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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057756_0001"/>
?hc HZast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving (he East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.60Vr4- 2 3<lb/>
Tuesday. November 12, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium Due<lb/>
For Major Expansion<lb/>
B IH)l (, R()BrRM)<lb/>
M.fl W<lb/>
1 he possible expansion of<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium to 50,000 seats<lb/>
would enable ECU to atti<lb/>
more majoi football teams, said<lb/>
Director o Athletics Ken Kan<lb/>
Ken Karr<lb/>
"As w e<lb/>
expansion of 1 icklen Stadium is<lb/>
r ma<lb/>
K a i'<lb/>
-<lb/>
35,OOi Kan<lb/>
15,001<lb/>
ci Kai addi<lb/>
I10 s would be add<lb/>
ed to the north side ol the<lb/>
stadium. "We would double-<lb/>
deck the north side, creating a<lb/>
balcony effect<lb/>
Kan said the expansion plans<lb/>
for Ficklen are tentative, bin "we<lb/>
have identified this as a real need<lb/>
and have discussed it al various<lb/>
administrative levels<lb/>
 50,000-seat stadium would<lb/>
equal the University ol North<lb/>
Carolina's Kenan Stadium, cur-<lb/>
rently the state's largest.<lb/>
karr said a largei stadium is<lb/>
necessary for ECU to continue to<lb/>
act major 1-A football<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
'The expansion of our facility<lb/>
is really important. In order to<lb/>
maximize our chances ol getting<lb/>
big-name teams, w? need a<lb/>
stadium thai can hold largei<lb/>
crowds he said.<lb/>
Karr added the larger capacity<lb/>
of I icklen would heip in scht<lb/>
ing major team- to play at 1 C I<lb/>
"We had a record ci<lb/>
i ?5 ?4") at the Souli .r olina<lb/>
md a nea I linsi<lb/>
Miami. Io gel these pe<lb/>
.mn to contrast- into the<lb/>
I9s0s, we need a stadium thai can<lb/>
er ci ow ds he<lb/>
such, as Kl<lb/>
? ging<lb/>
face<lb/>
theii<lb/>
schedules.<lb/>
"Most schools set their<lb/>
schedules up to 10 years in ad-<lb/>
vance. Independents have a more<lb/>
difficult time. ECU schedules<lb/>
three to tour years in advance,<lb/>
but we have some contracts<lb/>
through 1990 he said.<lb/>
Former ECU head football<lb/>
coach and current Auburn head<lb/>
coach Pat Dye said alter last<lb/>
Saturday's game, "ECU needs to<lb/>
increase the sie o its stadium to<lb/>
50,(XXI That way, it can attract<lb/>
bigger-name teams. ECU already<lb/>
has the community support to fill<lb/>
a 50,000-seat stadium<lb/>
Karr said he expects the expan-<lb/>
sion to attract teams such as<lb/>
North Carolina State, Carolina,<lb/>
Duke and Wake Forest. The<lb/>
Pirates have played the Wolf pack<lb/>
tor 16 years straight in Raleigh.<lb/>
Karr said the expansion of<lb/>
ficklen is an indication of the<lb/>
positive direction in which ECU'S<lb/>
Athletic Department is moving.<lb/>
expansion tends to<lb/>
reflect where our program is go-<lb/>
ing. I he NCAA's (National Col-<lb/>
legiate Athletic Association) Pro-<lb/>
position 48, which requires<lb/>
athletes to score a minimum of<lb/>
700 on the S Al and to maintain a<lb/>
t average or bettei in a core cur-<lb/>
riculum, is a positive trend for all<lb/>
colleges, as well<lb/>
Break Time<lb/>
JIMLEUTCEN S The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gay Powell (left), Brian Nause (center) and Clay Howard enjoy the sunshine, while taking a break<lb/>
on the wail beside the A.J. Fletcher Building, short shorts made a brief reappearance along with<lb/>
unseasonably warm temperatures. However, cooler weather is anticipated within a few days. Indian<lb/>
summer may be short-lived this year.<lb/>
New Media Head Selected<lb/>
Bv ELIZABETH PAGE<lb/>
Staff WriKr<lb/>
The ECl Media Hoard named<lb/>
rom Luvender I he las- Caroli-<lb/>
nian's new general manager, in a<lb/>
close five-to-foui decisioi Mon<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
"I'm excited about the new<lb/>
position said luvender. '<lb/>
I'm looking forward to the new<lb/>
tllenge thai tin- position ha<lb/>
Students Encounter Anxiety<lb/>
Bv Bl 111 W Kl K<lb/>
M.H Writ,<lb/>
a ? ry<lb/>
essful env iron-<lb/>
met: ? " a ademic demands.<lb/>
lemands and the pressure<lb/>
to p irding to ill<lb/>
Ba! . directoi of the EC I<lb/>
 mseling Center.<lb/>
rhe stresses that affect college<lb/>
students have been marked on a<lb/>
ridar and distributed to<lb/>
?rents of new students at<lb/>
Guilford Colleg<lb/>
The idea for the calendar came<lb/>
from a similar calendar at the<lb/>
versity of North Carolina al<lb/>
trlotte.<lb/>
According to the calendar,<lb/>
during the first month of school,<lb/>
students cajr expect to be confus-<lb/>
ed and depressed when trying to<lb/>
meet the demands of college and<lb/>
their parents.<lb/>
"We all feel the stress ol hav-<lb/>
ing to meet demands when we<lb/>
feel unprepared to meet them<lb/>
1 reshman are leaving home and<lb/>
establishing themselves in a new<lb/>
situation and the effect on their<lb/>
lifestyle will have an effect on<lb/>
their physical health said<lb/>
Vv liber Castellow, chairman ol<lb/>
E( I psychology department.<lb/>
"Stress develops in September<lb/>
when students try to adjust to the<lb/>
role ol a college student from the<lb/>
role ol child responsible to a<lb/>
parent said Donald Conde, a<lb/>
sophomore at ECl .<lb/>
"1 think October is a hard<lb/>
month; students are trying io ad-<lb/>
iiist and having a hard time. Oc<lb/>
tober stands out as one ol the<lb/>
harder and most stressful months<lb/>
of the year. For some students,<lb/>
homesickness mounts in the mid-<lb/>
dle and the end of October. Some<lb/>
students go home for Fall Break<lb/>
and do not want to come haA<lb/>
said Kenny Jenkins, residence<lb/>
director ol Slav and Umstead<lb/>
dormitories.<lb/>
ccording to the calendar, by<lb/>
October, freshman realize that<lb/>
college is not fun and games.<lb/>
Problems the students brought<lb/>
with them from high school and<lb/>
home may still exist.<lb/>
"freshman get stressed out<lb/>
when they realize that they can't<lb/>
d everything. By October, most<lb/>
treshman realie that college life<lb/>
is different Ball said.<lb/>
Ball said many problems en-<lb/>
countered in the counseling<lb/>
center are related to problems the<lb/>
students have with relationships.<lb/>
Conflicts and confusions arise<lb/>
because of the attitudes toward<lb/>
relationships and sex on the col-<lb/>
lege campus.<lb/>
"Men are more oriented<lb/>
toward non-responsible sex than<lb/>
women. Nkm are going to press<lb/>
for sex. Students have a right to<lb/>
establish ground rules in their<lb/>
relationships. Stress and dif-<lb/>
ficulties occur when young men<lb/>
and women in a relationship "tee<lb/>
off" one another Ball said.<lb/>
"Students from conservative<lb/>
backgrounds have some difficul-<lb/>
ty adjusting to a liberal college<lb/>
campus said Jenkins.<lb/>
"Students with encouragement<lb/>
from family and friends deal with<lb/>
social and academic stresses bel-<lb/>
ter said Cliff Fish, resident<lb/>
director of Belk dormitory.<lb/>
The calendar lists November as<lb/>
a time for depression among<lb/>
students, as they feel they should<lb/>
fit in by now. November also br-<lb/>
ings economic pressure, as money<lb/>
from summer jobs and parental<lb/>
support runs low.<lb/>
"Students begin to realize in<lb/>
late October and earlv November<lb/>
that performance in the<lb/>
classroom is required; before that<lb/>
social functions had been more<lb/>
important.<lb/>
The pressure before the<lb/>
Christmas holidays mounts as<lb/>
students tee! the stress brought<lb/>
on by final exams.<lb/>
"Students realize that when<lb/>
they take that final exam there is<lb/>
no changing the past said Con-<lb/>
de.<lb/>
"One of the reasons stress<lb/>
mounts m December is students<lb/>
realie that they might have<lb/>
prepared enough during the<lb/>
semester for their exams cited<lb/>
Fish.<lb/>
As January and February rolls<lb/>
around, the calendar shows<lb/>
students with a decrease in<lb/>
physical activity because ol<lb/>
weather and the slowing of the<lb/>
school's social calendar.<lb/>
With March comes academic<lb/>
pressure. Seniors worry whether<lb/>
they have chosen the right major.<lb/>
the calendar cites.<lb/>
Guilford College officials<lb/>
believe drug and alcohol use in-<lb/>
creases in March.<lb/>
See STRESS Page 3.<lb/>
otter<lb/>
Aftet interv iewii a<lb/>
plica' ts fot the position, the<lb/>
board deliberated tor nearly 30<lb/>
minutes bet ore makil<lb/>
sion<lb/>
lW hai I'm I<lb/>
is set up a period oi observation,<lb/>
' at'er thai pel -serva-<lb/>
tion, I'm<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
1 u vender.<lb/>
idual, according to luvender.<lb/>
He said they include better rela-<lb/>
tionships with campus organ<lb/>
"ions a- tar as news coverage is<lb/>
concerm i. "I'm just looking<lb/>
better communication w<lb/>
staff he added.<lb/>
luvender plans to spend<lb/>
'wo to three weeks working<lb/>
with current General Manager<lb/>
N- ui, learning what is<lb/>
.?ssary to take over his new<lb/>
on.<lb/>
"1 am just glad it's over. It's<lb/>
been a hectic week tor me said<lb/>
1 uvender.<lb/>
"1 would like to commend the<lb/>
candidates tor their<lb/>
ettorts he said. "I know the<lb/>
Media Board had a tough deci-<lb/>
?<lb/>
"I would like to create an at-<lb/>
phere conducive to team-<lb/>
work, p r i d e and<lb/>
nalism said Luvender.<lb/>
"I'n excited about the<lb/>
position, and I'm looking for-<lb/>
ward to the challenge that I know<lb/>
it's going to bring<lb/>
New Teacher Plan<lb/>
Helps Pay Tu ition<lb/>
Bv 1)AW NF GODWIN<lb/>
si?f WriCrr<lb/>
National Education ss<lb/>
President Mary Hatwood<lb/>
Futrell has endorsed a plan that<lb/>
would have college graduates<lb/>
teach tour years in return for<lb/>
payment of college tuition.<lb/>
"Colleges and universities have<lb/>
to explore new approaches, and I<lb/>
think this idea has a great deal of<lb/>
merit Futrell said.<lb/>
The plan, first proposed by<lb/>
Frank Newmman, former presi-<lb/>
dent of the University of Rhode<lb/>
Island, would have students pay<lb/>
back loans bv spending one<lb/>
weekend a month m teacher<lb/>
training and the summer months<lb/>
in rural or ghetto schools or help-<lb/>
ing children with special needs.<lb/>
Upon graduation, the students<lb/>
would give back the four vears bv<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
Charles R Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education at ECU<lb/>
said, "Incentive grants like the<lb/>
one proposed by Newman are a<lb/>
low-cost way to attract students<lb/>
into teaching<lb/>
According to Coble, "There is<lb/>
a teacher shortage right now in<lb/>
selected locations and in selected<lb/>
subjects such as math and the<lb/>
physical serenes and generally in<lb/>
middie school education "<lb/>
v oble predicts that in the next<lb/>
15 vears, the shortage vvill<lb/>
become more pervasive in most<lb/>
areas Coble said one of the fac-<lb/>
tors behind the shoitage is that<lb/>
the U.S. has a mature teacher<lb/>
faculty. "Estimates are that due<lb/>
to retirements in the next five<lb/>
See NEW Page 5.<lb/>
SGA Unable To Stop Veto<lb/>
Future Classroom Building J,M<lb/>
LHJGSN S -Th?Eat Carolinian<lb/>
This empty area is the future site for anew classroom building here at ECU. Included in the new<lb/>
building will be 65 classrooms and laboratories and 180 faculty offices. The new building is scheduled<lb/>
for completion in August 1987.<lb/>
By LANCE SEARL<lb/>
surf Writer<lb/>
In a close vote. ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association<lb/>
legislators were unable to over-<lb/>
ride a veto that prevents a $1,550<lb/>
grant from going to the<lb/>
marketing department at ECU.<lb/>
The legislature needed a 23 vote<lb/>
to overturn SGA President David<lb/>
Brown's veto.<lb/>
The grant would have been us-<lb/>
ed to purchase three series of<lb/>
filmstrips that would have aided<lb/>
students in marketing and other<lb/>
related courses.<lb/>
Gordon Walker, who voiced<lb/>
support for the appropriations,<lb/>
said the films would help students<lb/>
visualize difficult marketing con-<lb/>
cepts and would add a "spark"<lb/>
to the courses.<lb/>
However, Brown's supporters<lb/>
believed the grant would limit<lb/>
funs in the SGA budget and<lb/>
would be unproportional with<lb/>
other organizations in need of<lb/>
grants.<lb/>
According to Scott Irwin, SGA<lb/>
legislative member, "If 30 per-<lb/>
cent of the students took<lb/>
marketing courses and the<lb/>
marketing department received<lb/>
$1,500, then if say 60 percent o<lb/>
the students took English<lb/>
courses, the English department<lb/>
could receive $3,000. There isn't<lb/>
enough money for that<lb/>
Others simply said that<lb/>
students pay tuition; funds for<lb/>
such projects should come from<lb/>
the university not the students.<lb/>
In other business. The SGA<lb/>
apologized to the Homecoming<lb/>
Steering Committee. Last week,<lb/>
the body had appropriated the<lb/>
committee $400 for allegedly<lb/>
spending more than that was ap-<lb/>
propriated to them.<lb/>
However, the SGA Treasurer<lb/>
mislead the Legislature concern-<lb/>
ig me budget over-runs leading to<lb/>
the decision to appropriate the<lb/>
additional money. More impor-<lb/>
tant, the SGA learned that the<lb/>
Homecoming Steering Commit-<lb/>
tee, in fact, stayed within the<lb/>
budget, which led to the apology<lb/>
clearing the Homecoming Steer-<lb/>
ing Committee of any budget<lb/>
over-run.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifiedsio<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Sportsg<lb/>
The best of men cannot sus-<lb/>
pend<lb/>
their fate:<lb/>
The good die early, and the<lb/>
bad<lb/>
die late.<lb/>
 ?Daniel Defoe<lb/>
,<lb/>
<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0002"/><lb/>
HE EAST( ARQL INIAN<lb/>
N() 1 Bi R<lb/>
lK<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
STUDENT HEALTH<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
T fie Great Ame'<lb/>
November 2 is' Com to rw<lb/>
den' Health Center or. the 21st 1<lb/>
canctv ana information on<lb/>
ing LKKres avil tv a1 10 00. 1 0<lb/>
tor Spe ifl rips B i i N<lb/>
Smoker For more information<lb/>
ElCSha-Adams at 757 ?S4t or Di t D Glover<lb/>
AI 'n1 6V6I<lb/>
ROOMMATE PROBLEMS?<lb/>
Have you been to Menaentian Ian i<lb/>
There in m showcase . .h a ? ? Alpha<lb/>
Ptii Omega s pertei t solution ?, s<lb/>
roommate problems Still ntere!<lb/>
DetaHsaie also posted informing you on how<lb/>
to apply 'c youi net roommate Also any<lb/>
brother ot Apiha pi Omega an<lb/>
with ne essaf ? ntorma'ion<lb/>
ECU RUGBY<lb/>
t he Rugby Club will be ho<lb/>
1 hur Nov 14, at 8 00 p ;?<lb/>
. let L b'a' v<lb/>
Anyone intereste<lb/>
season or gang on the Bahamas<lb/>
Break Tour is entourage ' ????<lb/>
nembers attendance s ess I ? -<lb/>
m be shown<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
a ???u- s -g students members ai<lb/>
members are invited<lb/>
?- s Thursday 11 U at 7 pm n room 101<lb/>
"? ? s rtg Bu Id ng Evi<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi announces its second an<lb/>
? ? unclay<lb/>
N . ?<lb/>
 " -<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Greens ? N<lb/>
? will be t<lb/>
???-<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
On Friday. Nov<lb/>
? ?? ?' ? i-don.a<lb/>
Wright c<lb/>
canned foo ISO Which w<lb/>
ink "i<lb/>
COLLEGE DEMOCRATS<lb/>
? <lb/>
NO V 14<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
PAN v <lb/>
 I A<lb/>
?<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
T here shall be a meeting Tuesday Nov 13<lb/>
at 8 00 p "i m the Multi Purpose room ot<lb/>
Mendenhan Student Center Brian Dollery<lb/>
est speaker on South Africa we<lb/>
regret an, mix ups about the cancelled<lb/>
?St week lm I t successful state<lb/>
and the sui i eSSful f lertion work<lb/>
race Call Sandy<lb/>
- mto<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
1 Law So.  ?<lb/>
Stevens house tor a COOkOUt on<lb/>
1 ' Nov is at ? 00 p m This is a reguiai<lb/>
. and we look tor<lb/>
s to attend This will be av ex<lb/>
' ? i tor us tog. ? ? ? . -other<lb/>
and too is. uss future meetings ot the S<lb/>
<lb/>
Bl '58 31SS<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
? will be a meeting Wed<lb/>
Nov 13th a1 MendenhaM's multi<lb/>
purp - ee you there1<lb/>
PRE PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
ADVISING SESSION<lb/>
? ? " ? idvising foi i . ? i i ? .?<lb/>
ipy ' lei  'or spring<lb/>
ursday. N . J<lb/>
n the Physxal Therapy<lb/>
Depai Building<lb/>
Mii<lb/>
STUDENT ATHLETIC BOARD<lb/>
Student Athletic Board will meet Von<lb/>
Nov 18th 1985 m Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
in room 221 at 4 00 p m<lb/>
BALLOON ASCENTION<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma is sponsenng a<lb/>
balloon ascention to support their national<lb/>
philanthropy the Robbie Page Memorial<lb/>
Inkers are $100 Balloons will be released<lb/>
at the Tulsa game and the person tttal buys<lb/>
the balloon that travels the farthest and Tie<lb/>
person that finds it win S25 each c i<lb/>
Sigma house for a t.cke'<lb/>
SEANC<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of SEANC will meet on<lb/>
Nov 19. 1985 at 5 30 p m in Brews'er B 102<lb/>
Area membership is encouraged to attend<lb/>
uisness session Guests v<lb/>
Ivan Hill Past state President of Si<lb/>
f) B Miller Chairman District ?A and<lb/>
David Woods Membership Cha ?<lb/>
? if-<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
na Unive- ' ?<lb/>
'? be presenting ?? la oncert Thursda,<lb/>
g Nov 14. m the A J Fletcher i-?<lb/>
HallatB 15 The program will be<lb/>
trie n i bands of 1 ?. ? .<lb/>
from the traditional sound' ? ft ? ?'<lb/>
Herman and Count Basie Orchestras to the<lb/>
.???ss've sounds of<lb/>
- ? - ' By Bands " ? ?<lb/>
'arge for admission ano s ope' ? the<lb/>
PRE MED<lb/>
Alpha Epstion Delta ?? V net'<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday N<lb/>
Flanagan a- ? jsua-<lb/>
i 30 D' ack Allis tirma<lb/>
?<lb/>
pledy.<lb/>
?<lb/>
LSS<lb/>
- . ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Roon ? . .<lb/>
sored by the LeiS I I ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
J100 Of '<lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
que?'<lb/>
? i ?<lb/>
Camp<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
-<lb/>
5 Cl<lb/>
8 Turkisl<lb/>
??? .<lb/>
13 Fish eggs<lb/>
14 Festive<lb/>
15 F .<lb/>
18 Heell<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
li ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? . ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 123'i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
' li?m<lb/>
;<lb/>
V ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
' II.<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
' f ?<lb/>
v<lb/>
I Mali ? ep pi<lb/>
? ons<lb/>
25 Be m debt<lb/>
26 A1<lb/>
28 B<lb/>
30 Younq I .<lb/>
See<lb/>
Pane 5 For Solution<lb/>
PHYSICIANS FOR<lb/>
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY<lb/>
 '? . '?' ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
today I - ?<lb/>
<lb/>
l)r I RllSI<lb/>
College!<lb/>
Pensive Mood j? number<lb/>
Don give up. Hie holidays are no! foo far off, and the inevitable task of studvin seems to keen<lb/>
students occupied more so than the ? like to he. However, in the long run. concentration<lb/>
makes tor a better character, though it ?m ,he stud-task is constant haunted hx<lb/>
procrastination a student's worst enen.<lb/>
Hooher Memorial Christian Church<lb/>
Disciples of hi r i ??:<lb/>
Mil Greenville Blvd 756-2275<lb/>
Special C ussfs forollege Students<lb/>
9 45 am. Christian Education tall ages)<lb/>
11:00 am Worship- Open Communion<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
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<lb/>
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s<lb/>
Hfv. H Varm Kniqhl<lb/>
<lb/>
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IRTSWORLD<lb/>
104 E. Red Banks Roa d<lb/>
presents<lb/>
LADIES NIGH T<lb/>
Tuesday Night November 12th<lb/>
7:00-11:00<lb/>
College Ladies FREE with Co liege ID<lb/>
College Men $1.00 with College ID<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
e a o<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Carolina East Centre<lb/>
Off Highway 11<lb/>
Near Plitt Theatre<lb/>
Phone 756 6401<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
THE LADIES ZOO AND LOCKOUT<lb/>
Ladies Only 8 p.m.?10 p.m.<lb/>
Guys admitted at 10 p.m.<lb/>
25c Wine and Draft all Night Long!<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
Pre-Game Party with the ECU Cheerleaders<lb/>
Wear something with ECU on it and<lb/>
get in for JUST $1.00<lb/>
Doors Open at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
$.1.00 Tall Boys ?50c Wine &amp; Draft<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL thru Sept. 30<lb/>
$2.00 New $1.00 Renewal<lb/>
Daddy Cool plays the jams both nights<lb/>
Beau s a Private Club for Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
AM ABC Permits<lb/>
I CONTA<lb/>
I $105.00<lb/>
$145.00<lb/>
GflECAl<lb/>
tVVVVV<lb/>
Seafood House<lb/>
if<lb/>
 Flounder<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp<lb/>
J Hours4:3C<lb/>
YA. - NEWLY REl<lb/>
SHOE O<lb/>
Name Brar<lb/>
At Disc out<lb/>
Duck Shoes<lb/>
Sperry Top Siders<lb/>
Ladies Dress andl<lb/>
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Large Selection<lb/>
Tennis Shoes $1<lb/>
203 West Ninth 3reet<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057756_0003"/><lb/>
Check<lb/>
Out<lb/>
The<lb/>
Library<lb/>
I Ht I ASFAKOI INIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 12, 1985<lb/>
VISE<lb/>
lo keep<lb/>
'jiion<lb/>
UBLE<lb/>
s ' - <lb/>
UI QNSI Deta.is In store<lb/>
?2<lb/>
L POtO'<lb/>
' Chips ?<lb/>
tato<lb/>
ips . . .<lb/>
99<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Free<lb/>
15<lb/>
Vicious<lb/>
?pies  .<lb/>
5S1<lb/>
i " 'ogenng<lb/>
Campus Health Costs Rise<lb/>
KALAMAZOO, Ml (CPS) ?<lb/>
Health center fees on the nation's<lb/>
campuses arc about to go up, col-<lb/>
lege health officials across the na-<lb/>
tion say.<lb/>
Students at Western Michigan<lb/>
I niversity, foi example, are pa<lb/>
ing higher health, center fees this<lb/>
semester because WMU's in-<lb/>
surance company wanted to<lb/>
charge the school $500,000 more<lb/>
than last year for malpractice in-<lb/>
sist a nee.<lb/>
hhough no one has evei ac<lb/>
cused WMU ol medical malprac-<lb/>
tice and collegiate malpractice<lb/>
suits are rare, experts sa<lb/>
students nationwide soon will<lb/>
share WMU's misfortune. I he<lb/>
also predict main campus health-<lb/>
care facilities will be cutting pro<lb/>
tms ovei the next few years.<lb/>
Wh Skyrocketing malprac-<lb/>
tice insurance rates are affecting<lb/>
campu-es for the first time tins<lb/>
yeai. experts explain.<lb/>
"Where student health centers<lb/>
have been insulated up to now<lb/>
from the increase in malpractice<lb/>
rates, they won't be anymore<lb/>
sas Steve Blom, director of the<lb/>
American College Health<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Adds Eugene Marquardt,<lb/>
president of the University Risk<lb/>
Managers Association, "If we<lb/>
can't get it resolved, institutions<lb/>
will be forced to cut back on<lb/>
training and health-care treat-<lb/>
ment. They just will not be in any<lb/>
position to take chances<lb/>
Many large schools with<lb/>
medical training facilities already<lb/>
have been unable to buy enough<lb/>
malpractice insurance. Com-<lb/>
panies are refusing to offer in-<lb/>
surance in some cases because of<lb/>
increasingly large court awards to<lb/>
patients who claim they have<lb/>
received improper or poor treat-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In response, college risk<lb/>
managers across the country cur-<lb/>
rently are drafting plans to insure<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Marquardt is confident that,<lb/>
b adopting new tactics, most<lb/>
schools will be able to keep their<lb/>
health-service or medical training<lb/>
programs going, but it may cost<lb/>
students more.<lb/>
He thinks the current insurance<lb/>
crisis is as severe as any that has<lb/>
confronted colleges since the<lb/>
1960s, when student riots sent<lb/>
property insurance rates through<lb/>
the roof.<lb/>
"This crisis has come on<lb/>
faster, and gone deeper, than<lb/>
most we've faced Marquardt<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Medical malpractice insurance<lb/>
premiums are increasing as much<lb/>
as four-fold in less than a year.<lb/>
Campus insurance rates had<lb/>
been rising more slowly because<lb/>
students health centers do not<lb/>
prov ide the kinds o health care -<lb/>
such as surgery - that most fre-<lb/>
quently trigger malpractice<lb/>
claims.<lb/>
Moreover, campuses haven't<lb/>
had main malpractice claims fil-<lb/>
ed against them.<lb/>
Nevertheless, campus health<lb/>
officials sa it's onK a matter of<lb/>
time before higher malpractice<lb/>
rates catch up with them.<lb/>
"1 sense the insurance industry<lb/>
is saying 'We've got to do<lb/>
something about these losses<lb/>
and universities are being swept<lb/>
up in that concern along with<lb/>
everybody else Blom says<lb/>
"1 don't think we're being<lb/>
singled out says John Hunger-<lb/>
ford, assistant director of aux-<lb/>
iliary enterprises at Western<lb/>
Michigan. "It's applying to all<lb/>
health-care providers<lb/>
Michigan schools are among<lb/>
the first to be notified of substan<lb/>
tial increases in medical malprat<lb/>
tice rates because court awards<lb/>
are particularly high in that state,<lb/>
as they are in New York and<lb/>
California.<lb/>
At Western, the cost of $20<lb/>
million worth of coverage would<lb/>
have increased July 1 from<lb/>
$87,000 to $591,000. University<lb/>
officials decided to reduce their<lb/>
coverage and purchased a policy<lb/>
for $211,000.<lb/>
Stress Plays Large<lb/>
Part With Students<lb/>
? Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
"By March, students who have<lb/>
more vested in alcohol or drugs<lb/>
aren't very interested in school.<lb/>
Students who ate not achieving<lb/>
academically by March are trying<lb/>
to achieve socially, later in the<lb/>
vear, the student does what he<lb/>
has succeeded in, whether it be<lb/>
academics or social situations<lb/>
Ball said.<lb/>
I he pressure oi finding a job<lb/>
hits in April, according to the<lb/>
calendar. Underclassmen feel<lb/>
stress when having to decide on<lb/>
majors and complete pre-<lb/>
registration lor the next semester<lb/>
According to Fish, the overall<lb/>
dynamics of time management<lb/>
greatly affect the amount oi<lb/>
stress a student feels. "Pro<lb/>
gressive sequential planning<lb/>
relieves or minimizes anxiety<lb/>
stress said Fish.<lb/>
"All stress is not bad a<lb/>
ding to Ball. "A little stress tends<lb/>
to push students to achieve<lb/>
more<lb/>
I he ECU C ounseling Center is<lb/>
available to students having dif-<lb/>
ficulties coping with the stress<lb/>
and pressures of college life. I he<lb/>
Counseling Center is located in<lb/>
the Wright Annex. Hours are 8<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
College Degrees Earn More Respect<lb/>
W ASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) -<lb/>
College degrees are worth n<lb/>
to male students now than at any<lb/>
time since the 1960s, the authors<lb/>
oi a new United States Census<lb/>
Bureau vtud sav<lb/>
rhe studv, bv analysts in the<lb/>
bureau's Department for<lb/>
Demographic Studies, says as oi<lb/>
1983, male college graduates<lb/>
could expect to earn 39 percent<lb/>
more than men who quit school<lb/>
: high scho<lb/>
Male college students'<lb/>
n iv edge over high school<lb/>
s declined dutmg the 1970s.<lb/>
In 1969. male college grads made<lb/>
ei cent more tha school<lb/>
ids. In 1979, .  fference was<lb/>
21 percent.<lb/>
By 198 ad been<lb/>
reversed. Tie economic edge was<lb/>
34 percent thai vear.<lb/>
I he studv Joes not include<lb/>
tie c ol 1 e g e<lb/>
es<lb/>
I he bureau's analysts attribute<lb/>
the decline and subsequent in-<lb/>
crease in the value of a degree to<lb/>
md passage oi<lb/>
"Baby Boom" generation<lb/>
through college.<lb/>
The larger the college<lb/>
graduating class, the less valuable<lb/>
a college degree is in the market<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Among other conclusions the<lb/>
analysts found:<lb/>
?Even states with low levels ol<lb/>
educational attainment are im-<lb/>
proving. In 1950. 19 percent oi<lb/>
South Carolina's aduhs had<lb/>
graduated from college, com-<lb/>
pared to 49 percent of Utah's. Bv<lb/>
19 80, the e x t r em es wer e<lb/>
represented by Kentucky (53 per-<lb/>
cent) and Alaska (83 percen<lb/>
?Black students' graduation rale,<lb/>
which was 65 percent oi that oi<lb/>
w lutes in 1940. improved to 96<lb/>
percent bv 1980.<lb/>
? I hirl v -two percent oi the<lb/>
American population has at leas<lb/>
some college education. Bv com-<lb/>
parison, 17 percent of hast Ger-<lb/>
many's, 16 percent oi Sweden's<lb/>
and percent oi Hungary's<lb/>
populations have some higher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
?In 1940, 38 percent of<lb/>
Americans at least 29 years old<lb/>
had a high school diploma, and 6<lb/>
percent had a college degree. To-<lb/>
day. 86 percent have a high previously published data,<lb/>
school diploma and 22 percent a although some new information<lb/>
college degree. from the National Center tor<lb/>
Education Statistics was also us<lb/>
The study relied primarily on ed.<lb/>
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h.uvkwviVl<lb/>
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We Buv Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
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ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
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tional cost Pregnanc Test, Birth Controi. and<lb/>
Problem Pregnanc Counseling. For further<lb/>
information call 832-0535 (Toil Free Number<lb/>
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tILDQH WOMEN'S<lb/>
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At DiscountPrices<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE<lb/>
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4 p.m10 p.m.<lb/>
Duck Shoes<lb/>
Sperry Top Siders<lb/>
$10 to $20<lb/>
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Ladies Dress and Casual Shoes<lb/>
$1288 to $15.88<lb/>
Large Selection of Name Brand<lb/>
Tennis Shoes $12.88 to $39.88<lb/>
12 Block off Evans Street<lb/>
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Fried Shrimp? All You Can Eat $4.50<lb/>
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Scallops &amp; Soft Shell Crab Combo $4.50<lb/>
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Phone: 752-6497<lb/>
<lb/>
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2U?e East ffiarolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
MlKF LUDWK k. stEhio.<lb/>
Scott Ccxper, v- <lb/>
John Shannon, amwu<lb/>
Lorin Pasquai . i  ?<lb/>
DeChanhi Johnson, ,?<lb/>
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COMRAPe,Q(JlCK(,lNg?C<lb/>
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AfO,NO?, I WISH TOP6F5C7<lb/>
Acid Rain<lb/>
7V.C Suffering Effects<lb/>
The November 8 ? 21 issue of<lb/>
771? Independent, an alternative bi-<lb/>
weekly newspaper based in<lb/>
Durham, North Carolina, featured<lb/>
an article on the acid rain problem<lb/>
that is currently facing this state. In<lb/>
the article writer Barry Yeoman<lb/>
remarked: "When we talk about<lb/>
acid rain we're talking about more<lb/>
than dead trees. We're talking<lb/>
about the deaths of entire<lb/>
ecological worlds<lb/>
What Yeoman is referring to is<lb/>
the fact that acid rain is responsible<lb/>
for more than defoliated and dying<lb/>
trees. It is, of course, tragic and sad<lb/>
that a small forest of red spruces<lb/>
and Fraser firs, only 72,(XX) acres in<lb/>
size and completely out of place in<lb/>
North Carolina, is dying. (Such<lb/>
evergreens are usually found in<lb/>
subarctic Canada, but the spruce-<lb/>
fir ecosystem has survived in the<lb/>
Blue Ridge and Great Smokies since<lb/>
the Ice Age due to high altitudes<lb/>
and heavy cloud cover.) But such<lb/>
mute tragedies tend to get lost in the<lb/>
bottom line preoccupied twentieth<lb/>
century. So, what is really impor-<lb/>
tant to realize is that acid rain<lb/>
threateas marine life, regional<lb/>
economies and communities as well<lb/>
as trees.<lb/>
For example, according to Dr.<lb/>
Jack Durham, acid rain program<lb/>
manager at the Environmental Pro<lb/>
tection .Agency's Research Triangle<lb/>
Park facility, there is increasing<lb/>
evidence that the effects of acid rain<lb/>
might spread to lowland commer-<lb/>
cial forests. Within this region.<lb/>
North Carolina ranks first in timber<lb/>
products and third in paper, accor-<lb/>
ding to Business: North Carolina<lb/>
magazine. More than 55,(XX) North<lb/>
Carolinians are employed in these<lb/>
two industries. Moreover, as Lt<lb/>
Governor Bob Jordan has pointed<lb/>
out, acid rain also threatens proper-<lb/>
ty values since land that cannot<lb/>
grow trees is worth little.<lb/>
Acid rain threatens marine life in<lb/>
two ways. First, as trees die off and<lb/>
others fail to grow at all or fail to<lb/>
mature quickly enough to take trie<lb/>
place of dying trees, soil erosion<lb/>
results. Because of erosion, streams<lb/>
become contaminated with silt and<lb/>
fish die. Secondly, the acidity of tie<lb/>
rain water itself may harm fish<lb/>
And finally, because of its acidity,<lb/>
the rain can wear down soil arid<lb/>
rocks, releasing toxic metals into<lb/>
the water. According to a report by<lb/>
the National Wildlife Federation<lb/>
"Acid rain may increase weathering<lb/>
of Anakeesta rock formations in<lb/>
Smokey Mountain National Park<lb/>
releasing iron-pyrite, aluminum,<lb/>
zinc and killing acquatic life The<lb/>
same report states that "small-<lb/>
mouth bass in the Lake Chatuge<lb/>
reservoir, bordering Georgia and<lb/>
North Carolina, have skeletal<lb/>
deformities caused by aluminum<lb/>
toxicity<lb/>
The ultimate outcome of this<lb/>
process of water contamination<lb/>
may be that groundwater which<lb/>
people depend upon will become<lb/>
poisoned, making necessar) tie<lb/>
construction of expensive water<lb/>
treatment plants. Even bet ore such<lb/>
plants are constructed main<lb/>
citizens could suffer the effects rf<lb/>
drinking contaminated water.<lb/>
Since acid rain is a by-product of<lb/>
sulfer dioxide and nitrogen oxides,<lb/>
which are released into the at-<lb/>
mosphere by power plants, fac-<lb/>
tories and automobiles, it is an<lb/>
outgrowth of the industrial age<lb/>
Thus scientists claim that the red<lb/>
legal remedies for acid rain are laws<lb/>
that would control a whole variety<lb/>
of pollutants and laws that would<lb/>
begin to wean us from fossil fuels<lb/>
Yet, utilities, energy producers and<lb/>
their friends in Congress have<lb/>
resisted efforts to tighten emmis-<lb/>
sion standards. That makes the<lb/>
Acid Rain Control Act of 1985,<lb/>
which is presently being considered<lb/>
by congress, a particularly impor-<lb/>
tant peice of legislation. Though<lb/>
Jim Br oy h i 11, the veteran<lb/>
Republican now vying for Senatcr<lb/>
John East's seat will be sure to op-<lb/>
pose that bill, as he was singled out<lb/>
by the National Clean Air Coalition<lb/>
for consistently opposing acid rain<lb/>
controls, North Carolinians should<lb/>
make their views known to other<lb/>
congressmen.They should do so by<lb/>
writing letters urging them to sup-<lb/>
port strong acid rain legislation.<lb/>
WHAT? W Fg&amp;SlCK<lb/>
ANP WANT SOME KELP?<lb/>
A RSH TO PlSSeCT<lb/>
PONTW0RRVIMN0T<lb/>
TAPNG THS5E<lb/>
WSCUSSlOIUS;<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
 J<lb/>
"SBORPFffSWirc<lb/>
V<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
A Poor And JoblessKind of Blues<lb/>
This is a thank-you letter to all<lb/>
those who. m hte, would do! hire me<lb/>
because of lack of experience. It is<lb/>
meant to thank you tor putting me<lb/>
where I am today - in an early grave. I<lb/>
always tned and wanted to he a<lb/>
honesi man. And. as such, I do not<lb/>
trv to condone what I did. Yini know<lb/>
m kids. And chances are that thev<lb/>
even pla with our kids. In your<lb/>
eyes, they are probabl) jusi like other<lb/>
kids.<lb/>
Oh, hut I wish 1 could have lived to<lb/>
see them grow up. But such is not ihe<lb/>
case. Foi I looked high and<lb/>
work, hut all ot you, who were hir-<lb/>
ing, said that you could not affoi<lb/>
tram someone. 1 even applied tor<lb/>
public aid. Hut ass. to the la<lb/>
cutbacks, we did not qualify. So I<lb/>
kept on looking for work. Bui<lb/>
you gave me the same lame excuses.<lb/>
Bui while I kept Irving to support mv<lb/>
family and kept looking tor work.<lb/>
our tood supply ran out. I tned to ex-<lb/>
plain to my children that "daddy"<lb/>
couldn't find any work. But how do<lb/>
you explain to vour children that<lb/>
there simplv is no work and no food.<lb/>
OH! How do you look at vour<lb/>
children dav after day, watching them<lb/>
go hungrv, and noi cry yourself to<lb/>
sleep Or lav awake worrying? Even<lb/>
though I knew that I'd get caught, ot<lb/>
worse. I finall) broke down. I sold<lb/>
what tew personal possessions 1 own-<lb/>
ed at a pawn shop and, with part ol<lb/>
the money, 1 bought a small han-<lb/>
dgun. With the rest. bought a tew<lb/>
groceries and a bottle of "liquid<lb/>
courage" - just cheap whiskey. Foi 1<lb/>
knew that tor what I had to do<lb/>
tonight, I would need it. So after din-<lb/>
ner 1 kissed m wife and kids. I knew<lb/>
that after what I had to do. I might<lb/>
never return.<lb/>
I drove into the night. I drove to<lb/>
the nearest liquor store. I pulled out<lb/>
mv gun Mid told the clei I<lb/>
nisi a kid, " Ihis is a i<lb/>
He vailed the cops aft<lb/>
boui hall way hkvk,<lb/>
cops caught up wit<lb/>
mv gun Bui before I knew <lb/>
pened, I heard a si ol -<lb/>
v chest. I<lb/>
thr . heart, and I was<lb/>
?? ' Mood' Dead'<lb/>
But how could ? be?! I<lb/>
till have a familv<lb/>
? a te to live 1<lb/>
take. Ican'i be dead! Bui bel<lb/>
you a qu i You wl<lb/>
. ' trail mv<lb/>
How is it i<lb/>
?<lb/>
have enough to waste on taxes<lb/>
welfa<lb/>
counterprod<lb/>
lot mote sense to spend thai a<lb/>
amount on training and make pei<lb/>
more productive?<lb/>
Harrv Fai<lb/>
eenville Reside<lb/>
Graffiti<lb/>
Graffiti is an important ;<lb/>
culture, literature and persoi i<lb/>
It allows Us to voice our opini<lb/>
hear others relieve frustrate<lb/>
entertain, etc.<lb/>
But please' Have the decency and<lb/>
sound mind to leave it in the stacks<lb/>
and stop usmg it destructively.<lb/>
example, don't put n on "art work<lb/>
You know what I am talki ut -<lb/>
the sculpture in iron: of the<lb/>
building. If someone sees your face<lb/>
someday and doesn't like it. should<lb/>
he or she write on if.1<lb/>
Jeaneen Linebergei<lb/>
Senior-Bioloc v<lb/>
Think<lb/>
?<lb/>
wii<lb/>
?<lb/>
I ? ? .<lb/>
D<lb/>
k t<lb/>
ed?<lb/>
II<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
1 u.<lb/>
DO YOl I HINK<lb/>
N o i<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
? s Building, j. ?? ??<lb/>
tran 'oyner Libt<lb/>
f or purposes oj ven h <lb/>
nclude the nan<lb/>
cation, . , phom<lb/>
- ivnature oj the auth <lb/>
urt- limited to tw<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly prin i<lb/>
letters are subject to editit<lb/>
ty, obscemtv and libel,<lb/>
attacks will be permute<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letter<lb/>
page are ren<lb/>
to ry five issues<lb/>
Abortion: What Is God's View On Life?<lb/>
By MICHAEL GARDNER<lb/>
At the end of my last article. Abor-<lb/>
tion Seen As War On The Unborn<lb/>
(Thursday, October 24, 1985), I sug-<lb/>
gested that everyone ask him or herself<lb/>
the question, "What is God's view on<lb/>
abortion?" I will be addressing this<lb/>
question today as it would pertain to the<lb/>
Christian.<lb/>
What is a Christian, you may ask? A<lb/>
Christian is an individual who is born-<lb/>
again of the spirit through his faith in<lb/>
Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior.<lb/>
A Christian is also an individual who<lb/>
believes in the inherent truth of the<lb/>
Word of God, not someone who picks<lb/>
and chooses certain items from The Bi-<lb/>
ble to believe in and disgards the rest.<lb/>
Hopefully, this article will enable both<lb/>
Christians and non-Christians to better<lb/>
understand the moral elements of God's<lb/>
perspective on the issue of abortion.<lb/>
First, though, I would like to review<lb/>
some prominent questions, which have<lb/>
been used to justify abortion. Then I<lb/>
will proceed with "God's view" on<lb/>
abortion.<lb/>
Question .Does The Bible take a<lb/>
stand on a woman who's pregnant and<lb/>
whose unborn baby develops complica-<lb/>
tions that most likely would lead to<lb/>
deformity or retardation? The Bible<lb/>
doesn't change because a baby might be<lb/>
born with a handicap. What about the<lb/>
deformities that are not detected before<lb/>
birth ? should these babies be killed in<lb/>
the delivery room? If we can abort the<lb/>
defective unborn child, why not just kill<lb/>
the defective newborn child Where is<lb/>
the line drawn?<lb/>
"If we choose to extinguish anyone<lb/>
who is imperfect, we need to ask<lb/>
ourselves two significant questions: 1)<lb/>
Just how perfect does one need to be<lb/>
before he or she is allowed to live? 2)<lb/>
Who will have the power to make these<lb/>
decisions? Does anyone have the right<lb/>
to play God? (Last Davs Newsletter,<lb/>
1983)<lb/>
According to the Bible, in Exodus<lb/>
4:11, "Who has made man's mouth? Or<lb/>
who makes him dumb or deaf, or seeing<lb/>
or blind? Is it not I, the Lord?"<lb/>
Question 2: If a woman became preg-<lb/>
nant by rape, what would God want her<lb/>
to do?<lb/>
First of all, rape practically never results<lb/>
in pregnancy, due to all the trauma in-<lb/>
volved. But if pregnancy should occur,<lb/>
the woman needs loving support and<lb/>
assistance, not added guilt from an<lb/>
abortion. Justice seems warped when an<lb/>
innocent child is killed for the crime of<lb/>
its father. Two wrongs never make a<lb/>
right. Not only would God enable the<lb/>
woman to forgive the father, but he<lb/>
would enable her to have a real love for<lb/>
her child. "If you found out tommor-<lb/>
row that you were the product of a<lb/>
rape- would you wish that your mother<lb/>
had aborted you? (Last Days Newslet-<lb/>
ter, 1983)<lb/>
Question 3: Isn't an unborn child<lb/>
simply a wad of cells that adheres to the<lb/>
wall of a uterus? An unborn baby is a<lb/>
unique individual with his or her own<lb/>
distinct set of chromosomes- different<lb/>
from any part o' the mother. I he child<lb/>
has its own blood supplv. and the<lb/>
child's blood type mav even be different<lb/>
from the mother's. The child can also<lb/>
be of the opposite sex from the mother.<lb/>
"Jesus taught that anyone in distress<lb/>
is our neighbor, and we must come to<lb/>
his aid (Luke 10:30-37). Let's do all we<lb/>
can to help the mother without exter-<lb/>
minating her baby (Last Days News<lb/>
letter, 1983)<lb/>
Question 4: Isn 't legally preventing a<lb/>
woman from having an abortion an in-<lb/>
vasion of her privacy? The laws here in<lb/>
the United States are somewhat<lb/>
peculiar. They allow police to enter the<lb/>
privacy of people's houses to stop them<lb/>
from beating and abusing their<lb/>
children, and then they use the same<lb/>
"force of law" to guarantee the<lb/>
"privacy and right" of would-be<lb/>
parents to destroy their unborn babies.<lb/>
If you think about it, "almost all crime<lb/>
is done in private (i.e murder, theft,<lb/>
kidnapping, rape, etc.). Does this mean<lb/>
that if we know it's going on, we turn<lb/>
our heads and look the other way, so as<lb/>
not to invade anyone's right to privacy?<lb/>
Of course not (Last Days Newsletter,<lb/>
1983)" Abortion is murder, plain and<lb/>
simple.<lb/>
Question 5:Should we make abortions<lb/>
illegal if people will continue to get<lb/>
them anyway? Yes. Abortions will con-<lb/>
tinue but not in such high numbers.<lb/>
"Rape also goes on in spite of our laws-<lb/>
-should it no longer be a crime? Or<lb/>
would we spend tax money to buy the<lb/>
rapist a gc,x.xi clean hotel room to com-<lb/>
mit his crime inAfter all. 'he is going<lb/>
to rape people anyway (last Davs<lb/>
Newsletter. 1983)"<lb/>
In light o the preceding questions.<lb/>
let's examine God's view on the aboi<lb/>
tion issue, according to His Word, in<lb/>
The Bible.<lb/>
What happens when a woman becomes<lb/>
pregnant? Psalm 139:13-14 states, "lor<lb/>
Thou (God) didst form my inward<lb/>
parts; Thou didst weave me in my<lb/>
mother's womb. I will give thanks to<lb/>
Thee, for I am fearfully and wonderful-<lb/>
ly made. Wonderful are all Thv works,<lb/>
and my soul knows it very well<lb/>
Who grows within the mother? Psalm<lb/>
139:15-16 describes King David's<lb/>
prenatal development, stating "Mv<lb/>
frame was not hidden from Thee (God),<lb/>
when 1 was made in secret (womb), and<lb/>
skillfully wrought in the depths of the<lb/>
earth. Thine eyes have seen mv unform-<lb/>
ed substance; and in thy book, they<lb/>
were all written, the days that were or-<lb/>
dained for me, when as yet there was<lb/>
not one of them<lb/>
Therefore, "a human being exists<lb/>
when God creates him, not at some later<lb/>
point when he has grown to look like a<lb/>
newborn or has taken his first breath of<lb/>
air. God creates human beings at con-<lb/>
ception (Abortion and Psalm 139,<lb/>
Christian Action Council) Other<lb/>
relative verses include Psalm 51:5, Job<lb/>
3:3 and Matthew 1:18-20.<lb/>
There are many examples to choose<lb/>
from in The Bible where God knew a<lb/>
person before he was born. For in-<lb/>
stance, God knew Jeremiah whe:<lb/>
was in his mother's womb; God sa<lb/>
tified him and ordained him to be a<lb/>
phet. Jeremiah 1:4-5 states. "Now<lb/>
Word of the lord came<lb/>
savingBefore I (God) formed <lb/>
the womb, I knew you. and before<lb/>
were born I consecrated you; 1 have ap<lb/>
pointed you a prophet to the nations<lb/>
The Bible reveals that John the Bap<lb/>
tisl was "filled w,th the Holj Spirit,<lb/>
while yet in his mother's womb (I uke<lb/>
1:15)<lb/>
Finally, the most significant example<lb/>
is stated in Luke 1:31-33 when the at<lb/>
Gabriel announced to Mary. "Behold.<lb/>
you will conceive in vour womb and<lb/>
bear a son, and you shall name Him<lb/>
lesus He will be great, and will be call-<lb/>
ed the Son ot the Most High and His<lb/>
Kingdom will have no end<lb/>
So vou see. Cod doesn't wail until a<lb/>
child can hve and move outside the<lb/>
mother's womb, before He knows ?.<lb/>
hnes it. treats it like a unique human<lb/>
being.<lb/>
Onlv God has the right to decide<lb/>
whether a child lives or dies<lb/>
(Deuteronomy 32:39). not the parents,<lb/>
the doctors, or the courts. I prav that<lb/>
everyone who reads this article will<lb/>
come to some understanding about<lb/>
God's view on abortion. "Please trv to<lb/>
imagine God's grief. He sees it all, vou<lb/>
know. I wonder if He didn't think a<lb/>
mother's womb was the safest, most<lb/>
loving place in the world for a little<lb/>
baby to be nurtured and protected.<lb/>
Colleg<lb/>
HEALTt<lb/>
COLUf1<lb/>
I h,<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I he I<lb/>
Fines Ca<lb/>
B IKU (, Ht)H Rsii<lb/>
<lb/>
New Prog<lb/>
1 South Park<lb/>
Amoco<lb/>
AMOCO<lb/>
5<lb/>
7S-3t23 bfi<lb/>
J10<lb/>
"Mi ? ? Ig<lb/>
Joke's On Usg<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER C 185<lb/>
IrSDMEK&amp;P?<lb/>
? I<lb/>
?<lb/>
id of Blues<lb/>
Ihink!<lb/>
a <lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
u.<lb/>
en-<lb/>
n, all let-<lb/>
. r and<lb/>
. her<lb/>
I etters<lb/>
pages,<lb/>
ed. All<lb/>
<lb/>
 ienis,<lb/>
. re iimited<lb/>
n Life?<lb/>
<lb/>
anc-<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
-the<lb/>
me<lb/>
u in<lb/>
.an-<lb/>
??l<lb/>
Bap-<lb/>
Dther's w  1 Luke<lb/>
ignificantexample<lb/>
the angel ?Behold, mb and<lb/>
and all name Him<lb/>
nd wi11 be call-<lb/>
v f ?. and His<lb/>
(j"d doesn't wait until a<lb/>
e and move outside the<lb/>
before He knows it,<lb/>
uke a unique human<lb/>
 has the right to decide<lb/>
ether a child lives or dies<lb/>
(Deuteronomy 32:39), not the parents,<lb/>
the doctors, or the courts. I pray that<lb/>
everyone who reads this article will<lb/>
ne to some understanding about<lb/>
? lew on abortion. "Please try to<lb/>
imagine God's grief. He sees it all, you<lb/>
know. I wonder if He didn't think a<lb/>
mother's womb was the safest, most<lb/>
loving place in the world for a little<lb/>
babv to be nurtured and protected.<lb/>
Colleges Say Prosperity Here For Schools<lb/>
(CPS) Mosf college ad-<lb/>
ministrators think then schools<lb/>
are on the brink of a more pro-<lb/>
sperous era. but thev ptedict<lb/>
students will pa) foi it by paying<lb/>
;ven higha tuition over the next<lb/>
few years.<lb/>
In a survey bv a group called<lb/>
Higha Education Panel, a<lb/>
najoritj ot administrators think<lb/>
he collegiate fiscal woes of tlu<lb/>
?asl decades from the hyper<lb/>
nflation begun by the oil em-<lb/>
bargo ol 1973 through the federal<lb/>
budget cuts ol 1981 and the reces-<lb/>
ol !s82 83 mav be draw-<lb/>
to a close as legislatures give<lb/>
re money to campuses and the<lb/>
improved economy, makes il<lb/>
ei foi schools to attract dona-<lb/>
ns<lb/>
But schools will have to raise<lb/>
tuition for students anyway, the<lb/>
respondents said.<lb/>
To adequately fund private<lb/>
colleges, for example, tuition will<lb/>
probably have to rise 1.5 to two<lb/>
percent faster than the inflation<lb/>
rate, says Julianne Thrift of the<lb/>
National Institute of Independent<lb/>
Colleges arid Universities.<lb/>
Public college administrators<lb/>
also say tuition must increase<lb/>
faster than inflation, although<lb/>
not as rapidly as in the last four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The reason is that "education<lb/>
is labor intensive. Industry can<lb/>
deploy technology to offset labor<lb/>
costs explains James Buchhol.<lb/>
a vice chancellor at Washington<lb/>
University in St. linns, Mo.<lb/>
Colleges also are trying to<lb/>
catch up on construction projects<lb/>
they've delayed since the hard<lb/>
times began, and trying to im-<lb/>
prove teacher salaries, which lag-<lb/>
ged during the high inflation of<lb/>
the 1970s and early 1980s, Thrift<lb/>
says.<lb/>
But Thrift is optimistic because<lb/>
private colleges tend to do better<lb/>
when the economy at large does<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"Our colleges tend to do very<lb/>
well when parents have a rosy<lb/>
outlook on the general economic<lb/>
climate. Parents react to us like<lb/>
they do blue chip investments<lb/>
she observes.<lb/>
I abor costs and erasing infla-<lb/>
tion's effects are public school<lb/>
issues as well, but the improving<lb/>
? ? ? SlivStS ? ? ?<lb/>
the Health Column answers<lb/>
student's questions and concerns<lb/>
about health related problems.<lb/>
Anyone who has a question they<lb/>
would like answered, or a con-<lb/>
cern they would like to have<lb/>
clarified, send your question or<lb/>
concern to the Health Column,<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, ECU.<lb/>
What i stress, and how do I<lb/>
know if 1 have it?<lb/>
Stress i- youi body's response<lb/>
demand. A certain amount<lb/>
of stress may be helpful. A com<lb/>
mon example of normal, useful<lb/>
stress is that which helps you get<lb/>
a paper written on time or by do-<lb/>
ing well in a competition. loo<lb/>
much stress can make you un-<lb/>
comfortable and can shorten<lb/>
your life. Common signs of stress<lb/>
include aches, especially<lb/>
headaches, neck aches, and back<lb/>
aches, "nervous stomach diar-<lb/>
rhea, chesl pains, grouchiness.<lb/>
eating and drinking too much ot<lb/>
too little, inability to sit still or<lb/>
concentrate, insomnia, and hav-<lb/>
ing vague, inappropriate fears<lb/>
about known or unknown events.<lb/>
What can I do to reduce stress?<lb/>
Sleep at least six to eight hours<lb/>
a night; sleep is necessatv because<lb/>
it helps the body restore itself.<lb/>
Exercise, such as swimming, run-<lb/>
ning and aerobics, reduces ten-<lb/>
sion and increases mental alert-<lb/>
ness. Diet influences your reac-<lb/>
tion to stress; caffeine increases<lb/>
feelings of anxiety. Cut down on<lb/>
sugar, salt, alcohol, junk food<lb/>
and caffeine.<lb/>
More important, spend time<lb/>
alone cacti day to give yourself a<lb/>
chance to unwind and focus on<lb/>
yourself. Use your friends as<lb/>
sounding boards; sharing daily<lb/>
experiences with them can be<lb/>
relaxing and helpful at the same<lb/>
lime.<lb/>
Consider taking courses in time<lb/>
management or stress reduction.<lb/>
health of public colleges also<lb/>
depends on how much money<lb/>
their state legislatures give them.<lb/>
Legislators in states which have<lb/>
not participated fully in the<lb/>
economic recovery may not be<lb/>
able to appropriate as much<lb/>
money as those in other states.<lb/>
Last week, Nebraska<lb/>
legislators, for example, debated<lb/>
cutting state college budgets<lb/>
drastically.<lb/>
New Mexico's public campuses<lb/>
are so broke that administrators<lb/>
announced Oct. 23 that they<lb/>
would no longer make counter<lb/>
salary offers to faculty members<lb/>
offered jobs by other schools.<lb/>
State schools in Michigan and<lb/>
Ohio have suffered from the<lb/>
decline of the steel and<lb/>
automobile industries. Loui-<lb/>
siana, Texas, Alaska and<lb/>
Oklahoma, robbed of tax<lb/>
revenues bv the oil glut, cut their<lb/>
state college budgets earlier this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Moreover, "higher education<lb/>
has more competition for state<lb/>
funds" in all states, notes<lb/>
Franklin Matsler of Illinois<lb/>
State's Department of Higher<lb/>
Lducation Administration, which<lb/>
monitors state higher education<lb/>
appropriations around the coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
Legislators are being pressured<lb/>
to fund new prisons and ap-<lb/>
propriate more money to com-<lb/>
pensate for recent federal cuts in<lb/>
programs for the poor and the<lb/>
handicapped, he adds.<lb/>
Nevertheless, administrators in<lb/>
prospering states generally are<lb/>
upbeat about their immediate<lb/>
fiscal futures.<lb/>
"We have really seen the<lb/>
dawn notes Adrian Harris, a<lb/>
vice chancellor at the University<lb/>
of California at Los Angeles.<lb/>
"We had about 17 years drought<lb/>
beginning with Reagan's gover-<lb/>
norship<lb/>
"Under Edmund (Jerry)<lb/>
Brown, we would be lucky to get<lb/>
$7 million" for new construction<lb/>
on all nine schools in the state's<lb/>
university system, he recalls.<lb/>
In the last two years, Califor-<lb/>
nia Governor George Deukme-<lb/>
jian has budgeted $300 million<lb/>
for campus construction needs<lb/>
"He really has covered the water-<lb/>
front Harris says.<lb/>
Next, Harris and other of-<lb/>
ficials in the California university<lb/>
system plan to ask the legislature<lb/>
for more money for teaching<lb/>
assistants.<lb/>
But some planners remain<lb/>
skeptical.<lb/>
Even upbeat private college ad-<lb/>
ministrators worry about the<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
Fines Can Cause Problems<lb/>
Bv DOl (, ROBLKM)N<lb/>
Warning<lb/>
have outstanding<lb/>
1 (. I should vicar<lb/>
immediately: otherwise.<lb/>
records.<lb/>
rhese holds will be removed<lb/>
only after the student has fulfill-<lb/>
ed his her obligation to the<lb/>
university. More important,<lb/>
unless the hold i removed, the<lb/>
be able to pre- stujent cannot complete the pre-<lb/>
registration process.<lb/>
we money, such<lb/>
overduelibrarv fines and park-<lb/>
Anna Dougherty, assistant<lb/>
university will head of circulation at Joyner<lb/>
placed 'Mi their I ibrary, said students with over-<lb/>
due books or unpaid fines should<lb/>
contact the librarv immediately.<lb/>
"It students have overdue<lb/>
hooks, they won't be able to pre-<lb/>
register she said.<lb/>
Dougherty added that clearing<lb/>
overdue books and unpaid fines<lb/>
requites only a tew minutes but<lb/>
can save time during pre-<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
New Program An Alternative<lb/>
? $, we could experience ov<lb/>
million new teaching iobs in this<lb/>
and we simplv don't<lb/>
people enrolled to<lb/>
eplace ! hem<lb/>
Another factor in the shortage<lb/>
. ipates will be a rise in<lb/>
?ol population which will<lb/>
for a tew vears before<lb/>
to the approximate<lb/>
?odav<lb/>
?-lt would be far cheaper to<lb/>
provide this incentive said Co-<lb/>
ble, "than it will be to pa to; the<lb/>
consequences of a declining<lb/>
teacher pool and the poor in-<lb/>
struction that results<lb/>
"The responsibility of schools<lb/>
of education is to assume a<lb/>
stronger position academically<lb/>
and professionally to provide bet-<lb/>
ter preparations of teachers<lb/>
Coble said. "Our goal is to<lb/>
become the very best possible and<lb/>
to seek the best students - the<lb/>
most committed, dedicated and<lb/>
prepared<lb/>
30-60 OFF<lb/>
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CALL USFOR AN<lb/>
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WITH THE DOCTOR<lb/>
OF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
Must Present Ad At Time CM Purrjiase<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Phone 752 1446<lb/>
Open Mon Fri t AM til 5 10 PM<lb/>
t<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
Beecher Kirk ley Dispensing Optician<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
Amoco<lb/>
in<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
756-3023 24 tars.<lb/>
310 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Joke's On Us<lb/>
Food Delivery Co.<lb/>
Delivers For<lb/>
fottfr fM fiHm.<lb/>
CHMATOUM EXPRESS<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Lunch 757-1973 '????<lb/>
Monday -DRAFT &amp; DRYER DAY<lb/>
25$ Draft &amp; 25P for 25<lb/>
minutes on the Dryers<lb/>
Tuesday - TWO FOR ONE DAY<lb/>
Wash one load of clothes,<lb/>
the 2nd wash is on us<lb/>
Wednesday -SOAP &amp; SUDS DAY<lb/>
75$ Long neck bottle<lb/>
beer and free soap<lb/>
Specials Run All Day<lb/>
Open 8 am - 12 am 7 days a week<lb/>
2510 E 10th St Greenville, NC<lb/>
Magozine-<lb/>
The Minority Affairs Publication of East Carolina University<lb/>
i.r. a,  ric 00, NA JNIVEPSl<lb/>
:?frVV! E NC I. rfL 55! ?' ? Sy<lb/>
has pen ings for the following positions<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Adverti sing Representative<lb/>
Applications will be available at Expressions Office or the<lb/>
Media Board Secretary, 2nd floor, Publications Bldg.<lb/>
Upcoming Events<lb/>
Films Committee:<lb/>
A Nos Amours<lb/>
American Graffitti<lb/>
The Breakfast Club<lb/>
Travel Committee:<lb/>
PARIS AND THE SEINE -<lb/>
(Presented by Kathy Dusek inHendnx Theatre.<lb/>
Recreation Comnittee:<lb/>
Men's Billiards<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Student Center Billiards Room<lb/>
Turkey Shoot In Bowling<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 21 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Student Center Bowling Alley<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee:<lb/>
International Week<lb/>
Nov. 17 through Nov. 21<lb/>
The Underground<lb/>
For Lunch<lb/>
Tuesdays at 1:30 p.m<lb/>
Rock wo rid Videos<lb/>
Thursdays at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Movie Shorts<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 13<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 14<lb/>
7&amp;9p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Nov. 15 &amp; 16<lb/>
at7&amp;9p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 19<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
 Special <lb/>
JAMAICAN EVENING<lb/>
Featuring "The Amateurs"<lb/>
Serving non-alcoholic "mocktails"<lb/>
While They Last!<lb/>
November 14, 8-10 p.m.<lb/>
?<lb/>
 it<lb/>
OUT<lb/>
gathering place<lb/>
Ground Floor, Mendenhall<lb/>
, Mft<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROIINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
I)ooiH'st)ur<lb/>
NO I MHt-K 12, 1985<lb/>
Page <lb/>
Larry<lb/>
Linville At ECU<lb/>
ByWARRFN BAkfR<lb/>
and<lb/>
JSFF CHESTER<lb/>
?Muff nlrr<lb/>
This interview with i arr I<lb/>
ville was broadcast by .<lb/>
radio station. H ZMB 1 ?<lb/>
view was i ondm ted<lb/>
Chester, All material in :?<lb/>
cle may not be rebroadt.<lb/>
stared in a storage bin, stuj<lb/>
witt ? vt n out ! pro.<lb/>
lion fur into proportion I<lb/>
matter, sauteed with garlic<lb/>
sauce, or judged to bt moronic<lb/>
without express written<lb/>
telepathic permission fro<lb/>
somebody whose name escapes us<lb/>
at this time, hut we're sure the<lb/>
person is important.<lb/>
Jeff ChestertSo whal arc you do-<lb/>
ing nowadays?<lb/>
l.arry linvillerEverything.<lb/>
university thing turned into an<lb/>
explosion, so I'm having to do<lb/>
those, plus plays, and I think 1<lb/>
have four day1- off till the end of<lb/>
August. It's been one helluva<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
i <lb/>
MASH '<lb/>
I 1 :M<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
R .<lb/>
MASH<lb/>
New :?<lb/>
places, issembled<lb/>
show. There were a<lb/>
pie experienced in doing c<lb/>
because with<lb/>
 1 xcepi the crew,<lb/>
lls ice, and<lb/>
:ai make them laugh, because<lb/>
? ve seen everything,<lb/>
know you're really fui<lb/>
J.CV.The character, Fra<lb/>
B ii ns did you come up with<lb/>
oi was it in the<lb/>
plo<lb/>
L.L.tl had to. We couldn't do<lb/>
anything that was done in the<lb/>
ion picture because of pro<lb/>
gram practices and the censoi<lb/>
and a that. It had to<lb/>
mpJetel recreated, bin<lb/>
!<lb/>
with the show .<lb/>
? I<lb/>
: t<lb/>
ive to<lb/>
igain;<lb/>
' ? e names<lb/>
the basic<lb/>
else was<lb/>
?!?( "Wl ai fa orite<lb/>
" 1 SH '<lb/>
1 .1  1 Soi mes You<lb/>
Heai th? Bullei " ! ? at's the one<lb/>
where Hawkeye's friend, who's<lb/>
ei Haw keye, kisses<lb/>
Henry Blake mouth, in-<lb/>
king his hand. I<lb/>
mean, he's a real lunatic, very<lb/>
funny. But he's writing a novel<lb/>
ab the social pom: of view<lb/>
from the trenches, and he winds<lb/>
Lip dead on Hawkeye's table.<lb/>
And that all sounds very grim,<lb/>
but you find out the picture was<lb/>
nny. And it was the<lb/>
perfeel blend ol comedy and<lb/>
drama and, probably, sheer ter-<lb/>
ror, which was the thing we were<lb/>
aftei ? me. Gel that blend.<lb/>
thai mix; and we got close to ii<lb/>
several times. But with that one.<lb/>
we hit it dedd on.<lb/>
J.C.rWh) did you leave MASH?<lb/>
1 1 ?'? I hat's a novel. It's a long<lb/>
r with a lot ol tributing<lb/>
factors. Basically, fundamental-<lb/>
ly, i! was really the tact that the<lb/>
portrait oi frank Bums was<lb/>
ie. I: was finished. It was just<lb/>
time to move on and do other<lb/>
things.<lb/>
I hat gives you a career. Other-<lb/>
wise, you can ride some hot, fast<lb/>
thing tor live or ten years, at the<lb/>
max. Unless you've had superb<lb/>
investment counselors up to that<lb/>
point, you wmd up not being able<lb/>
to live the rest oi your life or<lb/>
retire irrespective oi superstitions<lb/>
surrounding success on televi-<lb/>
sion. Some oi the ex-so-called<lb/>
'television stars' are now poun-<lb/>
ding nails or working in kitchens<lb/>
and restaurants which is<lb/>
something I didn't want to do. I<lb/>
enjoy acting, so I made some<lb/>
choices to have a career with<lb/>
some longevity. Thankfully, it's<lb/>
working out.<lb/>
Math Column Debuts<lb/>
By WIL RAYMOND<lb/>
and<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
Complex mathematical<lb/>
systems elude visual intuition<lb/>
when described in purely tradi-<lb/>
tional symbolic terms. See fig. I.<lb/>
It is clear that the formula<lb/>
represents the picture.<lb/>
Often a fundamentally in-<lb/>
teresting process is occluded by<lb/>
stultifying terminology. Yet, if<lb/>
the process can be explained in a<lb/>
succinct manner, in a diagram<lb/>
perhaps, the difficulty in perceiv-<lb/>
ing the nature of the process<lb/>
melts away.<lb/>
A case in point: In the third<lb/>
grade, I came upon a unique<lb/>
mathematical problem which was<lb/>
compreheasible to me visually,<lb/>
yet whose general aspects I can<lb/>
only now enjoy.<lb/>
Take a pencil. Trace fig. 2<lb/>
without lifting the pencil and<lb/>
(here is the difficult restraint)<lb/>
without tracing over the same line<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
What? Impossible!<lb/>
Now, create a house from fig.<lb/>
2 (This was the original<lb/>
tmework of the problem).<lb/>
I race through fig, 3. Visual intui-<lb/>
tion, as a trial-and-error method,<lb/>
may solve the problem. But what<lb/>
about solving the general case'<lb/>
Through what figures can one<lb/>
trace such a path?<lb/>
Graph theory, initiated bv<lb/>
Ueonhard Euler in 1736, can<lb/>
determine which figures or<lb/>
graphs one can trace a line<lb/>
through without lifting the pencil<lb/>
or tracing the same line twice.<lb/>
These paths are called Eulerian<lb/>
trails, in honor oi Euler.<lb/>
A graph consists oi two classes<lb/>
of mathematical objects: venues<lb/>
and edges. Edges connect vertices<lb/>
to form figures. For example, a<lb/>
square has four vertices, one at<lb/>
each corner, and four edges.<lb/>
Notice: a path can be traced<lb/>
around the square without lifting<lb/>
the pencil. Therefore, the square<lb/>
has a Eulerian trail. There are<lb/>
several graphs which have four<lb/>
vertices and varying numbers of<lb/>
edges (fig. 4). If a graph has a<lb/>
Eulerian path, its two basic com-<lb/>
ponents, vertices and edges, must<lb/>
satisfy various criteria. What<lb/>
criteria?<lb/>
Each vertex must have an edge<lb/>
attached to it (i.e. there are no<lb/>
isolated vertices)<lb/>
Therefore, a graph with four<lb/>
vertices must have at least three<lb/>
edges. Note: the maximum<lb/>
number oi edges connecting four<lb/>
vertices is M (as in fig. 2). Try<lb/>
calculating the general rule for<lb/>
determining the maximum<lb/>
number ol edges connecting any<lb/>
number oi vertices.<lb/>
The degree oi a vertex is the<lb/>
number oi edges connected to it.<lb/>
I he square's vertices each have<lb/>
degree two. figure 2 has four ver-<lb/>
tices with degree three. Figure 3<lb/>
has one vertex with degree two<lb/>
(the peak ot the roof), two with<lb/>
degree tour (the upper corners),<lb/>
and two with degree three.<lb/>
W hat can t he degree of a vertex<lb/>
tell about the possibility of there<lb/>
being a Eulerian trail in a graph?<lb/>
If a vertex has degree one, then<lb/>
one can only begin or end tracing<lb/>
at this point. If a vertex has<lb/>
degree two, then one can ap-<lb/>
proach along one edge and leave<lb/>
along the other. There are two<lb/>
choices as to which edge one<lb/>
picks.<lb/>
Finally, a vertex with degree<lb/>
three presents the most choices of<lb/>
movement. One can approach<lb/>
along one edge, leave by another,<lb/>
but, obviously must (to trace all<lb/>
edges) finally return along the<lb/>
odd edge. The case is similar<lb/>
when one begins by leaving a<lb/>
vertex of degree three.<lb/>
Try determining the number of<lb/>
vertices with degree one, two or<lb/>
three that can be used to con-<lb/>
struct a graph with Eulerian trail.<lb/>
Use three or less of each degree<lb/>
vertex. Experiment with various<lb/>
combinations. Can a general rule<lb/>
be manufactured which will<lb/>
delineate what graphs have<lb/>
Eulerian trails?<lb/>
As a final hint, the initial<lb/>
motivation for Euler's investiga-<lb/>
tions, as related by Bela Bollobus<lb/>
in his Graph Theory, involved the<lb/>
puzzle of Konigsberg. the<lb/>
seven bridges on the Pregel, in<lb/>
the ancient city of Konigsberg<lb/>
(fig. 5). Could anyone walk<lb/>
across the bridges so that he<lb/>
would cross each one once and<lb/>
only once?"<lb/>
The answer, no.<lb/>
llllilllllllUllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiniMHHHMtl<lb/>
"Amateur" Night<lb/>
A t Underground<lb/>
By DAY II) McGINN ESS<lb/>
M.ff Wrilrt<lb/>
122L422J222. EL?llKaican Night Thursday<lb/>
MASH's Frank Burns Speaks<lb/>
Recently the Greenville 1(1<lb/>
:ji community has been exposed to<lb/>
x something it rarely gets more<lb/>
? than a taste of ? reggae music.<lb/>
 On Oct. 27, the Awareness Ait<lb/>
 Ensemble plaved on the patio at<lb/>
jtj Mendenhall before a crowd id<lb/>
 about 400. Their fluid brand ot<lb/>
g reggae was both danceable and<lb/>
 "jammin Vocals, guitar, bass<lb/>
 and keyboard showed excellent<lb/>
:j: speed and dextent v. while keep<lb/>
?;? mg a smooth and mellow quality.<lb/>
iji This Thursday, Mendenhall<lb/>
:?; will sponsor some more ol the<lb/>
J area's finesi reggae. The Student<lb/>
jjj Union Coffee Houseomm<lb/>
j: will hold "Jamaican Night" in<lb/>
:j The Underground (formerly the<lb/>
ji Coffee House) a! 8 p.m teatur<lb/>
y mg Greenville's rock and re.<lb/>
. band "The Amateurs Admis<lb/>
? sion will cost SI at the door.<lb/>
?: In addition, a bartend;<lb/>
:the Fast Carolina Bartending<lb/>
j: School will be on hand mi ?<lb/>
:? non-alcohohc beverages<lb/>
?: I he Amateurs' style ino I<lb/>
: porates Jamaican reggae i<lb/>
:with a decidedly American in-<lb/>
 fluence. Their reperti<lb/>
: from S ant ana to M<lb/>
? Chuck Berry<lb/>
Each member<lb/>
: seems to be doing his<lb/>
j but at the same time I<lb/>
? to the band's<lb/>
I ach musician eontrib ite<lb/>
concept, but the whole i?<lb/>
than the sum ot its pa<lb/>
Shep, the lead singer,<lb/>
r'er and audiena<lb/>
plays his drums as though they<lb/>
were alive, slidin inds<lb/>
across, pounding a rim-shot i<lb/>
then leaping into the ail as<lb/>
crowd goes nu<lb/>
Mike, the lead guitarist, piays<lb/>
with a style reminiscent of Carlos<lb/>
Santana and leaves the audience<lb/>
breathless. At one show, a man's<lb/>
law drops as he mumbles. 'Fle's<lb/>
playing a run tor two minutes us-<lb/>
ing alternating sevenths In<lb/>
other words, his girlfriend adds,<lb/>
"his ass is jammin<lb/>
Bassist I arrv Graham plays<lb/>
with a laid-back, easy-going style<lb/>
that contrasts with and yet com-<lb/>
plements the high energy Mike-<lb/>
and shep display. When he leans<lb/>
back, closes his eyes and begins<lb/>
jam, one gets the impre<lb/>
:ou!d do it on one , the<lb/>
k Perhaps the word that best<lb/>
describes him is "cool The con-<lb/>
styles reminds one : wal<lb/>
1 ntwhistle play<lb/>
Pete Fownshend.<lb/>
Craig Gonway, the Amateurs'<lb/>
drummer, has a style that ra:<lb/>
m a powerful driving force<lb/>
more rock oriented material<lb/>
a back-beat in the reg-<lb/>
ic H percussion blends<lb/>
well with Shep's congas<lb/>
With the addition ol kcyboar-<lb/>
Debbie Goodwin, the<lb/>
ateurs' sound has gained a<lb/>
re full and rounded texture.<lb/>
uses synthesizers to broaden<lb/>
mic range<lb/>
the band's<lb/>
d ignite its<lb/>
-? Its members fuse dif-<lb/>
ng new<lb/>
surpasses a<lb/>
De . viduality pre-<lb/>
Vmateurs don't com-<lb/>
? - ?? with the sole<lb/>
tig beautiful<lb/>
mus pleases theii audience<lb/>
Honors Program Strong<lb/>
B CIA 1)1 UIHKIll<lb/>
The reputation of any urn.<lb/>
ty is based upon its academic<lb/>
gram and the accomplishmen<lb/>
its graduates. These are two. im-<lb/>
portant things that businesses.<lb/>
employers and graduate schools<lb/>
all look a: when recruiting new<lb/>
graduates. A driving force behind<lb/>
E I 's increasing academic<lb/>
reputation is the honors pro-<lb/>
gram, directed bv Dr. David<lb/>
Sanders.<lb/>
Begun about 20 years ago when<lb/>
several students got together to<lb/>
discuss great books with pro<lb/>
fessors even though they didn't<lb/>
get credit for it. the honors pro-<lb/>
gram has grown to be an impor-<lb/>
tant part oi FCC. In the late<lb/>
1960s, oie honors seminar was<lb/>
offered for credit. Since then, the<lb/>
program has grown, even surviv-<lb/>
ing being disbanded in the<lb/>
because oi a lack<lb/>
nors seminars are m-<lb/>
lisciplinary (they can satisfy<lb/>
G( requirements in various<lb/>
areas) and are team taught. They<lb/>
are at the heart of the honors pro-<lb/>
m, and five seminars are being<lb/>
ottered lor the spring semester.<lb/>
In "What's All This buss<lb/>
About Humanism?" students<lb/>
Uil !r to determine why<lb/>
humanism is being considered<lb/>
somewhat controversial during<lb/>
the '80s Both sides oi the<lb/>
liu-nanism issue will be discussed,<lb/>
so that students can form their<lb/>
beliefs on the issue.<lb/>
"Masculinity Femimnitv: New<lb/>
Perspectives" is a course design-<lb/>
ed to shed new light on the socio-<lb/>
biological factors that influence<lb/>
gender strategies and roles.<lb/>
 rare opportunity exists this<lb/>
vear in "Astronomy: In Celebra-<lb/>
see SEMINARS, Page 7<lb/>
X A<lb/>
fig. 1<lb/>
X2AXfA -X-?A<lb/>
r : :<lb/>
f?g, 4<lb/>
Four Legitimate Graphs<lb/>
Fig. 2<lb/>
i<lb/>
2)<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
Fig. ,<lb/>
Fig. 3<lb/>
That's How You Do It!<lb/>
A" rt<lb/>
1 <lb/>
<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
:<lb/>
-?????<lb/>
Tooth<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
Seminars Of<lb/>
Continued from Pa;t<lb/>
ol H;<lb/>
program I<lb/>
the<lb/>
ow n solar sv - .<lb/>
axies (<lb/>
the firs- ;<lb/>
register<lb/>
Mosi -<lb/>
once, so if there's a ;<lb/>
want to take, do-<lb/>
being offered<lb/>
semester<lb/>
According to D<lb/>
eligible studer e with<lb/>
grade point av<lb/>
invitations - h be afraid<lb/>
of taking honors classes. He<lb/>
the classes ?facilitate actual lear-<lb/>
ning insfead of harder work" and<lb/>
that "many people make higher<lb/>
grades in honor classes than tl (<lb/>
do in regular ones "<lb/>
Some believe the honors pro-<lb/>
gram is not oniv boosting the<lb/>
I<lb/>
an c<lb/>
Bur<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0007"/><lb/>
? 4<lb/>
N ight<lb/>
around<lb/>
St rot<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Fig. "<lb/>
ow You Do It!<lb/>
loonesbur<lb/>
HI 1 AM AKOI I MAN<lb/>
MM K<lb/>
B i.AHHV UUHM All<lb/>
4<lb/>
v<lb/>
fh<lb/>
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II<lb/>
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-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
mn Pggf'1<lb/>
JAY LENO<lb/>
Comedy For The Eighties!<lb/>
Monday, November 25<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ECU Students &amp; Guest: $1.50<lb/>
AMAl s<lb/>
? r rtJ? <lb/>
It<lb/>
 v. ??  4r<lb/>
K:<lb/>
l" ?" ? -<lb/>
V I i i ft'<lb/>
v -<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU FacultyStaff and Dependents:<lb/>
 Public and at Door: $4.00<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Tickets available Monday through Friday from J<lb/>
11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Central Ticket Office, <lb/>
Mendenhall StudentCenter. Phone 757-6166, ?<lb/>
ext. 266 for more info. <lb/>
Sponsored by the Studmt Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
Yfan-O-Stiek h jarrell &amp; johnson ??. ?<lb/>
  -J<lb/>
2? ?<lb/>
IK<lb/>
?f?s)<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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A<lb/>
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N<lb/>
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'y<lb/>
V<lb/>
&amp; Sigma Nil<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
S o<lb/>
?y:<lb/>
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Be<lb/>
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Tooth<lb/>
By<lb/>
BROOKS<lb/>
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L<lb/>
? 1 (<lb/>
I . -<lb/>
Is.<lb/>
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Overkill<lb/>
IkV'<lb/>
-<lb/>
Bv PAUL FR1EDRICH<lb/>
. A <lb/>
 p. FvrrSTjc! -flu Wofj<lb/>
ftt?-R(fRte. j<lb/>
10 Draft "All Rite<lb/>
&amp; Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Presen ts<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Iwednesdav, November 13, 1985 9:00-1:00 A.M.<lb/>
Admission SI.50 Guys Sl.OOLadiesj<lb/>
n &amp; Try : ni. With Our Music-Back GuaraiT' ?<lb/>
-RISK<lb/>
m;(mi)s<lb/>
Seminars Offer Rare Opportunity<lb/>
( ontinued from Pant' 6<lb/>
fit<lb/>
?  K L il<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
? ? rsc you<lb/>
ike don'l couni on il<lb/>
offered the follow<lb/>
i ai any other time.<lb/>
 linj to i ?? Zanders.<lb/>
ble students (those with 3 4<lb/>
le point averages or better oi<lb/>
r ons) should not be afraid<lb/>
onors classes. He says<lb/>
lasse fa ilitate actual lear-<lb/>
j instead of harder work" and<lb/>
"many people make higher<lb/>
trades in honor classes than they<lb/>
in regular ones<lb/>
Some believe the honors pro<lb/>
,1 only boosting the<lb/>
university's reputation, but is<lb/>
becoming known nationwide as a<lb/>
superior program. I hose in the<lb/>
program state the standards foi<lb/>
admissions are highei than at<lb/>
most universities, and the<lb/>
number ol students involved as a<lb/>
percentage of the total student<lb/>
population is highei than the na-<lb/>
tional average. Also, the<lb/>
anization is a member of the<lb/>
National Collegiate Honors<lb/>
C ouncil (NCHC). One formei<lb/>
member of the organization,<lb/>
Rick Atkinson, recently won a<lb/>
Pulitzer Prize tor journalism.<lb/>
I he honors program is not on<lb/>
ly concerned with academics,<lb/>
though. The last C arolina<lb/>
Honors Organization tic HO) is<lb/>
an offshot oi the program aimed<lb/>
at "bringing students together<lb/>
socially outside the classroom<lb/>
according to its president Brian<lb/>
Burke<lb/>
1 CHO is just reallv getting<lb/>
under way this year, even though<lb/>
it has been officially chartered<lb/>
tor five years. Nevertheless, the<lb/>
organization is already<lb/>
recruiting, remodeling the honors<lb/>
lounge and planning to host the<lb/>
1987 state convention of the<lb/>
NCHC. Burke said future plans<lb/>
include starting ECHO programs<lb/>
that affect all ECU students<lb/>
He'd also like to increase the<lb/>
number of honors students pai<lb/>
ticipating in the ECHO.<lb/>
With the increase in national<lb/>
attention that the honors p<lb/>
gram is earning Brian Burke is<lb/>
running Ux one oi three student<lb/>
spots on the national executive<lb/>
council Ol the M H( ?it can do<lb/>
nothing but get better and<lb/>
enhance tiie image oi the whole<lb/>
school, members say. If eligible,<lb/>
you can be a pan oi this group h<lb/>
simply signing up for an honors<lb/>
course.<lb/>
OUR<lb/>
"NO RISK<lb/>
GUARANTEE<lb/>
MARILUON<lb/>
MISPLACEI HILDHOOD<lb/>
? ? ? -<lb/>
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On Sale Throi<lb/>
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HOUNPS OF L ?VI<lb/>
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$5.99Each<lb/>
Cassette or LP<lb/>
cn<lb/>
 Tl ? 'Ifl<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
THE PLAZA ? CAROLINA EAST AAALL<lb/>
a?<lb/>
vtsa<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
IHt t S i AKOI IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
S(!l MHt K 12, lyx- I'dr '<lb/>
Fullwood Steals Siow<lb/>
Junior tailback Brent Fullwood led Auhumwit h 153 yards rushing and<lb/>
three touchdowns for the 14th-ranked Vtir Ka gles<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
Backup tailback B r e n I<lb/>
Fullwood rushed tor 153 yards<lb/>
and three touchdowns on 14 car-<lb/>
ries as No. 14 Auburn defeated<lb/>
ECU on their homecoming<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Fullwood, a junior from Si.<lb/>
C loud, Ha tilled in lor a slightly<lb/>
injured Heisman candidate Bo<lb/>
Jackson. Fullwood lead a potent<lb/>
Auburn rushing attack (3rd in the<lb/>
nation, 342.4 yards per game)<lb/>
that netted 310 vards, compared<lb/>
to 181 for the Pirates.<lb/>
After ECU elected to kKkott,<lb/>
Auburn began on their own 20<lb/>
vard line. After three first downs<lb/>
by I he War Eagles, the Buc<lb/>
defense stiffened as strong safet)<lb/>
Vernard Wynn and linebacket<lb/>
Bubba Waters dropped AI<lb/>
quarterback Pat Washington for<lb/>
a five-yard loss. With 9:IK left in<lb/>
the first period, Al "s Colbert<lb/>
punted into the endone.<lb/>
The Pirates managed a first<lb/>
down on a 10-yard pass from<lb/>
Darrell Speed to spin end loin<lb/>
Smith. Freshman punter Tim<lb/>
Wolter than boomed a 60-yard<lb/>
punt, which was downed on the<lb/>
War Wagle one-yard line.<lb/>
?l got a quick first down deep<lb/>
No. 14 Auburn Tops Bucs<lb/>
li!?P'R m ,hc!r llu" 't110 Ihen, cored the process, forcing a Chris 19-yard held.<lb/>
Washington appeared to com- KnaPP field-coal attemnt of K War lay; 14 :<lb/>
in their own territory, then<lb/>
Washington appeared to com<lb/>
plete a short pass to Jackson,<lb/>
who was stripped oi the ball by<lb/>
strong safety Essra laliateno.<lb/>
However, the pass was ruled in-<lb/>
complete. K I was able to hold<lb/>
and received the hall on its own<lb/>
25<lb/>
Alter tlie Pirates were unable<lb/>
to move the ball. Wolter nailed a<lb/>
52-yard punt to the -l 16. I tie<lb/>
War Eagles responded by driving<lb/>
4 vards m eight plays, with<lb/>
1-ullwood scoring from foul<lb/>
ds out. I Ins gave AT a 7-0<lb/>
lead, with 14:() remaining in the<lb/>
second quarter.<lb/>
After another Woltei punt, it<lb/>
looked as if -( would take con<lb/>
trol as the) moved to the E I<lb/>
43. However, an Aaron tarter<lb/>
and Willie Mack sack forced M<lb/>
to punt from their 49.<lb/>
The Pirates ran into tough. W ai<lb/>
Eagle defen e as they could not<lb/>
music a fii m down on either<lb/>
their next wo possessions.<lb/>
Big plays in the Fine defense<lb/>
kepi the Al id to just seven<lb/>
points nd down and<lb/>
rom the l 10, Robert<lb/>
Washington sacked Al 's<lb/>
Washington On third down.<lb/>
cored the process, forcing a C hns<lb/>
Knapp field-goal attempt of J5<lb/>
yards. Knapp's attempt was<lb/>
blocked bv the ever present<lb/>
senior cornerhack Kevm Walker<lb/>
The War Fagles .<lb/>
chance at a three pointer I his<lb/>
time Knapp's 31-yard attempt<lb/>
was wide left, leaving Al tip 7 '?<lb/>
at the halt<lb/>
( )nly down by seven poin<lb/>
coach Baker felt the Pirates .??<lb/>
still alive but needed to make<lb/>
some adjustments.<lb/>
"We were verv confident at the<lb/>
half Baker said. "1 felt we<lb/>
could make some adjust me<lb/>
and get something<lb/>
tense<lb/>
However, Al responded<lb/>
quickly. On their first pla ? I<lb/>
scrimmage. Fullwood samp'<lb/>
4 vards fin a Wat 1 agle score,<lb/>
upping their lead to 14<lb/>
tter tin teams traded p-<lb/>
snwis. F C I received the ball<lb/>
Al 49. After L.n Baker<lb/>
slashed tor 16 vards u nid-<lb/>
dle, Darrell Speed ke<lb/>
and dashed 32 vard<lb/>
sideline ECl aJ .1 first and-<lb/>
goal from the Al three with '<lb/>
left in the third period.<lb/>
Pirates couldn't fully capita<lb/>
ird fii<lb/>
War I agk ? 14<lb/>
? I<lb/>
w i t h a<lb/>
FI n ied ?<lb/>
Ho wev<lb/>
W .i r I .<lb/>
28-3 ad<lb/>
third i'??<lb/>
I he Pira'e- dii I<lb/>
pressive. but lati<lb/>
ECl drove 55 ? ai I<lb/>
1ednck Rainbow and Mack en- as thev settled foi a let? H<lb/>
Bucs mixed<lb/>
and m<lb/>
three 1 ick Ai<lb/>
the ' 1w<lb/>
l -<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
' 'I appu<lb/>
pi a ? Baker<lb/>
" r<lb/>
i row. B<lb/>
Pirate Defense Shines In Loss To Auburn<lb/>
By NTOI F COOPER DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
Alth  iburn ECl M<lb/>
dicative of a fine<lb/>
ce Def outstanding<lb/>
allowing jusi -irteenth ranked team in trie nation. Seniors Robert Washington and Keith Ford had nine tackles piece ti :y ECl<lb/>
He Bo<lb/>
lackson, w<lb/>
18! ; yards pei game, wa he! I<lb/>
just yard 14 carries.<lb/>
Howevei d an<lb/>
tnding performance bv<lb/>
Auburn backup tailback Brent<lb/>
Fullwood made Jackson's<lb/>
ence undamaging to the War<lb/>
1 C 1 coach ri Bakei thought<lb/>
that the Pirates gave an outstan-<lb/>
ding effort, despite losing the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
"I felt our defense plaved e<lb/>
tionall) well in the first half<lb/>
Baker said. "I have to take m<lb/>
off to the defense. I he<lb/>
coaches really had a fine plan<lb/>
wcorked out.<lb/>
"I felt we made a positive ef-<lb/>
ahurn Baker ad-<lb/>
ded. "Our defensive tackles<lb/>
played improved football ?<lb/>
David Plum. Medrick Rainbow<lb/>
and Walter Bryant all did well.<lb/>
1 inebackers Waters and<lb/>
Washington have been playing<lb/>
well all year and had another fine<lb/>
game<lb/>
The Pirate offense, whicl<lb/>
been struggling all year, was<lb/>
without the services ol<lb/>
sophomore quarterback Ron<lb/>
Jones. Backup quarterbacks Da-<lb/>
re Speed and Berke Holtzda<lb/>
were both unable to rally the<lb/>
Bucs However, coach Baker did<lb/>
see some positive signs from his<lb/>
offensive unit.<lb/>
"Darrell started out very ner-<lb/>
vous Baker said. ?'It's the first<lb/>
game he's started all season.<lb/>
Berke was showing signs<lb/>
'freshman-itis but he showed<lb/>
after us and reall) hit hard Dye<lb/>
" ou onlv see that kind ol<lb/>
effort from a team that has the<lb/>
greatest respeel ach.<lb/>
"I; you give Art Baker the<lb/>
nine, he'll turn that progi<lb/>
around Dye added. "1<lb/>
v arolina is in a good location to<lb/>
?d athletes that van<lb/>
run i .a see a dream that I saw<lb/>
yeai have a good<lb/>
Southern Independent power<lb/>
C oav-h. Dye, who prolesscd no<lb/>
wish to beat ECU. likened his vic-<lb/>
tors over the Pirates to his defeat<lb/>
' 'he legendary coach Paul<lb/>
"Bear " Bryai I<lb/>
 slid lach fit van; to<lb/>
Dye also expressed fond fe<lb/>
ings toward the Greenville com-<lb/>
munity, which was his home dur-<lb/>
ing his six ears at the helm ol<lb/>
Pirate football progr.r<lb/>
"('?<lb/>
e in the w Dye<lb/>
: enjoy<lb/>
.<lb/>
IS W<lb/>
"If you give Art Baker the time, he'll<lb/>
turn that program arouid can see a<lb/>
dream that I saw years ago ? to have a<lb/>
good Southern Independent power. "<lb/>
?Pat Dye<lb/>
Tony Baker rambles for<lb/>
J B HtM)E? T - The EjiI Carolinian<lb/>
yardage in Saturday's contest.<lb/>
quite a bit of promise as well.<lb/>
"We had to play with offensive<lb/>
linemen who hadn't practiced all<lb/>
week. Baker continued, "and<lb/>
they played very well. Greg<lb/>
Thomas, Ken Bourgeois, Tim<lb/>
Dumas and Greg Sokolohorsky<lb/>
really came through for us.<lb/>
(Snapper) Stuart Ward, who we<lb/>
weren't even sure would make the<lb/>
trip, also gave a great effort. We<lb/>
were getting the kind of efforts<lb/>
you usually don't get<lb/>
Auburn head coach and<lb/>
former ECl' head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
felt that the Pirates showed their<lb/>
devotion to coach Baker.<lb/>
"East Carolina made a foot<lb/>
ball game out of it. Thev came<lb/>
go to his grave having iost to<lb/>
coach. Dye, just like 1 didn't want<lb/>
to go out there and beat ECL,<lb/>
but it wasn't up to me, the kids<lb/>
play the game coach Dye con-<lb/>
fessed.<lb/>
JIMLEtftEN S Th?E?itO<lb/>
Robert Washington (58) id Ron C.ilhax)(85 define gang tackling.<lb/>
First ECU Open Successful<lb/>
By DA ID McGINNKss<lb/>
The first annual ECU I M <lb/>
Tennis ("lassie was held this<lb/>
weekend with a draw of "2 par-<lb/>
ticipants competing in seven dif-<lb/>
ferent events.<lb/>
Among the entrants were many<lb/>
of the 1(1 men's and women's<lb/>
tennis team members, as well as a<lb/>
lot of local talent and state-<lb/>
ranked players.<lb/>
In the men's open competition.<lb/>
Greenville's own Alan larfour<lb/>
defeated Andy King in straight<lb/>
sets, 6-4, 7-5.<lb/>
The women's final pitted two<lb/>
ECU varsity players, Lisa<lb/>
Eichholz and Ty Myers. Eichholz<lb/>
downed Myers in three sets 4-6,<lb/>
6-4, 6-1.<lb/>
Two former ECU men's team<lb/>
members, Galen Treble and<lb/>
Barry Moran narrowly lost to<lb/>
Norman Bryant and Steve<lb/>
Walker 4-6, 6-4, 5-7. "It was a<lb/>
good match said Moran. "The<lb/>
momentum shifted to us after the<lb/>
first set but back to them in the<lb/>
third. We were playing with no-<lb/>
ad scoring which was unfamiliar<lb/>
to people who haven't played col<lb/>
iege tennis recently<lb/>
In the women's doubles finals,<lb/>
Wilson natives Linda Horton and<lb/>
Chris Graham defeated ECU's<lb/>
Ty Myers and Lisa Eichholz 7-5,<lb/>
6-4.<lb/>
The men's 35 singles champion<lb/>
was John Clayton, a Greenville<lb/>
resident who topped Larry<lb/>
Walker 6-1, 6-4.<lb/>
In the men's 35 doubles, John<lb/>
Benson and Lee Home needed<lb/>
three sets to dispose of Cecil Mar-<lb/>
tin and Paul Tardtf, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.<lb/>
The mixed doubles finals saw<lb/>
Henry Hostetler and Margaret<lb/>
McGlohan defeat Steve Walker<lb/>
and Jeannie Jones 7-6, 6-2.<lb/>
Hostetler-McGIohan ousted<lb/>
ECU's Eichholz-Anthony in the<lb/>
semi-final match 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 to<lb/>
reach the championship round.<lb/>
The tournament was postpon-<lb/>
ed due to rain a week ago, which<lb/>
resulted in the dropping out of<lb/>
about 35 participants. However,<lb/>
on the whole, both sponsors and<lb/>
participants were pleased with the<lb/>
tournament's organization, com-<lb/>
petition and atmosphere.<lb/>
"I was a little dissappointed<lb/>
that we had to postpone the tour-<lb/>
nament because of the rain said<lb/>
tournament director Pat Sher-<lb/>
man, "but we had a really good<lb/>
tournament. The weather was<lb/>
beautifulthe level of competi-<lb/>
tion was really goodand<lb/>
everyone einjoyed themselves.<lb/>
Doubles finalist Barry Moran<lb/>
also thought highly of the tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"It was a good one said<lb/>
Moran. "There was no waiting<lb/>
for courts and there were some<lb/>
really good matches played<lb/>
William Grady (40) and the ECU Pirate basket b all team will host the Irish wi i T<lb/>
Minges Coliseum at 7:30 p.m. Students itadm itted free with a valid ECU ID<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ueberr<lb/>
YORK<lb/>
missionei P<lb/>
major Ira.<lb/>
rekxj<lb/>
as no<lb/>
Sp ?<lb/>
ference 1<lb/>
prese<lb/>
chise<lb/>
specit<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
PI<lb/>
O i ?<lb/>
pete<lb/>
N a ? ?<lb/>
and<lb/>
??( -?<lb/>
sider i<lb/>
Uebt.<lb/>
<lb/>
their al<lb/>
Despite L<lb/>
Team Takl<lb/>
The 1 I<lb/>
valid<lb/>
came<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
the<lb/>
row<lb/>
IV -<lb/>
with at<lb/>
were ur. .<lb/>
poii<lb/>
Span<lb/>
grabbed tl<lb/>
about I<lb/>
ger p-<lb/>
The extra<lb/>
IV <lb/>
The<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
 '<lb/>
reless<lb/>
"they did ;<lb/>
where<lb/>
Greensbor<lb/>
score Zimmei<lb/>
example was <lb/>
interception in the nrsr ziar. nc<lb/>
picked off a pass and<lb/>
about 45 meters be'<lb/>
tackled, stopping a Pi<lb/>
The second I .<lb/>
? '? -i<lb/>
Despite a great Pirate effort, the f<lb/>
quest for the state title against a po?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE EY<lb/>
FRA<lb/>
WITH THE PI R H W Of<lb/>
i"hoc from our lrr ???v<lb/>
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i<lb/>
OPEN ? AM i? PM MONDAY THE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057756_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER U198 3<lb/>
aps Bucs<lb/>
JR. ?H-<lb/>
: nit i 5:31<lb/>
j wii-play, apped wood.<lb/>
11 in-<lb/>
5 cae Hiding<lb/>
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idrive.<lb/>
4<lb/>
0 rhe<lb/>
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seven ? with<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Dye<lb/>
nd Ron Gilliaa1(85 i define tjann tatkling.<lb/>
will host the Irish National Team tonight in<lb/>
with - valid ECU ID.<lb/>
Recommends<lb/>
YORK ? (UPI) Baseball Com-<lb/>
missioner Peter Ueberroth said<lb/>
major-league expansion or<lb/>
relocation "could come as early<lb/>
as next year<lb/>
Speaking at a brief news con-<lb/>
ference following two days of<lb/>
presentations by 12 cities or<lb/>
regions seeking big-league fran-<lb/>
chises, Ueberroth was very<lb/>
specific in linking expansion and<lb/>
relocation and in adding, "It may<lb/>
not come for several years<lb/>
Phoenix, Buffalo, N.Y New<lb/>
Orleans, Tampa Bay-St.<lb/>
Petersburg, Fla New Jersey and<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn made presenta-<lb/>
tions as did Columbus, Ohio,<lb/>
Denver, the Miami, Fla area,<lb/>
Washington, D.C Indianapolis<lb/>
and Vancouver, British Colum-<lb/>
bia.<lb/>
"One of the cities appeared to<lb/>
us to have backed off con-<lb/>
siderably from their interest<lb/>
Ueberroth said. "Some that we<lb/>
thought were way-down-line<lb/>
types of cities surprised us by<lb/>
their ability to be ready to con-<lb/>
sider expansion or relocation<lb/>
much quicker than we had<lb/>
thought He declined to name<lb/>
any of them.<lb/>
He also said the relocation of<lb/>
existing teams doesn't have to be<lb/>
completed before expansion fran-<lb/>
chises are awarded and that<lb/>
financially troubled teams could<lb/>
get first crack at the cities seeking<lb/>
ballclubs.<lb/>
"If ownership decided that ex-<lb/>
pansion won't come until 'X'<lb/>
year, then relocation would have<lb/>
first shot he said. "If they<lb/>
decided on a much quicker time<lb/>
frame for expansion, they<lb/>
(relocation and expansion) might<lb/>
be lumped together.<lb/>
"It's also possible that some<lb/>
cities might be better for reloca-<lb/>
tion than expansion and vice ver-<lb/>
sa. Obviously, if a city has no<lb/>
facility now, then a relocation is<lb/>
probably not possible. That city<lb/>
would be more of an expansion<lb/>
city than a relocation city. A city<lb/>
where we could play next week<lb/>
could have both possibilities<lb/>
Denver, Vancouver and New<lb/>
Orleans have ballparks that could<lb/>
Despite Loss; Rugby<lb/>
Team Takes Second<lb/>
house major-league teams im-<lb/>
mediately. Washington's RFK<lb/>
Stadium, former home of the<lb/>
Senators, needs some restructur-<lb/>
ing of the seating. Each other<lb/>
community has either a minor-<lb/>
league park needing major ex-<lb/>
pansion or no existing stadium at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Buffalo and Phoenix pitched<lb/>
their weather in earlier sessions<lb/>
with the Long Range Planning<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
"One floor upstairs are<lb/>
baseball people making baseball<lb/>
decisions for the future of their<lb/>
sport Bob Rich Jr president<lb/>
of the minor-league Buffalo<lb/>
Bisons, said in a room on the<lb/>
48th floor of a skyscraper hous-<lb/>
ing the offices of Willie, Farr &amp;<lb/>
Gallagher, a law firm that in-<lb/>
cludes former Commissioner<lb/>
Bowie Kuhn as a member.<lb/>
"The Buffalo jokes not-<lb/>
withstanding Rich said, "sure<lb/>
we have snow, but it comes in the<lb/>
winter, when it's supposed to.<lb/>
We only had seven games rained<lb/>
out over the last three years and<lb/>
no games snowed out<lb/>
Buffalo's image problem is the<lb/>
reverse of Phoenix's. The average<lb/>
August temperature there is 104<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
"There are rumors afoot that<lb/>
it's warm in Phoenix in the sum-<lb/>
mertime Mayor Terry Goddard<lb/>
said with a grin. "We consider<lb/>
that an advantage, but there are .<lb/>
those who don't and we had to<lb/>
talk to the committee about that.<lb/>
"There was concern that we<lb/>
wouldn't be able to build a fan<lb/>
base during July and August, but<lb/>
we feel the fan enthusiasm is<lb/>
there, as is the new technology of<lb/>
stadium construction with<lb/>
transluscent domes, retractable<lb/>
domes and evaporative coolr.g<lb/>
a form of outdoor air condition-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
New Orleans' pitch was linked<lb/>
to the Louisiana Superdome,<lb/>
New Jersey's to a projected First-<lb/>
year attendance of 2.6 million,<lb/>
Nashville's to its claim as a major<lb/>
tourist center and the home of a<lb/>
highly successful minor-league<lb/>
team and the Tanipa-St.<lb/>
Petersburg bid to the region's<lb/>
growth potential and climate.<lb/>
The 26 club-owners meet a<lb/>
month from now in San Diego,<lb/>
where they will evaluate the com-<lb/>
mittee's report. Ed Durso,<lb/>
baseball's executive vice presi-<lb/>
dent, secretary-treasurer and<lb/>
general counsel, reiterated that<lb/>
the committee "will not be mak-<lb/>
ing any announcements or com-<lb/>
mitments" and that their sole<lb/>
purpose was to gather informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"We neither encouraged nor<lb/>
discouraged anyone Durso<lb/>
said, shooting down comments<lb/>
by Rich.<lb/>
"We came here as the dark<lb/>
horse and we're going out as the<lb/>
eye-opener Rich said. "We<lb/>
tried to bite our lip, but we're en-<lb/>
couraged<lb/>
"I'm pleased they feel that<lb/>
way Durso said. "It probably<lb/>
just reflects the fact that they<lb/>
were happy to have an opportuni-<lb/>
ty to address the committee. 1 can<lb/>
assure you there was nothing<lb/>
stated by the committee to them<lb/>
in any way which would say<lb/>
they're to be particularly en-<lb/>
couraged<lb/>
New Orleans offered the<lb/>
Superdome as a neutral site for<lb/>
the World Series. "There was no<lb/>
reaction on their (the<lb/>
committee's) part Mayor<lb/>
Ernest Morial said.<lb/>
The stadium, home of the Na-<lb/>
tional Football League's New<lb/>
Orleans Saints, also housed the<lb/>
New Orleans Pelicans, a Class<lb/>
AAA American Association team<lb/>
that arrived from Tulsa, Okla in<lb/>
time for the 1977 season and left<lb/>
for Springfield, Mo before the<lb/>
1978 season. "Poor attendance<lb/>
was a major factor in the team's<lb/>
move said a spokesman for the<lb/>
team, now located in Louisville,<lb/>
Ky.<lb/>
"There is a different appeal<lb/>
with major-league baseball than<lb/>
there is with minor-league<lb/>
baseball Morial said.<lb/>
The expansion franchise in its<lb/>
region "would draw, from year<lb/>
one, 2.6 million people Jon<lb/>
Hanson, chairman of the New<lb/>
Jersey Sports and Exposition<lb/>
Authority said.<lb/>
"We are willing to enter into<lb/>
an agreement of a baseball fran-<lb/>
chise that, for the first five years<lb/>
of operation, we would have two<lb/>
million dollars paid admissions<lb/>
per year, and if it were less than<lb/>
that, we would have to make the<lb/>
payments to back it up Hanson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The exposition authority owns<lb/>
the Meadlowlands complex,<lb/>
home of the Giants and Jets of<lb/>
the NFL plus pro basketball's<lb/>
Nets and pro hockey's Devils.<lb/>
Hanson said a baseball stadium<lb/>
would not be a part of the com-<lb/>
plex but would be built elsewhere<lb/>
in northern New Jersey.<lb/>
The ECU Rugby club gave a<lb/>
valiant effort this weekend, but<lb/>
came up short against UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro. finishing No. 2 in<lb/>
the state for the second year in a<lb/>
row.<lb/>
UNC-G started out quickly<lb/>
with an early try. However, they<lb/>
were unsuccessful with the extra-<lb/>
point attempt and led 4-0. The<lb/>
Spartans scored again off a line-<lb/>
out. "Their second row member<lb/>
grabbed the ball and scored from<lb/>
about five meters out said rug-<lb/>
ger president Bill Zimmerman.<lb/>
The extra point was good and<lb/>
UNC-G suddenly had a 10-0 lead.<lb/>
The score remained this way until<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
Although the Pirates went<lb/>
i scoreless in the opening half,<lb/>
"they did put together good plays<lb/>
where they broke down<lb/>
Greensboro's team, but couldn't<lb/>
score Zimmerman said. One<lb/>
example was Alan Blankenship's<lb/>
interception in the first half. He<lb/>
picked off a pass and scrambled<lb/>
bout 45 meters before being<lb/>
tackled, stopping a Pirate drive.<lb/>
The second half went scoreless<lb/>
for the first 15 minutes. Then<lb/>
ECU freshman rugger Steve<lb/>
Kinne scored on a 10-meter<lb/>
overlap. Mike Brown added the<lb/>
extra point and ECU trailed 6-10.<lb/>
With five minutes left to play,<lb/>
UNC-G tacked on another try on<lb/>
a 30-meter run off the wing. With<lb/>
the conversion, UNC-G went on<lb/>
to win 16-6.<lb/>
"The match was pretty even,<lb/>
the score didn't indicate how the<lb/>
match really was Zimmerman<lb/>
said. "It was a tough-fought<lb/>
match in front of a big crowd.<lb/>
"The experience this year will<lb/>
help us carry on the tradition next<lb/>
year Zimmerman added.<lb/>
Zimmerman and the ECU<lb/>
rugby team would like to thank<lb/>
their two December graduates ?<lb/>
Alan Blankenship and Kevin<lb/>
Mussier for their time and effort<lb/>
throughout the years.<lb/>
Also, the rugby team would<lb/>
like to invite all interested<lb/>
students to attend a team meeting<lb/>
on Nov. 14 in room 205 of the<lb/>
library. The team will be discuss-<lb/>
ing plans for the Spring Break<lb/>
Tour to the Bahamas.<lb/>
Despite a great Pirate effort, the ECU njby team fell short in their<lb/>
quest for the state title against a powerfti UN C-G team.<lb/>
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PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd Greenville, NC<lb/>
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