<?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="00057749_0001"/>
(Earolmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No.16<lb/>
Thursday, October 17. 1985<lb/>
(.reenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Faculty Satisfied With ECU <lb/>
By DOK.KOKKKSON<lb/>
M?ff Wrllrt<lb/>
An informal survey of ECl<lb/>
faculty found that most arc<lb/>
satisfied with the pay and ad-<lb/>
vancement opportunities in their<lb/>
profession.<lb/>
The East Carolinian survey of<lb/>
15 ECU faculty members was<lb/>
prompted b a Carnegie Founda-<lb/>
tion survey on the quality of<lb/>
undergraduate education. The<lb/>
Carnegie survey found that 38<lb/>
percent of college faculty nation-<lb/>
wide say they may quit teaching<lb/>
in the next five years.<lb/>
In contrast, all ECl faculty<lb/>
members surveyed said they were<lb/>
satisfied with their profession<lb/>
and would not consider leaving.<lb/>
The Carnegie survey found<lb/>
that one-third of college faculty<lb/>
members believed abolishing<lb/>
tenure would improve higher<lb/>
education. Twelve out of the 15<lb/>
ECU faculty members surveyed<lb/>
believed tenure has no adverse ef-<lb/>
fect on the quality of education.<lb/>
Approximately 75 percent said<lb/>
they were against abolishing<lb/>
tenure.<lb/>
One professor in favor of<lb/>
tenure said, "a well-qualified in-<lb/>
dividual who is willing to meet<lb/>
university requirements has a<lb/>
good opportunity for advance-<lb/>
ment <lb/>
? professor who thinks tenure<lb/>
has an adverse effect on educa-<lb/>
tion said. "Tenure has a tendency<lb/>
to make some individuals relax"<lb/>
and that he would prefer "a<lb/>
system of long-term contracts<lb/>
These contracts would be renew-<lb/>
ed every five to seven years while<lb/>
providing employment security,<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
In the national survey, 60 per-<lb/>
cent believed their salaries are<lb/>
either fair or poor. About 40 per-<lb/>
cent said their pay is good or ex-<lb/>
cellent.<lb/>
The survey of ECU faculty<lb/>
found that 80 percent think their<lb/>
pay is as good or better then pay<lb/>
across the nation.<lb/>
One professor commentr <lb/>
"You don't expect to get rich<lb/>
teaching, but I think we are ade-<lb/>
quately compensated<lb/>
According to the American<lb/>
Association of University Pro-<lb/>
fessors, the average salaries in<lb/>
1984-85 were: $39,870 for a full<lb/>
professor; $29,910 for an<lb/>
associate professor and $24,610<lb/>
for an assistant professor.<lb/>
According to information<lb/>
prepared and assembled by the<lb/>
ECU Office of Institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement, the average salaries<lb/>
of male professors on a nine<lb/>
month contract in 1985 were:<lb/>
$37,071 for a full professor;<lb/>
$30,603 for an associate pro-<lb/>
fessor and $24,587 for an assis<lb/>
tant professor.<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Academic Affairs, said ECU<lb/>
"gets a lot of high-quality ap-<lb/>
plicants. We're a college where<lb/>
people want to come to, not<lb/>
leave<lb/>
The Carnegie survey results<lb/>
were published in the September-<lb/>
October issue of Change<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
ECU Participates InTelecast ??<lb/>
B EI.IABKTH PXGr<lb/>
st?fr wntrt<lb/>
ECU, . uction w ith 15<lb/>
othei colleges and universities,<lb/>
? part in the W  Day<lb/>
sat el ? te telecoi ce on<lb/>
W ednesday . oi Id 1 ood Dav,<lb/>
which is now in fear,<lb/>
marks thi mi I the<lb/>
indmg ' : :<lb/>
Agriculture Orga<lb/>
United Nations in 1945.<lb/>
The national committee for<lb/>
Woi  Day is made up of<lb/>
S. Depart m e n t o t<lb/>
griculture, the gency for In-<lb/>
ternationa! Developmei I and a<lb/>
coalition of 350 private v oiuntary<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
The three-hour teleconference<lb/>
originated f r o m G e o r g e<lb/>
W ashingt on Univers ty in<lb/>
Washington, D. . a d was<lb/>
shown at The Brody Med<lb/>
Sciences Building at ECl<lb/>
The first hour ol the<lb/>
teleconfernce was designated<lb/>
panel presentai n the rela-<lb/>
tionship of poverty and w<lb/>
hunger, the impact on world food<lb/>
security, and the problem of at-<lb/>
taining long-term, sustainable<lb/>
agriculture development in the<lb/>
Third World.<lb/>
Among those on the panel were<lb/>
Peter McPherson, administrator<lb/>
or' the Agency for International<lb/>
Development; Barbara Hud-<lb/>
dleston, chief of the loot! Securi-<lb/>
ty and Information Service of the<lb/>
food and Agriculture Organiza-<lb/>
tion; Sena Paul S n on (D-Il);<lb/>
and Mane Savane, president of<lb/>
the ion of African<lb/>
Women tor Research on<lb/>
Development in Dakar, Sengal.<lb/>
During the second hour. !( <lb/>
faculty made a presentation ol<lb/>
the teleconference site. Kathrvn<lb/>
M. Kolassa and Marilyn F.<lb/>
e, 1 I lood and nutrition<lb/>
 Maurice Simon, an ECl<lb/>
political scientist; Frederick Day,<lb/>
a geography and populations ex-<lb/>
and Judith C. Rollins, dean<lb/>
of the Schol of Home<lb/>
? nomics, spoke at the<lb/>
teleconference.<lb/>
Day, who often teaches his<lb/>
students on the subject of world<lb/>
hunger by relating it to popula-<lb/>
tion said, "1 relate population to<lb/>
increase in numbers and the abili-<lb/>
ty to feed those people<lb/>
"The population is growing so<lb/>
fast that they are not able to pro-<lb/>
vide enough food for the people<lb/>
in Africa said Day.<lb/>
Day did not think that the<lb/>
teleconference would help the<lb/>
hunger situation, but that it<lb/>
would help in the informing l<lb/>
others, so that they would be<lb/>
prepared to help deal with the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
The third hour of the<lb/>
teleconference was designated to<lb/>
a discussion between the par-<lb/>
ticipating schools with Karl<lb/>
Rodabaugh of the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education.<lb/>
An evening program was also<lb/>
held to discuss the World Food<lb/>
Day theme "Hunger: Who<lb/>
Should Starve The program in-<lb/>
cluded a pane! discussion which<lb/>
featured Day. Nina Blount of the<lb/>
Greenville Tabernacle Praver.<lb/>
Debbie Ryals of the Department<lb/>
of Social Services, and was<lb/>
moderated by Greenville Mayor<lb/>
Janice Buck.<lb/>
The panel discussion was<lb/>
followed by a rebroadcast of the<lb/>
first hour of the telecast.<lb/>
"For those who work to end<lb/>
hunger, this is a symoblic year<lb/>
and the teleconference will be an<lb/>
important opportunity to explore<lb/>
global tood and hunger issues<lb/>
said Patricia Young, coordinator<lb/>
of the National Committee for<lb/>
World food Dav.<lb/>
"The teleconference provide- a<lb/>
new way for the American college<lb/>
community to be involved in the<lb/>
search for new ideas and<lb/>
answers added Young.<lb/>
World Food Day marks the an-<lb/>
niversary of the founding of the<lb/>
Food and Agriculture Organiza-<lb/>
tion of the United Nations. It was<lb/>
founded in 1945. ECU par-<lb/>
ticipated in the teleconference<lb/>
along with 15 other universities<lb/>
and colleges.<lb/>
Snack Time ieuTec.r??.<lb/>
Here are the range of choices students have when the go into the<lb/>
Student Store between classes. More often than not. students will<lb/>
choose these quick snacks. But beware, in order to maintain good<lb/>
health one needs to eat good foods such as fruits, nuts, sandwiches<lb/>
and milk products.<lb/>
Historical Grasp<lb/>
Vital In Choices<lb/>
Side of Brain Determines Talent<lb/>
By BETH WHICKER<lb/>
NUff Unln<lb/>
For some students, math is sim-<lb/>
ple and English is more com-<lb/>
plicated. For others artistic talent<lb/>
flows while mechanical and<lb/>
reasoning ability is low.<lb/>
Some psychologists believe this<lb/>
division of talent is due to use of<lb/>
the right and left hemisphere of<lb/>
the brain.<lb/>
The right side of the brain con-<lb/>
trols the left hand, artistic ability<lb/>
and communication or verbal<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
"In one of my classes at the<lb/>
N.C. School ol the Arts, 75 per-<lb/>
cent of the students were left<lb/>
handed. The class was comprised<lb/>
of dancers, visual art students,<lb/>
and design students. In math<lb/>
class, our instructor had a dif-<lb/>
ficult time trving to make us<lb/>
understand the concent of math.<lb/>
The best dancer in ihe entire<lb/>
school was completly illiterate in<lb/>
math according to a former<lb/>
student at the N.C. School of the<lb/>
Arts and a current ECU student,<lb/>
who did not want to be named.<lb/>
The left side of the brain controls<lb/>
our right hand and mechanical<lb/>
ability.<lb/>
"Data has been collected on<lb/>
the differences between sexes and<lb/>
brain sides. This data shows that<lb/>
males may be more lateralized to<lb/>
the left side of the brain, which<lb/>
could be the origin of the males'<lb/>
greater mechanical ability. The<lb/>
study shows that females may be<lb/>
more lateralized on the right side<lb/>
and might be a bit ahead verbal-<lb/>
ly. Despite the findings the dif-<lb/>
ferences are too small to base a<lb/>
decision on according to<lb/>
Robert Graham, professor of<lb/>
Psychlogy.<lb/>
"When presenting a card with<lb/>
a focal point and a word on either<lb/>
side of the focal point, everything<lb/>
seen on each side will go to the in-<lb/>
dividual side of the hemisphere.<lb/>
You can tell exactly which<lb/>
hemisphere it's going to. This<lb/>
works for most people. It's from<lb/>
this kind of experiment that we<lb/>
think language is processed in the<lb/>
left hemisphere said Graham.<lb/>
Electrical potentials from both<lb/>
hemispheres show different<lb/>
statistics from right to left<lb/>
hemispheres when different tasks<lb/>
were performed. One function<lb/>
most clearly lateralized is speech.<lb/>
Both hemispheres can com-<lb/>
prehend language, usually only<lb/>
one hemisphere can speak<lb/>
Graham said.<lb/>
"Ambidexterity was thought<lb/>
to be both sides of the brain do-<lb/>
ing the same thing. It is still<lb/>
found that the speech cortex is in<lb/>
the left hemisphere. Of course the<lb/>
right side still controls the left<lb/>
hand and vice versa according<lb/>
to Graham.<lb/>
"Less evolved brains have no<lb/>
division of labor in the<lb/>
hemispheres like the human<lb/>
brain. All paws try to do all the<lb/>
same things. This could be<lb/>
because they do not have a se-<lb/>
cond motion area said<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
"A monkey's brain shows divi-<lb/>
sion of labor. If a monkey's se-<lb/>
cond motion area is removed<lb/>
See SIDE Page 3<lb/>
By MIkEl IDWICK<lb/>
Sr?, Mllor<lb/>
A new history course that will<lb/>
be offered next semester is<lb/>
designed to provide the vital in-<lb/>
formation that is necessary for<lb/>
students to make informed and<lb/>
intelligent decisions about apar-<lb/>
theid and the dilemma facing the<lb/>
US.<lb/>
The course entitled "Problems<lb/>
in Southern African History" is<lb/>
offered by the History depart-<lb/>
ment through the course Selected<lb/>
Topics in History. Kenneth<lb/>
W'ilburn, assistant professor of<lb/>
history, will instruct the course.<lb/>
"1 think everyone should be<lb/>
very concerned with how their<lb/>
country should view South<lb/>
Africa said W'ilburn.<lb/>
W'ilburn stated that the course<lb/>
should provide the background<lb/>
that is necessary for students to<lb/>
understand apartheid.<lb/>
"College students today are<lb/>
picketing or boycotting South<lb/>
African products, among other<lb/>
things. This course wili give them<lb/>
the background and information<lb/>
they need to make knowledgable<lb/>
decisions as to what they should<lb/>
do as individuals W'ilburn said.<lb/>
"Apartheid has evolved for<lb/>
over 300 years W'ilburn added,<lb/>
"in order to understand how to<lb/>
end apartheid you have to<lb/>
understand what it is, so you<lb/>
have to do more than watch 30<lb/>
minutes of nightly news<lb/>
W'ilburn maintained that<lb/>
students must "put the South<lb/>
African problems into perspec-<lb/>
tive so people can make more in-<lb/>
telligent decisions about the par-<lb/>
ticipation of their government<lb/>
and businesses in South African<lb/>
affairs<lb/>
The course, according to<lb/>
W'ilburn. will start with a look at<lb/>
southern Africa before l85 and<lb/>
the arrival of the first whites<lb/>
the Cape area in southern Africa<lb/>
and the problems between the<lb/>
whites and the three major in-<lb/>
diginouss groups of people in<lb/>
Cape region of southern Africa:<lb/>
the KHOI-KHOI, who were<lb/>
known as the hottentots, the<lb/>
SAN, who were the bushmen.<lb/>
and the XHOSA. who were<lb/>
known as the blacks.<lb/>
Next, the course will examine<lb/>
the establishment of the Zulu<lb/>
ethnic group and the resulting<lb/>
dispersion of the other black<lb/>
groups, because they were trying<lb/>
to escape the wrath of the Zulus.<lb/>
W'ilburn said that the course<lb/>
will look at the establishment of<lb/>
the British in South Africa and<lb/>
the conflict between British im-<lb/>
perialism and the Boers, which<lb/>
eventually resulted in the Boer<lb/>
War.<lb/>
Finally, the course will con-<lb/>
sider apartheid and black<lb/>
resistance to South Africa.<lb/>
Hanging Around<lb/>
JIM LEUTOENS ? Tha East Carolinian<lb/>
Todd Lovett and Donna Corey are enjoying a guiet moment after classes. More than likely they<lb/>
are discussing where and what they will be doing for Fall Break. Fall Break begins this Friday after-<lb/>
noon, and it is a hard earned break, so enjoy your vacation.<lb/>
Editor Arrested For Larceny<lb/>
By LORIN PASQUAL<lb/>
Greenville police have arrested<lb/>
a former East Carolinian features<lb/>
editor and two other men on<lb/>
charges of breaking and entering<lb/>
and larceny in connection with<lb/>
the theft of more than $10,000<lb/>
worth of computer equipment<lb/>
from the Wilcar Executive<lb/>
Building on West 10th Street,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Detective John Nichols iden-<lb/>
tified the men as Stephen Ashley<lb/>
Sherbin, 21, a Florida native who<lb/>
worked at The East Carolinian<lb/>
from August to October, 1985;<lb/>
Brian Keith Berryman, 19, who<lb/>
lived with Sherbin at 305 E. 14th<lb/>
St and Jeffrey Neil Ferris, 19, a<lb/>
resident of Black Mountain,<lb/>
N1Cltwho previously lived at 213<lb/>
Nichols Drive, Greenville.<lb/>
Police arrested Berryman Fri-<lb/>
day afternoon after they brought<lb/>
him to the department for ques-<lb/>
tioning. They arrested Sherbin<lb/>
and Ferris Monday, at which<lb/>
time Sherbin and Berryman con-<lb/>
fessed to the charges and made<lb/>
official statements, according to<lb/>
Nichols.<lb/>
Berryman, who gave police at<lb/>
least three different former ad-<lb/>
dresses in New England, was<lb/>
found with more than 100<lb/>
unauthorized keys, said Nichols.<lb/>
At least a dozen of those were to<lb/>
ECU buildings, he added.<lb/>
Although the university has<lb/>
"no legal standing (in the case) at<lb/>
the present time, there is a<lb/>
possibility that they (the three<lb/>
men) could be investigated" in<lb/>
connection with recent thefts at<lb/>
ECU, said Director of Campus<lb/>
Security Joseph Calder.<lb/>
Sherbin, an ECU sophmore<lb/>
majoring in anthropology, is a<lb/>
former member of the Student<lb/>
Government Association at-<lb/>
torney general's staff and the<lb/>
College Republicans. He belongs<lb/>
to the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity.<lb/>
All three men appeared at U.S.<lb/>
District Court in Greenville Mon-<lb/>
day and were released on $1,500<lb/>
bail each.<lb/>
They are scheduled to appear<lb/>
for probable cause hearings at the<lb/>
following times: Berryman, Oct.<lb/>
25, before Judge Rountree, and<lb/>
Sherbin and Ferris, Nov. 1,<lb/>
before Judge Hunter.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0002"/><lb/>
I HI f V<lb/>
F C U PO L I T IC AI S C ? f? N C F<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
ADVF NTURES<lb/>
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IMMEDIA TEL Y<lb/>
Call 757-6366 or slop by<lb/>
the Publications Building<lb/>
and fill out an application<lb/>
VKOKIloNs p<lb/>
m 12th WEEK<lb/>
PRECiN N( <lb/>
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NC STUDENT LEGISLATURE<lb/>
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? r. ?<lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
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ECU SURFING<lb/>
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ss.<lb/>
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THE PIGGIES ARE<lb/>
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???????????????<lb/>
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YEARBOOKS<lb/>
Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
FALL BREAK SPECIAL<lb/>
The holiday festivities are fast approaching<lb/>
Get Your Body Ready<lb/>
Sign up by Sat. Oct. 26, 1985<lb/>
and get the rest of the semester for<lb/>
$20.oo<lb/>
417 Evans St. Downtown 7571606<lb/>
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Register To<lb/>
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Football<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
t<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
will give<lb/>
away 2<lb/>
pairs of<lb/>
tickets for<lb/>
each of the<lb/>
5 home games<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
EVERY WEEK<lb/>
V,<lb/>
A<lb/>
Red<lb/>
Roses<lb/>
DON T FORGET<lb/>
PLUS v<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
MANUFACTURFR S<lb/>
COUPONS!<lb/>
Det;<lb/>
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Lite . .<lb/>
12<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
Carlo<lb/>
Rossi Wine<lb/>
Cherry<lb/>
Coke .<lb/>
FRf I<lb/>
IB S3 99<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
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Video Movie<lb/>
Rentals<lb/>
o Club Fees 24 Hour Service<lb/>
OVER<lb/>
650<lb/>
TITLES<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
A VMS <lb/>
VHS Player<lb/>
Rental<lb/>
$28<lb/>
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Jeno's<lb/>
Pizza . .<lb/>
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OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057749_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 17, 1985 3<lb/>
J<lb/>
? -v-<lb/>
?????????????????????<lb/>
??????-???????????<lb/>
???????t<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
BRICE<lb/>
STREET<lb/>
ECU $1.50<lb/>
? ?OIF ?5JS f J? t v -$ W-<lb/>
U LI v<lb/>
ACTUWFR s<lb/>
PONS!<lb/>
Details In store<lb/>
Kerry<lb/>
oke .<lb/>
99<lb/>
7 ;<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Basket<lb/>
$<lb/>
?UNMMir <lb/>
E<lb/>
reyers<lb/>
ogurt.<lb/>
49<lb/>
o Krogenng<lb/>
Congress Ready To<lb/>
ForceEqual Treatment<lb/>
WASHINGTON D.C. (CPS) -<lb/>
Despite some negative input from<lb/>
a college president last week.<lb/>
Congress seems ready to pass a<lb/>
lav. forcing most college pro-<lb/>
grams to treat male and female<lb/>
students equallv<lb/>
I he bill, called the Civ il Rights<lb/>
Restoration Act. would overrule<lb/>
a 1984 U.S. Supreme Court deci-<lb/>
sion that excused many college<lb/>
departments from having to<lb/>
pledge not to discriminate against<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Bur some administrators and<lb/>
apparently some students as well<lb/>
worry the measure would let the<lb/>
tederal government "interfere"<lb/>
in campus programs.<lb/>
"It sounds like a new fear to<lb/>
me sas congressional aide Kris<lb/>
McManiman. "We get students<lb/>
calling up from Baptist colleges<lb/>
askmg if (they're) going to have<lb/>
to room with a man<lb/>
"We want to protect our in-<lb/>
dependence Charles Macken-<lb/>
zie, president of Grove City Col-<lb/>
lege (Pa.), told Congress m hear-<lb/>
ings last week. "The government<lb/>
at some point may want to im-<lb/>
pose their secular values on our<lb/>
campus<lb/>
The bill's sponsors say they on-<lb/>
ly want to give college women a<lb/>
legal tool with which to challenge<lb/>
discrimination, which a court ?<lb/>
not the government ? would<lb/>
then treat.<lb/>
Last week's hearings only con-<lb/>
tinued a debate that began when<lb/>
Congress approved Title IX of<lb/>
the Higher Education Amend-<lb/>
ments of 1972.<lb/>
Title IX, of course, bars col-<lb/>
leges that take federal money<lb/>
from discriminating on the basis<lb/>
of gender.<lb/>
Many women's groups say Ti-<lb/>
tle IX provided the legal tool to<lb/>
open admissions to certain degree<lb/>
programs to women, gain more<lb/>
resources for female students'<lb/>
cholarship programs, and even<lb/>
funnel money into women's<lb/>
sports teams and facilities.<lb/>
Several schools ? the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Richmond, Hillsdale Col-<lb/>
lege and Grove City College<lb/>
among them ? have gone to<lb/>
court to escape the law .<lb/>
They've argued Title IX should<lb/>
not cover whole colleges, but on-<lb/>
ly programs that get or use the<lb/>
federal government's money.<lb/>
Grove City asserted the govern-<lb/>
ment simply should leave campus<lb/>
programs to campus ad-<lb/>
ministrators to run.<lb/>
"We did not want to accept the<lb/>
principle of federal jurisdiction<lb/>
Mackenzie told Congress last<lb/>
w eek.<lb/>
It was Grove City's legal<lb/>
challenge to the jurisdiction that<lb/>
made it to the Supreme Court last<lb/>
year. The court ruled Title IX ap-<lb/>
plied only to programs that<lb/>
directly got federal money, not to<lb/>
all programs on a campus that<lb/>
took some kind of federal aid.<lb/>
The court added, however,<lb/>
that campus student aid offices<lb/>
would have to comply with Title<lb/>
IX because they administer<lb/>
federal funds.<lb/>
"It's completely absurd that<lb/>
women can only be protected in<lb/>
specific programs and buildings<lb/>
on a campus says kristin<lb/>
Stelck, a lobbyist for the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of University<lb/>
Women.<lb/>
Stelck says the ruling makes it<lb/>
harder for female students to<lb/>
pursue their rights.<lb/>
Soon after the ruling, for ex-<lb/>
ample, the civil rights office of<lb/>
the Department of Education<lb/>
dropped the case of a student<lb/>
who officially complained she'd<lb/>
been sexually, harassed in a Nor-<lb/>
theastern University economics<lb/>
building, Stelck says.<lb/>
Side Of Brain Determines Talant<lb/>
Continued From Pajje 1.<lb/>
then the monkey will act as<lb/>
though he has two dominant<lb/>
hands. Presumably, if this were<lb/>
dine with a human the results<lb/>
would be the same added<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
"The split brain experiment<lb/>
was performed on people with<lb/>
psychiatric problems. Ninety per-<lb/>
cent of the experiments using<lb/>
tl and left hemispheres were<lb/>
done on normal people said<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
"Some psychologists make a<lb/>
living on the concept. People<lb/>
should beware of educational<lb/>
systems claiming that it will<lb/>
educate a particular hemisphere.<lb/>
We are just beginning to learn<lb/>
about the differences. We're a<lb/>
long way from applying anything<lb/>
practically Graham said.<lb/>
"I would guess that there are<lb/>
brain differences that produce<lb/>
differences in Art and<lb/>
Mechanical abilities but we don't<lb/>
know what they are. Certain peo-<lb/>
ple are low in talent in either<lb/>
area; it might not be because of<lb/>
their hemispheres. Other factors<lb/>
such as inheritance and past ex-<lb/>
periences determine talent also A<lb/>
dancer has to use all of the body.<lb/>
Math is localized to the bram<lb/>
added Graham.<lb/>
"It's a debatable issue, we<lb/>
don't have proof of the issue.<lb/>
Psychometric testing does not<lb/>
clearly demonstrate the theorv.<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Call "Jokes On Us" for delivery of<lb/>
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OPEN 12-9 PM Mon-Thur<lb/>
10-5 Fri-Sat<lb/>
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East Carolina University<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Week Activities<lb/>
October 23 - 29<lb/>
<lb/>
Real Pirates Know Their Limits<lb/>
Wednesday, October 23<lb/>
?A.M 4:OOP.M Vlcohol Awareness Fan Tyler Hall Lobby<lb/>
?'M Discussion: "Demon Run r Ration Mendenhall 244<lb/>
(irog ititudcs un Drinking<lb/>
K:30P.M IO:0OPM Lets Have a Party" Making Non<lb/>
U oholu I innks, Rei ipes and<lb/>
I ikhJ featuring Stuart Haithcotl<lb/>
I asternarolina Sch?M)l ol<lb/>
Bartending<lb/>
Mendenhall 244<lb/>
Thursday, October 24<lb/>
2:00PM 4 imp M rricycleRaces lntluenc I<lb/>
Alcohol on ke.K nun I ime<lb/>
? H)P M y H)P M Makmgand rasti N Mcohoht<lb/>
Steven Haithcotl<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
North I awn<lb/>
(irogs<lb/>
1). iwntown (ireenv ille<lb/>
Saturday. October 2f<lb/>
1:30P.M. h'ootball 1(1 rh Carolina Ficklen Stadiu<lb/>
Know vow limits, act responsiblv<lb/>
Sunday. October 2"<lb/>
lHI I M h- wareness Vrl<lb/>
I nscml<lb/>
m<lb/>
Mendenhall Patio or<lb/>
Hendriv theatre<lb/>
1 uesdav.ktober 2V<lb/>
I n?ip M ; mil' i<lb/>
1 loi it ion 1 an<lb/>
Scotl Hall I.ohhv<lb/>
hitr Ifore tlroboJ laformatkm Contact<lb/>
( ampus ikrohol and Drug Program<lb/>
757-6793<lb/>
. I 1 is Ki t Kl 1 . IP! ro I HI i'l HI (<lb/>
I kets R ; . ?<lb/>
Drunken<lb/>
we can<lb/>
a difference.<lb/>
We all are aware of the tragedy caused by drunken drivers The deaths, the accidents and the<lb/>
human suffering resulting from their irresponsible behavior<lb/>
Tough, enforceable drunken driving laws will help So will alcohol education and treatment<lb/>
But more is necessary We each need to get involved in the campaign against drunken driving<lb/>
We must ensure that we re individually contributing to the solutions and not to the problem<lb/>
And that means acting responsibly, never mixing driving and heavy drinking<lb/>
By knowing our limits and sticking to them<lb/>
By taking the responsibility for those to whom we serve alcohol, making sure our friends<lb/>
associates and guests don t exceed their limits<lb/>
It also means not allowing someone to drive who has had too much to drink As the saying<lb/>
goes. Friends Don't Let Friends Drive Drunk<lb/>
We can each be a part of the answer<lb/>
What we do does make a difference<lb/>
We Support Responsible Use Of Alcohol<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
And Steve Hall, Campus Representative<lb/>
Miller Brewing Company<lb/>
GftlJjtr<lb/>
?<lb/>
" " ??'( ???'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0004"/><lb/>
?I)c iEaat OlarnUman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
roM Norton, cm. !????.<lb/>
I V Sl(  ?,wajuij <lb/>
TOM LUVENDER, ? ?, ??,???<lb/>
Anthony Martin, a<lb/>
John Peterson. c?m<lb/>
Shannon Short, ,w?.? vw-<lb/>
Debbie Stevens. v<lb/>
Bui Mn(HniJ?nWw,fr<lb/>
MlKl 1 i DWICK, w?fi<lb/>
R " K Mc I 'KM M<lb/>
v on Coopi k<lb/>
1 ORIN PASQl !<lb/>
NDREU Jov Nl R,<lb/>
Hi I HANI! I Johns. N<lb/>
7, ! J,s <lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Hunger<lb/>
Student Organization Formed<lb/>
Yesterday hundreds of campuses<lb/>
und the nation sponsored educa-<lb/>
tional events and fundraisers<lb/>
designed to help bring about an end<lb/>
to world hunger. A major organizer<lb/>
and sponsor of many of these<lb/>
events was the National Student<lb/>
C ampaign Against Hunger. The<lb/>
NSCAH, which is a joint project of<lb/>
Public Interest Research<lb/>
ups and USA tor Africa, aims<lb/>
uild a movement against hunger<lb/>
will be able to sustain its ef-<lb/>
- over a long period of time,<lb/>
thus mobilizing students on a mass<lb/>
scale to bring about an end to world<lb/>
hunger.<lb/>
vv<lb/>
Students on the campus meal<lb/>
rado state Universit)<lb/>
inged to give up their evening<lb/>
meal and donate the money to a<lb/>
nger relief organization.<lb/>
at Boston College passed a<lb/>
bucket at a sold-out foot-<lb/>
ball game. V the Universit) of<lb/>
Moi hour credit course<lb/>
been established that will deal<lb/>
world tood issues. At the<lb/>
Connecticut! and at<lb/>
over the country<lb/>
? ere held with pro-<lb/>
s o hunger relief<lb/>
se pan<lb/>
ding fundraisers to<lb/>
Vfrica; 2) sponsi<lb/>
educational events complete<lb/>
speakers, courtes) of the<lb/>
AH, to deepen public<lb/>
tnding about hunger; and 3)<lb/>
projects to ? hungei in<lb/>
d States.<lb/>
N S<lb/>
making communities viable by<lb/>
planning for reservoirs, irrigation<lb/>
projects and education efforts<lb/>
designed to increase the skill and<lb/>
knowledge of local farmers. Final-<lb/>
ly, ten percent goes to combatting<lb/>
hunger in the United States. The<lb/>
way USA for Africa spends its<lb/>
money is by funding specific pro-<lb/>
jects proposed by "reputable"<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
According to NSCAH spokesper-<lb/>
son Janet Anderson, the campaign<lb/>
has already gotten responses from<lb/>
1,000 campuses and: "people are<lb/>
still calling and writing The cam-<lb/>
paign, she adds, has alot of cam-<lb/>
puses involved in making large<lb/>
cardboard feet with students'<lb/>
signatures on them. The feet bear<lb/>
the inscription: "Students Stamp-<lb/>
ing Out Hunger Ultimatelv, says<lb/>
Anderson, the NSCAH plans to<lb/>
send the feet to the House Select<lb/>
C ommittee on Hunger.<lb/>
While it is difficult to gage the<lb/>
level of success that the NSCAH is<lb/>
likely to meet with it is certain that,<lb/>
being co-sponsored by the over 100<lb/>
Public Interest Research Groups on<lb/>
America's campuses and USA for<lb/>
Africa, it is a force to be reckoned<lb/>
with. And, at the very least, in an<lb/>
age when famine and drought are<lb/>
threatening to engulf more and<lb/>
more of the African continent it is<lb/>
encouraging to see students ex-<lb/>
hibiting a humanitarian impulse.<lb/>
v hile the NSC H is working in<lb/>
ition with ISA tor Africa it<lb/>
? discourage local studeni<lb/>
nizations from donating to<lb/>
anger relief groups such as<lb/>
Oxfam America or World Vision.<lb/>
USA tor Africa breaks its funds<lb/>
wn into four categories in an at-<lb/>
wage a comprhensive fight<lb/>
st hunger. Thirty-five percent<lb/>
s proceeds go to immediate<lb/>
?t relief in the form of food<lb/>
d medical care. Thirty-five per-<lb/>
u goes to development aid in the<lb/>
'orm of farm supplies, seed, and<lb/>
fertilizer. Twenty percent goes to<lb/>
long term policy planning aimed at<lb/>
"Students have been among trv<lb/>
strongest supporters of USA for<lb/>
Africa. But we must do more than<lb/>
buy the album, we must commit<lb/>
ourselves to the struggle to end<lb/>
iiunger. "<lb/>
? Amv Carter<lb/>
"The Sat tonal Student Campaign<lb/>
Against Hunger is a chance to join<lb/>
forces with USA for Africa in mak-<lb/>
ing a brighter day for so manv less<lb/>
fortunate people. Students are the<lb/>
hope of the future. I hope that they<lb/>
will give (heir time, talent and<lb/>
energy to begin building that future<lb/>
now. "<lb/>
? Lionel Richie<lb/>
4fiM<lb/>
Anti-<lb/>
I I<lb/>
pus<lb/>
Now You Can Do More To Fight<lb/>
Hunger Than Buy The Record.<lb/>
Farm Economy In Trouble Meet Schl<lb/>
B GENE LOGSDON<lb/>
Moth?r Jonj<lb/>
I cringe every time I hear a politician<lb/>
boast to an audience about how in this<lb/>
great country one farmer can teed 78<lb/>
people. Or about turn one hour of farm<lb/>
labor produces 15 times more than it did<lb/>
60 years ago, as President Reagan<lb/>
himself (no friend to farmers) once<lb/>
bragged at an appearance before I S<lb/>
Department of Agriculture employees.<lb/>
How lucky Americans are. Reagan said,<lb/>
to spend only 17 percent ol their<lb/>
disposable income on food ? the lowesi<lb/>
rate in the world.<lb/>
These statistics are the worst kind of<lb/>
misrepresentation because they are, in a<lb/>
narrow sense, tacts. You can repeal<lb/>
them with one hand on the Bible<lb/>
without fear of perjury or a boll oi<lb/>
lightning from above. I lie typical in-<lb/>
dividual is therefore not going<lb/>
understand how they are false, espe<lb/>
ly when repeated, as ;he often are, with<lb/>
much preening o political leathers hv<lb/>
presidents and secretaries ot<lb/>
agriculture.<lb/>
But, in any meaningful sense, one<lb/>
farmer does nol feed 78 people, or<lb/>
whatever number the ag r i - f a c 1<lb/>
manipulators are using now (the ratio<lb/>
widens as farmers go out of business, as<lb/>
2(X),(XX) of them have since Reagan first<lb/>
took office.) If there is only one actual<lb/>
producer of food left for everv 78 peo-<lb/>
ple in the population, n is only because<lb/>
there are millions of other workers<lb/>
employed in providing the farmer with<lb/>
money, machines, chemicals, and con-<lb/>
sultation that enable the farmer to pro-<lb/>
duce more.<lb/>
According to L'SDA figures, about<lb/>
3.5 million workers are directly involved<lb/>
in agricultural production ? but<lb/>
another 5 million or so are involved in<lb/>
agricultural manufacturing and support<lb/>
services. If you add in food processing,<lb/>
transportation, and retailing, you come<lb/>
up with a whopping 22 million workers<lb/>
employed in getting food to America's<lb/>
tables.<lb/>
Farm magazine will solemnly exploit<lb/>
the l-per-78 agri-fact to show how effi-<lb/>
cient farmers are. Then, barely a<lb/>
paragraph later, in comes the 22 million<lb/>
tigure to show what an important<lb/>
pact agriculture has on the e<lb/>
how main jobs ii supplies, how much<lb/>
profit it generates. Is thei ntradic-<lb/>
? Nobody notices.<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
more productive than it was 60 vears<lb/>
ago only if you ignort nlythela<lb/>
? 'he 22 million, b . ?<lb/>
unted others <lb/>
which<lb/>
rtilizers arid fuel I<lb/>
chemica<lb/>
itself allow ? .<lb/>
when oil<lb/>
73<lb/>
soaring.<lb/>
Bui ? provim<lb/>
SUP we<lb/>
ild ' I he wl i le idea see-<lb/>
make us feel lucky on tw<lb/>
" us have to engage in<lb/>
?ned grueling manual labor, and<lb/>
that the resi of u<lb/>
our wages for food, "he 17 percent of<lb/>
disposable income foal<lb/>
spend, on the a-  feed<lb/>
themselves is. we are lowesi<lb/>
centage in the world.<lb/>
V d there's another pseudo-aj<lb/>
the 17 percent is an average. I<lb/>
spend relatively much less, the r<lb/>
much more. And babies eat less than<lb/>
20-year old halfbacks ccording I<lb/>
number of studies, the typical middle-<lb/>
class family with a couple of children<lb/>
spends at leas; 25 percent of its income<lb/>
tor tood. In any case, compari ns with<lb/>
the rest of the world are more or less<lb/>
meaningless as proof of farm efficiency,<lb/>
considering rhe variations in economies,<lb/>
climates, wages, subsidies, and price<lb/>
controls.<lb/>
Even if we do spend comparatively<lb/>
less of our time working for food, a<lb/>
necessity of life, is this a I which<lb/>
we should be proud'1 One thing that 1"<lb/>
percent figure means is that bv wav of<lb/>
deficit spending, the United States has<lb/>
put huge amounts of fiat money into<lb/>
circulation. The resulting inflation<lb/>
drives up the price of everything the<lb/>
farmer buys to keep himself going. But<lb/>
he can't push up his own pri<lb/>
keep pace with everyone else<lb/>
He's ju irmer among<lb/>
bu;<lb/>
? and selling to giant ?<lb/>
set the terms of the sale.<lb/>
?-<lb/>
n i toincrea<lb/>
ductioj He t<lb/>
: low<lb/>
e<lb/>
-<lb/>
(w<lb/>
'<lb/>
l tiny and eve- . ? c<lb/>
P? - ? .ia.e1 V<lb/>
nirable about pi ? ?<lb/>
manner that millu i<lb/>
 blown or wa<lb/>
each year, and rivers and ground wa<lb/>
? oned Would we not be m are<lb/>
in the long run if we were to emp<lb/>
manv more pe a kind of tarn- c<lb/>
that depended more on human lab<lb/>
on machines and chemicals1 Could<lb/>
we not cut unemploymei .ild we<lb/>
reverse the trend toward fewer lan-<lb/>
slow- a trend that n. (ricaJly<lb/>
led to a decline in democratic govern-<lb/>
ment?<lb/>
Vet the claims I i American farm i<lb/>
ficiency go unchallenged, ever: by<lb/>
farmers, who want to go on . ?<lb/>
great in the eyes of city dwellers. And<lb/>
ty dwellers are evidently as insulated<lb/>
from the reality of food production as<lb/>
were their counterparts in ancient<lb/>
Rome, who accepted free grain as p i<lb/>
'heir birthright, while the farm<lb/>
economy of the empire was being milk-<lb/>
ed drv.<lb/>
Gene Logsdon, a contributing editor<lb/>
New farm and Ohio magazines, writes<lb/>
a weekly newspaper column and works<lb/>
his own small farm in Oh<lb/>
This article was reprinted with permis<lb/>
sion from Mother Jones magazim<lb/>
monthly based in San Francisi<lb/>
World Hunger Not Caused By Usual Suspects<lb/>
B JAY STONE<lb/>
rding to Richard J. Barnet,<lb/>
autl ? The lean Years, in 1980 462<lb/>
million people in the world were starv-<lb/>
- everyday. Over half of them were<lb/>
children under five. Sixty-seven million<lb/>
' these people lived in Africa, 301<lb/>
million in the Far East. 36 million in<lb/>
Latin America, 30 million in the Near<lb/>
East, and 28 million of them were scat-<lb/>
tered throughout what is known as the<lb/>
developed world Today the picture<lb/>
is much worse due primarily to popula-<lb/>
tion increases.<lb/>
Everyday the world produces two<lb/>
pounds of grain for every man, woman<lb/>
and child on earth. That is enough to<lb/>
provide 3,000 calories a day for<lb/>
everyone, even without the enormous<lb/>
quantities of meat, fish, vegetables, and<lb/>
fruits that are produced each year.<lb/>
Thus, the fact that people are starving<lb/>
has less to do with inadequate food pro-<lb/>
duction than with the way food is<lb/>
distributed.<lb/>
Overpopulation is obviously a factor<lb/>
in world hunger. Today, many<lb/>
underdeveloped countries are still ex-<lb/>
periencing a decline in death rates and a<lb/>
simultaneous increase in birth rates.<lb/>
Yet. Third World countries have made<lb/>
progress. As of 1980 China had cut its<lb/>
birth rate from 32 (per 1,000 of total<lb/>
population) to 19. Sri Lanka, Singapore<lb/>
and Taiwan have also made substantial<lb/>
progress in cutting their birth rates.<lb/>
The fact is that the population explo-<lb/>
sion of our time follows a certain con-<lb/>
sistent pattern. The introduction of<lb/>
public health measures dramatically<lb/>
reduces the death rate while the birth<lb/>
rate remains constant. Then the popula-<lb/>
tion begins to fall. Both parts of the<lb/>
process have already taken place in<lb/>
most of the developed world. East Ger-<lb/>
many, Luxemborg, Austria, Belgium<lb/>
and the United Kingdom all have stable<lb/>
or declining populations. By the late<lb/>
1970s the growth rate for Western<lb/>
Europe as a whole was half what it was<lb/>
at the beginning of the decade. Between<lb/>
1970 and 1975 the population growth<lb/>
rate in North America fell by almost<lb/>
one-third.<lb/>
There is, then, a relationship between<lb/>
the level of prosperity of a country and<lb/>
its birth rate, provided that prosperity is<lb/>
distributed in a somewhat egalitarian<lb/>
manner.<lb/>
More and more, the worldwide food<lb/>
production and distribution system is<lb/>
coming under the control of a relatively<lb/>
small number of multinational corpora-<lb/>
tions. Five grain companies effectively<lb/>
control the world traffic in wheat, corn,<lb/>
barley, and soybeans. Two farm<lb/>
machinery companies control 60 per-<lb/>
cent of the farm machinery in the U.S.<lb/>
and also have a decisive role in the<lb/>
world market. A small number of grain<lb/>
and chemical companies now control<lb/>
the world seed market. As powerful and<lb/>
important as they are, multinational<lb/>
corporations are, of course, not the on-<lb/>
ly factor in the world food system.<lb/>
Local landowners, local governments,<lb/>
peasants, and local consumers have<lb/>
their own interests, prejudices, and<lb/>
traditions, and these are also important<lb/>
in determining who eats and who<lb/>
doesn't.<lb/>
Still, the industrialization of<lb/>
agriculture and the priorities of cor-<lb/>
porations have led to developments<lb/>
which have had a dramatic impact upon<lb/>
world hunger. For one thing, high<lb/>
technology agriculture has led to in<lb/>
creasing concentration of land, increas-<lb/>
ing dependence upon imported inputs<lb/>
such as seeds and fertilizers, and in-<lb/>
creasing use of cash crops to maintain<lb/>
the economies of underdeveloped coun-<lb/>
tries. As land becomes more valuable<lb/>
marginal farmers must sell and either<lb/>
work as sharecroppers or go to the city.<lb/>
In addition, mechanized agriculture re-<lb/>
quires increased credit. Obviously,<lb/>
wealthier farmers are preferred risks for<lb/>
loans with which to buy imported seeds<lb/>
and fertilizers. Thus the gap between<lb/>
rich and poor increases within the coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
Another unfortunate result of the in-<lb/>
dustrialization and corporatization of<lb/>
agriculture is the rise of ash cropping.<lb/>
From the mid-1950's to the mid-1960's<lb/>
the principle cash crop; ? coffee, tea,<lb/>
bananas, cotton ? grew more than<lb/>
twice as fast as the rest of the<lb/>
agricultural economy in<lb/>
underdeveloped countries. Coffee pro-<lb/>
duction in Africa has increased more<lb/>
than 400 percent in the last twenty<lb/>
years. Because export crops are more<lb/>
profitable they crowd out the non-<lb/>
commercial crops on which millions of<lb/>
poor people depend for their nutritional<lb/>
needs. Land that was used for growing<lb/>
black beans for the poor in Brazil, has<lb/>
been convened to soybeans for cattle<lb/>
feed. Black beans then have to be im-<lb/>
ported, and the price is prohibitive for<lb/>
the poor. There are similar examples<lb/>
from all over the Third World. Hence,<lb/>
the high-technology ? export model<lb/>
distributes benefits unequally. Foreign<lb/>
sales of U.S. seed and fertilizer com-<lb/>
panies are highly profitable. Consumers<lb/>
of tea, coffee, bananas, and strawber-<lb/>
ries around the world benefit from in-<lb/>
creased production, and the plantation<lb/>
owners, usually foreigners, derive large<lb/>
profits.<lb/>
Dependence upon exporting food<lb/>
makes poor countries extremely in-<lb/>
secure because they depend upon a<lb/>
world market that they cannot control<lb/>
While production has increased<lb/>
dramatically for tea, coffee, cocoa<lb/>
sugar and similar commodities, prices<lb/>
have fallen in real terms, and when<lb/>
compared with imported agricultural in-<lb/>
puts and manufactured goods.<lb/>
disastrously so. Short-term price rises!<lb/>
as for example in sugar and coffee, br-<lb/>
ing on a strong reaction in the world<lb/>
market because there are many com-<lb/>
petitive sources of supply. The fluctua-<lb/>
tions in agricultural exports, then, is a<lb/>
direct cause of hunger in poor countries<lb/>
dependent upon cash crops.<lb/>
The only way to combat world<lb/>
hunger on any long-term basis is to<lb/>
develop a Third World agriculture that<lb/>
is more labor intensive than industrializ-<lb/>
ed. It should also depend less upon<lb/>
chemical fertilizers than agriculture in<lb/>
the developed world does because of the<lb/>
world shortage of petroleum that is used<lb/>
in fertilizers. In addition, the developed<lb/>
world must provide food aid to combat<lb/>
emergency famines in poor countries<lb/>
and loans for long term development<lb/>
projects that would be aimed at making<lb/>
the country self-sufficient.<lb/>
The economic policies of the<lb/>
U.S. government should stop favoring<lb/>
the interests of large agri-business cor-<lb/>
porations and instead should promote a<lb/>
more decentralized and democratic<lb/>
agricultural industry, both within this<lb/>
country and around the globe. If such<lb/>
efforts were to be undertaken tommor-<lb/>
row we could wipe hunger's ugly visage<lb/>
from the face of our planet forever.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Orbach<lb/>
u<lb/>
fI Srm H<lb/>
V I<lb/>
M<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
Rep Wa.<lb/>
pei<lb/>
Mar" ' a<lb/>
Marii t<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
pu"<lb/>
to dev<lb/>
sta<lb/>
Pres<lb/>
thre<lb/>
b occ<lb/>
N<lb/>
Top<lb/>
rela<lb/>
develop<lb/>
toui<lb/>
coas<lb/>
CKkken A IImmIH<lb/>
<lb/>
Tailgate With<lb/>
Tin?? Ovtt<lb/>
Open 24 Hours'<lb/>
$<lb/>
NEED CASH?<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Gun &amp; Pawn<lb/>
752-2464<lb/>
500 N. Green.<lb/>
$<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0005"/><lb/>
I HI I AM i KOt 1N1AN<lb/>
OCTOBER 17, 1983<lb/>
Io Fight<lb/>
Record.<lb/>
-<lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ns<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'irn<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?ini-<lb/>
<lb/>
tiated en i art ? farm<lb/>
g milk-<lb/>
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Anti-Nuclear Group Plans March<lb/>
Md 1 I s, CA (CPS) -<lb/>
Hoping to revive the fires of cam-<lb/>
pus anti-nuclear activism, disar-<lb/>
mament proponents are combing<lb/>
colleges this month to sign up<lb/>
students for an "unprecedented"<lb/>
month cross-country march.<lb/>
I cadets of PROPEACE (Peo-<lb/>
Reaching Out for Peace) hope<lb/>
act 5,000 people ? over<lb/>
?x1 oi them college students ?<lb/>
arch from I os Angeles to<lb/>
Washington, D.C. next year, a<lb/>
$,235 mile journey beginning in<lb/>
March and climaxed by a<lb/>
ighl vigil bv one million<lb/>
n November.<lb/>
Members oi Congress have<lb/>
 il er clear that nothing<lb/>
to dramatically affect<lb/>
arms race until there is,<lb/>
allv, a citizen uprising ex-<lb/>
PROPEACE founder<lb/>
M ner, a veteran of Viet -<lb/>
ai pi (tests and a longtime<lb/>
? tate hallo! referen-<lb/>
To pull off the "uprising<lb/>
Mixner hopes to raise $18 to $20<lb/>
million, which would make it the<lb/>
most expensive, prolonged pro-<lb/>
test in memory.<lb/>
PROPEACE will also have to<lb/>
find some way to awaken the dor-<lb/>
mant campus anti-nuclear move-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"Organized anti-nuclear forces<lb/>
on campus are not there now, but<lb/>
there is a great deal of receptivity<lb/>
to the issue reports Marshall<lb/>
Mayer, who is organizing PRO-<lb/>
PEACE's current four-week na-<lb/>
tional 125-camus recruiting drive.<lb/>
Because few students can<lb/>
devote nine months to walking<lb/>
across country, Mayer has<lb/>
organized a panel of professors<lb/>
to aid the students in getting<lb/>
course credit for the adventure.<lb/>
March organizers expect<lb/>
students will make up between 33<lb/>
and 40 percent of the par-<lb/>
ticipants.<lb/>
Mayer thinks the sheer<lb/>
magnitude of the sacrifice PRO-<lb/>
PEACE is seeking will revive in-<lb/>
terest in the arms race.<lb/>
"People go to college to build<lb/>
a future, and college students are<lb/>
increasingly realizing they won't<lb/>
have a future unless nuclear arms<lb/>
are dismantled<lb/>
Efforts to build a sustained<lb/>
anti-nuclear weaponry campus<lb/>
movement peaked with the "con-<lb/>
vocation" and "Ground Zero"<lb/>
teach-ins and rallies of 1983 and<lb/>
1984. Organizers readily confess<lb/>
it was mostly a faculty ? not a<lb/>
student ? movement.<lb/>
But even faculty groups faded<lb/>
away in the months after the spr-<lb/>
ing, 1984 network television<lb/>
broadcast of "The Day After a<lb/>
film about the effects of nuclear<lb/>
war.<lb/>
So Sanford Gottlieb, director<lb/>
of United Campuses to Prevent<lb/>
Nuclear War (the largest campus-<lb/>
based anti-nuclear group), says<lb/>
PROPEACE will make history if<lb/>
it meets its numerical and fun-<lb/>
draising goals.<lb/>
"If you add the budgets of all<lb/>
the anti-nuclear groups, campus<lb/>
and off-campus, during the peak<lb/>
year of the anti-nuclear move-<lb/>
ment (1984), you're not going to<lb/>
get even close to $18 million<lb/>
Gottlieb says.<lb/>
"What they're doing is unlike<lb/>
anything that's ever been done<lb/>
before on any issue Gottlieb<lb/>
adds. "There's nothing to com-<lb/>
pare it to<lb/>
Gottlieb, a student organier<lb/>
since the early 1960's, is<lb/>
"awestruck and envious" ol<lb/>
PROPEACE's resources, though<lb/>
he isn't sure it's the best way the<lb/>
movement can spend $18 to $20<lb/>
million.<lb/>
"I can't imagine that the effect<lb/>
of the march on anyone but the<lb/>
marchers is going to be worth<lb/>
that amount of money he says<lb/>
PROPEACE, which has raised<lb/>
about $1.6 million so far, ad-<lb/>
vocates worldwide disarmament,<lb/>
but spokesman Peter Kleiner saj<lb/>
the group endorses unilateral<lb/>
disarmament as a step in that<lb/>
direction. Gottlieb's group op-<lb/>
poses unilateral disarmament.<lb/>
Gottlieb, among others, has<lb/>
found any kind ol disarmament<lb/>
issue shoved aside by student in-<lb/>
terest in Central America and<lb/>
South Africa.<lb/>
Mayer, however, expects PRO<lb/>
PEA( 1 will benefit from the in-<lb/>
terest. "They have raised the<lb/>
whole level of political awareness<lb/>
millions of students<lb/>
The size and drama of the el-<lb/>
tort also will attract attention.<lb/>
"This is basicall) going to be a<lb/>
moving city Maver savs. "All<lb/>
that goes on in a city will he going<lb/>
on in this march<lb/>
PROPEACE organizers are<lb/>
trying to keep the march en-<lb/>
vironmentally sound. Meals,<lb/>
laundry supplies, showers and<lb/>
medical equipment foi marchers<lb/>
will be transported by 75 electric<lb/>
cars. Hot water will be heated by<lb/>
portable solar heat'<lb/>
Marchers won't clear anv plant<lb/>
life when they pitch their 2,500<lb/>
tents. A conservation corps will<lb/>
clean up after marchers leave<lb/>
their campsites<lb/>
Organizers figure it will take<lb/>
tour million meals (all stressing<lb/>
whole foods), two million<lb/>
showers and 40,000 pairs of shoes<lb/>
to get to Washington. They'll<lb/>
supply vitamins designed to<lb/>
facilitate long periods of exercise.<lb/>
The U.S. Student Association,<lb/>
student coalitions in four states<lb/>
and more than 200 student<lb/>
. ctnment leaders already have<lb/>
jorsed PROPEACE.<lb/>
Groups at six universities ?<lb/>
Harvard, USC, Colorado,<lb/>
( alifornia-Irvinc, Massachusetts<lb/>
and Cal State-Northridge ? have<lb/>
pledged to raise $15,000 each<lb/>
toward purchase of large<lb/>
cafeteria tents.<lb/>
A series of campus walk-a-<lb/>
thons, aimed at raising money, is<lb/>
scheduled for November 3.<lb/>
Trouble Med School Celebrates Anniversary<lb/>
Suspects<lb/>
ai d when<lb/>
 icultural in-<lb/>
red goods,<lb/>
i term price rises,<lb/>
ind coffee, br-<lb/>
in the world<lb/>
many com-<lb/>
ippl) I he fluctua-<lb/>
iral export, then, is a<lb/>
poor countries<lb/>
ombat world<lb/>
 term basis is to<lb/>
A rid agriculture that<lb/>
'erosive than industrializ-<lb/>
depend less upon<lb/>
;ers than agriculture in<lb/>
he de -id does because of the<lb/>
age of petroleum that is used<lb/>
isers In addition, the developed<lb/>
id must provide food aid to combat<lb/>
emergency famines in poor countries<lb/>
ans for long term development<lb/>
- that would be aimed at making<lb/>
the countrv self-sufficient.<lb/>
The economic policies of the<lb/>
. vernment should stop favoring<lb/>
the interests of large agri-business cor-<lb/>
porations and instead should promote a<lb/>
more decentralized and democratic<lb/>
agricultural industry, both within this<lb/>
ntry and around the globe. If such<lb/>
efforts were to be undertaken tommor-<lb/>
row we could wipe hunger's ugly visage<lb/>
from the face of our planet forever.<lb/>
t Nt-?s Bureau<lb/>
 public open house will kick<lb/>
I week long celebration Oct.<lb/>
20-25 as the East Carolina<lb/>
yersity School of Medicine<lb/>
observes its 10th anniversary.<lb/>
e event commemorates the<lb/>
North Carolina General<lb/>
Assembly's decision to establish a<lb/>
r medical school at ECU<lb/>
in the summer of 1975. The<lb/>
: operated a one-year<lb/>
a education ? gram from<lb/>
ng of 1975.<lb/>
? the public, the highlight of<lb/>
a eek will b open house<lb/>
- mda, Oci 20, ieaturing<lb/>
: the Brody<lb/>
Med al p Building and<lb/>
Radiation I tocology<lb/>
1; will be the public's first<lb/>
unit) to tour the radiation<lb/>
ter, a beautiful and functional<lb/>
ns state-of-the-art<lb/>
"We hope that everyone in the<lb/>
community will be able to join us<lb/>
as we commemorate our first 10<lb/>
years of service to eastern North<lb/>
Carolina said Dr. William<lb/>
Laupus, ECU vice chancellor and<lb/>
dean of the medical school.<lb/>
"The occasion provides us<lb/>
with an opportunity not only to<lb/>
show our friends how much we<lb/>
have grown over the last 10 years,<lb/>
but also to thank them for the<lb/>
faithful support they have given<lb/>
us from the beginning<lb/>
Members of the medical school<lb/>
faculty, staff and student bod)<lb/>
will be on hand to direct open<lb/>
house visitors through<lb/>
laboratories and educational and<lb/>
clinical areas. Guests will have<lb/>
the opportunity to receive a free<lb/>
computerized health risk ap-<lb/>
praisal in the lobby of the Brodv<lb/>
Building, where a special photo<lb/>
exhibit will feature rare snapshots<lb/>
from the early days of the School<lb/>
of Medicine. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
The open house will initiate a<lb/>
series of events planned for<lb/>
medical school faculty, staff and<lb/>
students during anniversary<lb/>
week Among the events planned<lb/>
are the dedication of a park area<lb/>
adjacent to the school, an open<lb/>
house for ECU main campus<lb/>
employees and students, a cake-<lb/>
baking contest and book collec-<lb/>
tion drive to benefit the Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House, and a continu-<lb/>
ing medical education program to<lb/>
provide area physicians with an<lb/>
overview of new approaches in<lb/>
the treatment of cancer with<lb/>
radiation therapy.<lb/>
The first public discussion of a<lb/>
medical school at what was then<lb/>
East Carolina College began in<lb/>
1964. After a protracted public<lb/>
debate, ECU was authorized to<lb/>
establish a one-year medical<lb/>
education program in 1972.<lb/>
The UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
gave its approval for a four-year<lb/>
school at ECU in late 1974, and<lb/>
the state legislature authorized<lb/>
and appropriated funds for the<lb/>
expansion and construction of<lb/>
the school the following summer.<lb/>
Dr. Laupus joined the school<lb/>
as dean in 1975, the same vear the<lb/>
school fashioned a mod filia-<lb/>
tion agreement with Pitt Count)<lb/>
Memorial Hospital. The school<lb/>
enrolled its first 28 students m the<lb/>
tour-year program in 1977. Since<lb/>
then, entering classes have grown<lb/>
to include 68 students.<lb/>
The school now has 271 can-<lb/>
didates for the MD and 124<lb/>
physicians in the po . : iate<lb/>
education program.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
AJi i Mf A. <lb/>
? - S?S?S?sC.SeSCC.<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
757-0327<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
$5.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Served with french fries, cole slaw and<lb/>
hushpuppies<lb/>
Offer GooJ Thursday, Oct. 17<lb/>
i<lb/>
???????????????<lb/>
Orbach Chairs Conference<lb/>
V News Bureau<lb/>
:<lb/>
ECl cultural an-<lb/>
, ??; will direct the North<lb/>
? iovernor's Conference<lb/>
States Ocean Policy,<lb/>
Oct Nov. 1. in Raleigh.<lb/>
Michael K. Orbach of the ECU<lb/>
He<lb/>
'merit ol Si<lb/>
 o I o k v<lb/>
An-<lb/>
ai : I c ?: mics will<lb/>
serve as chairman for the con-<lb/>
which will feature ad-<lb/>
Go James Martin,<lb/>
Wake: B. Jones (D-NC)<lb/>
? cean polic) ex-<lb/>
across the country.<lb/>
Martin will open the conference<lb/>
with remarks on Wednesday and<lb/>
Jones, chairman of the congres-<lb/>
al committee on Merchant<lb/>
Marine and Fisheries, is schedul-<lb/>
ed to deliver the keynote address<lb/>
at a banquet on Thursday.<lb/>
Orbach said the goal of the<lb/>
conference is to educate<lb/>
policymakers and the general<lb/>
public about important ocean<lb/>
policy issues facing the state and<lb/>
levelop a coordinated coastal<lb/>
e perspective on those issues.<lb/>
Presentation will be divided in-<lb/>
nree panels and will be given<lb/>
.ean policy experts from<lb/>
North Carolina and other states.<lb/>
Topics will include state-federal<lb/>
relations on ocean policy, ocean<lb/>
fisheries, offshore petroleum<lb/>
development, and leisure and<lb/>
tourism development in the<lb/>
coastal zone.<lb/>
The conference is the result of<lb/>
a report published by the N.C.<lb/>
Marine Science Council which<lb/>
evaluated ocean policy issues<lb/>
relating to the state. Earlier this<lb/>
year Martin directed appropriate<lb/>
state agencies to implement nine<lb/>
recommendations made in the<lb/>
report.<lb/>
Orbach directed production of<lb/>
the report which was developed<lb/>
by the Ocean Policy Committee<lb/>
of the Marine Science Council.<lb/>
Others on the committee are<lb/>
Belinda Buescher, Wilmington;<lb/>
B.J. Copeland. UNC Sea Grant<lb/>
C ollege Program; Mary Johrde,<lb/>
Edenton; Jay I angfelder. N.C.<lb/>
State University; William H.<lb/>
Oueen, ECU; William A. Raney,<lb/>
Jr Wilmington and Rep. Peggv<lb/>
Stamev, Raleigh.<lb/>
The conference is sponsored by<lb/>
the N.C. Marine Science Council<lb/>
and the N.C. Department of Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
DRINKING<lb/>
ECU Pirates<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
USC Gamecocks<lb/>
BBQ Chicken<lb/>
at<lb/>
Chicken A Biscuits<lb/>
<lb/>
Tailgate With<lb/>
Time Out!<lb/>
Open 24 Hours!<lb/>
THINKING<lb/>
?<lb/>
il<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Pickin'<lb/>
10th St.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Charles Blvd.<lb/>
830-1530<lb/>
October 26<lb/>
$<lb/>
NEED CASH?<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Gun &amp; Pawn<lb/>
752-2464<lb/>
SOON. Greene<lb/>
7$<lb/>
$7.00 (tax included) WHOLE Bucket (8 pieces)<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
Free Commemorative T-SHIRT (while they last!)<lb/>
SUPPOR T THE PIRA TES<lb/>
For every bucket of chicken purchased, Sunny's will<lb/>
donate $1.00 to ECU Athletic Fund.<lb/>
: ? ? ? mea :? " 1 ;? " ?<lb/>
I budd I Budwesi<lb/>
' ? ? ? ? net I al<lb/>
: ? ? .?.???? : '<lb/>
i ? .<lb/>
??? ? ? neant I be e .?<lb/>
idull t . : ???:??<lb/>
' MODERATION i<lb/>
iid be used whenever : ? -<lb/>
Makl , ? : - : : : ! ?<lb/>
thinking  ? .<lb/>
: I judgmenl . ? f thej<lb/>
?.? they need ? "<lb/>
think for then n t let th<lb/>
bel " ? ???? " ? ?? ?<lb/>
ild ta ? isti<lb/>
MODERATION KEY RING<lb/>
; -<lb/>
, Aak 1 fiuMa !<lb/>
We Support Responsible Use Of Alcohol<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0006"/><lb/>
im FST AROI IMAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Reporters Are<lb/>
Strange Breed<lb/>
B lOl (, ROBFRSON<lb/>
'thei daj. I wa waiting<lb/>
?' ie call at The East<lb/>
nian when a fellow<lb/>
asked, "Whai arc ya'<lb/>
Wa ting 1 replied.<lb/>
V aiting foi who?" he asked.<lb/>
 ? bod eor body I<lb/>
M' I waited, but no one<lb/>
? n ked on several stories<lb/>
ther people. None of<lb/>
P e -a ere in, so J efi<lb/>
Bui no one called.<lb/>
8 I his is how much of a<lb/>
si s time is spent. The<lb/>
:iiage of the fast-living,<lb/>
argeh<lb/>
: Mosl ol a reporter's time is<lb/>
waiting en iew s or<lb/>
tor people to return<lb/>
- a 1 i s Although a<lb/>
fe can be hectic at<lb/>
d portion of his life is<lb/>
to jusi plain waiting.<lb/>
 friends, it's time<lb/>
up a few of the other<lb/>
s the public has<lb/>
8 D Ma Rather,<lb/>
Harbara<lb/>
s ?' Mosl jour-<lb/>
that's all.<lb/>
t Ins,<lb/>
irked in a<lb/>
???? Unless of<lb/>
belongs to his<lb/>
x ? ber 2 - Jour-<lb/>
rous and ex-<lb/>
c lans and<lb/>
 ' ever) da).<lb/>
Number 2 - Journalists<lb/>
have the unique opportunit) ol<lb/>
meeting main interesting people.<lb/>
Most of these people are every<lb/>
day folks just like you and me.<lb/>
You won't find main reporters<lb/>
sitting down to 'chew the fat'<lb/>
with Ron and Nancy.<lb/>
Misconception Numbei ; Joui<lb/>
nalism is a profession filled with<lb/>
intrigue and suspense In<lb/>
vestigative reporters gel into<lb/>
some prett) dangerous situations.<lb/>
FACT Number 3 Mosl jour<lb/>
nalists don't get the opportunit)<lb/>
to investigate many potentiall)<lb/>
dangerous stories. Reporting is<lb/>
relative!) sate, unless you con-<lb/>
sider slamming your finger in a<lb/>
filing cabinet drawei while look<lb/>
ing for a case folder hazardous<lb/>
While attempting to gel an inter-<lb/>
view. I did manage to find mysell<lb/>
standing between a group ol ami<lb/>
apartheid protesters and some<lb/>
angr) looking he, k lets.<lb/>
However, the situation wat<lb/>
nearh as dangerous as it dp-<lb/>
peared at the time . irnalists<lb/>
are not Mike Wallace<lb/>
Misconception Number 4 - Jour-<lb/>
nalists die loo pUsh. I he 're<lb/>
always trying to find trouble<lb/>
where their real!) isn'<lb/>
Reporters stick th<lb/>
where the) don't belong<lb/>
FACT Number 4 Reporters<lb/>
must ask main people .<lb/>
in order to obtaii<lb/>
detailed information<lb/>
perform a 'watchdog' <lb/>
insuring tl at the pub:<lb/>
ol illegalities and<lb/>
Watergates doi com<lb/>
everyda) nd journalists<lb/>
ot the reasons u h)<lb/>
Misconception Number c<lb/>
sts are too liberal I<lb/>
alwas putting down the . .<lb/>
and the president.<lb/>
FACT Number 5 ? As<lb/>
fessions, Democrats and<lb/>
(x roBi h<lb/>
I'r '<lb/>
Singer Ray Charles<lb/>
Helps Handicapped<lb/>
Jour nalism.This ts how much of a<lb/>
journalist's time is spent. The<lb/>
Public image of the fast-living,<lb/>
JIML60TCENS Th. t?U C?rol.A.n<lb/>
hard-drinking journalist is iargeh<lb/>
false<lb/>
Rt-T blica he found in<lb/>
n .i president's<lb/>
pop<lb/>
nalists is low it you ?<lb/>
Reagan, y i<lb/>
-<lb/>
Cd  I )r.<lb/>
ke Reag<lb/>
love negative<lb/>
publicit) al iim. Makes<lb/>
nd hold on to<lb/>
friends, some o us<lb/>
journalisi n voted foi Pi<lb/>
dent Reagan.<lb/>
Hopetully. some of the<lb/>
miscon<lb/>
en clea<lb/>
course, I've been a i<lb/>
onh a few months,<lb/>
' mces<lb/>
x 'lends, ;<lb/>
u see i<lb/>
tssed like a bum.<lb/>
I) didn'i have anything<lb/>
wear<lb/>
(Doug Roberson is a sei<lb/>
? minoring<lb/>
nalism.)<lb/>
Record Review Roundup<lb/>
JAY &amp; KM IOTT kRAYF 1<lb/>
Rayharles showed up<lb/>
While House resent<lb/>
President Reagan's bl<lb/>
new public service ad Na<lb/>
rial Organizati<lb/>
tv.<lb/>
"There are 35 million pe<lb/>
with disabilities in <lb/>
day Charles told us du . i<lb/>
interview on the White H<lb/>
lawn. "Do you know v<lb/>
warn fe?"<lb/>
Charles sa<lb/>
need what mosl p<lb/>
 'A<lb/>
g<lb/>
said " ;<lb/>
want. We w<lb/>
the disabled, tying<lb/>
CSS<lb/>
"We wa<lb/>
everythi . R .<lb/>
it now I wa<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bu ??: al<lb/>
pur<lb/>
ped<lb/>
"I ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
sax. I got it ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
! acclaimed as a mu . s<lb/>
ise inspiring<lb/>
jazz, bines, pop, soul and even<lb/>
platinum albums.<lb/>
Award<lb/>
Playboy' la an Hall<lb/>
f Fa<lb/>
Hall of Fai<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Mil was mad-<lb/>
-<lb/>
. -pel mu<lb/>
ii ?<lb/>
. believe<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
He<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
w as<lb/>
Mu<lb/>
ick<lb/>
-<lb/>
B<lb/>
Please see i , pav,e 7<lb/>
Loverboy And Hooters Rock<lb/>
M.PARKER &amp; I SKAR1<lb/>
ECL students have long been<lb/>
deprived of recentlv released<lb/>
album info; the Couch Potatoes<lb/>
shall attempt to inform you now<lb/>
and in the weeks to come of up-<lb/>
coming music. We appreciate<lb/>
Apple Records' suppl) of albums<lb/>
this week. So put on your ear-<lb/>
phones<lb/>
KISS ? Asylum<lb/>
Another monotonous,<lb/>
repetitious, predictable album<lb/>
right off the pop heavy metal<lb/>
assembly line. Nearly every song<lb/>
follows the verse-chorus-verse-<lb/>
solo-chorus-etc. format of con-<lb/>
tinuous, non-stop, harmonic-<lb/>
upon-harmonic vocals. "Tears<lb/>
are Fallin the album's video<lb/>
single release, will probably lure<lb/>
hard-core Kiss fans into another<lb/>
disc for their 20-album collec-<lb/>
tion. Although their new guitarisr<lb/>
ws some talent, especial!)<lb/>
"Radar for I ove" and "Love's a<lb/>
Deadlv Weapon he doesn't<lb/>
get a very good chance to show<lb/>
his stuff. We give it a C<lb/>
written bv Bryan d 1<lb/>
r:cdw, nfora . V1TV<lb/>
video. Overall,<lb/>
( anada's veteran ?<lb/>
provemenl ovei<lb/>
therefore me . a B<lb/>
THE HOOTERS<lb/>
ight<lb/>
er<lb/>
l "U<lb/>
I OVERBOY<lb/>
Minute of It<lb/>
Lovin' Every<lb/>
Hooters new alb<lb/>
suprise pick hit this week B .<lb/>
their first major-label<lb/>
Senous Sight hits home<lb/>
isic. The mandolin<lb/>
such soi g<lb/>
We Danced" .<lb/>
"u ildrenGo In the<lb/>
m, the Hooters' urn-<lb/>
could win then a<lb/>
.ketiess<lb/>
RT M and U2. A B is our grade<lb/>
lovin' Every Minute of It's<lb/>
main difference is Paul Dean's<lb/>
razor-sharp guitar riffs, tastefully<lb/>
mixed keyboard effects and new<lb/>
signs of originality. The title<lb/>
song, in case it hasn't been<lb/>
engraved in your mind, will be<lb/>
soon. Well done "Dangerous<lb/>
Boone To Hudson:<lb/>
'Get The Disease Out<lb/>
Billy The Kid Struts His Stuff<lb/>
The Louisville Ballet will appear at McOiius Theatre Thursday at<lb/>
8 p.m. Tickets to the performance arc 5.00 for ECU students<lb/>
and guest, 7.00 for youth (high school and under), and 10 00 for<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff, and the public.<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) The<lb/>
wife of singer Pat Boone con-<lb/>
ducted an evangelical prayer ser-<lb/>
vice at Rock Hudson's bedside<lb/>
shortly after his death, chanting<lb/>
"get the disease out of the body"<lb/>
as the coroner waited to take the<lb/>
body away, People magazine<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
In its Oct. 21 issue, released<lb/>
Sunday, People said Shirley<lb/>
Boone, who was called by one of<lb/>
Husdon's nurses to the actor's<lb/>
bedside about 20 minutes after<lb/>
his death Oct. 2 from AIDS,<lb/>
grasped his legs and spoke in<lb/>
tongues during the half-hour<lb/>
evangelical service.<lb/>
Clutching a Bible, Mrs. Boone<lb/>
chanted "get the disease out of<lb/>
the body over the corpse as the<lb/>
coroner waited downstairs in<lb/>
Hudson's Beverly Hills home, the<lb/>
magazine said.<lb/>
The magazine said Hudson,<lb/>
who was raised as a Roman<lb/>
Catholic, made his confession to<lb/>
a priest in the weeks before-he<lb/>
died of acquired immune defi-<lb/>
ciency syndrome at the age of 59<lb/>
and received Communion. The<lb/>
priest also administered the last<lb/>
rites.<lb/>
The night before Hudson's<lb/>
death, a Pentecostal prayer group<lb/>
of which the Boones and two of<lb/>
Hudson's four nurses are<lb/>
members came to pray for the ac-<lb/>
tor's recovery as he lay as un-<lb/>
conscious in his bed.<lb/>
"After a while when we were<lb/>
all standing around his bed, he<lb/>
raised up off his pillow and smil-<lb/>
ed at us said Boone. "It was a<lb/>
real turnaround. Because of this<lb/>
sign of rejuvenation, one of the<lb/>
nurses, with (friend) Tom Clark's<lb/>
help, laid out some nice clothes<lb/>
for Rock to wear the next day<lb/>
The following morning<lb/>
Husdon awoke early and was<lb/>
dressed by the nurse. But Clark,<lb/>
concerned that it was too soon<lb/>
for the actor to be getting up, un-<lb/>
dressed him and put him back to<lb/>
bed, People said.<lb/>
Hudson died a half hour later,<lb/>
the magazine said.<lb/>
Using handmade masks, bold colors J MUMr "TBc,ro'4m,n<lb/>
costumes, New York artist left Wav n PF?PS and c,ab?rate<lb/>
mime, dance, music and drama at GravnS ,edta,unil? show of<lb/>
ra 'cry Wednesday.<lb/>
v - s. <lb/>
v<lb/>
3<lb/>
X <lb/>
K<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
u<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
?L<lb/>
Ray Charles<lb/>
Is Not Blind<lb/>
To Handicap:<lb/>
? ontinued from page 6<lb/>
Here the teenage musioa; .<lb/>
instrument<lb/>
after "ah<lb/>
him and his tea<lb/>
Lawrence Garret! Gra<lb/>
Still in his tee:<lb/>
be stopped by<lb/>
Charles lei<lb/>
a dance band in J I<lb/>
toured with the group 1<lb/>
Florida ani Georgia and ?<lb/>
union card bv lying about<lb/>
"It was just a case of one da 1<lb/>
heard somebody say to me, 'F<lb/>
you sound just like Nat Cole<lb/>
he recalled. "And I s<lb/>
Thanks I thought that wa<lb/>
great compliment but then<lb/>
name Ray Charles wa<lb/>
tioned<lb/>
myself. 'Well, fi<lb/>
lose or draw, when I<lb/>
whatever ui) I'n<lb/>
they re goinj<lb/>
me the way sound nr.<lb/>
"Seeing<lb/>
life he said. "People<lb/>
never be bitter about anyl<lb/>
They should go out into the<lb/>
id and learn to keep I .<lb/>
for themselves. The match tl<lb/>
burns you also burns me. 1 do<lb/>
need to see to plav or sing the wav<lb/>
I do. That comes from w<lb/>
Eastc<lb/>
S<lb/>
SPECI<lb/>
CO<lb/>
Thed.<lb/>
?S<lb/>
Sund<lb/>
Octobl<lb/>
ON THE PA- 0<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0007"/><lb/>
harles<lb/>
apped<lb/>
I HI EAS1 Ak1 IMAN<lb/>
OCT( ?MI K : IVS?<lb/>
oc?<lb/>
"<lb/>
f HUMBERT T"? 6?? Carolinian<lb/>
and elaborate<lb/>
d a unique show of<lb/>
Ulerj Wednesday<lb/>
The Family Nastymouth<lb/>
fHfrfr<lb/>
Festival Planned<lb/>
H ' J<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
x<lb/>
A,<lb/>
? ? i ?wy?T  " ?? ? ? ' ?<lb/>
m a k ? o-<lb/>
W. r g canV j f ?o move n<lb/>
TarRiverFest, sponsored by<lb/>
the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce, promises both fun<lb/>
and competition for all ages<lb/>
The festival begins at 9 a.m.<lb/>
Saturday at the Town Com-<lb/>
monsDowntown area in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
For the fun part, many craft-<lb/>
spersons and artists will display<lb/>
and sell their goods at the<lb/>
festival.<lb/>
John Smith, chairman for the<lb/>
canoe and raft races, is finalizing<lb/>
the plans for the races and en-<lb/>
courages people who are in-<lb/>
terested in entering the race to<lb/>
send in their registration forms or<lb/>
call the Chamber of Commerce.<lb/>
a.m. from the North arohna<lb/>
Wildlite Access Area and ill end<lb/>
at the Town Commons. Award<lb/>
will be presented in all tl<lb/>
classifications.<lb/>
In addition, a 1UK run bey<lb/>
at 8:45 a.m leaving the River<lb/>
side Oyster Bar and ending at the<lb/>
Town Commons. A two-mile<lb/>
"fun" run will start at 9 a.m. af<lb/>
the Town Commons, taking par<lb/>
ticipants through the downtowi<lb/>
district and ending at the Town<lb/>
Commons. Gift certificates and<lb/>
prizes will be awarded to the win<lb/>
ners of the events, sponsored b<lb/>
Overtoil's Sports Center.<lb/>
For more information, call<lb/>
752-4101.<lb/>
The canoe race will begin at 10<lb/>
Hooker Memorial Christian Church<lb/>
Dist ifls of hn?t<lb/>
1 1 1 1 (revnville Blvd 756 2275<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
h<lb/>
Y<lb/>
He H V rtim Kmqht<lb/>
Special Classes Lor College Students<lb/>
945 a.m. Christian Education (all ag?s X<lb/>
11 00 am Worship- Open Communion<lb/>
Grecrt<lb/>
?. a h "riC?<lb/>
Rav Charles<lb/>
Is Not Blind<lb/>
To Handicaps<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
Here the teenage musician got the<lb/>
instruments he craved, but only<lb/>
after "a lot of perscvercncc" by<lb/>
him and his teacher. Mrs.<lb/>
Lawrence Garrett Grant.<lb/>
Still in his teens and refusing to<lb/>
be stopped b his handicap,<lb/>
Charles left St. Augustine to join<lb/>
a dance band in Jacksonville. He<lb/>
toured with the group throughout<lb/>
Florida and Georgia and got his<lb/>
union card by lying about his age.<lb/>
"It was just a case of one day I<lb/>
heard somebody say to me, 'Ray,<lb/>
you sound just like Nat Cole<lb/>
he recalled. "And I said,<lb/>
'Thanks I thought that was a<lb/>
great compliment but then the<lb/>
name Ray Charles was not men-<lb/>
tioned at all So I said to<lb/>
myself, 'Well, from now on, win.<lb/>
lose or draw, when 1 record,<lb/>
whatever company I'm with,<lb/>
they're going to have to accept<lb/>
me the way I sound myself<lb/>
"Seeing or not seeing life is still<lb/>
life he said. "People should<lb/>
never be bitter about anything.<lb/>
They should go out into the<lb/>
world and learn to keep fighting<lb/>
for themselves. The match that<lb/>
burns you also burns me. 1 don't<lb/>
need to see to play or sing the way<lb/>
I do. That comes from within<lb/>
ELLIE'S<lb/>
Ladies Fashions &amp; Men's Wear<lb/>
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Bargains<lb/>
Ladies Cotton Sweaters From $8.99<lb/>
Jeans $17.95 to $23.95<lb/>
Men's Lacoste Shirts $15.99<lb/>
Men's Suede Jackets $21.99<lb/>
And More<lb/>
-e 10 percen<lb/>
2008 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Across From I<lb/>
Highway Patrol <lb/>
Present ECU ID and receive 10 percent off! f<lb/>
Mon-Wed<lb/>
8oz.<lb/>
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Huh Salad Bar<lb/>
And Drink<lb/>
s4 cieat ftltice t&amp; e&amp;tf<lb/>
STUAK HOUSE<lb/>
tl<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
'Adults S2 oo <lb/>
5.30 I ANYTIME<lb/>
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BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Held Over 2nd Week<lb/>
SILVER BULLET <lb/>
SHOWS DAIL Y 1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20<lb/>
J 4 V? FOSDA IN Held Over 4th Week<lb/>
AGNES OF GOD ?,?<lb/>
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STARRING<lb/>
Held Over 3rd Week ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER<lb/>
COMMANDO<lb/>
5 SHO W'S DA IL Y 1:10-3:10-5:10- 7:10- 9:10<lb/>
TALK<lb/>
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East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
SPECIAL CONCERT<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
presents<lb/>
The deep, REGGAE beat of<lb/>
Sunday Evening<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
October 27 7:00<lb/>
AWARENESS ART ENSEMBLE<lb/>
ON THE PATIO AAENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
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Bringing po' I<lb/>
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enjoy lusic Bragg brings ? lefight to all<lb/>
listen<lb/>
4.99 CASSETTE OR LP<lb/>
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In the 60 s he put The Box Tops on top with The Lettei In the 70<lb/>
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two decades of rock s best and brightest Chilton s back onr<lb/>
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4.99 CASSETTE OR LP<lb/>
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On his eighth and most rea release. Rid hnuestopn<lb/>
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5.99 CASSETTE OR LP<lb/>
TRANSLATE SLOWLY<lb/>
Translated literally, then name means spirit of the time, but their<lb/>
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5.99 CASSETTE OR LP<lb/>
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THROUGH OCT 30 AT CAROLINA EAST MALL &amp; THE PLAZA<lb/>
VTS4<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0008"/><lb/>
I HI- I ASI (. k(M INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
(X tOBf R 7, IV85<lb/>
Page?<lb/>
Mascot Crucial Role<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ihese mascots came from all oer the Ration to train at the "Mascot's University<lb/>
and will be competing for top honors in February, (an ou find ECU's Pirate?<lb/>
in Nashville, Tenn<lb/>
Lady Spikers Pull Out Win<lb/>
B JANET SIMPSON<lb/>
Miff nlrr<lb/>
rhe Lady Pirate volleyball<lb/>
lean; picked up their fourth win<lb/>
in their last five matches Tuesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
lor the second time this<lb/>
season, the Lady Bucs have come<lb/>
oui victorious in matches with<lb/>
N.C W esleyan College<lb/>
( oach Imogene Turner was<lb/>
p with the win. "We've now<lb/>
ur out of the last five<lb/>
ich Turner said. "We're also<lb/>
nninj to show some c<lb/>
lence overall<lb/>
 oach Turner feels tl<lb/>
- their concentration still<lb/>
seems to he a slight problem I<lb/>
: ad Pirates<lb/>
"We came out strong and won<lb/>
? first, then we lost the second<lb/>
?? won the third Turner said.<lb/>
"Then after we lost rhe fourth.<lb/>
we came back and won the match<lb/>
with the fifth<lb/>
The Bucs came out I<lb/>
. winning 15 I<lb/>
dropped the second 7 !<lb/>
back to win the third 15 1<lb/>
ped again in the fourth 12-15, but<lb/>
did take the match in I<lb/>
: final ga 5-2.<lb/>
Traci Smith and Vickie (iolden<lb/>
both had good game- I<lb/>
Lad) Pirates Donna Davis also<lb/>
played well, according i<lb/>
Turner<lb/>
"Donna lead ff sen . foi us<lb/>
the first game and scored 12<lb/>
 e <lb/>
ime<lb/>
consecutive points before giving<lb/>
up serve Turner explained.<lb/>
'Main of the 12 were aces too<lb/>
c oach Turner really believes in<lb/>
her team and stands behind them.<lb/>
ey're really can be awesome<lb/>
when they are playing well<lb/>
1 he I ady Bucs next match is<lb/>
tonight, when they host St. An-<lb/>
drews c ollege. (oach Turner<lb/>
y wants a vicory on the<lb/>
Pirates home court.<lb/>
"I really want St. Andrews,<lb/>
who is coming up here on Thurs-<lb/>
day night<lb/>
The match starts at 7 pm in<lb/>
Minges C oliseum. Ian support is<lb/>
very, important to a ball team so<lb/>
please come out and cheer the<lb/>
I ad Pirates on.<lb/>
By JEFF WEBB<lb/>
 ?irtbuun, Writer<lb/>
The hometeam is behind with<lb/>
minutes to go, third down and<lb/>
long yardage for the winning<lb/>
score. Time is called.<lb/>
But the nail-gnawers in the<lb/>
home stands get a few minutes<lb/>
relief from Ulcerville when out<lb/>
on the field comes the quickly<lb/>
recognized symbol of the team's<lb/>
nickname (or mascot), exhorting<lb/>
the huddled team with exag-<lb/>
gerated movements and gestures<lb/>
of various expressions of<lb/>
anguish.<lb/>
A few moments of distraction<lb/>
allows the fans' heartbeats to<lb/>
return at least a little closer to<lb/>
normal and they finish out the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The ungainly cartoon character<lb/>
tripped a psychological lever in<lb/>
the fans' heads just as 'happy<lb/>
time' was announced. And, for a<lb/>
few moments, the magic of im-<lb/>
agination took them away from<lb/>
the cares of the day.<lb/>
Mascots, the light and special<lb/>
attraction, and specifically<lb/>
cheerleading, are a relatively re-<lb/>
cent phenomena that has quickly<lb/>
and popularly spread through the<lb/>
college sports world and now<lb/>
raches down to high-school<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
Mascots from 250 colleges and<lb/>
universities were trained this past<lb/>
summer by the "Mascots Univer-<lb/>
sity" of the Universal<lb/>
Cheerleaders Association.<lb/>
UCA, whose headquarters are<lb/>
in Memphis, Tenn will sponsor<lb/>
the National College Mascot<lb/>
Championship, part of the<lb/>
American School Spirit Awards,<lb/>
in February. The annual I<lb/>
College Cheerleading Champion<lb/>
ship and the National Collegiate<lb/>
Dance Team Championship will<lb/>
be held at San Diego's Sea World<lb/>
in January<lb/>
"It all started with the Boston<lb/>
College mascot said Jeff Davis,<lb/>
the former mascot of University<lb/>
of Southern Mississippi's Golden<lb/>
Eagles. "But mascoting has<lb/>
become a very sophisticated and<lb/>
highly trained avocation<lb/>
Davis pushed mascots through<lb/>
10-hour-a-day paces during four<lb/>
day training camps at Memphis<lb/>
State, Virginig Tech and the<lb/>
University of Utah.<lb/>
Pam Davis, cheerleading coach<lb/>
at ECU, believes the mascot is big<lb/>
part of the cheerleading team and<lb/>
that the Pirate squad had an e<lb/>
cellent year as well.<lb/>
"He (the mascot) plays a big,<lb/>
big role. He's an intregal part ol<lb/>
the program Davij com-<lb/>
mented. "He sets the irftige for<lb/>
the team<lb/>
Davis has the right to be hap-<lb/>
py, as he Pirate squad finished in<lb/>
the finals ol two categories at<lb/>
nationwide competitii<lb/>
"It was a good show .<lb/>
us Davis said. "We were<lb/>
two teams that won the n<lb/>
improved award "<lb/>
The Bucs also finished ii<lb/>
finals oi the fight<lb/>
overall cheer fina<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
f he American S<lb/>
Awards will recognize the I???<lb/>
college and unh<lb/>
next Februa<lb/>
wide competition thai -<lb/>
in November dmii<lb/>
the Universal heei<lb/>
 sociation of Mem-<lb/>
the mascot compel<lb/>
pansion ol the compai<lb/>
cheerleading contest M<lb/>
250 mascots spent a<lb/>
10-hour days Ii<lb/>
their character<lb/>
University, I he vie<lb/>
toons, '<lb/>
and learned to wall<lb/>
animals they depict.  i<lb/>
show motion through par i<lb/>
"These mas<lb/>
creasingly important i<lb/>
ing students and alum<lb/>
terested in theii<lb/>
universities<lb/>
IA president.<lb/>
I he I t will<lb/>
d College heerle<lb/>
San Dieg i .<lb/>
Ruggers Slip Past Marines<lb/>
ACC Downs Pirate Netters<lb/>
B DAVIDMeGINNESS<lb/>
Viaistaoi Sports -dH.?<lb/>
ECU men's tennis<lb/>
' tfeated Tuesday 6-3 bv<lb/>
v ? hristian College, losing<lb/>
their top-four singles and top-two<lb/>
nbles matches.<lb/>
Freshman John Taylor lost to<lb/>
VCC's Jaqadis Gowda 6-1 in the<lb/>
sel .oul 6 in the second.<lb/>
In the No 2 match, veteran<lb/>
Dan Lamont lost to John Maltas<lb/>
also in straight sets, 6-4, 6-1.<lb/>
Mark I pple of ACC beat No. 3<lb/>
reg Loyd 6-4, 6-3.<lb/>
ECU's No. 4, Paul Haggar<lb/>
tared no better against opponent<lb/>
Krull, losing 6-3, 6-3.<lb/>
hn Melhorn strengthened I<lb/>
rad good singles record,<lb/>
ing verv Ludwig 6-2, 6-1.<lb/>
John Anthony proved he can<lb/>
perform well at the No, 6 spot.<lb/>
topping Danny Adcock 6-1, 6-1.<lb/>
In doubles play the story was<lb/>
same, the men lost in the up-<lb/>
per matches and won solidly in<lb/>
the lower ones.<lb/>
Melhorn and Taylor fell to<lb/>
Gowda and Maltas 6-3, 6-4 in the<lb/>
No. 1 match<lb/>
ACC's Epple and Krull took<lb/>
olNimatch,<lb/>
defeai  onv( am<lb/>
panero 6-4. 6-3.<lb/>
In ihebirdh, 1am ont<lb/>
and IoydpreventecI anvc<lb/>
sweepol 1he dmbles wit<lb/>
6-0 domination ol Adcock<lb/>
I 1 udwig.<lb/>
With then final dual .match<lb/>
completed, the mens1 record now<lb/>
stands at 4-6. On Oct. 25 thev will<lb/>
'ravel to Richmond for the Col-<lb/>
onial Athletic Conference Cham-<lb/>
pionships.<lb/>
John Taylor and the men netters gear up for the championships.<lb/>
B SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
And<lb/>
DA VID MeGINNESS<lb/>
The ECU Rughv Club extend-<lb/>
ed it's winning record to 3-1 bv<lb/>
edging out the U.S. Marines ol<lb/>
the Cherrv Pom! Air Station<lb/>
16-14.<lb/>
The marines drew firs! blood<lb/>
by scoring a try on a loose-ball<lb/>
play, but were unable to convert<lb/>
the extra-pom; kick.<lb/>
The Pirates quickly regrouped,<lb/>
scoring the next 12 pom's ol the<lb/>
half. Rob Carroll, team advisor<lb/>
and 13-year rugby veteran,<lb/>
scored a try on a 10-meter run<lb/>
Mike Brown added the extra<lb/>
point, giving the Bucs a 6-4 ad-<lb/>
vantage.<lb/>
Five minutes later, the Pirates<lb/>
scored off a Wayne Parnsh punt.<lb/>
ECU's Doug Eckley caught the<lb/>
punt and downed it in the try-<lb/>
zone. Brown was once again suc-<lb/>
cessful on the conversion at-<lb/>
tempt, stretching the Pirate lead<lb/>
to 12-4.<lb/>
Cherry Point retaliated with a<lb/>
long run off an overlap on the<lb/>
wing, cutting the ECU lead to<lb/>
12-10 at the half.<lb/>
In the second half. Bob robin<lb/>
made a valuable play, giving the<lb/>
Pirates the insurance goal thev<lb/>
would need for the win. Tobin<lb/>
grabbed the ball from the back of<lb/>
the scrum and made a 20-meter<lb/>
dash to the goal line. Brown fail-<lb/>
ed on his third extra-point at-<lb/>
tempt, leaving the Bucs with a<lb/>
16-10 lead.<lb/>
The Marines made a last-ditch<lb/>
effort, but fell short when they<lb/>
missed the extra point.<lb/>
Team veteran Bill Zimmerman<lb/>
was impressed with the Pirates<lb/>
performance and praised<lb/>
Cherry Point squad<lb/>
"Thev like to hit hard, but we<lb/>
do too Zimmerman said "We<lb/>
outplayed them technique wise,<lb/>
even though thev had a<lb/>
strong and big scrum<lb/>
While most ol the ECl student<lb/>
body will be home recupera<lb/>
during the fall break, the P.<lb/>
ruggers will be in<lb/>
fWashington) D.C. area :<lb/>
fall-breal<lb/>
I he Bucs w<lb/>
iversitv<lb/>
1 will l<lb/>
?ci 22<lb/>
"We plan i<lb/>
me  At wa<lb/>
ichool<lb/>
JBl<lb/>
Mike Brown (above) boots a free kick in the Bucs win over Cberrt<lb/>
Pointwh.le the ruggers (below) psyche th,mU for ,his wekend<lb/>
UNC Board Reviews A dmissions Policies<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
And<lb/>
DAVID MeGINNESS<lb/>
sorti ration<lb/>
A special committee of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors studying<lb/>
academics and athletics in the<lb/>
university system has found<lb/>
evidence of low SAT scores, poor<lb/>
graduation rates and many excep-<lb/>
tions to admissions standards.<lb/>
However, the board recommend-<lb/>
ed Thursday that no new system-<lb/>
wide policies should be imposed.<lb/>
In a report to the board, the<lb/>
committee recommended that<lb/>
chancellors who head 15 UNC<lb/>
campuses seek reforms in<lb/>
eligibility for college sports,<lb/>
recruiting of high school athletes<lb/>
and season lengths. The reforms<lb/>
would be accomplished through<lb/>
the National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association and individual-<lb/>
athletic conferences.<lb/>
The committee found that<lb/>
chancellors have adequate con-<lb/>
trol over athletics and over<lb/>
booster clubs, which were<lb/>
described as well-audited and<lb/>
clearly accountable.<lb/>
At the same time, the commit-<lb/>
tee's report said UNC campuses<lb/>
had "serious problems associated<lb/>
with our (athletic) programs<lb/>
and some of these have the<lb/>
potential to lead to gross abuses<lb/>
that could seriously impair in-<lb/>
stitutional integrity unless the<lb/>
problems are faced and firmly<lb/>
dealt with<lb/>
The committee recommended<lb/>
that chancellors would be re-<lb/>
quired to prepare annual reports<lb/>
for the UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
on student athletes. The reports<lb/>
would show athletes' SAT scores,<lb/>
the number of student athletes<lb/>
admitted in exception to admis-<lb/>
sions policies and athletes'<lb/>
academic progress during college,<lb/>
among other information.<lb/>
"We felt the chancellors are<lb/>
the responsible party (for<lb/>
athletics) at the campuses and we<lb/>
didn't change that Poole said.<lb/>
William C. Friday, president<lb/>
of the UNC system, said the com-<lb/>
mittee did not need to set more<lb/>
detailed requirements. "It's the<lb/>
attitude and purposefulness<lb/>
that's conveyed by the document<lb/>
that will command our<lb/>
attention he said. "They don't<lb/>
have to spell out every phase of<lb/>
it. The committee believes the<lb/>
chancellors support what they're<lb/>
doing, and e pects them to follow<lb/>
through<lb/>
The committee decided not to<lb/>
recommend any separate eligibili-<lb/>
ty standards for freshman<lb/>
athletes at UNC schools, but to<lb/>
wait and see if a new NCAA<lb/>
eligibility rule will be left intact at<lb/>
the group's convention in<lb/>
January. The committee said it<lb/>
would come back into session to<lb/>
review the NCAA's actions, and<lb/>
might choose to act independent-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
The committee's report offered<lb/>
the first comprehensive look at<lb/>
the UNC-system athletics pro-<lb/>
grams and their relations to<lb/>
academics. Among its findings:<lb/>
The average SAT scores of<lb/>
football and basketball players<lb/>
were considerably lower than the<lb/>
average for all freshmen at each<lb/>
school. At East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity, 63 percent of the players had<lb/>
combined math-and-verbal<lb/>
scores below 700. Only about 10<lb/>
percent of the 1984 freshman<lb/>
class at ECU had scored below<lb/>
700 on the test, the report in-<lb/>
dicated.<lb/>
"Excessive" numbers of<lb/>
athletes were admitted as excep-<lb/>
tions to admissions policies at<lb/>
most UNC campuses. ECU and<lb/>
N.C. State University each ad-<lb/>
mitted an average of three-out-<lb/>
of-four freshman basketball<lb/>
recruits as exceptions during the<lb/>
four years from 1980-84. UNC-<lb/>
CH admitted an average of two-<lb/>
out-of-four freshman basketball<lb/>
players as exceptions.<lb/>
Pam Penland, ECU assistant<lb/>
athletic director for academic<lb/>
counceling feels mat the universi-<lb/>
ty has done a great deal to im-<lb/>
prove the problem.<lb/>
"We have instituted a com-<lb/>
prehensive tutorial program to<lb/>
help the athletes Penland said<lb/>
"The coaching staff here at ECU<lb/>
is very concerned about the<lb/>
(players') academics. There has<lb/>
been a concentrated effort in the<lb/>
coaching staff.<lb/>
"There is a program to check<lb/>
on the progress of athletes in the<lb/>
classrooms Penland added.<lb/>
"Now there is an effort to get<lb/>
people graduated. There is a very<lb/>
positive attitude<lb/>
Graduation rates of athletes,<lb/>
particularly at the larger schools,<lb/>
are low. At NCSU, only 23 per-<lb/>
cent of students who entered with<lb/>
athletic grants-in-aid from 1978<lb/>
to 1981 received their degrees. At<lb/>
ECU, it was only 19 percent, and<lb/>
at UNC-CH it was 18 percent.<lb/>
This may lead us to the ques-<lb/>
tion of whether oi not college<lb/>
coaches have an interest in the<lb/>
academic success of th<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
ieir<lb/>
The number of courses and<lb/>
semester credit hours that<lb/>
athletes take generally was below<lb/>
the loads taken by other full-time<lb/>
students, particularly for football<lb/>
and basketball plavers at ECl<lb/>
NCSU and UNC-CH.<lb/>
Booster clubs are also a poten-<lb/>
tial concern "Influential and<lb/>
over zealous boosters intent on<lb/>
controlling the programs they<lb/>
support can cause serious pro-<lb/>
blems for the autonomy of an in-<lb/>
stitution the report said. "Re-<lb/>
cent cases reported in the na-<lb/>
tional press are illustrative, and<lb/>
no university or college, in-<lb/>
cluding none in the UNC-system<lb/>
is immune from such an in-<lb/>
fluence<lb/>
WIT<lb/>
for s;<lb/>
?<lb/>
N E E O T Y P<lb/>
FOR SA<lb/>
PROFESSl<lb/>
? HE<lb/>
?<lb/>
' SE<lb/>
FOR SA<lb/>
STUDES<lb/>
'HANCE<lb/>
OR<lb/>
.VORD PROCF<lb/>
rOR SALE<lb/>
V<lb/>
9<lb/>
Roieig ? ? <lb/>
1<lb/>
Ococxsc?xcco3y3COxrxsyDocc<lb/>
Prepare Your Cc<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
R?tr?ad Tlrti<lb/>
17.00 a Up '<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
CiA'J<lb/>
i<lb/>
o!<lb/>
impute i ?, i<lb/>
Brake Sa <lb/>
c-?<lb/>
v<lb/>
CAR SHAKES'<lb/>
Foi<lb/>
Ufcnmenj .<lb/>
3ff'Ciai HOJUHCftHOlWASU<lb/>
WC tffMVlCE s'0a<lb/>
(SfFGoodrich<lb/>
TIPE CENTER<lb/>
"Considi<lb/>
J? Home<lb/>
Coggms<lb/>
756-5<lb/>
320 W<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST C AROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 17, 1985<lb/>
al Role<lb/>
.<lb/>
Marines<lb/>
-<lb/>
We a.m<lb/>
fret kick in (ht Bucs in overherry<lb/>
lo psvchf themsehes for this weekend<lb/>
licies<lb/>
intere<lb/>
the<lb/>
leek<lb/>
the<lb/>
Ided<lb/>
i es.<lb/>
per-<lb/>
with<lb/>
is At<lb/>
I, and<lb/>
In'<lb/>
Iques-<lb/>
The number<lb/>
ester redi; hours<lb/>
at hir ? : ? generally was be<lb/>
the iken ther full-time<lb/>
lents, particularly for football<lb/>
and basketball plavers at ECU,<lb/>
N SI and UN( H<lb/>
Booster clubs are also a poten<lb/>
concern. "Influential and<lb/>
over zealous boosters intent<lb/>
controlling the programs<lb/>
support can cause serious p<lb/>
biems for the autonomy of an in-<lb/>
stitution the report sajd. "Re-<lb/>
cent cases reported in the na-<lb/>
tional press are illustrative, and<lb/>
no university or college, in-<lb/>
cluding none in the UNC-system,<lb/>
is immune from such an in-<lb/>
fluence<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE. Commodore VIC 20<lb/>
utet with all hookups and some<lb/>
s including 6 game tapes.<lb/>
"tie storage recorder player,<lb/>
? fick modem with terminal pro<lb/>
issette Programer's Aid,<lb/>
'ory expansion cartridge and<lb/>
ence manuals $200 Call An<lb/>
it 757 6366 or 752 ?346<lb/>
NEED TYPING: Letters Resume's,<lb/>
m papers etc Call Karen at<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Suick SkylarK<lb/>
4 door Air condition<lb/>
P S Am Fm Stereo. Tilt Wheel.<lb/>
ape $3,500 or $500 down ana<lb/>
? ??? over payments of $148 a month<lb/>
Offer Call 758 2174 between<lb/>
ipm. Ask for Tony<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Experience, quality work,<lb/>
B V- Selectric typewriter Lanie<lb/>
? e 758 5301<lb/>
THE MIDDLEMAN: Apartment<lb/>
ig roommate referral service<lb/>
all fee - putting you in touch<lb/>
. " people Let us help you find the<lb/>
? partment or roommate you're look<lb/>
. for. Call 830 1069<lb/>
1 SELL AVON Ca : Sheila 752 7279.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo MBC 550 IBM<lb/>
catiDle computer 256K. 2000K<lb/>
and 800K disk drives seal. parallel<lb/>
oorts, lotus video board, hi res<lb/>
monitor, lots of software, Epson<lb/>
over $2000 invested $1400<lb/>
printer $1100 without. Price<lb/>
? PI .a' 752 5979<lb/>
STUDENTS DON'T MISS YOUR<lb/>
CHANCE: To buy your official<lb/>
Call foi ore informa<lb/>
"OR SALE Nun<lb/>
Durner<lb/>
kitchen table with 4<lb/>
?- 200 or 756 4270<lb/>
.VORD PROCESSING: contact<lb/>
: 5998 i8an: 5<lb/>
?perience in typing<lb/>
scien' ? reports,<lb/>
? ts Dusmess and form let<lb/>
rOR SALE: One year old Cockatiel<lb/>
age included $50 or best offer Call<lb/>
19<lb/>
VORD PROCESSING: We offer ex<lb/>
)enencei typing resumes, theses,<lb/>
echnical documents, and term<lb/>
apers. We manage and merge your<lb/>
tames and addresses into merged<lb/>
etters, labels, envelopes or rolodex<lb/>
:ards. Our prices are extremely<lb/>
esonable and we always offer a 15<lb/>
percent discount to ECU Students. S<lb/>
?nd F Professional Computer Co.<lb/>
Back of Franklin's) 757 0472<lb/>
"OR SALE: 1967 Mustang Ex<lb/>
ellent condition Call 756 5541<lb/>
OR SALE. 5 pc leather luggage<lb/>
-Jever been used $250 Call 752 1726.<lb/>
TAPPER DAN'S VINTAGE<lb/>
CLOTHING. (1920 1960), Jewelry<lb/>
and Coliectables are now available<lb/>
at Poorman's Flea Market on Hwy<lb/>
264 between Washington and Green<lb/>
ville open Sundays from 10 6. See<lb/>
Danny<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICEWORD PROCESSING: The<lb/>
Dataworks specializes in Student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertions,<lb/>
theses, resumes, and more. All work<lb/>
is computer checked against 50,000<lb/>
word electronic dictionary Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1.75 per page, in<lb/>
eluding paper (Call tor specific<lb/>
rates) Call Mark at 757 3440 after<lb/>
6:15 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Love seat, sofa, chair,<lb/>
coffeetable. 757 1691.<lb/>
LOFT FOR SALE: Fits on (Aycock)<lb/>
dorm bed $40. Call 752 3265<lb/>
FOR SALE: Get ahead on buying<lb/>
that special gift for that special per<lb/>
son. The ECU Collapsable Chair Co<lb/>
ilNDT 4092 4093) is now taking<lb/>
orders for the sale of the ultimate in<lb/>
sitting pleasure. Call 752 2110<lb/>
TYPING: Professional, experienced<lb/>
IBM Typing $1 per page Includes<lb/>
proofreading, grammatical and<lb/>
spelling corrections Call 757 0398<lb/>
after 5 15t m<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Elec<lb/>
tronic typewriter Reasonable rates<lb/>
Call Janice at 355 7233 after 530<lb/>
TYPING: All typing services pro<lb/>
vided by professional woman with<lb/>
iBM Correcting Selectric<lb/>
typewriter Familiar with all styles<lb/>
Call Debbie at 756 6333<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
LOST: Ti 58 C Calculator Reward<lb/>
offered call after 6 p m 756 5285<lb/>
FOUND: Computer program disk<lb/>
Found Oct. 10 (Thursday) near<lb/>
steamplant To claim call 752 4635<lb/>
and identify disk brand.<lb/>
ijuo HEWARD: For any mtorma<lb/>
fion leading to the return of a stereo<lb/>
stolen on the night of Sept 28 Op<lb/>
tomca 5 pc set all in black Call<lb/>
758 6921<lb/>
Shop Nightly tii v?The Plena<lb/>
Sturdy Cotton Duck<lb/>
Flip Chairs<lb/>
rue 49.99<lb/>
Htgt ?? . ? ?:<lb/>
covered with heavy<lb/>
jji' cotton duck in assorted<lb/>
colors Great for dor" s<lb/>
vacation homes,<lb/>
recreation rooms and more<lb/>
galleria<lb/>
l?a:eigh?Durham?Greensboro?Wilson?Greenville?Wilmington?Fayefteville<lb/>
- -roocoooccoycoc XIOCOCCCC&amp;CCCO&amp;Cr-<lb/>
Prepare Your Car<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
R?lr?ad Tlr?<lb/>
$7.00 UP<lb/>
SEBVIC<lb/>
For Fall Break!<lb/>
Complex 5 Pom<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
?  Check<lb/>
:rJouf"o"<lb/>
OIL- ,oC<lb/>
4-CynieT<lb/>
CAR SV?.HATe $29.95<lb/>
<lb/>
For l dilhty, fci&amp;he<lb/>
Alignment <lb/>
Ail size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available.<lb/>
3fflClfil NORTH CAROLINA SIAU INSPlCflON STATif N<lb/>
Wf SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
StFGoodrieh<lb/>
SbTIRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
? MAM. 1:00 PM.<lb/>
OPEMMON FRI<lb/>
INtMiXPM<lb/>
<lb/>
"Consider us your cars'<lb/>
Home Away From Home " o3V<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville Blvd<lb/>
ofKocowPP?JJ0000100<lb/>
TOMMY FORE : Have a super twen<lb/>
tieth birthday! Love, K<lb/>
JOY: please have patience Burgun<lb/>
dy will chase away your blue and<lb/>
your dreams will be fulfilled It only<lb/>
takes time. I love you. JR<lb/>
McGARRET<lb/>
DJ!<lb/>
5-0: If you only had<lb/>
COLLEEN: The time has come to<lb/>
give a clue, sometime this week, I'll<lb/>
talk to you. SSA<lb/>
ODELL: I lied, I did and I do feel<lb/>
bad. I did not forget your birthday or<lb/>
neither our friendship. No apologies<lb/>
or excuses are needed between<lb/>
friends, but my conscience feels bet<lb/>
ter. Love Ya Little Paula<lb/>
L.A.G.N.A.F If you win this next<lb/>
one what do you say we all GNAF<lb/>
and celebrate! Good luck guys! Jar<lb/>
vis is behind you! Love,<lb/>
A.R.B N.A.F<lb/>
A.R.B.r A.F C. Abbott, D. Fisher,<lb/>
C. Horton, K. Lipuma, N. Nickel, J<lb/>
and J James Remember it was a<lb/>
team effort and a good one! There's<lb/>
always next year! Get off ladies! B<lb/>
McShea, you were a great coach.<lb/>
Thanks for all your help!<lb/>
CINDY: Happy 21st birthday Hope<lb/>
you have a great day Love. Kevin<lb/>
IRWYWSM<lb/>
FITZHUGH: Get your own Cabbage<lb/>
Patch Doll Susan<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To our new<lb/>
Gammettes! Sherry Jone, Veronica<lb/>
McKinney, Francine Allen, Wanda<lb/>
Battle and Stephanie Perry<lb/>
Welcome to the Sigma Family!<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority<lb/>
100 KEGS: Through twelve taps, will<lb/>
be on hand at the Sigma Tau Gam<lb/>
ma Halloween party. Music will be<lb/>
supplied by Robm Thompson and<lb/>
Skip Castro So come to the biggest<lb/>
party on Oct 31<lb/>
ECU FOOTBALL TEAM: Take ad<lb/>
vantage of no game this weekend<lb/>
Think about the first 6 games ana<lb/>
see what has gone right and wrong<lb/>
When thinking about what went<lb/>
wrong, try to correct it. I've been<lb/>
telling my family about how good we<lb/>
are and how good we can be They're<lb/>
coming for the South Carolina game,<lb/>
so prove to them that you are a gooa<lb/>
team use this week to rest and heal<lb/>
your injuries Have a good Fall<lb/>
Break and get psyched for USC The<lb/>
Fan<lb/>
BUCCANEER UPDATE: The 1985<lb/>
Buccaneer yearbooks will arrive on<lb/>
campus Oct 23rd or 24th Books will<lb/>
De distributed in front of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store. You must present your<lb/>
ID. card ;n order to get your book<lb/>
responsible for marketing, pro<lb/>
moting, and delivering USA TO<lb/>
DAY For more into call Mike<lb/>
Rosenthal at 1 800 532 0062.<lb/>
TRAVEL FIELD OPPORTUNITY:<lb/>
Gain valuable marketing experience<lb/>
while earning money. Campus<lb/>
representative needed immediately<lb/>
for spring break trip to Florida. Call<lb/>
Bill Ryan at 1 800 282 6221<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED: To<lb/>
work at this campus. Good Income.<lb/>
For more information and applica<lb/>
tion write to Allen Lowrance,<lb/>
Director, 251 Glenwood Drive,<lb/>
Mooresville, N.C. 28115.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Christian<lb/>
roommate needed to share 2<lb/>
bedroom duplex. $135 includes<lb/>
utilities 1 ' 2 bath. Call 756 8676 after<lb/>
5.30<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: Looking for a ride<lb/>
to New Jersey for Fall Break. Can<lb/>
leave at 1 p.m. Oct. 18th. Will pay for<lb/>
part of the gas Call 752 0796, ask for<lb/>
Dan.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Non<lb/>
smoker, male to share two bedroom<lb/>
apt $147 50 a month, 'utilities.<lb/>
752 0461. Auailable now.<lb/>
$60 PER HUNDRED PAID: For<lb/>
remailing letters from home Send<lb/>
self addressed, stamped envelope<lb/>
for informationapplication.<lb/>
Associates, Box 95 B, Roselle, NJ<lb/>
07203<lb/>
NEED SPENDING MONEY: Need<lb/>
extra cash for Christmas? Have a<lb/>
little spare time? Like earning<lb/>
money the easy way? Like to find<lb/>
out more about it? Call Julie at<lb/>
638 5308.<lb/>
AMBASSADORS. Great Weekend!<lb/>
Too bad some couldn't go next time<lb/>
Be proud, we made it with mos<lb/>
quitos, without civilization and over<lb/>
THE WALL Love y'all, Aggressive<lb/>
and Enthusiastic.<lb/>
JAMES GRIFFIN: Your day will<lb/>
come my friend Sincerely, Your<lb/>
Brothers.<lb/>
PAT O'NEILL: You outsmarted<lb/>
me this time. Get ya next spring<lb/>
M.K L.<lb/>
Buy, Sell And Trade<lb/>
Through<lb/>
EaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
Today!<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Turn in ads to The Fast Caroli-<lb/>
nian by 12:00 noon one business<lb/>
day before publication. No ads<lb/>
will be taken over the phone. All<lb/>
ads must be pre-paid.<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
less<lb/>
Rates<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Moi . Icnts<lb/>
Each additional word,<lb/>
All boldface type<lb/>
Boxed border(lpt.)<lb/>
- s: ?<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
05<lb/>
.1.00<lb/>
! 00<lb/>
UHliiliiimifnmmitiiiiiii.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
i<lb/>
Read The Comics<lb/>
Every Week In The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
lll?lllllXTTCXlXTXTTXia.llJLX-t-gJULaLXt:<lb/>
USA TODAY: The nation's<lb/>
newspaper, is looking for a hard<lb/>
working campus rep<lb/>
EXERCISE INSTRUCTOR NEEDED -<lb/>
Self-motivated, enthusiastic individual'<lb/>
Call Theresa at "5h-5te<lb/>
<lb/>
Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
10th &amp; Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
AU Transactions Confidential . <lb/>
BUY?SALE?TRADE JP?<lb/>
752-0322 <lb/>
:00 pat Moijii.<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 17th<lb/>
25 DRAFT<lb/>
All Nite<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
ADMITTED FREE<lb/>
DON'T DRIVE CALL<lb/>
758-5570 for a<lb/>
FREE RiDE!<lb/>
TOP 40 by POWER PLAY<lb/>
Private Club - All ABC Permit!<lb/>
Friday Oct. 18th<lb/>
LADIES NITE OUT<lb/>
XANADU<lb/>
Formerly Ultimate Fantasy<lb/>
50? WINE ALL NITE<lb/>
Doors Open ? 6:30<lb/>
LADIES ONLY<lb/>
Doors Open to Public at 9:30 for the<lb/>
TOP 40 of<lb/>
 TIGHTROPE<lb/>
CO FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARMY<lb/>
WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT.<lb/>
The hardest thing about break<lb/>
ing into professional<lb/>
music is- well, break-<lb/>
ing into profession<lb/>
music. So it you're<lb/>
looking for an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to turn your<lb/>
musical talent into<lb/>
.i full-time perform-<lb/>
ing career, take a<lb/>
good look at the<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
It's not<lb/>
all parades<lb/>
and John Philip<lb/>
Sous,). Army<lb/>
hands rock,<lb/>
waltz and boogi<lb/>
.is well as march,<lb/>
and they perform<lb/>
before concert au-<lb/>
diences as well<lb/>
as spectators.<lb/>
With an average<lb/>
of 40 performances a month, there's<lb/>
also the opportunity for travel -<lb/>
not only across Amenca. but possibly<lb/>
abroad.<lb/>
Most important, you can<lb/>
expect a first-rate pro-<lb/>
fessional environment<lb/>
from your instructors,<lb/>
facilities and fellow<lb/>
usicians. The Army<lb/>
has educational<lb/>
programs that<lb/>
can help you<lb/>
pay for off-<lb/>
duty instruc-<lb/>
tion, and if<lb/>
you qual-<lb/>
ify even<lb/>
help you<lb/>
repay<lb/>
your<lb/>
federally-insured<lb/>
student loans.<lb/>
If you can sight -<lb/>
read music, performing in the Amm<lb/>
could be your big break Write<lb/>
Chief, Armv Bands Office, Fort<lb/>
Benjamin Harrison, IN 46216 5005<lb/>
Or call toll tree ! 800-USA-ARM<lb/>
ARMY BAND.<lb/>
BEALLYOUCANBE.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057749_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1HI I AM i AKOI IN1AN<lb/>
OCIOHhk 17, 1J<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
Tennessee- Alabama<lb/>
uhurn-(,a lech<lb/>
( lemson-Duke<lb/>
Michigan-lmu<lb/>
Miami-Oklahoma<lb/>
UNC-N.C. Slate<lb/>
Penn Stale-Syracuse<lb/>
SMI -Houston<lb/>
William &amp; Mar-Iemple<lb/>
Texas- Arkansas<lb/>
West aBoston College<lb/>
Illinois-Mich. State<lb/>
rODD PAT ION<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
1 O U A<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
I emple<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
West Va.<lb/>
Mich. State<lb/>
Cooper Moves Up In Standings<lb/>
SIEGFRIED MEWS tou uadtau nnrwiTTcnur <lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SMI<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
West Va.<lb/>
Mich. State<lb/>
BII I DAW SON<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Penn St;<lb/>
SMI<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Ark<lb/>
Boston c ollege<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
TOM NORTON<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SMU<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
West Va.<lb/>
Mich. State<lb/>
THE WATTS LINE<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SMU<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SMU<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SMU<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
West Va.<lb/>
JOHN PETERSON<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
SMU<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
llinois<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
SIEGFRIED MEWS<lb/>
TOM NORTON<lb/>
THE WATTS LINK<lb/>
SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
JOHN PETERSON<lb/>
TODD PATTON<lb/>
BILL DAWSON<lb/>
l AM WEEK<lb/>
9-3<lb/>
9-3<lb/>
9-3<lb/>
11-1<lb/>
7.5<lb/>
9-3<lb/>
9-3<lb/>
10-2<lb/>
OVERALL<lb/>
52-19<lb/>
51-20<lb/>
50-21<lb/>
49-22<lb/>
48-23<lb/>
46-25<lb/>
45-26<lb/>
45-26<lb/>
IRS Physical Fitness Program Coming<lb/>
B JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
stiff Wr1lr<lb/>
I h e Depart m e n t o f<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Sen ices<lb/>
Physical Fitness Program is gear-<lb/>
ing up for second session aerobic<lb/>
fitness registration From Oct.<lb/>
23-25 second session registral<lb/>
wi<lb/>
be<lb/>
h.?<lb/>
room<lb/>
:o4<lb/>
Memorial Gym. The classes begin<lb/>
Oct. 28 and will end Dec. 6. fhe<lb/>
cost is $8.00 for students and<lb/>
$15.00 for facult) stafl spouse.<lb/>
All campus putt-put: g<lb/>
finals will be held tonight at<lb/>
Greenville's Putt-Putt Golf<lb/>
Course on Highwa) 33. With the<lb/>
reason's end. individual low<lb/>
scores have been tabulated with<lb/>
following outcomes. Jen Tafi<lb/>
and Rick Klein have tied for the<lb/>
lowest match, by shooting a 61.<lb/>
Donna San Marco shot the lowesl<lb/>
ie in the ladies division with<lb/>
an 80. The <lb/>
lowest overall average are Jeft<lb/>
Ian and Donna SanMarco who<lb/>
shot a 63 and 80 respectively.<lb/>
It's time for last Carolina's<lb/>
alley cats to come out of hiding<lb/>
dud register for team bowling,<lb/>
Oct. 16-24. learn Captain's must<lb/>
?nd the Team Captain's<lb/>
meeting on ct. 24 at 5 pm in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center.<lb/>
Registration for Volleyball<lb/>
begins this week. A learn Cap-<lb/>
tain's meeting will be held Oct. 24<lb/>
Brewster C-103. If you<lb/>
extra mone for those<lb/>
family? : stmas gifts, attend the<lb/>
volleyball official's clinic Oct. 23.<lb/>
The Intramural Sports Program<lb/>
will tram you through a number<lb/>
oi rules and positioning clinics.<lb/>
The clinic will be held at 9 pm in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 102.<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
ECU students to tonight's<lb/>
women's soccer and men's rugby-<lb/>
club social to be held at Sub Sta-<lb/>
tion II at 8 pm. If you are in-<lb/>
terested in being a member of any<lb/>
sport club offered, contact Pat<lb/>
( o in room 204 Memorial Gvm.<lb/>
flag Football finals are tonight<lb/>
on the intramural fields adjacent<lb/>
to Ficklen Stadium. Be sure to get<lb/>
'?nt and cheer on your favorite<lb/>
gridiron greats. Congratulations<lb/>
to tins year's divisional finalists.<lb/>
 iood Luck!<lb/>
V??????SCN?sCS?sCsC?S?sCN<lb/>
I THE<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
4 p.m10 p.m.<lb/>
Jters with the Sport Club program invites all<lb/>
Show us your student I.D.<lb/>
and Get An Extra 10 Discount:<lb/>
Pure Gold Tryouts<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Pure Gold Dancers will be<lb/>
conducting tryouts for the up-<lb/>
coming sea ' ere will be an<lb/>
organizational meeting !ODA<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum in Room 144<lb/>
8 pm.<lb/>
Gamecock<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Sold Out<lb/>
The IX I vs. South Carolina<lb/>
game on Oct. 26 is officially a<lb/>
sellout, athletic department of-<lb/>
als announced a week ago. No<lb/>
general public tickets remain at<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
The only way general public<lb/>
ale of South Carolina tickets will<lb/>
take place is if the ECU students<lb/>
do not pick up their allotted<lb/>
tickets or if the University of<lb/>
South Carolina returns some of<lb/>
its allotment to the ECU Athletic<lb/>
Ticket Office.<lb/>
If either occurs, the remaining<lb/>
tickets will be placed on sale for<lb/>
the general public on Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 21.<lb/>
Due to the excessive demand<lb/>
for tickets for the South Carolina<lb/>
game, the Athletic Department is<lb/>
revising the ECU student pickup<lb/>
schedule. In order to give<lb/>
students ample opportunity to<lb/>
pick up their allotted tickets, TO-<lb/>
DAY is the last day.<lb/>
TODAY is the FINAL day that<lb/>
students can pick up tickets for<lb/>
the ECU vs. South Carolina<lb/>
game. If students have not picked<lb/>
up their allotted tickets at the end<lb/>
of the final day, remaining<lb/>
tickets, which will be on the press<lb/>
box side of Ficklen Stadium, will<lb/>
be placed on sale to the general<lb/>
public beginning Monday, Oct.<lb/>
21.<lb/>
Those interested in placing<lb/>
their names on a waiting list in<lb/>
the event seats become available<lb/>
from the University of South<lb/>
Carolina or from unclaimed stu-<lb/>
dent tickets, send your name, ad-<lb/>
dress and telephone number to<lb/>
the ECU Athletic Ticket Office at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Names will be<lb/>
recorded as they are received and<lb/>
you will be contacted regarding<lb/>
ticket availability.<lb/>
Vnyone interested MUST at-<lb/>
d the meeting. For further in-<lb/>
formation contact the Athletic<lb/>
Marketing Department a:<lb/>
757-6491. All students are asked<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 Mon. &amp; Tues. Night<lb/>
Fried Shrimp ? All You an I at $4 50<lb/>
 Wed. Night<lb/>
Scallops &amp; Soft Shell Crabs Combo $4.50<lb/>
7- Thurs. Night<lb/>
Cubbies Cheese Steak $2.50<lb/>
) Fri. Night<lb/>
Cabbies Shrimp Burger $1.50<lb/>
Dailx Special<lb/>
2 Hot Dogs for $1.00<lb/>
Hamburger &amp; French Fries Sl.(K)<lb/>
corner oj ma I vans St.<lb/>
Hours: 10:30 a m. to 2:30 a.n<lb/>
" Day 5 a H eek<lb/>
Phone 752-6497<lb/>
TUBE!<lb/>
Revco Bagged Candy<lb/>
A.ss Pted FIslv i<lb/>
Get it for less everyday<lb/>
2S100<lb/>
vi<lb/>
?<lb/>
STYLING IRON<lb/>
Royal Salon Curling Iron $f QQ<lb/>
Assorted styles ? MB<lb/>
Get it for less everyday lib ea.<lb/>
Filler Paper<lb/>
100 count<lb/>
Get it for less everyday<lb/>
89<lb/>
t<lb/>
IVOIsO<lb/>
Ivory<lb/>
ShampooConditioner<lb/>
15 n. oz<lb/>
Get it for less everyday<lb/>
$189<lb/>
1<lb/>
DATE: Wednesday October 16<lb/>
Thursday October 17<lb/>
TIME: 9:00-4:00<lb/>
PLACE Student Store Sf s tradit,on ?fe'??ence<lb/>
DISCOUNT DRUG <lb/>
?(Only ECU Student D s Qualify For 10 Discount,<lb/>
Does Not App,y ,o Alcohol Tobacco Products F?m Products. Magaz.nes 0. Sot, DnnKs<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
South Park Shopping Center<lb/>
115 E. Red Banks Rd. ? 756-9502<lb/>
Open Mon-Sat 9-9 ? Sun 1-6<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>