<?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="00057734_0001"/>
Howell Announces Retirement<lb/>
.1<lb/>
ti!<lb/>
Chancellor John i<lb/>
tnnounccd at the Fall<lb/>
? Convocation last week<lb/>
he plans to retire no later<lb/>
lune K, IMS"<lb/>
W7 is  long wav into the<lb/>
e Howell said in a per-<lb/>
note injected near the close<lb/>
is annual convocation ad-<lb/>
"But 1 do not feel that mv<lb/>
uncement of retirement is<lb/>
ature "<lb/>
said his intended retirement<lb/>
has not been a secret at an<lb/>
m appointment" and<lb/>
?uncement now clears<lb/>
a tor a deliberate search<lb/>
11. a scholarly political<lb/>
ofessoi and veteran<lb/>
it. administrator, will<lb/>
hancelloi of ECl to;<lb/>
rs and his retirement will<lb/>
rareei ol 30 vears during<lb/>
W<lb/>
which he has served successively<lb/>
as pi ofessoi, chairman, dean ot<lb/>
an - and sciences, dean of the<lb/>
graduate school, provost, vice<lb/>
chancellor tor academic affairs<lb/>
and chancellor.<lb/>
He vvas appointed interim<lb/>
chancellor in January, 1982, and<lb/>
four months later was nominated<lb/>
bv a search committee to succeed<lb/>
Dr. Thomas B Brewer, who had<lb/>
resigned.<lb/>
c Ralph Kinsev Jr. of<lb/>
Charlotte, chairman ot the ECU<lb/>
board of trustees, said he expects<lb/>
to begin forming a selection com<lb/>
mittee during earlv 1986 to<lb/>
nominate a successor to Dr.<lb/>
Howell.<lb/>
"We have more than ample<lb/>
time to do an effective job<lb/>
Kinsev said. I he trustees chair-<lb/>
man appeared on the same con-<lb/>
vocation platform as Howell at<lb/>
the convocation in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
"The committee will consist ol<lb/>
members who represent the<lb/>
bioad interests of the Universitv<lb/>
community, including the faculty<lb/>
and staff, student bodv, alumni<lb/>
and general community Kinsev<lb/>
said. He indicated that a public<lb/>
hearing is likelv to solicit ideas<lb/>
and recommendations from the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
In addressing the faculty,<lb/>
Howell said "I have written<lb/>
President (William) Fndav that 1<lb/>
will be 65 vears old in January of<lb/>
198" and that I want to retire<lb/>
after that date. I have told him<lb/>
that the exact date can be set once<lb/>
m successor has been selected,<lb/>
but that I would not want it to be<lb/>
later than June 30. 198<lb/>
"1 added a pledge to assist him<lb/>
and the ECU Board ot Trustees<lb/>
in assUrmg a smooth transition<lb/>
Howell said his announcement<lb/>
of retirement "in no wav means<lb/>
ihat I will be retired or retiring<lb/>
between now and then. 1 intend<lb/>
to (unction until my salary ends<lb/>
and earn it. I have left jobs<lb/>
betoie - a staggering number at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"I do not have a record of go<lb/>
ing into semi-retirement before<lb/>
the last dav ot work he said.<lb/>
Kinsev said the universitv com-<lb/>
munity feels "endeared to Dr.<lb/>
Howell and our first lady,<lb/>
Gladys.<lb/>
"Their achievements foi I asl<lb/>
Carolina are unsurpassed for the<lb/>
past 28 vears he said. "One of<lb/>
the most privileged experiences of<lb/>
my lite has been the opportunity,<lb/>
lo know them and serve them as<lb/>
thev have led this Universitv<lb/>
Ill will be undergoing the<lb/>
chancellor search process for the<lb/>
third time since I)t. 1 eo W.<lb/>
See SEARCH, Page 13<lb/>
ECl Chancellor John M. Howell announced at<lb/>
faculty convocation that he would retire in two v<lb/>
last week's<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
She<lb/>
innual<lb/>
(Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving (he East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 60 No. 1<lb/>
Monday August 26, 1985<lb/>
dreenville. VC<lb/>
40 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Dowdy Challenge Gives Area<lb/>
Chance To Support Fund<lb/>
V ?<lb/>
Moiin' In<lb/>
TONY RUMPLE<lb/>
ECU Swv Bur<lb/>
For some reason life is a little more difficult for fresh<lb/>
belongings b themselves. ECl freshmen Kim Bailev .<lb/>
thev cam the.r belongings to their dorm room. Both Kim anTshei aPe fro<lb/>
men. Hside from having to move all their<lb/>
and Sherri Strickland have their hands full as<lb/>
m Durham.<lb/>
Bv r 1 lXBI JH PM,i<lb/>
staff Writrr<lb/>
" 1 Ins is going to be the biggest<lb/>
and best telefund ever said<lb/>
ECl 's nnual diving 1<lb/>
Directoi . indv Kittrell.<lb/>
I he Annual Giv ing I elefui<lb/>
I C I 's annual program desig<lb/>
to solict monetary support for the<lb/>
I niversity. I he money raised<lb/>
u .?- to various campus pro-<lb/>
ms, c?nging m sv holai I ,<lb/>
w emergency student loans.<lb/>
Kitrell recruits students from<lb/>
varums campus organizations as<lb/>
well as the residence halls. "Any<lb/>
organization is welcome to come<lb/>
and participate said Kitrell.<lb/>
Previously, the telefund travel-<lb/>
ed to different regions of the state<lb/>
to solicit funds. The national tele-<lb/>
fund will consolidate these<lb/>
regions, making one large region<lb/>
and one large national telefund.<lb/>
I he telefund is expected to last<lb/>
eight weeks begining Sept 23 and<lb/>
ending Nov 23, with a week oft<lb/>
for fall break<lb/>
I his veat's telefund will<lb/>
idded incentive with an alum-<lb/>
nus" recent gift ol S100.000<lb/>
Kitrell is calling this resent gift<lb/>
the "Dowdv Challenge after its<lb/>
: Ronald Dowdy<lb/>
Ihe "Dowdy Challenge" is<lb/>
designed to encourage alumni to<lb/>
make more contributions this<lb/>
year. Dowdy has agreed to match<lb/>
every new and increase donation<lb/>
dollar for dollar. He has set no<lb/>
limit on 'he amount of the dona-<lb/>
tion. Kittrell said.<lb/>
"It's nice io know that so-<lb/>
meone really, believes in EC 1<lb/>
Kitrell hopes to enlist more<lb/>
help this vear with the telefund.<lb/>
Students that help with the tele-<lb/>
fund will receive a meal each<lb/>
night they help. Prizes will be<lb/>
awarded nightly for the person<lb/>
who gets the top donation There<lb/>
will also be a grand prize at the<lb/>
end ol the telefund<lb/>
Sororities and fraternities that<lb/>
participate will receive points<lb/>
towards the Challelor'sup. and<lb/>
residence halls will receive points<lb/>
towards "Dorm of the Yeai "<lb/>
"Helping with the telefund can<lb/>
even help someone land a job<lb/>
Kitrell said. "One former LCI<lb/>
student got a job selling tingles to<lb/>
a radio station because of his ex-<lb/>
perience with the telefund<lb/>
Faculty Convocation Kicks Off ECU's 76th Academic Year<lb/>
jan its -6th academic<lb/>
week with a traditional<lb/>
ECU be<lb/>
vear last<lb/>
faculty convocation on Wednes-<lb/>
day, new programs in place and<lb/>
construction set to start on a huge<lb/>
SI 1 million classroom building in<lb/>
mid-campus.<lb/>
A system of on line, com-<lb/>
puterized registration put into ef-<lb/>
fect last spring is expected to<lb/>
reduce, but not eliminate entire-<lb/>
ly, the numbers of students and<lb/>
long lines involved in pre-<lb/>
semester registration and drop<lb/>
procedures Thursday and<lb/>
add<lb/>
i ridav<lb/>
I Diversity officials predic<lb/>
cautiously that ECU's fail enroll<lb/>
mem will be about the same<lb/>
as<lb/>
?asl vears, whicn was a record<lb/>
13,827 students on campus.<lb/>
"We look down the road verv<lb/>
optimistically said Angelo<lb/>
Volpe, vice chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs in a recent inter-<lb/>
v lew.<lb/>
"We are in a constantly im-<lb/>
proving mode both in quality ol<lb/>
students and quality ot faculty<lb/>
Volpe said. "There are so many<lb/>
things about this University that<lb/>
are gaining favorable attention,<lb/>
that have gone beyond the boun-<lb/>
daries tif this campus, beyond<lb/>
even North Carolina and the<lb/>
country, that we are verv op-<lb/>
timistic about this vear and the<lb/>
future he said.<lb/>
The freshman class includes<lb/>
seven outstanding young men<lb/>
and women selected as the first<lb/>
recipients of the University's<lb/>
prestigious, privately-financed<lb/>
University Scholars aw aids<lb/>
The University Scholars pro-<lb/>
gram was developed during the<lb/>
past vear to attract increasing<lb/>
numbers of highly-qualified<lb/>
students with proven leadership<lb/>
potential to ECU. Ihe awards<lb/>
provide full tuition and fees<lb/>
scholarships and are renewable<lb/>
for four vears of undergraduate<lb/>
studv.<lb/>
The fall semester marks tie<lb/>
beginning of a full-fledged<lb/>
undergraduate degree program in<lb/>
communications. The BA degree<lb/>
in journalism will be offered<lb/>
through the English department<lb/>
and the BS in broadcasting<lb/>
Hot Summer News<lb/>
through Theatre Arts.<lb/>
Two new deans have been<lb/>
named in academic administra-<lb/>
tion. Dr. Judith Rollins, formerly<lb/>
of Kansas State University,<lb/>
becomes dean of the School of<lb/>
Home Economics and Dr. Maria<lb/>
J. O'Neil, from Salve Regina<lb/>
College, will become associate<lb/>
dean and director of Social Work<lb/>
in the School of Allied Health<lb/>
and Social Work.<lb/>
Volpe noted that the work ot<lb/>
several faculty members has<lb/>
received "national recognition<lb/>
among them Dr. Kathryn Kolasa<lb/>
of the School of Home<lb/>
Economics who has been award-<lb/>
ed a national Kellogg Foundation<lb/>
fellowship and Dr. Trenton<lb/>
Davis, chairman of the depart-<lb/>
ment of environmental health,<lb/>
who received the highest national<lb/>
award of the association for en-<lb/>
vironmental health for technical<lb/>
excellence and service.<lb/>
He said the work of Dr. Stan<lb/>
Riggs of the Geology department<lb/>
in organizing and directing inter-<lb/>
national conferences on<lb/>
phophontes has been widely ac-<lb/>
claimed A phosphorites con-<lb/>
ference on the campus last Mav<lb/>
brought scientists from 42 coun-<lb/>
tries to ECU to studv methods ol<lb/>
mining phosphates and making<lb/>
the mineral available for use as<lb/>
fertilizer in food-scarce,<lb/>
underdeveloped nations of the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Drs. Charles Coble and Par-<lb/>
malee Hawk, the dean and<lb/>
clinical professor respectively of<lb/>
the School ol Education, received<lb/>
the distinguished research award<lb/>
from the national association of<lb/>
teacher educators for their<lb/>
research on measurement of in-<lb/>
field teacher certification effec-<lb/>
tiveness<lb/>
Ten degree programs have<lb/>
been made available for the first<lb/>
time for non-traditional students<lb/>
attending night classes in the<lb/>
University College of the Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education,<lb/>
Volpe said.<lb/>
"A sign of our maturity is our<lb/>
service Volpe said. "Through<lb/>
Continuing Education, the In-<lb/>
stitute for Caostal and Marine<lb/>
Resources, Rural Education In-<lb/>
stitute, the BB&amp;T Center for<lb/>
B HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
New r4lfm<lb/>
If you were one ol the luckv<lb/>
ones who didn't have to attend<lb/>
summer school and were able to<lb/>
spend your vacation on the<lb/>
beach, you may have lost contact<lb/>
with what went on in the world of<lb/>
news.<lb/>
Aside from rock singer<lb/>
Madonna posing nude, you mav<lb/>
also not be aware that Presidem<lb/>
Reagan has (or had ? it's still<lb/>
debatable) cancer. On campus,<lb/>
the SGA sponsored a successful<lb/>
program for new students and<lb/>
ECU's Assistant Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor Pam Holt left to pursue a<lb/>
career up North.<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustee member<lb/>
C. Ralph Kinsey was once again<lb/>
re-elected as Chairman. Newly<lb/>
appointed members Sandra Babb<lb/>
of Raleigh, Thomas Bennent,<lb/>
William Dansey and Max Joyner,<lb/>
all of Greenville and all are<lb/>
graduates of ECU.<lb/>
In a- survey by the Office of<lb/>
Student Life, 1984 graduates<lb/>
were more satisfied with different<lb/>
aspects of college life than 1979<lb/>
graduates.<lb/>
Three areas of the campus ?<lb/>
student publications, food service<lb/>
and student government were all<lb/>
at the top of the list for the 1984<lb/>
grads.<lb/>
Aside from the New Student<lb/>
Initiation to Campus Organiza-<lb/>
tion program sponsored by the<lb/>
SGA, ECU was also host to 104<lb/>
state high school students par-<lb/>
ticipating in the Summer Ven-<lb/>
tures in Science and Math.<lb/>
Funded by the state legislature.<lb/>
Summer Ventures provided<lb/>
enriching and stimulating pro-<lb/>
grams for students interested in<lb/>
the fields of math and science.<lb/>
Greenville police arrested two<lb/>
ECU students near Jams Dorm<lb/>
and later charged them with ex-<lb/>
tortion on July 17. According to<lb/>
Greenville police, the two<lb/>
students tried to extort $400 from<lb/>
See MADONNA, Page 6<lb/>
Plan Early Job Search<lb/>
They 're Back<lb/>
JON JORDAN - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Yes, It's true. The long, lonely days of Greenville are now over as<lb/>
thousands of students have recently made their transitJoa to college<lb/>
life- we're glad you're back.<lb/>
By DOUG ROBKRSON<lb/>
siaff Wrllrr<lb/>
"Now is the time for all seniors<lb/>
to register with ihe Career Plann-<lb/>
ing and Placement Center said<lb/>
Director Furnev James.<lb/>
"Most people procrastinate,<lb/>
but seniors should come see us as<lb/>
early in the semester before they<lb/>
miss valuable job opportunities.<lb/>
"We try to get student thinking<lb/>
about a career sooner, and we<lb/>
want students to find a job that<lb/>
will satisfy them personally and<lb/>
financially he said.<lb/>
A lot of students may not<lb/>
realize the wide variety of jobs<lb/>
available to them, James said.<lb/>
"When you tell someone there's<lb/>
a job available with an insurance<lb/>
company, they think about in-<lb/>
surance salesmen. But, Nation-<lb/>
wide (Insurance Company) has<lb/>
more people working in manag-<lb/>
ment positions than in sales<lb/>
For students unsure of what<lb/>
career path to take, the Career<lb/>
Planning office offers a com-<lb/>
puterized system, enabling<lb/>
students to explore different oc-<lb/>
cupational options and to make<lb/>
educational plans according!)<lb/>
Use of the computerized system is<lb/>
available to students at no<lb/>
charge, James said.<lb/>
By registering with the Center.<lb/>
a student is able to attend resume<lb/>
and job search workshops. A<lb/>
listing of the dates and times of<lb/>
these workshops are periodically<lb/>
published in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Registrants also receive a mon-<lb/>
thly listing of job openings. This<lb/>
list also contains information on<lb/>
visiting recruiters and gives<lb/>
students an opportunity to sign<lb/>
up for interviews.<lb/>
James said about 1,200 seniors<lb/>
and 40 alumni use the Center's<lb/>
services each year. "We find that<lb/>
about 70 to 75 percent of those<lb/>
who use our services find jobs<lb/>
each year<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Center is located in<lb/>
Bloxton House, between<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
Greene Dorm.<lb/>
V<lb/>
T<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0002"/><lb/>
I HI M k<lb/>
 ? IS <lb/>
t .1 s 1 2b. I vh<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
WRITERS<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS<lb/>
. . ?<lb/>
Sepi<lb/>
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
? ? ur ?tudy skins<lb/>
? ge T he following<lb/>
S . an help ,ou<lb/>
o kioak of ci<lb/>
.oo' v ti a When and<lb/>
 I ? ' ' I in 30i Wright<lb/>
IFC<lb/>
? ? . ? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
? -1 ' " ? a 3S m Sept s<lb/>
st Tal  ? ? s p m<lb/>
N C STATE LEGISLATURE<lb/>
 Si lent Legit ature<lb/>
. Monday ??tf rti I<lb/>
' .in Coffeehouse th s<lb/>
? ' manual mal meet<lb/>
epl i It NCSU wi<lb/>
'? ?? I s'uiients are nvited<lb/>
? ? have any quest.ons please<lb/>
? ?' ? v '9j 4036<lb/>
STATE EMPLOYEES<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
??'s.h if f Nortt ii<lb/>
. ? . .<lb/>
? , ?<lb/>
? '? ' ? ? . a : .<lb/>
a . ?? . - en : .<lb/>
" ? ? ? ? ? ??<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE<lb/>
PIRATE WALK<lb/>
????-??? ? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
'?'??'? -<lb/>
J- 4' t B sect<lb/>
-<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
TALENTED STUDENTS<lb/>
photograph<lb/>
. v. <lb/>
Sri ? , ??  .<lb/>
44  . .<lb/>
? ' ' ? ? 4<lb/>
- '<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
EPISCOPAL FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
?  t . . <lb/>
? ' '? H ? ? ???? lay A . . -??<lb/>
it st Pa .copal<lb/>
TEAM PUTT PUTT<lb/>
' " ? ?? fit will<lb/>
Registraf I I . A ? , - . ? . ,<lb/>
room 105 B Men ? ill FOR I<lb/>
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
' - ' ? ince I<lb/>
? ? .<lb/>
N . B<lb/>
' ? ' ' . ? ? ?? ? <lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
CO-REC SOFTBALL<lb/>
?Some HurU<lb/>
Area B<lb/>
Kv H m<lb/>
fc K'w3&amp;<lb/>
 word of advice to all nen students: know where your possessions an- a. all times lso do no, te.<lb/>
TJelZ"l7r 'e" y?U  ' hbra" 'S ?' WOrSe' 'ht ha,hrm ?"? ?? lu  o.r<lb/>
?<lb/>
'? v.<lb/>
?'?' ? '  - ? v.<lb/>
RAFT TRIP<lb/>
TENNIS SINGLES<lb/>
Di<lb/>
an error in ;<lb/>
' page 4. Rue a<lb/>
NO TICE<lb/>
;? ' mtAssocianon-sD<lb/>
Uebat ls mcorreci Please consul th S <lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
? ?? at<lb/>
Me i <lb/>
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DOWN<lb/>
?T-<lb/>
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kii ? ?? ?<lb/>
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Kri<lb/>
nswers on Page 9<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Crab L<lb/>
and<lb/>
tabitt<lb/>
Sweel lent ?i.f-k.in rab l t<lb/>
FRIDAY Shrimp and Chablis 9 95<lb/>
fried, boiled and hr 1<lb/>
SATURDAY Beef and Burgundy jq 95<lb/>
I he ,if ? - -? pnn - rib!<lb/>
Including a SeU ! Breakfast. Lunch<lb/>
Mond.v.rnd.v and Dinner U Will! lease I 1 en<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
in Most Dis riminatins Palate.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
K) I Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(?reenville, N( 27834<lb/>
? , . 752-2790<lb/>
 Operated by Piaza Hptei Mgmt, inc<lb/>
Buffet<lb/>
All You Care<lb/>
To Eat<lb/>
11:50-2:00<lb/>
New Fall Fashions Like NeverBefore<lb/>
SwImwMr by:<lb/>
Get Wet<lb/>
Oooh<lb/>
Cant Wait<lb/>
Menden<lb/>
Monc<lb/>
Frida<lb/>
9at<lb/>
: Sun:<lb/>
BB&amp;T Otters ECU Conv<lb/>
BE<lb/>
reinior mat 10n comae: J<lb/>
AlvmMuchellor Mastei<lb/>
1errBovesin Room<lb/>
inorCall757-6967 or<lb/>
Your Ban<lb/>
mm<lb/>
t-mmmmtm.?<lb/>
California. He's also a IWitk 10<lb/>
Conference diving champion<lb/>
"What made me enroO in Array<lb/>
ROTC? I aarted thinking about my<lb/>
future. I cam dive the restof <lb/>
MH I my life. And to be a champ<lb/>
? in business, you Ve got 10 be a leader and<lb/>
a manager. r <lb/>
"ROTChas given me a real taseWwnat its<lb/>
like to be a leader, to be the man in charge.<lb/>
Handling that kind of nspepsibijity is pre-<lb/>
paring me to be a leader in life<lb/>
"At first, I thought that ROTC aainingwould<lb/>
get in the way of my other activities on campus.<lb/>
But it's helped me excel in all areas of school The con-<lb/>
centration, self-confidence and discipline I've devel-<lb/>
- v ?? ??my<lb/>
athletic and other extracwricubr<lb/>
activities, as well as my studies.<lb/>
"I can use my ROTC training <lb/>
ivhetever I go. whatever I do"<lb/>
Ifyoutc thinking about<lb/>
" your future, think about<lb/>
enrolling in Army ROTC.<lb/>
you need no matter what the competition<lb/>
Mil HO PC.<lb/>
YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
Iht f'i?I<lb/>
- -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml AS!AKOl INI AN AUGUS1 26. 19853<lb/>
?as ECU Photo Lad<lb/>
Mso, do not lei<lb/>
I luck in your<lb/>
ifnfan<lb/>
s<lb/>
J<lb/>
rTl<lb/>
T7<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
wgiVeyau the edge<lb/>
the competitim<lb/>
JL<lb/>
5omg &amp;mr5 HaVe Free Checking<lb/>
Area Banks Offer Services To ECU Students<lb/>
B HAKOl.DJOYNhR<lb/>
It you're tired of hiding your<lb/>
mone. in an old dirt sock, area<lb/>
Greenville banks are definitely<lb/>
something you should check out<lb/>
finally settling in your<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
While man) services are of-<lb/>
fered by the following banks, u<lb/>
might pay to check out the ones<lb/>
otter free checking. f you<lb/>
large sums of money, a lot<lb/>
banks will go to the extra trou-<lb/>
ble u offer interest on your ac-<lb/>
quite a difference from<lb/>
- your money collect dust.<lb/>
lso, because this is only a par-<lb/>
king ol the banks and the<lb/>
? king and savings services<lb/>
they otter, you may want to con<lb/>
tact each bank for more detailed<lb/>
ni orm?ition<lb/>
Kl Mudenl Bank The<lb/>
1I Student Bank, located on<lb/>
the first floor of Mendenhall stu-<lb/>
dent center, offers then services<lb/>
to students and faculty only. The<lb/>
bank will cash up to Si25 ot<lb/>
checks during a seven-day work-<lb/>
ing period. No two-party checks<lb/>
can be cashed (unless it's a<lb/>
I niversity payroll check). valid<lb/>
student ID activity card is<lb/>
necessary before any check can<lb/>
be cashed. Also, make sure you<lb/>
have your driver's license on<lb/>
hand in cas" further identifica-<lb/>
tion is necessary.<lb/>
It you have some exi ney<lb/>
that you're not ready to spend<lb/>
vet. the Student Bank will hold it<lb/>
for you in then "withdrawal<lb/>
fund The accounts are non-<lb/>
interest bearing.<lb/>
I elephone bill- may also be<lb/>
paid at the bank<lb/>
Branch Banking and I rust Co.<lb/>
 The convenient i<lb/>
automated teller machine at youi<lb/>
disposal ri campus is one of the<lb/>
tree servic red by BB&amp; I .<lb/>
ig a chet li<lb/>
prov ide<lb/>
?<lb/>
if you re :<lb/>
ing account,<lb/>
ou<lb/>
BB&amp;<lb/>
free Pira:<lb/>
sonalized checks cost $8.15 or<lb/>
more per 200) and there is no<lb/>
checking account service charge<lb/>
for your BB&amp; I checking account<lb/>
as long as you keep a minimum<lb/>
daily balance of $400 daily<lb/>
or$5(K) in savings. You'll also<lb/>
stay away from charges if you<lb/>
keep an average monthly balance<lb/>
of SI.(MX) in your checking ac-<lb/>
count There will be a fee of<lb/>
$7.50 a month if any of the abov e<lb/>
conditions are not met.<lb/>
Checking Plus is another ser-<lb/>
vice offered by BB&amp;T. For $3.00<lb/>
a month, you can get free checks,<lb/>
discounts at all Greenville<lb/>
theatres, travel and amusement<lb/>
park discounts and $10,(MX) ac-<lb/>
cidental death insurance. Call the<lb/>
bank for more details.<lb/>
 BB&amp;T, your money can<lb/>
earn interest from the day of<lb/>
deposit to the day of withdrawal<lb/>
at a rate compounded daily and<lb/>
paid monthly.<lb/>
First American Federal Savings<lb/>
and loan Association Open<lb/>
Monday through Thursday from<lb/>
 a.m to 5 p m. and Friday from<lb/>
s a.m to fi p.m First American<lb/>
pays 5 1 4 interest on checking<lb/>
accounts with a balance of SUM)<lb/>
or more. lo avoid a service<lb/>
charge ot S4 the minimum must<lb/>
be maintained.<lb/>
I o open a passbook sav mgs ac-<lb/>
count, .i $100 'ii i mm urn deposit is<lb/>
required Money market and cer-<lb/>
ates of deposit are also<lb/>
av ailable.<lb/>
Automated teller machines are<lb/>
ailable. but a spokesman<lb/>
saui plans are being finalized in<lb/>
initiating a system with Relav in<lb/>
t )ctobei or November.<lb/>
First Citizens Banking and<lb/>
I rust lull time students can<lb/>
receive tree checking by opening<lb/>
a $50 account with first Citizens.<lb/>
Students can also become<lb/>
members of the Banclub foi<lb/>
S4 75 a month. With this service,<lb/>
there will be no required<lb/>
minimum balance I he cost ot<lb/>
printing personalized checks can<lb/>
be avoided if you're a member of<lb/>
the club, and in addition, you can<lb/>
obtain no-fee traveler's checks or<lb/>
money orders.<lb/>
Savings accounts pay 5 I, per-<lb/>
cent daily with a minimum of<lb/>
$50, but you can only make three<lb/>
withdrawals per month without<lb/>
penalty.<lb/>
There are two Relay automated<lb/>
teller machines and two branches<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
First Federal Savings and Loan<lb/>
? There are two First Federal<lb/>
locations in Greenville and one<lb/>
automated teller machine.<lb/>
Checking account customers<lb/>
can deposit $300 and receive free<lb/>
checking. If the $300-plus<lb/>
balance is maintained, interest<lb/>
will be paid. However, if the<lb/>
balance falls below the minimum,<lb/>
interest will not be paid, but<lb/>
checking services are still free.<lb/>
Regular savings accounts are<lb/>
available, with an opening<lb/>
balance of SUM).<lb/>
Home Federal Savings and<lb/>
loan ? Home federal offers in-<lb/>
terest bearing checking accounts<lb/>
with a $500 minimum. The cost<lb/>
of 2(X) checks are S7.01 per<lb/>
month and that includes a free<lb/>
wallet register and personalized<lb/>
checks.<lb/>
A SI00 minimum is needed to<lb/>
open a savings account and pays<lb/>
5 1 2 interest with no penalty for<lb/>
withdrawls.<lb/>
1 here ate two locations in<lb/>
Greenville and hours of service<lb/>
are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondav<lb/>
through Thursdav and 9 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m. on 1 ridav.<lb/>
North Carolina National Bank<lb/>
NCNB has four locations in<lb/>
Greenville, as well as automated<lb/>
teller machines.<lb/>
Actual conditions tor opening<lb/>
a checking or savings account<lb/>
were not avaiable at this writing.<lb/>
but they may be reached at<lb/>
5K-341 for more information.<lb/>
People's Bank While there<lb/>
V<lb/>
WWW<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
v<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Monday ? Thursday8:30 a.m. ? n p.m.<lb/>
Frlday8:30 ? 12 midnight<lb/>
Saturday12 noon ? 12 midnight<lb/>
Sunday1 p.m. ? 11 p.m.<lb/>
VVVVVQVVVQVV&amp;VVVVVVVVVVVVVv'yVVV<lb/>
BB&amp;T Offers ECU Convenience PLUS.<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
- FREE 24 HOUR BANKING<lb/>
You'll receive your 24 hour card when you open your checking or savings account. Syitin<lb/>
?PiUS<lb/>
Your Bank At ECU Mendenhall<lb/>
FREE PIRATE CHECKS<lb/>
Just for ECU - Your FIRST PIRATE CHECKS ARE FREE, with your new BB&amp;T checking account<lb/>
OTHER GREENVILLE LOCATIONS<lb/>
Arlington Blvd 3rd &amp; Greene Streets,Stantonsburg Road<lb/>
752-6889 Member FDIC<lb/>
is only one People's Bank in<lb/>
Greenville, plans are being made<lb/>
to build two more in the near<lb/>
future. Cards are also being<lb/>
distributed to customers for ser-<lb/>
vice with any Relay automated<lb/>
teller machine.<lb/>
The ONE Account is an in-<lb/>
terest bearing checking account<lb/>
that offers free services upon<lb/>
receipt of $500 or more. Certain<lb/>
charges are applied when the<lb/>
balance falls below the minimum<lb/>
and the bank can provide you<lb/>
with additional information.<lb/>
The regular checking account<lb/>
is available at $8 a month. This<lb/>
includes cost of checks, S10.000<lb/>
accidental life insurance and no-<lb/>
fee traveler's checks.<lb/>
Six hundred dollars is required<lb/>
to open a regular savings ac-<lb/>
count.<lb/>
Planter's National Bank and<lb/>
Trust Co. ? Four Planter's<lb/>
Banks are located in Greenville,<lb/>
as well as automated teller<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
No service charge checking is<lb/>
available with a minimum<lb/>
balance of $500 in checking or<lb/>
$400 in savings. Service charges<lb/>
are added if the balance falls<lb/>
below the minimum, along with a<lb/>
nomimal fee for each item.<lb/>
North State Savings and loan<lb/>
-? With one automatic teller<lb/>
machine (Funds Machine) and<lb/>
two Greenville branch locations.<lb/>
North State offers a variety of<lb/>
checking services.<lb/>
To avoid a $3 monthly service<lb/>
charge, a $300 minimum is re-<lb/>
quired to open a regular checking<lb/>
account.<lb/>
In the Funds Checking Ac-<lb/>
count, a $2,(XX) balance is re-<lb/>
quired, but 6 3 4 interest is paid.<lb/>
A regular savings account re-<lb/>
quires a minimum of $100 and it<lb/>
pays 6.18 percent. Hours of<lb/>
operation are s a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Mondav through Thursdav and 9<lb/>
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Fridays.<lb/>
Wachovia Bank and Trust ?<lb/>
I here are five offices in Green<lb/>
ville and five Ieller II automated<lb/>
teller machines, one of them be-<lb/>
ing at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
No service charge checking is<lb/>
obtained by opening a savings ac-<lb/>
count of $400 or more.<lb/>
Regardless of the balance of your<lb/>
checking account, no tees will be<lb/>
charged There is a $3 main-<lb/>
tanence fee if the savings account<lb/>
balance falls below the minimum.<lb/>
Overdraft protection is offered<lb/>
upon request. It you write a<lb/>
check for more than what is in<lb/>
your account, a $1 charge will<lb/>
save you the embarrassment ot<lb/>
having a returned check plus any<lb/>
service charge fees by<lb/>
automatically transferring your<lb/>
savings to checking.<lb/>
Area banks are definitely<lb/>
something to check out during<lb/>
your settling in your new dorm<lb/>
room. If you're looking for a<lb/>
great place to put your money, all<lb/>
Greenville tellers will be glad to<lb/>
help you. Most of the banks'<lb/>
hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-<lb/>
day through Thursday and 9 a.m.<lb/>
to 5 p.m. on Fridays.<lb/>
With a u t o m a t e d teller<lb/>
machines, some bank5 are con-<lb/>
nected with the Relay or Cirrus<lb/>
The bank you choose can give<lb/>
your more details.<lb/>
?It<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
The East Carolinian is<lb/>
looking for an energetic Person<lb/>
with good photography skills. If<lb/>
interested call 757-6366.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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?<lb/>
?<lb/>
???????????????????V<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
Movie: "The Cotton Club"<lb/>
7, 9:30 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
I.Ds Made<lb/>
2:30 p.m6:30 p.m. Multi-Purpose Rm.<lb/>
August 29, 30, 31<lb/>
August 28<lb/>
Tickets On Sale At Central<lb/>
Ticket Office:<lb/>
Theatre Production: "Cotton Patch Gospel"<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
September 10<lb/>
Dinner Theatre: "Last of the Red Hot Lovers'<lb/>
6:30 p.m. Aud. 244<lb/>
September 20, 21<lb/>
Madrigal Dinners<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Multi-purpose Rm.SC<lb/>
Trips: New York<lb/>
Hawaii<lb/>
December 4,5,6,&amp; 7<lb/>
Nov. 27-Dec. 1<lb/>
Dec. 31-Jan. 7<lb/>
 - - ???? - .<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0004"/><lb/>
HI EAS1RQ IN1AJN t G<lb/>
I si 26. ls8<lb/>
?i?e iEafit aiarnltnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton. ?"t-mi<lb/>
J Y STONfc, tfaniimrjuui<lb/>
HAROI I) JOYNER. v t()V1 r rvtnPQ ,<lb/>
I I'M LI VfcNDfcR, )ir?? o .wiumf<lb/>
DANI1 I 1 M Rf K. FtmatKB a ANTHONY MARTIN. ?? v,??aff,<lb/>
Rick Mccormac, ? John Peterson, o,<lb/>
SlC,0t,K BUI MlRHHlta,v<lb/>
Shannon Short. di-bhu Stevens. <lb/>
DeChanile Johnson. , Andrew Joyner.vi<lb/>
JERRY<lb/>
FALWELLANP HIS IMMORAL MINORITV<lb/>
I SIS<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Marijuana<lb/>
New Laws Throwback<lb/>
Over the summer the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly took a<lb/>
bold regressive leap back into the<lb/>
Middle Ages. Thanks to a bill which<lb/>
easil) slithered through both<lb/>
bouses, a defendant convicted of<lb/>
possessing less than a half-ounce of<lb/>
marijuana goes straight to jail for<lb/>
30 days and pays a $100 fine. The about chemicals used and stored by<lb/>
jail term cannot be suspended e- local businesses. The version of the<lb/>
cept in first offense cases. Anyone law that was passed was. in effect.<lb/>
convicted of holding more than a pro-industry and it pre-empted local<lb/>
half-ounce, but less than 1.5 ounces<lb/>
repeal the Hardison Amendment,<lb/>
which prevents the state from adop-<lb/>
ting environmental standards<lb/>
stricter than those adopted bv the<lb/>
federal government. In addition it<lb/>
passed a watered-down right-to-<lb/>
know law, designed to give workers<lb/>
and the public access to information<lb/>
Oy86"?W?V't'lt0lOr7fl<lb/>
Trade Deficit Not Serious<lb/>
Japanese Tac<lb/>
Doomed<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
I Ik S Krpublk<lb/>
can face up to two years and a fine,<lb/>
while anyone who is picked up with<lb/>
more than 1.5 ounces can be charg-<lb/>
ed with a felon v.<lb/>
It is eviocnt thai we are no longer<lb/>
living ii the 1960s when radicalized<lb/>
youth maae the legalization of mari-<lb/>
juana a central plank of their<lb/>
political platform. And it is not the<lb/>
polic of this paper to condone the<lb/>
use ot any drug that is a proven<lb/>
health hazard. Nevertheless, the<lb/>
passage of this new law, which con-<lb/>
travenes an earlier law passed dur-<lb/>
ing the Hunt administration<lb/>
decriminalizing marijuana, is vet<lb/>
another example of the kind of<lb/>
moral hypocrisy that seems to<lb/>
abound in government these days.<lb/>
The same legislature which stiffened<lb/>
pot penalties, presumably to protect<lb/>
the health of potential users, gave<lb/>
no support whatsoever to an at-<lb/>
tempt bv environmentalists to<lb/>
In all of social science, the one law<lb/>
that comes closest to being scientific in<lb/>
ordinances such as Durham's more<lb/>
stringent right-to-know law.<lb/>
i .i  , , . . mai mines emscsi u) uemiz scientific in<lb/>
In the final analysis, then, it must the sense of having perfect predictive<lb/>
ne concluded that the moralizing at- value is the economic doctrine of free<lb/>
titude which the state has exhibited trade: A nation always benefits<lb/>
in this case is an affront to common economicaIlv from allowing its citizens<lb/>
sense. As ex-President Jimmv t0 Purchase forei8n Roods without<lb/>
rwt, j r'CM"c,H Jimmv restrictions, and this is true whether<lb/>
Carter reasoned when he introduced foreign nations reciprocate or not<lb/>
a federal decriminaJization bill to Economists arc in rare unanimity<lb/>
Congress, the penalty for the use of abouI thls- excepi tor a tew .ranks and<lb/>
a restricted substance should not do<lb/>
more harm to a person than the use<lb/>
of the substance itself. It is doubtful<lb/>
would harm the United States as much them. In return r ars Al<lb/>
as anyone. Some industries beg lor tern- that d . od for ultimately<lb/>
porary relief, arguing the) need time to buy Is and services from Amei<lb/>
adjust. But one taste ol this drug in-<lb/>
variably turns them into addicts, as the<lb/>
auto and steel industries have<lb/>
demonstrated.<lb/>
So the trouble boils down to coolies<lb/>
s there u<lb/>
Japane Uar<lb/>
surpluses I jarSi m<lb/>
which case ? they<lb/>
spend the in whi the<lb/>
D-1<lb/>
thai<lb/>
anyone could have said it more and editoria<lb/>
hired guns. The legitimate exceptions to<lb/>
this law are barelv worth mentioning<lb/>
and almost never arise in real life.<lb/>
Yet no one believes it. Oh, columnists<lb/>
writers usually put tree<lb/>
eloquently. The stiffer the penalties<lb/>
are for marijuana possession the<lb/>
more the stigma of conviction will<lb/>
haunt its users in advancing their<lb/>
careers and their educations.<lb/>
Moreover, such a move toward doUar-an-hour coolie labor. If they did!<lb/>
troglodyte ideas of justice will only e d soon change our tune<lb/>
make criminals of otherwise law-<lb/>
abiding citizens, thus diminishing<lb/>
respect for the law in general. Is this<lb/>
any way to run an advanced civiliza-<lb/>
trade right up there with teenage, sobrie-<lb/>
ty and support for ihe arts as deities<lb/>
worth of regulai genuflection. But<lb/>
that's only because the South Koreans<lb/>
haven't yet found a way to manufacture<lb/>
high-minded opinions b the yard using<lb/>
So pending that ominous develop-<lb/>
ment, this is a good moment to restate<lb/>
the holv writ.<lb/>
and cheating. It's feared that cheap problem is<lb/>
foriegn workers will drag us down to Senatoi !<lb/>
their level. But a nation can't get richer author of a ma bill, s<lb/>
b excluding the produ we need<lb/>
labor. And it can't get poorer b letting to come to gi<lb/>
them in. Quite the opposite When an cantilis<lb/>
American does a job that some foi . trading stem Bui hy<lb/>
is willing to do for a dollar, he's only ad- lapanese arc ma<lb/>
ding a dollar of value to the economy, accum . ds<lb/>
I hat's true no matter what he actually mercantilist 1<lb/>
gets paid. If it's $15 an hour, he's impos- ISth century w<lb/>
ingaSU tax on other American If he's with accumu i . s<lb/>
a steelworker or an auto worker, most ol mistake We onlv be<lb/>
those other<lb/>
he is<lb/>
Americans are poorer than<lb/>
The easiest wa to grasp the<lb/>
fallacy here is to imagine that we shut<lb/>
our borders to all foreign goods and ser-<lb/>
vices and started paving ourselves Si ,000 sani<lb/>
N w that' i bil ersimplified v,<lb/>
? the lapanese decide to spend their<lb/>
hoard, we will find ourselves working<lb/>
supply them with goods and services and<lb/>
getting nothing in return except our own<lb/>
tattered dollars hack ff won't he pica<lb/>
tion<lb/>
On Trees And Things<lb/>
Our current trade problems have been<lb/>
blamed on four factors. First, the over-<lb/>
valued dollar. Second, tough but<lb/>
legitimate foreign competition. Third,<lb/>
cheap foreign labor. And fourth<lb/>
outright cheating: foreign trade barriers<lb/>
and export subsidies.<lb/>
Most people recognize that the first<lb/>
two factors are not good reasons for<lb/>
protectionism. The overvalued dollar is<lb/>
I like trees. Alot of other people What if Greenville had been plann-<lb/>
do too judging from the remarks ed as a college town from its incep- our own fault, of course, caused bv<lb/>
iave been circulating around tion and it had been built around massive government borrowing, and is a<lb/>
campus as a result of the hatchet job the college? What if all of the Prob,em that seems to be solving itself,<lb/>
thai the university ordered done in buildine that was done here had l lkew!se- protectionism against<lb/>
preparation for its new building, been carried on with that in mind? fTT f?rCTco"ipctiti?n ?a?<lb/>
c with a tnHn?c f.r ?rc? n u L   llilu- tor international trade paralvsis, which<lb/>
witn a tondness lor green Perhaps then there would be room<lb/>
growing things have been refering to for both buildings and trees as well<lb/>
this action as 'arboricide I can't as a number of other amenities that<lb/>
thai melodramatic about it would enhance the environment<lb/>
myself, though I am the first to con- here. There might even be a better<lb/>
cede that all those tree stumps do in- mass transit system connecting<lb/>
spire a kind of mute anguish in me Greenville with points east, west,<lb/>
when I'm forced to walk through north, and south. Yet, such specula-<lb/>
thorn. Yet, progress must go on. tion is idle because for now chaos<lb/>
Things have got to be done and rules the dav and trees find<lb/>
there's no time for sitting around themselves laving horizontal,<lb/>
chewing the fat about bushes and<lb/>
an hour. Would we all be rich Hardlv<lb/>
Now, cheating, let us suppose the<lb/>
worst of the Japanese 1 et's suppose<lb/>
they're so determined to sell more than<lb/>
they buy that they purposely underprice<lb/>
their own goods and pull every trick in<lb/>
the book to keep our goods out. Or let's<lb/>
suppose that thev're genetically pro-<lb/>
grammed to work like beavers ft) hours<lb/>
a week and never spend any money. Is<lb/>
that unfair to us'7 Should we cracl<lb/>
down'1<lb/>
It's hard to see why What Japan's<lb/>
$40 billion annual trade surplus with the<lb/>
United States means is that they are sup-<lb/>
plying us $40 billion more of goods and<lb/>
services this year man we are supplying<lb/>
But note the irony. If that unpleasant<lb/>
day ever arrives, we will be running a<lb/>
le surplus and thev will be runnii<lb/>
deficit. That is, America will be in<lb/>
precisely the position the Japanese ar<lb/>
tod?.y, a position we accuse then-<lb/>
acheiving as pan of some devious mer-<lb/>
cantilist pl ?<lb/>
Clearly, if we're determined to g<lb/>
tough with the Japanese on trade issues,<lb/>
we should do precisely the reverse<lb/>
what everybody is suggesting. Instead of<lb/>
demanding that they change their hal<lb/>
'nee. we should demand 'hat they<lb/>
pursue their mercantilist policy<lb/>
definitely Let's force them to keep sen-<lb/>
ding us $40 billion of free automobiles.<lb/>
camaras and VC'Rs every vear, until I<lb/>
CI v<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
 FORUM<lb/>
dan lelions - no.<lb/>
Out university is growing. It is on<lb/>
the move and virtually everyone<lb/>
says that is good. That is, after all,<lb/>
how they pay the bills, upgrade their<lb/>
services and facilities and get a<lb/>
name for themselves.<lb/>
Thirty years ago no one could<lb/>
have foreseen that ECTC would<lb/>
grow to be as big as it is today. That<lb/>
is why the university has taken to<lb/>
buying up old houses on the edge of<lb/>
campus and cutting down trees in<lb/>
the center of campus. In fact, the<lb/>
arboretum was just barely spared.<lb/>
Thirty years ago folks thought<lb/>
ECTC would always be a teacher's<lb/>
college and that's why they didn't<lb/>
acquire enough land for the school<lb/>
to grow on. They were, of course,<lb/>
wrong. But we should not be too<lb/>
hard on the people who decided<lb/>
ECTC's fate thirty years ago. Thirty<lb/>
years from now students and ad-<lb/>
ministrators will be laughing at our<lb/>
delusions.<lb/>
The problem here is that there ap-<lb/>
pears to be a profound lack of plan-<lb/>
ning involved in these matters. No<lb/>
one really has decided how big ECU<lb/>
will grow to be or in what direction<lb/>
it will grow. The school is just grow-<lb/>
ing because growth pays dividends.<lb/>
LIVE AID - BA ND A ID - H E ARE<lb/>
THE WORLD - USA FOR AFRICA - all<lb/>
are familiar words that bring to mind the<lb/>
human tragedy of drought and famine<lb/>
that has plagued the peoples of<lb/>
developing countries that most Americans<lb/>
had never heard of one year ago. There<lb/>
is a new awareness in America, an<lb/>
awareness that each of us can make a<lb/>
difference. The Yuppie mentality of our<lb/>
more recent past is giving way to a<lb/>
resurgence of compassion and concern<lb/>
about how we can best help our brothers<lb/>
and sisters of the world face the complex<lb/>
human problems that have confronted<lb/>
humanity through out the ages. The<lb/>
Peace Corps, a United States government<lb/>
agency, has been a partner in that effort<lb/>
for twenty-five years.<lb/>
Peace Corps has purposely chosen to<lb/>
launch its 25th Anniversary with a<lb/>
column targeted to universities, colleges<lb/>
and high schools all over the United<lb/>
States. It was on such a campus that the<lb/>
idea of a peace corps first received<lb/>
national attention. Almost 25 years ago,<lb/>
then-presidential candidate John F.<lb/>
Kennedy tossed out an impromptu<lb/>
challenge to thousands of University of<lb/>
r Michigan students: How many of you<lb/>
II who are going to be doctors are willing<lb/>
sj to spend your days in Ghana? To his<lb/>
astonishment a petition signed by more<lb/>
than 800 students affirming their interest<lb/>
reached him just two days later.<lb/>
YVV. Since that time more than 120,000<lb/>
Jjr Americans have served in the Peace<lb/>
 Corps in more than ninety countries<lb/>
around the globe. There are now 6,000<lb/>
Peace Corps volunteers serving in 60<lb/>
countries, more than half of whom are in<lb/>
one way or another involved in<lb/>
agriculture and agricultural-related<lb/>
projects. For example, in countries<lb/>
around the world.<lb/>
? Forestry volunteers work to curb<lb/>
receding forests by establishing fruit tree<lb/>
nurseries and village woodlots for future<lb/>
firewood.<lb/>
? Energy volunteers introduce designs<lb/>
for more fuel efficient stoves.<lb/>
? Engineering volunteers build portable<lb/>
water systems which supply the essential<lb/>
water for cooking and gardening.<lb/>
? Health volunteers teach family<lb/>
nutrition and basic sanitation practices as<lb/>
well as combat infant dehydration with<lb/>
locally-made formulas.<lb/>
Individual volunteers can proudly point<lb/>
to their accomplishments as catalysts for<lb/>
self-help projects. Michael Shean 27,<lb/>
completed a remarkable task of surveying<lb/>
the soil of one million acres of terrain in<lb/>
Nepal; he recently extended his two-year<lb/>
assignment for another year to oversee<lb/>
one million dollars' worth of projects<lb/>
which will triple the amount of available<lb/>
farmland<lb/>
Lynn Blalock, 63. enhanced the quality<lb/>
of native sheep in Barbados through<lb/>
better animal nutrition, which improved<lb/>
the diet of the Caribbean people,<lb/>
increased the income of farmers, and<lb/>
decreased costly meat imports.<lb/>
These brief examples are intended to<lb/>
highlight the work of Peace Corps<lb/>
volunteers in the area of food<lb/>
production. Their efforts and that of<lb/>
their host country co-workers are helping<lb/>
to create a foundation of hope and<lb/>
promise for a future free of hunger,<lb/>
disease, poverty, and illiteracy together<lb/>
these collective contributions of people-<lb/>
helping-people in the remote corners ol<lb/>
the world demonstrates more than anv<lb/>
other measurement the caring and<lb/>
compassion that can be shared when one<lb/>
is given the opportunity to offer one's<lb/>
time and talent.<lb/>
Peace Corps volunteers receive<lb/>
extensive skill, language, and cross<lb/>
cultural training and are provided<lb/>
medical care, transportation, and student<lb/>
loan determents. Additionally thev are<lb/>
paid a monthly living allowance and a<lb/>
readjustment sum of approximately<lb/>
$4,500 upon completion of service"<lb/>
This is the first of nine columns which<lb/>
will focus on international organizations<lb/>
concerned with development, particularly<lb/>
Jood production. For more information<lb/>
on the Peace Corps, call 800-424-8S80<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
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mise to be present for everv spec<lb/>
the five days the gathering<lb/>
Luis Ignacio da Siiva. the B<lb/>
union leader who is populai<lb/>
Lula, summarized the sense of I<lb/>
vention: 'Without being the l<lb/>
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nine olumns which<lb/>
national organizations<lb/>
elopment, particularly<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
rps, tali 800-424-85 HO.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
Union welcomes letters<lb/>
ng all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
m by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
ns Building, across from the en-<lb/>
? net Library.<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
THF I AS IARM INI AN<lb/>
Al (,LST26, 1985<lb/>
By MY STONE<lb/>
Socially Responsible Investment<lb/>
During the late 1960's. a; the height of<lb/>
the post-World War H dissident movemen<lb/>
thai captured the allegiance of a genera-<lb/>
tion, making money was looked upon with<lb/>
a measure of disdain. In the minds of<lb/>
main the American economy was so rite<lb/>
with corporate criminals and socially, ir-<lb/>
responsible businesses that it was virtually<lb/>
impossible to make a buck and still have a<lb/>
siear conscience. The conventional wisdom<lb/>
which prevailed among the social rebels ol<lb/>
the 60 s was that the establishment was rot-<lb/>
ten to the core because it had produced<lb/>
McCarthyism, institutionalized racism a<lb/>
technology that pillaged nature, poverty<lb/>
beside affluence, and an ill-conceived war<lb/>
in ietnam which was the very symbol of<lb/>
the decadence of the established order It<lb/>
was. therefore, far nobler to drop out or<lb/>
the system than to join it and become a cog<lb/>
he wheel of a machine that was only<lb/>
.apable of spreading miser) and injustice.<lb/>
malism, the new dissidents charged.<lb/>
was incapable of reconciling itself with any<lb/>
value other than profit.<lb/>
Yet, while the majority ol Americans<lb/>
might hae secretly agreed with much oi<lb/>
what activists were saying the spectei of<lb/>
1 astern European style statism made them<lb/>
ful oi what the alternative to<lb/>
Capitalism might be. Moreover, it was a<lb/>
time of relative affluence and many could<lb/>
see no compelling reason for change. Fai<lb/>
better to suffer the evils of an admittedly<lb/>
an free market place than to have the<lb/>
government running the local hardware<lb/>
re and hamburger stand.<lb/>
Upon realizing the need to <lb/>
rkable and coherent alternatives to both<lb/>
Soviet style socialism and 20th century<lb/>
capitalism the activists from the I960<lb/>
came to a recognition that social change<lb/>
would not occur overnight. C onsequently,<lb/>
thev slowly began to be assimilated within<lb/>
the system that thev had struggled against<lb/>
tor so long. A iarge number of them,<lb/>
however, resisted actually joining the<lb/>
system. Some became a pan of the holis<lb/>
health and human potential movement-<lb/>
which are very slowlv transforming ideas<lb/>
about health care and wellness, others<lb/>
ried more stridently political movements<lb/>
and sought to devise alternative ap<lb/>
proaches to social transformation and still<lb/>
hers concerned themselves with<lb/>
economics or went into business.<lb/>
Some of these people began to work to<lb/>
restructure the marketplace itself by runn-<lb/>
ing electoral campaigns and calling for a<lb/>
democratization o( economic and<lb/>
workplace decision-making. Others fought<lb/>
to force universities, unions, and city and<lb/>
state governments to divest themselves of<lb/>
then holdings in corporations doing<lb/>
business in South Africa or. in some cases,<lb/>
with the defense department. Still others<lb/>
worked to shut down the nuclear power in-<lb/>
dustry and change the economic priorities<lb/>
of the country's largest utility companies.<lb/>
Through all of these battles a new<lb/>
awareness began to emerge among a few<lb/>
ex sixties radicals and religious leaders: it<lb/>
was not enough simply to identify<lb/>
unethical corporate behavior and fight<lb/>
against it. It was necessary to define what<lb/>
good corporate behavior was and to devise<lb/>
alternative ways of dealing with money so<lb/>
that investors might make a positive social<lb/>
. ontribution.<lb/>
As a consequence of this recognition the<lb/>
militant attitudes, which regarded making<lb/>
money with an ambivileni cynicism,<lb/>
loosened somewhat and the movement for<lb/>
socially responsible investment was born.<lb/>
lodav, though the net total of socially<lb/>
screened investments has quadrupled since<lb/>
19K1 and will continue to quadruple in<lb/>
even shorter periods of time for years to<lb/>
come, the entire sum of all of this nation's<lb/>
socially screened assets probably comes to<lb/>
less than one percent of the country's<lb/>
available investment capital. The ethical<lb/>
investment movement is at best, then, a<lb/>
guerilla campaign. Nevertheless, it is a<lb/>
movement that has, in the past fifteen<lb/>
years, redirected billions of investment<lb/>
dollars away from the dark and venal side<lb/>
ol corporate America and toward areas<lb/>
that adress real human needs such as: con-<lb/>
sumer co-ops, inner-city redevelopment,<lb/>
alternative energy, small businesses, family<lb/>
farms, worker-owned companies, as well<lb/>
as corporations with enlightened policies<lb/>
toward their employees, "heir products and<lb/>
the environment<lb/>
lodav there are scores o socially<lb/>
responsible investment firms which<lb/>
specialize in applying ethical criteria to the<lb/>
business ol making money. Different firms<lb/>
have different guidelines for determining<lb/>
where thev will or will not invest. Firm<lb/>
like the Calvert Social Investment Fund<lb/>
tend to focus more on avoiding in-<lb/>
vestments in corporations which violate<lb/>
their definition of social responsibility<lb/>
than on making more risky investments in<lb/>
companies with an explicit commitment to<lb/>
social responsibility. The Calvert Fund,<lb/>
which had the highest yielding money<lb/>
market fund in the country in 1983, con-<lb/>
siders a firm's performance regarding<lb/>
issues such as labor relations, the enviion-<lb/>
ment, South Africa, nuclear enrgy,<lb/>
weapons, and what the prospectus calls<lb/>
'commitment to human goals' in determin-<lb/>
ing whether or not it will invest in the firm.<lb/>
Simultaneously it claims to actively seek<lb/>
out companies that:<lb/>
1) Deliver safe products and services in<lb/>
ways that sustain the environment.<lb/>
2) Negotiate fairly with workers, provide<lb/>
opportunities for women, disadvantaged<lb/>
minorities, and others for whom equal op-<lb/>
portunity has been denied.<lb/>
3) Are managed with participation<lb/>
throughout the organization in defining<lb/>
and achieving objectives.<lb/>
4) Foster awareness of a commitment to<lb/>
human goals such as creativity, productivi-<lb/>
ty, self-respect, and responsibility.<lb/>
Other firms specializing in ethical in-<lb/>
vestments make additional requirements<lb/>
on business besides the ones enforced by<lb/>
Calvert. Working Assets, an investment<lb/>
company based in San Francisco, for ex-<lb/>
ample, informs its clients that it will not in-<lb/>
vest overseas nor will it finance mergers<lb/>
and acquisitions between companies and<lb/>
other such unproductive activities which<lb/>
do not produce jobs or goods for<lb/>
Americans. Working Assets says that it<lb/>
specifically seeks out solar and small<lb/>
business investment opportunities, but on-<lb/>
ly in a way that entails minimal risk to its<lb/>
investors. It doesn't, for example, invest in<lb/>
solar and other small businesses, but in-<lb/>
stead buys the guarenteed portion of Small<lb/>
Business Administration loans. This<lb/>
guarenteed portion (usually 90 percent of<lb/>
the original loan) is backed by the U.S.<lb/>
Treasury. Working Asset's return rate so<lb/>
far has been running about five tenths of a<lb/>
percent above the money market average.<lb/>
Perhaps Co-op America is the firm with<lb/>
the nui st explicit commitment to<lb/>
facilitating social transformation through<lb/>
the alternative investment strategy. It<lb/>
states as us goal: 'to link socially responsi-<lb/>
ble businesses and consumers m a national<lb/>
Third World Debt<lb/>
B JAMES NORTH<lb/>
Every Bolivian man, woman and child<lb/>
owes world financial institutions nearly<lb/>
Si.000. You reach this figure by dividing<lb/>
the South American country's popula-<lb/>
tion into its total debt. Some years ago,<lb/>
workers in the Bolivian tin industry - the<lb/>
heart of the nation's economy - were<lb/>
earning about one dollar a day. Even if<lb/>
that figure has now doubled, or even<lb/>
tripled, it would still take a miner with a<lb/>
family of five more than eight vear-<lb/>
over his share in the national debt - pro-<lb/>
vided the family spent their income on<lb/>
nothing else.<lb/>
It is exactly this sort of absurdity that<lb/>
prompted Fidel Castro to call a<lb/>
hemisphere-wide conference on the debt<lb/>
crisis here during the first week in<lb/>
August. In his opening remarks, he said<lb/>
he hoped for the broadest, mast<lb/>
pluralistic meeting in the history of<lb/>
Latin America.<lb/>
He may well have succeeded. A<lb/>
preponderance of the 1,200 delegates<lb/>
represented leftist and center-left<lb/>
movements across Latin America.<lb/>
Among those present were: Michael<lb/>
Manley, leader of the Jamaican opposi-<lb/>
tion; Sergio Ramirez, representing the<lb/>
Nicaraguan ?overnment; Liber Seregm,<lb/>
the Uruguayan leftist who served ten<lb/>
years as a political prisoner; the Nobel<lb/>
Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia<lb/>
Marquez; and Hortensia Bussi, the<lb/>
widow of Chilean President Salvador<lb/>
Allende. But there were more than a tew<lb/>
unusual visitors to Cuba. They included:<lb/>
Radomiro Tomic, the Christian<lb/>
Democrat who lost to Allende in the<lb/>
1970 Chilean elections; Adolfo Perez Es-<lb/>
quivel, the deeply religious Argentine<lb/>
human rights activist who holds the<lb/>
Nobel Peace Prize; and Miguel Angel<lb/>
Capriles, a colorful Venezuelan<lb/>
millionaire whose newspapers have long<lb/>
blasted Castro bur who told the gather-<lb/>
ing, T would even go to hell, or heaven'<lb/>
to discuss the debt crisis.<lb/>
The conference was very well organiz-<lb/>
ed. Speaker after speaker gave<lb/>
12-minute presentations to a generally<lb/>
attentive audience in the new Conven-<lb/>
tion Palace. Fidel Castro kept his pro-<lb/>
mise to be present for every speech over<lb/>
the five days the gathering lasted.<lb/>
Luis Ignacio da Silva, the Brazilian<lb/>
union leader who is popularly known as<lb/>
Lula, summarized the sense of the con-<lb/>
vention: 'Without being the least bit<lb/>
radical or adventurist, I would say to the<lb/>
companeros here that the Third World<lb/>
War has already started. It is a silent<lb/>
war, but no less sinister. Thi- war is<lb/>
crushing Brazil, Latin America and<lb/>
practically the entire Third World In-<lb/>
stead ol soldiers, children die; instead of<lb/>
millions wounded, there are millions ol<lb/>
unemployed; instead ol the destruction<lb/>
ol bridges, there is the destruction of<lb/>
 'ories, schools, hospitals and entire<lb/>
economies<lb/>
Lula's observations are supported bv<lb/>
tacts. By the end of this year, the World<lb/>
Bank estimates the Third Wold will owe<lb/>
a total ol $710 billion, up from $135<lb/>
billion in 1974. (Using other criteria, the<lb/>
Bank says the debt could be as large as<lb/>
S970 billion.) Latin America's share in<lb/>
this staggering figure is more than one-<lb/>
halt. By way of perspective, U.S.<lb/>
foreign aid, a sum many Americans<lb/>
regard as large, will total only about $12<lb/>
billion this year.<lb/>
Fidel Castro's thesis was that the debt<lb/>
cannot and should not be paid. The first<lb/>
part of his argument received an impor-<lb/>
tant boost on the eve of the conference,<lb/>
when newly-inaugurated Peruvian Presi-<lb/>
dent Alan Garcia announced that his<lb/>
country would devote only 10 percent of<lb/>
its export earnings over the next year to<lb/>
repaying its S14 billion debt. To repay<lb/>
the S3.7 billion it owes this year would<lb/>
have been impossible; Peru's total ex-<lb/>
ports will bring in only $3.1 billion.<lb/>
The second part of Castro's argu-<lb/>
ment, that repaying the debt would be<lb/>
unjust, also won varying degrees of ap-<lb/>
proval from the other speakers. Bolivian<lb/>
Minister of Planning Fredy Justiniano<lb/>
said, to loud applause, 'We will not con-<lb/>
tinue paying if to do so we have to take<lb/>
bread from the mouths of those who did<lb/>
not contract the debt in the first place<lb/>
Much of the immense sum was lent to<lb/>
countries that were ruled by repressive<lb/>
dictatorships, like Brazil, Chile and<lb/>
Argentina, or by bumbling, corrupt<lb/>
governments, like Mexico. During the<lb/>
70's, conservative Americans like Milton<lb/>
Friedman pointed to economic growth<lb/>
spurts in some of these nations as free-<lb/>
market miracles that would undercut<lb/>
support for the left in the Third World.<lb/>
Now that the apparent advances of that<lb/>
era have been obliterated like sand-<lb/>
castles after high tide, the Friedmanites<lb/>
are more judiciously keeping their<lb/>
thoughts to themselves.<lb/>
Perhaps the only bright side to the<lb/>
debt crisis was that it helped to discredit<lb/>
some of the military dictatorships and<lb/>
helped lead to the restoration of political<lb/>
democracy in places like Argentina,<lb/>
Brazil and Uruguay.<lb/>
But if the crisis continues, these<lb/>
democracies are threatened. The Inter-<lb/>
national Monetary Fund, denounced by<lb/>
nearly every speaker at the conference,<lb/>
nearly always imposes severe austerity<lb/>
measures on the debtor nations in return<lb/>
for approving further loans to them or<lb/>
guarenteeing their credit-worthiness.<lb/>
These measures include wage freezes,<lb/>
cuts in social spending and subsidies for<lb/>
basic necessities. The IMF, which is con-<lb/>
trolled by conservative bankers from the<lb/>
United States and Western Europe, also<lb/>
requires the Third World nations to<lb/>
reduce their tariffs, as a stimulus to free-<lb/>
market competition and efficiency. In<lb/>
fact, the flood of imports tends to<lb/>
destroy local industries and increase<lb/>
unemployment. Radomiro Tomic, the<lb/>
Chilean Christian Democrat, likened the<lb/>
IMF's exhortations to economic com-<lb/>
petition to 'the lion asking the lamb to<lb/>
compete, or the shark asking the seal<lb/>
No democratic government can im-<lb/>
pose such harsh measures for long<lb/>
without having to turn to repression.<lb/>
Speakers from nations like the<lb/>
Dominican Republic described what<lb/>
have come to be called 'IMF riots in the<lb/>
streets Perez Esquivel, the Nobel Peace<lb/>
laureate, warned, 'Human rights,<lb/>
foreign debt and democracy are pro-<lb/>
foundly interrelated He went on to<lb/>
recommend that Latin America go<lb/>
before the World Court and argue that<lb/>
the efforts to collect the debt are a viola-<lb/>
tion of human rights.<lb/>
The very fact that the debt crisis is so<lb/>
serious, and afflicts so many nations, is<lb/>
paradoxically a source of potential<lb/>
strength. If one country defaults or<lb/>
declares a moratorium on repayment,<lb/>
the international financial community<lb/>
could orchestrate an economic<lb/>
blockade. But if several nations act<lb/>
together, particularly if they include the<lb/>
larger debtors, then it is the banks that<lb/>
have the problem.<lb/>
Fidel Castro will not be able to lead a<lb/>
revolt of the debtors. At the very least,<lb/>
though, Cuba has furnished the more<lb/>
moderate governments with a bargain-<lb/>
ing ploy as they confront the IMF and<lb/>
the banks. They can use Castro's posi-<lb/>
tion of total intrasigence, as well as the<lb/>
internal pressure from their own people,<lb/>
as they argue for greatly relaxed terms of<lb/>
repayment.<lb/>
The legacy of the Havana conference<lb/>
will be an increased sense of hemispheric<lb/>
unity rather than any concrete action.<lb/>
As the Venezuelan press lord Miguel<lb/>
Angel Capriles explained (he told the<lb/>
delighted audience he was speaking as<lb/>
'an entrepreneur and a bourgeois<lb/>
capitalist'), Cuba had at least acted.<lb/>
'When the history of this period is writ-<lb/>
ten Capriles said in his rapid-fire<lb/>
Venezuelan accent, it will come to be<lb/>
recognized that, while other countries<lb/>
wasted time, Fidel Castro brought 1,200<lb/>
of us here to confront what may well be<lb/>
the greatest problem of this century<lb/>
accomplish its ends by supporting the<lb/>
development of socially and ecologically<lb/>
concerned businesses and cooperatives,<lb/>
and stimulating the development of new<lb/>
responsible producers of needed goods and<lb/>
services. The firm's revolving loan fund<lb/>
will be used for this purpose as will the<lb/>
development of the network of pro-<lb/>
gressive minded consumers and businesses<lb/>
which it hopes to put into contact with one<lb/>
another through the publication of its<lb/>
catalogues offering members discounts on<lb/>
merchandise, alternative job oppor-<lb/>
tunities, educational programs, and<lb/>
literature. Co-op America, then, is really<lb/>
the only major ethical investment firm<lb/>
which limits its inves'ments to businesses<lb/>
with an explicit commitment to social<lb/>
responsibility. Consequently, it shuns in-<lb/>
vestments in traditional companies that<lb/>
Calvert or Working Assets are likely to in-<lb/>
vest in such as Apple Computer or<lb/>
People's Fxpress.<lb/>
Portfolio managers for many of the<lb/>
country's larger socially sensitive accounts<lb/>
note that the ethical criteria that their firms<lb/>
emplov automatically rule out about a<lb/>
third of the country's major corporations.<lb/>
But the vast majority, they say, fall into a<lb/>
gray area. Examples of companies which<lb/>
operate in the gray zone, according to<lb/>
Steve Moody (a portfolio manager for<lb/>
U.S. Trust's social accounts) is Howard<lb/>
Paper, the country's leading manufacturer<lb/>
of recycled paper. The product that it<lb/>
manufactures scores high among en-<lb/>
vironmentalists because it preserves scarce<lb/>
resources - trees. Vet. Howard Paper has<lb/>
also had labor problem- and has refused to<lb/>
meet some pollution control requirements<lb/>
These considerations have consigned the<lb/>
company to an ambivileni status in the<lb/>
minds of most ethical investors. The same<lb/>
can be said of Magma Power, whose<lb/>
development of geothermai power has<lb/>
made it one o the best utility buys ol the<lb/>
past decade. Simultaneously, however, the<lb/>
Sierra Club has been critical of the power<lb/>
company for environmental reasons. Port-<lb/>
folio managers for ethical investment com-<lb/>
panies such as Calvert and Working<lb/>
Assets, therefore, evaluate each company<lb/>
on a ase bv case basis. In each of the par-<lb/>
ticular cases mentioned above the com-<lb/>
panies involved decided to maintain their<lb/>
investments for the present. Co-op<lb/>
-menca, however, avoids making such<lb/>
decisions bv refusing to invest in ques-<lb/>
nable companies altogethei<lb/>
What the new trend toward socially<lb/>
responsible investment represents, in<lb/>
general terms, is an attempt to force the<lb/>
marketplace to respond to values other<lb/>
than profit. It is an attempt to go beyond<lb/>
ad-hoc consumer boycotts and divestment<lb/>
protests and to establish a comprehensive<lb/>
criteria which can inject values like con-<lb/>
cern for community, the environment, and<lb/>
a commitment to democracy into a<lb/>
decision-making process that has previous-<lb/>
ly considered profit to be the dominant, if<lb/>
not the only value which it cherishes. To<lb/>
do this is, in some sense, to create a non-<lb/>
market market - that is. a market in which<lb/>
profit is not the sole determinant of market<lb/>
decisions, but is still something which is<lb/>
considered since products must compete. It<lb/>
is to humanize the American marketplace.<lb/>
Of course, pursuing an ethical investment<lb/>
strategy is only one approach to acheiving<lb/>
this end and it is not even particular the<lb/>
most effective approach. Perhaps its' real<lb/>
value as a strategy lies in the fact that it<lb/>
provides a model for how businesses and<lb/>
lending institutions can incorporate ethical<lb/>
considerations into economic decision-<lb/>
making. The Calvert Fund has alreadv<lb/>
served this purpose in relation to the South<lb/>
African divestment movement. Divestment<lb/>
proponents quickly pointed out to univer-<lb/>
sity officials who claimed that divestment<lb/>
would result in a loss of revenue for the<lb/>
university that the Calvert Fund has<lb/>
scrupulously avoided investments in South<lb/>
Africa since its inception. In 1983,however<lb/>
its money market fund enjoyed the highest<lb/>
rate of return in the nation.<lb/>
In this sense the ethical investment<lb/>
movement certainly has a role to plav and<lb/>
its continued growth can only lend addi-<lb/>
tional strength to the other" movements<lb/>
that are seeking to humanize our economy.<lb/>
REASANS<lb/>
constructive<lb/>
ehgagbment<lb/>
taceaeaessesaeaimtamseUi<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0006"/><lb/>
I HI EASTC ROI INIAN<lb/>
M l si 26, is8<lb/>
Madonna, Baseball Fans Strike Out In Summer<lb/>
C oniinued From Page l<lb/>
the manager ol Chico's Mexican<lb/>
restaurant.<lb/>
h students were released on<lb/>
oond, pending a coun date<lb/>
Eighteen lawsuits against the<lb/>
owners ol Village Green Apart-<lb/>
ments have been settled out of<lb/>
court, a Greenville attorney said<lb/>
I he suns were filed in connec-<lb/>
tion with the March 1W explo<lb/>
?on ai Village Green pan<lb/>
ments, which killed one person.<lb/>
an ECl student - and in-<lb/>
jured ai least a doen more<lb/>
A bright blue and white draw-<lb/>
ing showing a scar belt comint<lb/>
together will he used on<lb/>
Phamplets, bumper stickers and<lb/>
Pledge cards as a part of the<lb/>
state s campaign to urge<lb/>
travellers to buckle up their<lb/>
seatbealts, which will become<lb/>
mandaton law on Oct. l.<lb/>
The General Assembly approv-<lb/>
ed the la earlier this year, but<lb/>
$25 violations won't go into ef-<lb/>
fect until Dec. 31, 1986 No<lb/>
driver's license or insurance<lb/>
points will be given for a viola-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Termed as one of the biggest<lb/>
events in rock history since<lb/>
Woodstock, the 16-hour Live Aid<lb/>
concert generated millions of<lb/>
dollars for the African Reliel<lb/>
Hind. Watched by more than 90<lb/>
million people via satelite, the Ju-<lb/>
lv concert featured such stars as<lb/>
David Bowie, Tina Turner Mick<lb/>
I agger and Phil Collins<lb/>
Coke are it? After some<lb/>
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oi the cola giant. Under the<lb/>
design of Murjani International<lb/>
Ltd  the New York Company<lb/>
that made the Gloria Vanderbilt<lb/>
label a hit - the latest Coke<lb/>
fashions were put on the market<lb/>
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Baseball fans weren't the only<lb/>
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Madonna fans had the chance to<lb/>
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But, the heat was on between<lb/>
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September issues to the<lb/>
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Two major airline crashes,<lb/>
one near Dallas and the other a<lb/>
Japan Air Lines Jet - almost a<lb/>
week a part, left hundreds of<lb/>
passengers dead.<lb/>
I he Delta Air I mes flight<lb/>
191, left 133 people dead, crashed<lb/>
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Only tour people survived the<lb/>
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mg off tornados, causing f<lb/>
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people from theii homes ?<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
s News<lb/>
With gusts ol wmds ol i<lb/>
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residences went tor days Ait)<lb/>
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ma and Florida, da<lb/>
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Ohio native and ECl<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Maguerite<lb/>
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fessoi Perr) ?<lb/>
faculty in Januj<lb/>
unrank<lb/>
She has beer<lb/>
French and sered a chaii<lb/>
the department ol 1 v<lb/>
Languages and Literature<lb/>
a number of years<lb/>
"Her vouthful look dec<lb/>
the facts in<lb/>
said. Mrs Per ' a seen<lb/>
much progress and man<lb/>
milestones crossed drmg her<lb/>
man years here '<lb/>
Professor Perry returned<lb/>
last seek after spending<lb/>
several weeks of summer vaca-<lb/>
tion in Pans. She was out jog-<lb/>
ging the day prior to convoca-<lb/>
tion . <lb/>
-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0007"/><lb/>
s News I Alumni Center Helps Current Students<lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1985<lb/>
 nds ol more<lb/>
1 ousiana<lb/>
w a state ot<lb/>
11 I) as 20,000<lb/>
days Mthout<lb/>
1<lb/>
Africa, anti-<lb/>
ethnic protests<lb/>
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Kenneth R.<lb/>
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By ELIZABETH PAGE<lb/>
According to the ECU Alumni<lb/>
? enter, students are "alumni in<lb/>
residence<lb/>
According to Assistant Direc-<lb/>
tor ol Alumn. Affairs Page<lb/>
Aman. students are only students<lb/>
tor tour or five years, but they<lb/>
are alumn. for the rest of their<lb/>
lives "We want graduates to<lb/>
maintain contact with ECU as<lb/>
their lives change said Aman.<lb/>
The best time to begin those ties<lb/>
is while they are still students, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We want students to know<lb/>
about the services and relation-<lb/>
ships available to them through<lb/>
the Alumni Association said<lb/>
Aman ECU would train the<lb/>
students to be alumni.<lb/>
Students get new jobs and<lb/>
often times move away to an<lb/>
unknown region. The Alumni<lb/>
Center is trying to make an "ex-<lb/>
tended family" that would be<lb/>
very beneficial to the young<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
Through the Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion and alumni chapter involve-<lb/>
ment, today's students can<lb/>
graduate with ready contacts<lb/>
from the Alumni Association,<lb/>
which in many instances can ease<lb/>
the situation of being far away in<lb/>
a new job.<lb/>
According to Aman, many<lb/>
graduates have a hard time com-<lb/>
ing back to campus for alumni<lb/>
functions. Aman's goal is to<lb/>
make students more aware of the<lb/>
Alumni Association and its ser-<lb/>
vices, which would in turn make<lb/>
young alumni more aware of<lb/>
these functions.<lb/>
The ECU Ambassadors, a stu-<lb/>
dent group of official University<lb/>
representatives, provides a<lb/>
natural liason between the<lb/>
students and alumni. Sponsored<lb/>
by the Office of Institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement, Ambassadors work<lb/>
closely with the Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion hosting special functions on<lb/>
campus for the chancellor,<lb/>
visting lecturers and artists, or<lb/>
prospective students. Am-<lb/>
bassadors also conduct campus<lb/>
tours, speak on recruiting trips<lb/>
with the Admissions Office and<lb/>
call alumni during the Annual<lb/>
Giving telefund. They also help<lb/>
keep alumni up with the happen-<lb/>
ings on the campus and with the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Ultimately Aman hopes to pro-<lb/>
vide more programs linking cur-<lb/>
rent students with alumni.<lb/>
Aman's main objective is to keep<lb/>
ECU people in touch. "We simp-<lb/>
ly want to connect students and<lb/>
alumni to maximize benefits for<lb/>
everyone Aman added.<lb/>
"Anyone who moves to a new<lb/>
place needs a contact. In our fast-<lb/>
paced world, people are looking<lb/>
for a common ground. What bet-<lb/>
ter shared experience is there to<lb/>
build upon than the same alma<lb/>
mater? said Aman.<lb/>
Faculty Meet<lb/>
1 eadership Development, the<lb/>
Center tor Applied Technology,<lb/>
ihe Regional Development In-<lb/>
stitute and others, we have<lb/>
tremendous outreach programs<lb/>
He said ECU's 996 full time<lb/>
faculty produced 59 books and<lb/>
monographs last year for a 28 per<lb/>
cent increase and contributed 400<lb/>
articles and chapters to the<lb/>
literature for a 10 per cent in-<lb/>
crease. New or renewed grants<lb/>
for research at the university<lb/>
reach $7 million a year, Volpe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bids for contracts for construc-<lb/>
tion of the major new general<lb/>
classroom building are to be<lb/>
opened Tuesday with work to<lb/>
begin on the mid-campus site in<lb/>
about a month. For the next two<lb/>
years, this construction of a<lb/>
three-story, 162,700 square foot<lb/>
structure will be the major<lb/>
building project on campus.<lb/>
The building itself will be the<lb/>
first new construction on the<lb/>
main campus in more than 10<lb/>
years, but in the meantime the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine com-<lb/>
plex has been developed in west<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Historic Wright Auditorium is<lb/>
to be closed for a final phase of a<lb/>
complete renovation to provide<lb/>
the university with a first-class,<lb/>
modern concert hall. A complete<lb/>
renovation of Cotten Hall, one of<lb/>
the campus's original residence<lb/>
halls, was completed last week in<lb/>
time.<lb/>
TONY ?UMLE ? ECU Ntwi 6ur??u<lb/>
hv ? r!n!nnl.?te,r' StUdentS are 'A,umnl ln Residence. Go<lb/>
by the Center today for more details.<lb/>
THANKS!<lb/>
Private Men's Care<lb/>
Available At Center!<lb/>
Men's health care is provided<lb/>
by the Student Health Center.<lb/>
The maie health program consists<lb/>
o education and the prevention,<lb/>
diagnosis and treatment of health<lb/>
problems. All services are con-<lb/>
idefmaf.<lb/>
Educational programs offered<lb/>
to male students cover a variety<lb/>
of men's health issues including<lb/>
contraception, self-testicle ex-<lb/>
amination and sexually transmit-<lb/>
ted diseases. Other topics are of-<lb/>
fered on demand. These pro-<lb/>
grams are available to dormitory<lb/>
students and other campus<lb/>
groups. A contraception class is<lb/>
held twice a week at the Student<lb/>
Health Center Wednesdays at 2<lb/>
p.m. for females and males.<lb/>
One of the main goals of the<lb/>
Student Health Center is for all<lb/>
male students to learn how to do<lb/>
a simple three minute, monthly<lb/>
self-testicle examination. Cancer<lb/>
of the testes ? the male<lb/>
reproductive glands ? is one of<lb/>
the most common cancers in men<lb/>
15-34 years of age. It accounts<lb/>
for 12 percent of all cancer deaths<lb/>
in this age group. If discovered in<lb/>
the early stages, testicular cancer<lb/>
can be treated promptly and ef-<lb/>
fectively.<lb/>
It's important for all males to<lb/>
take the time to learn the basic<lb/>
facts about this type of cancer ?<lb/>
it's symptoms, treatments and<lb/>
what one can do to get the help<lb/>
you need when it counts.<lb/>
Brochures and other informa-<lb/>
tion about men's health are also<lb/>
available at the health center,in-<lb/>
cluding topics such as eating<lb/>
disorders, diet and nutrition,<lb/>
cancer, high blood pressure, sex-<lb/>
ual dysfunctions, depression and<lb/>
alcohol and drugs.<lb/>
Tests for sexually transmitted<lb/>
diseases, herpes and the evalua-<lb/>
tion of other men's health pro-<lb/>
blems are also available. Pro-<lb/>
phylactics may also be obtained<lb/>
for a minimal fee through the<lb/>
Pharmacy.<lb/>
More information about the<lb/>
men's health program may be ob-<lb/>
tained by calling 757-6841 or by<lb/>
stopping by the Student Health<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
We at allje iEaat (UarDlfnian would like<lb/>
to express our appreciation to the numerous mer-<lb/>
chants who participated in our Welcome Back<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
We also encourage our readers to patronize<lb/>
these businesses that support East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Begins<lb/>
45th Year<lb/>
Thg Chairman of ECU's<lb/>
Board of Trustees noted at the<lb/>
faculty convocation held last<lb/>
week that one professor has<lb/>
neld her post for 45 of the in-<lb/>
stitutioi 's " academic years.<lb/>
"It is heart warming for me<lb/>
to know that when spring<lb/>
semester begins in January,<lb/>
Maguerite Perry will be enter-<lb/>
ing her 46th year as a faculty<lb/>
member said C. Ralph<lb/>
Kinsey Jr of Charlotte. Pro-<lb/>
fessor Perry joined the ECU<lb/>
faculty in January, 1940, as an<lb/>
unranked instructor.<lb/>
She has been professor of<lb/>
French and served as chair of<lb/>
the department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literature for<lb/>
a number of years.<lb/>
"Her youthful looks deceive<lb/>
the facts in this case Kinsey<lb/>
said. "Mrs. Perry has seen<lb/>
much progress and many<lb/>
milestones crossed during her<lb/>
many years here<lb/>
Professor Perry returned<lb/>
last week after spending<lb/>
several weeks of summer vaca-<lb/>
tion in Paris. She was out jog-<lb/>
ging the day prior to convoca-<lb/>
tion. ?<lb/>
ibu know the best place to get pizza at L a.m.<lb/>
Here's the best place to get the cash to buy it.<lb/>
hlh r U' locations ionium nt<lb/>
to Fjist Carolina I 'nit rsity<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0009"/><lb/>
IHl fcAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 185<lb/>
?I'<lb/>
Colleges Convincing Trustees To Divest<lb/>
H<lb/>
I<lb/>
nkki ad food thru<lb/>
September 1 1985<lb/>
? opt Labor Day Monday<lb/>
IMS for your shopping<lb/>
soiwtiNOfiet<lb/>
<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
? fcrf<lb/>
In January, Edward<lb/>
nnings, presideni of the<lb/>
53,000 student Ohio State<lb/>
"? was emphatic:<lb/>
State would not sell its<lb/>
in companies that do<lb/>
;ss m segregationist South<lb/>
While apartheid ? South<lb/>
laws ot racial segrega-<lb/>
was "appalling Jenn-<lb/>
explained at the time that<lb/>
would buy and sell stocks<lb/>
"the best possible in-<lb/>
not b judging a com-<lb/>
ity's racial policies.<lb/>
H less than six months later,<lb/>
igs com meed OSU's<lb/>
to sell about $3.3 million<lb/>
of interests in firms with<lb/>
African operations, plus<lb/>
5 million over the next<lb/>
I happened in the interim<lb/>
 the political and<lb/>
 nds are changing in<lb/>
lege boardrooms,<lb/>
more schools are ben-<lb/>
demands to sell<lb/>
we ei indirect, in<lb/>
v-<lb/>
sin<lb/>
iartl<lb/>
illd<lb/>
as! spring, when<lb/>
leid protests erupted<lb/>
imated 60 campuses.<lb/>
New Mexico univer-<lb/>
d plans to<lb/>
si re in certain<lb/>
S t a i<lb/>
' w n,<lb/>
the<lb/>
State University of New York<lb/>
system, Washington, Illinois and<lb/>
Minnesota officials have promis-<lb/>
ed to sell all or part of their in-<lb/>
terests in the companies.<lb/>
The American Committee on<lb/>
Africa, which has organized<lb/>
many campus anti-apartheid ac-<lb/>
tivities, calculates American col-<lb/>
leges sold ? or promised to sell<lb/>
? some $57 million in South<lb/>
African stocks during the first six<lb/>
months of 1985.<lb/>
At Ohio State, the change<lb/>
came after a series of campus<lb/>
protests, a petition drive and a<lb/>
student group that made com-<lb/>
mon cause with a union of OSU<lb/>
workers.<lb/>
In January, students held a<lb/>
press conference in front of Jenn-<lb/>
ings' office. In February, OSl<lb/>
track star George Nicholas<lb/>
galvanized part of the student<lb/>
body by kneeling during the play-<lb/>
ing of the national anthem at a<lb/>
track meet, and then refusing to<lb/>
run for OSL; until it divested<lb/>
itself of its interests in South<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
"It got people thinking<lb/>
Nicholas explains. "(Then) we<lb/>
had to do a lot of education.<lb/>
Some didn't think the university<lb/>
should take a political stand by<lb/>
divesting, or were worried their<lb/>
tuition would go up if South<lb/>
African holdings verc<lb/>
withdrawn<lb/>
Nicholas then formed Students<lb/>
United Against Apartheid.<lb/>
Yet only about 50 students ac-<lb/>
tually joined.<lb/>
"We were disappointed by<lb/>
that Nicholas recalls<lb/>
But Nicholas hooked the tiny<lb/>
group up with the campus<lb/>
chapter of the Communications<lb/>
Workers of America. The 2500<lb/>
members of CWA were<lb/>
negotiating a new contract with<lb/>
the trustees, and rapidly agreed<lb/>
to make divestiture a labor issue<lb/>
in the negotiations.<lb/>
Critics called the alliance a<lb/>
marriage of convenience to heat<lb/>
up lukewarm campus reaction to<lb/>
both groups' demands.<lb/>
Union members trained<lb/>
students in civil disobedience tac-<lb/>
tics, offered to pay legal fees if<lb/>
students were arrested, helped<lb/>
circulate a divestiture petition<lb/>
that some 27(X) students eventual-<lb/>
ly signed and printed anti-<lb/>
apartheid fivers and posters.<lb/>
In turn, SUAA members<lb/>
picketed in support of the union's<lb/>
position.<lb/>
The protest that was burning<lb/>
across main campusses in the<lb/>
spring finally made it to OSl in<lb/>
May, when nearly 4(X) students<lb/>
and workers disrupted a trustees'<lb/>
meeting by hanging on a room<lb/>
divider, chanting and pursuing<lb/>
trustees as they hurried from the<lb/>
scene under police protect urn.<lb/>
Police arested one union<lb/>
member.<lb/>
Jennings and the trustees<lb/>
changed their minds soon<lb/>
thereafter.<lb/>
A week later, the trustees sign-<lb/>
ed a new union contract. At its<lb/>
next meeting, on June 7th, the<lb/>
board agreed to divestiture by a<lb/>
6-3 vote.<lb/>
Nicholas thinks the trustees<lb/>
simply read the handwriting on<lb/>
the wall.<lb/>
"I think they figured that in a<lb/>
few years they'll be forced to<lb/>
divest (by a state law) anyway,<lb/>
and that time might not be as<lb/>
economically beneficial (as sell-<lb/>
ing now) Nicholas speculates.<lb/>
"Without the union, I don't<lb/>
think it would have happened<lb/>
says Stephanie Gussler, a<lb/>
sophomore communications ma-<lb/>
jor. "(It) had the financial<lb/>
resources, the numbers, the<lb/>
negotiating and legal expertise. It<lb/>
was essential<lb/>
No trustees are willing to say<lb/>
the union pressure changed their<lb/>
mind, though a few concede stu-<lb/>
dent pressure played a role.<lb/>
"Basically, we (the trustees)<lb/>
were surprised by the student<lb/>
protests asserts Trustee Joe<lb/>
Teas ford.<lb/>
"Campuses are remarkably<lb/>
placid these days he explains.<lb/>
"To me, it was most refreshing<lb/>
that students were interested in<lb/>
something<lb/>
Teasford thinks most trustees<lb/>
changed their minds because Jen-<lb/>
nings changed his.<lb/>
In introducing the proposal to<lb/>
sell the stocks, Jennings called<lb/>
apartheid "morally, socially and<lb/>
economically bankrupt and<lb/>
said OSU should not associate<lb/>
with it, regardless of the profit<lb/>
lost on the investments sold<lb/>
Teasford add, that "we were<lb/>
satisfied that divestment over<lb/>
time would cause no economic<lb/>
loss. In fact, recent studies show<lb/>
that universities that divest over<lb/>
time have made a profit<lb/>
??????????????????????????<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0012"/><lb/>
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1 HI i M.xkol NJAN<lb/>
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ter Offers<lb/>
ECU Minority Organizations Pursue Goals, Plan Events Pregnancy<lb/>
i<lb/>
H' complet<lb/>
B fMKOI.I)JOM-K<lb/>
Students interested m pro<lb/>
moting academic justice to E l<lb/>
assisting in community ac<lb/>
tivities, should consider joining<lb/>
one ol the campus' mam service<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
V- a member of ECU's Stu<lb/>
dent Union, freshmen will tuh.<lb/>
the doors ol entertainment open<lb/>
immediately. You'll have a sa in<lb/>
what dims will be presented at<lb/>
Mendenhall or help plan tot the<lb/>
annual majoi concert commit<lb/>
lins past spring, II enjoyed<lb/>
  music ol the Kinks, James<lb/>
Brown and the corned ol la<lb/>
Lenno Watch tor upcoming<lb/>
membership drives in September<lb/>
In add<lb/>
ma) find they want t me a<lb/>
member ot the Minors'<lb/>
 ommittee, which has sp<lb/>
programs such as International<lb/>
Week, Jewish and Black r<lb/>
Festivals, and other pi .<lb/>
geared towards minority<lb/>
awareness.<lb/>
Eric Hughes, 1st vice presid<lb/>
S,avic Researcher, Education Prof Win Awards<lb/>
ol the I <lb/>
Huj<lb/>
Dr. Maria B. Malby, professo<lb/>
? '?? and Germai<lb/>
Slavn studies<lb/>
Patri, ia I nders<lb/>
fntarv education fa ult i<lb/>
f ECU's 1985 <lb/>
sv' teaching e,<lb/>
ds<lb/>
;e S i ierald Arnold ol<lb/>
x A c Appeals, presid<lb/>
ai<lb/>
nvocatio<lb/>
l' v lay. 1 ,i,<lb/>
. $5 ?<lb/>
Malbv ot the horeign<lb/>
I<lb/>
R<lb/>
md Di<lb/>
?ived ?<lb/>
v s lav s<lb/>
auard. Both awards are membei ol Phi Beta Kappa<lb/>
alumni<lb/>
presented annually to recipients<lb/>
?sen by the 1(1 I ea?, hing I I<lb/>
fectivenessommittee.<lb/>
A native ol Zagreb,<lb/>
Yugoslavia, Dr. Malby received<lb/>
an B degree in German from<lb/>
Florida State University, a<lb/>
mastei "s degree in Russiai<lb/>
Harvard and the PhD in Sla<lb/>
St ild<lb/>
ii Harva<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Delta Phi and the authoi ol many<lb/>
Slavic studies research papers and<lb/>
articles, she ha membei<lb/>
the II faculty since 1970<lb/>
Di ; pro.<lb/>
k'w education,<lb/>
School ol Fdu( atii ned the<lb/>
ECU facult ? She is a<lb/>
spec<lb/>
read and iCs to<lb/>
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Miss and has undergraduate<lb/>
and master's degrees from I<lb/>
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ite in education from the 1 n<lb/>
I Georgia, she<lb/>
the elementary schools<lb/>
Mississippi and was<lb/>
faculty of Iowa Wesleyan i<lb/>
before coming to E( I<lb/>
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Students<lb/>
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NEEDED<lb/>
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the father andor other tatmlv<lb/>
members, of the hild it he needs<lb/>
counseling Williams said.<lb/>
The Center is located in the I ee<lb/>
Building at 111 F. 3rd St Green-<lb/>
ville. The number to call tor<lb/>
24-hour, tree, confidential<lb/>
counseling is 757-0003.<lb/>
Search Will<lb/>
Begin For<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
Jenkins retired in 1978, Kinsey<lb/>
said. "To me, this means that<lb/>
the communications, mutual<lb/>
respect and sharing of con-<lb/>
cerns and interests within the<lb/>
University family have been<lb/>
time tested and exercised ?<lb/>
creating a deep sense of trust<lb/>
and understanding. We will be<lb/>
reaching for new horizons<lb/>
together<lb/>
He said he expects the selec-<lb/>
tion committee to be<lb/>
established in Januaary or<lb/>
February and that Howell and<lb/>
president Friday will be invited<lb/>
to meet with the group to<lb/>
share ideas, advice and<lb/>
guidance.<lb/>
President Friday himself<lb/>
will retire m Julv 1986.<lb/>
SGA Plans For 1985 Year<lb/>
Bv LISA nWYKR<lb/>
Stiff Wrllrt<lb/>
Students old and new can look<lb/>
forward to new and revamped<lb/>
services ottered bv the Student<lb/>
Government Association in-<lb/>
cluding carpet foi dorm students,<lb/>
Parents Day and programming<lb/>
new information into the<lb/>
I reasui.<lb/>
()ne ol the new? set ? ices ol<lb/>
?d bv the SGA is carpet tor<lb/>
dorm students, sold at reduced<lb/>
prices bv Wholesale Carpets 11,<lb/>
Brown sai<lb/>
ceeds will j<lb/>
EC I Pirat<lb/>
(hi the ?<lb/>
Pai<lb/>
may get<lb/>
and regi<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Due t<lb/>
Walk<lb/>
w eekend<lb/>
S , A<lb/>
a S <lb/>
el sale pro-<lb/>
ards funding the<lb/>
iervice.<lb/>
September<lb/>
te hosting<lb/>
i; crested<lb/>
booklet<lb/>
the SGA<lb/>
New<lb/>
Student Initiation to Campus<lb/>
Organizations program held this<lb/>
summer. Brown said September<lb/>
1 1 has been set aside foi another<lb/>
NSICO meeting.<lb/>
I he program otters new<lb/>
students various information<lb/>
about campus organizations, and<lb/>
also gives them a chance to meet<lb/>
with campus groups. Location<lb/>
the Septembei meeting will be<lb/>
in front of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store. Brown said.<lb/>
More up-to-date budget finan-<lb/>
cing records of campus organiza-<lb/>
tions has kept SGA Treasurer<lb/>
Tony Braswell busy in the past<lb/>
weeks. Braswell and Robert Wai<lb/>
ten are putting the final touches<lb/>
ol a program tor the new SGA<lb/>
computer system installed last<lb/>
spring. Braswell said the financial<lb/>
package will keep all student<lb/>
groups' spending in a more f i<lb/>
mal and accurate manner<lb/>
Other services offered by the<lb/>
SGA include National Student<lb/>
Savings c ards, which offered dis-<lb/>
counts at various Greenville<lb/>
stores. Brown said the cards<lb/>
would be distributed in mid-<lb/>
September.<lb/>
or those wishing to become<lb/>
involved m SGA activities<lb/>
without going through an elec-<lb/>
tion process may do so through<lb/>
the Student Government<lb/>
Freshmen Aide Program. Brown<lb/>
explained that any student may<lb/>
volunteer or be appointed to cer-<lb/>
tain activities offered by the<lb/>
SGA Information may be picked<lb/>
up in the SGA office or .a<lb/>
5rS611 cm. 218 for more<lb/>
details.<lb/>
"Any student who comes by<lb/>
the SCiA office can have a place<lb/>
in student government<lb/>
activities Brow n said.<lb/>
FALL ID SCHEDULE<lb/>
August 2S $:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
September 42:30p.m. to 3:30p.m.<lb/>
September 112:30p.m. to 3:30p.m.<lb/>
September 132:30p.m. to 4:30p.m.<lb/>
September IS2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m<lb/>
September 252:30p.m. to 3:30 p.m<lb/>
September 272:30p.m. to 4:30p.m<lb/>
r<lb/>
Get the<lb/>
word out<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
id The East Carolinian<lb/>
uHttf<lb/>
THE<lb/>
HEADHUNTER<lb/>
MEN'S HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
RIVERGATE SHOPPI NG CENTER<lb/>
A complete line of Roffler &amp; Sebring Products<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MONFri. 8:00to6:00<lb/>
Sat. 8:00 to 12:00<lb/>
9' 9 "2 3855<lb/>
Sweet Carolines Welcomes All ECU Students Back to Greenville<lb/>
I r, i<lb/>
P ultn<lb/>
v ,<lb/>
:AY<lb/>
SunJu<lb/>
1 i.(tt<lb/>
:AV<lb/>
&amp;&amp;<lb/>
.WELT<lb/>
CAROLINES<lb/>
f 1<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
I HI t AS! AKOi sJAN<lb/>
Al t.l SI 26tti<lb/>
Education Department Informs IRS On Loan Defaulters<lb/>
(CPS) ? In its latest effort to<lb/>
dramatize how tough it's getting,<lb/>
the Education department last<lb/>
week said it would sic the Internal<lb/>
Revenue Service on current and<lb/>
former students who don't repay<lb/>
their student loans<lb/>
The department says defaulters<lb/>
won'l get their 1985 or 1986 tax<lb/>
refunds until they repay their<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
Department officials predict<lb/>
the agreement with the IRS will<lb/>
recoup $50 million to $250<lb/>
million in past due financial<lb/>
repayments next year.<lb/>
Thev hope to corral almost 80<lb/>
percent of the scofflaws.<lb/>
The department has publicized<lb/>
ambitious recovery programs<lb/>
etore, including ongoing media<lb/>
events like impounding<lb/>
defaulters' cars and temporarily<lb/>
kicking some schools out of<lb/>
financial aid programs.<lb/>
This time, officials add, the<lb/>
recovered money probably won't<lb/>
go directly back into student aid.<lb/>
In all, current and former<lb/>
students still owe anywhere from<lb/>
$1 billion to $5 billion, according<lb/>
to various estimates.<lb/>
"This is the largest single ef-<lb/>
fort in terms of money to be<lb/>
returned to the U.S. Treasury<lb/>
contends Dick Hastings, the<lb/>
department's director of debt col-<lb/>
lection and management<lb/>
assistance services.<lb/>
"About 82 percent o the<lb/>
defaulters on our data base get<lb/>
income tax refunds he claims.<lb/>
Hastings plans to mail final<lb/>
r<lb/>
Yamaha puts the finishing<lb/>
ar - touch on<lb/>
winning<lb/>
$1?50<lb/>
$1700<lb/>
: ? ??? " v . - .1- <lb/>
P a. v  S.<lb/>
lake i ?<lb/>
? ?i ?<lb/>
' ?'? ; a ? tat<lb/>
" i ?<lb/>
? ? .? ? ?<lb/>
Stan's Cycle Centet, Inc.<lb/>
YAMAHA<lb/>
Built for the fun of it<lb/>
? Liu's.Orieiitals<lb/>
 Sale<lb/>
H all Hangings, Laterns,<lb/>
Unique gifts and Decorations<lb/>
for your room.<lb/>
Hours Jig Mnn Fr. 71 c -<lb/>
nfr ;?-r  'W Shopping Cento- 752 l75t<lb/>
payment notices to about one<lb/>
million defaulters this month,<lb/>
giving them iwo months to pay<lb/>
up or lose their 1985 refunds.<lb/>
State agencies will threaten to<lb/>
withhold 1986 refunds from<lb/>
another million defaulters.<lb/>
"We've agreed to accept 2.3<lb/>
million referrals from the Educa-<lb/>
tion Department, accounting for<lb/>
$31 billion in debts affirms<lb/>
IRS spokesman Steve Pyrek.<lb/>
"We'll take a tape from ED<lb/>
with defaulters' names to match<lb/>
with our tape of people getting<lb/>
refunds he explains.<lb/>
During (he two-year program,<lb/>
the IRS can withhold defaulters'<lb/>
returns until all loan obligations<lb/>
are paid.<lb/>
For example, if a defaulter ex-<lb/>
pects a $500 1985 refund and<lb/>
owes $1,000, the IRS will<lb/>
withhold refunds in 198 and<lb/>
1986<lb/>
'We'll send ihe money<lb/>
wherever the ED wants, and send<lb/>
the defaulter a note saying where<lb/>
the money went Pyrek reports<lb/>
"It's not only not likely the<lb/>
money will go back into student<lb/>
aid funding, but it's most definite<lb/>
it will go to the U.S. Treasury<lb/>
Hastings says. "That, after all, is<lb/>
where student aid comes from<lb/>
To get it back in 1982, federal<lb/>
attorneys in Philadelphia im-<lb/>
pounded the cars of 17 area<lb/>
detaulters as collateral against<lb/>
their overdue loan payments.<lb/>
That same year, then ?ED<lb/>
Secretary Terrel Bell temporarily<lb/>
withheld student aid funds from<lb/>
400 schools with default rates<lb/>
over 25 percent<lb/>
l asi year, Congress authorized<lb/>
ED officials to hire private<lb/>
lawyers to collect past due ac<lb/>
counts, and reported defaulters<lb/>
to private credit rating agencies.<lb/>
"Ihe credit agency program<lb/>
was extremely successful<lb/>
Hastings notes. "It has doubled<lb/>
the amount collected since<lb/>
1981<lb/>
Some states let schools<lb/>
withhold defaulters' college<lb/>
transcripts. A Kansas bill would<lb/>
have prevented defaulters'<lb/>
children from getting slate finan-<lb/>
cial aid.<lb/>
Despite the high rum-payment<lb/>
rate, a spring, 1985 study bv the<lb/>
Highter Education Services Cor<lb/>
poration suggests most defaulters<lb/>
are unemployed or ignorant of<lb/>
repayment schedules<lb/>
Most want to repay the debts<lb/>
but are financially unable, the<lb/>
study says.<lb/>
"There's a phone number on<lb/>
the top of ihe final notice ED'<lb/>
Hastings counters. "We can<lb/>
work out arrangement tor partial<lb/>
payment if the defaulter can't<lb/>
pay it all at once<lb/>
"We're not the easiest guys on<lb/>
the block to get along with he<lb/>
admits, "but you certainly can<lb/>
work with us<lb/>
"We hope that the people<lb/>
(who) aren't being responsible<lb/>
will realie they've got to repa<lb/>
adds Dallas Martin, executive<lb/>
director of the American<lb/>
Association (,f Student Financial<lb/>
Aid Administrators.<lb/>
?!?' 50 ??d.?exh:?"9h The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds. Call 757-6366 for more information.<lb/>
YOUTH SOCCER COACHES<lb/>
Youth Soccer Coaches work part time, 10 12 hours<lb/>
weekly, beginning Monday, September 9th Hours are<lb/>
normally 3:30-7:30 pm, Monday thru Friday, with oc<lb/>
casional Saturdays Salary rate $3.46hr. Knowledge<lb/>
of soccer skills and the ability to coach young people,<lb/>
ages 9 15 needed. Contact: Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Dept at 752 4137 (ext. 262). Deadline for<lb/>
plications is Tuesday, September 3rd.<lb/>
ap<lb/>
? Books - Posters fi"3?ii<lb/>
'The B,<lb/>
FalJj<lb/>
Bv DAMN MAI h<lb/>
.<lb/>
cjui k<lb/>
SlOli<lb/>
day<lb/>
flit!<lb/>
foui<lb/>
Bride<lb/>
Bea<lb/>
of Ma<lb/>
iea. .<lb/>
Di.<lb/>
the Bridt<lb/>
Sheik-? !r.<lb/>
Its Hi<lb/>
attemj<lb/>
ma<lb/>
ed I<lb/>
to at tail<lb/>
doe<lb/>
jov al<lb/>
Cl' . .<lb/>
at) a<lb/>
H<lb/>
'Heart'<lb/>
THE PROMOTE<lb/>
f<lb/>
r<lb/>
- -<lb/>
J<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
MONDAY:<lb/>
TUESDAY:<lb/>
Welcomes All E. C. U. Students Back<lb/>
MEXICAN MADNESS<lb/>
Free Nacho Bar 10 p.mMIDNITE<lb/>
MARGARITA'S $1.99<lb/>
LADIE'S NIGHT 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
All Ladies Will Receive a Carnation<lb/>
Wine Special $1.67<lb/>
10 O'clock Munch: 10 p.m. 'til Midnite<lb/>
New Improved Food Bar Featuring<lb/>
"Sheet Pan Pizza"<lb/>
WEDNESDAY: ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
PASTA . . . $5.95<lb/>
THURSDAY: COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
$3.50 PITCHERS<lb/>
Mugs 75C<lb/>
Wine Special $1.67<lb/>
Includes Salad and Tea<lb/>
DARRYL'S DELIVERS - CALL 757-1973<lb/>
800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
752-1907<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Mon-Thurs<lb/>
11:00 a.m12:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fri-Sat<lb/>
11:00 a.ml.OO p.m.<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
11:00 a.mH:Oop.m<lb/>
in<lb/>
Heart will aPpt.ar jn Ralegh i,<lb/>
Opennintj for Heart hj h -<lb/>
ECU Prl<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Bv l)MH M U HYH<lb/>
?<lb/>
A ?? Di Rutl <lb/>
and Deai bb<lb/>
Carolii<lb/>
nisi Di<lb/>
will -v <lb/>
Appeal<lb/>
Style s?<lb/>
man.<lb/>
feature Or Mc<lb/>
fessional<lb/>
from readers<lb/>
ot topics<lb/>
ships, sexuaJitv<lb/>
health.<lb/>
In addittoi<lb/>
titude and a plea<lb/>
Dr. Ma am moi<lb/>
valuable experiei c<lb/>
?f clinica<lb/>
psychology, to a ;<lb/>
hopes will serve ? Cl<lb/>
students<lb/>
Dr. McCammon -<lb/>
primarv goals<lb/>
will be "to inform stud<lb/>
especially when it comes to se<lb/>
uality related questions<lb/>
"Sometimes pev p<lb/>
lack information<lb/>
tinued "Maybe rn much<lb/>
now as it used to be, but even<lb/>
now I know there arc<lb/>
People who don't have so!<lb/>
<lb/>
Mfti<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0015"/><lb/>
faulters<lb/>
iNe, the<lb/>
 on<lb/>
1 p<lb/>
lartial<lb/>
-<lb/>
i ? " he<lb/>
can<lb/>
i , epa.<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
rif r i<lb/>
?MS!<lb/>
Street<lb/>
N.C 27834<lb/>
7676<lb/>
a ana I ea<lb/>
Mon-Thurs<lb/>
11:00 a.m12:00 p.m<lb/>
Fri-Sat<lb/>
11:00 a.m1:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
11:00 a.m11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hit I ASIAko INIan<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
M (.1 SI 26, ivx Page<lb/>
' The Bride'<lb/>
Falling Short Of Movie Magie<lb/>
B DANIEL Ml RLR<lb/>
tralurr Editor<lb/>
Svnonymous with the name<lb/>
Frankenstein are visions of<lb/>
en-skinned Boris Karloff<lb/>
bolts protruding from his<lb/>
k, as he brings chaos to a<lb/>
Romanian ullage. I hose vi-<lb/>
, perhaps the fathei of to<lb/>
lay's hack and-slash hoi<lb/>
s, are contrary to what's<lb/>
nd in Columbia Pictures The<lb/>
Bride, staring Sting and Jennifer<lb/>
ils; the latest interperatation<lb/>
? Mar) Shelley's Frankenstein<lb/>
icy<lb/>
DirectO! 1 ranc Roddam takes<lb/>
I he Bride (actualh a sequel to<lb/>
lley's Frankenstein) beyond<lb/>
ts Hollywood-horror roots in an<lb/>
empt to capture a bit o1 the<lb/>
gic with which Shell) bestow-<lb/>
her classic novel.<lb/>
I ven though The Brute is close<lb/>
attaining such a result, it<lb/>
-n't neccessarih make tor en-<lb/>
? able moviegoing. Aftei an ex-<lb/>
ng and provocative openning<lb/>
minutes, the picture slows to<lb/>
almost unbearable pace.<lb/>
Roddam's film is not so much<lb/>
a horror film as it is a fairy tale,<lb/>
complete with happy ending. In<lb/>
it. a young Baron Von Frankens-<lb/>
tein (Stmg) makes his second at-<lb/>
tempt at creating life from<lb/>
lifeiessness. His first, a scared,<lb/>
simple-minded, short-tempered<lb/>
behemouth (Clancy Brown), is<lb/>
The Bride<lb/>
I hr Bndf ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
. Bi <lb/>
I ?.<lb/>
less than perfect.<lb/>
I he Baron plans tor his second<lb/>
creation, a female counterpart, to<lb/>
mate with the creature, later<lb/>
known as Victor. Unfortunately<lb/>
for Victor and luckl) for the<lb/>
Baton the product of the experi-<lb/>
ment is Jennifei Beals, christened<lb/>
Eva for the first woman.<lb/>
The beautiful Eva screams in<lb/>
terror at first sight ol ictor, sen-<lb/>
ding turn in a rage that destroys<lb/>
the tower laborator.<lb/>
Victor escapes into the coun-<lb/>
tryside and the Baron begins<lb/>
teaching Eva about her new life,<lb/>
as a story of love, desire and<lb/>
obsession begin.<lb/>
While on the road, Victor is<lb/>
befriended by a plucky dwarf<lb/>
named Rinaldo (David Rap-<lb/>
paport) who finagles the two of<lb/>
them jobs with a small circus.<lb/>
Together these two misfits form<lb/>
an unbreakable bond of friend-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Baron begins<lb/>
to teach Eva, molding her into a<lb/>
new and independent woman.<lb/>
T he story reaches its climax when<lb/>
Eva refuses to love the Baron in<lb/>
return, and Victor comes home to<lb/>
his bride.<lb/>
Roddam's direction is superb,<lb/>
his character development inspir-<lb/>
ing. His choice of locations in<lb/>
southwestern France adds a<lb/>
wonderful romantic flavor to the<lb/>
film.<lb/>
With the help of Director of<lb/>
Photograph) Stephen Burrum,<lb/>
Roddam produces something of a<lb/>
cinematic masterpiece. In fact, if<lb/>
audiences can bear with the film's<lb/>
See BEALS, Page 17<lb/>
Sting, as Baron Von Frankenstein, becomes enraged when Fa, played by Jennifer Beals. refuses<lb/>
to loe him in Columbia Pictures, latest release. 'The Bride<lb/>
'Heart' Of Rock'n'roll To Play Dorton Arena<lb/>
PROMOTER<lb/>
PRE SENTS<lb/>
Heart will appear in Raleigh's Dorton Arena on Aug. 31 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Openning for Heart will be Shooting Star.<lb/>
Snce their inception in ls)"6.<lb/>
the popular rock group<lb/>
Heart has sold over fifteen<lb/>
million albums worldwide. Their<lb/>
string of hits, which include such<lb/>
classic rockers as "Crazy On<lb/>
You "Magic Man "Bar-<lb/>
racuda and "Dog and Butterf-<lb/>
ly have provided the sound-<lb/>
track to the lives ol many a fan<lb/>
and. almost ten years since the<lb/>
release ol Dreamhoat Annie,<lb/>
Hear: remain one ol America's<lb/>
best-loved bands.<lb/>
Heart, their debut I P tor<lb/>
Capitol and ninth IP overall,<lb/>
proves to be a special event, in-<lb/>
corporating the full range of the<lb/>
band's potential as unleashed bv<lb/>
celebrated producer Ron (Led<lb/>
Zeppelin, Who, Survivor)<lb/>
Nevison.<lb/>
I ed bv Ann Wilson, one of<lb/>
rock's most valued vocalists.<lb/>
Heart features the guitar and<lb/>
keyboards of Nancy Wilson,<lb/>
guitarist Howard 1 ewesc, bassist<lb/>
Mark Andes and drummer Den-<lb/>
ny Carmassi. There are few<lb/>
bands that can rock as hard, or<lb/>
deliver a ballad just as powerful-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
Even from their beginnings on<lb/>
the bar circuit of the Pacific Noi<lb/>
thwest, Hear: built a reputation<lb/>
on versatility and original songs,<lb/>
with influences from 1 ed Zep-<lb/>
pelin to 1 ennon and McC artney.<lb/>
Their first album, Dreamhoat<lb/>
Annie, contained two instant<lb/>
classics, "Crav On You" and<lb/>
"Magic Man<lb/>
I he I P als k an impor-<lb/>
tant blow ? k 'n' roll in a<lb/>
disco-oriented I of music.<lb/>
One ol the most powerful del<lb/>
in music history, the album sold<lb/>
six million pies and continues<lb/>
to be a stead) seller<lb/>
At the time of Heart's debut in<lb/>
1976, the sight ol a successful<lb/>
rock unit fronted bv two stunning<lb/>
sisters was somewhat new to the<lb/>
music world. The fact that Ann<lb/>
and Nancv Wilson also composed<lb/>
their own songs was ground<lb/>
breaking.<lb/>
While the media was still figur-<lb/>
ing out which sister was which,<lb/>
Heart were already finishing then<lb/>
multi-platinum second album.<lb/>
Tittle Queen The album yielded<lb/>
two more hits, "Barracuda" and<lb/>
"Kick It Out The string would<lb/>
continue with "Heartless" and<lb/>
"Without You from their third<lb/>
platinum album, faxazine<lb/>
Dog and Butterfly followed,<lb/>
gomg platinum as well and ma ?<lb/>
ing the entrance ol Hear: col-<lb/>
laborator Sue Ennis on the hits<lb/>
"Dot And Butterfly" and<lb/>
"Straight On 1 he band-<lb/>
produced effort Behe I e Strange<lb/>
came next and contained some of<lb/>
the group's hardest rocking stan-<lb/>
dards ? "Even It Up "Behe<lb/>
Le Strange "Rockin' Heaven<lb/>
Down" and "RaisedIn <lb/>
Heart's next album was the in-<lb/>
novative Private Audition. I he<lb/>
critical!) acclaimed I P contained<lb/>
rockers like "Citv's Burning" as<lb/>
well as the progressive "The<lb/>
Situation<lb/>
Heart has experienced several<lb/>
personnel changes over the years.<lb/>
In 1982 the group's best line-up<lb/>
was completed with the arrival of<lb/>
drummer Dennv Carmassi and<lb/>
bassist Mark Andes.<lb/>
Carmassi was a highly-<lb/>
respected talent who honed his<lb/>
original style in groups like Mon-<lb/>
trose and Gamma. His skills are<lb/>
noted by fans and fellow musi-<lb/>
cians across the globe. Andes.<lb/>
himself a world-class talent, was<lb/>
an original member of the groups<lb/>
Spirit. Jo Jo Gunne and Firefall.<lb/>
This is the line-up thai powered<lb/>
group ? the 80's.<lb/>
As much as the Wilson sisters<lb/>
share the spotlight. Heart is a<lb/>
ip. Never is it more obvious<lb/>
than on stage. Throughout their<lb/>
career, few bands have held down<lb/>
such a longstanding relationship<lb/>
with concert audiences.<lb/>
The Wilson sisters and lead-<lb/>
Howard Leese have<lb/>
always that their live<lb/>
performances advanced their<lb/>
recorded hits to new heights. The<lb/>
addition of Carmassi and Andes<lb/>
took their concerts even further.<lb/>
In 1983 the band released Pas-<lb/>
sionworks, an album that<lb/>
featured the hit songs and videos<lb/>
"How Can I Refuse" and<lb/>
"Allies As always, it was the<lb/>
work of a group not content to<lb/>
rest on it's mainstram laurels.<lb/>
The trend continues with the<lb/>
group's ninth album, their first<lb/>
for Capitol Records. The music<lb/>
and title ? Heart ? is as direct<lb/>
and unyielding as the Rebecca<lb/>
Blake photo that adorns the<lb/>
cover.<lb/>
See HEART. Page 19<lb/>
ECU Professor To Begin<lb/>
Student Advice Column<lb/>
B DANIEL MALRER<lb/>
V ruturro T d.lor<lb/>
Fillowing in the footsteps<lb/>
f Dr Ruth. Ann Landers<lb/>
and Dear Abby. is The Fast<lb/>
( a:oilman's own advice colum-<lb/>
nist Dr. Susan McCammon,<lb/>
with "Sound Advice<lb/>
(Appearing in each Tuesday's<lb/>
Style section of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian, "Sound Advice" will<lb/>
feature Dr. McCammon's pro-<lb/>
fessional response to letters<lb/>
from readers concerning a range<lb/>
of topics including relation-<lb/>
ships, sexuality and mental<lb/>
health.<lb/>
In addition to a positive at-<lb/>
titude and a pleasant demeanor.<lb/>
Dr. McCammon brings<lb/>
valuable experience in the field<lb/>
of clinical communitive<lb/>
psychology to a column she<lb/>
hopes will serve to inform ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Dr. McCammon said one the<lb/>
primary goals of the column<lb/>
will be "to inform students,<lb/>
especially when it comes to sex-<lb/>
uality related questions.<lb/>
"Sometimes people simply<lb/>
lack information she con-<lb/>
tinued. "Maybe not as much<lb/>
now as it used to be, but even<lb/>
now I know there are a lot of<lb/>
people who don't have solid in-<lb/>
formation about sexuality and<lb/>
other things that are related to<lb/>
mental health<lb/>
Dr. McCammon, however,<lb/>
doesn't believe in the practice of<lb/>
therapv through the mail. Like<lb/>
all responsible advice columns.<lb/>
McCammon<lb/>
"Sound Advice" offers just<lb/>
that, advice. Its purpose is to in-<lb/>
form and direct students so they<lb/>
may find their own solutions or<lb/>
find professionals who are in a<lb/>
position to help. Dr. McCam-<lb/>
mon is leery of therapy over the<lb/>
phone, by mail or over the radio<lb/>
because such a therapist can<lb/>
never know all the facts.<lb/>
Having received her Ph.D. at<lb/>
the University of South<lb/>
Carolina ? Columbia, Dr. Mc-<lb/>
Cammon conducted her intern-<lb/>
ship at Vanderbilt University<lb/>
before coming to ECU in 1981.<lb/>
She is currently doing research<lb/>
on how people cope with<lb/>
traumatic events, and has serv-<lb/>
ed as a consultant to the Pitt<lb/>
County Mental Health Center<lb/>
during the development of their<lb/>
Tornado Response Project.<lb/>
This summer Dr. McCam-<lb/>
mon saw the publication of an<lb/>
article in Annals of Emergency<lb/>
Medicine reporting the reac-<lb/>
tions of rescue workers respon-<lb/>
ding to the Village Green crisis,<lb/>
which she co-wrote with Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Durham and Dr.<lb/>
Jackson Allison Jr.<lb/>
This fail she begins her fourth<lb/>
semester teaching a psychology<lb/>
of sexual behavior class.<lb/>
Readers interested in writing<lb/>
to Dr. McCammon should mail<lb/>
their letters to Sound Advice in<lb/>
care of The East Carolinian,<lb/>
Features Dept Old South<lb/>
Building, East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834-4353. All names will be<lb/>
held strictly confidential.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Dr. McCam-<lb/>
mon's many obligations pro-<lb/>
hibit her from making personal<lb/>
replies.<lb/>
Musical Scheduled Sept. 10<lb/>
New York's hit musical, Cot-<lb/>
ton Patch Gospel, will be<lb/>
performed Tuesday. Sept. 10 in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre at 8 p.m. under<lb/>
the sponsorship of the ECU Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Minority Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
Cotton Patch Gospel is one of<lb/>
the best family entertainments<lb/>
that has come to eastern North<lb/>
Carolina in yearc. Two in-<lb/>
separable ingredients have been<lb/>
combined to make the show the<lb/>
great success that it is.<lb/>
One is the last complete works<lb/>
of songwriter Harry Chapin. His<lb/>
finger-snapping, toe-tapping<lb/>
music and the wonderful multi-<lb/>
character acting of Dan<lb/>
Delafield, star of the National<lb/>
Tour, have been given rave<lb/>
reviews by theatre critics from<lb/>
around the country. These, and<lb/>
the familiar story of Jesus set in<lb/>
modern America, are a hard<lb/>
combination to beat.<lb/>
The show has the endorsement<lb/>
of all major denominations of the<lb/>
church. Both Catholic and Pro-<lb/>
testant groups have hailed this<lb/>
literal adaption of Southern Bap-<lb/>
tist theologian Dr. Clarence Jor-<lb/>
dan's Cotton Patch Version of<lb/>
Matthew and John into a<lb/>
wonderful stage presentation.<lb/>
The show has been performed<lb/>
before record breaking crowds of<lb/>
theatergoers in Dallas, Altanta,<lb/>
New York and other cities on this<lb/>
tour and before the annual<lb/>
meeting of the Gospel Music<lb/>
Association, the General<lb/>
Assembly of the Christian<lb/>
Church (Disciples of Christ),<lb/>
Christian Life Commission of the<lb/>
Southern Baptist Convention and<lb/>
the Christian Educators Conven-<lb/>
tion among others.<lb/>
It was nominated for an Emm)<lb/>
Award as a NBC-TV Special call-<lb/>
ed "Harry Chapin's Cotton<lb/>
Patch That show won a Wilbur<lb/>
Award from the Religious Public<lb/>
Relations Council. The stage ver-<lb/>
sion will be adapted for the<lb/>
screen next year.<lb/>
This humorous, yet always<lb/>
relevant, retelling of the Book of<lb/>
Matthew is performed by a group<lb/>
of expert actors and musicians.<lb/>
I he music is performed by a<lb/>
"bluegrass configuration" of<lb/>
banjo, guitar, fiddle and bass.<lb/>
The actors play many roles<lb/>
with Dan Delafield. who was<lb/>
recently in the long-running New<lb/>
York production of Funtasticks,<lb/>
starring in the role of Matthew<lb/>
the Narrator. He tells the story of<lb/>
Jesus in a very literal adaptation<lb/>
and modern language adaption,<lb/>
with a slightly southern accent.<lb/>
The book is always reverent of<lb/>
See MUSICAL, Page 17<lb/>
Harry Chapin<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
IHhlASVRQLIN1AN UGUS1 26. 198<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
Fair85 Movie Schedule<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
TITLE<lb/>
TIME RATING<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
JP1 I't<lb/>
FINISHED'<lb/>
f Z WHA1?<lb/>
(<lb/>
r<lb/>
Aug. 22-24Terminator<lb/>
Aug. 29-MThe Cotton Club<lb/>
Sept. 4Seven Year Itch;<lb/>
Some 1ike If Hot<lb/>
Sept. 5-7The Sure Thing<lb/>
Sept. 6-7Nightmare on Elm Stree<lb/>
Sept. 11Network;<lb/>
Being There<lb/>
Sept. 12-4Mrs. Soffel<lb/>
Sept. 19-21Beverly Hills Cop<lb/>
Sept. 25Dr. hivago<lb/>
Sept. 26-28A Passage to India<lb/>
Oct. 2The Cods Must Be Crazy<lb/>
Oct. 3-SPlaces in the Heart<lb/>
Oct. 9Red Beard<lb/>
Oct. 11-12H itness<lb/>
Oct. 16la Traviata<lb/>
Oct. 23Jules and Jim;<lb/>
Small Change<lb/>
Oct. 25-26Dune<lb/>
Oct. JONosferatu the I'ampyre<lb/>
Oct. 31 - o. 2The Killing Fields<lb/>
Nov. 1-2Motel Hell<lb/>
Nov. 7-9Chostbusters<lb/>
Nov. 13A Nos Amours<lb/>
ov. 14American Orafitti<lb/>
Nov. 15-16The Breakfast Club<lb/>
Nov. 21-23imadeus<lb/>
Dec. 4The Dresser;<lb/>
The Bostonians<lb/>
Dec. 6-7Rear H indow;<lb/>
 ertigo<lb/>
Dec. o-7W oodstock<lb/>
Dec. 11The Spirit of the Beehive<lb/>
Dec. 12-14Return of the Jedi<lb/>
7:00, 9:00<lb/>
7:00. 9:30<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
7:00. 9:00<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
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8:00<lb/>
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7:00. 9:30<lb/>
Midnight<lb/>
7:00, 9:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
7:00, 9:00<lb/>
7:00, 9:00<lb/>
6:30. 9:15<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
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11:30<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
7:00, 930<lb/>
R<lb/>
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NR<lb/>
PC<lb/>
PC-13<lb/>
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NR<lb/>
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PC<lb/>
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PC-13<lb/>
PC<lb/>
R<lb/>
R<lb/>
Pi,<lb/>
R<lb/>
PC<lb/>
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Pi,<lb/>
Pi,<lb/>
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N OKAY 7<lb/>
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-o<lb/>
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0<lb/>
1 " "i<lb/>
?? i<lb/>
  r,t.s ?<lb/>
Friday Sports Hour<lb/>
4:30-7:00<lb/>
Monday ight I<lb/>
: g : i <lb/>
. mm h '?. ?<lb/>
A MITSUBISHI<lb/>
Presenting<lb/>
World's Best Hot Dog<lb/>
ce Cold Beverages<lb/>
Big Screen TV<lb/>
Satellite - Stereo<lb/>
Sports - Worldwide<lb/>
We Play ALL the Games<lb/>
unfden<lb/>
11 e Support the Pirates<lb/>
Pool: A Game for<lb/>
l-udies and Gentlemen<lb/>
The Old 420 Club<lb/>
? ' ' R.<lb/>
Detach ad at<lb/>
I xptres -<lb/>
-It is a newspaper's duty to print the news and raise hell. " - William I. Story<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
H e wum to he your niithi spot<lb/>
every night<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom house 125$ per<lb/>
month ana : 2 utilities Call 757 3528<lb/>
home or 756 8500 work Ask for<lb/>
Wendy<lb/>
BRODYS FOR MEN: Has a position<lb/>
open for part time salesperson<lb/>
Sales experience and understanding<lb/>
of men's fashion is preferred Flexi<lb/>
ble schedule. Better than minimum<lb/>
wage pay Apply to Mrs Daniels,<lb/>
Brody's, The Plaza Mon. Fri. 2 5<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER: Needed im<lb/>
mediately for the East Carolinian.<lb/>
Come by the office or call 757 636S<lb/>
PERFECT Need to earn extra<lb/>
money, but you haven't got extra<lb/>
time? Well this is the perfect job for<lb/>
you We need tele marketing agents<lb/>
for our new, conviently located of<lb/>
fice m downtown Greenville Even<lb/>
ing hours flexible to your schedule,<lb/>
yet leaving you time for fun! Salary<lb/>
plus bonuses For interview call<lb/>
Donna at 758 5595 between 2-7 p.m.<lb/>
SUPERMARKET EMPLOYEES<lb/>
NEEDED: Part time openings for<lb/>
cashiers, produce &amp; stock clerks<lb/>
available Must have previous<lb/>
supermarket experience &amp; good<lb/>
references. We are willing to work<lb/>
around reasonable school schedule<lb/>
Call Charles Overton or Cathy<lb/>
Kilpatrick for interview 752 5025.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible<lb/>
salesperson some sales experience.<lb/>
Pay negotiable. Apply in person bet<lb/>
ween 5306:00 MonFri Gordon's<lb/>
Golf &amp; Ski Shop. 200 E. Greenville<lb/>
Blvd 756 1003<lb/>
SOCCER: Part time soccer coaches<lb/>
needed, afternoon hours. Call Pitt<lb/>
County Community Schools at<lb/>
752 2934, Ext. 276 or 267.<lb/>
YOUTH SOCCER COACHES. Work<lb/>
part time, 10-20 hours weekly, begin<lb/>
ning Monday, Sept. 9th. Hours are<lb/>
normally 3:30-7:30 p.m. Mon. Fri.<lb/>
with occasional Saturdays. Salary<lb/>
rate S3.46 per hr. Knowledge of soc<lb/>
cer skills and the ability to coach<lb/>
young people, ages 9 15 needed.<lb/>
Contact Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Dept at 752 4137 (ext 262 <lb/>
Deadling for applications is Tues<lb/>
Sept 3rd<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Non smoker $175 per month utilities<lb/>
included Call 752 1642<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Students in<lb/>
terested in security guard work who<lb/>
are 18 years of age or older, able to<lb/>
satisfactorily complete a Criminal<lb/>
Record Check, have ery depen<lb/>
dable transportation, willing to work<lb/>
weekends and holidays and nights,<lb/>
contact Major Tony Catapano at<lb/>
758 2174<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
PERSONAL: Male prisoner on<lb/>
death row at the Arizona State<lb/>
Prison would like to correspond with<lb/>
anyone interested in writing to a<lb/>
man on Death Row. I'm thirty seven<lb/>
years old and have no family. I'll<lb/>
answer all questions that you ask<lb/>
and every letter Please feel free to<lb/>
ask me anything that you are<lb/>
curious about and talk about<lb/>
whatever you want to. If you could<lb/>
please send stamps they would be a<lb/>
very big help because I am not<lb/>
allowed to get out of my cell to work<lb/>
to earn money to buy them. If in<lb/>
terested write to: Robert Moorman,<lb/>
Box B 31293, Florence, AZ 85232<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Motobecane Nomade If<lb/>
21 inch. $150 Call 753 3685 ask for<lb/>
David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: D.P. weightlifting<lb/>
machine. Capable of 30 exercises. 110<lb/>
lbs. of weight, padded bench. Used<lb/>
one month. $140 758 3583 after 5:30.<lb/>
CAR FOR SALE: '80 Honda Civic<lb/>
white, 5 speed, great car for student.<lb/>
Call 758 4917 or 757 6053 Ask for<lb/>
Stuart $2,900 Neg.<lb/>
UNUSUAL INSTRUMENTS:<lb/>
Original design Dulcimer, I owner,<lb/>
S150 Herdi Gerdi (Spanish style)<lb/>
$250 Price is negotiable Call Marc<lb/>
for more info 752 5507<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: Two units<lb/>
for sale efficiency 8th floor, one<lb/>
bedroom 4th floor Units completely<lb/>
furnishec, carpeted, air conditioned,<lb/>
and include kitchen appliances<lb/>
Please call (aay) 201 532 7993 (after<lb/>
5 p.m.) 201 4310768, or write Mr.<lb/>
Celidonio, 99 Wilson Ave Freehold<lb/>
NJ, 07728.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed for sale<lb/>
Waveless mattress 756 8257 after 5<lb/>
p m<lb/>
FOR SALE: Commodore, VIC20<lb/>
computer with all hookups and some<lb/>
extras including: 6 game tapes,<lb/>
cassette storage recorderplayer,<lb/>
lOystick, modem with terminal pro<lb/>
gram cassette, Programmer's Aid,<lb/>
memory expansion cartridge and<lb/>
reference manuals. $200. Call An<lb/>
thony at 757 6366 or 752 7346<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator, 5 cubic<lb/>
ft good condition, perfect for<lb/>
dorms, asking $150. Call Keith at<lb/>
355 6212 or 752 2853<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Elec<lb/>
tronic typewriter. Reasonable rates<lb/>
Call Janice a 355 7233 after 5:30.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING: Contact<lb/>
Becky Latham 752 5998 (8 a.m. 5<lb/>
p m.) 17 years experience in typing<lb/>
theses, scientific reports,<lb/>
manuscripts, business and form let<lb/>
ters<lb/>
NEED TYPING?: Letters,<lb/>
resumes, term papers, etc. Call<lb/>
Karen at 752 0498.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room for rent with<lb/>
Christian couple. 752 7212.<lb/>
WHY PAY RENT: Stop making<lb/>
your landlord rich! Buy a new<lb/>
mobile home for less than you pro<lb/>
bablv pay now. Call 756 0333.<lb/>
THE MIDDLEMAN: Apartment<lb/>
listing Roommate Referral Service.<lb/>
210 E. 4th St. Suite 2 across from Sub<lb/>
Station II. Let us help you find the<lb/>
apartment or roommate you're look<lb/>
ing for. Call 830 1069<lb/>
East Carolina Party Center<lb/>
? I Lotanche Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758-4591<lb/>
Doors Open: DST 9:00-2:00a.m. Est. 8:30-1:00 a.m.<lb/>
MONDAY- CLOSED-Open for private dorm socia.s and specia.<lb/>
MondaVS, i.e. first week of each semester<lb/>
always different &amp; always fun<lb/>
? WEDNESDAY- DRAFT NITE-S1.00 admission for ladies S 50<lb/>
for guys and 10c draft &amp; 10c draft all nite ($1 00 yr adm ?<lb/>
THURSOAV- COLLEGEN.TE-SLOO admission for ECU student<lb/>
fr.day- ENDoPETEATYarar<lb/>
admissinfora ECU students wK.ag<lb/>
CAT11D? Fnda n'te 00 adm.&amp;85ccans all nite<lb/>
SATURDAY- Best in Dance Music-$1.00 admission ECU students<lb/>
SUNDAY-LAD.ES NITE-For ,5 years our favor?r <lb/>
the weekend. Free admisson ?IKWfflg<lb/>
85c specials all nite.<lb/>
"BRING YOUR FRIENDS &amp; COME EARLY<lb/>
N.C. State law prohibits persons under 19 to ourchA ?<lb/>
Persons under 19 required to wear a wr stband?h . a,ohoc beverages<lb/>
Alternative beverages are provided Wh"e ?n " Premises<lb/>
? Exludes 1st Wednesday of each semester.<lb/>
Save Lives-Don-t Drive- Walk Downtown<lb/>
Or Ride The SGA Bus<lb/>
Musical<lb/>
Delivers Fun,<lb/>
Faith<lb/>
( onlinurd from Punt J?<lb/>
Jesus ?<lb/>
per<lb/>
on<lb/>
Sat :<lb/>
pre<lb/>
thca'<lb/>
dire<lb/>
adap:c :<lb/>
the orig i<lb/>
C'hapin. a<lb/>
tor<lb/>
this ?<lb/>
Co-a<lb/>
tured al<lb/>
ing i<lb/>
day'v a .<lb/>
suitable I<lb/>
This na<lb/>
will per: rn<lb/>
disco mi<lb/>
' -<lb/>
EC (<lb/>
dep-<lb/>
pub.<lb/>
.<lb/>
Beals, Sting<lb/>
Stand Out In<lb/>
'The Bride'<lb/>
 ontmutd rr.im I'ut 15<lb/>
he finch<lb/>
.?<lb/>
Si<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
-1<lb/>
creator Bea<lb/>
she .<lb/>
Ab<lb/>
formana<lb/>
The<lb/>
The Bruit<lb/>
Iran,<lb/>
l K1<lb/>
a f<lb/>
J<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0017"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
f<lb/>
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SA)<lb/>
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fi<lb/>
 the dames<lb/>
'OOi<lb/>
j Cat nen<lb/>
He Old 420 Club<lb/>
00 a.m.<lb/>
and special<lb/>
- of eac mester.<lb/>
? from<lb/>
esday is<lb/>
I &amp; i Aays fun.<lb/>
?or ladies, SI.50<lb/>
SI.00 18 yr. adm.)<lb/>
ECU students<lb/>
-ecial 85c all nite.<lb/>
7.30 p.no Free<lb/>
ans85call day<lb/>
&amp; 85c cans ail nite.<lb/>
on ECU students<lb/>
S2.00 18 yr. adm.).<lb/>
favonte way to wrap up<lb/>
I 18 r adm.). Watchfor<lb/>
85c specials all nite.<lb/>
EARLY<lb/>
coholic beverages<lb/>
r the premises<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Musical<lb/>
Delivers Fun,<lb/>
Faith<lb/>
( ontinued Krom Pajje 15<lb/>
i, as God and Man, hut<lb/>
tps a! times critical or as<lb/>
eviewei said "sharply<lb/>
a of people.<lb/>
1 his buoyant and jubiliani<lb/>
presentation ol faith and<lb/>
? excitement has been<lb/>
;ted b Russell Irew, who<lb/>
ted the book and directed<lb/>
riginal Nov. York hit. Tom<lb/>
?in, ho was musical direc-<lb/>
" the original, also directs<lb/>
? tout<lb/>
1 om Kc has cap-<lb/>
 italitj and start I-<lb/>
, ance of i he ston foi to-<lb/>
day's audiences. I he show is<lb/>
ible for all ages and groups,<lb/>
uional touring company<lb/>
form tor one night only .<lb/>
student and group<lb/>
j scounts are available, with<lb/>
 prices at Si 50 foi ECU<lb/>
at d guest. $2.50 tor<lb/>
Theatre A rts Series To Host Ballet<lb/>
P he ja strut reuie. Ain't<lb/>
? Misbehavin , winner of the<lb/>
coveted Tony Award for Best<lb/>
Musical of the 1978 Season, will<lb/>
be one of four presentations on<lb/>
the 1985-1986 Theatre Arts Series<lb/>
ai ECU. The Department ol<lb/>
I niversity Unions1 Theatre Arts<lb/>
Committee will also be presenting<lb/>
the Louisville Ballet. The<lb/>
?ikhemedians, and a production<lb/>
from the National Theatre of the<lb/>
Deaf. The shows will be held in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre of the Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Beginning the season on Oct.<lb/>
17, 1985, will be the Louisville<lb/>
Ballet. Founded in 1952 as a civic<lb/>
ballet, the Louisville Ballet has<lb/>
slowly grown in stature to<lb/>
become what 7he ew York<lb/>
Times has called "theatrical<lb/>
magic<lb/>
With a large repertoire of<lb/>
classic and original works by such<lb/>
noted choreographers as Balan-<lb/>
chine, Taras, and Iudor, the<lb/>
company performs to more than<lb/>
60,000 people per year. The<lb/>
Louisville Ballet also holds the<lb/>
distinction of being the only<lb/>
regional company with which<lb/>
Mikhail Baryshnikov has danced.<lb/>
They are one of the South<lb/>
finest ballet companies and can<lb/>
boast of a long list of distinguish-<lb/>
ed guest artists and<lb/>
choreographers that no other<lb/>
regional company has approx-<lb/>
I C I<lb/>
f ac u 11 staff an d<lb/>
idents, S2 50 foi groups of<lb/>
? ? re, and 4 50 for the<lb/>
at the door<lb/>
Beats, Sting<lb/>
Stand Out In<lb/>
The Bride'<lb/>
( ontinued From Pajje 15<lb/>
p tee, The Bride is<lb/>
is fine<lb/>
;<lb/>
 fine pe<lb/>
ince .in ant bul ai<lb/>
Bai or ?: 1 ? ankens-<lb/>
His p ? boi ?<lb/>
inderlying intens<lb/>
.<lb/>
Both Beals arid Brown are ex-<lb/>
i 'urn<lb/>
?<lb/>
Beals' performance is<lb/>
. ind believable as<lb/>
v- ve a  pet<lb/>
I: "<lb/>
between he and<lb/>
k a is simph<lb/>
unbeatable<lb/>
The Bndt . ? an admir ible at<lb/>
tempt ? par: ol R Ian<lb/>
do y's Frankenstein<lb/>
:e However it is not quite<lb/>
moviegoers are at<lb/>
? It is in no wa a<lb/>
flop, but wl ? ? ike two<lb/>
?<lb/>
imated.<lb/>
The Alehemedians, comprised<lb/>
of Bob Berky, Fred Garbo, and<lb/>
Michael Moschen, will be next<lb/>
win their performance Oct. 30,<lb/>
i9K5. The three are clowns,<lb/>
mimes, dancers, and jugglers,<lb/>
often at the same time and never<lb/>
at rest<lb/>
The Alehemedians, with a<lb/>
repertoire that runs from circus<lb/>
tomfoolery to twirling with fire,<lb/>
show each performer to his best<lb/>
advantage. Berky is a burlesque<lb/>
clown, with a gift for spon-<lb/>
taneous audience participation<lb/>
numbers. Garbo is a solitary<lb/>
sketch artist whose specialty is<lb/>
the art of mime which he skillful-<lb/>
ly demonstrates in a series of<lb/>
mind-boggling images.<lb/>
Moschen's primary talent is jug-<lb/>
gling, which in his hands becomes<lb/>
a balletic art.<lb/>
The combination ol the three<lb/>
proves trial The Alehemedians is<lb/>
a truly foolproof virtuotic pro-<lb/>
duction for every member of the<lb/>
family. It is no small wonder that<lb/>
The Alehemedians won the 1983<lb/>
Obie and Villager Awards.<lb/>
Ain't Misbehavin' is a celebra-<lb/>
tion of the life and good times of<lb/>
one of the 1930 most beloved<lb/>
clowns and jazzmen, Thomas<lb/>
"Fats" Waller. Raucous, joyful,<lb/>
and sometimes bluesey, five<lb/>
"regulars" of a lowdown Harlem<lb/>
nightclub dance and flirt from<lb/>
table to table, singing over<lb/>
twenty-five songs either written<lb/>
or made famous bv Waller.<lb/>
Scheduled for Jan. 15, 1986,<lb/>
this will be the most rousing per-<lb/>
formance seen anywhere this<lb/>
season and for many to come. It<lb/>
truly is an award-winning show.<lb/>
The National Theatre of the<lb/>
Deaf is, without a doubt,<lb/>
America's most remarkable<lb/>
theatre, and they will be perform-<lb/>
ing March 27, 'l986. This com-<lb/>
pany has toured and gained ap-<lb/>
plause from all fifty states and<lb/>
twenty-three countries, and has<lb/>
won a Tony Award for Theatrical<lb/>
Excellence.<lb/>
By combining spoken English<lb/>
with sign language. The National<lb/>
Theatre of the Deaf created a new<lb/>
dual language theatre form. The<lb/>
visual imagery in sign language,<lb/>
when magnified for the stage, ha<lb/>
the effect of also magnifying the<lb/>
spoken work.<lb/>
The English language suddenly<lb/>
expands to include the visible<lb/>
shapes of the words and ideas be-<lb/>
ing expressed by the actors. This<lb/>
second, visible voice is seen as it<lb/>
blends with the NTD's spoken,<lb/>
audible voice.<lb/>
Season tickets for the<lb/>
1985-1986 Theatre Arts Series<lb/>
may be obtained by contacting<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office ot<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
757-6611. ext. 266. Monday-<lb/>
Friday, 11 a.m6 p.m. Ticket<lb/>
prices are Si5 for ECU Students<lb/>
and Guest, $21 for Youth (age 14<lb/>
and under), and S30 for ECU<lb/>
Facultv Staff and the Public.<lb/>
1 he Louisville Ballet is onl one of the mans shows the theatre Arts Series has to offer.<lb/>
T ho<lb/>
THF -ci ne AEROBIC<lb/>
R Workshop<lb/>
WefWORKSHOP<lb/>
Icome Back Student Special<lb/>
fer $15 for 1 Month ? Sat lua 31 $50 for The Semester<lb/>
Unlimited Usage 23 classes a week to choose from!<lb/>
Aalk.ng distance from campus 417 Evans<lb/>
Vust Br.na .n Coupon to Receive Discount Downtown 752 1608<lb/>
ABORTIONS IP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OK PREGNANCY<lb/>
S195 -h' ??? ? ? m 13 ' 18 Aeeks at addi<lb/>
tional cosi Pregnancy lest. Birtl .and<lb/>
err, Pregnancy t ur.se!ing For further<lb/>
all x; "?ifoil I  N<lb/>
I 800-532-5384) between 9 A.M anj ? P M<lb/>
AeekJa1<lb/>
RELEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 WMt Morgan St<lb/>
RoUigh, NC<lb/>
V<lb/>
no oru " ?<lb/>
MINI DILI ifA?<lb/>
3? (??lr 35)9 fomft<lb/>
a a a<lb/>
eg? ff?B a(fe (SfijsU0<lb/>
rtoW<lb/>
serving OLD FASHIONED BISCUITS,<lb/>
HOMEMADE SANDWICHES,<lb/>
HOT DOGS, DESSERTS,<lb/>
SUBS &amp; SALADS<lb/>
Drop by after your night-on-the-toun at<lb/>
ffrafei<lb/>
Chest<lb/>
YOUR CONVENIENCE STORE<lb/>
call 756-6641 for<lb/>
all your party needs.<lb/>
Located at the intersection of Greenville Blvd. &amp; Charles St. (By the Plaza)<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
Welcome Back To The Place To Meet<lb/>
BEAU'S of course<lb/>
Thursday:<lb/>
SHAG NITE, Don Bunn, Judy Bazemore teach<lb/>
shag lessons from 7:30-10:30. Floor is open for<lb/>
the Best in Beach Music at 10:30. Members &amp;<lb/>
Guest FREE ALL NITE.<lb/>
Friday:<lb/>
ULTIMATE WEEKEND THROWDOWN. Doors<lb/>
open at 8:00. $1.00 Tallboys. 50C Draft All<lb/>
Nite Long for everybody. Daddy Cool plays the<lb/>
best in Dance, Disco &amp; Funk. All 18 yr. olds<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Wednesday:<lb/>
All new LADIES ZOO. Ladies Only 8-10. Guys<lb/>
admitted at 10. 25C Wine &amp; Draft All Nite. All<lb/>
18 yr. olds welcome. Music: Dance, Disco &amp;<lb/>
Funk by Daddy Cool.<lb/>
Saturday:<lb/>
ruuy.<lb/>
Steve Hardy's ORIGINAL BEACH PARTY.<lb/>
Doors open at 8:00 p.m. Dance to Top 40 &amp;<lb/>
Beach.<lb/>
Call 756-6401 For Full Information<lb/>
Membership Special Thru Sept. 30,1985<lb/>
$2.00 New $1.00 Renewal<lb/>
BEAU'S is a private club for members A Guests ah abc Permits<lb/>
GUESTS ARE WELCOME<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE CAROLINA EAST CENTER OFF HWY 11<lb/>
NEAR PLITT THEATRE<lb/>
' <lb/>
jjji<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
'Ml I AS I t AKOl IMA<lb/>
Al t.l SI 26. IS?f<lb/>
Filmmaker Returns Home After 20 Years ?wjJ<lb/>
B JAY &amp; ELLIOTT KRA ETZ<lb/>
lairraatktnal Pboio r<lb/>
17 ioever expected to find<lb/>
?? L)ennis Hopper, the<lb/>
counter-culture actor-filmmaker<lb/>
oi the '60s whose film Easy Rider<lb/>
polarized an entire generation<lb/>
sith its "do your own thing"<lb/>
message, starring as an ex-hippie<lb/>
high school teacher in<lb/>
Touchstone Films' fan-<lb/>
tasy adventure tv Science Pro-<lb/>
ject!<lb/>
"Ifs something 1 never<lb/>
thought would happen he com-<lb/>
mented recently. "But the role<lb/>
ottered me an opportunity to<lb/>
return to filmmaking in Los<lb/>
Angeles Before My Science Pro-<lb/>
ject, 1 hadn't worked on a<lb/>
Hollywood sound stage in over<lb/>
20 years.<lb/>
"It was fun and I had a great<lb/>
time he said.  wanted the<lb/>
part I play an ex-hippie science<lb/>
teacher who gets caught in a<lb/>
space-time warp and come out<lb/>
dressed as Billy, m character<lb/>
from Easy Rider, It's a real gag,<lb/>
I'm right out Oi the '60s.<lb/>
spouting the same 'Hell no, 1<lb/>
oY go '(lower power' and I<lb/>
even get carted off to jail. It was,<lb/>
well, son of deja vu<lb/>
At age 49. Hopper can look<lb/>
back at the not- too- distant pas:<lb/>
when his offscreen, wild behavior<lb/>
had given him a reputation as a<lb/>
radical. Yet, at the same time, he<lb/>
was oted best foreign actor of<lb/>
1970 b the French Academy oi<lb/>
Cinema for his performance in<lb/>
Easy Rider had an exhibition of<lb/>
his photographic art at the<lb/>
prestigious Corcoran Gallery oi<lb/>
An in Washington, D.C and was<lb/>
a confrere or Louis Malie. Her-<lb/>
man Kahn, Bruno Bettelheim.<lb/>
Paul Desmond and Robert Ar-<lb/>
drey at a special summit meeting<lb/>
to plot a prediction of the future.<lb/>
"The only good artist is a dead<lb/>
artist he told us during a 1978<lb/>
interview. "Making things is<lb/>
agony. I hate to make movies.<lb/>
But I've got to do it. It justifies<lb/>
my existence. If I couldn't I'd<lb/>
destroy myself<lb/>
Born on May 17. 1936, in<lb/>
Dodge City, Kansas where his<lb/>
father was a railway postal clerk<lb/>
and his mother a farm girl. Hop-<lb/>
per was raised by his grand-<lb/>
parents on a farm during the war<lb/>
years while his mother worked in<lb/>
Kansas City and his father served<lb/>
overseas in the the U.S. Army.<lb/>
"I advocate the 'method'<lb/>
school of acting Hopper said in<lb/>
1981 following the release oi<lb/>
King of the Mountain. "It's bet-<lb/>
ter than not having any method. 1<lb/>
feel more secure in at least know-<lb/>
ing what I'm doing than not<lb/>
knowing. Before the creation oi<lb/>
the Actors Studio we never had a<lb/>
method<lb/>
When he was 13, the Hopper<lb/>
family moved to San Diego. The<lb/>
summer vacation oi 1951 found<lb/>
him in Pasadena working as a fry<lb/>
cook in a cafe so that he could<lb/>
spend the remainder of his wak<lb/>
ing hours at the Pasadena<lb/>
Plavhouse painting flats, making<lb/>
props and soaking up the wonder<lb/>
and magic oi the theatre.<lb/>
"1 actually ran away from<lb/>
home that summer to do it he<lb/>
said recently. "It was my start in<lb/>
the business<lb/>
The following summer he<lb/>
became an apprentice at the 1 a<lb/>
JoIIa Playhouse and wa the<lb/>
juvenile lead in one play. Follow-<lb/>
ing his graduation from high<lb/>
school in 19M. Hopper was<lb/>
awarded an acting scholarship at<lb/>
the Globe Theatre Playhouse in<lb/>
San Diego There he appeared in<lb/>
the National Shakespeare<lb/>
Festival's productions of Twelfth<lb/>
Mght and The Merchant of<lb/>
Venice.<lb/>
Encouraged by the reception<lb/>
he received he next tackled<lb/>
Hollywood. Months of<lb/>
discouragement followed until he<lb/>
finally got a walk-on role in a<lb/>
television series, then a ten-line<lb/>
part in another series and finally<lb/>
a featured role as an epileptic in a<lb/>
segment of "Medic<lb/>
When he was 19, Warner<lb/>
Brothers took notice of him and<lb/>
he became one of their contract<lb/>
players. His first major role was<lb/>
in Rebel Without a Cause which<lb/>
starred James Dean. The two<lb/>
young actors became fast, close<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
"I learned a lot from Dean<lb/>
Hopper said. "He taught me that<lb/>
you have to be dedicated to<lb/>
yourself. That you've got to learn<lb/>
how to do something and not<lb/>
show it<lb/>
Next, came Giant, again with<lb/>
Dean. Following Dean's untimely<lb/>
death. Hopper obtained a release<lb/>
from his film contract and moved<lb/>
to New York where he became a<lb/>
member of Tee Strasberg's Ac-<lb/>
tors Studio. In 1957. he returned<lb/>
to California and joined the cast<lb/>
oi From Here to Texas.<lb/>
Almost immediately he began<lb/>
to have problems with the film's<lb/>
autocratic director, Henry<lb/>
Hathaway. The sounds from<lb/>
their battles echoed throughout<lb/>
the hallowed halls of the<lb/>
Hollywood studio and created<lb/>
headlines in the gossip columns,<lb/>
later Hopper discovered that the<lb/>
word wa- out that he was "un-<lb/>
controllable<lb/>
1 r seven years it seemed as<lb/>
though the major studio doors<lb/>
were closed to him and he<lb/>
couldn't seem to get an accep-<lb/>
table role. It was during this dark<lb/>
period that he called upon his<lb/>
skill as a photographer and went<lb/>
to work for Vogue and Harper's<lb/>
Bazaar In spite of the problems<lb/>
Hathaway had with Hopper he<lb/>
respected the actor's creativity<lb/>
and in 1964 he cast him in The<lb/>
Sons of Katie Elder and later, in<lb/>
True Grit.<lb/>
His other film credits include<lb/>
Night Tide, The Trip, The<lb/>
American Friend, Tracks, Mad<lb/>
Dog Morgan, Apocalypse Sow,<lb/>
Out of the Blue, and Reborn. He<lb/>
made his directional debut with<lb/>
Easy Rider, written by he and<lb/>
Peter Fonda in which both star-<lb/>
red. Later, Hopper wrote, pro-<lb/>
duced and directed The Last<lb/>
Movie, which became the first<lb/>
American film to win the best<lb/>
picture award at the Venice Film<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
"Tike Easy Rider, The Last<lb/>
Movie has no snpt Hopper ex-<lb/>
plained during the '78 interview.<lb/>
'I simply hired a cast that includ-<lb/>
ed some of the most conspicuous<lb/>
individuals in Hollywood, among<lb/>
them Peter Fonda, Dean<lb/>
Stockwell, Jim Mitchum, Russ<lb/>
Tamblyn, John Phillip Law and<lb/>
Michelle Phillips of the Mamas<lb/>
and the Papas.<lb/>
"I hired myself as leading<lb/>
man. and united everybody to a<lb/>
location 14,(XX) feet above sea<lb/>
level in the backlands of Peru, a<lb/>
country where all the major drugs<lb/>
? cocaine, speed, heroin,<lb/>
hallucinogens ? are restricted<lb/>
but can in fact be easi! attained.<lb/>
I got all those cats together down<lb/>
there and we had the wildest<lb/>
scene in the history of movies.<lb/>
"But Universal Pictures refus-<lb/>
ed to release it in the U.S he<lb/>
continued. "They couldn't quite<lb/>
understand the 'last Movie's'<lb/>
message ? a storv about<lb/>
Dennis<lb/>
America and how it's destroving<lb/>
itself<lb/>
During the past two years, he<lb/>
has had featured roles in Franas<lb/>
Ford Coppola's Rumble Fish,<lb/>
Sam Peckinpah's The Osterman<lb/>
Weekend and Robert Altman's<lb/>
OX. andStiggs No longer 'he ir-<lb/>
repressible bad boy, Hopper,<lb/>
who has been clean of drugs and<lb/>
drink for the past 18 months,<lb/>
says he doens't look back on the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
"I don't really think too much<lb/>
about it he said "I was against<lb/>
the war, various things. But that<lb/>
war is over, life has gone on you<lb/>
know, it's a waste oi time<lb/>
think about it<lb/>
Hopper<lb/>
During tl<lb/>
ing, Hopper made<lb/>
I os ngelt<lb/>
standing I<lb/>
New Me.xic<lb/>
"Pc<lb/>
stav the rev; oi 'he I ?-<lb/>
they j it H<lb/>
per said ol raos in 1983 -p<lb/>
driven some people<lb/>
Revet he Je<lb/>
movc i ? I ngeles<lb/>
 tud I <lb/>
with the country a<lb/>
come back<lb/>
excitement, the dosei<lb/>
film business, the mu<lb/>
art work. Plus all my I<lb/>
in I os ngeles and Sew ?<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Transit Schedule<lb/>
PURPLE SCHEDULE<lb/>
(7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.)<lb/>
PLACE DEPARTS<lb/>
SpeightOn the Hour<lb/>
Univ. Cond5 after hour<lb/>
Cannon Court6 after hour<lb/>
Eastbrook7 after hour<lb/>
Rier Bluff10 after hour<lb/>
Kings Rove15 after hour<lb/>
Village Greene 18 after hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym20 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall23 after hour<lb/>
sPeight on half hour<lb/>
Univ. Cond25 till hour<lb/>
Cannon Court 24 till hour<lb/>
Eastbrook23 till hour<lb/>
R,r Bluff20 till hour<lb/>
Kings Row15 till hour<lb/>
Village Greene12 till hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym10 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall7 till hour<lb/>
BROWN SCHEDULE<lb/>
(7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.)<lb/>
PLACE DEPARTS<lb/>
SPeia-hton the hour<lb/>
Oak and 1st St3 after hour<lb/>
ElmStreet 5 after hour<lb/>
Willow &amp; Woodlawn 8 after hour<lb/>
A very &amp; Holly10 after hour<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth15 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall20 after hour<lb/>
Speight on half hour<lb/>
Oak and 1st St27 till hour<lb/>
ElmStreet25 till hour<lb/>
Willow &amp; Woodlawn22 till hour<lb/>
Avery&amp; Holly20 till hour<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth 15 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall10 till hour<lb/>
GOLD SCHEDULE<lb/>
(7:30 a.m. - 9:30 p.m.)<lb/>
PLACE DEPARTS<lb/>
Mingeson the hour<lb/>
Allied Health3 after hour<lb/>
?Greenville Square5aft<lb/>
?Pitt Plaza6 after hour<lb/>
"Hargett Drug10 after h .<lb/>
Mendenhall20afl our<lb/>
10th and College Hill25 after hour<lb/>
College Hill26 after hour<lb/>
Mingeson half hour<lb/>
Allied Health 27 till hour<lb/>
?Greenville Square25 till hour<lb/>
?Pitt Plaza24 till hour<lb/>
 'Hargett Drug20 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall10 till hour<lb/>
10th and College Hil5 till hour<lb/>
College Hill 4 till hour<lb/>
?Bus schedule includes sh .<lb/>
tween the hours of 5:30 p.m<lb/>
"Bus schedule includes Hargett Drugs only betw<lb/>
the hours of 730 a.m. 5 30 p m v f<lb/>
NIGHT TRANSIT<lb/>
Friday and Saturday Nights<lb/>
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
SCHEDULE HOURLY<lb/>
Home FederalO the Hour<lb/>
College Hill6 after he .<lb/>
Cannon Court 12 after hour<lb/>
Eastbrook14 after hour<lb/>
River Bluff19 after hour<lb/>
Kings Row26 after h<lb/>
Village Greene30 after houf<lb/>
'Departure for last round will be at 15 minutes <lb/>
the hour<lb/>
No beverages or food may be consumed on the bus<lb/>
000000000000000t<lb/>
RIDE THE BUS<lb/>
No gas to buy<lb/>
No wear and tear<lb/>
on your car<lb/>
No worry with traffic<lb/>
No parking problems<lb/>
Relax . . . Ride the<lb/>
SGA Transit<lb/>
rrr?<lb/>
Continued From h-uut 15<lb/>
from the-<lb/>
intention a to mal<lb/>
album hkc<lb/>
this record <lb/>
challenging<lb/>
us said <lb/>
band is<lb/>
and surpassed<lb/>
Added Na<lb/>
thought tl a<lb/>
put us in ou<lb/>
that we wcr.<lb/>
COUld r . ?<lb/>
and play a<lb/>
This albun<lb/>
vha' we<lb/>
Wi t h pi I<lb/>
the hell<lb/>
Choir To<lb/>
H Mlkr I I I)VM( K<lb/>
T<lb/>
cond -r<lb/>
dancing . .<lb/>
Aug ?<lb/>
105<lb/>
student ????<lb/>
tion .<lb/>
The (<lb/>
studei<lb/>
? ' i ?<lb/>
'on i ping 1<lb/>
musk and n<lb/>
the twenty-mem<lb/>
In tne pa<lb/>
Show Cho<lb/>
cam r i<lb/>
Carolina 5 ,<lb/>
performed I<lb/>
"La<lb/>
saiJ I .<lb/>
dai<lb/>
the<lb/>
Read<lb/>
Fres<lb/>
AOSo<lb/>
U<lb/>
:a?-S<lb/>
SS<lb/>
5<lb/>
A2$<lb/>
FUDGE BROWNIE<lb/>
.  m ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0019"/><lb/>
0 Years<lb/>
HI I AM H1 IMAN<lb/>
?M i,l si 2ft 1983<lb/>
19<lb/>
Heart Returns On New Lable<lb/>
<lb/>
fcjrtniW <lb/>
'&amp;<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 15<lb/>
From the er beginning, the<lb/>
ttion was to make a Heart<lb/>
in like no other. Making<lb/>
record has been a verv<lb/>
enging experience tor all of<lb/>
is -aid Ann Wilson, "but this<lb/>
hand is so powerful that it met<lb/>
and surpassed thai challenge<lb/>
Added Nancy: "I've always<lb/>
Light that the one thing that<lb/>
us in our own category was<lb/>
we were unpredictable. We<lb/>
d rock as hard as any band,<lb/>
d play a ballad just as well.<lb/>
- album shows full range ot<lb/>
ai we can do<lb/>
w ith producer Ron Nevison at<lb/>
helm, Heart recorded more<lb/>
than twenty tracks over a period<lb/>
of several months. Those songs<lb/>
were pared down to ten tracks<lb/>
and the result is their most consis-<lb/>
tent album yet. Songs like "Shell<lb/>
Shock" and "If Looks Could<lb/>
Kill" expand on the group's hard<lb/>
rock base.<lb/>
Other tracks like "Never" and<lb/>
"These Dreams" bring a timely<lb/>
sophistication not yet heard<lb/>
before on a Heart album. Ann's<lb/>
vocals have never sounded better<lb/>
and Nancy is reaching advanced<lb/>
plateaus as a lead-guitarisi on<lb/>
songs like "The Wolf" and<lb/>
"What He Don't Know<lb/>
The songwriting has also been<lb/>
bolstered bv two new collabora-<lb/>
tions with Holly Knight ("Better<lb/>
Be Good To Me "Love Is A<lb/>
Battlefield "The Warrior")<lb/>
who helped co-open the cuts<lb/>
"Never" and "All Eyes<lb/>
Heart sets the stage for a new<lb/>
era of Heart music for a group<lb/>
that has maintained their success<lb/>
and their following throughout a<lb/>
decade of changes. They've done<lb/>
it simply and with a style all their<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Heart appears in concert Satur<lb/>
day, Aug. 31 in Raleigh's Dorton<lb/>
Arena at 8 p.m. Opening for<lb/>
Heart will be Shooting Star.<lb/>
Tickets are available at Apple<lb/>
Records and the Pirate's Chest in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Choir To Hold Auditions<lb/>
B M1KF.1 I DW1CK<lb/>
M?ff W nirr<lb/>
The ECl Jazz and Show<lb/>
Choir is preparing tor its se-<lb/>
nd smash season of singing and<lb/>
cing. Auditions w,ii! be held<lb/>
j 26 and 2" at 6 p.m. in room<lb/>
5 in the School oi Music. Any<lb/>
.den; who is interested in audi-<lb/>
loning should prepare a vocal<lb/>
in a jazz or pop style.<lb/>
Choir is open to all<lb/>
lents in addition to music ma-<lb/>
?rs Choir Director Lddie Lup-<lb/>
. hoping tor a nice mix of<lb/>
t and non-music majors in<lb/>
?j twenty-member croup.<lb/>
will be able to be a bit more selec-<lb/>
tive because the previous year<lb/>
was so successful. Hopefully, 1<lb/>
will be able to select a group as<lb/>
dedicated as last year's<lb/>
As for the purpose ol this<lb/>
year's Choir, it will be a little dif-<lb/>
ferent from last year's, according<lb/>
to Lupton. "The University saw<lb/>
us and saw how important we are<lb/>
to the University. The Alumni of-<lb/>
fice will use us to put on shows in<lb/>
different Alumni chapters,<lb/>
because the Choir is an excellent<lb/>
instrument of public relations for<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
i :(. l Jazz and<lb/>
performed on<lb/>
In tne ,<lb/>
?<lb/>
. am pus, appeared on the<lb/>
u ilina 1 odav Show, and has<lb/>
rformed tor the Kiwanis.<lb/>
isl yeai we were successful<lb/>
? ! upton, "because there were<lb/>
twenty dedicated singers and<lb/>
cers. Thev wanted to make<lb/>
Choir a success and tor the<lb/>
:r ; continue. This year 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
.?.<lb/>
.?.<lb/>
<lb/>
if<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
)<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
The .la and Show Choir is holding auditions on Aug. 26 and 2? at<lb/>
6 p.m. in room 105 in the School of Music.<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
iCHEDCJLE<lb/>
0 p.m<lb/>
DEPARTS<lb/>
Fresh Way Food Sto<lb/>
810 East 10th Street<lb/>
Net to the Post Office<lb/>
fsV<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
25 -f oo<lb/>
Sf&amp;fa<lb/>
ii<lb/>
DE THE BUS<lb/>
10 gas to bu<lb/>
vear and tear<lb/>
our car<lb/>
orry with traffic<lb/>
arking problems<lb/>
3x . . . Ride the<lb/>
SGA Transit<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
FUDGE BROWNIE WITH PURCHASE OF DRINK OR SANDWICH<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU 9-2-85<lb/>
Long hours, low pay,<lb/>
hard work, great company.<lb/>
The East Carolinian 757-6366<lb/>
?? - ??.  m - :? ? ? -<lb/>
the<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
lB &amp; now,<lb/>
4 i<lb/>
- <lb/>
A I -<lb/>
<lb/>
SIGN-UP<lb/>
August 26 in IMS<lb/>
? t <lb/>
-? X<lb/>
in M<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
CONVOCATION<lb/>
Thursday, ugust 29, I9S.1<lb/>
RISH<lb/>
s ptemht 1<lb/>
I : P. 1<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
a good idea<lb/>
DATE:<lb/>
Tues. Sept. 3<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 4<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 5<lb/>
TIME: <lb/>
pi AQ?- Student Supply Store<lb/>
Saving Include All Quality Rings<lb/>
HERFF JONES<lb/>
Division of Carnation Company<lb/>
$10.00 OFF<lb/>
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I HI EAST -Kil INIAN<lb/>
M i .1 SI 26, ls?i?<lb/>
t)<lb/>
Til Death Do You Part' Rare In Hollywood<lb/>
H()l VWOOD(UPI) With<lb/>
almost half of American mar-<lb/>
riages ending in divorce courts,<lb/>
the odds against movie-TV stai<lb/>
wedlock are ghasti)<lb/>
Whatever the built-in domestic<lb/>
hardships inherent m marriage,<lb/>
they are alarming!) exacerbated<lb/>
il one or both parties are pei<lb/>
formers.<lb/>
What wife, tot instance, would<lb/>
01 experience a rise m blood<lb/>
essure as she watched her bus<lb/>
and make love to another<lb/>
woman on a movie screen What<lb/>
sband would not feel a wrench<lb/>
jealous) if his wife were on<lb/>
cation with a male sex symbol<lb/>
tor three months'<lb/>
here is a tendenc) for stars to<lb/>
fall in love with other stars on<lb/>
cations, Among the best ex-<lb/>
ples was the Steve Mc-<lb/>
een h MacGraw romance in<lb/>
ihe Getaway, which got them<lb/>
h into marriage and out of<lb/>
other marriages. They, too, even-<lb/>
tually were divorced.<lb/>
How does the spouse of a<lb/>
superstar react when he or she is<lb/>
shunted aside at social events<lb/>
while the performer is swarmed<lb/>
over by admirers?<lb/>
And in the case of married<lb/>
stars, what happens when one<lb/>
partner's career is soaring and the<lb/>
other's is in the pits? What price<lb/>
does a couple pay when they are<lb/>
separated for months on end at<lb/>
different ends of the globe in pur-<lb/>
suit o their careers?<lb/>
These are only the easy ques-<lb/>
tions. There are tough ones like<lb/>
who has first dibs on the family<lb/>
make-up mirror every morning<lb/>
betore work And what if the<lb/>
spouse isn't included on the cover<lb/>
of People magazine? We're talk-<lb/>
ing tragedy here.<lb/>
Marital longevity is not<lb/>
unknown in Hollywood but il is<lb/>
uncommon when you think that<lb/>
Zsa Zsa Gabor, Elizabeth Taylor<lb/>
and Lana Turner alone wore<lb/>
holes in the aisle carpets of un-<lb/>
counted chapels.<lb/>
There are, however, some<lb/>
lasting marriages among the<lb/>
celestial creatures of tube and<lb/>
screen.<lb/>
Many good Hollywood mar-<lb/>
riages involve couples who work<lb/>
and travel together constantly.<lb/>
Others seem to thrive when the<lb/>
partners spend long periods of<lb/>
time apart.<lb/>
The scrutiny of goldfish bowl<lb/>
lives sometimes helps, sometimes<lb/>
hinders star marriages. Bob and<lb/>
Dolores Hope, and Paul and<lb/>
Joanne Newman, seem to thrive<lb/>
in the limelight. Robert and<lb/>
Arlene Alada and Robert and<lb/>
Lora Redford avoid it.<lb/>
Perhaps the most illuminating<lb/>
tact of Hollywood marriages is<lb/>
that not a single superstar actress<lb/>
in recent memory has enjoyed a<lb/>
lengthy marriage. Not one.<lb/>
Among actor-actress marriages<lb/>
probably none has survived<lb/>
longer that the Newmans. They<lb/>
have chalked up 26 years of<lb/>
more-or-less wedded bliss. Her<lb/>
ballet interests and his car racing<lb/>
are safety valves.<lb/>
Robert apparently is a good<lb/>
solid name for married guys in<lb/>
show business. A flock of them,<lb/>
including Hope, Young, Preston<lb/>
and Redford have rung up some<lb/>
impressive runs.<lb/>
Robert and Betty Young rank<lb/>
among record-setting Hollywood<lb/>
marriages with 51 years of living<lb/>
under the same roof.<lb/>
Bob Hope probably holds the<lb/>
record for longest marriage ol a<lb/>
superstar. The comedian and<lb/>
Dolores tied the knot a half-<lb/>
century ago. The fact that Bob is<lb/>
on the road solo more than six<lb/>
months a year, gives them<lb/>
breathing space, too. Robert<lb/>
Preston and his wife, Catherine,<lb/>
have been married for 45 years.<lb/>
Hanging right in there in the<lb/>
marital longevity derby are<lb/>
Charlton and Lydia Heston who<lb/>
recently celebrated their 40th year<lb/>
of connubial bliss.<lb/>
Also in the 40-year category<lb/>
are John Forsythe and wite Julie<lb/>
IJoyd and Dorothy Bridges are<lb/>
working on their 45th year ol one<lb/>
of Hollywood's happiest mat-<lb/>
ches.<lb/>
Eddie and Margo Albert will<lb/>
celebrate their 40th anniversary<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Jimmy Stewart, a cage)<lb/>
bachelor until well into his 30s.<lb/>
married his Gloria 35 years ago<lb/>
Kirk and Anne Douglas recent<lb/>
ly celebrated thur 30th anniver<lb/>
sary. Robert and Rosemary Stack<lb/>
are moving right along rhey've<lb/>
been married 28 years.<lb/>
Gregory and Veroniquc Peck<lb/>
have been married 2K vears And<lb/>
it won't be long before Larrv<lb/>
Hagman and his wife Maj<lb/>
celebrate their 30th Richard and<lb/>
Penni (renna have surpassed the<lb/>
25-year mark, as have Mike and<lb/>
Marilouonnors, Alan and<lb/>
Arlene Alda and Robert and Lola<lb/>
Redford.<lb/>
Among the stormi - public<lb/>
and private marriages that has<lb/>
managed to endure is thai l I <lb/>
and Felicia Lemmon who have<lb/>
tallied 22 vears of Mr and Mrs<lb/>
Still newlyweds bv most stan-<lb/>
dard- are Cliff Robertson and<lb/>
Dina Merrill Both I their<lb/>
own careers arid oft find<lb/>
themselves in differei<lb/>
the countr)<lb/>
I he Hollywood divorca<lb/>
mav be lower than it w<lb/>
I oda) perfomers plav h use<lb/>
together more<lb/>
ing it<lb/>
statistics.<lb/>
?<lb/>
'Falcon Crest' Star Proves Life Imitates Art<lb/>
HOI 1 WOOD il I'll I lie<lb/>
? s' imes im an w hen a<lb/>
ass ui the<lb/>
:haracteristics of a role oi<lb/>
omes absorbed in an element<lb/>
a script.<lb/>
Paul Newman plunged<lb/>
mobih . iftei stai<lb/>
Winning in which he played a<lb/>
e Jner<lb/>
In the case of 1 aura Johnson,<lb/>
e as the wealth) T.<lb/>
?rd in the television scries<lb/>
1 alcon c re ibstantialh<lb/>
luenced the acti fest) le<lb/>
Unt<lb/>
imetime ? <lb/>
nson, 26, I <lb/>
ught . . ? 11<lb/>
id enjoyed a few<lb/>
i he<lb/>
I ast season, : owevei.<lb/>
'I alcon C res writers had ierrv<lb/>
u) an interest in a<lb/>
thoroughbred, and Johnson has<lb/>
been horsing around ever since.<lb/>
Now much of her daily life is<lb/>
scheduled around her four-legged<lb/>
acquisition.<lb/>
" I he script called for me, as<lb/>
lerrv, to ride the horse in a cou-<lb/>
ple ol scenes Johnson said. "I<lb/>
wanted to look believable in the<lb/>
saddle dnd 1 didn't want the pro<lb/>
ducers to use a double.<lb/>
"So. -even months ago 1 went<lb/>
to a stable and found a trainer<lb/>
who could teadi me to ride com-<lb/>
rtabl) and convincingly in au<lb/>
I nglish saddle. I wanted to learn<lb/>
-age and some of the intricate<lb/>
and formal moves ol a good<lb/>
: idei <lb/>
Rial was the beginning of the<lb/>
end. or the beginning of the<lb/>
beginning of a new way of life for<lb/>
the actress. It also signaled<lb/>
changes in the life of her new hus-<lb/>
band, actor Harrv Hamlm.<lb/>
Johnson quickl) became more<lb/>
obsessed with horses than the ex-<lb/>
traordinarih wealthv Terry in the<lb/>
-how .<lb/>
I ike Terry, Johnson bought a<lb/>
thoroughbred ? to ride, not to<lb/>
race ? and has dihgenlty worked<lb/>
at becoming one of the best<lb/>
horsewomen among Hollywood<lb/>
actresses.<lb/>
"I am still taking lesson- four<lb/>
hours a day Johnson said the<lb/>
other dav, sacrificing a lunch<lb/>
hour awav from the corral.<lb/>
"And my horse. Godsend, is<lb/>
an absolute wonder. He's a little<lb/>
long in the tooth at 16, but he's a<lb/>
huge chestnut, 1" hands high<lb/>
He's a hunter-jumper who does<lb/>
dressage, too. Mv life hasn't been<lb/>
the same since I bought him<lb/>
almost tour months ago<lb/>
During rhe "Falcon Crest"<lb/>
hiatus, and on those davs when<lb/>
she is not working, Johnson<lb/>
reports to the I os Angeles<lb/>
Equestrian Center stables at 8:30<lb/>
a.m six davs a week, to work<lb/>
with Godsend.<lb/>
"I groom him, saddle him and<lb/>
walk him tor about 30 minutes<lb/>
SALE PRICES<lb/>
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Johnson said. "Then 1 enjoy a<lb/>
good hour's ride, then walk him<lb/>
another 20 minutes. After that 1<lb/>
groom and teed him. It takes<lb/>
time and patience.<lb/>
"There's no denying that I've<lb/>
become obsessed with riding and<lb/>
my horse. You can't ride well<lb/>
unless you are obsessed. So far<lb/>
I've been content with learning<lb/>
dressage but I plan to start jump-<lb/>
ing him soon<lb/>
How will Johnson find time to<lb/>
ride Godsend once she begins<lb/>
working on her CBS-TV series<lb/>
again?<lb/>
"I'll have to get up real earl)<lb/>
every morning, before dawn, or<lb/>
get to the stables after work late<lb/>
at night she -aid cheerfully.<lb/>
"But I only work in the series<lb/>
about two davs a week because<lb/>
we have such a large cast and so<lb/>
many storv lines<lb/>
And how does husband<lb/>
Hamlm feel about his bride-<lb/>
devoting so much time to a<lb/>
horse?<lb/>
"Harry encourages me because<lb/>
he knows how much 1 lov<lb/>
ride she answered.<lb/>
"I spend a lot more tune with<lb/>
Harry than I do with Godsend<lb/>
Harrv and I attend the same ac<lb/>
ting class We plaved one scene<lb/>
together. It wasn't a good idea <lb/>
was a screaming, fighting scene<lb/>
and when we rehearsed at home<lb/>
the neighbors were ready I<lb/>
the police<lb/>
"I've worked in various I <lb/>
hows and some movies, but I've<lb/>
never become as absorbed r<lb/>
character as 1 have Terrv. I .here's<lb/>
always some actoi transference<lb/>
ol character th.it works both<lb/>
ways<lb/>
't an't realh sepa<lb/>
yoursell from the role, espeaalh<lb/>
in a long-running set<lb/>
'I alconrest' 1 ? ?  started out<lb/>
? ker who gradual!)<lb/>
 aj me rich and<lb/>
table I wor ?<lb/>
Ierrv more like rm<lb/>
? ime.<lb/>
v hen she fell in love . i<lb/>
I transferred<lb/>
Harr ike il<lb/>
wor ?<lb/>
"On the otl<lb/>
her interest in I<lb/>
had an impa ny life <lb/>
couldn't be hapi<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
Nitelifer<lb/>
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Pepsi Boasts Carolina Roots<lb/>
' Ht TCARQLINIAN AUGUST 26, 1985 21<lb/>
C'olfnians have a proud<lb/>
ieritagc and, justifiably,<lb/>
u ,a claim to a number ot<lb/>
significant world contributions.<lb/>
Foi example. North Carolina<lb/>
.a In th to the airplane, was the<lb/>
first state to deelare in-<lb/>
dependence from Great Britain,<lb/>
and was the site of this nation's<lb/>
first discover) ot gold and silver.<lb/>
South Carolina, the first state<lb/>
lo export cotton, also had the<lb/>
first tue plantation, and the first<lb/>
Chambei of Commerce What's<lb/>
more, the War Between the States<lb/>
began with a single shot in<lb/>
Charleston.<lb/>
But these sister states share one<lb/>
bit of heritage that now cover<lb/>
the globe, heritage that pleases<lb/>
the taste buds and quenches the<lb/>
thirst ot millions of people<lb/>
throughout the world even day.<lb/>
Pepsi c ola.<lb/>
Pepsi was created in New Bern,<lb/>
North Carolina in 1898. The taste<lb/>
first known as "Brad's Drink<lb/>
was concocted by New Bern<lb/>
pharmacist Caleb Bradham. The<lb/>
coveted cola proved extremelv<lb/>
popular in the Carolinas, and the<lb/>
roots o the product are as strong<lb/>
as ever.<lb/>
Iodav, the 18 Pepsi-Cola bot-<lb/>
tlers that market Pepsi-Cola here<lb/>
in the Carolinas rank with the na-<lb/>
tions' oldest and most successful<lb/>
bottlers.<lb/>
"We are verv proud thai Pepsi<lb/>
was born m the Carolinas said<lb/>
Carl Brown of Wilmington,<lb/>
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Pepsi-Cola Bottlers. "Caroli-<lb/>
nians consume the highest pet<lb/>
capita volume of soft dunks in<lb/>
America, and Pepsi is the leading<lb/>
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Currently, the IS Carolina<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola bottlers are touting<lb/>
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1 shuts proclaiming "I'm A<lb/>
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Born In The Carolinas The<lb/>
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bach of the high-quality shirts<lb/>
sports a "Crafted With Pride In<lb/>
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"Many people don't know that<lb/>
Pepsi was born in the<lb/>
Carolinas explained Frank<lb/>
Avent of Florence, current chair-<lb/>
man of the Carolina Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
Bottlers.<lb/>
"We are quite proud of this<lb/>
and want all Carolinians to know<lb/>
it The fact that Pepsi was born<lb/>
here in the Carolinas and is con-<lb/>
sumed worldwide is a lot to be<lb/>
proud of.<lb/>
-?? ?wan imm<lb/>
w,<lb/>
Pepsi-C ola Recalls .fsarolma Heritage with a new sales pitch. Pepsi: Pride of thearolinas.<lb/>
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Good only with this coupon One discount per pizza<lb/>
Otter expires December Jl. 1985<lb/>
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Good only with this coupon One d.scoun. per p?za<lb/>
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IHF I AM (. AROl ISIAN<lb/>
?M GUST 26, I985<lb/>
23<lb/>
Playhouse Holds 'Peter Pan' Audition<lb/>
n K i n s<lb/>
Ml'<lb/>
and dancing audi<lb/>
" the Easi Carolina<lb/>
I layhouse production ol the<lb/>
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lames Barrie's fantasj Peter Pan<lb/>
are scheduled tor Mondaj and<lb/>
rucsday, Sepi 2 and 3 in the<lb/>
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I he auditions will begin at 7:30<lb/>
 m each evening in Room 206<lb/>
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,n 'he ECU campous foi 7<lb/>
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I his production will be cast<lb/>
m ECl students, faculty,<lb/>
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There are 40 roles open tot<lb/>
casting b Director I dgai<lb/>
'ssin who commented. "We<lb/>
 a variety ol roles available<lb/>
foi the show We want to en<lb/>
throughout the area to<lb/>
audition<lb/>
Hoys between the ages of 10<lb/>
and 16. older boys and men who<lb/>
can smg are needed. Auditioning<lb/>
singers should prepare a song of<lb/>
their choice which shows off their<lb/>
voice to the best advantage and<lb/>
bring then music. An accom-<lb/>
panist will be provided ? no<lb/>
"a-capella" singing will be per-<lb/>
(Jiited<lb/>
Dancers should also sing and<lb/>
bring rehearsal clothes, shoes and<lb/>
will be given standard routines bv<lb/>
the choreogrpaher. Mavis Rav.<lb/>
Peter Pan will be the first pro-<lb/>
duction of the ECU Playhouse<lb/>
season and will be performed in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre, Wednesday<lb/>
through Saturday, Oct. 9-12 at<lb/>
8:15 p.m with a special matinee<lb/>
set for 2:15 p.m. on Saturday<lb/>
Oct. 12. Tickets to the produc-<lb/>
tion will become available on<lb/>
Oct. 2.<lb/>
Utot K<lb/>
&amp;Ar<lb/>
Summer It almost over but we<lb/>
ttill have plenty of COOL cottons<lb/>
for the hot months to come<lb/>
New arrivals and cutwork<lb/>
envenings out on me town<lb/>
for<lb/>
New Laurel Burch earrings and ac-<lb/>
cessories<lb/>
Specializing in Natural Fiber<lb/>
Clothing for Women<lb/>
116 E. 5th St. Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30<lb/>
Next Door to Book Barn 757-3944<lb/>
K<lb/>
Chinese Restaurant<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Featunng the Largest Var.ety of Ch.nese Dishes in Greenville<lb/>
Announcing Our New<lb/>
Daily Luncheon Buffet<lb/>
11:30 "til 2:30<lb/>
?2 Kmds Or<lb/>
?5 Entree.<lb/>
appetizers<lb/>
-i &amp; Soup included<lb/>
$3 75<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
TAN EAT<lb/>
?. i<lb/>
Persnr,<lb/>
lei j Frp<lb/>
Children unoer<lb/>
Also Serv.ng Our Regular Lanvnwn Menu And Daily Specials<lb/>
A v to 1 P M<lb/>
A M to ' ' 00 P M<lb/>
? M<lb/>
sd<lb/>
,?<lb/>
Take-Outs Welcom<lb/>
Tree House Is Open<lb/>
For Lunch<lb/>
? With The Tree House Hot<lb/>
Luncheon Buffet featuring;<lb/>
Roast Beef, Lasagna &amp; Corn Beef<lb/>
with several vegetables of the week<lb/>
On Special This Week for $2.99<lb/>
Regularly $3.50<lb/>
Also Come Enjoy Our 50 Item Salad Bar<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
This Week ?'ECUStudent ID SI.99<lb/>
Located on the corner of 5th and Cotanche Street<lb/>
treet Greenville NC 27834<lb/>
JBi <lb/>
Telephone 919) 752-3411<lb/>
' 'Greenville 9s newest and most innovative offering to snoppers<lb/>
??<lb/>
GOURMET<lb/>
COFFEE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Cookware<lb/>
Store<lb/>
Bargain<lb/>
Barrel<lb/>
Enjoy your Gourmet cooking<lb/>
with beautiful high quality<lb/>
cookware. We also carry Sushi kits,<lb/>
bamboo Steamer and Wok.<lb/>
Great place to meet your<lb/>
friends, relax with a cup of Gourmet<lb/>
Coffee and a variety of muffins that<lb/>
are baked fresh daily.<lb/>
Gifts<lb/>
? Dolls and Doll Cases<lb/>
? Cloisonne Beads<lb/>
? Cloisonne Earrings<lb/>
? Cloisonne Bracelets<lb/>
? Cloisonne Belts<lb/>
? Wall Hangings<lb/>
? Picture Frames<lb/>
Looking for a bargain ? come<lb/>
to The Bargain Barrel<lb/>
See such items as.<lb/>
? Antiques<lb/>
? 4 place setting of dishes for only<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
? Teddy Bear rugs for only $5.00<lb/>
? And much much more<lb/>
Cook<lb/>
School<lb/>
We offer Chinese, Japanese<lb/>
Cooking and Sushi Course. Please<lb/>
come by and visit us.<lb/>
4<lb/>
Siu foul<lb/>
$MfyHL<lb/>
<lb/>
Caterers<lb/>
For your tailgating pleasures try<lb/>
our tailgate box lunches. Have a<lb/>
Simpley Elegant feast on us!<lb/>
Call Today.<lb/>
Our varied selections of<lb/>
gourmet foods, herbs and spices,<lb/>
bulk grains, aromatic tea, fresh<lb/>
roasted bean coffees and wonderful-<lb/>
ly delectible chocolates are sure to<lb/>
please your taste buds.<lb/>
A<lb/>
" r - '?? f ' ? jr " <lb/>
v v<lb/>
1 ???,<lb/>
,1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
HI 1AMAKOI INI AN<lb/>
M CIST 26. 1S?8<lb/>
Pitt County Fair Offers Top Entertainment<lb/>
T he Pitt County- American<lb/>
A Legion Agricultural Fair<lb/>
will start its 66th season on Mon-<lb/>
day, Sept. 30, 1985. Plans have<lb/>
been underway since November<lb/>
of 1984 to make the 1985 Fair the<lb/>
largest and finest fair to be found<lb/>
in North Carolina east of<lb/>
Raleigh. The fair will run<lb/>
' through Saturday night, Oct. 5.<lb/>
The finest exhibits in the area<lb/>
are expected to be viewed at the<lb/>
fair with emphasis on<lb/>
Agriculture, Education, Science,<lb/>
Services and livestock. Sam Win-<lb/>
chester, Veteran Fair Manager<lb/>
for the Pitt County Fair stated<lb/>
that some exhibit space had been<lb/>
reserved as early as June for the<lb/>
event that attracted upwards to<lb/>
65,000 people in 1984.<lb/>
On the Midway, the huge<lb/>
Amusements of America will<lb/>
return this year with over 40<lb/>
rides, shows and many other at-<lb/>
tractions having just completed<lb/>
The Pitt Countv Fair begins its 66th season Sept. ?.<lb/>
SP0RTSW0RL0<lb/>
P.O Box 8068<lb/>
Greenville, V  - ?<lb/>
Welcome's ECU Students<lb/>
every tues. night<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
Skate for $1.00 with ECU ID<lb/>
from 7:00 until 10:00<lb/>
104 E. Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
(Behind Shoney's)<lb/>
756 6000<lb/>
engagements with some of the<lb/>
biggest fairs on the east coast in-<lb/>
cluding Greensboro, Charlotte,<lb/>
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, the<lb/>
Vermont State Fair and heading<lb/>
to the Georgia State Fair.<lb/>
Owned by the five Vivona<lb/>
Brothers this organization ranks<lb/>
at the very top in carnival<lb/>
organizations across America<lb/>
and has grown steadily since its<lb/>
founding in the late forties. It has<lb/>
the industry's top reputation for<lb/>
safe clean family outdoor enter-<lb/>
tainment. This is expected to be<lb/>
the largest midway east of<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
No fair can outrank the Pitt<lb/>
County Fair in the free attrac-<lb/>
tions that it offers its patrons.<lb/>
The fair's 18 building Village of<lb/>
Yesteryear was the idea of Con-<lb/>
ner Eagles of Greenville, and is<lb/>
considered to be the finest exam-<lb/>
ple of a typical farming village to<lb/>
be found anywhere that depicts<lb/>
life as it was lived in the latter<lb/>
part of the 19th Centurv. This at<lb/>
traction is open all during fair<lb/>
week and is free.<lb/>
On Wednesday and Thursday<lb/>
nights at 6 p.m. will be Jake<lb/>
Plumstead and Tonnv Petersons<lb/>
Hell Drivers Auto Thrill Show<lb/>
This event is also free ot charge<lb/>
? which is not the situation at<lb/>
many fairs, including the North<lb/>
Carolina State lair, v.here the<lb/>
show will be the latter pan ot Oc-<lb/>
tober. This event will be in the<lb/>
Grandstand area.<lb/>
The Grandstand will be the<lb/>
scene of Band Night on Tuesday,<lb/>
Oct. 1 at 7:30 p.m as area<lb/>
school bands give their perfor<lb/>
mances. This is a "first" tor the<lb/>
fair, and it is planned that this<lb/>
will become an annual event.<lb/>
Band Booster clubs in the Pit:<lb/>
and surrounding area are current-<lb/>
ly selling tickets tor armbands tot<lb/>
$7.00, which entitles a holder to<lb/>
. i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
CRISIS PREGNANCY<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
111 EastThirdSt.<lb/>
(The Lee Building)<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
unlimited rides on the midway<lb/>
I he band concerts are of course<lb/>
free also<lb/>
Another free '?first" this year<lb/>
is theommerford &amp; Sons <lb/>
and Circus Menagane coming to<lb/>
Greenville direct from the<lb/>
I astern States Imposition in<lb/>
Massachusetts Patrons can view<lb/>
and pet as well as teed unique and<lb/>
tamed animals with a si<lb/>
trge tor elephant and p<lb/>
rides.<lb/>
I he 1910arouse! Organ will<lb/>
again be belting out its earn<lb/>
music at the midway entra<lb/>
with a rest area in front all week<lb/>
Seldom seen now, these org<lb/>
premded music tor fairgrounds<lb/>
all across America until the eark<lb/>
1950's. This midway nosta<lb/>
should appeal not only ti -<lb/>
but to adults as well, produced b '<lb/>
an organ that was there.<lb/>
1 he Piti I o inty lair ? Sept.<lb/>
30 thru ' ci 5, 198<lb/>
free pregnancy test confidential counsel in<lb/>
All services and referrals are free of charge<lb/>
for information or appointment, call:<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
A 24-Hour Helpline<lb/>
FOOD<lb/>
is our<lb/>
SUBTECT<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Students<lb/>
NEW MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Come m and meet us"<lb/>
Al &amp; Audrey McDaniel<lb/>
at<lb/>
Our Maytag Equipped<lb/>
SOUTHPARK HOME<lb/>
STYLE LAUNDRY<lb/>
H5 Red Banks Road<lb/>
Behind the RAMADA INN<lb/>
264 By Pass Greenv,le Tel 355-5023<lb/>
75 Wash 25C25Min. Dry<lb/>
Watch for FREE DA Y<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
welcome everyone back to<lb/>
ECU and also welcome<lb/>
new students. Have a<lb/>
Great Year!<lb/>
SGA Office<lb/>
228Mendenhall<lb/>
757-6611<lb/>
?<lb/>
east Carolina<lb/>
dining service<lb/>
- COLLEGE HILL <lb/>
DINING HALL<lb/>
- MENDENHALL<lb/>
SNACK BAR<lb/>
- BUFFET DINING<lb/>
- GALLEY<lb/>
- CATERING<lb/>
vSs.?s -A<lb/>
Aspiring young conservatives,<lb/>
tired of the<lb/>
 <lb/>
liberal bias"<lb/>
ot tne<lb/>
campgs . media?<lb/>
make vourseivesneara!<lb/>
Tile E?st Carolinian needs a col-<lb/>
H??t?t$wr,Je a weekly "From<lb/>
the Right" colymn.<lb/>
5p?iJ2)i-storE mlhe Ea$t Caroli-<lb/>
nian office Monday or Wednes-<lb/>
2?X2?e?noon or ca" 757-6366 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
Now, receive a summer bonus<lb/>
from Foto Express<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
DINING ROOM<lb/>
a FREE extra set of prints.<lb/>
For a limited time at Futo Express<lb/>
you'll get an extra set of color<lb/>
prints free with every disc or roll<lb/>
of color print film you bring to us<lb/>
for processing.<lb/>
' That's right! You'll receive two<lb/>
sets of color prints for tne price of<lb/>
one. So take advantage of this<lb/>
special offer and share your<lb/>
memories with family and friends.<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Dining Services<lb/>
p?OOlCTS8'r<lb/>
Kodak<lb/>
Polo<lb/>
tKpfc??<lb/>
"The Specialists"<lb/>
10th &amp; Cotonchc Stre?t<lb/>
Beiid Hardee's<lb/>
n ! 758-7767<lb/>
Over 30 locations in the Carolina and Virginia<lb/>
The Buffet Dining Room at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center opens<lb/>
on Monday, August 26 at 11:00.<lb/>
The hours will be 11:00 until 200<lb/>
Monday through Friday. Along<lb/>
with the daily salad bar, build-your-<lb/>
own-sandwiches, and soup specials,<lb/>
items also featured are a potato bar<lb/>
on Mondays, Wednesdays, and<lb/>
Fridays and quiche on Tuesdays<lb/>
and Thursdays.<lb/>
Soloi<lb/>
s<lb/>
r-g ?<lb/>
( H<lb/>
plj'<lb/>
Incl<lb/>
. i ?<lb/>
<lb/>
pj<lb/>
30 ?A<lb/>
Ray Ban Sungii<lb/>
s?<lb/>
R i .279 1<lb/>
BIFOCALS4ti<lb/>
20i<lb/>
?S, 1 ? ?<lb/>
"OSCCCCCOCCCOSCOCCOOCX.<lb/>
Jf elcome h<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
Rctraad !??<lb/>
17.00 k UP<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Complex 5 P<lb/>
$14.88<lb/>
Foi<lb/>
hunmenj<lb/>
JfflClAL NORTH CAHOU<lb/>
Wf SERVICE H<lb/>
KFGood<lb/>
IE CENTER<lb/>
' 'Con<lb/>
Cogging<lb/>
7561<lb/>
320 West<lb/>
' <lb/>
HMHi<lb/>
?!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0025"/><lb/>
ainment<lb/>
midway<lb/>
l course<lb/>
5 eai<lb/>
oming to<lb/>
om the<lb/>
in<lb/>
"A<lb/>
and<lb/>
3 MlUil<lb/>
ill<lb/>
will<lb/>
itrance<lb/>
 ee k<lb/>
gans<lb/>
Linds<lb/>
e earl<lb/>
k<lb/>
op;<lb/>
OD<lb/>
our<lb/>
ECT<lb/>
Mi -<lb/>
?<lb/>
1?<lb/>
AiXLo<lb/>
a service<lb/>
(ILL<lb/>
g hall<lb/>
ENHALL<lb/>
BAR<lb/>
ET DINING<lb/>
.TERING<lb/>
-CS<lb/>
w Open<lb/>
JFFET<lb/>
G ROOM<lb/>
I niversity<lb/>
ling Services<lb/>
!l<lb/>
Dining Room at<lb/>
tudent Center opens<lb/>
August 26 at 11:00.<lb/>
I be 11:00 until 2:00,<lb/>
3ugh Friday. Along<lb/>
salad bar, build-your-<lb/>
les, and soup specials,<lb/>
tured are a potato bar<lb/>
, Wednesdays, and<lb/>
quiche on Tuesdays<lb/>
:vs.<lb/>
Soloists Open Artists Series<lb/>
T<lb/>
'e Dcpartmeni of Uiiiversi<lb/>
Unions' rtists Series<lb/>
has announced<lb/>
i otinittec nas announced<lb/>
plans tor the 198s isw, reason.<lb/>
Included in the Artists Series tor<lb/>
the year are the Concerto Soloists<lb/>
 Philadelphia, rhe Bach ria<lb/>
-??-? ? Pianist Jean Phillippe<lb/>
. ollard, and violinist Viktoria<lb/>
Mullova<lb/>
Foi the 1985-1986 season, all<lb/>
programs will be hold in Hendrix<lb/>
rheatre ol Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Centei due to the final ren<lb/>
of Wright uditorium. Ml<lb/>
performance times will be 8 p.m<lb/>
rhe season will commence on<lb/>
24 with the performance ol<lb/>
Concerto Soloists ol<lb/>
Philadelphia. I his nK- chambei<lb/>
orchestra, modeled aftei those ol<lb/>
Bach and Mozart, has an exten-<lb/>
repertoire ol Baroque and<lb/>
( lassical music through to 2<lb/>
century composers<lb/>
1 ach sear, the) premiere<lb/>
works b i ontemporai i<lb/>
merican composers. Mar<lb/>
Mostovo is the musk din<lb/>
and conductor ol the<lb/>
He is regarded as an authontx<lb/>
performan<lb/>
Baroque and Classical<lb/>
tones.<lb/>
Jeai Phillipe c <lb/>
ing Dec  1985, I a a<lb/>
d of a<lb/>
He has .  ?; s<lb/>
awards, made ai<lb/>
numbei ol record<lb/>
siveh around the world, and<lb/>
compa  '  grea<lb/>
pianists as Josel Hofmann,<lb/>
Sergei Rachmaninoff, Vladimii<lb/>
Horowitz, and Sviatoslas<lb/>
Richtei He is termed, "the e<lb/>
traordinary 1 rench pianists<lb/>
I he Bach Ana Group will pei<lb/>
form Jan. 2 1986. I he Group,<lb/>
founded in 1946, has toured<lb/>
throughout the world and, in ad-<lb/>
dition to its performances, holds<lb/>
Master classes, Festivals, and In-<lb/>
stitutes for young artists and the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Bach's ana music is challeng-<lb/>
. to both the vocalists and in<lb/>
a lists with severe<lb/>
si k demands, while at the<lb/>
?one time requiring highk<lb/>
developed ensemble skills. The<lb/>
Bach Ana Group has a refined<lb/>
technique ol balancing divergent<lb/>
ce and instrumental capacities<lb/>
and therebv unlocking the magic<lb/>
ol Bad<lb/>
 iolii is; V iktoria Mullova will<lb/>
Jose the 1985 1986 Artists Series<lb/>
n March<lb/>
?'?" M ? : s a re<lb/>
fron et I nion<lb/>
' .i bei ome<lb/>
Her playing is<lb/>
? ique and Rifted<lb/>
S ? med with mans<lb/>
mpl<lb/>
tie violinist evei<lb/>
ich as ?<lb/>
 ? Symp!<lb/>
LOOK GOOD<lb/>
When Your Friends<lb/>
See You Back at School<lb/>
30-60 off<lb/>
Ail Eyeglass Frames wpurchase of Rx Lenses<lb/>
Ray Ban Sunglasses. . . 30 off<lb/>
.APGE<lb/>
I Group of Frames<lb/>
s,es<lb/>
Rj r or ? 4 ? ?ve<lb/>
27<lb/>
95<lb/>
 BIFOCALS<lb/>
46<lb/>
95<lb/>
Mils<lb/>
-Ay x<lb/>
FACETED<lb/>
POLISHED EDGES<lb/>
Reg S40 Now<lb/>
s25<lb/>
20<lb/>
Senior Citizen<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
Sale Ends Sept 15.1985<lb/>
1 Discount Per Eyeglass<lb/>
C<lb/>
??L<lb/>
VUE <lb/>
V7S4<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
? R<lb/>
E ?XAMINA1 <lb/>
Welcome Back Students!<lb/>
new &amp; USED<lb/>
Retread Tlrea<lb/>
$7.00 4 UP<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Comptet Pom?<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
 Check ZZs<lb/>
,niM,i?J4 ??<lb/>
and V J,C '?? 1<lb/>
$itSL<lb/>
1cooOH<lb/>
? ?,??? $29.95<lb/>
Vlignment ,)<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
DffICIAI NORIH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATiCN<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
ISPGoodrich<lb/>
SbTNRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
? 00 A M 1.00PM<lb/>
OPENMON FRI<lb/>
I 00?M S30PM<lb/>
' 'Consider us your cars '<lb/>
j? Home Away From Home " Vt<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville Blvd<lb/>
?oooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooco?sooco50ococooococ<lb/>
Vikloria Mullova<lb/>
Back-To-School "u<lb/>
Co'orful<lb/>
Adjustable<lb/>
Scissor Lamps<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Cotton Duck<lb/>
Flip<lb/>
Chairs<lb/>
Milk Crates<lb/>
Stackable Storage<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
$10 Value<lb/>
Shop Nightly In 9?rhe Plaza<lb/>
?aleigh?Dufham?GreensDoro?Wilson?Greenvilie?Wiirningion?Fayetieville<lb/>
ex<lb/>
wnftf<lb/>
THREE DELICIOUS FLAVORS<lb/>
?" "? ' ? ? ? ? . f its ond invite<lb/>
H.R. Tankard Dist. Co. Washington, N.C.<lb/>
27889<lb/>
946-2154<lb/>
IMI bASTt -Ho NK<lb/>
AUGUST 26 '??<lb/>
25<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Avc<lb/>
We Buv Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
INSTANT GASH LOANS<lb/>
I All Transactions Confidential <lb/>
752-0322 '<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
!??q I it, b??ii<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT &amp;<lb/>
sun Sidewinder<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
of<lb/>
Cordon's Golf<lb/>
&amp; Shi Shop<lb/>
? : idies Summer Clothing 50? off<lb/>
? Men s IZOD Sport Shirts Re. S2H.(H) Now$17.95<lb/>
? STUDENT SPECIALS ?<lb/>
s ?' ?' i special a , ?<lb/>
  ni<lb/>
Goll Balls $16.95 a dozen<lb/>
$19.95 for balata balls<lb/>
H ith Pun hasi iozgolfba i indfu<lb/>
ogolj<lb/>
F I (HAT ION 264 Bpass (Beside McDonalds)<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
V.A. Merrill's<lb/>
1<lb/>
Vfck1' SPECIALLY PRICED.<lb/>
PORTABLE AND LIGHTWEIGHT<lb/>
?St X 4 J<lb/>
Microwave Oven<lb/>
? 35 rnmute lime- with - . ? I g<lb/>
?2 i?jp' eve - ' Hility<lb/>
CuO<lb/>
?Attractive ig i<lb/>
? i year limited ar.i ?.<lb/>
M xJei Ri<lb/>
just lOy<lb/>
95<lb/>
HxrtpjcrLriJr<lb/>
STARTS AS A VALUE<lb/>
. . STAYS A VALUE!<lb/>
V.A. MERRITT &amp; SONS<lb/>
207 Evans Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3736<lb/>
"Serving Pitt County for over 50 Years"<lb/>
Easy Financing?Factory Trained Servicemen<lb/>
m 4 ? " <lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0026"/><lb/>
26<lb/>
HI EAS C Roi IMAS<lb/>
Al i.l SI 26. 1S?8<lb/>
String Quartet To Kickoff Chamber Festival<lb/>
T c 1985 1986 Chamber<lb/>
estival, co-sponsored bv<lb/>
- Department of University<lb/>
1 nions and the ECU School of<lb/>
Music, will consist of five<lb/>
cnamber music ensembles, each<lb/>
to be hold at 8 p.m in Hendnx<lb/>
i iicaire.<lb/>
rhe performances include I he<lb/>
Concord String Quartet. 1 h-<lb/>
Folger Consort, The Rogeri I no.<lb/>
soprano I ucy Chelton and<lb/>
flutists Carol Wincenc. and An<lb/>
Die Musik.<lb/>
rhe Concord String Quartet<lb/>
gins the season Oct. 10 with a<lb/>
performance that will continue<lb/>
the reputation Ihe e York<lb/>
limes has given them as "one of<lb/>
the best American string<lb/>
quartets The tour musicians<lb/>
ng together separate skills and<lb/>
qualities to form a fusion which<lb/>
is at once brilliant, loving and<lb/>
soulfull.<lb/>
rhe Concord String Quartet is<lb/>
attuned; whether the romp or<lb/>
sigh together, then split-second<lb/>
timing with melodies and<lb/>
rhythms and full ripeness of their<lb/>
sound have earned them a place<lb/>
in the first rank of chamber<lb/>
music groups.<lb/>
On Nov. 20, The Folger Con<lb/>
soil will bring their unique<lb/>
Renaissance sound to the series.<lb/>
This ensemble of professional<lb/>
musicians, in residence at the<lb/>
Folger Shakespeare Library, has<lb/>
a fundamental goal to provide to<lb/>
the rapidly widening early music<lb/>
audience performances which<lb/>
combine a strong basis in scholar-<lb/>
ship with a vivid sense of the<lb/>
vitality and universal appeal of<lb/>
Medieval and Renaissance music.<lb/>
Ihe Folger Consort is most suc-<lb/>
cessful at this as thev have<lb/>
garnered reviews nationwide ac-<lb/>
claiming their performances.<lb/>
The Rogeri I no was formed in<lb/>
1976 and since that time, thev<lb/>
have met with extraordinary<lb/>
critical and public acclaim at<lb/>
campuses and in major cities<lb/>
throughout the United States.<lb/>
Following the rrio's New York<lb/>
debut. The en York Times<lb/>
wrote of the Rogeri I no that it<lb/>
"demonstrated its technical<lb/>
fluency, m usicality and<lb/>
liveliness<lb/>
Based in New York City, the<lb/>
Trio was in residence at Vale<lb/>
University where it presented,<lb/>
with the Tokyo String Quartet,<lb/>
the complete Brahms chamber<lb/>
music cycle. Their performance<lb/>
date is Feb. 19, 1986.<lb/>
Lucy Shelton, a soprano<lb/>
vocalist, and Carol Wincenc,<lb/>
flutist, will be combining their<lb/>
unique talents for a performance<lb/>
on March 3. 1986. I ucy Shelton<lb/>
is a remarkably versatile per<lb/>
former who is distinguished as<lb/>
the only artist to have received<lb/>
'he Naumberg Award twice. She<lb/>
has performed with main sym-<lb/>
phony orchestras across the<lb/>
country, and Shelton tours and<lb/>
records extensively as well.<lb/>
Carol Wincenc has established<lb/>
a reputation as one of toda<lb/>
foremost flutists, like her<lb/>
counterpart in this duo, Wincenc<lb/>
tours and records frequently and<lb/>
finds time for other collabora-<lb/>
tions with such luminaries as<lb/>
Jean-Pierre Rampal, Fmanuel<lb/>
A, Idly Ameling and Eliot Fisk.<lb/>
She won the 1978 Naumberg<lb/>
flute competition, and her first<lb/>
solo album was cited bv Stereo<lb/>
Review as a "Recording ol<lb/>
Special Merit<lb/>
An Die Musik will conclude the<lb/>
Chamber Festival on March 19,<lb/>
1986. They are an internationally<lb/>
celebrated chamber music enscm<lb/>
ble and have been acclaimed foi<lb/>
their superb artistry throughout<lb/>
the United States and Europe<lb/>
Comprised of five superlative<lb/>
artists, dedicated to chamber<lb/>
music and performing an annual<lb/>
concert series in New Vorl<lb/>
1976, Ar, Die Musik ha I<lb/>
featured bv distinguished S?<lb/>
( enters, and Festivals act<lb/>
United States his perfi<lb/>
will continue their ranking<lb/>
foremost oi world cla<lb/>
music ensemble<lb/>
t hambei f estival<lb/>
Series Season ticket<lb/>
available from the Centra ' ?<lb/>
Office. Morid.r. I<lb/>
a.n ' , telcphoi "<lb/>
266, begini<lb/>
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1009 Dickinson Ave. Greenville 758-0057 VISAvTASTERCARD<lb/>
??<lb/>
Baker<lb/>
Bj k h i<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
atfaB<lb/>
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<lb/>
a.<lb/>
ron Baktr -4J? ramhies<lb/>
running bacW rusht-d tor !2i v?rd-<lb/>
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pie<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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vVesi Fui<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Joe M( ?ho finished<lb/>
He<lb/>
? a<lb/>
the<lb/>
scnoo<lb/>
nd all<lb/>
CASH OR CHECK<lb/>
leading<lb/>
formei ?<lb/>
Evans, M k M<lb/>
IsLtm.<lb/>
 an. wh<lb/>
in rushing<lb/>
yards, will be the Mane:<lb/>
running back pos tion He<lb/>
became only the thud t<lb/>
back in N c Statt<lb/>
for over 200 diA in a game.<lb/>
ting 20 yards on 27cai a<lb/>
season's 31-22 win tvei I C I<lb/>
This vear contest will be the<lb/>
16th meeting between the<lb/>
schools with all the gamev b<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0027"/><lb/>
Festival<lb/>
V 1 ?rk since<lb/>
as heen<lb/>
k .? Series,<lb/>
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will be<lb/>
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? HI- t AS1AROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
M dl si 26 Ivx'<lb/>
Baker's Pirates Prepare For Difficult Slate<lb/>
B RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
t sponi tdltor<lb/>
With the ECU football team<lb/>
embarking on their 1985-86 cam-<lb/>
paign, lust-seat coach Art Baker<lb/>
is trying to prepare his team for<lb/>
the school's toughest season ever.<lb/>
With Baker and si new assis-<lb/>
coaches the Pirates hope to<lb/>
tpture the form that drove<lb/>
m to an 8-3 record and a<lb/>
fop 20 ranking in the Associated<lb/>
Press Poll and a No. 17 rating in<lb/>
the Sports Illustrated Poll.<lb/>
Baker will lead the Pirates in<lb/>
1985 after playing a major role in<lb/>
ECU'S successful 1983 season<lb/>
That year saw Baker in the role oi<lb/>
associate head coach and offen-<lb/>
sive coordinator. However, 1985<lb/>
will mark the third time Baker<lb/>
has been a head coach on the col-<lb/>
legiate level. His previous stops<lb/>
were at Furman and The Citadel.<lb/>
In 1984, the personable Baker<lb/>
<lb/>
; i<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Ion Baker 43t rambles for vardage against N.C. State. The senior<lb/>
running back rushed for 120 yards against the Wolfpack last season<lb/>
served as assistant head coach<lb/>
and quarterback coach for<lb/>
Florida State's Bobbv Bowden.<lb/>
Baker inherits a voting squad<lb/>
in 198s, as 30 lettermen were lost<lb/>
from last year s 2-9 club.<lb/>
"I've always liked a<lb/>
challenge Baker said "lavbe<lb/>
thai goes along with being short<lb/>
(standing at 5-8), but I believe the<lb/>
way you accomplish things thai<lb/>
yotl couldn't otherwise, is<lb/>
through togetherness relation-<lb/>
ships you develop in a family<lb/>
type situation<lb/>
Baker advocates in option of-<lb/>
fense and a strong defense, but<lb/>
said that team unity is the kev in-<lb/>
gredient in making this a suc-<lb/>
cessful vear for his Pirates.<lb/>
"Whether we win or lose is go-<lb/>
ing to depend on the values we<lb/>
gam by being a close football<lb/>
team ECU'S rookie coach em<lb/>
phasized. "You become a good<lb/>
football team when people Mar:<lb/>
giving up theii individuality.<lb/>
With the schedule we have, that's<lb/>
our only chance to accomplish<lb/>
something good and worthwile<lb/>
this vear <lb/>
Forty one lettermen return<lb/>
from last year's squad, including<lb/>
a number ol people on each side<lb/>
oi the ball who started at some<lb/>
point during the iss4 campaign.<lb/>
But inexperience looms in two<lb/>
critical areas - wide receiver and<lb/>
the interioi defensive line<lb/>
"It just means we have a much<lb/>
harder task Bake: said o his<lb/>
receiver dilemma "In order to<lb/>
e .i quality passing game you<lb/>
receivers, and<lb/>
have thai It's going I taki<lb/>
while to develop, because ai<lb/>
present time we don't have<lb/>
speed, abihtv, experience or<lb/>
talent to really threaten pe<lb/>
with the passing game<lb/>
Defensi1 ely. the Pirates<lb/>
just as inexperienced at the tackle<lb/>
md n ?s -? lai d positions 1 eon<lb/>
Hail and David Plum are the<lb/>
players with any experience at<lb/>
tackle, and talent is thin after<lb/>
h a v e q u a<lb/>
we simplv d<lb/>
Pirate Opponents Profiled<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium<lb/>
 hen E I to Raleigh<lb/>
Sepi 7 i ?pen the season<lb/>
at ? val State,<lb/>
the s will be facing a<lb/>
Wolfpack squad with an inex-<lb/>
perienced quarterback at the<lb/>
heln<lb/>
terback Erik Kramer is<lb/>
d as first team on the<lb/>
preseason depth char; and is the<lb/>
leading candidate to take over the<lb/>
I the Wolfpack attack. A<lb/>
slender 6-1. 191 pounder from<lb/>
Pierce Junior College in Califor-<lb/>
nia, he moved ahead o junior<lb/>
Scott Wilson and senior Bob<lb/>
Guidise in spring practice. While<lb/>
at Pierce JC, Kramer completed<lb/>
144 ol 254 passe- foi 2,481 yards<lb/>
and 21 touchdowns, leading his<lb/>
team to a 10-1 record.<lb/>
"Erik performed much better<lb/>
than we had expected during the<lb/>
spring NX . State head coach<lb/>
Tom Reed said. "He can throw<lb/>
on the move and ha a quick<lb/>
release, and his decision making<lb/>
has been prettv good. He must<lb/>
now pass the test of being on the<lb/>
firing line "<lb/>
While Kramer is the number<lb/>
one signal caller coming out of<lb/>
spring practice. Reed was also<lb/>
pleased with the progress shown<lb/>
by Wilson, a 6 junior.<lb/>
However, Reed anticipates both<lb/>
Wilson and Kramer will be<lb/>
challenged by John Heinle, who<lb/>
starred at Golden West Junior<lb/>
College last season, setting new<lb/>
marks for most yards passing in a<lb/>
game, season and career.<lb/>
Although the Wolfpack lost<lb/>
Joe Mclntosh. who finished as<lb/>
the school's second all-time<lb/>
leading rusher, proven per-<lb/>
formers still remain in Vince<lb/>
Evans, Mike Miller and Ricky<lb/>
Isom.<lb/>
Evans, who led the Wolfpack<lb/>
in rushing last season with 883<lb/>
yards, will be the starter at the<lb/>
running back position. He<lb/>
became only the third running<lb/>
back in N.C. State history to rush<lb/>
for over 200 yards in a game, net-<lb/>
ting 201 yards on 27 carries in last<lb/>
season's 31-22 win over ECU.<lb/>
This year's contest will be the<lb/>
16th meeting between the two<lb/>
schools with all the games being<lb/>
played at suite's Carter-Finley<lb/>
Stadium. The Wolfpack hold- an<lb/>
11-4 advantage in the series with<lb/>
the last Pit, e win com ? I 983<lb/>
bv a 22-16 margn<lb/>
SH Texas State<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
ECU will play host to<lb/>
Southwest Texas State the on-<lb/>
ly non-Division I-A school on the<lb/>
PirateC '85 schedule - on Sept.<lb/>
14 in the ECU home opener.<lb/>
The Bobcats, o the Gulf Star<lb/>
Conference, are in their second<lb/>
vear of playing Division l-AA,<lb/>
after being a Division 11 power.<lb/>
Southwest Texas State made<lb/>
the adjustment in their initial<lb/>
year o Division l-AA, compiling<lb/>
a 7-4 overall record, but were a<lb/>
ing 2-3 in league play<lb/>
A- Southwest rexas State<lb/>
enters the upcoming campaij<lb/>
O'Hara is entertaining thoughts<lb/>
ol an excellent season.<lb/>
Right tackle Charlie Vatterott<lb/>
and left tackle Kevin Mueth both<lb/>
started last yeai foi the Bobcats,<lb/>
along w ith guard loe (ihrisl and<lb/>
center Mitch Davidson.<lb/>
Quarterback David Longhof-<lb/>
fer returns as well. After earning<lb/>
the starting job in the fourth<lb/>
game o the season, 1 onghoffei<lb/>
passed foi 1,613 yards and seven<lb/>
touchdowns, while leading the<lb/>
Bobcats with 1,968 yards total of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
Joining 1 onghoffer in the<lb/>
back field will be senior Eric Co-<lb/>
ble and junior Rene Gonzalez.<lb/>
Coble, a starter last year who<lb/>
rushed foi 470 yards despite be-<lb/>
that.<lb/>
At noseguard, Mednck Ram-<lb/>
bow saw action in a reserve roll<lb/>
last year, but he struggled<lb/>
through spring drills because ol<lb/>
an appendectomy. However, in<lb/>
juries could hamper TCI at<lb/>
noseguard because depth is a ma-<lb/>
)or problem at this position.<lb/>
Although weak in two areas,<lb/>
the Pirates have experience and<lb/>
talent returning at the other areas<lb/>
? it importance<lb/>
On the defensive side ol the<lb/>
line, the linebackers and secern<lb/>
darv should prove to be a strong<lb/>
point for the Bucs. The lineback-<lb/>
ing core returns seniors Robert<lb/>
Washington and Steve Jacobs,<lb/>
juniors Bubba Waters and I arrv<lb/>
Beri) with added help tor<lb/>
sophomores Bruce Simpson and<lb/>
John Brut.<lb/>
Although the Pirates look to<lb/>
have more talent then they did a<lb/>
vear ago, it is uncertain how the<lb/>
team will react to their extremely<lb/>
difficult schedule. On the road,<lb/>
the Pirates travel to Perm State,<lb/>
North C aroiina State, Auburn,<lb/>
LSU, Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana Visiting<lb/>
Greenville in 1985 will be South<lb/>
Carolina, 1983-national cham-<lb/>
pion Miami-Florida, Tulsa, Tem-<lb/>
ple and Southwest Texas State<lb/>
No major changes are expected<lb/>
from Baker and his new staff<lb/>
either offensively or defensively<lb/>
I he Pirates will once again run<lb/>
the Cption-1 or "Freeze Optior<lb/>
offense and 5-2 defense iti<lb/>
down linemen and tw<lb/>
linebackers). It ECU do<lb/>
anything differently in 1985, u<lb/>
will come via the air as Baker has<lb/>
hopes o' throwing the ball more,<lb/>
despite an inexperienced receiv-<lb/>
ing corps and uncertainty at<lb/>
quarterback.<lb/>
last year's starting signal<lb/>
caller Darrell Speed was moved<lb/>
down to the second team after<lb/>
Ron Jones displayed more pro-<lb/>
mise during sprint drills<lb/>
Offensively, the line is an-<lb/>
chored by All-America candidate<lb/>
I im Dumas, who should clear the<lb/>
path for fourth-year starter Tony<lb/>
Baker at tailback.<lb/>
The Pirates had their first full-<lb/>
scale scrimmage of the year last<lb/>
Wednesday, and Baker was not<lb/>
surprised at the results.<lb/>
"It was a good scrimmmage<lb/>
it was typical of a first-night<lb/>
scrimmage he said. "We made<lb/>
tar too many mistakes though. If<lb/>
you make that many mistakes<lb/>
you arc going to beat yourself.<lb/>
and that's what we are going to<lb/>
try and eliminate ? beating<lb/>
ourselves If an opponent beats<lb/>
us that's another thing "<lb/>
Still, Baker was pleased with<lb/>
much of what he saw during the<lb/>
scrimmage, especially the play ol<lb/>
the defense.<lb/>
"There were some good things<lb/>
out there People flying around<lb/>
and going to the ball on<lb/>
defense the head coach said "I<lb/>
was impressed with our first-team<lb/>
defense. I thought they did a<lb/>
good job, and we had some good<lb/>
performances from some of our<lb/>
iltensive players.<lb/>
Among the bright spots for the<lb/>
Pirate offense was a 64-yard pass<lb/>
completion from Darrel Speed to<lb/>
Chris McLawhorn. Senior kicker<lb/>
Jeff Heath added two Field goals<lb/>
in the scrimmage.<lb/>
While FCC coach Baker was<lb/>
not disheartened by the tact that<lb/>
the defense seemed to be ahead of<lb/>
the offense, he does feel the of-<lb/>
fense needs to get better<lb/>
"I was a little more pleased<lb/>
with the way we threw the ball<lb/>
Baker said, "But we still have a<lb/>
long way to go<lb/>
 U will open the season on<lb/>
sept. 7 in Carter-Finley Stadium<lb/>
against N.C. State<lb/>
Fssra Ialiaferro (23, shown here making a lackle against the Seminoles of Florida State last year, will help<lb/>
the defense in stopping opponent ground attacks.<lb/>
ing hobbled bv injuries,<lb/>
sui gei on his foo in the11<lb/>
season and should be 100 percent<lb/>
by the time the season starts<lb/>
I he receiving positions are<lb/>
both manned bv experienced<lb/>
veterans as the starters at both<lb/>
flanker and split end return to<lb/>
provide the sparks for the Bobcat<lb/>
aerial attack.<lb/>
Flanker Tony Woodley lias led<lb/>
the team in receptions each o the<lb/>
past two seasons, hauling in 19<lb/>
passes last year for a 1 C5 average<lb/>
per catch.<lb/>
Split end Wayne Coffey led the<lb/>
team in average gam per catch<lb/>
last season, with 24.5 yards per<lb/>
reception on 10 catches.<lb/>
Coach O'Hara is looking for<lb/>
improvement in his team's offen-<lb/>
sive play this season and feels<lb/>
that more consistency is what is<lb/>
most needed.<lb/>
ECU-State Tickets<lb/>
Tickets for the EC1 -N.C.<lb/>
State game to be played on Sept.<lb/>
in Raleigh will be on sale for<lb/>
two davs only, on Monday, Sept.<lb/>
26, and Tuesday Sept 2 at the<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Ticket Office.<lb/>
Tickets will cost Si3, with a<lb/>
two ticket maximum for each stu-<lb/>
dent. Students must have a valid<lb/>
ECU Identification card as well<lb/>
as an activity card. The ticket of-<lb/>
fice will be open from 8 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. on both daw.<lb/>
First-year ECU coach Art Baker gets his team fired up.<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Beaver Stadium<lb/>
Penn State head coach Joe<lb/>
Paterno returns 46 lettermen for<lb/>
this his twentieth year at the helm<lb/>
of the Nittany Lions, with<lb/>
talented performers returning to<lb/>
both sides of the ball.<lb/>
Leading the way on offense<lb/>
will be junior tailback D.J.<lb/>
Dozier. The Virginia native rush-<lb/>
ed for 691 yards and four<lb/>
touchdowns last season, despite<lb/>
being hampered by numerous in-<lb/>
juries. Dozier will again be joined<lb/>
in the Penn State backfield by<lb/>
fullback Steve Smith, who rushed<lb/>
for 398 yards and five<lb/>
touchdowns last year.<lb/>
The Nittany Lion running at-<lb/>
tack will be counted on to relieve<lb/>
some of the pressure on first year<lb/>
starting quarterback John Shaf-<lb/>
fer. Shaffer is the leading can-<lb/>
didate to run the Nittany Lion at-<lb/>
tack, as he completed 40 of <lb/>
passing attempts in limited action<lb/>
a year ago. Shaffer will need to<lb/>
improve on his interception to<lb/>
touchdown ratio, as last year he<lb/>
threw seven interceptions to only<lb/>
one touchdown pass<lb/>
 xpenenced piayers return at<lb/>
the receiving positions, and<lb/>
should also help the new Nittany<lb/>
Lion quarterback. Split end Herb<lb/>
Bellamy returns after catching 16<lb/>
passes last season for a 19.1 per<lb/>
catch average. The receiving<lb/>
corps are further bolstered by the<lb/>
return oi two veteran tight ends.<lb/>
Dean DiMidio caught caught 11<lb/>
balls last season, averaging 17<lb/>
yards a catch. Brian Sil ering<lb/>
also returns after hauling in eight<lb/>
passes last season.<lb/>
Three offensive lineman will<lb/>
have to be replaced, but one of<lb/>
those spots is expected to be filled<lb/>
by former defensive tackle Todd<lb/>
Moules. Also on the offensive<lb/>
line will be senior center Keith<lb/>
Radecic, who was a reserve last<lb/>
fall before he was injured.<lb/>
Penn State's offense scored 20<lb/>
points or less in seven games last<lb/>
year, but it was the defense that<lb/>
caused the Nittany Lions to lose<lb/>
three of their final four games.<lb/>
The Lions surrendered 44 points<lb/>
to Notre Dame and 31 to Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh in two of the season-<lb/>
ending lossses.<lb/>
Nine starters return on defense<lb/>
for Penn State, with safetv Ray<lb/>
Isom leading a veteran secon-<lb/>
dary. Isom had 82 tackle1 - tops<lb/>
on the team last year .nu is one<lb/>
of three returning starters in the<lb/>
defensive backfield. Michael Zor-<lb/>
dich, the hero back returns after<lb/>
being named all-East last season.<lb/>
The Lions will have to fill a<lb/>
vacancy at one cornerback posi-<lb/>
tion but senior Lance Hamilton<lb/>
does return at the other corner<lb/>
Hamilton was the third-leading<lb/>
tackier on the team last season<lb/>
with 74 stops.<lb/>
Senior Shane Conlan returns to<lb/>
lead an experienced group of<lb/>
linebackers. He was the second-<lb/>
leading tackier last season with 7<lb/>
tackles while also garnering five<lb/>
quarterback sacks. Senior Rogers<lb/>
Alexander will step in at one<lb/>
linebacker spot while fellow<lb/>
senior Don Graham will fill the<lb/>
other.<lb/>
Defensive ends Bob White and<lb/>
Don Ginnetti along with tackle<lb/>
Mike Russo are all experienced<lb/>
returners along the frontline.<lb/>
Punter John Bruno also<lb/>
returns for the Nittany Lions<lb/>
after averaging 41.4 vards a kick<lb/>
last season. Massimo Manca is<lb/>
expected to handle the place kick-<lb/>
ing duties, replacing the<lb/>
graduated Nick Gancitano.<lb/>
This year marks the first<lb/>
meeting between the Nittany<lb/>
Lions and the Pirates, as ECU<lb/>
will travel to the state of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania for the fourth year in a<lb/>
row.<lb/>
 empie<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
With his team coming off a<lb/>
winning season (6-5), Temple<lb/>
coach Bruce Anans is going to be<lb/>
hard pressed to repeat last year's<lb/>
number of wins.<lb/>
The Owls, who were 4-7 in<lb/>
Arians first year, will be talented,<lb/>
but they also will face a difficult<lb/>
See HURRICANES, Page 2<lb/>
H OR CHECK<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0028"/><lb/>
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I Mi<lb/>
1 li K( INIAN<lb/>
M ' il M 26. !H<lb/>
Hurricanes Com<lb/>
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Continued from Page 27<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
In the first tour weeks ol the<lb/>
season. Temple will pla road<lb/>
games at Boston College, Penn<lb/>
State and ECU I hen onij home<lb/>
game during that span will be<lb/>
against defending national cham-<lb/>
pion Brigham Young.<lb/>
All-east running back Paul<lb/>
Palmer will return, aftei leading<lb/>
Icmple in rushing last veai with<lb/>
?S5 yards.<lb/>
while the quarterbacking posi-<lb/>
tion is suspect, the Owls will have<lb/>
one of the biggest offensive hues<lb/>
in the school's history.<lb/>
I ast year's quarterback I ee<lb/>
Salt, who threw twice as man)<lb/>
interceptions as he did<lb/>
touchdowns last season, will have<lb/>
to have a better year foi the Owls<lb/>
to have a winning season.<lb/>
Icmple ranked 2!si nationally<lb/>
last year in total defense, but the<lb/>
will have to replace some key pei<lb/>
sonnel. Safety Anthony Young,<lb/>
who led last vear's team in in-<lb/>
terceptions with five, will have to<lb/>
be replaced, but a talented group<lb/>
of linebackers remain.<lb/>
Ail-American linebacker "odd<lb/>
Bowles, who led the team<lb/>
tackles List year, along with Keith<lb/>
Armstrong and Bob Pilkauskas<lb/>
make the team deep at<lb/>
linebacke;<lb/>
Miami-(FLA)<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
The Miami Hurricanes will<lb/>
come to Greenville this season I<lb/>
the second time in the school's<lb/>
history. However, one kev ingre-<lb/>
dient to their success will be miss<lb/>
mg.<lb/>
Bernic Kosar, the quarterback<lb/>
who guided Miami to a national<lb/>
championship two short years<lb/>
ago, decided to forgo a final year<lb/>
ol eligibly at Miami, to play in<lb/>
the Ml<lb/>
Taking over for the all<lb/>
everything Kosar will be junior<lb/>
Vinny restaverde. The 6-5 New<lb/>
York native completed 17 of 34<lb/>
attempts last season in rather<lb/>
limited action.<lb/>
restaverde's inexperience may<lb/>
be soothed somewhat by the<lb/>
returning depth in the rest ot the<lb/>
backfield. Melvin Bratton returns<lb/>
to halfback while Alonzo<lb/>
Highsmith will play fullback.<lb/>
Highsmith was well on his way to<lb/>
a thousand yard season last year,<lb/>
when a knee injury sustained<lb/>
against Maryland put him out for<lb/>
the season. Highsmith ended the<lb/>
rcai with ?)6 yards rushing and<lb/>
m. touchdowns in only nine<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Bratton come on after<lb/>
Highsmith's injury, rushing tot<lb/>
I34 yards and tour touchdowns<lb/>
in Miami's memorable loss to<lb/>
Boston College last year.<lb/>
While Miami does return ex-<lb/>
perienced performers in the<lb/>
backtield, they are not so for-<lb/>
tunate in the wide receive; posi<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Gone are last year's starters<lb/>
Eddie Brown and Sranlcv<lb/>
Shakespeare, and it will be up to<lb/>
lomore Brian Blades and<lb/>
?man Michael Irvin to fill the<lb/>
holes ar spin end and flankei<lb/>
respectiv eh.<lb/>
Graduation also decimated the<lb/>
ranks in the offensive line as onl<lb/>
one starter will return for the<lb/>
Hurricanes in tackle Paul Ber-<lb/>
tucelli.<lb/>
Tight end Willie Smith is a pro-<lb/>
ven performer - a second team<lb/>
All America selection last year. It<lb/>
is a good bet he will break the all<lb/>
time receiving iecord for a tight<lb/>
end at Miami before his career<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
The Hurricane attack will cer-<lb/>
tainly miss Kosar, Brown,<lb/>
Shakespeare and a veteran front<lb/>
wall, so it figures to be up to the<lb/>
ground game and a much malign-<lb/>
ed defense to spark the team,<lb/>
last year's defense caved in,<lb/>
allowing 123 points in three<lb/>
season ending losses to<lb/>
Maryland, Boston College and<lb/>
UCLA.<lb/>
I he defense does return eight<lb/>
starter" however, so there is some<lb/>
talent returning to try and build<lb/>
on. lackles Derwin Jones and<lb/>
Kevin lagan will head up the<lb/>
front wall, lagan is an All-<lb/>
America candidate who ranked<lb/>
first in sacks last year while also<lb/>
leading all down linemen in<lb/>
tackles with 51.<lb/>
A defensive backfield that<lb/>
wielded to a blitzkrieg oi enemy<lb/>
air fire last year, will lie looking<lb/>
to make amends tor last vear's<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Free safety Darrel 1 ullington is<lb/>
the leader ol the secondary. He<lb/>
had live interceptions lasi year to<lb/>
lead the team, and finished up<lb/>
with 85 tackles, the second<lb/>
highest total on the club. Starting<lb/>
cornerback lolbert Bam. returns,<lb/>
but the othei corner position will<lb/>
be manned by inexperienced<lb/>
lomore Bernie Blades.<lb/>
The place kicking will be solid<lb/>
Ficklen<lb/>
as sophomore Greg Cox returns.<lb/>
Cox led the team in scoring last<lb/>
year with 82 points ? a new<lb/>
school record for points by a<lb/>
kicker in a season.<lb/>
ECU will be looking for their<lb/>
first wm ever over the Hur-<lb/>
ricanes, as the Pirates are wmiess<lb/>
in three meetings.<lb/>
J<lb/>
SW Louisiana<lb/>
Cajun Field<lb/>
A lot of veterans return as 42<lb/>
letterman, including 15 starters.<lb/>
However, there are still questions<lb/>
to be answered as the University<lb/>
ol Southwest Louisiana prepares<lb/>
tor the 1985 campaign.<lb/>
The Cajuns go into the 1985<lb/>
season with seven starters return-<lb/>
ing on defense, six starters on of<lb/>
tense and both kicking specialists<lb/>
coinir" back.<lb/>
See RAGIV, Page 29<lb/>
Ragin'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
The Jeff Heath 3i kicking Kame ill be a major weapon<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWER:<lb/>
At The Campus'East Carolina Univ, <lb/>
 SAj t v O.HTKI UH11<lb/>
? ' ? '? f 7 ri<lb/>
!  ' ' ' ?? Down t.<lb/>
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" ?? " ' W . -r s<lb/>
' ' - ? ? ?<lb/>
WARC PROPERTY E-<lb/>
??i<lb/>
9'9 756 B1<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
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profession<lb/>
? Cleaning don<lb/>
? Pain-free restol<lb/>
Robertarili<lb/>
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608 t. 10th -<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and Operated by<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
<lb/>
Ba ft<lb/>
Dinn<lb/>
One Stop Shopping For:<lb/>
art supplies<lb/>
bulletin board ideas<lb/>
calculators<lb/>
gift items<lb/>
greek items<lb/>
greeting cards<lb/>
jerseys<lb/>
leisure reading paperbacks<lb/>
official ECU class rings<lb/>
rainwear<lb/>
room accessories<lb/>
school supplies<lb/>
shorts<lb/>
sundries<lb/>
sweatshirts and pants<lb/>
t-shirts<lb/>
textbooks<lb/>
and . . .<lb/>
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Used Book Savings Inventory<lb/>
Shop Early &amp; Save<lb/>
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(.ourmel Seafood in a ti<lb/>
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walking di<lb/>
River bluff 4<lb/>
Sightly<lb/>
New menu com<lb/>
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Rivergaie Shopping P<lb/>
3101 E. 10th S<lb/>
I'horu' 757-1 757<lb/>
Watch for announcement in<lb/>
the Sept. 3 issue of the East Caroli-<lb/>
nian for information concerning<lb/>
our new computer sales depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
We accept Visa and Master Charge Bank Cards<lb/>
Fall "Rush" Hours<lb/>
Aug. 26-29<lb/>
8:30 a.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Steinbeck's<lb/>
Two Kmi<lb/>
Carolina Kasi M<lb/>
The Si<lb/>
100<lb/>
Button Dol<lb/>
ranoMrr?i Mall<lb/>
Formal Wear<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0029"/><lb/>
IHl t AM AkOl ISIAN<lb/>
 GL'STK m<lb/>
29<lb/>
Ragin' Cajuns Play Host To Pirate Gridders<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
( ontinued from page 2H<lb/>
1 Robertson's team<lb/>
'? eii last live games<lb/>
 at 6 5<lb/>
ity linebackers, led<lb/>
-? iin along Mth a<lb/>
i ive secondary and a<lb/>
ited running hacks<lb/>
.test ques<lb/>
luartei back,<lb/>
people who<lb/>
i<lb/>
tmpbell is<lb/>
only<lb/>
. om<lb/>
le I ajuns,<lb/>
d vete<lb/>
<lb/>
H major weapon.<lb/>
4f()<lb/>
WERS<lb/>
but ?as the team's leading rushei<lb/>
two years ago when he scampered<lb/>
foi 739 yards. Jackson only needs<lb/>
42 yards to become I SI <lb/>
careei rushing leadei<lb/>
I he ol fensive line looks to be<lb/>
strong, although last year's<lb/>
leadei Chris Boudreaux<lb/>
graduated. The fust unit starting<lb/>
five should average 255 pounds<lb/>
pei man, with tout seniors in the<lb/>
group. I he leadei on the front<lb/>
wall should be senior centei Dan<lb/>
in Alexander, who was moved to<lb/>
centei from tackle.<lb/>
Heading up the defense will be<lb/>
linebackers Steve Spinella and<lb/>
chns lacob.s Spinella has led the<lb/>
Ragin' Cajuns in tackles cash ol<lb/>
the past two seasons 13 1 stops<lb/>
last year), while Jacobs was se<lb/>
cond on the team last yeai with<lb/>
si tackles.<lb/>
I he deter.su e secondary also<lb/>
looks i be in good hands as three<lb/>
static, s return this year, lunioi<lb/>
Elton Slater returns to handle one<lb/>
oi the cornerback spots aftei<lb/>
making 2 tackles last season.<lb/>
Mt hough there are seseral<lb/>
familial faces around, the defen<lb/>
sive front is in need ol some<lb/>
rebuilding since both defensive<lb/>
ends and stalwart defensive<lb/>
tackle Charles "Gator" Bennett<lb/>
have graduated<lb/>
However two starters o return<lb/>
as tackle kevm Sorice and<lb/>
noseguard Scots Sible come hack<lb/>
for then senioi seasons<lb/>
I he kicking game should be<lb/>
sound, as sophomore kickei<lb/>
Patrick Broussard and senioi<lb/>
puntei letiv Falgout are hack.<lb/>
Falgout, w ho averaged 39.6 yards<lb/>
per kick in his first three games<lb/>
last year aftei a 40.3 average in<lb/>
1983, vvas injured earlv in the<lb/>
1984 season with a broken leg. It<lb/>
tullv healed, Falgout should do a<lb/>
good job with the punting shores.<lb/>
Broussard had an erratic<lb/>
freshman yeai in handling all the<lb/>
( ajun placements, hitting onlv 10<lb/>
ol 22 field goal attempts, hut he<lb/>
did make all 2 of his extra point<lb/>
attempts and should onlv gel bet-<lb/>
ter a he gains more experience<lb/>
South C arolina<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
South Carolina head coav I<lb/>
Morris in ' as made a name foi<lb/>
self bv impro ii ball<lb/>
i ? am at eer skhool he's<lb/>
been associated with. "Sow he will<lb/>
nv to keep his Gamecock foot-<lb/>
ball team at the lottv heights they<lb/>
achieved last season.<lb/>
In his second vear ai South<lb/>
( arolina, Morrison led his squad<lb/>
to i lo 2 record - the best mark<lb/>
ever achieved at Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
The Gamecocks were on the<lb/>
verge ol becoming the No. 1<lb/>
Linked team in the nation, before<lb/>
tailing to Navy in the next to last<lb/>
game ol the regular season<lb/>
Morrison returns 51 lettermen,<lb/>
but graduation hit both the ol<lb/>
tensive and defensive lines hard<lb/>
Heading this year's offensive<lb/>
front will be sophomore tackles<lb/>
l)ru Minis and Buddy Quarles<lb/>
a pair ol 290 pounders. Two-yeai<lb/>
letterman Rav Carpenter will<lb/>
man one guard spot while David<lb/>
Poinsett occupies the other l'i<lb/>
viding much needed experience<lb/>
on the front wall will be senioi<lb/>
centei I eonard Burton.<lb/>
Heading the list ol returnees<lb/>
are last year's quarterbacks Allan<lb/>
Mitchell and Mike Hold Hold<lb/>
was the relief specialist in 1984,<lb/>
as the junior col leg transfer<lb/>
ne ofl the bench to lead the<lb/>
five wins for the<lb/>
(iamecocks<lb/>
i<lb/>
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Stop in our downtown offices and introduce yourself<lb/>
We look forward to professionally handling all your<lb/>
travel needs<lb/>
Ask about student travel<lb/>
ski trips cruises holiday reservations<lb/>
Our 1 4th vear serving ECU students and faculty<lb/>
T);(<lb/>
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Phone 757-0234<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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Full Service Bar within<lb/>
walking distance of<lb/>
River bluff 4 p.m1 a.m.<lb/>
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In Stock<lb/>
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COUPON EXPiRES SEP'<lb/>
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1985 I w'lh coupon onlv<lb/>
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Daily Lunch &amp; Dinner Specials,<lb/>
MonThurs. 5-10 FriSat. 5-11<lb/>
Lunch Served MonFri. 11-2<lb/>
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Steinbeck's Men's Shop<lb/>
Two Fine Stores<lb/>
Carolina East Mall ? Downtown<lb/>
The SERO<lb/>
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C arolina r ast Mall<lb/>
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ECU - LET PIZZA HUT<lb/>
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Fresh, Hot and Always Fast<lb/>
Delivery Area: AH ECU Dorms<lb/>
Cyprus Gardens Cannon Ct. Kings Row<lb/>
College View Eastbroofc River Bluff<lb/>
Cherry St. Forest Manor Village Green<lb/>
VilMn Acres Tar River Estates Greenmill Run<lb/>
l'ia tint keserves The Righl To Limit Delivery Area.<lb/>
HOI RS: Sun. Thurs. 5:00-1:00, FriSat. 5:00-2:00<lb/>
752-4445<lb/>
East 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Seniors rhomas Dendy and<lb/>
Kent Hagood both return to the<lb/>
Gamecock back field, aftei com-<lb/>
bining tor 1,185 yards rushing<lb/>
and 12 touchdowns last ear.<lb/>
Senior spin end Eric Poole<lb/>
returns to lead the receiving corps<lb/>
after catching ten passes last<lb/>
season tor an astronomical 2.1<lb/>
yard average last tall<lb/>
Much of last sear's success can<lb/>
be attributed to the tact th.i! 25<lb/>
seniors starred for the garnet and<lb/>
black last season. On defense, the<lb/>
secondary looks strong but the<lb/>
rest ol the unit is an unknown<lb/>
quanity.<lb/>
Six regulars return to the "tire<lb/>
ant" defense, with halt of those<lb/>
returnees manning positions in<lb/>
the secondary.<lb/>
Senior Tom Guyton will lead<lb/>
the defense from his end position<lb/>
as he is the only senior on the<lb/>
starting unit. rwo-year letterman<lb/>
Willie Mcintee will fill the other<lb/>
end position.<lb/>
1 eadmg the lit I i kers m11 be<lb/>
sophomorearl Hill, vho was<lb/>
named to the fre hman All-<lb/>
America team la I ea on Junior<lb/>
Danny Miller and n ore-<lb/>
Sam laylor will handle the duties<lb/>
at the other lineha ? lots<lb/>
although neither has had<lb/>
game experience<lb/>
I he kicking II be an<lb/>
 the Game ? uld not<lb/>
worry both the<lb/>
punter and kid rn from<lb/>
last year's 10-2 squad lunioi<lb/>
placekickei Scott Haglei hit eight<lb/>
of 13 field goal was<lb/>
perfect on all 4 ;<lb/>
touchdow n ai I empi I om<lb/>
O'O mnoi retui mdle the<lb/>
punting dui ? iftei<lb/>
40.4 yard; kick in.<lb/>
South arol : ?<lb/>
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it comes down to this: the Kaypro 1 keeps<lb/>
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The Kypro I is a complete wordprocessor and in-<lb/>
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The Kaypro I has two disk drives (400K each) to<lb/>
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The Kaypro l allows instant hookup of a vanen<lb/>
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'HI I M i AKOIIMAN i G si 26. 3<lb/>
Imagine that you are a top<lb/>
swimmer. You are an individual<lb/>
with valuable marketable skills<lb/>
that can essentially buy you an<lb/>
education at a good university.<lb/>
Why would you want to pick a<lb/>
school (and swimming program)<lb/>
like the one in Greenville, N.C<lb/>
On the surface this seems like a<lb/>
tough question, but talented high<lb/>
school swimmers have been and<lb/>
are finding themselves drawn to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Their talent, combined with<lb/>
sweat and dedication, have led to<lb/>
a program that in good and<lb/>
steadily improving "Our strong<lb/>
recruiting during the last tour<lb/>
vears is really starting to pav off<lb/>
now ECU head coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe said. "For the first time we<lb/>
have a really solid veteran team<lb/>
Solid is right. While most<lb/>
teams hope for three or font<lb/>
good returning seniors, the Pirate<lb/>
men will field five.<lb/>
"Seniors Kaut, Pittelli,<lb/>
Hawkins, Cook and<lb/>
Robaczewski will help give us the<lb/>
depth and experience we'll need<lb/>
to achieve our goals Kobe said.<lb/>
Goals form the crux of Coach<lb/>
Kobe's philosophy. "Nothing<lb/>
with substance can ever be<lb/>
achieved without a truly defined<lb/>
goal Kobe continued.<lb/>
His goals for the Pirates this<lb/>
season are threefold: to have a<lb/>
winning season, to win the Col-<lb/>
onial Athletic Conference Cham-<lb/>
pionships, and to qualify a swim-<lb/>
mer or swimmers for the NCAA<lb/>
The rapidh improving Pirate Swim team, is hoping to have qualifiers for the na<lb/>
tionals this vear.<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Kobe has also utilized goals in<lb/>
recruiting, "lour years ago we<lb/>
were basicalh trying to build an<lb/>
entire team he said. "Now we<lb/>
can use our recruiting dollars to<lb/>
pick and choose swimmers who<lb/>
arc good in our weaker areas<lb/>
While lacking the large<lb/>
recruiting budget- that some pro-<lb/>
grams receive, ECU has ma<lb/>
qualities that make it attrac i,<lb/>
potential swimmers<lb/>
The last two years have seen an<lb/>
exceptional amount of incoming<lb/>
talent at ECU. For instance<lb/>
Bruce Brockschmidt, one of this<lb/>
season's freshmen, led the men's<lb/>
team, barely missing qualifying<lb/>
for the nationals.<lb/>
Although most of ECU's talent<lb/>
comes from the Mid-Atlantic and<lb/>
Florida areas, there are also peo-<lb/>
ple on the team from throughout<lb/>
the country, as well as other na-<lb/>
tions. Due of Peru's best, Chema<lb/>
I arranaga, made great contribu-<lb/>
tions to the team during his vears<lb/>
at E I<lb/>
ECU has been drawing<lb/>
talented swimmers and Kobe<lb/>
makes it a point to get everything<lb/>
out ol their ability. "We have no<lb/>
right to be as fast as we are<lb/>
Kobe said. What he means is that<lb/>
the Pnates have exceeded<lb/>
everyone's expectations in terms<lb/>
of performance.<lb/>
ECU's success over the past<lb/>
two seasons if reflected in a 34-17<lb/>
combined dual meet record<lb/>
despite a modest budget i<lb/>
parison with mam o<lb/>
who are swimming rx?????<lb/>
Pirates also had 2 qualil ?<lb/>
the nationals, whih<lb/>
varsitv and 15 freshman<lb/>
over this same period<lb/>
While winning is I<lb/>
ol every coach, Kobe find<lb/>
other aspects<lb/>
regarding rhe<lb/>
ween the coa<lb/>
make his dutie<lb/>
thwhile.<lb/>
"I really enjo<lb/>
the team<lb/>
course ever da) th<lb/>
problem fot<lb/>
ing the kids wit<lb/>
is really sat;<lb/>
my team are<lb/>
fun to be around.<lb/>
" That kind<lb/>
through the tough<lb/>
added, "but th<lb/>
watching then ? .<lb/>
meets after<lb/>
season<lb/>
I I has an attractive campus<lb/>
and many of its academic pro-<lb/>
grams are highly rated nationally<lb/>
In addition, the swimming pro-<lb/>
gram has a good national reputa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
However, according to Kobe<lb/>
what many recruits seem to like<lb/>
about ECl is its people. "Once<lb/>
recruits come and spend time<lb/>
th the team, they usually like<lb/>
ell that thev decide<lb/>
is so<lb/>
<lb/>
Welcome Back ECU"<lb/>
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Sou them V Ussissippi<lb/>
Roberts Stadium<lb/>
rhc misfortunes ol the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi football<lb/>
last yeai were nearh<lb/>
al to those of ECl 1 he<lb/>
 lolden I agles entered the season<lb/>
a 8 yeai in 1983 with I<lb/>
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a have ' tppropriate last<lb/>
. on hit-<lb/>
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I ho Golden 1 agles lost 10<lb/>
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<lb/>
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rhree starting offensive<lb/>
linemen return to the Southern<lb/>
Miss lineup with 6-7, 275-pound<lb/>
tackle Benny Draughn as the<lb/>
mam anchor. I eft guard Chris<lb/>
Haag and centei Ken Bentley,<lb/>
both seniors, started last season.<lb/>
I wo sophomores are expected to<lb/>
till vacant line positions Kick<lb/>
Slatei should start at one tackle<lb/>
spot, while Hm Mailman will be<lb/>
one o the guards.<lb/>
Southern Miss averaged just 17<lb/>
points a game las! yeai offensive<lb/>
ly, and were especially anemic in<lb/>
the first and fourth quarters ?<lb/>
when they scored just 68 points in<lb/>
22 total quarters of pla<lb/>
A veteran secondary will lead<lb/>
the way for the Golden Eagle<lb/>
dcensejStronii sal el 1 i.n Smith<lb/>
enters his junior year with ex-<lb/>
cellent credentials. He secured<lb/>
105 total tackles last fall to lead<lb/>
all defensive backs and his three<lb/>
interceptions also led the defense<lb/>
in that department. Senior cor-<lb/>
nerbacks James Harris and Bobo<lb/>
Cooper keep their starting posi-<lb/>
tions and will provide a calming<lb/>
influence on an otherwise young<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
Nose guard Tracy Oakley led<lb/>
the Golden I agles in sacks last<lb/>
year with five, and had a total of<lb/>
68 tackles. He is the team's top<lb/>
returning tackier, and should be<lb/>
helped by fellow returning<lb/>
starters Kip Smith and Greg<lb/>
Dampeer at defensive tackle and<lb/>
end respectively.<lb/>
Placekicker Rex Banks hit all<lb/>
18 PAT tries last year, while also<lb/>
connecting on 16 of 23 field goal<lb/>
attempts last year. However, the<lb/>
punting duties are still up for<lb/>
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Auburn<lb/>
Jordan-Hare Stadium<lb/>
Former ECU coach Pat Dye<lb/>
will try to continue his winning<lb/>
ways at Auburn and from the<lb/>
looks of things the Tigers will be<lb/>
a power.<lb/>
Dye coached the Pirates from<lb/>
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along with a trip to the In-<lb/>
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??&amp; ?w of"r or ?-? -<lb/>
Name<lb/>
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Tigers<lb/>
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before lakinj<lb/>
joh<lb/>
Since Dye<lb/>
I9H1 his<lb/>
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for lOo discount on<lb/>
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Tigers Look Strong<lb/>
IHI I AM AKOI INKS . I (.1 SI 2fr IVM<lb/>
5<lb/>
1 ontiniifd from Page 3<lb/>
dependence Bowl fve lefl ECU<lb/>
10 coach at Wyoming 101 a yeai<lb/>
before taking ovci the Auburn<lb/>
10b<lb/>
Since Dye started at uburn in<lb/>
1981 tus teams have ?.n m<lb/>
games while losing onl u, foi a<lb/>
'OS winning percentage<lb/>
Dye's record should onl goi<lb/>
bettet as uburn is the preseason<lb/>
favorite in the rugged<lb/>
Siutheastern Conference, and<lb/>
have even been picked to win the<lb/>
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Xuburn backfield b returning<lb/>
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redshirt freshman Bobbv<lb/>
 alden are the back ups<lb/>
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Steve Wallace, who was in<lb/>
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iet urns al center and Yann<lb/>
Cowarl will stari at guard this<lb/>
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Auburn returns 19 lettermen<lb/>
on defense, but just six of those<lb/>
started last fall on a unit that Dye<lb/>
was not totally pleased with.<lb/>
"We have a lot of it's on<lb/>
defense, but I don't mind having<lb/>
its as long as we have some<lb/>
answers Dye said. "I don't<lb/>
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hue Nose guard Harold Hallman<lb/>
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?Xubuin's secondary returns<lb/>
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Although there are some ques-<lb/>
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ECU golf coacft Bob Hdmick<lb/>
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"1 think John Chapman,<lb/>
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Helmick is excited about the<lb/>
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Welcome Back Students<lb/>
But.<lb/>
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tackle Ka B .<lb/>
step in w here Sn<lb/>
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Defensiveh. the 1 ij,<lb/>
hae ai resting<lb/>
young, yet expei<lb/>
Seven starters return foi i<lb/>
sbarger, with six of those<lb/>
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99c<lb/>
297<lb/>
IHf i ASfAKOI.I.MAN AUGUST 26, 1985<lb/>
1985 ECL<lb/>
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
bept.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0040"/><lb/>
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l85<lb/>
OUR BIGGEST "USEDM<lb/>
TEXTBOOK INVENTORY<lb/>
EVER!<lb/>
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i<lb/>
The University Book Exchange<lb/>
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is Your<lb/>
Complete College Store<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0041"/><lb/>
ILMMrW<lb/>
W1WW<lb/>
ugiM 1985<lb/>
lf? Paul's<lb/>
New Era Beginning Under Baker<lb/>
ECU tool bail has officially entered<lb/>
a new era under the direction of first-<lb/>
head coach Art Hake:<lb/>
With six new assistants and one ol<lb/>
the toughest schedules in the nation,<lb/>
the Pirates hope to recapture the<lb/>
ton: tha drove them to an 8-3 rei<lb/>
rop 2o ranking during the 1983<lb/>
season<lb/>
Baker will lead the Pirates it: 1985<lb/>
majot role in EC L"s<lb/>
successful 1983 season I ha' yeai saw<lb/>
Bake in the role ol associate head<lb/>
id ai d ?ffensive coordinator, hut<lb/>
985 will mai k tl<lb/>
een a<lb/>
tte level His<lb/>
third time Bakei<lb/>
i ? ?n Mi<lb/>
ie v itadel<lb/>
? u it pi i<lb/>
ti ida N'<lb/>
Bake-<lb/>
1985, a 3 le<lb/>
and i ?? 1<lb/>
? assista<lb/>
? back c tat h<lb/>
ate's Bobby Bowden<lb/>
rits a young squad in<lb/>
ttei men were lost from<lb/>
last year's 2-9 club.<lb/>
I've always liked a challenge<lb/>
Bak? "Maybe thai goes along<lb/>
with being short (5-8), but 1 believe<lb/>
the was you accomplish things that<lb/>
sou couldn't otherwise is through<lb/>
togetherness relationships you<lb/>
develop in a family-type situation<lb/>
Baker advocates an option offense<lb/>
and a strong defense, but said that<lb/>
team unity is the key ingredient in<lb/>
making this a successful year for his<lb/>
ites.<lb/>
"Whether we win or lose is going<lb/>
to depend on the values we gain by<lb/>
being a close football team EC I "?<lb/>
rookie coach emphasized. "You<lb/>
become a good football team when<lb/>
people start giving up then in-<lb/>
dividuality. With the schedule we<lb/>
have, that's our only chance to ac<lb/>
compiish something good and wor-<lb/>
thwile this year<lb/>
Forty-one lettermen return from<lb/>
last year's squad, including a number<lb/>
o people on each side of the ball who<lb/>
started at some point during the 1984<lb/>
campaign. But inexperience looms in<lb/>
two critical areas ? wide receiver and<lb/>
the interior defensive line.<lb/>
"It just means we have a much<lb/>
harder task Baker said of his<lb/>
receiver dilemma. "In order to have a<lb/>
quality passing game you have got to<lb/>
have quality receivers, and we simplv<lb/>
don't have that. It's going to take a<lb/>
while to develop, because al the pre<lb/>
sent time we don't have the speed,<lb/>
ability, experience or talent to really<lb/>
threaten people with the passing<lb/>
game<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates are just as<lb/>
inexperienced at the tackle<lb/>
noseguard positions. 1 eon Hall<lb/>
David Plum are the only players with<lb/>
Closing in on the Record<lb/>
Senior running back Tony Baker picks up tough yardage against Florida State.<lb/>
The High Point native needs 1,017 yards to overtake Carlester Grumpier and<lb/>
become ECl"s all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
anv experience a! tackle, and<lb/>
thin after that<lb/>
 noseguard, Medrick Rainbow<lb/>
saw action in a reserve roll la<lb/>
but he struggled thi  ipring drills<lb/>
because ol an appendectomy. Depth<lb/>
;s also a majoi problem at tl<lb/>
Although weak in two area the<lb/>
ive experience and<lb/>
returning at th ate<lb/>
oi importance.<lb/>
( it fensix ely . 'Me Sine i<lb/>
Ml mei<lb/>
who should cleai I<lb/>
vca- startei I ony Bak ? ick.<lb/>
 n the defensive s.de ?' the I<lb/>
trie linebackers and secondary she<lb/>
be able k up the pieces in I<lb/>
event that the defensive front does<lb/>
improve ovei tl<lb/>
L'aM'ii<lb/>
Although the Pirates<lb/>
more talent then they did a yeai ago,<lb/>
n is uncertain how the team will re<lb/>
to thier extremely difficult schedule.<lb/>
On the road, the Pirates 'ravel to<lb/>
Penn Slate, North Carolina S;<lb/>
Auburn, 1ST. Southern Mississ<lb/>
and Southwestern I ouisiana V<lb/>
Greenville in 1985 will be S -<lb/>
Carolina, 198.1 national champion<lb/>
Miami-Florida, Tulsa, Temple<lb/>
Southwest Texas State<lb/>
No majoi changes arc expected<lb/>
from Baker and his new statt either<lb/>
offensively or defensively. The<lb/>
Pirates will once again run the<lb/>
Option I or "Freeze Option" offense<lb/>
and 5-2 defense. It Tel does<lb/>
anything differently in 1985, it will<lb/>
come via the air as Baker has hopes ol<lb/>
throwing the ball more despite an in-<lb/>
experienced receiving corps and<lb/>
uncertainty at quarterback<lb/>
last year's starting signal callei<lb/>
Darrell Speed was moved down to the<lb/>
second team after Ron Jones<lb/>
displayed more pomise during sprint<lb/>
drills.<lb/>
Although many questions remain<lb/>
about the 1985 edition of the ECl<lb/>
football team, n safe to sav the<lb/>
Pirates will fare better than ' :m year's<lb/>
dismal 2 9 record.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0042"/><lb/>
THl- PIRAM: PIGSKIN PREVIEW<lb/>
AUGUST 1985<lb/>
ICMXIW<lb/>
Randy Mews Rick McCormac<lb/>
Editors &amp; Publishers<lb/>
The Pirate Pigskin Preview was made available to the<lb/>
public by Randy Mews and Rick McCormac As Co-<lb/>
Publishers and Co-Editors, they were entirely responsible<lb/>
tor all phases of production and all advertising sales<lb/>
wh.ch led to the success of this publication<lb/>
WMrrVv cruurrentlV employed as associate producer at<lb/>
WNCTTV Channel 9, while McCormac serves as Co-<lb/>
Sports Editor of The East Carolinian Both are students at<lb/>
tL.U and expect to graduate in December of 1986<lb/>
Dedication<lb/>
aJS Publ,cati?n IS dedicated to ECU Associate<lb/>
Athletic Director Bob Helmick, whose assistance in gain-<lb/>
ing university cooperation made this venture a success<lb/>
As he has done so many times ,n the past, Helmick gave<lb/>
ot himself for the express purpose of helping someone<lb/>
else. The editors of this periodical salute Bob Helm.ck -<lb/>
a man of great character and a true friend.<lb/>
Special Thanks<lb/>
ECU nth.tetPl5Skin ' WOU'd l,ke f? QlS? th?nk <lb/>
ECU athletic department for sponsoring our publication<lb/>
Special thanks go to Associate Athletic Director Dave<lb/>
Han and assistant Lee Workman as well as Sports Infor-<lb/>
SffSLFSX Aob Gennareass,stant Rob Wi1 -<lb/>
and the.r staffs. As a result of the.r help, distribution<lb/>
channels were cleared on campus, thus ensuring max<lb/>
Popu"at!on?SUre ?f tKe f00tba teQm '? 'he <lb/>
Varsity Barber Shop<lb/>
&amp; Hair styling<lb/>
? Regular Haircut$5.50<lb/>
? Layer Haircut$5.75<lb/>
? Haircut &amp; Style$10.00<lb/>
No Appointments Necessary<lb/>
Weekdays 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Located in downtown Greenville (Across from UBE)<lb/>
Baker Glad To Be At ECU<lb/>
Art Baker faces a tough<lb/>
challenge against the likes of<lb/>
Auburn, Penn State. LSU<lb/>
Miami and South Carolina as<lb/>
he enters his first season as<lb/>
head coach of the East<lb/>
Carolina University football<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Baker replaced Ed Emory in<lb/>
December of last year, a man<lb/>
whom Baker served under in<lb/>
1983 when he was associate<lb/>
head coach for the Pirates.<lb/>
The Pirates "freeze option"<lb/>
offense with Bakei calling<lb/>
the plays ? ranked 16th in the<lb/>
nation in rushing offense in<lb/>
1983. averaging 239.4 yards<lb/>
per game. As a unit. ECU<lb/>
averaged 349.5 yards of total<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
Baker's initial stav at ECU<lb/>
was brief however. In 1984 he<lb/>
left to accept the assistant<lb/>
head coaching position at<lb/>
Florida State under Bobby<lb/>
Bow den.<lb/>
Baker was on the road in<lb/>
Atlanta when ECU athletic<lb/>
director Ken Karr approached<lb/>
him about the vacancy at ECU<lb/>
1 which Baker accepted.<lb/>
"Greenville has been one ol<lb/>
the favorite places I've lived<lb/>
and the East Carolina people<lb/>
are some of the finest Eve<lb/>
been around Baker said.<lb/>
"I'm just really excited about<lb/>
coming back here. Eve always<lb/>
felt the Lord has a plan for all<lb/>
of us. and this is His plan for<lb/>
me<lb/>
Baker accepted the head<lb/>
coaching job at ECU knowing<lb/>
that the Pirates would have<lb/>
one of the most difficult<lb/>
schedules in college football<lb/>
ECU faces Penn State.<lb/>
Auburn, LSU, South Carolina<lb/>
Art Baker<lb/>
and Miami-Florida on the rug-<lb/>
ged 1985 schedule, and some<lb/>
people wondered how he could<lb/>
give up the security of one of<lb/>
the best assistant coaching<lb/>
positions in football.<lb/>
"A lot of my coaching col-<lb/>
leagues thought 1 was off mv<lb/>
rocker to leave what I think<lb/>
was one of the better assistant<lb/>
coaching jobs in the country<lb/>
he said. Baker also said the<lb/>
ECU job was one of the few<lb/>
coaching jobs he would have<lb/>
considered.<lb/>
Baker, who has 25 years of<lb/>
intercollegiate coaching ex<lb/>
perience. brings with him a<lb/>
career head coaching record oi<lb/>
57-48-5 after stints in<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
man (1973-77) and Jh-<lb/>
(1978-82), where he had i<lb/>
r losing seasons in<lb/>
The first-year coacl<lb/>
1  can do well this -<lb/>
it will take a total tea<lb/>
for the Pirates to do so.<lb/>
'I've always liked<lb/>
lallenge he said<lb/>
things that you cou<lb/>
wise, is through together!<lb/>
? relationships you d<lb/>
a family-style atmosphere :<lb/>
Although Hake: a<lb/>
be as successful as possible<lb/>
the gridiron, he realizes I<lb/>
plaers must also be<lb/>
in the classroom.<lb/>
"I think all football c i<lb/>
are aware that we ar?<lb/>
fired because ot the numbei I<lb/>
wins or losses he sai .<lb/>
know I'm going to be judj<lb/>
whether b the administration,<lb/>
the athletic director oi<lb/>
alumni. Yet, to satisfy m<lb/>
being, 1 could not,<lb/>
k back and<lb/>
didn't do everything I :<lb/>
see that m players gel<lb/>
education<lb/>
Baker sums up his coaching<lb/>
philosoph) b) saying that he<lb/>
tries to "treat every player like<lb/>
1 would want someone to treat<lb/>
mv sons<lb/>
Saturday Sports Spectacular<lb/>
Greg Kerr Brian Bailey<lb/>
?Z?P'fe,h,9Wights of the ECU Pirates<lb/>
t?l?T S?3St Conference football<lb/>
Saturday from 11:15 p.m. to 11:45 pm on<lb/>
NewsCenter 9<lb/>
WNCT-TV<lb/>
Baker, Di<lb/>
Quarterback: <lb/>
i<lb/>
1 q ?<lb/>
ga:<lb/>
rushing ?<lb/>
pa<lb/>
touch<lb/>
-<lb/>
jhrnen '<lb/>
Hoitzclaw combii<lb/>
?ng nuc;<lb/>
Tailba.k<lb/>
name here. The Hi.<lb/>
natne en:<lb/>
all to himself ?<lb/>
with Jimmy Walden the<lb/>
?"v Bak come<lb/>
tCL - number nine all-<lb/>
her with his 513 j<lb/>
ar ago. Behind Bake-<lb/>
capable bodies ,R<lb/>
Paige and George Frank<lb/>
Art Baker is looking<lb/>
from th.s position. espec<lb/>
Baker, who rushed for 137  <lb/>
the spring game in r<lb/>
ony<lb/>
sprint<lb/>
fullback: nother position<lb/>
nappy with. Sophomore<lb/>
Simpson emerged from the<lb/>
ECL's No. fullbacl<lb/>
The Brooklyn, NY, nativ,<lb/>
?x) yards and scored tw??<lb/>
team with Tony Baker<lb/>
Pirates an excellent one-two i<lb/>
the backfield. Behind Simpson are<lb/>
host of back such as redsh;<lb/>
treshman Tim James and sei<lb/>
by Clair. who will lend d<lb/>
<lb/>
 ECU Spo,<lb/>
We have<lb/>
<lb/>
5<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
InTh<lb/>
W<lb/>
s<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
758-2616<lb/>
fesaaoaoEK<lb/>
VViVvxvVMAv<lb/>
<lb/>
???i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0043"/><lb/>
mil<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
jlar<lb/>
Baker, Dumas Lead Freeze Option Attack<lb/>
Quarterback: <lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
lac kit<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
 iiian<lb/>
Re eh ers:<lb/>
S<lb/>
Offensive Analysis<lb/>
11<lb/>
I ailhack<lb/>
i<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
11 I<lb/>
-<lb/>
Fullback: <lb/>
v ?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bob<lb/>
?<lb/>
Be is will t ;?<lb/>
time a md nd S<lb/>
?<lb/>
hman rim On  , ,t- nui<lb/>
 li  en<lb/>
games lasi season 1 he k<lb/>
be the return ol Dun<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
I(l<lb/>
and <lb/>
?<lb/>
Mel aw,<lb/>
M I<lb/>
Benedi ? figure in rigl<lb/>
( filter:<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ron Jones gained the starting quarterback position from Darrel Speed durin,<lb/>
xpnnK practice. Jones started on two occasions last Near.<lb/>
1 ight 1 ml: Senior<lb/>
9 HA<lb/>
?<lb/>
?" - ?<lb/>
He caught )<lb/>
I We have the best selection<lb/>
 ECU Sportswear<lb/>
In The<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
758-2616<lb/>
world U.B.E<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
XVXl<lb/>
Av<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0044"/><lb/>
HI PIRATF PIGSKIN PR vil w<lb/>
M (Jl SI 1985<lb/>
?e!ackers A"d Secondary Look Strong<lb/>
ihows although sophomore Nh-dr T" HdlJ "urn, again, is Washing  ?  a <lb/>
phomore Medrick<lb/>
Rainbow returns. Gone is last year's<lb/>
cartel Chris Sania Cruz, but Ram<lb/>
bOM d,d see a loi o( action before be<lb/>
ing injured late in the season. Behind<lb/>
Rainbow, who was limited in the spr<lb/>
due to an appendectomy, depth is<lb/>
a Problem Onlv redshin freshman<lb/>
Shannon Bolmg is listed below Rain<lb/>
ECU at N.t<lb/>
hh renenee as redshirt freshman<lb/>
Rodnes Glovei and ??,?? William<lb/>
Jennette are the backups. I he<lb/>
development of Jennette is a kev here<lb/>
as he sat out the 1984 season with a<lb/>
"?Moulder injury.<lb/>
bou<lb/>
coming out of tlie spring.<lb/>
I nd: yeai ago this was a question<lb/>
mark position, but entering 1985 ii is<lb/>
one ot the strengths for the Pirates<lb/>
H'Kk are sophomores Ron Gilliai I<lb/>
' six games a vea<lb/>
hhn Williamson<lb/>
once<lb/>
Defensive Analysis<lb/>
linebacker: Might possible<lb/>
ngesi position tor the Pirate<lb/>
he like- ol<lb/>
a n d k (<lb/>
senn i'<lb/>
,tu a playing<lb/>
!<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Washington, juniors I arr kf<lb/>
Bubba aters, and sophomon I<lb/>
Briti and Bruce Simpso all I<lb/>
whom played last yeai Wa<lb/>
the surprise ol the . ? ased<lb/>
the coaching stafl with his pil<lb/>
? being switched from<lb/>
bai k a year ,iv. lacobs, wh<lb/>
f'oui games in 1984, and v.<lb/>
listed as the si i<lb/>
see playing tune in j<lb/>
Secondary: gain, thi<lb/>
ng area<lb/>
?-4.<lb/>
Ba ?<lb/>
tensive ,<lb/>
Ciarv l.i tndoi<lb/>
' i"<lb/>
ted for I<lb/>
.ernard ?"?<lb/>
Wolfp<lb/>
T siresj m<lb/>
jn<lb/>
CU GOLF TEAM LEADERS<lb/>
(let'ens swarms to ih h i  j ?<lb/>
msioih, hall ,n a game againsl Souihwe- I ouisiai<lb/>
EolLSchedule<lb/>
MacGregor Golf Classic<lb/>
John Ryan Viemoriai Tournament<lb/>
H lipackollegiate Invitational<lb/>
i C-HUmington Fall Invitational<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
Mike Brad.ely<lb/>
rwo-Tme Team MVP<lb/>
Paul Steelman<lb/>
Academic AH-America Candidate All C w , <lb/>
" Selection<lb/>
xv<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0045"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
oak Strong<lb/>
1 HE PIRATE PIGSKIN PREVIEW<lb/>
AUGUST 1985<lb/>
kles<lb/>
? JW. -<lb/>
rong safet<lb/>
starter and<lb/>
ason 1 on<lb/>
984 and ac<lb/>
losses,<lb/>
s on the<lb/>
 th senior<lb/>
won the free<lb/>
h( 1984<lb/>
ntercepted one<lb/>
med with the<lb/>
i His Dillahuni<lb/>
free safety.<lb/>
game at left<lb/>
npressed<lb/>
omise al<lb/>
e Behind<lb/>
Essi a<lb/>
lefensive<lb/>
 liaferro<lb/>
and<lb/>
the left<lb/>
son<lb/>
i n -<lb/>
undei<lb/>
Don<lb/>
? V<lb/>
-<lb/>
'<lb/>
? <lb/>
EL t o I<lb/>
I<lb/>
,vi<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Mark Ardfesi<lb/>
Vtl- onterence Selection<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECU at N.C. State ? September 7, 1985 ? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wolfpack Tangles With Bucs In Opener<lb/>
When ECU travels to Raleigh on<lb/>
Sepl 7 to open the season aeainsi in-<lb/>
state rival N.C State, the Pirates will<lb/>
be facing a Wolfpack squad with an<lb/>
inexperienced quarterback at the<lb/>
helm.<lb/>
Tim Espisito, the starting quarter-<lb/>
N stale the "pas: two<lb/>
season has completed Ins eligibi<lb/>
Espisito, who completed almos<lb/>
percent o! his passes last - asoi . will<lb/>
enlaced ps one 1 hree ui<lb/>
per ?<lb/>
k isline- is li<lb/>
the preseas<lb/>
candidate I<lb/>
? the Wolfpacl itta<lb/>
191 pounde fi ?<lb/>
lidice in sprii i i<lb/>
Wh <lb/>
!44 o 254 ,4?<lb/>
2 i id<lb/>
i 10<lb/>
I '<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
i.<lb/>
?' :<lb/>
- ' ?? I .? (4,139);<lb/>
; 'iniie!ion- (3<lb/>
sea 200) - -<lb/>
mosi ichdov r<lb/>
seas (19) a ? ?r (36).<lb/>
Whichever quarterback gets he<lb/>
starting nod will be helped In a<lb/>
talen of running backs to<lb/>
carr the ball.<lb/>
lthough the Wolfpack lost Joe<lb/>
Mclntosh, who finished as the<lb/>
school's second all-time leading<lb/>
rusher, proven performers abound as<lb/>
Vince Evans, Mike Miller and Ricky<lb/>
Isom all return for their senior<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
Evans, who led the Wolfpack in<lb/>
rushing last season with 883 yards,<lb/>
will be the starter at the running back<lb/>
position. He became only the third<lb/>
running back in N.C State historv to<lb/>
rush for over 200 yards in a game,<lb/>
netting 201 yards on 27 carries in last<lb/>
season's 31-22 win over ECU.<lb/>
Miller, who plays both running<lb/>
back and fullback, edged out last<lb/>
year's starter Isom at the fullback<lb/>
position in spring drills.<lb/>
Opening the holes for the running<lb/>
backs will be an experienced offensive<lb/>
line returning four starters. Leading<lb/>
the way is 6-5, 295 pound senior Joe<lb/>
Millinichik. The powerful<lb/>
Millinichik, who benches 550 pounds,<lb/>
will be joined bv three time ieiterman<lb/>
Larry Burnette at one guard and<lb/>
center Johnny Smith, who also<lb/>
started last year. Guard Ron Kosar is<lb/>
the final returning starter, with Joev<lb/>
Pope expected to fill the remaining<lb/>
tackle posit<lb/>
While the offensive line look-<lb/>
strong, tight end could be a<lb/>
troublesome spot as Ralph Britt gets<lb/>
the starting nod. He is the only, retur-<lb/>
ning lettermai<lb/>
backs. Also, we're able to utilize our<lb/>
personnel better, and 1 feel it's a little<lb/>
easier for our defense to play<lb/>
Vince Evan<lb/>
Joe Milimchik<lb/>
?? an ? o ?<lb/>
? . Brother? cai<lb/>
' p tsses wi<lb/>
: .<lb/>
-<lb/>
ann Peebles.<lb/>
? Miltoi K<lb/>
v<lb/>
Adleta, also a pair of sophs, will be<lb/>
the back-ups<lb/>
Three of the four hnebacking posi-<lb/>
tions also look strong, with three<lb/>
seniors penciled in for starting roles.<lb/>
Mark Franklin and Don Herron will<lb/>
man the outside positions and Pat<lb/>
league will fill one of the inside pom<lb/>
tion i<lb/>
In the secondary senior si<lb/>
lones, a two-year .tartei a- :on<lb/>
back, remains He overca<lb/>
nones in b md<lb/>
banner yea<lb/>
? ?s. two interceptions a<lb/>
pie recover).<lb/>
. recove<lb/>
?<lb/>
spot<lb/>
Ml, :v twsei<lb/>
wili man the safety p<lb/>
made <lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
il 5-2 ?<lb/>
tackle six ali i ? the<lb/>
sprii ? tsitive results.<lb/>
1 like abou con-<lb/>
said Reed, "is thai now the<lb/>
outside linebackers will be forcinj<lb/>
the run rather than smaller defensive<lb/>
kicker Mike Cofer<lb/>
The interior of the defense will be<lb/>
anchored b) tackles Re U instead<lb/>
and Grad Harris, a pair o<lb/>
sophomores. Steve Rankin and John<lb/>
?<lb/>
nice chools ???<lb/>
all tl eing pla<lb/>
sy 5 . m .<lb/>
Wolfpack holds an I 1-4 advantage<lb/>
the serie- with th win<lb/>
coming in I9S3 b a 22-16<lb/>
Precision<lb/>
Haircutting<lb/>
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Specializing in Color,<lb/>
Cellophanes &amp; Perms<lb/>
Melody Furci ? Tina Furci ? Beth Long<lb/>
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758-6190<lb/>
I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0046"/><lb/>
I HI PIRATE PIGSKIN PREVIEW<lb/>
Al C,l SI ls85<lb/>
SIV Texas State at ECU ? September 14, 19S5 ? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Pirates Open Home Slate Against Bobcats<lb/>
J will play host to Southwest bd,mMh,R,hKuK ,  . . . . ?<lb/>
E I will play host to Southwest<lb/>
rexas State ? the only non-Division<lb/>
I-A school on the Pirates' '8<lb/>
schedule ? on Sept. 14 in the ECU<lb/>
home opener.<lb/>
The Bobcats, of the Gulf Star Con-<lb/>
ference, are in their second year of<lb/>
playing Division l-AA, after being a<lb/>
Division II power.<lb/>
Southwest Texas State made the<lb/>
adjustment in their initial vear of<lb/>
Division l-AA, compiling a 7-4<lb/>
overall record, but were a disappoin-<lb/>
ting 2-3 m league play.<lb/>
Bobcat coach John O'Hara. who<lb/>
a 16-6 record in two years at the<lb/>
school, fell that the move up from<lb/>
Divison l-AA did create some new<lb/>
problems tor his team.<lb/>
"Even Saturday, you are playing<lb/>
unsl a good tootball team, because<lb/>
the personnel and depth are better<lb/>
O'Hara said. "The wear and rear on<lb/>
' team is greater, because the pla<lb/>
is more physical.<lb/>
V Southwesi rexas State enters<lb/>
- campaign, O'Hara is<lb/>
an excellent<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Based el retun<lb/>
ur spnng drills, we ha i ns<lb/>
optimistic, and u kly<lb/>
hopes tor this :<lb/>
 he said. "I thmk n<lb/>
tttitudeand have the desire to<lb/>
have a better yeai than we did<lb/>
ir<lb/>
Among the reasons O'Hara feels<lb/>
cam can have a better year is that<lb/>
offensive linemen who started<lb/>
last year return.<lb/>
Right tackle Charlie Vatterott and<lb/>
left tackle Kevin Mueth both started<lb/>
last year tor the Bobcats, along with<lb/>
guard Joe Christ and center Mitch<lb/>
Da idson.<lb/>
Quarterback Daid Longhoffer<lb/>
returns as well. After earning the star-<lb/>
ting job in the fourth game of the<lb/>
season. Longhoffer passed for 1,613<lb/>
yards and seven touchdowns, while<lb/>
leading the Bobcats with 1.968 yards<lb/>
total offense.<lb/>
Joining longhoffer in the<lb/>
backficld will be senior Eric Coble<lb/>
and innior Rene Gonale. Coble, a<lb/>
starter last year who rushed for 470<lb/>
yards despite being hobbled by in-<lb/>
juries, had surgery on his foot in the<lb/>
off-season and should be 100 percent<lb/>
by the time the season starts.<lb/>
Eric Cobble<lb/>
I'h<lb/>
Mitch Davidson<lb/>
receiving positions are both<lb/>
inned  experienced veterans as<lb/>
the starters a; both Hanker and spin<lb/>
end return to pro parks for<lb/>
the Bobcat aerial attack.<lb/>
flanker Fonj Woodle) has led the<lb/>
team in receptions cash ol the past<lb/>
two seasons, hauling in 19 passes last<lb/>
linebacker Shawn Woods, the leading<lb/>
defender on the team last year with<lb/>
103 tackles. Woods is a unanimous<lb/>
pre-season all-conference selection<lb/>
and will be the leader for the s is<lb/>
defense<lb/>
Three of tour starters return for the<lb/>
Bobcats m the defensive backfield,<lb/>
with red shirt freshman Ben Jessie be-<lb/>
ing the only newcomer in the secon-<lb/>
dar. at cornerback.<lb/>
Strong safety Jimmy Nelms and<lb/>
tree safety Charles Sterling both<lb/>
return to the back line of defense<lb/>
along with cornerback Eugene<lb/>
Rogers.<lb/>
The key to the defensive perfor-<lb/>
mance this season however may rest<lb/>
in a player not even on the depth<lb/>
chati in the spring. Defensive<lb/>
lames Roberson injured his achilles<lb/>
tendon in spring practice, but will<lb/>
start - provided his injun heals<lb/>
Roberson was called a "difference"<lb/>
type player b O'Hara dnd will be<lb/>
needed as only two starters return to<lb/>
the defensive line<lb/>
Arnold Baker returns at one : I<lb/>
sive end spot, while tackle D<lb/>
I aeke also started last sea<lb/>
Lackey is a preseason all (,s(<lb/>
while Baker was the third lea<lb/>
tackier on the I<lb/>
hits.<lb/>
Die kicking came will he somewl<lb/>
luestion mark even<lb/>
punter Jerry Fife returns. .<lb/>
kisker on hand ha<lb/>
ne experience.<lb/>
1 fe, who has punted eat I I I<lb/>
;hrec previous<lb/>
will prov;de some stability witl<lb/>
career punting averat<lb/>
? kei<lb/>
ri to problei<lb/>
. -nen S<lb/>
State has the unenviable ta ?<lb/>
home<lb/>
Ten.<lb/>
wa-<lb/>
if sesono. !?<lb/>
home opener since<lb/>
average<lb/>
catch.<lb/>
Split end Wayne Coffey led the<lb/>
n in average gam per catch last<lb/>
season, with 24.5 yards per reception<lb/>
on 10 catches.<lb/>
Coach O'Hara is looking for im-<lb/>
provement m his team's offensive<lb/>
play this season and feels that more<lb/>
consistency is what is most needed.<lb/>
"I hope our offense will be back<lb/>
where it was m 1983. We weren't bad<lb/>
last vear. but we were inconsistent<lb/>
he said. "1 hope we get that con-<lb/>
sistent this vear because we do have<lb/>
more experience<lb/>
On defense, the Bobcats return<lb/>
eight starters, with the secondary and<lb/>
linebackers being the strong points.<lb/>
Heading the list of returners is<lb/>
Linebacker Shawn Woods<lb/>
PET VILLAGE<lb/>
PET SHOP<lb/>
511 Evans Sr.<lb/>
Phone 756-9222<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
4We specialize in it<lb/>
The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
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Lineman kein Muerth<lb/>
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429 Evans Street Mall<lb/>
Ladies Dress Shoes .50 c<lb/>
Ladies Jeans $1.00<lb/>
Men's Dress Pants &amp; Shirts .50 to Si.00<lb/>
Children's Clothes .25C to .50c<lb/>
Athletic Clothes $2.50<lb/>
GROSS<lb/>
THE late night place to<lb/>
be seven nights a week<lb/>
119 E. 5th St.<lb/>
752-8711<lb/>
Private Club For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
All Night Drink Specials After<lb/>
Every ECU Home Football Game<lb/>
Sept. 14<lb/>
THE SHAVETAIL BOBCAT<lb/>
Sept. 28<lb/>
THE HOOTLESS OUT<lb/>
Oct. 5<lb/>
Oc? 6 W,NDLESS HURRICANE<lb/>
THE YELLOWBIRD<lb/>
Nov. 16<lb/>
THE DYING HURRICANE<lb/>
 oupon dood Foi SI<lb/>
Off Grogs T Shirt<lb/>
ECU at Penn Stc<lb/>
Paterno's<lb/>
Pei<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
 h<lb/>
i<lb/>
jy<lb/>
2<lb/>
ez.<lb/>
? n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0047"/><lb/>
<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
IHt iMR.Ml- iK,Skl I'KI Ml W<lb/>
At (.1 M I4H5<lb/>
inst Bobcats<lb/>
. anc defen-<lb/>
tacklc David<lb/>
season.<lb/>
? S( pick,<lb/>
' ird leading<lb/>
? -?a: with 78<lb/>
somewhat<lb/>
? . en though<lb/>
ls no field<lb/>
? any real<lb/>
ach of the<lb/>
the Bobcats<lb/>
? with his<lb/>
rage, but a<lb/>
kick-<lb/>
x utl west Iexas<lb/>
k of being<lb/>
Although<lb/>
asi season's<lb/>
Si am, it<lb/>
? r EC l in a<lb/>
ECU at Penn State ? September 21, 1985 ? 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Paterno's Nittany Lions Seeking More Wins<lb/>
Penn State head coach Joe Paterno<lb/>
returns 46 lettermen for what is sure<lb/>
to be an improved season over last<lb/>
year's 6-5 campaign.<lb/>
Leading the way on offense will be<lb/>
junior tailback D.J. Dozier. The<lb/>
Virginia native rushed for 691 yards<lb/>
and four touchdowns last season,<lb/>
despite being hampered by numerous<lb/>
injuries. Paterno hopes that Dozier<lb/>
will be able to avoid injuries and put<lb/>
some numbers up comparable to his<lb/>
freshman season when he rushed for<lb/>
1,002 yards. Dozier will again be join-<lb/>
ed in the Penn State backfield by<lb/>
fullback Steve Smith who rushed for<lb/>
398 yards and five touchdowns last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Nittany Lion running attack<lb/>
will be counted on to relieve some of<lb/>
the pressure on firs! year starting<lb/>
quarterback John Shaffer. Shaffer is<lb/>
the leading candidate to run the Nit-<lb/>
tany Lion attack as he completed 40<lb/>
of 96 passing attempts in limited ac-<lb/>
tion a year ago. Shaffer will need to<lb/>
improve on his interception to<lb/>
touchdown ratio, as last year he<lb/>
threw seven interceptions to only one<lb/>
touchdown pass.<lb/>
D J Dozier<lb/>
Joe Paterno<lb/>
Experienced players return at the<lb/>
receiving positions, and should also<lb/>
help the new Nittany Lion quarter-<lb/>
back. Split end Herb Bellamy returns<lb/>
after catching 16 passes last season<lb/>
for a 19.1 per catch average. Last<lb/>
year Penn State receivers caught only<lb/>
six touchdown passes, with Bellamy<lb/>
the team leader with two TD recep-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Erik Hamilton, the second leading<lb/>
receiver on the team last year with 14<lb/>
receptions, returns to man the flanker<lb/>
position.<lb/>
The receiving corps are further<lb/>
bolstered by the return of two veteran<lb/>
tight ends. Dean DiMidio caught<lb/>
caught 11 balls last season, averaging<lb/>
17 yards a catch. Brian Silvering also<lb/>
returns after hauling in eight passes<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Three offensive lineman will have<lb/>
to be replaced, but one of those spots<lb/>
is expected to be filled by former<lb/>
defensive tackle Todd Monies. Join-<lb/>
ing Moules up front will be juniors<lb/>
Mitch F-rerotte and Chris Conlin at<lb/>
the guard and tackle positions respec-<lb/>
tively. Stephen Davis, Tom Wilk and<lb/>
Steve Seebacher all will see action at<lb/>
tackle, while Rob Smith and Mark<lb/>
Sickler will vie for time at the other<lb/>
guard position.<lb/>
Penn State's offense scored 20<lb/>
points or less in seven games last year,<lb/>
but it was the defense that caused the<lb/>
Nittany Lions to lose three of their<lb/>
final four games. The Lions sur-<lb/>
rendered 44 points to Notre Dame<lb/>
and 31 to Pittsburgh in two of the<lb/>
season-ending lossses.<lb/>
Nine starters return on defense for<lb/>
Penn State, with safety Ray Isom<lb/>
leading a veteran secondary.<lb/>
This year marks the first meeting<lb/>
between the Nittany Lions and the<lb/>
Pirates, although ECU has traveled<lb/>
to the state of Pennsylvania in each of<lb/>
the last four years.<lb/>
M Ik.<lb/>
nernan ktin Muerlh<lb/>
ns Thrift Shop<lb/>
' vall<lb/>
Shoes .50 c<lb/>
es leans $1.00<lb/>
&amp; shirts .50 to SI.00<lb/>
( ; 5 to ,50c<lb/>
iolhes S2.50<lb/>
BACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
M<lb/>
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530 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
757-3616<lb/>
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757-1816<lb/>
Call Toll Free<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0048"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE PIRATE PIPSI PREVIE W<lb/>
AUGUST 1985<lb/>
Temple at ECU ? September 28, 1985 ? 7:00p.m.<lb/>
Pirates Seek Revenge On Improving Owls<lb/>
es are high in the "Citv of include iwt? r n r?  . ?<lb/>
Hopes are high in the "City of<lb/>
Brotherly Love" after Temple coach<lb/>
Bruce Arians led his team to a winn-<lb/>
ing record last year. Although much<lb/>
talent returns, the Owls will be hard<lb/>
pressed to match last year's win total<lb/>
of six.<lb/>
Arians accepted the Temple job<lb/>
two years ago, taking over for then<lb/>
head coach Wayne Hardin. Arians<lb/>
first year was a mediocre 4-7, but last<lb/>
season he guided a team made up of<lb/>
mostly the same plavers to a winning<lb/>
record.<lb/>
The major reason Temple mav not<lb/>
win as many games this season as they<lb/>
did last is the schedule. Four of their<lb/>
first five games are on the road (in-<lb/>
cluding a visit to Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Sept. 28), with the only home game<lb/>
being against defending national<lb/>
champion Brigham Young.<lb/>
If the Owls are to rise to the top<lb/>
against this tough schedule that also<lb/>
includes Boston College, Penn State<lb/>
West Virginia and Pittsburgh, an ex-<lb/>
perienced offense will have to lead the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Todd Bowles<lb/>
John Rienstra<lb/>
Nine starters return for the Temple<lb/>
offense, with standout tailback Paul<lb/>
Palmer leading the way. The all-East<lb/>
running back churned out 8? yards<lb/>
rushing last year, averaging 4.9 yards<lb/>
per carry and scoring nine<lb/>
touchdowns. Palmer came on strong<lb/>
in the closing stages of the '84 season<lb/>
and will be counted on to lead the<lb/>
ground attack.<lb/>
1 he quarterback position is filled<lb/>
by junior Lee Saltz, who must cut<lb/>
down on interceptions for the Owls<lb/>
aerial attack to be successful. 1 asl<lb/>
year, Saltz threw twice as many in-<lb/>
terceptions (12) as touchdown passes<lb/>
(six).<lb/>
Wide receiver Willie Marshall<lb/>
returns and will be the man that Saltz<lb/>
will look to most often. Marshall,<lb/>
who caught 22 passes for 503 vards<lb/>
last year for a 22.9 yard per catch<lb/>
average, will receive more attention<lb/>
from enemy secondaries since last<lb/>
year's other wideout, Russel Carter<lb/>
has graduated Carter led the team in<lb/>
receptions last year with 23. but will<lb/>
have to be replaced along with the top<lb/>
three tight ends from last year's<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
?X-ww.w,wlvw<lb/>
Jeff Ward should hold down the<lb/>
right end position along the defensive<lb/>
front, while Chuck Kumrow<lb/>
Ralph Jams will battle for playing<lb/>
time at the left end spot ,v<lb/>
tackles, Doug Davis should be at<lb/>
slot, while Jimmy Moore. Rodnev<lb/>
Walker and Mike Swanson will share<lb/>
time at the other tackle position The<lb/>
nose guard will either be B<lb/>
Caen or Dave Candy.<lb/>
Punter Kip Shenefelt and k<lb/>
Jim Cooper are two importani<lb/>
returnees from last year's team<lb/>
Shenefelt averaged 39 3 ards per<lb/>
kick in 53 attempts while Cooper is<lb/>
back after making good on I l-of-17<lb/>
field goal attempts last season<lb/>
Temple became the first team to<lb/>
defeat the Pirates at home ?<lb/>
Miami (Fla) beat the Pirates in ?-<lb/>
ECU will try to avenge las- seas<lb/>
defeat, as the Owls will once ag<lb/>
travel to Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
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Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
key ingredients tha<lb/>
a football powei<lb/>
Kosar.<lb/>
Kosar. the quai<lb/>
Miami to a na<lb/>
two short years aj<lb/>
his final vear of elig I<lb/>
play in the NF1<lb/>
Taking over f r K<lb/>
junior Vinny I<lb/>
New York native<lb/>
attempts last season<lb/>
action.<lb/>
Testaverde's inexp<lb/>
soothed somewha<lb/>
depth in the rest<lb/>
Melvin Bratton returr.<lb/>
while Alono H j<lb/>
fullback. Highsrrnth - .<lb/>
way to a 1,00 .<lb/>
until he sustain<lb/>
Running Back Monzo Hiiihsmith<lb/>
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THE PIRATE PIGSKIN PKEVIFU M GUST 1985<lb/>
i ? l<lb/>
proving Owls<lb/>
w n the<lb/>
defensive<lb/>
Kumrow<lb/>
plaving<lb/>
Vi the<lb/>
be at one<lb/>
? Moore, Rodney<lb/>
inson 'Ail! share<lb/>
ion. I he<lb/>
be Brian<lb/>
d kicker<lb/>
important<lb/>
ir's team.<lb/>
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Miami-Florida at ECU ? Octobers, 1985 ? 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hurricanes Seeking Replacement For Kosar<lb/>
Miami Hnrnitiot  ;n :i<lb/>
Miami Hurricanes will invade<lb/>
klen Stadium missing one of the<lb/>
ingredients that made their team<lb/>
football powerhouse ?- Bernie<lb/>
ar.<lb/>
Kosar, the quarterback who guided<lb/>
Miami to a national championship<lb/>
short years ago, decided to forgo<lb/>
rial Mar of eligibility at Miami to<lb/>
:? in the NFI .<lb/>
raking over for Kosar will he<lb/>
r Vinny lesiaverde. The 6-5<lb/>
New York native completed 17 of 34<lb/>
mpts last season in rather limited<lb/>
?n.<lb/>
restaverde's inexperience may be<lb/>
Mod somewhat by the returning<lb/>
depth in the rest ol the backfield.<lb/>
Melvin Bratton returns to halfback<lb/>
while Alonzo Highsmith will play<lb/>
back Highsmith was well on his<lb/>
?sa to a 1,000-yard season last year<lb/>
until he sustained a knee injury<lb/>
Running Back Alonzo Highsmith<lb/>
m<lb/>
against Maryland that put him out<lb/>
for the season. Highsmith ended the<lb/>
year with 906 yards rushing and six<lb/>
touchdowns in only nine games.<lb/>
Bratton come on after Highsmith's<lb/>
injury, rushing for 134 yards and four<lb/>
touchdowns in Miami's memorable<lb/>
loss to Boston College last year.<lb/>
Junior Darryl Oliver will provide<lb/>
depth at halfback while Eric Ham will<lb/>
Willie Smith<lb/>
Kevin Fagan<lb/>
be the second-team tailback.<lb/>
While Miami does return ex-<lb/>
perienced performers in the<lb/>
backfield, they are not so fortunate in<lb/>
the wide receiver position.<lb/>
Cone are last year's starters Eddie<lb/>
Brown and Stanley Shakespeare. This<lb/>
season it will be up to sophomore<lb/>
Brian Blades and freshman Michael<lb/>
Irvm to fill the holes at split end and<lb/>
Hanker.<lb/>
Graduation also decimated the<lb/>
ranks in the offensive line as tackle<lb/>
Paul Bertucetli returns as the only<lb/>
starter from a year ago.<lb/>
The Hurricane attack will certainly<lb/>
miss Kosar and a veteran front wall,<lb/>
so it figures to be up to the ground<lb/>
game and a much maligned defense to<lb/>
spark the team, last year's defense<lb/>
caved in, allowing 123 points in three<lb/>
season ending losses to Maryland,<lb/>
Boston College and UC1 A<lb/>
The defense does return eight<lb/>
starters however, so there is some<lb/>
talent to build on. Tackles Derwin<lb/>
Jones and Kevin Fagan will head up<lb/>
the front wall, lagan is an All-<lb/>
America candidate who ranked first<lb/>
in sacks last year while also leading all<lb/>
down linemen in tackles with 51.<lb/>
Bruce Fleming spearheads an active<lb/>
linebacking corps. The hard-hitting<lb/>
veteran led the Hurricanes in total<lb/>
tackles last year with 111 and he<lb/>
should get help from John McVeigh<lb/>
the units third leading tackier. George<lb/>
Mira Jr. and Daniel Stubbs will also<lb/>
be granted long looks at the two va-<lb/>
cant linebacking positions.<lb/>
A defensive backfield that wielded<lb/>
to a blitzkrieg of enemy air fire last<lb/>
year will be looking to make amends<lb/>
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for last year's performance.<lb/>
Free safety Darrel Fullington is the<lb/>
leader of the secondary. He had five<lb/>
interceptions last year to lead the<lb/>
team, and finished up with 85 tackles,<lb/>
the second highest total on the club.<lb/>
Cornerback Tolbert BJn returns to a<lb/>
starting position, but the other corner<lb/>
will be manned by inexperienced<lb/>
sophomore Bernie Blades.<lb/>
The place kicking will be solid as<lb/>
sophomore Greg Cox returns. Cox<lb/>
led the team in scoring last year with<lb/>
82 points ? a new school record for<lb/>
points by a kicker in a season.<lb/>
The punting chores will be handled<lb/>
by either sophomore Jeff Feagles or<lb/>
junior Steve Kadzin as last year's<lb/>
kicker Rich Tuten has departed.<lb/>
ECU will be looking to celebrate<lb/>
their homecoming with a victory over<lb/>
a hard-driving hurricane.<lb/>
linebacker Bruce Fleming<lb/>
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I HI I'IKMI I'U.SKIN I'KI V II tt<lb/>
V t t . I M I Wc<lb/>
ECU at SW Louisiana ? October 12, 1985 ? 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Ragin' Cajuns Return Talented Performers<lb/>
A lot of veterans abound ? 42<lb/>
returning lettermen and starters in 15<lb/>
different positions ? but there are<lb/>
still questions to be answered as the<lb/>
University of Southwest Louisiana<lb/>
prepares for the 1985 campaign.<lb/>
The Cajuns go into the 1985 season<lb/>
with seven starters returning on<lb/>
defense, six starters on offense and<lb/>
both kicking specialists coming back.<lb/>
Coach Sam Robertson's team won<lb/>
four of their last five games "last year<lb/>
to finish at 6-5 and many of last<lb/>
year's top performers remain.<lb/>
lour quality linebackers, led bv<lb/>
potential All-America Steve Spinella,<lb/>
return along with a strong defensive<lb/>
secondar) and a host of talented run-<lb/>
ning backs and receivers.<lb/>
On offense, the biggest question<lb/>
k is a' quarterback, where both of<lb/>
the people who had tilled the position<lb/>
the past three years have<lb/>
departed.<lb/>
Soph  re it ampbell is the<lb/>
leading contender foi the stari<lb/>
duties although lie only threw 20<lb/>
, completing<lb/>
?<lb/>
ng bad I i s is rnu<lb/>
a known quantity, <lb/>
ra experienced veterans return<lb/>
- including three ol last year's<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
lunior Dwane Williams returns <lb/>
the Ragin' Cajuns after leading last<lb/>
's squad with 460 yards rushing<lb/>
and foui touchdowns.<lb/>
Senioi rhomas Jackson also<lb/>
returns with a chance at becoming the<lb/>
school's all-time leading rusher. He<lb/>
was slowed bv injuries last vear, net-<lb/>
ting onlv 299 yards, but was the<lb/>
team's leading rusher two years ago<lb/>
when he scampered for "39 yards.<lb/>
Jackson onlv needs 492 vards to<lb/>
become I SI career rushing leader.<lb/>
Providing depth in the back field<lb/>
will be junior Karl Bernard and senior<lb/>
Jerry Kier. Both o the starters<lb/>
return at the wide receiver positions,<lb/>
with seniors Welton Morgan and<lb/>
Pierre Perkins providing experience<lb/>
at that spot. Perkins led the team in<lb/>
receiving last vear with 26 catches tor<lb/>
508 vards, while Morgan had 17 grabs<lb/>
for 266 vards.<lb/>
hk<lb/>
fc, Jfc<lb/>
Carl Isaac<lb/>
Clarence Glenn<lb/>
year with 81 tackles.<lb/>
Backing up those two will be<lb/>
seniors Dave Brammel and Tim<lb/>
Williams, who both had over 30<lb/>
tackles last year in reserve roles.<lb/>
The defensive secondary also looks<lb/>
to be in good hands as three starters<lb/>
return this vear. Junior Elton Slater<lb/>
returns to handle one ol the corner-<lb/>
back spots after making 2" tackles<lb/>
las: season. Both starting safties are<lb/>
also back as Clarence Glenn and<lb/>
Steve Judice combine to give FJS1<lb/>
some experience along the back wall<lb/>
o the defense.<lb/>
Although there are several familial<lb/>
faces around, the defensive front is in<lb/>
need of some rebuilding since botfi<lb/>
defensive ends and stalwart defensive<lb/>
tackle Charles "Gator" Bennett 1<lb/>
graduated.<lb/>
However two starters do return a<lb/>
tackle Kevin Sorice and nosegu<lb/>
Scott Sible come back tor their senior<lb/>
seasons. Sible led the down linemen<lb/>
last year with 2 tackles includ<lb/>
three that were tor negative yard<lb/>
At the other tackle position will be<lb/>
loe Hebert, a sophomore, or Cl<lb/>
Cannon, who is a redshiri man.<lb/>
Ihe kicking game should be sound,<lb/>
as sophomore kicker Pan<lb/>
Broussard and senior punter I<lb/>
1 algout are back 1 algout<lb/>
averaged 39.6 vards per . ?<lb/>
first three games last vear after a 40 <lb/>
average in 1983, was injured ear<lb/>
the 1984 season with a broken leg II<lb/>
fully healed, Falgout should d<lb/>
good job with the pun:<lb/>
Broussard had an en il f'i<lb/>
vear in handling all<lb/>
placements ? <lb/>
tempts, but he :<lb/>
sextrapoii<lb/>
?<lb/>
perience<lb/>
1 tie offense looks to be strong,<lb/>
although last year's leader Chris<lb/>
Boudreaux graduated. The first unit<lb/>
ting five should average 255<lb/>
pounds per man. with foui seniors in<lb/>
the group. The leadei on the from<lb/>
wall should be senior center Damn<lb/>
Alexander, who was moved to center<lb/>
n tackle. Iiiree vear lettermai<lb/>
 ictor Sheppard returns to one tackle<lb/>
position while Chris Morrow should<lb/>
hold down the oilier Ihe starting<lb/>
guards are slated to be Stuart<lb/>
Chambliss and Jay Hebert.<lb/>
Heading up the defense will be<lb/>
linebackers Steve Spinella and Chris<lb/>
Jacobs. Spinella has led the Ragin'<lb/>
Cajuns in tackles each of the past two<lb/>
seasons (131 stops iasr vear), while<lb/>
Jacobs was second on the team last<lb/>
Si <lb/>
Tony Baker rumhles for yardage against Southwest Louisiana last vear aker<lb/>
needs 1.017 ards to become ECU's all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
5Hje East titantlinfan<lb/>
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.Vofri Carolina at ECU ? October 26, 1985 ? 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Reliever Hold Leads Morrison's Gamecocks<lb/>
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???????<lb/>
upon his entrance into the game.<lb/>
Seniors rhomas Dend and Kent<lb/>
Hagood botti return to the Gamecock<lb/>
backfield aftei combining tor I, R5<lb/>
ng and 12 toil : ?wns last<lb/>
e<lb/>
defense from his end position H<lb/>
the onl senior on the starting u<lb/>
while two-year letterman Willie<lb/>
Mclntee will till the other end posi<lb/>
: ion.<lb/>
Leading the linebackers will be<lb/>
sophomore C arl Hill who was named<lb/>
to the freshhman Mi-America team<lb/>
season Danny Miller and<lb/>
sophomore Sam lav lor will handle<lb/>
the duties at the othei linebacl<lb/>
-lots although neither id much<lb/>
x experience.<lb/>
The kicking game will be an area<lb/>
the Gamecock not ha s<lb/>
worry about a- the punter and<lb/>
? er return from last year's 10 2<lb/>
squad Junior placekicker S<lb/>
Hagler hit eight oi 13 field .<lb/>
tempts and was perfect on all 4C<lb/>
point-after-touchdown attempts.<lb/>
I om )'( onnor return<lb/>
punting duties after aver 40 4<lb/>
yards per k k last sea<lb/>
Mitharolina ?ill c ?me I :<lb/>
ville this yea t tin<lb/>
tory rh I tri<lb/>
?r the (iamecock<lb/>
leave lly<lb/>
Willjams-Brice Si<lb/>
tunes m 1985.<lb/>
V k( Hold<lb/>
. '<lb/>
I Eric I irns<lb/>
pass<lb/>
Mot<lb/>
Much of la<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
loe Brooks<lb/>
?<lb/>
Morris. I ast<lb/>
season Man1: was the I leading<lb/>
interceptoi on the tea vith three,<lb/>
whil, "eakmg i enemy pass-<lb/>
Senior 11 ?ny Guy ton will lead<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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i<lb/>
Senior Ihomas Dendv returns to pace<lb/>
the South (arolina ground attack<lb/>
Saturday Sports Spectacular<lb/>
Hosts ? Greg Kerr &amp; Brian Bailey<lb/>
Producer ? Randy Mews<lb/>
Complete highlights of the ECU Pirates<lb/>
and Atlantic Coast Conference football<lb/>
Saturday from 11:15 p.m. to 11:45 p.m. on<lb/>
NewsCenter 9<lb/>
WNCT-TV<lb/>
-?.vwvvvi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0052"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
HE PIRATE PIGSKIN PREVIEW<lb/>
MJGUS1 1985<lb/>
ECU at Southern Mississippi ? November 2, 1985 ? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Eagles Look To Rebound From Bad Year<lb/>
he fortunes of the Southern Strong safety Tim Smith -M?X1 I Cal<lb/>
sissippi football program las, vMr IS"??? Z I? Sm,th enters hss<lb/>
rhe fortunes of the Southern<lb/>
Mississippi football program last yeai<lb/>
were nearly identical to those of<lb/>
ECU. rhe (olden Eagles entered the<lb/>
season after a 8-3 year in 1983 with<lb/>
high hopes, hut managed to on! win<lb/>
four games last year.<lb/>
' wait-till-next-yeai motto rna<lb/>
appropriate last sea-<lb/>
??.dilation hitting the Eagles<lb/>
his could be another long yeai<lb/>
have<lb/>
but w<lb/>
I .<lb/>
Strong safety Tim Smith enters<lb/>
junior year with excellent credentials<lb/>
He secured 105 total tackles last fall<lb/>
to lead all defensive backs and his<lb/>
three interceptions also led the<lb/>
defense in that departmeni Senior<lb/>
cornerbacks lames Harris<lb/>
- oopei keep their startinj<lb/>
and uili provide a calminj<lb/>
3n an otherwise young deft<lb/>
Iden Eagles lost io starters,<lb/>
ailback Sam Dejarnette!<lb/>
stan fensive lineman Rich;<lb/>
Byrd . Greg Hae<lb/>
Hea c armond<lb/>
two seasons at<lb/>
?i<lb/>
? hj thi<lb/>
 orth<lb/>
"i. t<lb/>
sses,<lb/>
i ? ?<lb/>
- .<lb/>
Robi<lb/>
??:  , but ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I -<lb/>
?<lb/>
I h<lb/>
nine<lb/>
<lb/>
572 sards, rhe fullback :<lb/>
ilh settled I<lb/>
B wn wil<lb/>
season after a<lb/>
4 v' ast in '84.<lb/>
IX<lb/>
n with she :<lb/>
n all returning. Junior<lb/>
nabbed a team<lb/>
his, with two ol those<lb/>
goh ichdowns. Backup <lb/>
"rcu v :ounted tor 17 catches<lb/>
with an average of nearl I6yards. ;<lb/>
split end. Chris McGee and Edward<lb/>
Wilson are hack alter combining foi<lb/>
:l reeptions last fall. Senior Robert<lb/>
Stalling -turns at tight end after<lb/>
making eight receptions last season.<lb/>
Three starting offensive linemen<lb/>
return to the Southern Miss lineup<lb/>
with 6-7, 275-pound tackle Bennv<lb/>
Draughn as the main anchor. Left<lb/>
guard Chris Haag and center Ken<lb/>
Bentley, both seniors, started last<lb/>
season Two sophomores are ex-<lb/>
pected to fill vacant line positions.<lb/>
Rick Slater should start at one tackle<lb/>
spot, while Tim Hallman will be one<lb/>
ol the guards.<lb/>
Southern Miss averaged just 17<lb/>
points a game last year offensively<lb/>
and were especially anemic in the first<lb/>
and fourth quarters ? when they<lb/>
scored just 68 points in 22 total<lb/>
quarters of play.<lb/>
A veteran secondary will lead the<lb/>
way for the Golden Eagle defense.<lb/>
Robert Duckswortr Andrew Mott<lb/>
omores Sidne C ?<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
?pec-<lb/>
B<lb/>
?<lb/>
JEar<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
91.3<lb/>
ECU's FM Alternativt<lb/>
Playing tomorrow's hits today<lb/>
SsSSsSSvSSsSSGSS<lb/>
ECU ut Auburn ?<lb/>
Dye's Tiger<lb/>
Dy<lb/>
1974-79, :<lb/>
all<lb/>
B<lb/>
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I<lb/>
Tulsa at It<lb/>
Morton<lb/>
<lb/>
J Hi !<lb/>
Ladies A<lb/>
,<lb/>
203 EA!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0053"/><lb/>
 1985 ? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
FHE PIRATfc PIGSKIN PREVIEW<lb/>
ora Bad Year<lb/>
I<lb/>
with<lb/>
Uernative<lb/>
's hits today<lb/>
1<lb/>
5&amp;33&amp;3&amp;$$C ?3SS&amp;&amp;33$333&amp;33&amp;3&amp;k<lb/>
W A('OUST 198?<lb/>
ECU at Auburn ? ovember 9, 1985 ? 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Dye's Tigers Preseason Pick To Win It All<lb/>
hen R'l travels to AnhnmV ,?  . . r V A JH<lb/>
When 1 t'l travels to Auburn's<lb/>
lordan-Harc Stadium it will mark the<lb/>
irsl meeting between former ECU<lb/>
coach Pal Dye and the Pirates.<lb/>
Dye coached the Pirates from<lb/>
974-79, posting a 48-18-1 record<lb/>
along with a trip to the Independence<lb/>
Bowl Dye left ECU to coach at<lb/>
Wyoming tor a year before taking<lb/>
the Auburn job.<lb/>
e Dye started at Auburn in<lb/>
?81 his teams have won 34 games<lb/>
losing onl 14 (.708 winning<lb/>
tge).<lb/>
Dy record should onl) get better<lb/>
the preseason favorite in<lb/>
 d Southeastern Conference<lb/>
been picked to win the na-<lb/>
mpionship by both The<lb/>
Views and inside Sports.<lb/>
nf Auburn's attack will be<lb/>
i err offense. 1 eading the<lb/>
standout senior Bo<lb/>
eading contender foi<lb/>
i leisman 1 rophy.<lb/>
was injured in the se-<lb/>
' - season lasi year<lb/>
against Texas with a separated<lb/>
shoulder, gained 475 yards after com-<lb/>
ing back in November.<lb/>
In his three years at Auburn,<lb/>
Jackson has rushed for 2,517 yards<lb/>
on 372 carries for a 6.8-vard average<lb/>
per carry.<lb/>
Bo Jackson<lb/>
Pat Dve<lb/>
V<lb/>
At quarterback, erratic Pal<lb/>
Washington returns tor his senior<lb/>
season. Washington started ever)<lb/>
game last season, throwing foi 1,202<lb/>
yards and rushing for 186 more.<lb/>
However, he completed only tour<lb/>
i down passes, while thro wine<lb/>
nine interceptions. Redshirt junior<lb/>
Jeff Burger and redshirt freshman<lb/>
Bobby Walden are the reserves.<lb/>
Auburn returns 19 lettermen on<lb/>
defense, but just six of those started<lb/>
last fall on a unit that Dye was not<lb/>
totally pleased with.<lb/>
"We have a lot of ifs on defense,<lb/>
but 1 don't mind having ifs as long as<lb/>
we have some answers Dye said. "1<lb/>
don't mind having questions as long<lb/>
as the answers are there. If you have<lb/>
questions without the answers being<lb/>
there, then you have problems<lb/>
Two people that Dye is counting on<lb/>
to answer some of the questions are<lb/>
on the defensive line. Nose guard<lb/>
Harold Hallman recorded 130 tackles<lb/>
last season, while tackle Gerald<lb/>
Williams collected 123 stops. Gerald<lb/>
Robinson returns at defensive end, but<lb/>
is a question mark due to shoulder<lb/>
surgerj during the oft season.<lb/>
Junior Ben McCurdy returns to<lb/>
head the linebacker spot alter making<lb/>
85 tackles la i fall. 1 dward Phillips,<lb/>
formerb defensive lineman is ex-<lb/>
pected to get the nod at the other<lb/>
linebaeking spot. Providing depth<lb/>
will be sophomores Russ C arreker<lb/>
and Roy Corhen.<lb/>
Auburn's secondary returns three<lb/>
starters in the secondary with both<lb/>
cornerbacks returning. Kevin Porter<lb/>
and Jonathon Robinson return along<lb/>
with strong safety Arthur Johnson.<lb/>
Johnson was the leading tackier<lb/>
among all defensive backs last season<lb/>
and is extremely talented at forcing<lb/>
oppenents to resort to the run.<lb/>
The free safety position is up foi<lb/>
grabs between Tom Powell, John<lb/>
Dobbs and Keith Grenn. all of whom<lb/>
could get playing time.<lb/>
Although there are some question<lb/>
marks on this year's Tiger -quad. Dve<lb/>
is optimistic about his team's<lb/>
chances.<lb/>
"We're going into our fifth year at<lb/>
Auburn and I'm verv excited about<lb/>
this year Dye said. "This football<lb/>
team has a lot o potential, but you<lb/>
know wfiat potential is ? that's all it is<lb/>
until il produces<lb/>
- V ? -V.WHIIV IIIIUUIU1 IS CJ.<lb/>
lulsaat ECU ? ovemberJ6, 1985 ? 1:30 p.m<lb/>
xMorton Replaces Cooper As Tulsa Coach<lb/>
tin! as both<lb/>
ootball<lb/>
I niversit) ol I ulsa,<lb/>
nalh decided it was<lb/>
i change. So when the<lb/>
State head coaching job<lb/>
. t jumped at the oppoi<lb/>
. ? ing Fulsa without a<lb/>
? late date.<lb/>
25, the Golden Hur-<lb/>
n Morton to take over<lb/>
? tm. He had spent<lb/>
Ni rth Texas State, with a<lb/>
v mark during his stay,<lb/>
1 tour consecutive<lb/>
f. lyofi appearances<lb/>
?ive minded mentor<lb/>
his sta at I ulsa. The<lb/>
c barters back on of-<lb/>
h plentv of depth also<lb/>
 battlt for the starting quarter-<lb/>
is shaping up between a<lb/>
Steve Gage, the 1983<lb/>
Missouri <lb/>
Newcomer<lb/>
bro ken jaw<lb/>
ve;<lb/>
e r e n c e<lb/>
-uttered a<lb/>
oust<lb/>
Den Morton<lb/>
Kevin Lilly<lb/>
Oklahoma State earlv last season.<lb/>
opening up the quarterbacking posi-<lb/>
tion to Richie Stephenson. The 5-11<lb/>
Stephenson never relinquished the<lb/>
starting role even when Gage returned<lb/>
one month later. Stephenson com-<lb/>
pleted 70 of 138 attempts for 1.134<lb/>
vards arid seven touchdowns, while<lb/>
dage hit on 24 ol 5 aerials 'or 319<lb/>
vards and two scores.<lb/>
The defensive outlook isn't as op-<lb/>
timistic, since just six regulars return.<lb/>
The secondary has several holes to<lb/>
fill, while the outside linebackers are<lb/>
untested. I he line is anchored bv two<lb/>
All-MVC selections, joe Dixon, the<lb/>
team's leading sacker is scheduled to<lb/>
start at nose guard, while Kevin Lillv<lb/>
returns at tackle. Junior Chris Pike<lb/>
been switched from second team<lb/>
e guard to starting right tackle to<lb/>
gel his 6-7, 28s pound frame into the<lb/>
action.<lb/>
Another all-MVC standout Xavier<lb/>
Warren. ,s a fixture di inside<lb/>
linebacker. The hard hitter led Tulsa<lb/>
in tackles with 134 last season, senior<lb/>
Jimmy Summers starts opposite War-<lb/>
ren. Youth and inexperience will<lb/>
hamper the outside linebackers as<lb/>
Mike Williams and redshirt 'reshman<lb/>
Dennis Bvrd are in the running tor<lb/>
the left side spot. Sophomore Scott<lb/>
Estes is 'he top prospect to man the<lb/>
other linebackinu slot.<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
BM M'M ks fs , ois SHOVELS<lb/>
tUMMix Ks Mfss Mrs (Muss<lb/>
HIK.l ?s M BOOIv. K4INWF h I MtlW<lb/>
fSAMH W MU IHMHs. WORKlOIHIs<lb/>
Browsers Welcome<lb/>
Ladies Apparel<lb/>
203 East 5th Street<lb/>
758-4061<lb/>
SAVE on Sperry Top-Siders<lb/>
l e C an<lb/>
Coordinate<lb/>
Your H ardrobe<lb/>
With Good<lb/>
Customer<lb/>
Service<lb/>
$49.90 (Regularly $62)<lb/>
 MOTS SHOP<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, Greenville<lb/>
Also visit our Big &amp; Tall Department<lb/>
??' -<lb/>
Nil ? I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0054"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
I HI P1KXII PIGSKIN PKI VII W.<lb/>
M GUS1 iss<lb/>
ECU at LSI! ? December 7, 1985 ? 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Pirates Travel To LSU For Season Finale<lb/>
Louisiana State Universitj will he<lb/>
the final opponent tor ECU this<lb/>
season when the Pirates travel to<lb/>
Baton Rouge where the rigers own a<lb/>
257-95-15 home record.<lb/>
Second year head coach Bill Arn-<lb/>
sbarger did nothing to hurt that winn-<lb/>
ing percentage in his initial season at<lb/>
the helm of the LSU football pro-<lb/>
gram. The Tigers went 5-1 at home<lb/>
and finished up 8-2-1 in the regular<lb/>
season as they earned a post-season<lb/>
trip to the Sugar Bowl.<lb/>
I SU lost to Nebraska in the Sugar<lb/>
Bowl, but nevertheless it was quite a<lb/>
turnaround for a team that went<lb/>
winless in the Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference the year before. Getting back<lb/>
to the Sugar Bowl will be a difficult<lb/>
task for Arnsbarger and his Bengal<lb/>
Tigers as there are some holes to till.<lb/>
1 SI will be forced to revamp the<lb/>
entire offensive line as only one<lb/>
starter returns. Curtis Core (6-4, 248)<lb/>
will provide the Tigers with some<lb/>
veteran leadership on the offensive<lb/>
line.<lb/>
But, replacing four of last year's<lb/>
line performers including<lb/>
all everything lance Smith will be<lb/>
difficult. Ray Brock is expected to<lb/>
Dalton Hilhard<lb/>
Jefl Wickersham<lb/>
step in where Smith left off at right<lb/>
tackle and Nacho Albergamo and<lb/>
Keith Melancon are slated to handle<lb/>
the center and right guard positions<lb/>
In keeping with Arnsbarger's theory<lb/>
ol keeping off unnecessary bodv tat.<lb/>
the Tigers' blocking wall will be quick<lb/>
bu; not verv bulkv<lb/>
As for quickness, M will have<lb/>
plenty of it in the backfield. I"he<lb/>
liters return their talented backfield<lb/>
duo of Dalton Hilhard and (.arv<lb/>
James ' two of five returning starters<lb/>
on the offensive side of the ball<lb/>
Hilhard is a bonafide All-America<lb/>
and Heisman Irophv candidate. The<lb/>
senior running back averaged 115 3<lb/>
vards rushing per game las! season<lb/>
while netting 1,268 total yards. The<lb/>
versatile back also snared 24 recep-<lb/>
tions, the second highest total on the<lb/>
team. James finished second in<lb/>
rushing with 426 yards Depth is<lb/>
abundant with talented performers<lb/>
like Craig Rathjen and Garland Jean<lb/>
Batiste waiting in the wings.<lb/>
The quarterback will once again be<lb/>
Jeff Wickersham. The senior signal<lb/>
caller is alreadv I Si's career passing<lb/>
leader, even before his senior season<lb/>
begins. Wickersham has thrown for<lb/>
more than 2.fMX) yards in two seasons,<lb/>
amassing 2.1 s 5 passing vards last<lb/>
season Last eat's 57 pen err<lb/>
pletion the ;<lb/>
was no fluke as hi<lb/>
percentage is 57.4<lb/>
1 he i igei defense will ha<lb/>
teresting mixture oi youi<lb/>
pcrienced I ilent Seven si i<lb/>
tor rnsbarger's defense witl<lb/>
those players<lb/>
sophomores or juniors.<lb/>
Inside linebacker Shawn B ?<lb/>
the only senior listed as<lb/>
the 1 SU depth chart and he ???<lb/>
expected to provide veteran lea<lb/>
ship. All-America candid<lb/>
Brooks will man one<lb/>
linebacking positions and is b<lb/>
counted on to play up to his<lb/>
tial.<lb/>
Sophomore Ron 1 ewis wil<lb/>
the placekicking chores after em<lb/>
ing as an extremely accui<lb/>
sidewinder last season when he hit<lb/>
eight of his p, I attempts and<lb/>
true on five ol seven field goal ti<lb/>
STOP SHOP<lb/>
? Western Union ?<lb/>
Your One Stop Party Store<lb/>
Beer (Import &amp; Domestic)<lb/>
Wine ? Kegs ? Coolers<lb/>
Ice ? Cups ? Flasks<lb/>
Candy ? Groceries ? Chips<lb/>
We send and receive Telegraphic Money Orders &amp; Telegrams<lb/>
?<lb/>
Corner of 5th &amp; Reodc<lb/>
(Across From Beef &amp; Shakes)<lb/>
752-6366<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
I<lb/>
Alphabets<lb/>
<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
THk<lb/>
be sev en nit<lb/>
LALNDRC<lb/>
-<lb/>
Out<lb/>
Oper<lb/>
?ted V <lb/>
2510 E. 10th Mreet<lb/>
"If vou have t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0055"/><lb/>
THE PIRATE PIGSKT PREV It W<lb/>
AUGUST 1985<lb/>
:<lb/>
f . i<lb/>
th<lb/>
r Season Finale<lb/>
pletion<lb/>
in in-<lb/>
yel ex-<lb/>
rturn<lb/>
six of<lb/>
b e i n g<lb/>
Rurkn is<lb/>
itarter on<lb/>
he will be<lb/>
ran leader-<lb/>
ite Michael<lb/>
the inside<lb/>
being<lb/>
poten-<lb/>
handie<lb/>
emerg-<lb/>
curate<lb/>
: hit all<lb/>
nd was<lb/>
OP<lb/>
<lb/>
n<lb/>
rty Store<lb/>
estic)<lb/>
lolers<lb/>
sks<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
? Orders &amp; Telegrams<lb/>
Alphabetical ECU Football Roster<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ews<lb/>
Bunn<lb/>
JR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
R<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
JR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
IB<lb/>
WR<lb/>
OT<lb/>
OG<lb/>
re<lb/>
LB<lb/>
NG<lb/>
C<lb/>
ss<lb/>
OL<lb/>
LB<lb/>
OL<lb/>
SE<lb/>
FS<lb/>
OT<lb/>
FS<lb/>
SE<lb/>
DB<lb/>
TB<lb/>
SE<lb/>
FLK<lb/>
TE<lb/>
TE<lb/>
FB<lb/>
NG<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
? '<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-4<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
5-1 1<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
202<lb/>
196<lb/>
261<lb/>
261<lb/>
176<lb/>
240<lb/>
236<lb/>
250<lb/>
205<lb/>
268<lb/>
I<lb/>
240<lb/>
210<lb/>
202<lb/>
i;<lb/>
204<lb/>
166<lb/>
192<lb/>
200<lb/>
185<lb/>
210<lb/>
230<lb/>
200<lb/>
244<lb/>
85<lb/>
97<lb/>
95<lb/>
27<lb/>
3<lb/>
69<lb/>
24<lb/>
48<lb/>
32<lb/>
98<lb/>
8<lb/>
74<lb/>
33<lb/>
41<lb/>
6b<lb/>
38<lb/>
87<lb/>
RonGill.ard SO DE<lb/>
Rodney Glover FR DT<lb/>
Leon Hall SO DT<lb/>
Charlie Harnman JR P<lb/>
Jeff Heath SR pk<lb/>
Paul Hoggara JR OG<lb/>
Brent Holbrook SR WR<lb/>
Steve Jacobs SR LB<lb/>
Tim James FR FB<lb/>
William Jennerte JR DT<lb/>
Ron Jones SO QB<lb/>
David Kramer SR OG<lb/>
Scott Lewis SR TE<lb/>
Theo Livingston SR OT<lb/>
. London JR SS<lb/>
Willie Mack SR DE<lb/>
Matt McLaughlin pr TE<lb/>
Mark Mr FR OL<lb/>
JoeMohr. FR OG<lb/>
JarroaMooov SO TB<lb/>
TrniOrr FR OL<lb/>
Terry Paige SO TB<lb/>
JettPattor SR TE<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-6<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-6<lb/>
I<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
238<lb/>
236<lb/>
255<lb/>
170<lb/>
190<lb/>
257<lb/>
190<lb/>
229<lb/>
225<lb/>
272<lb/>
186<lb/>
281<lb/>
218<lb/>
215<lb/>
206<lb/>
264<lb/>
245<lb/>
212<lb/>
255<lb/>
192<lb/>
221<lb/>
Vincent Ford FR DT 6-4 225<lb/>
Chris McLawhorn JR FLK 6-0 193<lb/>
Sam Miller FR TB 5-10 180<lb/>
50 David Ptum<lb/>
84 Wilhe Powell<lb/>
53 Mednck Rainbow<lb/>
31 Anthony Simpson<lb/>
49 Bruce Simpson<lb/>
13 Tony Smith<lb/>
44 Vmson Smith<lb/>
73 Greg SokoiohorsKv<lb/>
2 Darren Speed<lb/>
22 Rosweil Streeter<lb/>
61 Curtis Struyk<lb/>
35 Essray Tahaterro<lb/>
47 Ken Taylor<lb/>
Greq Thomas<lb/>
46 Jeff Turner<lb/>
92 Ojah Vasser<lb/>
37 Kevin Walker<lb/>
55 Stuart Ward<lb/>
58 Robel Washington<lb/>
39 Bubba Waters<lb/>
86 John Williamson<lb/>
14 Lewis Wilson<lb/>
10 Vernard Wynn<lb/>
George Prebuia JR<lb/>
Howard Sears FR<lb/>
Craig White jR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
SO<lb/>
so<lb/>
so<lb/>
so<lb/>
SR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
FR<lb/>
jR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
DT<lb/>
DE<lb/>
NG<lb/>
FB<lb/>
LB<lb/>
WR<lb/>
DE<lb/>
OG<lb/>
QB<lb/>
DB<lb/>
OL<lb/>
SS<lb/>
DE<lb/>
OG<lb/>
CB<lb/>
DT<lb/>
CB<lb/>
C<lb/>
LB<lb/>
LB<lb/>
DE<lb/>
DB<lb/>
FS<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-4<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
5-11<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
5-10<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
243<lb/>
224<lb/>
236<lb/>
226<lb/>
218<lb/>
171<lb/>
219<lb/>
290<lb/>
217<lb/>
190<lb/>
256<lb/>
205<lb/>
225<lb/>
247<lb/>
185<lb/>
245<lb/>
227<lb/>
208<lb/>
234<lb/>
190<lb/>
193<lb/>
iftd&amp;<lb/>
THE late night place to<lb/>
he seven nights a week<lb/>
 ?y<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
Games<lb/>
.screen "Cable" TV<lb/>
: hers 1 8 Drvers<lb/>
ae Patio<lb/>
Fluff 6 Fold Service<lb/>
Drv Cleaning Pick-Up<lb/>
Ample Parking<lb/>
Attendant On Duty<lb/>
Cold Beverages<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight, 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Located Next To The Pizza Hut<lb/>
2510 E. 10th Street Greenville, N.C. 752-5222<lb/>
vou have to do vour own laundrv. do it in style at the Wash Pub<lb/>
209<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
"Open To<lb/>
The Puhlic"<lb/>
Giant 15 Ft.<lb/>
TV Screen<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
vs. Dallas<lb/>
Mon. Sept. 9<lb/>
Sept. 7<lb/>
SIDEWINDER<lb/>
Sept. 14 (Home Game)<lb/>
PG-13<lb/>
Sept. 21<lb/>
ROBIN THOMPSON BAND<lb/>
Sept. 28 (Home Game)<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
Oct. 5 (Homecoming)<lb/>
AVALANCHE<lb/>
Oct. 12<lb/>
STRATUS<lb/>
Oct. 26 (Home Game)<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
Nov. 2 &amp; 9<lb/>
TO BE ANNOUNCED<lb/>
Nov. 16 (Home Game)<lb/>
SIDEWINDER<lb/>
 t<lb/>
mm<lb/>
1<lb/>
'f-<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0056"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THE PIRATE PIGSKIN PREVIEW AUGUST 1985<lb/>
1985 ECU Football Schedule<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Sept.7<lb/>
Sept.14<lb/>
Sept.21<lb/>
Sept.28<lb/>
Oct.5<lb/>
Oct.12<lb/>
Oct.26<lb/>
Nov.2<lb/>
Nov.9<lb/>
Nov.16<lb/>
Dec.7<lb/>
Opponent<lb/>
at N.C. State<lb/>
SW TEXAS STATE<lb/>
at Penn State<lb/>
TEMPLE<lb/>
MIAMI(FL)(Homecoming)<lb/>
at Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
at Southern Mississippi<lb/>
at Auburn<lb/>
TULSA (Shrine Day)<lb/>
at LSU<lb/>
Time<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
2:00 pm<lb/>
4:00 pm CT<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
6:00 pm CT<lb/>
1:00 pm CT<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm CT<lb/>
Numerical Roster<lb/>
Jarrod Moody TB<lb/>
Darren Speed QB<lb/>
Jeff Heath. PK<lb/>
Gary London. SS<lb/>
Ron Jones. OB<lb/>
Ron Eley SE<lb/>
Vernard Wynn. FS<lb/>
Barnet Easterlmg. FS<lb/>
Tony Smith, WR<lb/>
Lewis Wilson. DB<lb/>
Don Gaylor. SE<lb/>
Todd Abrams. QB<lb/>
Ellis Diliahunt. FS<lb/>
Keith Ford. DB<lb/>
Roswwell Streeter. DB<lb/>
Brent Holbrook. SE<lb/>
Charlie Harnman P<lb/>
Bobby Clair FB<lb/>
Anthony Simpson. FB<lb/>
Tim James FB<lb/>
Scott Lewis, TE<lb/>
Pat Bowens SS<lb/>
Essray Taliaferro SS<lb/>
Kevin Walker DB<lb/>
Terry Paige TB<lb/>
Bubba Waters. LB<lb/>
George Franklin, TB ?<lb/>
Tony Baker. TB<lb/>
Vinson Smith, DE<lb/>
Jeff Turner DB<lb/>
Ken Taylor, DE<lb/>
Steve Jacobs, LB<lb/>
Bruce Simpson LB<lb/>
David Plum DT<lb/>
Ken Bourgeois, C<lb/>
Mednck Rainbow NG<lb/>
John Britt, LB<lb/>
Stuart Ward, C<lb/>
Greg Thomas OG<lb/>
Robert Washington LB<lb/>
Curtis Struyk. OG<lb/>
Rich Autry. OG<lb/>
Joe Mohneaux. OG<lb/>
Shawn B-ady. OT<lb/>
Paul Hoggard. OG<lb/>
Greg Sokolohorsky. OT<lb/>
David Kramer OG<lb/>
Robert Alexander OT<lb/>
Tim Or. OT<lb/>
Tim Dumas OT<lb/>
Mark Minshew. OL<lb/>
William Caner SE<lb/>
Matt McLaughlin. TE<lb/>
Mike Gamey. TE<lb/>
Willie Powell. DE<lb/>
Ron Gilliard DE<lb/>
John Williamson DE<lb/>
Jeff Pattern TE<lb/>
Willie Fuller SE<lb/>
Larry Berry. LB<lb/>
0ah Vasser DT<lb/>
Walter Bryant. DT<lb/>
Leon Hall, DT<lb/>
Shannon Bolmg, NG<lb/>
Rodney Glover. DT<lb/>
William Jennette DT<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
Carter-Finley (45,600)<lb/>
Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Beaver (83,770)<lb/>
Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Cajun Field (31,000)<lb/>
Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Roberts (33,000)<lb/>
Jordan-Hare (72,169)<lb/>
Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Tiger (76,869)<lb/>
Location<lb/>
Raleigh, NC<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
University Park, PA<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Lafayette, LA<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Hattiesburg, MS<lb/>
Auburn, AL<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Baton Rouge, LA<lb/>
1985 Bowl Line-Up<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
BOWL<lb/>
December 14California<lb/>
December 21Cherry<lb/>
December 21Independence<lb/>
December 27Liberty<lb/>
December 28Florida Citrus<lb/>
December 28Sun<lb/>
December 28Aloha<lb/>
December 30Freedom<lb/>
December 30Gator<lb/>
December 31Peach<lb/>
December 31"Holiday<lb/>
December 31Bluebonnet<lb/>
December 31All-American<lb/>
January 1Fiesta<lb/>
January 1?oCot1on<lb/>
January 1Rose<lb/>
January 1?' Sugar<lb/>
January 1SOrange<lb/>
SITE<lb/>
Fresno Calif<lb/>
Pontiac Mich<lb/>
Shreveport. La.<lb/>
Memphis, Tenn<lb/>
Orlando. Fla<lb/>
El Paso, Tex<lb/>
Honolulu<lb/>
Anaheim Calif<lb/>
Jacksonville, Fla<lb/>
Atlanta Ga<lb/>
San Diego, Calif<lb/>
Houston Tex<lb/>
Birmingham, Ala<lb/>
Tempe. Ariz.<lb/>
Dallas. Tex<lb/>
Pasadena, Calif<lb/>
New Orleans. LA<lb/>
Miami, Fla<lb/>
BEAU'S<lb/>
Night Club<lb/>
Carolina East Centre<lb/>
Highway 11, Greenville<lb/>
756-6401<lb/>
Welcome to Greenville!  The place to meet "Beam of Course"<lb/>
WEDNESDAY (open 8 pm)<lb/>
Ladies' Zoo<lb/>
Ladies admitted 8 10 pm<lb/>
Guys admitted 10 until<lb/>
THURSDAY (open 7:30 pm)<lb/>
Come Shag with us<lb/>
Featuring the best in Beach music<lb/>
Shag lessons available (Thurs. only)<lb/>
FRIDAY (open 8 pm)<lb/>
ECU pre game party<lb/>
Come meet your Pirate Cheerleaders<lb/>
The best in Disco, Funk &amp; Soul<lb/>
SATURDAY (open 8 pm)<lb/>
Dance the night away<lb/>
Featuring the best in<lb/>
Top 40 and Beach music<lb/>
Memberships $2.00<lb/>
Renewals $1.00<lb/>
Until Sept. 30, 1985<lb/>
We Serve Your Favorite Drinks<lb/>
? All ABC Permits ?<lb/>
BEAU'S<lb/>
A Privote Club For Members (Guests Welcome)<lb/>
Call 756-6401<lb/>
? Luncheons ? Parties<lb/>
? Special Occasions<lb/>
I"<lb/>
mwmmm<lb/>
?I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0057"/><lb/>
<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Government<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Documents<lb/>
Revised April, 1985<lb/>
A<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0058"/><lb/>
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Page 2<lb/>
CONSTITUTION OF THK<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
PREAMBI E<lb/>
 se ?  oa - "r" " : rcsP?nsiblc "uden, self-government,<lb/>
' b ? UmT; ?5 ?rd ,kc a P?"1 fr?dom secure, to<lb/>
I ; ls C fCt ? ??  th? ds we ordain a, d establish this<lb/>
 . .tu ion Jtuden. Government Association for the student<lb/>
casi . aroiina I nn ei it<lb/>
ARTICLE I: SUPREME STUDENT 1 <lb/>
SccttOB I.<lb/>
This Constitution and ail laws th I ill be the supreme tudent law<lb/>
Vetion 2. law<lb/>
! enactments ol the Legislal i  the irious <lb/>
sets rshai! ?<lb/>
ARTICLE II: BILL OF RIGHTS<lb/>
B<lb/>
D<lb/>
i under <lb/>
ndivid<lb/>
I speech,<lb/>
 to peacefully assemble, ai<lb/>
I grievances,<lb/>
her possessions aj<lb/>
1<lb/>
H<lb/>
1<lb/>
;<lb/>
4.<lb/>
Section l.<lb/>
Student Government sso<lb/>
antee the following i ghts t <lb/>
A rhe i egislature shall make- no .<lb/>
!ht the right ol the si<lb/>
the government for a red<lb/>
lei<lb/>
and unreasonable sea<lb/>
?<lb/>
pose<lb/>
ncampus<lb/>
1 Ea<lb/>
gulations ol , k<lb/>
publicatioi<lb/>
G Each??? ? epresented<lb/>
? ? be fully md<lb/>
estiy mformed ol<lb/>
mShtectnTp ed, and the mSy whl<lb/>
?night be changed I. Each student shall have the Men: in al tases o<lb/>
Tn?llhel ?f Conduct, to beorji,<lb/>
in independent, fair, and impartial judiciary, drawn from and<lb/>
T,nr' em b-J- Each student shall havheHghMo<lb/>
ludicial due rroces including g<lb/>
Due notice<lb/>
A speedy hearing<lb/>
An open hearing upon request<lb/>
Representation bj student c unsel<lb/>
Confrontation ol accused with accusers<lb/>
Protection against sclf-incrimination<lb/>
Presumption innocence until proven guilt)<lb/>
Protection against cruel or unusual punishment<lb/>
A record ol the heanna upon request<lb/>
10. The right of appeal<lb/>
K Nodent shall Pe placed in jeopardy more than once For the same ol<lb/>
I Each student shall have the right to be exempt from suspension or exouJ<lb/>
r dit mers;tv'excr ror ??" j<lb/>
University debt, or violation ol a University regulation when such viola<lb/>
-i onst.tutes a threa, to the general welfare of the Lntversnv cot<lb/>
Each student shall have the right to initiate action within the reaular<lb/>
!?KES?"vioUtion of rights ?ed b <lb/>
N. Each student shall enjoy all these nghts w?hou. discrimination by creed<lb/>
race nattonal origin, or any other arbitrary or unreasonable<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
r'1C,ror o,aht,0n ?' !? rightS sha!1 " hc ? ?? i" way nullify-<lb/>
??? d,U ?'her ri8htS PUSSeSSCd b ents. severalK<lb/>
ARTICLE ID: LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Section I.<lb/>
Supreme Legislative power shall be vested in a Legislature .hi k h i. u<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
fandi?8 a, Eas, Ca,???a uSSR or VXZZ . 7Z<lb/>
8.<lb/>
9<lb/>
M<lb/>
set-lion 3.<lb/>
Representation in the 1 egislature shall bt<lb/>
A.Each residence hall ol not more than V.<lb/>
representative to the 1 egislature, and eacl<lb/>
students shall ele. t twi<lb/>
B rhe total number ol day student rep ? .<lb/>
number of full time day studei<lb/>
e hall si .<lb/>
hall<lb/>
Section 4<lb/>
1<lb/>
Section 5.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
dent Pro i emr r<lb/>
Section 6.<lb/>
There shall be a<lb/>
-<lb/>
Section 7.<lb/>
I he 1 egi<lb/>
st-il, .n 8.<lb/>
 I<lb/>
 :<lb/>
I<lb/>
2.1<lb/>
special sess<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
H. t0 AVp<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
stitution.<lb/>
Section 9.<lb/>
rhe Legislatut<lb/>
(2 V. vote<lb/>
Section 10.<lb/>
rhe Legislalture shall enact no laws wh h do<lb/>
sveon f'V' and :l<lb/>
section 12. Demex?, as directed b<lb/>
TthatKci Universitysl<lb/>
heshe deems necessary.<lb/>
Section 13.<lb/>
The Chancellor ol the l nivei<lb/>
legislative action.<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
ARTICLE IV: EXECUTIVE<lb/>
Section 1<lb/>
Office ol President- neither ha l ,n ,k shaU ht' cU?ib,e ,or th<lb/>
dance at fast (ti, f T?? 0 ln at!e<lb/>
good standing and dism.TralT5- " <lb/>
1. 10 make recommendations to the Legislature<lb/>
power within tenorS ?"?????<lb/>
J" To " e'as SSJ J ?f fhe ?"??? body<lb/>
notified a, least 24 ttl??? - ? <lb/>
Tojssue orders to executive comnu,t? anto requ.re reports from<lb/>
" "ai ana" exnjrna,?"18 ?f StUdenl btKi in a" matters, inter-<lb/>
5?. To appoint chairpersons of all everm ,<lb/>
10. To establish such bod.es sub dV.rv ' h T"1'1'<lb/>
necessary and proZZI ?T<lb/>
her duties. hc Performance ot his<lb/>
11 To delegate the exercise of anv nf .k- u<lb/>
 v except the ; ?hef?ve enumerated powers and<lb/>
 - ?. and the Power ,0 ;pfximLang ?f ? sla<lb/>
12.lo perfoi ? oullcs ?lodeni U1 h Q<lb/>
settion 2.<lb/>
S? tion<lb/>
?<lb/>
? .<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
de-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Legisla-<lb/>
Section 4<lb/>
Thei<lb/>
B N<lb/>
Car<lb/>
LI<lb/>
?<lb/>
4 1<lb/>
section 5<lb/>
The Esecut<lb/>
:he follow .<lb/>
 !?? - ordinati<lb/>
B To be responsible<lb/>
the Student<lb/>
C To app-<lb/>
1<lb/>
section 6.<lb/>
There shall I<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
and Graduate da<lb/>
Treasure-<lb/>
A. No person e.xcep: a J<lb/>
member of the f<lb/>
and has 1<lb/>
B. The Presidents of the see<lb/>
duties:<lb/>
1. To be a member of the I J<lb/>
2.To be an ex-officio memDer<lb/>
?.To perform all other duties as<lb/>
C The Vice Presidents of the several<lb/>
and duties:<lb/>
1. To perform the duties a<lb/>
his her absence or mcapa.<lb/>
2. To succeed to the off<lb/>
become vacant<lb/>
3 To perform all other d<lb/>
D. The Senior Class Secretarv -T-ei<lb/>
and duties<lb/>
1 To handle all secretarial mattJ<lb/>
2 To manage the financia; 3 I<lb/>
3 To assist the Senior Class P<lb/>
by him her<lb/>
Section 7. Vacancy<lb/>
A.There shall be the following <lb/>
I Should the otiice of Presider.t<lb/>
on the Vice President<lb/>
2.Should both offices of Preside!<lb/>
the Treasurer, or in his her <lb/>
assume said office until a Presi.<lb/>
B.Should any other executive office<lb/>
to fill the vacancy within three<lb/>
Section t.<lb/>
The President. Vice President, and Tr<lb/>
mer school and assume ail dut<lb/>
Government Association during<lb/>
aaan<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0059"/><lb/>
ileem<lb/>
wers and<lb/>
rgis iative<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
There shall be a Vice President of the Student Government Association to aic<lb/>
the President in the performance of hisher duties.<lb/>
A.The Vice President shall be elected in the manner prescribed for the Presi-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
B.No person shall be qualified for the office of Vice President who is not also<lb/>
quahtied for the office of President.<lb/>
(The Vice President shall enjoy the following powers and duties:<lb/>
1. To perform the duties and exercise the powers o the President in the<lb/>
event of the President's absence or incapacity.<lb/>
2. To succeed to the office ot President should that office become va-<lb/>
cant.<lb/>
3. To perform all duties incident to such office<lb/>
Section 3.<lb/>
Financial authority shall be vested in a Treasurer of the Student Government<lb/>
Association<lb/>
A. The Treasurer shall be elected in the manner prescribed for the President.<lb/>
B No person shall be qualified for the office of Treasurer who is not also<lb/>
qualified for the office of President.<lb/>
C. The Treasurer shall enjoy the following powers and duties:<lb/>
1 To appoint the Financial Advisor to the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion and to consult with him her on business matters of the Student<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
2. To be directlv responsible to the Legislature for all financial transac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
3. To affix his her signature to all requisitions issued by the Student<lb/>
Fund Accounting Office.<lb/>
4. To confer with the Student Fund Accounting Office accountant each<lb/>
school day to transact necessary business.<lb/>
5. To advise the Legislature on all financial matters for their considera-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
6. To sign all valid requisitions for organizations sponsored bv the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association<lb/>
7. To keep an open record on all appropriation acts passed bv the<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
8. To perform all duties incident to such office.<lb/>
Section 4.<lb/>
There shall be a Secretary of the Student Government Association.<lb/>
A. The Secretary shall be elected in the manner prescribed for the President.<lb/>
B.No person except a full-time student at East Carolina University who has<lb/>
completed 16 semester hours of work shall be eligible for the office of<lb/>
Secretary; neither shall anyone who is not in good standing at las;<lb/>
Carolina University and does not maintain a 2.000 average<lb/>
C.The Secretary shall enjoy the following powers and duties:<lb/>
1. To take minutes of all Legislature sessions and to keep such minutes in<lb/>
permanent form.<lb/>
2. To handle official correspondence of the Legislature under the direc-<lb/>
tion of the Speaker.<lb/>
3. To make available to Legislators and Executive Officers copies of the<lb/>
minutes of all Legislative sessions.<lb/>
4. To perform all duties incident to uch office.<lb/>
Section 5.<lb/>
The Executive Council, which shall consist of the Executive officers of the<lb/>
Student Government Association and the five class Presidents, shall en-<lb/>
joy the following powers and duties:<lb/>
A. To coordinate the action of its members.<lb/>
B. To be responsible for employing and discharging full-time employees of<lb/>
the Student Government Association.<lb/>
C. To appoint, with the legislature's approval, all student members of all<lb/>
Judicial boards except the residence hall councils.<lb/>
Section 6.<lb/>
There shall be class officers, elected by their respective classes, to consist of a<lb/>
President and a Vice President for the Freshmen. Sophomore, Junior<lb/>
and Graduate classes, and a President. Vice President, and Secretary-<lb/>
Treasurer for the Senior class.<lb/>
A. No person except a full-time student at East Carolina University who is a<lb/>
member of the class from which heshe is elected, is in good standing,<lb/>
and has a 2.000 average shall be eligible for class office.<lb/>
B. The Presidents of the several classes shall enjoy the following powers and<lb/>
duties:<lb/>
l.To be a member of the Executive Council.<lb/>
2.To be an cx-officio member of the Legislature.<lb/>
3.To perform all other duties as delegated to himher by the Legislature.<lb/>
C.The Vice Presidents of the several classes shall enjoy the following powers<lb/>
and duties:<lb/>
1. To perform the duties and execute the powers of the class President in<lb/>
hisher absence or incapacity.<lb/>
2. To succeed to the office of President of the class should that office<lb/>
become vacant.<lb/>
3. To perform all other duties as delegated by the Legislature.<lb/>
D. The Senior Class Secretary-Treasurer shall enjoy the following powers<lb/>
and duties:<lb/>
1. To handle all secretarial matters pertaining to the Senior Class.<lb/>
2. To manage the financial affairs of the Senior Class.<lb/>
3. To assist the Senior Class President in whatever way deemed necessary<lb/>
by himher.<lb/>
Section 7. Vacancy<lb/>
A.There shall be the following order of succession to the office of President.<lb/>
1 Should the office of President become vacant, the office shall devolve<lb/>
on the Vice President.<lb/>
2.Should both offices of President and Vice President become vacant<lb/>
the Treasurer, or in hisher absence the Speaker of the Legislature shall<lb/>
assume said office until a President shall be elected.<lb/>
B.Should any other executive office become vacant, there shall be an election<lb/>
to fill the vacancy within three weeks of its occurrence<lb/>
Section<lb/>
The President, Vice President, and Treasurer shall be required to attend sum-<lb/>
mer school and assume all duties for the operation of the Student<lb/>
Government Association during summer school. They shall receive nor-<lb/>
STUPENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS Page 3<lb/>
t !u Tg lre SUmmer' and as an addlon- their tuition shall be<lb/>
pa id by the Student Government Association. Exceptions to this rule can<lb/>
only be made by the Review Board. Any officer desinng an exception<lb/>
must file a formal request no later than 30 days before the end of Spring<lb/>
Semester. K <lb/>
ARTICLE V: JUDICIAL<lb/>
Section I.<lb/>
The supreme judicial power shall be vested in the Review Board.<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
The Review board shall be the board of final appeal from all boards<lb/>
established under the authority of this Constitution. It shall have the<lb/>
power to affirm, dismiss for violation of students' right, or refer back<lb/>
for further deliberation, the decision of any lower board brought to it on<lb/>
appi .1 The Review Board shall also have the final authoritv to interpret<lb/>
this Constitution and the laws passed under its authority<lb/>
Section 3.<lb/>
The Review Board, sitting as a Board for the Redress of Grievances, shall<lb/>
have exclusive jurisdiction over cases of a non-discriminatory nature<lb/>
where a student is being or would be harmed by any on-campus student<lb/>
organization. The Board shall have such power as is necessary to redress<lb/>
grievances brought to its attention.<lb/>
Section 4.<lb/>
There shall be such residence hall councils as shall be established for the<lb/>
maintenance of good order in the residence hall, provided that the<lb/>
original jurisdiction of these boards does not extend beyond one or a<lb/>
group of residence halls and that the decision of these boards may be ap-<lb/>
pealed to a higher board.<lb/>
Section 5.<lb/>
The following all-campus boards are hereby established. The Honor Board<lb/>
and the Academic Honor Board. These boards shall have such powers,<lb/>
duties and original appellate jurisdiction as the Legislature shall from<lb/>
time to time grant to them, including the power to interpret the Constitu-<lb/>
tion and laws of the Student Government Association as it pertains to<lb/>
disciplinary matters.<lb/>
Section 6.<lb/>
The Legislature may establish such other all-campus boards as it deems<lb/>
necessary and proper for the orderly administration of student justice.<lb/>
Section .<lb/>
Final appeal from the decision of the Review Board shall be to the Chancellor<lb/>
of the University.<lb/>
Section 8.<lb/>
No person except a full-time student, faculty member or administrative of-<lb/>
ficial at East Carolina University shall be a member of anv judicial board<lb/>
or council; neither shall any student be eligible who is" serving on the<lb/>
Legislature or the Executive Council, docs not maintain a 2 000 average<lb/>
or is not in good standing at East Carolina University<lb/>
Section 9.<lb/>
There shall be an Attorney General who snail be the coordinator of the<lb/>
judicial system.<lb/>
A.There shall be a selection committee composed of the Chairman of the<lb/>
Review Board and the Honor Board, the incumbent Attorney General<lb/>
and two administrators appointed by the Chancellor of the University<lb/>
which shall select two names and submit them to the President of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association. He she shall choose one of the people<lb/>
submitted to serve as Attorney General, subject to the approval of the<lb/>
Legislature. The Attorney General shall take office by April 20<lb/>
B The Attorney General shall enjoy thr following powers and duties<lb/>
1. Heshe shall appoint and assist ,n the training of hisher staff which<lb/>
shall be composed of men and women.<lb/>
2. He, she shall review all cases and complaints and shall determine the pro-<lb/>
per board to hear the case.<lb/>
3. In all questions or constitutional interpretations and procedures, heshe<lb/>
shall issue advisory opinions which shall stand unless questioned before<lb/>
tne Review Board.<lb/>
4. Heshe shall be responsible for the publication of and compliance with<lb/>
fhe udiSr"01 mCOnSistCnt with this Constitution, for the operation of<lb/>
ARTICLE VI: RECALL<lb/>
Section I.<lb/>
The power to recall any elected official shall be vested in the constituency of<lb/>
that official, which shall be defined as that body of students who are<lb/>
qualified to vote for that official. Officials shall be recalled in the follow-<lb/>
ing manner:<lb/>
A. A petition to recall cither the President, Vice President. Secretary or<lb/>
Treasurer of the Student Government Association must contain the<lb/>
signatures of at least 15 percent of the entire student body<lb/>
B. A Legislator may be recalled by a petition which contains the signatures of<lb/>
at least 15 percent of those students eligible to vote in hisher constituen-<lb/>
cy.<lb/>
C. A class officer may be recalled by a petition containing the signatures of at<lb/>
least 15 percent of the students in that class which elected himher.<lb/>
Sectfoa 2.<lb/>
S t?K,ihaU t!?111 to th Attorney General, who shall have<lb/>
tm (10) school days to determine validity of said petition Ifheshe<lb/>
declares the peutions valid, the Student GovemrnentAssociation PrS<lb/>
dent shall djrect the Elections Committee to hold an dectSn !n SSk<lb/>
Ujejncumbem may be a candidate. The incumbent shall remam in office<lb/>
Pending the outcome of the election.<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
???<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0060"/><lb/>
ARTICLE VII: INITIATIVE<lb/>
The student body shall have the power to initiate any act within the power of<lb/>
the Legislature, provided that 10 percent of the student body shall sign a<lb/>
petition calling for the consideration of a bill which they shall submit in<lb/>
writing with the petition to the President. The President shall, if heshe is<lb/>
notified by the Attorney General that the petition is in good order within<lb/>
the limitations of this Constitution, provide that a referendum be con-<lb/>
ducted on the bill in not less than eleven (11) nor more than sixteen (16)<lb/>
school days after heshe receives petition on the bill.<lb/>
Public notices of such referendum shall be given not less than four (4) days<lb/>
before it shall take place. A majority of the votes cast at the referendum<lb/>
shall be sufficient to pass the bill. This article shall not apply to constitu-<lb/>
tional amendments and appropriation bills.<lb/>
ARTICLE VIII: OATH OF OFFICE<lb/>
Section I.<lb/>
All Student Government Association executive, judicial and legislative<lb/>
members shall take the following oath:<lb/>
'1? hereby pledge myself to uphold the Constitution of the<lb/>
Student Government Association of East Carolina University, to promote<lb/>
the highest ideals of honor, and to execute to the best of my ability the<lb/>
duties of my office<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
Any member of any constitutionally established j idicial body who has<lb/>
previously taken the Oath, shall be empowered to administer it.<lb/>
ARTICLE IX: AMENDMENT PROCEDURE<lb/>
Section I.<lb/>
All the amendments to this Constitution must be proposed by one of the<lb/>
following methods:<lb/>
A. By a vote of two-thirds (23) of the membership of the Legislature on<lb/>
three readings.<lb/>
B By a petition presented in writing to the President earning the signature of<lb/>
15 percent of the membership of the student bodv<lb/>
Section 2.<lb/>
All proposed amendments to this Constitution must be reviewed before<lb/>
voting by the Attorney General to insure consistency in both form and<lb/>
content.<lb/>
Section 3.<lb/>
All proposed amendments to this Constitution must be adequately publicized<lb/>
at least one week prior to the date on which a vote is taken bv the student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
Section 4.<lb/>
Proposed amendments to this Constitution shall be adopted by a two-thirds<lb/>
2 3) vote of the students y oting on the amendment provided that at least<lb/>
20 percent ot the student body votes.<lb/>
Section 5.<lb/>
All changes to th.s Constitution shall be incorporated as chronologically<lb/>
enumerated Amendments thereto.<lb/>
Section 6.<lb/>
Within 24 hours after the polls are closed, the President must sign the amend-<lb/>
ment into the Constitution if it is ratified<lb/>
Section 7.<lb/>
After complying with Sections 1-6, all amendments shall become effective<lb/>
immediately unless otherwise specified.<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
II.<lb/>
BY-LAWS OF THE<lb/>
STUDENT LEGISLATURE OF<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
TITLE I: ORDER OF BUSINESS<lb/>
Rule 1.<lb/>
Convening Hour - The Legislature shall convene at the hour fixed by the<lb/>
preceding meeting. In the event the Legislature adjourns the preceding<lb/>
meeting without having fixed an hour for convening, the Legislature shall<lb/>
convene on the following Monday at 5 p m<lb/>
Rule 2.<lb/>
Opening the Session - The Speaker shall, upon order being obtained, have<lb/>
the sessions of the Legislature opened with a moment of silence<lb/>
Rule 3.<lb/>
Convening in Absence of Speaker - In the absence of the Speaker the<lb/>
Chairperson of the Rules and Judiciary Committee shall be Speaker pro'tcm-<lb/>
pore and shall perform all duties of the Speaker until such time as the<lb/>
Speaker may assume the Chair<lb/>
Rule 4.<lb/>
Quorum ?<lb/>
(a) A quorum consists of a majority of all the qualified members of the Stu<lb/>
dent Legislature.<lb/>
(b) When a lesser number than a quorum convenes, the members may sit as a<lb/>
body politic, but no business can be concluded in the name of the Stu<lb/>
dent Legislature.<lb/>
Rule 5.<lb/>
Approval of Minutes ? After the moment of silence, and upon the presence<lb/>
of a quorum, the Speaker shall ask for additions or corrections to the printed<lb/>
minutes. Upon hearing objections and after concluding additions and dele<lb/>
tions, the Speaker shall approve the minutes without the necessity of a vote of<lb/>
the Legislature.<lb/>
Rule 6.<lb/>
Order of Business ? After approval of the minutes, the order of business<lb/>
shall be as follows:<lb/>
(a) Reports of the standing committees<lb/>
(b) Reports of select committees<lb/>
(c) Correspondence<lb/>
(d) Questions and Privileges<lb/>
(e) Introduction of Bills, Petitions, and Resolutions<lb/>
(f) Unfinished business of previous meetings<lb/>
(g) Bills. Resolutions, Memorials, Messages, and other papers on the calen<lb/>
dar in their numerical order.<lb/>
(h) Notices and Announcements<lb/>
Rule 7.<lb/>
Duties and Powers of the Speaker ? The Speaker shall have general direction<lb/>
of the floor of the Legislature and shall be authorized to take such action as is<lb/>
necessary to maintain order. In case of any disturbance or disorderly con<lb/>
duct in the gallery or hall, the speaker shall have the power to order the same<lb/>
cleared.<lb/>
Rule 8.<lb/>
Substitution for the Speaker ? The Speaker shall have the right to call on the<lb/>
Speaker pro tempore to perform the duties of the Chair, but substitution<lb/>
shall not extend beyond one meeting.<lb/>
Rule 9.<lb/>
Limitation of Debate - No member shall speak more than once in the affir-<lb/>
mative on the main motion until all other members who wish to speak haye<lb/>
done so. Speeches shall be limited to no longer than five minutes for the first<lb/>
speech (first affirmative and first negative debate,) and two minutes for each<lb/>
speech thereafter, unless allowed to lengthen time alloted bv the affirmative<lb/>
vote of the majority of the legislature (not to exceed ten minutes) Three corn<lb/>
Plete rounds of debate must be completed before previous question may be<lb/>
called.<lb/>
Rule 10.<lb/>
General Decorum ?<lb/>
(a) The Speaker shall preserve order and decorum<lb/>
b) SSded ?f SPCCCh Sha" bC ?bSerVed and PCrS?nal renection ?refuil<lb/>
TITLE II: MOTIONS<lb/>
Rule 11.<lb/>
Motion Generally ?<lb/>
U) mewr,nnoand ?r rCS?;utl?n submitted to the Legislature shall be reduced<lb/>
to writing in proper form and on a proper motion sheet<lb/>
llTsTlT T b !hC SCl or rcad ' Speer ?<lb/>
wnhdrawn Ufn !? P058"800 ?f thc Legislature, bu.it mas be<lb/>
withdrawn before a decision or amendment, except ,n the case of a mo<lb/>
t.or, to reconsider, wh.ch motion, when made by a member hall nVtbe<lb/>
withdrawn without the leave of the Legislature '<lb/>
the Sadker " mUS' be ?dc ,mm?el after being recognized by<lb/>
TITLE III: VOTING<lb/>
Rule 12.<lb/>
Rule 13.<lb/>
TITLE IV: COMMITTEES<lb/>
Rule 15.<lb/>
Committees Generaliv ?<lb/>
(a) 5L55?SLXtTaa?!hc Spkcr-unl- ?<lb/>
(b) Any member may excuse himherself from serving on any committee if<lb/>
they are a member of two standing committees<lb/>
ofVuTnel'r ChaUpCrSOn shaJ1 det"m- orum for the transaction<lb/>
(dA majority of committee members shall be present for the quorum.<lb/>
Appointment of Standing Committee -<lb/>
(1) Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
(2) Screening and Appointments<lb/>
(3) Appropriations<lb/>
(4) Student Welfare<lb/>
Rule 17.<lb/>
Standing,mmittee Met<lb/>
(a) Standing committees and subct<lb/>
furnished with suitable meet<lb/>
scnedule h the Student C en<lb/>
(b) The chairperson or other :<lb/>
the meeting places of the<lb/>
disturbance or disorder<lb/>
and proper conduct of I egisla<lb/>
or individuals, the chairman o<lb/>
exclude from the se<lb/>
Legislative busine <lb/>
all persons not memb<lb/>
(c) t pon affirmative yote of a maj<lb/>
mittee or subcommittee, execi<lb/>
are elation of the apt<lb/>
(d) Procedure in the<lb/>
mittee determines ap-<lb/>
Till r V: HANd<lb/>
Rule 18.<lb/>
Reference toommti<lb/>
Each bill, resolution, or :<lb/>
tion be referred<lb/>
propnate.<lb/>
Rule 19.<lb/>
tntroductior<lb/>
(a) Every bill shall be introd i<lb/>
permission of the Speake<lb/>
(b) Any member introduc<lb/>
the substance of same and th<lb/>
Rule 20.<lb/>
Papers Addressed to the Legisic<lb/>
Petitions. Memorials, and other<lb/>
presented by the Speaker <lb/>
be verbally made by the in<lb/>
papers shall not be deba - I<lb/>
unless the Legislature<lb/>
Rule 21.<lb/>
Introduction I H.<lb/>
(a) Prior to any resolution or ?<lb/>
be sent to the Secretary here<lb/>
same to be a<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
(b) Numbering<lb/>
(No following) i r<lb/>
as I R<lb/>
(c) Wheneyer a bill is in!<lb/>
copies accompanying same as<lb/>
submifed without the re .<lb/>
returned to the introduce: I<lb/>
number stamped up- .1<lb/>
Rule 22.<lb/>
Duplication of Bills ?<lb/>
The Speaker shall so designat:<lb/>
be made of an introduced bill Pi<lb/>
shall have one copy put upoi<lb/>
other copies in their office <lb/>
committee to which 'he -<lb/>
Rule 23.<lb/>
Report by Committee ?<lb/>
All bills and resolutions shai<lb/>
red, with such recommendat:<lb/>
(a) Favorable Report When a 1<lb/>
tion that it be passed, the<lb/>
ib)Report without Prejudice hej<lb/>
judice, the bill shali be placed<lb/>
(c) Unfavorable Reports Wrier a<lb/>
mendations that it not Se passej<lb/>
the bill shall be placed on the<lb/>
td)Minoru Reports When a I <lb/>
mendation that it noi be passJ<lb/>
report signed bs ? -ne-fj<lb/>
who ere present and vot - <lb/>
-he question before I egis<lb/>
report" If the minority reporj<lb/>
shall be placed on the J<lb/>
minontv report fails ador<lb/>
ed on the unfavorab<lb/>
Rule 24.<lb/>
Removing Billfr ?<lb/>
A bill ma be removed from thr<lb/>
by two-thirds sote A motion<lb/>
is not debatable, but the member mj<lb/>
and concise statement no:<lb/>
reasons for 'he motion<lb/>
Rule IS.<lb/>
Reports on Approprtai<lb/>
All committees, other tl<lb/>
favorabf) reporting ans bill whichj<lb/>
same in the report, and the said bill<lb/>
Appropriations tor a report betore<lb/>
report from the Committee on r.<lb/>
sufficient tunc i<lb/>
 t<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
V t<lb/>
.1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0061"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
ICC, and upon the presence<lb/>
, corrections to the printed<lb/>
? Iditions and dele<lb/>
essity of a vote of<lb/>
rdci of business<lb/>
- on the- calen-<lb/>
cr.il direction<lb/>
u tion as is<lb/>
tisorderl) con<lb/>
dei the same<lb/>
n the<lb/>
ubstitution<lb/>
? e a ?<lb/>
speak have<lb/>
'or the first<lb/>
. 'or each<lb/>
i ti ve<lb/>
rec corn-<lb/>
may be<lb/>
 lt)N<lb/>
ker ot<lb/>
ia be<lb/>
i mo-<lb/>
on of<lb/>
ed b<lb/>
li: ()11M,<lb/>
titution ot<lb/>
mined b<lb/>
?x she<lb/>
te In all other<lb/>
n.er mav<lb/>
;iKer vote<lb/>
'MM2J i Kfs<lb/>
?sherwise<lb/>
.rnittee if<lb/>
msaction<lb/>
. . rum<lb/>
point the follow-<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION OCUMENTS<lb/>
Rule 17.<lb/>
Standing Committee Meetings ?<lb/>
(a) Standing committees and subcommittees of standing committees shall be<lb/>
furnished with suitable meeting places, if desired, pursuant to the<lb/>
schedule with the Student Center Information Office.<lb/>
(b) The chairperson or other presiding officer shall have general direction of<lb/>
the meeting places of the committee or subcommittee and in case of any<lb/>
disturbance or disorderly conduct therein, or if the peace, good order<lb/>
and proper conduct of I egislative business is hindered by any individual<lb/>
or individuals, the chairman or presiding officer shall have the power to<lb/>
exclude from the session any individual or individuals so hindering<lb/>
Legislative business; or if necessary to order the meeting places cleared of<lb/>
all persons not members of the committees or subcommittee.<lb/>
(c) Upon affirmative vote of a majority of the members of any standing com-<lb/>
mittee or subcommittee, executive sessions may be held, provided they<lb/>
are not in violation of the appropriate North Carolina Statute.<lb/>
(d) Procedure in the committee shall be governed by the rules which the com-<lb/>
mittee determines applicable for the committee.<lb/>
TITLE V: HANDLING OF BUSINESS<lb/>
Rule 18.<lb/>
Reference to Committee ?<lb/>
Each bill, resolution, or other matters shall immediately upon its introduc-<lb/>
tion be referred by the Speaker to such committee as heshe deems ap-<lb/>
propriate.<lb/>
Rule 19.<lb/>
Introduction of Bills and Resolutions ?<lb/>
(a) Every bill shall be introduced in regular order of business, except upon<lb/>
permission of the Speaker or on report of a committee.<lb/>
(b) Any member introducing a bill or resolution shall briefly state in the title<lb/>
the substance of same and the title shall not be amended.<lb/>
Rule 30.<lb/>
Papers Addressed to the Legislature ?<lb/>
Petitions, Memorials, and other papers addressed to the Legislature shall be<lb/>
presented by the Speaker, and a brief statement of the contents thereof may<lb/>
be verbally made by the introducer before reference to a committee, but such<lb/>
papers shall not be debated or decided on the day of their first being read,<lb/>
unless the Legislature shall direct otherwise.<lb/>
Rule 21.<lb/>
Introduction of Bills, Copies Required ?<lb/>
(a) Prior to any resolution or bill introduction, a duplicate copy thereof shall<lb/>
be sent to the Secretary where the bill is duplicated and shall cause the<lb/>
same to be available at all times to any member of the Student<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
(b) Numbering of I egislature Bills shall be designated as L.B.<lb/>
(No. following). A resolution shall be designated<lb/>
as L.R. (No. following).<lb/>
(c) Whenever a bill is introduced, it shall be in such form and have such<lb/>
copies accompanying same as designated by the Speaker, and any bill<lb/>
submitted without the required number of copies shall be immediately<lb/>
returned to the introducer. The Secretary shall stamp the copies with the<lb/>
number stamped upon the original bill.<lb/>
Rule 22.<lb/>
Duplication of Bills ?<lb/>
The Speaker shall so designate to the Secretary the number of duplications to<lb/>
be made of an introduced bill. Prior to the convening hour, the Secretary<lb/>
shall have one copy put upon the desk of each member and shall retain the<lb/>
other copies in their office. A sufficient number of copies for the use of the<lb/>
committee to which the bill is referred shall be made available.<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
an tee shall be chairperson, and<lb/>
a designate a co-chairperson and<lb/>
Rule 23.<lb/>
Report by Committee ?<lb/>
All bills and resolutions shall be reported from the committee to which refer-<lb/>
red, with such recommendations as the committee may desire to make,<lb/>
(a) Favorable Report: When a committee reports a bill with the recommenda<lb/>
tion that it be passed, the bill shall be placed on the favorable calendar.<lb/>
(b)Report without Prejudice: When a committee reports a bill without pre-<lb/>
judice, the bill shall be placed on the favorable calendar,<lb/>
(c) Unfavorable Reports: When a committee reports a bill with the recom-<lb/>
mendations that it not be passed, and no minority report accompanies it,<lb/>
the bill shall be placed on the unfavorable calendar.<lb/>
d)Minority Reports: When a bill is reported by a committee with a recom-<lb/>
mendation that it not be passed, but it is accompanied by a minority<lb/>
report signed by at least one-fourth of the members of the committee<lb/>
who were present and voting when the bill was considered in committee,<lb/>
the question before Legislature shall be: "The adoption of the Minority<lb/>
report If the minority report is adopted by a majority vote, the bill<lb/>
shall be placed on the favorable calendar for consideration. If the<lb/>
minority report fails adoption by the majority vote, the bill shall be plac-<lb/>
ed on the unfavorable calendar<lb/>
Rule 24.<lb/>
Removing Bill from Unfavorable Calendar ?<lb/>
A bill may be removed from the unfavorable calendar upon motion carried<lb/>
by two-thirds vote. A motion to remove a bill from the unfavorable calendar<lb/>
is not debatable, but the member may before making the motion make a brief<lb/>
and concise statement not to be more than three minutes in length of the<lb/>
reasons for the motion.<lb/>
Rule 25.<lb/>
Reports on Appropriation Bills ?<lb/>
All committees, other than the Committee on Appropriations, when<lb/>
favorably reporting any bill which carries an appropriations, shall indicate<lb/>
same in the report, and the said bill shall also be referred to the Committee on<lb/>
Appropriations for a report before being acted upon by the Legislature. The<lb/>
report from the Committee on Appropriation shall indicate that there are<lb/>
sufficient funds in the Treasury for the Appropriation.<lb/>
Rule 26.<lb/>
Recall of Bill from Committee ?<lb/>
When a bill has been introduced and referred to a committee and, if after<lb/>
thirteen days, the committee has failed to report thereon, then the introducer<lb/>
of the Bill or some member designated by himher, on motion supported by a<lb/>
vote of two-thirds (23) of the members present and voting, recall the same<lb/>
from the committee to the floor of the Legislature for consideration and such<lb/>
action thereon as a majority of the members present may direct.<lb/>
Rule 27.<lb/>
Calendar ?<lb/>
The Secretary shall keep a separate calendar of the bills and shall number<lb/>
them in the order in which tney are introduced, and all bills shall be disposed<lb/>
of in the order they stand upon the calendar<lb/>
Rule 28.<lb/>
Effects of Defeated Bill ?<lb/>
After a bill has been tabled or has failed to pass the second reading, the con-<lb/>
tents of such bill or the principal provisions of its subject matter shall not be<lb/>
embodied in any other measure. Upon the point of order being raised and<lb/>
sustained by the Chair, such measure shall be laid upon the table, and shall<lb/>
not be taken therefrom except by a two-thirds (23) vote.<lb/>
Rule 29.<lb/>
Amendments and Riders ?<lb/>
No amendment or rider to a bill before the Legislative shall be in good order<lb/>
under such rider or amendment is germane to the bill under consideration<lb/>
Rule 30.<lb/>
Appropriations Guidelines ?<lb/>
The following appropriations guidelines shall be strictly adhered to by the<lb/>
Legislature, with the understanding that all student groups are educational<lb/>
(a) No group(s) which advocate violation of federal, state or local laws shall<lb/>
be funded.<lb/>
(b) No partisan, political or social action groups or activities shall be funded<lb/>
(c) No religious groups or activities shall be funded.<lb/>
(d) Organizations and departments requesting money shculd first make full<lb/>
use of all money-producing opportunities.<lb/>
(e) The Student Government Association shall not make allocations to<lb/>
groups to use exclusively for the personal benefit of their members<lb/>
(f) Duplication of activities should be avoided.<lb/>
(g) Student activity fees shall not be used for social events with no educa<lb/>
tional or service value,<lb/>
(h) Careful consideration will be used in determining funding for awards,<lb/>
because activities are more important than awards.<lb/>
TITLE VI: LEGISLATIVE OFFICERS<lb/>
AND EMPLOYEES<lb/>
Rule 31.<lb/>
General Admittance to Room ?<lb/>
No person, except members, officers and employees of the Student<lb/>
Legislature and advisors, shall be permitted on the floor of the Legislature<lb/>
during its meetings unless permitted by the Speaker or provided by the Con-<lb/>
stitution of the Student Government Association, but shall remain in the area<lb/>
designated for visitors by the Speaker.<lb/>
Rule 32.<lb/>
Extending Courtesies ?<lb/>
(a) Courtesies of the floor shall only be extended by the Speaker.<lb/>
(b) If there is any objection from any member of the Legislature to a non-<lb/>
member speaking, then the non-legislator cannot speak unless by a ma-<lb/>
jority vote of the Legislature.<lb/>
TITLE VII: GENERAL RULES<lb/>
Rule 33.<lb/>
Selection of Secretary Pro Tempore ?<lb/>
(a) The Secretary shall have the power to appoint a Secretary Pro Tempore<lb/>
with the approval of the majority of the Legislature. The Secretary Pro<lb/>
Tempore shall be a member of the Legislature and shall be appointed no<lb/>
later than the second session of the newly-elected Legislature. The<lb/>
Secretary Pro Tempore shall enjoy the following powers and duties:<lb/>
1. To perform the duties and exercise the powers of the office of<lb/>
Secretary, excluding those powers of the Executive Council, in the even;<lb/>
of the Secretary's absence or incapacity.<lb/>
2. To perform those duties delegated by the Secretary.<lb/>
Rule 34.<lb/>
A ttendance of Members ?<lb/>
(a) No member or officer of the Legislature shall be absent from the service<lb/>
of the Legislature without leave, unless from sickness or disability.<lb/>
(b) Written excuses must be turned in to the Speaker or the Secretary prior to<lb/>
or within 24 hours after a meeting of the Student Legislature.<lb/>
(c) Upon three (3) unexcused absences (per semester) from regularly schedul-<lb/>
ed meetings, the Speaker may remove any member from membership in<lb/>
the Legislature. In addition, ar;y member removed by the Speaker shall<lb/>
also be suspended for one year from the date of suspension from holding<lb/>
any appointed or elected office in the Student Government Association<lb/>
(d) The Speaker may also remove any member of the Legislature for: Four<lb/>
unexcused committee meetings per semester; six unexcused early leaves<lb/>
(explanation); absenteeism from six Legislature meetings per semester or<lb/>
four consecutive Legislature meetings,<lb/>
(c) The departure from any two Legislature meetings with "just reason"<lb/>
before these meetings have been legally adjourned will be considered an<lb/>
infraction of the same magnitude as an unexcused absence from anyone<lb/>
of the Legislative meetins. Four unexcused early leaves equal two unex-<lb/>
cused absences. The Speaker of the Legislature decides on "just reason<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0062"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
Ul1:?ENT government ciation DogaffiNTO<lb/>
Documents to be signed by the Speaker ?<lb/>
All acts, resolutions, correspondence and official copies of the I esislature<lb/>
absence. ' " Speaker ?r presidin ? S<lb/>
Rule 36.<lb/>
Placement of Material on Members' Desks ?<lb/>
(a PZZZ ?Ken ,han CmberS ?f thc Legislature. officers or staff advisor<lb/>
thereof shall not place or cause to be placed any materials on member?<lb/>
ed shaT. htrVh ' aPPr0tthC Speaker Any rin,ed ma,e"al so p ac-<lb/>
ed shall bear the name of the originator<lb/>
(b) There shall be no printing or reproducing of papers that are not legislative<lb/>
in essence without approval of the Speaker egis.auve<lb/>
(e) The departure from any two Legislature meetings with "just reason"<lb/>
Sion of ZUngS h3Ve bee lega"y adj?Urned W1" be deeraed an<lb/>
nfrau on of the same magnitude as an unexcused absence from anvone<lb/>
of the Legislative meetings. Four unexcused earlv leaves equal two unex<lb/>
reason" ' The SpMker ?f the UgisIaturc 2E ? <lb/>
Rule 35.<lb/>
Documents to be signed by the Speaker ?<lb/>
Min a,CIS' n0110"5' COrresP?dence and official copies of the I egislature<lb/>
Minutes shall be signed by the Speaker or presiding officer ,n thelpSe"<lb/>
Rule 36.<lb/>
Placement of Material on Members' Desks ?<lb/>
U) "thS ?hhen than e,nbe" ?f the le8'slatu officers or staff advisor<lb/>
the eof shall not place or cause to be placed any materials on members'<lb/>
ed shall be'rL' f ?J Sk" A" pnnted mater'al " E-<lb/>
eci shall bear the name of the originator<lb/>
b) meereJna11 hC,K? Pnming ?r reProdn ?t Papers that are not legislative<lb/>
in essence without approval of the Speaker<lb/>
Rule 37.<lb/>
Procedure of the Rules ?<lb/>
???&amp;Sff- ' eg,S,atUre " EaSt C? L? shaH<lb/>
3) 2KK ?f lhC SlUdem G?Vernmen! Association of East Carolina<lb/>
,b UmleTsHv0' ,hC S'Udent GmernmenI Association of Fast Carolina<lb/>
(C) Roberts Rules of Order ? I atest edition.<lb/>
HI.<lb/>
Judicial Rules<lb/>
and Procedures<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
b<lb/>
8<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
12<lb/>
13<lb/>
14<lb/>
15<lb/>
16<lb/>
17<lb/>
18<lb/>
19<lb/>
20<lb/>
CONTENTS<lb/>
PPMd Policies Coverning the Judicial System<lb/>
Code of Conduct and Disciplinary Offenses forSents<lb/>
Academi. Integrity Violations<lb/>
Offenses Against the Judiciary<lb/>
Penalties<lb/>
Remedies<lb/>
Het ords<lb/>
Notification<lb/>
 'ompliance<lb/>
Ejec tion<lb/>
Administrative Procedures<lb/>
Procedures foi judicial Records<lb/>
Members oi the Judiciary<lb/>
Residence Life and Government<lb/>
Open House Visitation Pobcy<lb/>
au?jftsasi?B3?<lb/>
Current Universir Policy on Illicit Drue<lb/>
SSSSSSiSSSS<lb/>
KeK.stra.H.nof Stnd?, (?r?anuatu ' ll rK0TOI?<lb/>
TERMS AND DEFINITIONS<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
be used for The Code of<lb/>
The following terms and definitions shal<lb/>
t-onduct<lb/>
A Sfc'rf ,c,all enroiied ,n ,he acad? ?? - <lb/>
STmorT 3SSeS??yed b Car0"na l "?" - ??<lb/>
Test - Any written or oral examination of a student bv an instructor on<lb/>
b7etsrrt?oerd " "  b ?" S?<lb/>
l' T D??n'l for a specified period of time "<lb/>
zpgzzstfzszr ?"i ???-<lb/>
uSTIii!? Z A1y a0ttOn b a number of ?dents. participants in a<lb/>
SSSStT' ?r '? 0ff-al ??n of a ???<lb/>
Dtsmissd Dismissal from enrollment at the University for two year,<lb/>
B<lb/>
I)<lb/>
E<lb/>
EAS1 A HOI ISA UMVERSI l<lb/>
CRKENWIM MiKIIH 4MMJV4 SPtM<lb/>
H RISDft<lb/>
r? Student Judu ml Si, r?m ?  ,<lb/>
' ??l i rMfi; Jrr r,) ?<lb/>
establishes the esuntials of p, .<lb/>
 tstud t I  .<lb/>
?s ?"??" fem?m?(<lb/>
Asf??  ordmator, Mft. stud,   . <lb/>
thuhandbook mdfarn lfu,thth,  , .<lb/>
procedur, i (am especially ? v ,<lb/>
'? ' paying r its i ? ?<lb/>
7.<lb/>
R, ?. s . .<lb/>
I1<lb/>
( hancellor<lb/>
Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for<lb/>
Student Life<lb/>
S.R.A ppt<lb/>
Dl F PRO(<lb/>
:<lb/>
V<lb/>
1: PK1N( ip.<lb/>
(.0rRNIN( I<lb/>
ee:<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
mi?mm<lb/>
-?<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0063"/><lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;C&amp; 7<lb/>
Hearing5 R.A.<lb/>
B-ardAppeal<lb/>
Boiird<lb/>
RfMjcnce<lb/>
Board ofHall Judicial<lb/>
InquireHouseouncil Board<lb/>
JURISDICTION OF CAMPUS JUDICIAL BOARDS<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life ? All judicial findings are subject to<lb/>
review K the N ice C hancellor for Student I ife. Final appeals from the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor foi Student 1 ife shall go to the c hancellor<lb/>
Review Board ih Review Board shall have original jurisdiction in all<lb/>
cases involving constitutional questions in the interpretation and application<lb/>
ol the SGA c (institution. Ihe Review Hoard shall have appellate jurisdiction<lb/>
:l othei cases which originate before anv board of the Judiciary, except<lb/>
the Academic Integrit -<lb/>
Honor Board mot Hoard has original jurisdiction in cases ol<lb/>
other violations of the t ode of Conduct and disciplinary<lb/>
tenses.<lb/>
Academic Integrit) Board - Ihe cademic Integrity Boa:d shall have<lb/>
iton ?vei ' the H de. The<lb/>
Academic Integrity Board shall have appellate jurisdiction ii<lb/>
faculty member elects to hear the case.<lb/>
Board of Inquiry ? 1 ti ? Inquiry, at the ice C hancellor I<lb/>
ginal investij n alleged cas<lb/>
? .<lb/>
Residence Hall Houseouncil Board ? I he Residence Mall House C oi<lb/>
Residence Hall R<lb/>
. i or in the residence halls, rhese Boa<lb/>
. isdiction lations of rules and regulati is pa<lb/>
( House ouncil Boards. Ihev have the authority to refer any i<lb/>
he Honor Board tor proper disposition.<lb/>
Intramural-Recreation Services Advisory Council ? The Intramu<lb/>
Recreation Set rices Ad isory Council has original jurisdiction of all cases of<lb/>
disruptive and disorderly behavior relating to programs or services conducted<lb/>
under the auspices of the Department of Intramural-Recreation Services<lb/>
This council also authority to refer anv violation to the Honor Board<lb/>
or Hearings Board foi p: position.<lb/>
S.R.A. Appeal Board ? The S.R.A. Appeal Board has appellate<lb/>
diciton on all appeals from violations of Residence Hall rules and House<lb/>
Council Board action.<lb/>
STI'DENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION PQCTMKNTS Page 7<lb/>
Honor Code<lb/>
The heart of E.C.Us Judicial System is the Honor Code. This code states:<lb/>
You are on your honor not to cheat, steal or he.<lb/>
DUE PROCESS AND CODE OE CONDUCT<lb/>
FOR ALL STUDENTS<lb/>
I asl (. arolina University recognizes the rights oi all students as responsible<lb/>
members ol society and citizens ol the United States oi America, as well as<lb/>
the right to respect and consideration to the Constitutionally guaranteed<lb/>
doms of speech, assembly and association. The University further<lb/>
gnizes the rights oi all students within the institution to freedom of in-<lb/>
quiry, and to the reasonable use of, the services and facilties ol the University<lb/>
which are intended foi their education.<lb/>
In the interest oi maintaing order on the campus and guaranteeing the<lb/>
broadest range ol treedom to each member oi the community, some rules<lb/>
have been established by the students and other members of the University<lb/>
community acting in concert. These rules limit some activities and proscribe<lb/>
certain behavior which is harmful to the orderly operation of the institution<lb/>
and the pursuit of its legitimate goals. All students are held to be informed oi<lb/>
these rules, which are printed in the Student Government Association<lb/>
Documents Handbook.<lb/>
II anv student is accused of a violation of any of these rules, he. she has the<lb/>
right to a speedy and fair hearing before an appropriate hearing board. Ap-<lb/>
propriate due process safeguards have been built into the procedures which<lb/>
govern each of these boards so that no permanent or recorded penalty shall<lb/>
be meted out until the accused student shall have a fair chance to be heard.<lb/>
Appropriate appeals are allowed from the decisions of these boards.<lb/>
.All judicial findings are subject to review by the Chancellor of East<lb/>
Carolina University and he she shall have the final authority to sustain,<lb/>
change or reverse any findings.<lb/>
I: PRINCIPLES AND POLICIES<lb/>
GOVERNING THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM<lb/>
A. lntructor and Classroom Control ? The instructor has the ultimate con-<lb/>
trol over classroom behavior and can dismiss from the classroom any<lb/>
student engaged in disruptive conduct. The instructor should, in the<lb/>
event such action is necessary, immediately report the incident to the<lb/>
Head of the Department or Dean of the School and the Associate Dean<lb/>
of Students. "Except for the risk to the physical and emotional well-<lb/>
being of a student, faculty member or the University, the status of the ac-<lb/>
cused student will not change, pending disciplinary action on the<lb/>
reported incident<lb/>
(.<lb/>
B. Traffic and Parking Regulations ? The student is responsible for com-<lb/>
pliance with the rules and regulations governing the registration and use<lb/>
ol motor vehicles as printed in the campus Traffic Regulations. This<lb/>
booklet may be obtained from the Director of Public Safety. Students<lb/>
should familiarize themselves with these regulations<lb/>
C. Solicitations ? Solicitation, selling, merchandising, posting, and<lb/>
distribution oi posters, and or handbills or similar activities on<lb/>
I University-controlled property is prohibited Exceptions shall be apj<lb/>
ed bv the Vice Chancellor for Student Life, his designated representative,<lb/>
or the Committee on Canvassing and Solicitation.<lb/>
I). Use of Amplifying Lquipment ? The use of amplifying equipment, in-<lb/>
cluding sound tracks, on University property requires permission of the<lb/>
Vicehancelloi tor Student 1 ife or his designated representative.<lb/>
E. Distribution of Literature on C ampus ? Distribution oi commer<lb/>
literature n leaflets bv organization chartered bv the Student<lb/>
Government Association or bv individual students, or people not<lb/>
?sith the University is not pern<lb/>
buildings located on University-controlled property withoul<lb/>
Vice Chancellor tor Student Life, or his . . presentai<lb/>
.re and materials foi distribution on Univi<lb/>
perty mu ain: writings which are libelou:<lb/>
tie or I<lb/>
F. Identification Card ? The I.I), card is the pi<lb/>
rendered ;ver<lb/>
sity in the per; irman<lb/>
LD. in his her p be treated as a non-stud<lb/>
Security ? In order to n oi stud<lb/>
nd regulai<lb/>
Eastarolina University : pecial foi<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
H. CheckashingStudents must be aware of the penalties d in giv-<lb/>
ing the University a bad check. The Cashier's office, Student Bank,<lb/>
Feteria ana Student Supply Store all charge a fee for returnee<lb/>
Students should also recognize and realize that the L'nive- erves<lb/>
the right of a disciplinary hearing in repeated or flag<lb/>
taining to returned checks.<lb/>
1. Double Penalties ? In situations where the misconduct violates the law<lb/>
and University conduct regulations, the University ordinarily shall seek<lb/>
to exercise its jurisdiction so as to avoid dual punishment for the same<lb/>
act. This is true in all but very serious breaches of the iaw. When prompt<lb/>
public prosecution is anticipated or is underway, the University shall not<lb/>
exercise its jurisdiction until public officials have disposed of the case,<lb/>
unless exceptional circumstances compel otherwise.<lb/>
II. CODE OF CONDI CT AND DISCIPLINARY<lb/>
OFFENSES FOR STUDENTS<lb/>
Anv student whose conduct, on or off campus, becomes unsatisfactory in<lb/>
the judgment ot University officials in the light of the foregoing statements<lb/>
or policies will be subject to appropriate disciplinary action. Disciplinary ac-<lb/>
tion can be initiated by campus police, students, staff, faculty or ad-<lb/>
ministrative personnel. Unwarranted changes shall not be subjec<lb/>
disciplinary action.<lb/>
A studenf shall refrain from:<lb/>
A Knowingly publishing or circulating false information which is damaging<lb/>
to any member of the University community (slander, lying or libel)<lb/>
B. Using abusive, obscene, vulgar, loud, or disruptive language or conduct<lb/>
directed toward and offensive to a member of or a visitor to the Universi-<lb/>
'v community.<lb/>
C. Using any University or privately rented telephone in<lb/>
1. Avoiding the payment of tolls or long distance calls.<lb/>
2 Using the telephone to make harassing, intimidating, nuisance or<lb/>
obscene phone calls.<lb/>
D. Harrassing, abusing or threatening another by means other than the use or<lb/>
threatened use of physical force.<lb/>
E. Endangering, injuring or threatening to injure the person or propertv of<lb/>
another<lb/>
F. Entering residence halls, buildings, classrooms, or other University pro<lb/>
perties, or student properties (i.e. automobiles, lockers, or residences)<lb/>
without authorization.<lb/>
G. Vandalizing, destroying maliciously, damaging, or misusing public or<lb/>
private properties including library materials.<lb/>
H. Stealing or attempting to steal, aiding or abetting, receiving stolen proper-<lb/>
ty, selling stolen propety, or embezzling the property of another person,<lb/>
the University, or associated units.<lb/>
1. Book Selling ? When a student resells a book to an individual or to<lb/>
the Student Supply Store, that student is held responsible if the book<lb/>
which is being resold is stolen property. If and when a student buys a<lb/>
book from another student, it is the purchaser's or seller's responsibility<lb/>
to be able to identify the student involved. If the student buying the book<lb/>
will not or cannot identify the seller, the student buying the book will be<lb/>
held responsible. The student who sells a book to another student should<lb/>
always have hisher LD. number in the book.<lb/>
2. In addition to penalties given by the Honor Board, a student con-<lb/>
victed of stealing or knowingly possessing stolen goods shall make im-<lb/>
mediate and complete restitution.<lb/>
I. Disruptive and disorderly conduct as outlined in University Policy and<lb/>
Procedure concerning disruptive and disorderly conduct.<lb/>
J. Illegally manufacturing, selling, using or possessing narcotics, bar-<lb/>
biturates, amphetamines, marijuana, sedatives, tranquilizers,<lb/>
hallucinogens, andor other known drugs and or chemicals. A student<lb/>
shall also refrain from buying, selling, possessing or using any kind of<lb/>
drug paraphernalia or counterfeit drugs.<lb/>
 I<lb/>
MS<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0064"/><lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
Be ngintoxicated in pubhc, displaying or driving under the influence or<lb/>
legally possessing or using, alcoholic beverages or liquors. When a stu-<lb/>
JudVnV C" t0ihC JUdiCiary ?flCe ?n a" alcohol-related incident that<lb/>
destnld ?T t0 aUend thC A1C0h0' Woshop. Th.s Workshop I<lb/>
designed to increase awareness of the role alcohol plaved in the incident<lb/>
and m,n,m,ze the probability of reoccurrence. Within a two week Sod<lb/>
d iaUP tmg thK W?rksh?P- lh ?"den, wifl go for a follow-up<lb/>
dividual session with a counselor.<lb/>
L. To refuse to comply with any lawful order of a clearly indentifiable<lb/>
University official acting in the performance of hisher dm iefthn<lb/>
orcement of University Policy. Residence staff members are con s dered<lb/>
University officials when acting in an official capacitv<lb/>
shv off,ciar eSem hJShCr ID' Card WhC" reqUCSted '? d? S? by a Univer-<lb/>
O Gambim11"8 " harassmcm of East Caroli? Students<lb/>
P Fmogn' aIHenn dLe-fraudin M ming documents, charge cards or<lb/>
sr nvUmversuy with thc ?-? d?<lb/>
ArdrhmeLC,any V'?Ti B ,he,Honor Cod- Wch consists of the following:<lb/>
assKtanre nrTh ,aCU glVi"g " " ?f an "Authorized aid or<lb/>
assistance or the actual giving or receiving of anv unfair advantage on<lb/>
any form of academic work. 8<lb/>
r;nPia,giarfni Copying the language, structure, ideas, andor<lb/>
thoughts of another and passing same as one's original work<lb/>
wnrfnoSIfCatlHn SlatCment of an' truth, either verballv or ,n<lb/>
writing, regarding any circumstances relative to academic work'<lb/>
nncttCTPfS Af ?n tOWards thc commi-?ion of any act wheich would<lb/>
constitute an academic v,olat,on as herein (that is cheating, plagiarism<lb/>
andor falsification) shall be deemed to be a violation of the Honor Code"<lb/>
and may be punishable to the same extent as if the attempted act had<lb/>
been completed or consummated<lb/>
T. Possessing or using firearms, fireworks, explosives or illegal weapons on<lb/>
University-controlled or -owned property<lb/>
U. Withholding, with knowledge, information from thc University<lb/>
V. Obstructing justice by hindering or impeding a duly authorized function<lb/>
of any judicial body, council, or Board<lb/>
U Violation of city ordinances, State or Federal laws<lb/>
X. Failing to repay, in full, any S.G.A. loan within the allotted time period.<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Q.<lb/>
R.<lb/>
S.<lb/>
III. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY VIOLATIONS<lb/>
 trffl -Academ,ca?v ????, ,he Hl)nor Cod,<lb/>
aVSdtnT At,emptl an ?? ?h "f completed would constitute<lb/>
r mi ?, ry? ,megnty V1?latl0n as defined em. institute<lb/>
 Mudent Observation of Suspected violation a ? a .<lb/>
D. Organization and Procedures -<lb/>
2. Primary Interview<lb/>
a. Notification. A student whn u v.i;? j<lb/>
academically the Honor Code XlTte info? dof h T it?"<lb/>
faculty member who identified he viola fion Sh tne,chaLge by the<lb/>
will be called to an interview , 1, ' Subsequently, the student<lb/>
b. Composition. The studen' and thc facuhv mmk<lb/>
have a non-participating observer at the ta?nr??TneX ? tKh<lb/>
shall be the Chairperson of the DtpannJT<lb/>
Assistant Dean of the College or School The sh!rf?.? , a" ?r<lb/>
dent or faculty member as heshe ?s'ires lS n may,sf,ect a slu'<lb/>
observe the procedures impartial "an To be prepaTo'St'f 1?<lb/>
sruny to respond and presem -ssis!<lb/>
dismiss c.tr<lb/>
or some port.on thereof or take other appropS e fcS HeShe Tn<lb/>
d. Referral to Academic Integrity Board. After completion of the<lb/>
primary interview and on the basis of the evidence presented, if the facul-<lb/>
ty member is of the opinion that a failing grade in the coursers) is made<lb/>
quate disciplinary action, the faculty member may refer the entire case to<lb/>
the Academic Integrity Board for appropriate action. In each case a new<lb/>
hearing will be conducted by the Academic Integrity Board without<lb/>
regard to the findings made or any disciplinary action taken during the<lb/>
primary interview.<lb/>
e. Appeals.<lb/>
(1 i The student mav appeal the decision of :he primal<lb/>
view to the Academic Integrity Board if:<lb/>
(a.) The student believes the penalty too severe<lb/>
(b.) The student contests the decision oi the fa<lb/>
member on the basis of the evidence presented.<lb/>
(2.) Tne appeal must be submitted to the Office oi the<lb/>
Associate Dean of Students and Director of Student Services within five<lb/>
class days after notification of the decision by :he faculty member<lb/>
(3.) Iniversitv Academic Integrity Board<lb/>
a. Composition.<lb/>
(1.) Four faculty members and four alternates elected for three<lb/>
ear staggered terms by the Faculty Senate<lb/>
(2.) Three students and four alternates nominated bv the SOA<lb/>
Executive Council and elected by the S.G.A. Legislature. Thee studeni,<lb/>
shall serve for a vear and may be reelected for one additional year<lb/>
(3.) A quorum shall consist of four faculty members and 'luce<lb/>
students.<lb/>
(4) The Chairperson, elected for one-vear term shall be a<lb/>
and 1 ?f  B?ard' dected ?mb ? ? -t,re Board<lb/>
and may be reelected.<lb/>
(5 The Associate Dean of Students and Director of Student<lb/>
b oh i . 7TJ  admin'rat.ve officer of the Board<lb/>
or n.l JUriSdk,l?n- ThC Acadcmic Intr1 shall have<lb/>
TJuf ,UntClT ?VCr 3Cademic V1?Iafions ? thc H?" Code if "he<lb/>
faculty member elects to refer the case after the primary interview.<lb/>
c. Appellate Jurisdiction. The Academic Integrity Board shall have<lb/>
d. Procedures.<lb/>
(1) The Associate Dean of Students and Director of Sr, rW<lb/>
STofi Ch,a,rSOn- ?ft e Pa" ? ? o o<lb/>
a mee ,ng of the Academic Integrity Board within ten class days after an<lb/>
appeal by a student. The faculty member, the student wunesse, and the<lb/>
independent non-part,c,Pat,ng obs.rver(s), shall be SJ?<lb/>
m k J?u thC StUdem m thc coursc must b submitted the X<lb/>
member shall record a grade of incomplete, pending a deon b" the<lb/>
(2) Those present at the hearing shall be-<lb/>
3) .CnetssdsC.n,? Wh? ,hC nght l0 accompanied bv<lb/>
b) Pan,IdCbvVwmber- Wh? ha the n8ht to b ????-<lb/>
panieu dv witnesses.<lb/>
lemtv' nr"Par,1C,patmg H Present at<lb/>
me primary interview.<lb/>
!d'4n 0,her I"?" called bv the Chairperson<lb/>
Defender Att0ney  and the StudenI P?c<lb/>
(3) Should the student or the faculty member fail to ann?r<lb/>
without prior approval of the administrative officer the A , Im ,<lb/>
tegritv Board shall proceed with an absentia hearing " <lb/>
(4) The Academic Integrity Board will follow the hearing oro<lb/>
cedures established for the University Honor Board" '<lb/>
(5) A majority of the Board shall decide the issue rhc<lb/>
Chairperson shall vote onlv? in the case of a tie<lb/>
e. Actions by the Board<lb/>
vi-u  (1) Evdence insufficient to sustain chanre or eh.?.<lb/>
the student'and SfiaSSST ChmTpmon m con?tation wh<lb/>
Board z: <lb/>
mend to the tJ m?' or recom-<lb/>
the course(s) or J?f"Wi?Bt TC a failin? rad for<lb/>
one year. Pr?bati?n for a riod of time not to exceed<lb/>
(c) Impose suspension or dismissal from the University<lb/>
Board may be ?b?4?SSSC??h'<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life and the ?? Ch.ne M ? L'f Tht<lb/>
Affatr, ,haU io? review ,nt SJaaS5? 2?'<lb/>
submit , Sumrv4,Ro'Pirp?ro;eed??CademiCh B?<lb/>
SCA . ?iSlatu,e: therchanr o"rS nd'n't 'SZvt<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic Affairs. hc Vlce<lb/>
IV<lb/>
om.w (,is<lb/>
otempt<lb/>
bsrn!<lb/>
H Perjurv<lb/>
fnal b<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
?<lb/>
Violation of .<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
violatio-<lb/>
 PrNAI<lb/>
?<lb/>
jut<lb/>
referred foi<lb/>
Scene:<lb/>
A. Written repi<lb/>
B. Fine of not le<lb/>
Sc-<lb/>
it shai:<lb/>
manner acce<lb/>
equivak<lb/>
C. Volunta- ?<lb/>
assigned ;5 '??? .<lb/>
mence<lb/>
per<lb/>
assignment<lb/>
D. Tak .<lb/>
E. ProK<lb/>
exJ<lb/>
?<lb/>
Dc.<lb/>
Sectioa ; ? RetjMmt.<lb/>
A. Written rq<lb/>
B. Fine<lb/>
C. Re:r<lb/>
D. S<lb/>
VI. REMEDH<lb/>
The foll . rd:ev -<lb/>
jurisdici<lb/>
A. Restitution to the<lb/>
B. Order to the offender<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
MI RFC OR!<lb/>
Violations, per,<lb/>
Associate De<lb/>
ing under the<lb/>
released to outside source<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Mil. VHIrU <lb/>
dire, d<lb/>
the ;<lb/>
col:<lb/>
wopriatc<lb/>
suspa<lb/>
permanent acaden<lb/>
??? ?'<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
???<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0065"/><lb/>
IV. OFFENSES AGAINST THE JUDICIARY<lb/>
?<lb/>
DENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
IX. COMPLIANCE<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
' ree<lb/>
e Board<lb/>
? Si idem<lb/>
tie Board<lb/>
ail have<lb/>
de if the<lb/>
ew<lb/>
.ill have<lb/>
:ne<lb/>
,<lb/>
ind the<lb/>
led i ;es-<lb/>
eeting.<lb/>
i ult<lb/>
"v !he<lb/>
ippeai<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
dent<lb/>
<lb/>
tgi ? B<lb/>
on of<lb/>
<lb/>
nustain ihirvr nr rhinux<lb/>
indthe faculty<lb/>
 must be<lb/>
UtatM  with<lb/>
?upp the charge or charges. The<lb/>
ember; or recom-<lb/>
e a failing grade for<lb/>
time not to exceed<lb/>
? ersity.<lb/>
g wit ember of the<lb/>
.e It<lb/>
? evidence to the Board<lb/>
yiththe findings<lb/>
Penaitie-<lb/>
r f or A ademic<lb/>
'he Vice<lb/>
Any duly authorized member of a Judicial Board, including the Chairman<lb/>
may bring the charge of contempt or perjury before the Board. This charge<lb/>
may result from any of the following actions by a student or students<lb/>
A.Contempt - Students are forbidden to disobev or disrupt anv Judicial<lb/>
Board proceedings, to refuse to answer a Judicial summons, to violate<lb/>
anv mandamus or injunctive order received by any Judicial Board, or to<lb/>
tai! to honor a normal request of the Chairperson<lb/>
B Perjury- Any student who tells a deliberate falsehood during anv Judicial<lb/>
Board hearing or any administrative hearing of the Student Government<lb/>
Association shall be considered to have perjured himself herself<lb/>
inal b Absentia -Any student who refuses to appear at anv Judicial<lb/>
rrenminary. without just casue, or who fails to appear at the'regularly<lb/>
scheduled time of the hearing shall be tried in absentia. The student in ques-<lb/>
tion shall be sent a registered letter, return receipt requested, outlining the<lb/>
charges, rights of the student, and date, time and place of the hearing This<lb/>
constitutes procedural due process and if the student refuses to appear an<lb/>
absentia hearing shall take place.<lb/>
Violation of Procedures ? Any student or recognized body of the Student<lb/>
Government Assoication who shall violate a bill of the SGA Legislature not<lb/>
considered a disciplinary offense as defined in number H, nor considered<lb/>
grounds for impeachment, shall be in violation of procedures. Procedural<lb/>
violations shall not result in any disciplinary action bv any Judicial Board<lb/>
but may result in a mandamus proceeding, a violation of which is contemn'<lb/>
V. PENALTIES<lb/>
The following penalties may be imposed in all cases arising under the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the Univeristy Judicial System. In some cases a student may be<lb/>
referred for counseling.<lb/>
Section 1. (Individual Student)<lb/>
A. Written reprimand.<lb/>
B. Fine of not less that $10.UU nor more than $250.00 payable to the Judicial<lb/>
Service Fund, unless the defendant and the assessor of the penalty agree that<lb/>
it shall be payable in whole or in part by community service performed in a<lb/>
manner acceptable to the assessor of the penalty with one hour of service<lb/>
equivalent to the minimum wage.<lb/>
C. Voluntary work under supervision with an alternative penalty may also be<lb/>
assessed. The maximum number of voluntary work hours which may be<lb/>
assigned is 75. Work assisgned a student by the Honor Board shall com-<lb/>
mence in one week, and shall be completed within 30-40 days of the<lb/>
penalty. The student shall contact the Associate Dean of Students for<lb/>
assignment.<lb/>
D. Taking of activity card for a specified period of time.<lb/>
E. Probation ? an official notification to the student compelling him her to<lb/>
exhibit good conduct during the probationary period. Any further viola-<lb/>
tions during the probationary period will be referred to the Associate<lb/>
Dean of Students and may result in a more serious disciplinary action.<lb/>
Terms of probation shall be for a designated period of time not to exceed<lb/>
one year.<lb/>
In addition, probation mav include:<lb/>
1. In cases of misconduct in connection with L'niversity or facilities, the<lb/>
student may be prohibited from further use of the facilities involved<lb/>
other than those used in his her course work or studv.<lb/>
2. In cases of misconduct in connection with University owned or<lb/>
perated housing, the student may be ordered to vacate housing.<lb/>
F. Suspension from the University for the stated period not to exceed one<lb/>
year, or indefinitely with the right to petition the Hearing Board a! anv<lb/>
time for readmission.<lb/>
G. Dismissal from the University for a period of two years. Student must<lb/>
petition the Honor Board for readmission.<lb/>
Section 2 (Registered Organizations of Members of the ECU Community)<lb/>
A. Written reprimand.<lb/>
B. Fine of not less than $25.00 nor more than $500.00 payable to the Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
C. Restriction of privileges for a stated period not to exceed one year.<lb/>
D. Suspension of privileges for a stated period not to exceed one year.<lb/>
VI. REMEDIES<lb/>
The following remedies may be imposed in all cases arising under the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the of the University Judicial System.<lb/>
A. Restitution to the victim of the violation.<lb/>
B. Order to the offender to perform or to cease and desist from stated ac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
VII. RECORDS<lb/>
Violations, penalties, and remedies shall be recorded in the Office of the<lb/>
Associate Dean of Students andor Director of Public Safety in all cases aris-<lb/>
ing under the University Judicial System. Copies of such records shall not be<lb/>
released to outside sources without written consent of the subject of such<lb/>
record.<lb/>
VIII. NOTIFICATION<lb/>
All notifications of violations, penalties, and remedies shall be sent as<lb/>
directed by the Judicial Board to the University officials necessary to make<lb/>
the penalties and remedies effective and to other persons who might provide<lb/>
counseling assistance to the offender. For purposes of residence credit, the<lb/>
appropriate University officials shall be notified of penalties involving<lb/>
suspension or dismissal, but such notification shall not become a part of the<lb/>
permanent academic record of the offender.<lb/>
For noncompliance with penalties or remedies, the offender shall be<lb/>
suspended until heshe has complied.<lb/>
X. EJECTION<lb/>
For conduct adversely affecting public order, offenders may be ejected<lb/>
from the L'niversity campus or property, or any part thereof, by the<lb/>
Chancellor of the University or his designated representative.<lb/>
XI: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES<lb/>
A.General Information ? Penalties by a Judicial Board become matters of<lb/>
record. Until the affected student has been reinstated or until a particular<lb/>
penalty no longer applies, such students shall be considered to be under<lb/>
probationary status.<lb/>
All disciplinary action becomes effective upon the date of Board action<lb/>
unless otherwise specifically designated. Students dismissed by recom-<lb/>
mendation of the proper board follow the same withdrawal procedure as<lb/>
other students.<lb/>
A student accused of academic dishonesty during the final examination<lb/>
period shall be permitted to take all examinations that come prior to the<lb/>
completion of his'her final examination. He'She will be prevented from<lb/>
taking the remaining tests. No credit will be issued for such courses.<lb/>
Any student who leaves or withdraws from the University and seeks read-<lb/>
mission while disciplinary action is pending must secure a clearance from<lb/>
the Office of Associate Dean of Students before being readmitted in<lb/>
good standing.<lb/>
In addition to penalties given by the Honor Board, a student convicted of<lb/>
stealing or knowingly possessing stolen goods shall make immediate<lb/>
and complete restitution.<lb/>
B. Sanction without Hearing ? When the Associate Dean of Students or Stu-<lb/>
dent Attorney General, after investigation into an alleged violation of the<lb/>
Code of Conduct, believes a student has committed a disciplinary of-<lb/>
fense, he'she shall counsel with such student and may outline<lb/>
disciplinary punishment or treatment. If after so counseling with the<lb/>
Associate Dean of Students or Student Attorney General, the student<lb/>
wishes to have a hearing, the Associate Dean of Students shall forward<lb/>
the reports and evidence concerning the alleged disciplinary violation to<lb/>
the Attorney General, who shall be responsible for appropriately ad-<lb/>
ministering the case through the Stulent Governement Judiciary. From<lb/>
that point on, the Associate Dean of Students is concerncned with the<lb/>
keeping of records and aiding the student to comply with the punishment<lb/>
decreed bv the Board.<lb/>
GENERAL SUMMARY<lb/>
The foregoing rules should give you an adequate picture of your position<lb/>
within the University community. However, you should also realize that<lb/>
commission of acts which violate laws as well as the rules and standards of<lb/>
the University mav legally result in steps against you by an appropriate court<lb/>
and by the L'niversity as well. (This is not a violation of the legal prohibition<lb/>
against "double jeopardy) For example, students convicted for possession<lb/>
or sale of drugs in a court of law (for on or off-campus violations) face the<lb/>
possibility of suspension from the Unversity as well as appropriate legal<lb/>
penalties<lb/>
The following paragraphs summarize some of the areas in which Universi-<lb/>
ty rules and state laws coincide and in which students may have to answer to<lb/>
both forums for their behavior.<lb/>
Under North Carolina law, a student may be convicted of a criminal of-<lb/>
fense for instigating, aiding, or participating in a riot or for entering a<lb/>
building for the purpose of destroying records or other property.<lb/>
To carry a concealed weapon or display firearms in public areas or areas<lb/>
adjacent thereto is prohibited by state law.<lb/>
Students should know that the sale, possession or transportation into this<lb/>
state of many types of fireworks is a violation of state law. Those fireworks<lb/>
which are permitted may not be discharged in the vicinity of a public school.<lb/>
North Carolina law prohibits mischievous interference with a fire alarm<lb/>
box or misuse of fire equipment. Any person who aids or causes the burning<lb/>
of a school building or other public property may be convicted of the crime<lb/>
of arson.<lb/>
The use of indecent language, harassment, or false statements over the<lb/>
telephone; the malicious damage of utility equipment; or the intentional<lb/>
avoidance of payment of bills for telecommun -ations services are all viola-<lb/>
tions of state law.<lb/>
It is unlawful for any person to manufacture, possess, have under his con-<lb/>
trol, sell, administer or dispense any narcotic, stimulant, depressant, or<lb/>
hallucinogenic drug except as authorized by a licensed physician.<lb/>
XII: PROCEDURES FOR JUDICIAL BOARDS<lb/>
PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE<lb/>
At this conference, which must take place at least 72 hours before the hear-<lb/>
ing, the Attorney General or hisher agent shall inform the accused student<lb/>
of these facts:<lb/>
A. The composition of the Board which shall hear hisher case;<lb/>
B. The charge against him her;<lb/>
C. Possible penalties involved;<lb/>
D. His Her right to an assigned counsel or an counsel of hisher own choos-<lb/>
ing from the students under the jurisdiction of the Board in which<lb/>
hisher case shall be heard;<lb/>
E. HisHer right to mandatory summoning of material witnesses and pro-<lb/>
curement of evidence;<lb/>
<lb/>
tmmmmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0066"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
STTI)r NT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION IKK I MINTS<lb/>
F His Her right to summon as many as two character w<lb/>
G His Her right to a separate hearing upon request<lb/>
His It riffi !n ;eqUf VeaS?nahiC P?stP?n?"?' his he, hearing;<lb/>
is Her nghl to face his her accuser upon request; and<lb/>
 Her nghl to be presented with the court procedures, organization<lb/>
Pane 10<lb/>
and any other pertinent informal<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
RIGHTS OF THE ACCUSED<lb/>
A I he presumption of innocence until gu<lb/>
a, ihe nghi to face -he accusei (il requested)<lb/>
 Hie rightof timely notice of hearing <lb/>
tnan 2 ' to the hearinj<lb/>
G. rhengh.<lb/>
ft ?<lb/>
I No<lb/>
i. I .<lb/>
Hr ARIV, PROCEDURES FOR<lb/>
LNIVERSIH HONOR BOARD<lb/>
A he chail session 'o ordei and reminds all persons involve<lb/>
hearing of the honor .ode He She questions respondent 01 resi I<lb/>
uo fhfsTearing  ? ?' yOIU duc Pr0CCSS rights in r<lb/>
Url T?u? nCg1,1U- thC Chariman tructs the Attorney (,e?erai to<lb/>
read the rights to the respondent.<lb/>
After the Attorney General reads the rights, the Chairman again isks the<lb/>
respondent it he she understands his her rights<lb/>
D. The Chair asks the accused if he she challenges the ol<lb/>
member of the Board If so, the accused musl state the reason(s) The<lb/>
Board will meet in execut.se session to consider the challenge ,d deter-<lb/>
mine whether or not the member should hear the case<lb/>
1 Ihe Atu.rnes General reads the charges and specifications to the<lb/>
charge) from the modem report Chairman asks tor the respondent's<lb/>
plea to each charge<lb/>
F' 7ArrneV Cneral Presems !hc Facts and  which substantiate<lb/>
G Witnesses in support of the charges are presented. Both sides have at this<lb/>
tune, the right to cross-examine any and all witnesses and to examine am<lb/>
aid all documents before being received in evidence No member ol the<lb/>
Matt, faculty, or administration oi last Carolina University mas be call-<lb/>
ed as an epen witness.<lb/>
H. 1 he Public Defender presents the facts and ev idence which sup ,<lb/>
cused. ' "vo<lb/>
I. Wii n support ot the accused are presented Both sides have il i<lb/>
cross-examine any and all witnesses at<lb/>
and all document . n evidence v member ol<lb/>
? faculty, oi administration of Ea<lb/>
ed  witness<lb/>
Ihe ttorney General shall mal<lb/>
rhe Puhlk Defender shall make a ig statei<lb/>
lhc Bvi ?- deliberati Ked session<lb/>
rhe B"i: tnnounce its d ? approni<lb/>
tion(s) taken. ' '<lb/>
B.<lb/>
C.<lb/>
J.<lb/>
K<lb/>
1<lb/>
M<lb/>
JUDICIAL APPEALS PROCEDURE<lb/>
A A student found guilty of a violation mav request an appeal tor oik<lb/>
following reasons:<lb/>
1. Insufficient proof oi guilt.<lb/>
2. Violation of student right.<lb/>
v,vri J"dlCial acon inappropriate fW the circumstances ot the violation<lb/>
MI h: Requests tor reconsideration based on new evidence are not grounds<lb/>
tor action by an appellate body, but should be directed to the judicial bodv oi<lb/>
ong.nal jurisdiction. The judicial body of original jurisdiction will re-open a<lb/>
case at the request of the accused only if significant new evidence is not<lb/>
available for presentation at the original hearing is to be presented Whenever<lb/>
possible, the same judicial membership shall serve when a case is re-opened<lb/>
B. Appeals are to be submitted to the Associate Dean of Students' Office for<lb/>
delivery to the Chairperson of the appropriate appellate bodv or person<lb/>
An appeal must be requested in writing within 48 hours after'the judicial<lb/>
decision of the judicial body of original jurisdiction has been announced<lb/>
to the accused. Subsequent appeals, which are permitted only in cases<lb/>
resulting in a recommendation of suspension or dismissal, must be sub-<lb/>
mitted to the Associate Dean of Students1 Office within 24 hours after an<lb/>
appellate body has announced its decision to the accused. Time limits do<lb/>
not include weekends or University holidays.<lb/>
The specific reason(s) for the appeal and detailed explanation of the reason(s)<lb/>
must accompany the initial request for appeal. If a subsequent appeal(s) is re-<lb/>
quested, the accused may request action on any and all reasons listed in the<lb/>
initial appeal; however, new reasons will not be considered after the initial<lb/>
appeal has been completed.<lb/>
Appellate bodies mav uphold, reduce, or dismiss charj<lb/>
reverse verdicts, or uphold, alter or d . determined<lb/>
b a lower judicial or appellate bods. If an appellate etermines<lb/>
thai a ludiciaJ action should be altered, h mav reduce<lb/>
the term of the judicial action or it mav asign a more appropriate jud<lb/>
m providing the substitution action does constitute a level<lb/>
bation or separation from the University which is n i<lb/>
gned bv the judicial bods I<lb/>
letermines<lb/>
n ?<lb/>
6<lb/>
D ! hearing is grained tl<lb/>
md representative<lb/>
XIII: Ml MBFRSOI I HI II )( R<lb/>
Rr lr BOARD AND HONOR BOARD<lb/>
G<lb/>
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BOARD<lb/>
.  term.sha<lb/>
S Vl e T; "T thC SGA E' Ve oundj ? toed<lb/>
?ure, shall serve for a ,d may be re-elected for<lb/>
ATTORNEY GENERAL<lb/>
rhe Attorney General works m conjunction with the Associate Deal<lb/>
lents on matters relating to the judicial svstem He She is to be comp<lb/>
ly free and objective in rendering all decisions and services with re8ards to the<lb/>
-trmmst.at.on. faculty, and students. Those who seek this L<lb/>
ssreened bv the Selection Committee composed if administrative faculty<lb/>
and s uden, represen.ives Two names are then forwarded to the Preside,<lb/>
h SGA who with the approval ol the I egislafure. chooses one to be V<lb/>
torney General (Note: This appointment is for one academu ear i<lb/>
nms from the first day of Fai ?<lb/>
turn period.) nu<lb/>
The duties oi the Attorney General include the follow .<lb/>
B Coordination of ihe judicial svstem<lb/>
C. Safeguard oi the procedural and substantive due pro.es<lb/>
D Rule or: constitutional questions<lb/>
I When formal charges are tiled, only the Attorney General has the .<lb/>
o dismiss them.<lb/>
1 Cn?J" member,<lb/>
absent ' '<lb/>
members, fron<lb/>
he prelimin<lb/>
I States his her names and <lb/>
e charges against<lb/>
' Notil ridani ot the <lb/>
? pC 'he heannt:<lb/>
1 Reads to rtu.<lb/>
2 Presei ? Board all reles<lb/>
3 Recommends to the cl<lb/>
absence of a witness or any othe<lb/>
Y agree to table the case.<lb/>
PUBLIC DEFENDER<lb/>
for the purpose of insuring a completely fair and unbiased presentation of<lb/>
his case, the Associate Dean oi Students shall appoint Public Defended<lb/>
become well acquainted w?h the appropriate Board procedure and t r ??<lb/>
conscent.ous service to he defendants dt all times. Their job is to b ?? e<lb/>
in their beliefs and to insure the defendant a fair, impartial and unhased<lb/>
,hapnh.T rwSSt:aa,e ?ean ?f StUdentS reserv? !he .o'repLe anv -<lb/>
he Public Defenders if the majority oi the board members so I s,re<lb/>
,ia nf PTnlmenl lS'0r " ")? ? runs from tki<lb/>
pZoi: SemeSter  Un Pnd ?' !he "? ?-<lb/>
The duties of the Public Defender include the following<lb/>
A. lntemew with the accused at prelim.nar conference<lb/>
1. State hisher name and duties.<lb/>
2. Explain the charges and the procedures oi the hearing<lb/>
3 Go over the rights oi the accused as guaranteeo. in the st.uW ,<lb/>
sti.ution and the procedures of the court involved<lb/>
4. Assure the defendant that the Board is ava.lable to ass,s, the defen<lb/>
Sty" r" aHr bremberin8 a! an t,mes?-55:<lb/>
B Duties at the hearing.<lb/>
1 Make sure the defendant's side of the case is presented completels<lb/>
2. Make sure the student's constitutional rights are guaranteed in i<lb/>
Dutie<lb/>
JOIN! H Dl(<lb/>
The ?<lb/>
Speaker<lb/>
board<lb/>
emc<lb/>
mer I <lb/>
anc<lb/>
Men<lb/>
 Th? '?<lb/>
B ??<lb/>
f ' ?<lb/>
f) I -?<lb/>
mei<lb/>
Ins<lb/>
Mem<lb/>
year, ?<lb/>
RrMrW BOXRDPR<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
B. The S<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
c h<lb/>
Gene<lb/>
ten bi "<lb/>
E. At<lb/>
r D<lb/>
( -V<lb/>
?<lb/>
on<lb/>
H. Act<lb/>
<lb/>
Refei i ?<lb/>
i .<lb/>
tion of the K<lb/>
6 <lb/>
be J -<lb/>
1 A r?<lb/>
In the appea<lb/>
ril<lb/>
oi dr.c lin<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
j<lb/>
below,<lb/>
I: RrMDf V r I III WQ<lb/>
East (<lb/>
residence ha.<lb/>
arc coed, male a:<lb/>
places to live; howev b<lb/>
residents be cons dera<lb/>
I iving in the :e-<lb/>
Student signs the<lb/>
and University becomes -<lb/>
the contract can resu<lb/>
reserves the rij<lb/>
one's acceptance<lb/>
ing contravt<lb/>
There are also other at all res j<lb/>
(1) the State of North Carolina - the owner<lb/>
therebv making therr ate laws,<lb/>
safety standards that musl be maintains<lb/>
regulations have been carefully conside<lb/>
them<lb/>
All residents are held responsible fo<lb/>
realize that as mature adults, thes mus<lb/>
rights of others The following condi<lb/>
State of North Carolina and arc applicable<lb/>
1 Possession, use ir sa e of illicit drugs<lb/>
2. Theft, possession, or the receivin e<lb/>
<lb/>
??i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0067"/><lb/>
X<lb/>
?R B<lb/>
R1)<lb/>
 .f Sr R VI<lb/>
v<lb/>
BI.1C illrrNDIR<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
mteed<lb/>
C. Duties after the hearing.<lb/>
1 Explain, if necessary, the disposition, the penalty, and the right to ap-<lb/>
peal to a higher board.<lb/>
2. If he she so desires, go with the student to hisher conference with the<lb/>
Associate Dean for Student Life the following morning.<lb/>
JOINT JUDICIAL BOARD<lb/>
The purpose of the Joint Judicial Board is to periodically review the state<lb/>
of the judiciary and recommend changes to the Student legislature The<lb/>
Speaker of the I egislature shall refer all bills touching on the judiciary to this<lb/>
board for its recommendations unless such bills shall be needed in an<lb/>
emergency and are certified as such by the President of the Student Governe-<lb/>
ment Association, the Attorney General, the Associate Dean of Students<lb/>
and the Associate Dean and Director of Residence Life.<lb/>
Membership of the Joint Judicial Board shall be as follows:<lb/>
A The Attorney General, ex officio, as chairperson.<lb/>
B Associate Dean of Students, and Associate Dean and Director of<lb/>
Residence life, ex officio.<lb/>
C. Two faculty members appointed by Vice Chancellor for Student Life.<lb/>
D. Two student members appointed by the President of the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association.<lb/>
1 Two student legislators appointed by the speaker.<lb/>
Insofar as possible, it is recommended that in exercising their appointive<lb/>
power, the proper officials attempt to provide equal male and female<lb/>
residence hall and day student representation.<lb/>
Members of all the Judicial bodies shall be appointed for one academic<lb/>
vear, except that members of the Academic Integrity Board mav be re-<lb/>
elected.<lb/>
REVIEW BOARD PROCEDl'RF<lb/>
The following procedures will be followed bv all persons appearing before<lb/>
the Review Board.<lb/>
A The Review Board shall have original jurisdiction in all cases involving<lb/>
constitutional questions m the interpretation and application of the SGA<lb/>
Constitution. In such cases the Review Board will follow the hearing pro-<lb/>
cedures established for the University Honor Board.<lb/>
H The Review Board shall have appellate jurisdiction in all other cases which<lb/>
originate before any board of the SGA Judiciary except the Academic In-<lb/>
tegrity Board<lb/>
( In all appeai ,ases. the respondent will be represented bv student counsel<lb/>
ol his her choice. The University will be represented bv the Student Attorney<lb/>
Creneral or a member of his her staff.<lb/>
D, In cases involving appeals of decisions made bv the Honor Board, no writ-<lb/>
ten briefs will be presented.<lb/>
I At the scheduled hearing each side will be allowed thirty minutes for oral<lb/>
argument Oral arguments will be limited to the issue set forth in the written<lb/>
briefs filed with the Review Board. No new evidence will be considered on ap-<lb/>
peal.<lb/>
F. During oral arguments, board members may ask questions of the parties.<lb/>
(i After each party has rested the case, and all relevant questions have been<lb/>
asked by board members, deliberations will be made by the Board in closed<lb/>
session.<lb/>
H. Action by the Review Board:<lb/>
1 Affirm the findings decision of the Hearing Board.<lb/>
2. Amend the original decision.<lb/>
3. Refer back for further deliberation on a specifically defined question.<lb/>
4. Order a new hearing.<lb/>
5. Any case involving new evidence discovered subsequent to hearing<lb/>
below, the case will be referred back for further consideration in the discre-<lb/>
tion of the Review Board.<lb/>
6. Any case involving violation of a student's constitutional rights may<lb/>
be dismissed.<lb/>
I A record of proceedings will be kept for each Review Board case.<lb/>
In the appeal of all judicial cases involving a property right or action, a<lb/>
record of the proceedings will be made and will be forwarded to the proper<lb/>
authority of appellate review. Appellate review in all cases will be on the basis<lb/>
of and limited to the written record of the proceedings below.<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
Page I<lb/>
XIV: RESIDENCE LIFE AND GOVERNMENT<lb/>
East Carolina University accommodates over 5,500 students in its<lb/>
residence halls, and they usually operate at or near maximum capacity. There<lb/>
are coed, male and female residence halls. These are stimulating and pleasant<lb/>
places to live; however, it is imperative in these crowded conditions that all<lb/>
residents be considerate of the rights and needs of each other.<lb/>
Living in the residence halls is a privilege granted by the University. Once a<lb/>
student signs the uniform housing contract the relationship between student<lb/>
and University becomes a contractual one. Failure to adhere to the terms of<lb/>
the contract can result in termination of the contract. The University also<lb/>
reserves the right to give priorities in living area assignments based upon<lb/>
one's acceptance of and compliance with the provisions of the uniform hous-<lb/>
ing contract.<lb/>
There are also other factors that all residents and their guests must realize:<lb/>
(1) the State of North Carolina is the owner and landlord of residence halls,<lb/>
thereby making them subject to State laws, (2) there are certain health and<lb/>
safety standards that must be maintained. (3) all housing and House Council<lb/>
regulations have been carefully considered and have specific reasons behind<lb/>
them.<lb/>
All residents are held responsible for the residence hall rules and should<lb/>
realize that as mature adults, they must respect these and not infringe on the<lb/>
rights of others. The following conditions are made illegal by laws of the<lb/>
State of North Carolina and are applicable to the residence halls:<lb/>
1. Possession, use, or sale of illicit drugs.<lb/>
2. Theft, possession, or the receiving of stolen property.<lb/>
Vandalism by defacing, damaging, altering, or destroying State property.<lb/>
Arson by willfully starting fires in or about the buildings.<lb/>
Possession andor use of firearms.<lb/>
Intoxication, displaying, or possessing alcoholic beverages in public areas.<lb/>
Trespassing.<lb/>
8. Gambling or conducting lotteries.<lb/>
9. Willfully setting false fire alarms or tampering with the alarm system or ex-<lb/>
tinguishing equipment.<lb/>
10. Pnysical or verbal abuse.<lb/>
The above are representive, but in no way totally inclusive, of the State<lb/>
laws which apply to people living in residence hails. However, residents are<lb/>
subject to all State statutes.<lb/>
If legal action does not occur for violations of State laws, offenders will<lb/>
appear before the House Council Board to be settled there or referred to<lb/>
another judicial body with in the University.<lb/>
Regulations for the health and safety of the residents are:<lb/>
1. Maintain safe electrical conditions by not overloading circuits with more<lb/>
than 100 watts at a time.<lb/>
2. Keep no pets, other than fish.<lb/>
3. Keep the halls, stairs, and fire exits empty of any blocking items such as<lb/>
trunks, boxes, tables and bicycles.<lb/>
4. Leave doors completely closed that have been officially locked for the<lb/>
night.<lb/>
5. Place trash and garbage in designated receptacles only.<lb/>
6. Use proper procedure for entering or leaving the building.<lb/>
7. Throwing anything out the windows.<lb/>
Violators of the above regulations will be subject to House Council Board<lb/>
judicial action, which may include referral to the Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
There are also other established regulations which are necessary for the<lb/>
crowded living situations in the residence halls. In order to provide an at-<lb/>
mosphere that is conducive to rest or study at all times it is necessary that<lb/>
residents show proper consideration for each other These include: (1)<lb/>
keep down excessive noise due to loud stereos, skateboards, yelling, par-<lb/>
tying or general boisterous conduct, (2) attend all mandatory hall or<lb/>
house meetings and responding to calls or messages because necessary<lb/>
information is being dispensed, (3) have overnight guest of the same sex<lb/>
only on Friday and Saturday nights because the residence halls are too<lb/>
crowded to accommodate guests on other nights and (4) show respect for<lb/>
and cooperation with the other residents, the House Council Board, staff<lb/>
members, and the Administration.<lb/>
The individual House Council Board may establish regulation, with ap-<lb/>
proval, which pertain only to that residence hall.<lb/>
The House Council Boards are composed of the elected officers and hall<lb/>
representatives, the Student and professional staffs serve as advisors, but<lb/>
not voting members of the councils.<lb/>
The House Council boards are responsible for judicial matters, except<lb/>
visitation violations, regarding residence hall living.<lb/>
Penalties which may be imposed by the House Council Boards are (1) war-<lb/>
nings, (2) reprimand, (3) fine, (4) probation, (5) recommended removal<lb/>
from residence halls. Violations may also be referred to the University<lb/>
Honor Board.<lb/>
XV: OPEN HOUSE VISITATION POLICY<lb/>
I. General<lb/>
Subject to the follwong provisions and limitations, each Residence Hall<lb/>
may establish its own regulations and policies pertaining to informal<lb/>
social activities and study dates in which members of the opposite sex are<lb/>
entertained by residents.<lb/>
A. The hours of visitation shall not exceed:<lb/>
12 Noon to 1 a.m. Sunday through Thursday<lb/>
12 Noon to 2 p.m. Friday through Saturday<lb/>
B. No student is allowed to have a guest of the opposite sex in his her room<lb/>
over the objection of the roommate. No male or female under the age of 18 is<lb/>
allowed to participate in the visitation program.<lb/>
C.Escorted males may use any entrance or exit for women residence halls un-<lb/>
til 8 p.m. After 8 p m they must use front door only.<lb/>
D. Members of each residence hall ? cooperatively and individually ? must<lb/>
agree to conduct themselves in a manner publicly defensible for members<lb/>
of the University community and residents of University housing and to<lb/>
be responsible for assuming that such conduct prevails in the residence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
E. This policy and any rules adopted by an individual residence hall shall be<lb/>
posted conspicuously within the hall. Copies of all individual hall<lb/>
policies shall be furnished to the Department of Residence Life.<lb/>
F. This policy does not supersede other University policies.<lb/>
II. Procedures<lb/>
A. At the beginning of Fall semester or the Summer term each residence hall<lb/>
will vote on its hours for visitation within the guidelines. Also, the House<lb/>
Council Board will establish its own regulations and policies.<lb/>
B. A petition, signed by one-tenth of the members of a residence hall, shall at<lb/>
any time cause a reisdence hall to call an official house meeting to recon-<lb/>
sider the Open House policies.<lb/>
C. If there are instances of violating ? by a section, floor or entire residence<lb/>
hall ? the offending parties may be penalized by suspension of visitation<lb/>
privileges for a peiod of time decided upon by the Associate Dean and<lb/>
Director of Residence Life.<lb/>
D. At any time, for due cause, the program in any residence hall, or any part<lb/>
thereof, may be terminated by the Associate Dean and Director of<lb/>
Residence Life.<lb/>
E. All unescorted males found in the women's residence halls are subject to<lb/>
Judicial action. This does not include the lobby during the hours between<lb/>
8 a.m. and 1 a.m.<lb/>
F. All women found loitering unescorted inside or on balconies of the men's<lb/>
residence halls are subject to Judicial action. This does not include any<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0068"/><lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
Sfixrsrr,ocatcd ,n the basemcms dunng h?urs ?<lb/>
3. Any male student found in the residence hall room of a female student or<lb/>
a female student ound in the room of a male student between the hour<lb/>
Student 2 n00nVWi11 reP?rtcd to thc Assoicate Dean o<lb/>
Students for a violation of the visitation policy<lb/>
Any non-student found in a residence hall room of a student of the oo-<lb/>
pos, e sex between the hours of 1 a.m. and 12 noon wiil be banned fi?<lb/>
epor? 1, ' ?f Car?,ina UniVCrS,ty Thc student ?houW <lb/>
reported to the Assi iate Dean of Students.<lb/>
I. I he penalty for a visitation violation will vary from a written reorimand<lb/>
or i rrk loDss ?i ld pnvi,egc' probaii?n- ?" ?SS<lb/>
or removal from Residence Hall. The deciding factor in applying these<lb/>
pcnalities ,s the severity of the violation, and the degree of mVolvemem<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
H<lb/>
c<lb/>
?YlPOLICIES REGARDING THE POSSESSION AND<lb/>
CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES ON THE<lb/>
CAMPUS OF EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
A. Introduction<lb/>
The possession and consumption of alcoholic b verages on the University<lb/>
campus shall be restricted to Residence Halls, Mendcnhall Student Center<lb/>
and other sites specifically approved by the Chancellor or b Designee<lb/>
i l;n,1VCuSy POhaCS concernin8 ?he possession and consumption of<lb/>
alcoholic beverages do not contravene Federal, State or Municipal law regar-<lb/>
ding their purchase, possession or consumption<lb/>
1. The North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Laws make it unlawful<lb/>
for any person under nineteen (19) years of age to purchase, possess or<lb/>
consume; or for anyone to aid or abet such a person in purchasing<lb/>
possessing, and consuming any alcoholic beverage (General Statute<lb/>
I Os -oj<lb/>
2. Persons who are nineteen (19) years of age or older may purchase possess<lb/>
or consume alcoholic beverages containing less than fourteen per cent'<lb/>
,i ?ft alcono1 b volumc becr and fortified wines). (General Statute<lb/>
J8A-35)<lb/>
3. Persons who are twenty-one (21) years of age or older may puchase<lb/>
ransport. and consume alcoholic beverages7on.ain.ng moT.han fo"r'<lb/>
sZuTa-T' of a,coho1 by volumc (spin,uous K ?J5L<lb/>
4. It is unlawful for anyone to aid or abet a person under twenty-one (21)<lb/>
years of age ,n purchasing, possession, or consuming alcohol beverage<lb/>
???e?itZ: z!oun? -cem (,4) ?f b ?<lb/>
5. Under no circumstances may any type of alcoholic beverages be sold bv<lb/>
rSiSS0 ?" ' -S dthe Un.versT<lb/>
6 IHHnltn!aWfUl l?r any PCrSOn t0 drink aJoholic beverages or to offer a<lb/>
drink to another person, or persons, whether accepted or not on a?v<lb/>
public road or street, parking lot. sidewalk, or other publicly owned or<lb/>
aTJZ r W,thVhC Cjty ?f GWnViC- G??? Ord,nan?Z358<lb/>
and 360, General Statute 18A-3CM5))<lb/>
General policies regarding the possession and consumption of alcoholic<lb/>
beverages on the campus of East Carolina University ?onoiic<lb/>
Lc.?uJfZ?rSd Un?ni?. win? shall be served. Consumption of beer<lb/>
Sns .9 v2.r fWmCS at h:n,VCrsit aPPr?vcd functions ,s limited to per-<lb/>
sons 19 years of age or older, with proof of age required There shallbe<lb/>
an adequate "check" system at all events where alcohoUc beveri? ?<lb/>
served. Evcn though an organization ch at the dSr <lb/>
is still necessary to have a system which allows the server to fdenUfyThose"<lb/>
who may be served alcoholic beverages 'oenuiy tnose<lb/>
ctroraUon'onT:T SSf ?,d by "? "Won or<lb/>
corporation on the Unv.versity campus. All alcoholic beverages shall be<lb/>
purchased by the sponsoring organization. There ThT bf no<lb/>
gimmicks" to collect any monies, before, dunng. or afteT he socS<lb/>
aTnho,andJ,Udem aCt,ViVy fees shaiJ not ? used for the pruchaTof<lb/>
alcohohc beverages. Only alcoholic beverages served by the sp3r,n<lb/>
organization will be permitted at any type of activity exceTS nners<lb/>
pus where alcohol is served is l.nhZ  sponsored evenl on cam-<lb/>
pa.d and shall ?o, ,?? ?ao one'who .ZZsIZZ ? ? <lb/>
served and may be asked To leave U"Ct,0n' they wU1 not <lb/>
D. Possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages in residence halls<lb/>
1. Approved social functions.<lb/>
a. Alcoholic beverages (beer and unfortified wines) will be allowed<lb/>
only at scheduled functions sponsored by recognized campus organiza-<lb/>
tions and only within the confines of that function with regard to time<lb/>
and place of consumption. These fractions shall be held in designated<lb/>
areas, in and aroand the residence halls as approved by the Associate<lb/>
Dean and Director of Residence life or herhis representative.<lb/>
b. All requests to serve alcoholic beverages at a social function shall<lb/>
be forwarded to the Associate Dean and Director of Residence Life or<lb/>
representative three days before the scheduled event.<lb/>
c. The sponsoring organization shall assume ALL responsibilty for<lb/>
serving alcoholic beverages, behavior, and housekeeping. Failure to<lb/>
adhere to the above policy shall result in appropriate disciplinary action<lb/>
andor a fine to pay for cleaning up the area. Examples of unacceptable<lb/>
behavior are: intoxication; loud, vulgar, or obscene language and<lb/>
disorderly conduct.<lb/>
d. All alcoholic beverages shall be purchased by the sponsoring<lb/>
organization. There shall be no "gimmicks" to collect anv monies<lb/>
before, during, or after thc social event.<lb/>
c. Any sponsoring organization which allows behavior as described<lb/>
in letter c. is also subject to disciplinary action by the appropriate judicial<lb/>
council, andor the administration.<lb/>
f. At all social functions where alcoholic beverages are served<lb/>
supervisory personnel, as decided upon by the Associate Dean and Direc-<lb/>
tor of Residence Life, shall be present.<lb/>
g. At all social functions where alcoholic beverages are served, non-<lb/>
alcoholic beverages and food must also be served,<lb/>
h. At all social functions where alcoholic beverages are served, only<lb/>
students of East Carolina University, and their bona fide guests shall be<lb/>
admitted. There shall be an adequate "check" system at all events where<lb/>
alcoholic beverages are served. Even though an organization has a check-<lb/>
in system at the door, it is still necessary to have a system which allows<lb/>
the server to identify those who may be served alcoholic beverages<lb/>
i. All social functions will be held subject to the following:<lb/>
(1) Not more than two per month at night on ondays through<lb/>
Thursdays.<lb/>
(2) Friday. Saturday, and Sunday night daring the month.<lb/>
2. Residence Hall Rooms<lb/>
a. All possession and consumption of alcoholic coverages shall be in the<lb/>
privacy of the residence hall rooms.<lb/>
b. Public display, profanity, obscenity, intoxication and disorderlv con-<lb/>
duct are a few examples of violations of the drinking policy<lb/>
C 5 PV?!r "rt no1 Prm,Med in ? residence halU except in<lb/>
designated areas. K<lb/>
E" Pd?enTce0nnterd CUmumption of ??holic beverages in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
 Crater" and Unf?rficd wmcs ma ? "? ? Mendenhall Student<lb/>
sor Jh?h?llCVCragCS Wl11 a"?ed ?nly aI sch?lu??? functions spon-<lb/>
? registered campus organizations and only within the confines oHhat<lb/>
function with regard to time and place of consumption<lb/>
will ? 2.nri-?t,C2h?iC bevcra? by 'he sponsoring organization<lb/>
 ster ?n f ' tyPC ?f aC,1Vlt XCCpt dinncrs sP??red b<lb/>
registered University organizations. Ind.v.duals attending such dinners<lb/>
may bring unfortified wine. umners<lb/>
nn ir p0ns?nn? organizations are responsible to restrict the consump-<lb/>
tion of alcohohc verages to persons nineteen (19) years of age or oWe?<lb/>
c. Permission for such functions must be obtained from the<lb/>
Associate Dean Student Activities. Requests for permission must be<lb/>
Et?5? ?Z WCCk c" adVanCC and durin ,he re ?f.ce hou of<lb/>
the Assoicate Dean - Student Activities.<lb/>
Reservations must be made with the University Central Rescrva-<lb/>
?.ons Office ,n Mendenhall Student Center at least one week in advance<lb/>
e. Anytime alcoholic beverages are served at a function, the spon-<lb/>
soring organization shall also prov.de non-alcoholic beverages Tnd<lb/>
snacks or food <lb/>
3 TiLTrUTT ?f f and WinC ,S restr,c!ed to the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room, Coffeehouse and Auditorium 244. W.ne may be served ,n the Art<lb/>
Gallery on special occasions, approved by the Director No alcoholic<lb/>
r ,traCSiI,ayr consurned und" 'he circumstances in any other areas<lb/>
of the student Center. Alcoholic beverages may be used on as comple<lb/>
Sea) Pr?gramS- "CVCr 3S ,nC main fcature e.g. beer blasts are pro-<lb/>
4 ?fflC,TS f?f f.P0"50" organization shall be responsible for the enforce-<lb/>
ment of all University polices and regulations. Failure to comply with<lb/>
"Son rand regula,ions may resuh in a susp? s<lb/>
a The faculty advisor of a student organization or a Student Center<lb/>
staff member, approved by the Student Center director, must be inT<lb/>
StudXw8. 3ny tUnC"0n WhCre a,C?h0ilC bCVCr3g? ? ?Z Z the<lb/>
b. It is implicit in these rules that the officers of the sponsoring orKaniza<lb/>
t.on insure adequate safeguards for compliance with Federal State a"<lb/>
Municipal ordinances and laws and all rules of the Universt v<lb/>
fC ??rU? T" Sf d,SOrdery eon?uct in any manner may subject the of<lb/>
fender to disciplinary action andor arrest by law enfoJcemem person<lb/>
This policy guideline was recommended hv the University Alcohol Drue<lb/>
,980 COmmUee and apProved b l" Chancellor's staff ApS7f<lb/>
XVII: CURRENT UNIVERSITY POLICY ON<lb/>
ILLICIT DRUGS 1,C1UIN<lb/>
the pursuit of academ.c excellence and will To be toiwtedCSL! a"d<lb/>
who will cooperate fully with local. State and ftS?2rt5 ivers.ty,<lb/>
forcement of the law. CdCral autho?'es m thc en-<lb/>
The fundamental concern and resrionsibilitv of fh- 11?-<lb/>
tne abuser of drugs is constructive SSZSSSSSXi<lb/>
posed by la, the Unwersity wtU promote<lb/>
courage medical consultation i, order<lb/>
wilactnrm h through formal d<lb/>
abuse in those instances here these mea<lb/>
where psychiatric or medical considers<lb/>
by :he Health Services for diai<lb/>
INTFJlPRfTAIKiv <lb/>
iHTig l s The Ass<lb/>
apprehended m the impr<lb/>
Drug Abuse<lb/>
1 Perstar<lb/>
fiiiated<lb/>
hisher roommate or<lb/>
anxieties among stucc<lb/>
' all kesiaence Ha<lb/>
2 1 he l niversit) .a:<lb/>
Enforceement Agetu<lb/>
Drujj PowessK.n and or Iransfer<lb/>
:rar<lb/>
of 5<lb/>
possession and or transfei<lb/>
the op'<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Students whi are d"r<lb/>
time (up<lb/>
XVIII: I MVKRMI. poi K <lb/>
( ONCERNING DIri p<lb/>
expresssion, pea<lb/>
peaceable a<lb/>
thai<lb/>
ce<lb/>
me-<lb/>
? Iefiniti.?n of Disruptive ondu<lb/>
be<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
venii .<lb/>
and evv:e -<lb/>
cam<lb/>
B Disorderlv Conduct<lb/>
mur.it,<lb/>
presence an<lb/>
University auth -<lb/>
ail be subject I<lb/>
 bearing before tht<lb/>
Hoard. The degree i<lb/>
determine :he ap<lb/>
made by the Via<lb/>
S idei<lb/>
C Responsihilitv of the icehanceli<lb/>
! The Vice Chance<lb/>
all have a<lb/>
n B The Via<lb/>
shall the evidence, a"<lb/>
 Chancel<lb/>
2. The Vice<lb/>
ma) recommend<lb/>
thecoui<lb/>
B<lb/>
D Responsibitv of the Nice Chancellor ;ir<lb/>
Chance S <lb/>
ail step1- which he she det<lb/>
Carolina I rn<lb/>
enforced He shall u<lb/>
proper hearing il a<lb/>
In ca t these d<lb/>
upon the Associate Dear.<lb/>
or member of the Fa I<lb/>
not preclude the I n??<lb/>
anv offense under this o- an I<lb/>
bv law to Jo so, or if anv ee col<lb/>
sity ps'ilicv on off-campus conduct are<lb/>
f No Amnestv So adn I<lb/>
employee of :he Univen "? shall have a<lb/>
make anv promise as to prosecution<lb/>
Slate or Federal, or be?ore anv I<lb/>
Trustee comm'ttee to an) jJent char<lb/>
Section I of this nolicv<lb/>
?n<lb/>
asaa<lb/>
'?'?"?<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0069"/><lb/>
es of that function with regard to time<lb/>
I hese functions shall be held in designated<lb/>
residence halls as approved h the Associate<lb/>
lesidence I iff or her his representative.<lb/>
?r alcoholic beverages at a social function shall<lb/>
ks Hiate IVan and Director of Residence Life or<lb/>
the scheduled event.<lb/>
issumc Al I responsibilty for<lb/>
and housekeeping Failure to<lb/>
app ipriate disciplinary action<lb/>
uunples of unacceptable<lb/>
tbscenc language; and<lb/>
sponsoring<lb/>
anv monies,<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
posed by law. the University will promote a program of education and en-<lb/>
Psge 13<lb/>
.<lb/>
ws behaK" as described<lb/>
i the appropriate judicial<lb/>
ic beverages are served.<lb/>
he Associate Dean and Direc-<lb/>
"eserages arc served, non-<lb/>
e served.<lb/>
averages are sercd. only<lb/>
he:r bona fide guests shall be<lb/>
eck" system at all events where<lb/>
gh an organization has a check-<lb/>
necess ae a system which allows<lb/>
? . e -ervrd alcoholic beverages<lb/>
al  n ondays through<lb/>
. and Sunday nights during the month.<lb/>
. beverages shall be in the<lb/>
ixication and disorderly con-<lb/>
he drinking policy<lb/>
permitted in the residence halls excepi in<lb/>
iges in Mendenhali 5<lb/>
ierved in Mendenhali Student<lb/>
a scheduled fuiiction<lb/>
?nl within the c? es ol that<lb/>
ace ot consumption.<lb/>
e porganization<lb/>
except dim nsored by<lb/>
attending such dinners<lb/>
I 1 S)l VMfv .<lb/>
ump-<lb/>
oi permission must be<lb/>
ing the regular office hours of<lb/>
?ersitv C entrai Reserva-<lb/>
? east one week in advance<lb/>
? -erved at a function, the spon-<lb/>
k non-alcoholic beverages and<lb/>
? restricted to the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
litorium 2-U Wine may be served in the Art<lb/>
he Direcl - S alcoholic<lb/>
?stances ii her areas<lb/>
 iges may be used only, as comple-<lb/>
te g beer Masts are pro-<lb/>
.ponsible for the enforece-<lb/>
itions. Failure mplj with<lb/>
of reset-<lb/>
on or a Student Center<lb/>
? fare " r. must be in at-<lb/>
beverages are served in the<lb/>
' the p ?ring orgamza-<lb/>
i e ith Federal, State and<lb/>
' the University<lb/>
.inner may subject the ?<lb/>
aw enforcement person-<lb/>
hancet<lb/>
hoi i)ru<lb/>
if) April IS,<lb/>
rVf I MVF.KSir POLIO ON<lb/>
II IK II DKI GS<lb/>
amphetamines, barbituates<lb/>
incompatible with personal welfare and<lb/>
id will not be -olerated by the Universit)<lb/>
I State jr?? Federal authorities in the en-<lb/>
? respons ? the Universit) relative to<lb/>
- rehabtlitat on W,th,n -he limitations im<lb/>
courage medical consultation in order to meet this responsibility. However, it<lb/>
wil act fiamy through through formal disciplinary procedures to control drug<lb/>
abuse in those instances where these measures prove insufficient. In cases<lb/>
where psychiatric or medical consideration is essential, action will be taken<lb/>
by the Health Services for diagnosis and treatment<lb/>
INTERPRETATIONS OF THE POLICY<lb/>
Dni H" H ThC Axsociate Dcan of Students will counsel students who are<lb/>
apprehended in the improper use of drugs with no evidence of possession<lb/>
Drug Abase<lb/>
1 Persistant drug use by a student in University owned, operated, or af-<lb/>
filiated living units which adversely affects the living conditions of<lb/>
hisher roommate or roommates or nearby neighbors or which generates<lb/>
anxieties among students in the living unit constitutes cause for removal<lb/>
from all Residence Hall living units.<lb/>
2. The University cannot prevent Federal, State, or local officials of Law<lb/>
Enforcement Agencies from their investigation and prosecution of drug<lb/>
law violators.<lb/>
Drug Possession andor Transfer ? Evidence of illicit possession andor<lb/>
transfer of drugs will be transmitted to civil authorities. The Associate Dean<lb/>
of Students shall handle all cases wehre students are found to be involved in<lb/>
possession andor transfer of drugs The Associate Dean of Students also has<lb/>
the option of referring the case to ;he University Honor Board for disposi<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Students who are arrested for drug violations will be allowed a reasonable<lb/>
time (up to 90 days) before disciplinary action is taken.<lb/>
XVIII: UNIVERSITY POLICY AND PROCEDURE<lb/>
CONCERNING DISRUPTIVE CONDUCT<lb/>
East Carolina University has long honored the right of free discussion and<lb/>
cxprcsssion. peaceful picketing and demostrations, the right to petition and<lb/>
peaceable assembly. That these rights are a part of the fabric of the institu-<lb/>
tion is not questioned. They must remain secure. It is equally clear, however,<lb/>
that in a community of learning, willful disruption of the educational pro-<lb/>
cess, destruction of property, and interference with the rights of other<lb/>
members of the community cannot be tolerated.<lb/>
A.Definition of Disruptive Conduct ? Any student, who willfully, by use of<lb/>
violence, force coercion, threat intimidation or fear, obstructs, disrupts<lb/>
or attempts to obstruct or disrupt the normal operations or functions of<lb/>
the Lniversity, or who advises, procures, or incites others to do so, shall<lb/>
be subject to suspension or expulsion from the University. The follow-<lb/>
ing, while not intended to be exclusive, illustrate the offenses encompass-<lb/>
ed herein: occupation of any University building or part thereof with in-<lb/>
tent to deprive others of its use; blocking the entrance or exit of any<lb/>
I niversjty building or corridor or room therein; setting fire to or by any<lb/>
other means substantially damaging any University premises; except as<lb/>
necessars for law enforcement, any display of or attempt to threaten or<lb/>
to use firearms, explosives or other weapons for the purpose of intimida-<lb/>
tion, in any University building or on the campus; prevention of the con-<lb/>
vening, continuation or orderly conduct of any University class or activi-<lb/>
ty or of any lawful meeting or assembly in any University building or on<lb/>
the campus; inciting or organizing attempts to prevent attendance at<lb/>
classes; and except with permission of the Vice Chancellor for Student<lb/>
Life, blocking normal pedestrial or vehicular traffic on the University<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
B Disorderly Conduct ? For the protection and convenience of all the com-<lb/>
munity. University regulations prohibit disorderly conduct. Students<lb/>
participating in any unauthorized mass demonstrations, or whose<lb/>
presence and or actions constitute or abet a general disturbance, or who<lb/>
fail promptly to obey an order to disperse given to a group by any<lb/>
University authority or by any duly constituted law enforcement officer,<lb/>
shall be subject to suspension or expulsion from the University, pending<lb/>
a hearing before the University Hearing Board or University Honor<lb/>
Board. The degree of involvement and seriousness of the offense shall<lb/>
determine the appropriate hearing board. This determiniation shall be<lb/>
made by the Vice Chancellor for Student Life or Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
C. Responsibility of the Vice Chancellor for Student Life ?<lb/>
1. The Vice Chancellor for Student Life andor hisher representatives,<lb/>
shall have a duty to identify persons who violate the provisions of Sec-<lb/>
tion B. The Vice Chancellor andor hisher representative, shall mar-<lb/>
shall the evidence, and the Vice Chancellor for Student Life shall report<lb/>
it to the Chancellor in writing.<lb/>
2. The Vice Chancellor for Student Life andor hisher representatives<lb/>
may recommend to the Chancellor that injunctivc relief be sought from<lb/>
the courts to prevent reoccurrence, continuance, or recurrence of a viola-<lb/>
tion of Section B.<lb/>
D Responsibity of the Vice Chancellor for Student Life ? When it appears<lb/>
that there is a violation of Section B, it shall be the duty of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life, and heshe is fully authorized to act, to take<lb/>
all steps which heshe deems advisable to protect the best interest of East<lb/>
Carolina University, and to see that its rules, regulations and policies are<lb/>
enforced. He shall insure that any person or persons found guilty after a<lb/>
proper hearing shall be disciplined in such manner as may be warranted.<lb/>
In carrying out these duties, the Vice Chancellor for Student Life may call<lb/>
upon the Associate Dean of Students, any member of the administration<lb/>
or member of the Faculty. Conviction in any State or Federal court shall<lb/>
not preclude the University from exercising its disciplinary authority in<lb/>
any offense under this or any other section of this policy if it is required<lb/>
by law to do so, or if any of the three conditions described in the Univer-<lb/>
sity policy on off-campus conduct are present.<lb/>
E No Amnesty ? No administrative official, faculty member, student or<lb/>
employee of the University shall have authority to grant amnesty or to<lb/>
make any promise as to prosecution or non-prosecution in any court.<lb/>
State or Federal, or before any student, faculty, administrative, or<lb/>
Trustee committee to any student charged with or suspected violating<lb/>
Section I of this policv.<lb/>
F Delegation of Authority and Dm Process ? It shall be the duty of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life to exercise full authority in the regulation of<lb/>
student conduct and in the matters of student discipline al the University.<lb/>
In the discharge of this duty, delegation of each authority may be made<lb/>
by the Vice Chancellor for Student Life to faculty committees and to ad<lb/>
ministrative or to other officers of the institution, or to agencies of stu-<lb/>
dent government, in such manner and to such extent as may be deemed<lb/>
necessary and expedient by the Vice Chancellor for Student Life; provid<lb/>
ed, that in the discharge of this duty it shall be the duty of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life to secure for every student the right of due<lb/>
process and fair hearing, the presumption of innocence until found guil-<lb/>
ty, the right to know the evidence and to face witnesses testifying against<lb/>
himher and to have counsel in hisher own defense as may be allowable<lb/>
as approved by the Vice Chancellor for Student Life.<lb/>
G. Firearms and Other Weapons Prohibited ? The possession of bowie<lb/>
knives, dirks, daggars, loaded canes, sword canes, machetes, pistols,<lb/>
rifles, repeating rifles, shotguns, pump guns or other firearms or ex-<lb/>
plosives upon the University campus, or in any University owned or<lb/>
operated facility, unless explicitly permitted by the Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life or hisher designated representative in writing, is forbid-<lb/>
den Violation of this prohibition consititutes grounds for suspension<lb/>
from the University.<lb/>
H Chemicals Used for Disruptive Purposes ? The possession, threat to use<lb/>
or use of any explosive, inflammatory or disabling chemical for disrup-<lb/>
tive purposes is expressly forbidden. Violation of this prohibition con-<lb/>
stitutes grounds for suspension or expulsion from the University.<lb/>
PROCEDURES TO IMPLEMENT POLICY<lb/>
ON DISRUPTION<lb/>
To implement the University policy on disruptive conduct, the following<lb/>
procedures shall be adhered to:<lb/>
A. The Vice Chancellor for Student Life shall establish a Board of Inquiry<lb/>
consisting of not fewer than three nor more than six members of the<lb/>
University community. To this board, the Vice Chancellor for Student<lb/>
Life shall appoint at least one faculty member, one student, and if<lb/>
available one person with legal training. The appointments shall be made<lb/>
annually at the opening of the academic year for a twelve-month term.<lb/>
The Vice Chancellor for Student Life shall designate one member of the<lb/>
University Hearings Board to serve as its chairperson. No member of the<lb/>
Board of Inquiry established under Paragraph A. above, shall be ap-<lb/>
pointed to the University Hearings Board.<lb/>
B. Vacancies on the Board of Inquiry and on the University Hearings Board<lb/>
shall be filled by appointment of the Vice Chancellor for Student Life.<lb/>
C. In case of disruptive action, the Vice Chancellor for Student Life shall<lb/>
determine whether there is evidence sufficient<lb/>
to warrant charging any individual in the institutiton with violation of the<lb/>
University policy on disruptive conduct as defined in Section I in the Policy<lb/>
on Disruptive Conduct. In making this determination, the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life may, at his her discretion, seek assistance from the Board of<lb/>
Inquiry constituted as provided in Paragraph A, above.<lb/>
D. If the Vice Chancellor for Student Life seeks the assistance of the Board<lb/>
of Inquiry, it shall be convened by its chairperson at the request of the<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life, when convened, it shall be the duty of<lb/>
the Board:<lb/>
1. To proceed without delay to investigate allegations of disruptive con-<lb/>
duct;<lb/>
2. To advise the Vice Chancellor for Student I ife in writing whether<lb/>
there is sufficient evidence to warrant charging anv person with violation<lb/>
of the University policy on disruptive conduct.<lb/>
E. Upon receiving the report from the Board of Inquiry, the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life shall determine whether it appears that there has been a<lb/>
violation of the University policy on disruptive conduct requiring<lb/>
disciplinary action. If it appears to the Vice Chancellor for Student Uife<lb/>
that such a violation has occurred, he shall direct the Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students to proceed as follows:<lb/>
I. To give notice by personal service or registered mail, return receipt re-<lb/>
quested, to each person charged stating:<lb/>
(a) The specific violations of the University policy on disruption<lb/>
with which the accused person is charged, together with a summary of<lb/>
the facts on which the charge is based<lb/>
(b) That at a designated time and place, the accused person will be<lb/>
given a hearing on the charge by the University Hearings Board provided<lb/>
for in Paragraph B, above.<lb/>
XIX: EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
STUDENT GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES FOR<lb/>
GRIEVANCES INVOLVING SEX DISCRIMINATION<lb/>
AND OTHER EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COMPLAINTS<lb/>
PREAMBLE<lb/>
East Carolina University is committed to equality of educational oppor-<lb/>
tunity and does not discriminate against applicants, students, or employees<lb/>
based on race, color national origin, religion, sex, age, or handicap.<lb/>
Moreover, East Carolina University is open to people of all races and actively<lb/>
seeks to promote racial integration by recruiting and enrolling a larger<lb/>
number of black students.<lb/>
In accord with Sections 901 and 902 of Title IX of the Education Amend-<lb/>
ments Act of 1972, as implemented by Section 86.8 (a) (b) of the Regulations<lb/>
published by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the<lb/>
following procedures have been established to provide prompt and equitable<lb/>
resolution of student and employee complaints involving sex discrimination.<lb/>
???<lb/>
' f<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057734_0070"/><lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS PaKe 14<lb/>
A. INFORMAL GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE<lb/>
1. Informal Grievance Procedure Prerequisite ?<lb/>
Most student grievances based on sex discrimination as well as other above<lb/>
listed equal opportunity factors can and should be resolved in an infoi<lb/>
mal manner. Therefore, the student must seek resolution of his her<lb/>
grievance in accordance with the Informal Grievance Procedure in "2"<lb/>
as a prerequisite to the jurisdiction of a hearing committee to hear the<lb/>
complaint as set forth in "B" below.<lb/>
It is University policy that any student who requests or has need for the ser<lb/>
vices of an interpreter because of impaired hearing shall be provided the<lb/>
serM.es of an interpreter for all administrative proceedings hearings<lb/>
and conferences related to any grievances or disciplinary actions<lb/>
2. Steps in Informal Grievance Procedure<lb/>
(a) Discussion with Associate Dean of Students<lb/>
(1) If any student alleges a grievance based on sex discrimination or<lb/>
any of the equal opportunity factors shown in Preamble above an im-<lb/>
mediate appointment should be made with any Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students. These officials are in offices on the second floor of Whichard<lb/>
Building and the student may make an appointment with anv one of the<lb/>
said Associate Deans of choice.<lb/>
(2) At the time of making the appointment, the student should state<lb/>
expressly the need to discuss a sex discrimination grievance or other<lb/>
equal opportunity grievance.<lb/>
(3) The Associate Dean will set an appointment date and discuss the<lb/>
grievance with the student as soon as possible but in anv event within<lb/>
three school days after the request.<lb/>
(4) The grievance should be discussed freelv and in an informal and<lb/>
relaxed manner with the Associate Dean. Witnesses or other individuals<lb/>
who may assist in resolving the grievance should be consulted at the re-<lb/>
quest ot the student or the Associate Dean.<lb/>
(5) 1 he student will be advised of the corrective action and or deci-<lb/>
sion of the Associate Dean as soon as possible but not later than three<lb/>
school days subsequent to the date of the conference<lb/>
3. Appeal to the Associate Director of Fqual Opportunity Programs (Title IX<lb/>
Compliance Officer)<lb/>
(a) If the grievance is not resolved to the satisfaction of the student bv<lb/>
the Associate Dean of Students, the student has the right to appeal to the<lb/>
Associate Director oi Equal Opportunity Programs, Room 214 Wright<lb/>
Annex. The appeal must be made to the Associate Director within two<lb/>
working days subsequent to the decision of the Associate Dean<lb/>
(b) The Associate Director of Fqual Opportunity Programs will review<lb/>
the case in its entirety, interviewing anv and all witnesses deemed<lb/>
necessary, including where deemed appropriate, a conference involving<lb/>
all parties with the grievance and prior decisions made in an effort to<lb/>
resolve the grievance.<lb/>
(c) The Associate Director will render his her opinion within five work-<lb/>
ing days after receipt of the appeal. The decision of the Associate Direc-<lb/>
tor will be final and will termimate the student's rights pursuant to the in-<lb/>
formal grievance procedure.<lb/>
(d) If the decision and or corrective action taken bv the Associate Direc-<lb/>
tor ,s not satisfactory, the student has a r.ght to request a formal hearing<lb/>
of the grievance by a Grievance Committee in accordance with the pro-<lb/>
cedure in B<lb/>
FORMAL GRIEVANCE PROCFDlRF<lb/>
1. The Hearing Committee - A hearing committee composed of anvone<lb/>
from the Faculty, Staff, or student bodv of the Universitv will be ap-<lb/>
pointed in each case involving an allegation of discrimination against the<lb/>
student on the basis of sex discrimination or other equal opportunity fac-<lb/>
tor. The composition of the committee will be formed according to the<lb/>
following diagram:<lb/>
The aggrieved student will select the first member of the committee The<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life or other member of the Administration<lb/>
will select the second member. However, anv official of the Administra-<lb/>
tion against whom the allegations of discrimination have been made will<lb/>
not select the second member. The two members selected will then agree<lb/>
upon the selection of a third member who will become the chair<lb/>
GRIEVANT<lb/>
2. Steps in Formal Grievance Procedure<lb/>
(a) Hearing Request From Student and Selection of First Committee<lb/>
Member<lb/>
(1) The formal procedure requires the request for a hearing bv the<lb/>
student to be in writing. The letter will set torth the nature of the<lb/>
grievance including the names of individuals involved in the complaint<lb/>
I he letter will aist. nominate, by name, the first member of the hearing<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
(2) If necessary, the student may obtain the assistance of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Attorney General in drafting the letter of request. The letter should<lb/>
be submitted to the Vice Chancellor for Student I ife<lb/>
(b)Selection of Second Committee Member<lb/>
(1)1 pon receipt of the letter of request from the student, the Vice<lb/>
( hancellor for Student 1 ife will take appropriate action to nominate a<lb/>
second member to the committee.<lb/>
(c(Selection of Third Committee Member<lb/>
The first two members of the hearing committee will mutuallv agree upon a<lb/>
third member of the committee who will act as chair<lb/>
k. (Hearing<lb/>
(1) The Committee thus formed should complete hearing of the<lb/>
grievance within fifteen days after being formed where possible. Rarelv<lb/>
should it be necessary to extend this time. The request for an extension of<lb/>
time should be made to and approved by the Vice Chancellor for Student<lb/>
Life at his her discretion.<lb/>
(2) The Committee will comply with all the rules for a due process<lb/>
hearing set forth elsewhere in the ECU Student Handbook.<lb/>
(3) The Committee will maintain a complete record of the hearing<lb/>
by tape recording or other method as deemed appropriate bv the Com-<lb/>
mittee,<lb/>
(e) Committee Findings<lb/>
(l)The Committee will summarize its factual findings, its conclu-<lb/>
sions and make recommendations in writing as to its decision and or cot<lb/>
rective action recommended<lb/>
(2) The summary findings and recommendations will be forwarded<lb/>
to the ice Chancellor for Student Life within three working davs subse-<lb/>
quent to the conclusion of the hearing.<lb/>
It)Action B The Vice (hancellor for Student Life<lb/>
(1) The Vice Chancellor for Student Life will act upon the recom-<lb/>
mendations and findings of the Committee initiating anv corrective ac<lb/>
turn deemed appropriate to resolve the grievance.<lb/>
(2) The entire record of the hearing and the action taken bv the<lb/>
Committee will be retained on file for a period of one vear subsequent to<lb/>
the hearing.<lb/>
(g(Appeal To The Chancellor<lb/>
(1) If the action taken by the Vice Chancellor for Student L ife is not<lb/>
satisfactory to the student, he she may appeal the case to the Chancellor<lb/>
within three school days subsequent to the decision by the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor in Section f. Action by the Chancellor is final and will ex-<lb/>
haust the administrative efforts of the student<lb/>
XX: REGISTRATION OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
All student organizations are expected to register with the Office of the<lb/>
V ice C hancellor for Student Life, 204 Whichard, in order to reserve and use<lb/>
I niversity facilities tor meetings and events and to be listed in the Student<lb/>
Organization Directory. Such organizations must also have an up-to-date<lb/>
constitution on file, and must comply with the provision of Title IX of<lb/>
Education Amendments Acts of 1972.<lb/>
GROUP CONDUCT OFFENSES<lb/>
1. University societies, clubs, organizations and groups are subject to the<lb/>
same standards of conduct, both on and off the campus, as are in-<lb/>
dividuals in the academic community.<lb/>
2. The commission of any of the offenses listed under the Code of Conduct<lb/>
and Disciplinary offenses for students by such groups or the knowing<lb/>
failure of any organized group to exercise preventive measures relative to<lb/>
violation of the code by their members shall constitute a group offense<lb/>
Revocation or restriction of charter, fine, probation, suspension<lb/>
disciplinary probation or lesser sanctions may result from the commis-<lb/>
sion of a group conduct offense.<lb/>
ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
3.<lb/>
"&amp;-4? ???$?,<lb/>
PHO<lb/>
Office o<lb/>
Office o<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Office oi<lb/>
Academi<lb/>
Office o<lb/>
Residenc<lb/>
Office o<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Office ofl<lb/>
Presiden<lb/>
COMMITTEE FINDINGS<lb/>
Office of<lb/>
Director<lb/>
Unions<lb/>
TTTTTTTTTTTTT'il<lb/>
 I<lb/>
?<lb/>
tmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057734_0071"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
) IHH I Ml NIs<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
STIDKNT (.OVFRNMKNT ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTS<lb/>
Page 15<lb/>
VI em hi-<lb/>
n ot srsl I omrniiti't'<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
ipon a<lb/>
n oi<lb/>
lorn<lb/>
a<lb/>
nani fhu<lb/>
.<lb/>
by the Vice<lb/>
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Office of the Associate Dean and<lb/>
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