<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00057793_0001"/>
?ltt<lb/>
(Earoltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No.aO Thursday, January 16, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
ECU Buys Warehouse,<lb/>
Expanding Land Area<lb/>
Sow It's ECU'S<lb/>
JIWLEUTGENS- The E?s' C?rolmin<lb/>
Over thehrisimas break K I purchased the New Carolina Warehouse on Charles Street behind<lb/>
Minges. I he purchase completes the tract of land in that area. See related story on page 1 for further<lb/>
details.<lb/>
ECU Profess<lb/>
On Library b<lb/>
( <lb/>
Outspoken<lb/>
 Censorship<lb/>
B HAROI DJOYNER<lb/>
N4.ff Wrllrf<lb/>
In an effort to expand campus<lb/>
grounds, ECU officials recently<lb/>
announced that the purchase of a<lb/>
tabacco warehouse that was<lb/>
made over Christmas break and a<lb/>
proposal to make an official en-<lb/>
trance to the campus are still in<lb/>
the planning Mages.<lb/>
More than two a. res were<lb/>
recently added to EC I 's existing<lb/>
411-acre campus through the<lb/>
estimated $250,000 purchase of<lb/>
the New Carolina w arehouse and<lb/>
property located on Charles<lb/>
Boulevard.<lb/>
Nevertheless, no official plans<lb/>
have been made tor the 79,680<lb/>
square-foot warehouse, said<lb/>
CO- Moore, vice chancellor tor<lb/>
business affair. m e<lb/>
possibilities, such a- housing<lb/>
equipment or h itl letic<lb/>
events. have been suggested for<lb/>
uses oi the building.<lb/>
The University owns land on<lb/>
three sides oi the building, and<lb/>
Howell said in a recent interview<lb/>
that "The University needs to be<lb/>
interested in acquiring any pro-<lb/>
perty that becomes available<lb/>
when it borders on University<lb/>
property.<lb/>
ECU was offered the property<lb/>
where Ringgold Towers now<lb/>
stands but turned down the otter<lb/>
because of lack of funds. Howell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
tI VfHv Bureau<lb/>
? the nation's i<lb/>
tivc . .  ai d outspoken<lb/>
' ? I aniet cl til a:<lb/>
lumei . ban les on<lb/>
1 ? mendn n<lb/>
I aniet. pn c i ol library<lb/>
and information studies a; I (. I .<lb/>
neads the North Carolina I ibrary<lb/>
Association's Intellectual<lb/>
i reedom n n ittee and the<lb/>
V Vssociation's<lb/>
Intellectual Freed n Round<lb/>
I it He ften summoned to<lb/>
expei' -? tness, the voice<lb/>
for First Ami em rights, the<lb/>
ntidani I a panicky<lb/>
rai in beei ordered to<lb/>
pull a c ??-?? al book off the<lb/>
she<lb/>
He's also beeti the target ol<lb/>
se whom he describes as<lb/>
"radical right-wingers" who at-<lb/>
1 anier<lb/>
tempt to censor library and<lb/>
school textbooks, the "self-styled<lb/>
arbiters of public morals<lb/>
"I'm a First Amendment<lb/>
purist I.anier says with pride.<lb/>
"I am a fool for these words, for<lb/>
the concept. To me. the words of<lb/>
the First Amendment are ab-<lb/>
solute . . .no law. . .abridging<lb/>
the freedom of speech, or of the<lb/>
press. <lb/>
"It doesn't say that there will<lb/>
be freedom of expression provid-<lb/>
ed said expressions do not run<lb/>
contrary to popular thought, or<lb/>
that said expressions have no<lb/>
tendency to subvert standing in-<lb/>
stitutions<lb/>
A First Amendment champion<lb/>
because of his interest in<lb/>
??? Ml ?????<lb/>
The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features8<lb/>
Sports? 1<lb/>
In all things, success<lb/>
depends on previous prepara-<lb/>
tion, and without such<lb/>
preparation there is sure to be<lb/>
failure.<lb/>
-Confucius<lb/>
libraries. Lamer has often found<lb/>
himself allied with elements some<lb/>
might consider unsavory. "I am<lb/>
not comfortable with many of the<lb/>
excesses that take place in the<lb/>
ne of the Firs; Amendment<lb/>
he admits.<lb/>
The anti-censorship fight docs<lb/>
ike for some strange<lb/>
bedfellows ? librarians find<lb/>
themselves lined up with blatant<lb/>
pornographers in lobbying<lb/>
against such anti-obscentity<lb/>
measures as the law passed b the<lb/>
North Carolina General<lb/>
Assembly last fall. This legisla-<lb/>
tion was passed in disregard ol<lb/>
the report of the assembly's own<lb/>
study Commission on Obscenity<lb/>
Laws, according to Lamer, who<lb/>
served on the commission.<lb/>
"Now the censors are primari-<lb/>
ly after the video dealers, the<lb/>
adult bookstores, the motion pic-<lb/>
ture theaters said Lanier. "But<lb/>
when they've finished with them,<lb/>
they may turn they threats to the<lb/>
libraries and the classrooms.<lb/>
Where will they draw the line?"<lb/>
It is this singleminded devotion<lb/>
to the public's "right to read"<lb/>
that has sent Lanier on more than<lb/>
100 speaking engagements, to<lb/>
legislative hearings on proposed<lb/>
laws on obscenity and library<lb/>
user privacy. Hardly a week goes<lb/>
by that he doesn't get a call from<lb/>
a librarian needing advice on<lb/>
dealing with censorship threats.<lb/>
During 1985, these calls came<lb/>
from all over the state and<lb/>
elsewhere, from as far away as<lb/>
New York, California, Min-<lb/>
nesota and Florida.<lb/>
Lanier displays a framed copy<lb/>
of the American Library Associa-<lb/>
tion's Library Bill of Rights over<lb/>
his desk in ECU's Joyner<lb/>
Library. On another wall hangs<lb/>
some of the awards he's been<lb/>
given in recognition of his strug-<lb/>
gle against library censorship,<lb/>
among them the American<lb/>
Library Association's 1984 John<lb/>
Immroth Memorial Award for<lb/>
Intellectual Freedom. Receiving<lb/>
the Playboy Foundation's 1982<lb/>
Hugh M. Hefner First Amend-<lb/>
ment Award in Education<lb/>
brought Lanier widespread<lb/>
recognition ? and a charge by a<lb/>
former state legislator that<lb/>
Lanier's views of obscenity<lb/>
should be discounted since he had<lb/>
accepted the honor from a<lb/>
"known pornographer<lb/>
Lanier's postwar experience as<lb/>
a counterintelligence special<lb/>
agent in Western Europe brought<lb/>
him into contact with Germans<lb/>
who had lived through the "book<lb/>
burnings" of the Nazi regime. "I<lb/>
began to realize how easy it is for<lb/>
our basic right to be taken<lb/>
away he recalled. "This is par-<lb/>
ticularly true in a place where<lb/>
freedom is taken for granted.<lb/>
"Some of our basic freedoms<lb/>
are being eroded now by persons<lb/>
who are screaming louder than<lb/>
we are and who are dictating the<lb/>
reading, viewing and listening<lb/>
habits of our ctiens<lb/>
Censorship attempts in schools<lb/>
and libraries are increasing rapid-<lb/>
 Lamier said. Nationwide, there<lb/>
were one-third more documented<lb/>
vases in 1985 than the number<lb/>
reported in 1984. Targets of<lb/>
book-ban cases are numerous<lb/>
and varied ? new fiction by<lb/>
novelists Judy Blume and<lb/>
Howard Fast and literary classics<lb/>
Romeo and Juliet, Huckleberry<lb/>
Finn and Brave iew World, even<lb/>
such popular children's stones as<lb/>
"Little Red Riding Hood" and<lb/>
"The Emperor's New Clothes<lb/>
J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the<lb/>
Rye is a perennial target for<lb/>
school library purges. Reference<lb/>
works are not exempt either;<lb/>
Lanier knows of cases involving<lb/>
two current dictionaries and the<lb/>
See PROFESSOR Page 3.<lb/>
Howell<lb/>
The monev used to buy the<lb/>
warehouse was approved bv the<lb/>
ECL Board o! Governors<lb/>
ECU has asked the citj ol<lb/>
'he recent purchase completes the Greenville to sell the old "swim-<lb/>
tract of land. Chancellor John ming pool" parking lot, located<lb/>
at East Fifth Street and Readc<lb/>
Circle. Drawings and plans of the<lb/>
area were presented to Greenville<lb/>
City Council members at a recent<lb/>
meeting. In a letter by Howell<lb/>
stated that ECU wanted to buv<lb/>
the property at a "fair market<lb/>
value "<lb/>
EC U plans to make the ? tu-<lb/>
rning pool" lot an "official<lb/>
trance" to ECU through the use<lb/>
of landscaping and a sigr.<lb/>
The property was thev fthe<lb/>
old municipal swimming ;<lb/>
and is now being used as a leased<lb/>
city parking lot. Even thougl<lb/>
of the 26 parking spa.es arc leas-<lb/>
ed by the city. Council members<lb/>
were hesitant in selling the<lb/>
few remaining parking ts in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
ccord ' b ' 1984 figure<lb/>
campus is valued at i<lb/>
S2.9 million, with the replace-<lb/>
ment value of the buildings set at<lb/>
more than $196.36 milli n<lb/>
Ot the 246 77 acres f land tl at<lb/>
make up the van.pas. 2; 23 acre<lb/>
are covered by. b i Id ngs and i<lb/>
acres are covered by rr' 5<lb/>
There are 5.2. miles ? : streets and<lb/>
12 miles I lew ill rding<lb/>
the renort.<lb/>
Hearing Program Unique<lb/>
B C ROl SS DKIsWOI I<lb/>
Viff Wntr?<lb/>
"The Program tor Heai i a<lb/>
Impaired Students is here to pro-<lb/>
vide support services, not<lb/>
academic services to students at<lb/>
ECU explains Tony Schreiber,<lb/>
director of the program.<lb/>
Those who benefit from these<lb/>
services have disabilities ranging<lb/>
from a need for greater volume to<lb/>
complete deafness<lb/>
The program began nine years<lb/>
ago when James M. Dickson, a<lb/>
trustee for the university, wanted<lb/>
his hearing-impaired daughter to<lb/>
attend ECU. However, in 1977<lb/>
there were no services to support<lb/>
students with these conditions.<lb/>
At Dickson's suggestion, the pro-<lb/>
gram came into existence and has<lb/>
since expanded<lb/>
Its services are listed in several<lb/>
rials for prospective students<lb/>
looking for colleges with pro-<lb/>
grams for the hearing impaired.<lb/>
ECU's program offers five<lb/>
academic support services: inter-<lb/>
preting (in sign language and<lb/>
orally), tutoring, notetaking in<lb/>
class and counseling and ad-<lb/>
vocacy. "Educational support<lb/>
for the faculty says Schreiber,<lb/>
"is for those teachers with<lb/>
hearing-impaired students in<lb/>
their classes. . .to help them fit<lb/>
the student in<lb/>
Sign language training and<lb/>
amplification systems are the two<lb/>
technical services students may<lb/>
take advantage at ECU. For<lb/>
?hose who are "more hard<lb/>
hearing than deaf accord g I<lb/>
Schreiber, the program provides<lb/>
teacher-student a m p f<lb/>
devices in which the teachei<lb/>
wears a small microphone<lb/>
lapel.<lb/>
As far as social activities, .ap-<lb/>
tioned movies are frequei<lb/>
shown for students. Re.e:<lb/>
students took in Superman,<lb/>
Absence of Malice, Stripes and<lb/>
Airplane.<lb/>
In addition to those provided<lb/>
by the programs, the university<lb/>
offers a decoder on a television in<lb/>
Mendenhall for closed-captioned<lb/>
programs, amplifiers foi dorm-<lb/>
See HEARING Pane 3.<lb/>
Health Services Gets New X-Ray Unit<lb/>
BETH WHICKER<lb/>
stiff Wnitf<lb/>
The Student Health Services'<lb/>
purchase of a new X-ray unit has<lb/>
substantially decreased the cost<lb/>
of getting X-rays for students.<lb/>
"Before the X-ray unit was<lb/>
purchased, students were referred<lb/>
to private physicians, and that is<lb/>
very expensive said James Mc-<lb/>
Callum, director of ECU's Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Services.<lb/>
"Students have come in for ex-<lb/>
aminations and have been told<lb/>
that they needed X-rays. Some of<lb/>
these same students didn't have<lb/>
the money or the insurance to<lb/>
cover the cost of the X-ray at a<lb/>
doctor's office or the hospital<lb/>
said Kay Van Nortwick, ad-<lb/>
ministrative manager of ECU's<lb/>
Student Health Services.<lb/>
"The new machine will supply<lb/>
a need to the students where in<lb/>
the past there has been no<lb/>
availabilitymainly because of<lb/>
the service's costliness, said Mc-<lb/>
Callum.<lb/>
According to Van Nortwick,<lb/>
the cost of an X-ray at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Services will be<lb/>
about one-third the cost of get-<lb/>
ting an X-ray at a private physi-<lb/>
cian's office.<lb/>
"Insurance through the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Services pays for the<lb/>
entire cost of the X-rays perform-<lb/>
ed at the Student Health<lb/>
Services said Van Nortwick.<lb/>
The Student Health Services<lb/>
has been in the process of pur-<lb/>
chasing the new X-ray unit since<lb/>
April, 1985. The process was<lb/>
lengthy because the health center<lb/>
had to deal with state agencies<lb/>
and, moreover, adhere to their<lb/>
regulations.<lb/>
The Student Health Services<lb/>
purchased the unit with Student<lb/>
Health fees, which are the sole<lb/>
source of funding for the Student<lb/>
Health Services.<lb/>
"We have studied getting the<lb/>
X-ray unit for 10 years. It was a<lb/>
slow process because the Student<lb/>
Health Services spends money on<lb/>
services that are demanded<lb/>
most Van Nortwick said.<lb/>
"We see approximatly 300<lb/>
students a day. yet only about 25<lb/>
patients a week need X-rays<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
The new unit, able to X-ray the<lb/>
extremities and chest areas, will<lb/>
become most helpful during the<lb/>
flu season, noted Student Health<lb/>
Services administrators.<lb/>
However, the new machine is not<lb/>
equipped to perform internal<lb/>
X-rays such as gastrointestinals.<lb/>
Once an X-ray is taken, it will<lb/>
be sent to a radiologist who will<lb/>
read and interpret the X-ray The<lb/>
fee charged for this service will<lb/>
pay for the supplies used during<lb/>
the procedure and will also pay<lb/>
the radiologist's expenses<lb/>
New X-Ray Unit<lb/>
JIMLEUTGENS ThtElslCtrolmim<lb/>
The Student Health Services recently purchased an x-ray machine. By purchasing the new unit, the<lb/>
Student Health Services was able to cut the students' cost of x-rays by one-third. See related story on<lb/>
page 1 for more information.<lb/>
? ?- - ? ?- <lb/>
? ? - ?  ?.<lb/>
 ?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057793_0002"/><lb/>
I HI t s<lb/>
 I v -KIN s<lb/>
IANI k<lb/>
I WV<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
' - s s<lb/>
? s <lb/>
NEW POLICY<lb/>
??. at ?? ,<lb/>
' N ?'?? i ,<lb/>
? i tmc Is submiti w<lb/>
fc HN N ; v t N r 5 SUBMIT T fc (<lb/>
? BE PRINTED If PACE ?<lb/>
 ? ? ? N<lb/>
N A . : S . N <lb/>
St ? 1 . N ? ? <lb/>
S as<lb/>
?v. ? . s,  . ,? ,<lb/>
 i - , - . ? . , ? , . ?? ,<lb/>
? . ' ?'<lb/>
nportancr.? m ? ri I ? a ?<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
? A. a'? i , . ? . ?<lb/>
If 4 ? ,<lb/>
?Co<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ? . p<lb/>
I . . . ?<lb/>
-  ?<lb/>
East<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
ECU SURF CLUB<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
EC!<lb/>
!ATE CLUB<lb/>
PS! CHI<lb/>
NEWMAN CENTER<lb/>
SCRIPTURE STUDY<lb/>
GRADUATE STUDENTS<lb/>
MARTIN LUTHER KING<lb/>
AWARDS CELEBRATION<lb/>
? v-i ? ng Awards<lb/>
 .ene on Monday Jan<lb/>
' " ? '? Vlendenhan Student Center<lb/>
Special piattorrr, gues' will include D'<lb/>
rtspe' Bpj si? Mayoi Ead.e Carter<lb/>
Aus i .  , oert  ?? e award<lb/>
 ? East Carolina Gospel Cnoir The<lb/>
? ? : ?' ' ??- IS i- " c m Ana a rei ention<lb/>
?? neid n the Multipurpose BuiiO'g FT<lb/>
? ?? Nvirtc the ere nonv<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
' ? lessional Meant- ah,ante ?v-n have<lb/>
? ? ' B rs ,an 16 a' 6 00 p m<lb/>
We lenha All membi i v ested<lb/>
. -v rj raged 1 ?"?<lb/>
MARTIN L. KING SPEAKS<lb/>
? I I trie world's qreates'<lb/>
arid v ' grits ? a ?? i .e via<lb/>
? ' ? ? A' J ? Itura<lb/>
? <lb/>
? ? ? rd to<lb/>
?  <lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
 its Program fa<lb/>
? ? ? sal lo the<lb/>
? - ? . ?? ,<lb/>
Progran . ? . ? ?<lb/>
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GRADUATE MANAGEMENT<lb/>
ADMISSION TEST (GMAT)<lb/>
Itl V ? ,? ? - ?? vs t'S<lb/>
? ?? ? ? . ? . ? ? .<lb/>
?j- ? elon<lb/>
?? ?? ? rmarked<lb/>
???  ? ? ??<lb/>
 - . ?<lb/>
LAW SCHOOL<lb/>
ADMISSION TEST (LSAT)<lb/>
rest be ol<lb/>
it. F el ? ?<lb/>
ire to Oi pieted med<lb/>
' ? ? ? ? - . . ?<lb/>
??<lb/>
- ?  . ? . <lb/>
"? . ?<lb/>
NATIONAL TEACHER<lb/>
EXAMINATIONS<lb/>
CORE BATTERY EXAMS<lb/>
- .<lb/>
? ? ? . ire '<lb/>
tea a ???<lb/>
???<lb/>
? '?' ? ?-?<lb/>
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SKI SNOW SHOE SPRING<lb/>
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?? - . . ? ? ? ? ? . ?<lb/>
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SPRING BREAK IS COMING!<lb/>
Now is the time to start getting your body<lb/>
ready for bathing suit weather.<lb/>
Bring this coupon in for $5.00 off a<lb/>
month's membership.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
417 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
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Coupon Expires 1-31-86<lb/>
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" -  j new and exciting is com-<lb/>
' Gre- ? And you car join in the<lb/>
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? - ibe e's not only specializes in<lb/>
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me enjoy our variety-<lb/>
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Either way, you'll come to<lb/>
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For lunch, dinner<lb/>
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Visit us soon in The Plaza<lb/>
die's ?<lb/>
Hours Mon - Sat<lb/>
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Don I tot gi" la i ome I ?? i<lb/>
Jan 21st' Come nelp suppor<lb/>
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lUI s?Jl -?<lb/>
NEEDCASH<lb/>
The Deparrren' ol I n 1 I n<lb/>
Recreat.ona Serv es s iO?t I . '<lb/>
anyone ;nterestea in j i <lb/>
positions For more information t ontact j R<lb/>
a1 S t 6387 fclthou )l ? I ? . "<lb/>
?I r enl worn .j desired A . ? . ? j.<lb/>
m- invest gated and a in eo ime n?<lb/>
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hired for this years leaooe Conta I . etl<lb/>
Gmn 171.? is5n i The first be rie<lb/>
Jan 20 h' 9 00 p m m Rm 102 Me"<lb/>
Gym<lb/>
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS<lb/>
OFGREENVILLE<lb/>
? ? i : ? ivited 1 nity<lb/>
'orun- ed by the ? ee ? ? I l<lb/>
County League of Women Voters on tl<lb/>
oosec ma ? ? i jes n the ? ? ? ?<lb/>
Cooe ? ? itiwi ? the '?pe of ?.<lb/>
? ?'  ??, <lb/>
at large' systi<lb/>
' ? '? ? Forum <lb/>
? . it thi<lb/>
1 r Presbyti I . . ,<lb/>
14tn and i l . ? ?rs ?<lb/>
. ? ? enlists and G ee .<lb/>
tie p I ied to atte . ???<lb/>
the quest period For n<lb/>
Pati a Duni ? ? ?<lb/>
ECU POETRY FORUM<lb/>
ECU foe1 Forum w meet ?<lb/>
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ai if the Newma ?? <lb/>
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NEWMAN CATHOLIC<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNAN<lb/>
JANUARY 16, 1986<lb/>
AVUNWWXXW<lb/>
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Fossilized Neck Bones Of Whale Found<lb/>
MOREHEAD CITY (UPI) -<lb/>
Scientists say a fossilized neck<lb/>
bone found recently near<lb/>
Morehead City belonged to a<lb/>
50-foot whale that roamed the<lb/>
ocean more than 10,000 years ago<lb/>
when the shoreline ran near what<lb/>
is now Goldsboro.<lb/>
"You find whale parts all the<lb/>
time - ribs and jawbones said<lb/>
Frank Schwartz, a professor at<lb/>
the University of North<lb/>
Carolina's Institute of Marine<lb/>
Science in Morehead City. "But<lb/>
you very seldom find  neck<lb/>
bones, especially this near the<lb/>
skull. This was the first bone<lb/>
behind the skull<lb/>
The V-shaped, slate-gray bone<lb/>
is more than 2 feet long, 10 inches<lb/>
across and 18 inches tall. It was<lb/>
found around Christmas by<lb/>
Ernest Willis in a creek bed near<lb/>
Newport, Schwartz said.<lb/>
The bone belonged either to a<lb/>
sperm whale, a humpback whale,<lb/>
a sea whale or a right whale that<lb/>
lived in the Atlantic Ocean bet-<lb/>
ween 10,000 and 20,000 years<lb/>
ago, during the Miocene era.<lb/>
The ocean then was 200 feet<lb/>
higher because the Earth's ice<lb/>
caps had melted during an in-<lb/>
terglacial period, and the ocean<lb/>
extended as far inland as the fall<lb/>
line near Goldsboro, he said.<lb/>
Humans lived onshore nearby<lb/>
during the same period.<lb/>
Similar whales are found in the<lb/>
ocean off the North Carolina<lb/>
coast today, said Schwartz.<lb/>
"If we knew what kind of<lb/>
whale it was, we could make a<lb/>
better stab at saying whether this<lb/>
type of whale was found further<lb/>
inland he said. "It adds<lb/>
another piece (of evidence) that<lb/>
whales and porpoises were being<lb/>
found in various places in the<lb/>
coastal area<lb/>
A large set of whale jaws was<lb/>
found near Nags Head in 1982,<lb/>
and quarries in the eastern part of<lb/>
the state occasionally turn up<lb/>
various bits and pieces of whale<lb/>
skeleton, he said. This one ap-<lb/>
parently was washed out of the<lb/>
earth by rains associated with last<lb/>
year's hurricanes.<lb/>
Schwartz said the 30-pound<lb/>
fossil is only half of the neck<lb/>
bone. It has cup-shaped depres-<lb/>
sions on the ends of the V-shaped<lb/>
protrusions that fit onto the skull<lb/>
and a groove on the other end<lb/>
that accepts the prong of the next<lb/>
vertebra. Its shape made it easy<lb/>
to identify as the first vertebra.<lb/>
The man who found the bone<lb/>
plans to keep it for a while, then<lb/>
perhaps donate it to a state<lb/>
museum, said Schwartz, who is<lb/>
an ichthyologist - fish scientist -<lb/>
who also studies whales, sea<lb/>
turtles and porpoises.<lb/>
New Bus Route To Hospital Opens<lb/>
B JENNIFER MYERS<lb/>
s??ff nier<lb/>
Starting Monday, ECU<lb/>
students can ride the Greenville<lb/>
city bus from main campus to the<lb/>
medical school, free of charge,<lb/>
made possible by an agreement<lb/>
between the SGA Transit Divi-<lb/>
sion and the Greenville City<lb/>
Transit Division.<lb/>
The GREAT city buses will<lb/>
pick up students waiting at<lb/>
designated areas along Route 2.<lb/>
which runs on 5th Street between<lb/>
Elm and Jarvis streets.<lb/>
According to David Morris,<lb/>
transit supervisor for the city of<lb/>
Greenville, the idea of having<lb/>
such a route was a joint effort<lb/>
between he and former SGA<lb/>
Transit Manager Marshal<lb/>
Tucker. The city was asked to<lb/>
assist the SGA with bus repair<lb/>
and maintenance, and the idea of<lb/>
a new route to the medical school<lb/>
developed.<lb/>
Scott Alford, assistant SGA<lb/>
Transit manager, said the majori-<lb/>
ty of students using this route<lb/>
would be nursing majors and<lb/>
students needing research infor-<lb/>
mation at the hospital.<lb/>
Therefore, the passengers would<lb/>
be limited and would have no<lb/>
regular riding schedule.<lb/>
SGA Transit has always<lb/>
wanted to provide a route to the<lb/>
medical school but could not af-<lb/>
ford it. Now the school and city<lb/>
have developed a system in which<lb/>
ECU pays the city 50 cents per<lb/>
rider. The student merely shows<lb/>
the driver a pass and student ID<lb/>
Professor Fights Censorship<lb/>
with relieion ? their kind of potentially "offensive" items will<lb/>
Continued From Page l.<lb/>
"R" volume of the "World Book<lb/>
Encyclopedia" (for its article on<lb/>
reproduction).<lb/>
"The conservative cause had<lb/>
the program, but not the<lb/>
?soldiers' for their censorship ef-<lb/>
forts, not until recently when<lb/>
thev becan combining politics<lb/>
Hearing<lb/>
Impared<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
room telephones, a sign language<lb/>
club and job placement services.<lb/>
The Program for the Hearing<lb/>
Impaired employs four staff<lb/>
members for the 30 students it<lb/>
supports.<lb/>
Schreiber says, "We are always<lb/>
looking for student notetakers<lb/>
Anyone who is interested in this<lb/>
or any other aspect of the pro-<lb/>
gram can contact Schreiber at<lb/>
757-6729 or in A-114 Brewster<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
religion Lamer said. Since he<lb/>
debated the Moral Majority's na-<lb/>
tion field director a couple of<lb/>
years ago, Lanier's name was ad-<lb/>
ded to their mailing list; he<lb/>
receives mailings "almost week-<lb/>
ly he sas.<lb/>
In his role as advisor to and<lb/>
defender of librarians. Lanier<lb/>
argues that since librarians<lb/>
generally follow written, approv-<lb/>
ed book selection policies, most<lb/>
never reach library shelves.<lb/>
"Of course, there's a lot of<lb/>
garbage published, but it's not in<lb/>
the libraries he said.<lb/>
"However, what is considered<lb/>
objectionable varies from person<lb/>
to person, just as taste in art, ar-<lb/>
chitecture and music varies with<lb/>
the individual. What may be<lb/>
trash or trivia or indecency or<lb/>
obscenity to me ? the most of-<lb/>
fensive material ? may be quite<lb/>
another matter to you.<lb/>
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TEQUILA SUNRISES ? BLOODY MARYS<lb/>
MIMOSA ? CHAMPAGNE ? SCREWDRIVERS<lb/>
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to ride. The 50-cent fee comes<lb/>
from student fees paid every<lb/>
semester. This free ride can only<lb/>
be used on Route 2 to the medical<lb/>
school and back.<lb/>
The GREAT bus runs from<lb/>
7:20 a.m. to 6:20 p.m. The most<lb/>
accessible stops are across from<lb/>
Speight Building at 5th and Lewis<lb/>
streets, and the corner of Jarvis<lb/>
and 5th. by the ECU Personnel<lb/>
Office, or the student can get the<lb/>
driver to stop anywhere between<lb/>
Elm and Jarvis streets along 5th<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Passes can be obtained in<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 228 Monday<lb/>
hrough Friday from 9 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. by showing a student ID<lb/>
and activity card.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0004"/><lb/>
(Wje Eaat (ttarnliniati<lb/>
Serving t'tc East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Luvender, ?Tivupr<lb/>
Jay Stone, Managingtumi,<lb/>
Mike Ludwick. n,5 g Greg Winchester. d,Wo,o?,?,<lb/>
Scott Cooper. ?m ??.? Anthony Martin, &amp;,?, Manattr<lb/>
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DeChanile Johnson. ?? km Debbie Stevens. &amp;????<lb/>
CAMtt,KfflT,K0Ol.WINSTON<lb/>
Januarv 16, 1986<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Education Today<lb/>
According to The National<lb/>
Center for Education 163,000 more<lb/>
teachers will be needed next year ?<lb/>
and that goal will probably not be<lb/>
met. In addition, The National<lb/>
Education Association (NEA), the<lb/>
country's most prominent teacher's<lb/>
union, has estimated that by 1990<lb/>
the nation could be short by as<lb/>
many as 1.6 million teachers.<lb/>
Between 1972 and 1982, accor-<lb/>
ding to the NEA, the number of<lb/>
college graduates entering the<lb/>
teaching profession nose dived by<lb/>
more than 50 percent. Moreover,<lb/>
education majors are, on average,<lb/>
among the lowest scorers on stan-<lb/>
dardized college admission tests.<lb/>
Meanwhile, of course, demand for<lb/>
teachers continues to rise.<lb/>
These are sobering statistics in a<lb/>
nation facing a dropout problem of<lb/>
staggering proportions. On the<lb/>
average, 27 percent of America's<lb/>
teenagaers are not graduating from<lb/>
high school. In large cities the<lb/>
dropout rate has climbed above 40<lb/>
percent, in New York City it's over<lb/>
50 percent. The fact that more than<lb/>
half of the nation's prison inmates<lb/>
are dropouts makes the problem<lb/>
even more urgent.<lb/>
Of equal importance is the fact<lb/>
that minority children (particularly<lb/>
black children) and children from<lb/>
poor families lag behind white and<lb/>
affluent children in their academic<lb/>
performance. Since Brown vs. The<lb/>
Board of Education our public<lb/>
schools have ostensibly been an<lb/>
equalizing force. Yet as NEA<lb/>
president Mary Hatwood Futrell<lb/>
argued in a recent issue of the San<lb/>
Francisco Examiner, if present<lb/>
trends continue public education<lb/>
will merely perpetuate the polarities<lb/>
and inequalities that already exist in<lb/>
society at large. This is particularly<lb/>
true, Futrell maintains, if public<lb/>
school programs which promote<lb/>
equity have their funding cut and<lb/>
Troubles Brewing<lb/>
teachers are forced to teach ever-<lb/>
larger classes with less emphasis<lb/>
upon individual attention.<lb/>
The solution to these problems<lb/>
aside from fighting more cuts in<lb/>
education? According to the NEA,<lb/>
it would consist of having the<lb/>
government offer future teachers a<lb/>
federally funded free ride to college<lb/>
in exchange for their being required<lb/>
to teach for four years after they<lb/>
graduate. By doin so the govern-<lb/>
ment would be offering an attrac-<lb/>
tive incentive to students who might<lb/>
otherwise avoid a low-paying<lb/>
teaching job.<lb/>
By offering teachers a free educa-<lb/>
tion the NEA hopes that money<lb/>
that would have been used by<lb/>
education students for college will<lb/>
help compensate for the low wages<lb/>
that the teaching profession offers<lb/>
generally. NEA also hopes that by<lb/>
offering educational benefits more<lb/>
qualified personell will be attracted<lb/>
into teaching and thus more in-<lb/>
dividual attention can be given to<lb/>
students and the quality of educa-<lb/>
tion will improve. It is hoped that<lb/>
this will help solve the dropout pro-<lb/>
blem and problems of inequality.<lb/>
Of course, offering teachers four<lb/>
years of free education in exchange<lb/>
for four years of teaching is a fine<lb/>
idea. It is doubtful, however, that<lb/>
such a measure will solve the crisis<lb/>
in education. In oHer for that to<lb/>
happen teachers' salaries1-rmist"m<lb/>
crease as well and the educational<lb/>
system must offer disadvantaged<lb/>
students more intensive assistance<lb/>
and a much more relevant academic<lb/>
experience. More to the point,<lb/>
society itself must do something to<lb/>
overcome the alienation which the<lb/>
dispossessed feel, it must offer<lb/>
them real opportunities and it must<lb/>
endeavor to overcome the profound<lb/>
inequality which still excludes many<lb/>
from savoring the fruits which this<lb/>
land has to offer.<lb/>
WARD<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Republican Lambasts Democrats<lb/>
Many people in American today<lb/>
do not realize the basic differences<lb/>
between Republicans and<lb/>
Democrats. When asked about their<lb/>
political preference, they'll say one<lb/>
party or the other, often making this<lb/>
choice for all the wrong reasons.<lb/>
Maybe mom and dad are<lb/>
Republicans, so that must be right,<lb/>
or all their friends say they're<lb/>
Democrats, so that must be right,<lb/>
and so on. But politics affect even<lb/>
aspect of life, so shouldn't people<lb/>
know the facts before you go endors-<lb/>
ing one party over the other<lb/>
Republicans, commonly, known as<lb/>
conservatives, believe that man is in-<lb/>
nately free and that he has a spiritual<lb/>
side that separates him from other<lb/>
animals. Conservatives believe :1ns<lb/>
spiritual side is man's superior<lb/>
aspect, and thus, their goal is to offer<lb/>
man the most possible freedom to<lb/>
develop his spiritual side, or in-<lb/>
dividuality. Democrats, or liberals,<lb/>
?JJAJte Ser. hand, claim to be in<lb/>
favor of the "common man Thev<lb/>
favor a society in which everyone<lb/>
works for the good of the whole.<lb/>
Theirs is a system which rewards<lb/>
substandard performance and<lb/>
punishes achievement. Thus, they sti-<lb/>
fle man's individuality, and constrict<lb/>
his freedom, all in the name of the<lb/>
"common man A liberal society.<lb/>
with its "all for one and on for all"<lb/>
policy, does not bear much<lb/>
resemblance to the society our<lb/>
forefathers had in mind when thev<lb/>
created the United States of America.<lb/>
the land of the free. Indeed, a liberal<lb/>
society more resembles what Lenin<lb/>
had in mind when he drafted the<lb/>
socialist ideals that are the guidelines<lb/>
of the Soviet Union.<lb/>
Let us consider an example. Presi-<lb/>
deni Reagan is currently, striving to<lb/>
reduce the amount of taxes all of us<lb/>
are forced to pay to the government.<lb/>
In doing so. he is supporting that<lb/>
basic conservative policy, the<lb/>
freedom of the individual. In his at-<lb/>
tempts to lower taxes, however, he<lb/>
has run into opposition from the<lb/>
liberals. The liberals in Washington<lb/>
seem to think the government has an<lb/>
unlimited claim on all the money you<lb/>
earn. Apparent!), their only task is to<lb/>
decide how much of your income<lb/>
the) are going to take this year. Is<lb/>
this freedom? ' "How can a man be<lb/>
free it the fruits of his labor are not<lb/>
his to dispose of, but are treated, in-<lb/>
stead, as part o a common pool of<lb/>
public wealth'1" says Barry<lb/>
Goldwater.Thus, isn't the reduction<lb/>
of taxes an obviously desirable objec-<lb/>
tive' Why, then, does President<lb/>
Reagan run into opposition from<lb/>
liberals as he attempts to reduce<lb/>
taxes'1 The liberals must think that<lb/>
we, the American public, have en-<lb/>
joyed 40 years of ever-increasing tax<lb/>
rates.<lb/>
This is but one issue. Besides taxes,<lb/>
there are countless other political<lb/>
controversies going on now for which<lb/>
the conservatives have logical,<lb/>
morally-enhancing solutions that do<lb/>
noi infringe on man's freedom. Do<lb/>
you believe all men should - fret<lb/>
Do you support freedom move<lb/>
the world over? Do you view ;<lb/>
munism as one of the great<lb/>
blems of our world1 It so. .<lb/>
the College Republicans p.<lb/>
Tuesday nights in Mendenhall. v<lb/>
that you, for one, do n<lb/>
granted the freedoms you are<lb/>
enough to enjoy. You ow<lb/>
to yourself, but to your ;<lb/>
to the children you will leave bel<lb/>
The College Republicans; .<lb/>
keep you free. God Bless V<lb/>
Lance Hard in<lb/>
Sophomore, Business<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The Las; C arolinian weU<lb/>
expressing all point' ?? .<lb/>
drop them by our f)<lb/>
lions ttuttdtnu across from rhe en-<lb/>
trance of Joynt r 1 brai<lb/>
For purpose ??? . ? ? ?<lb/>
ters must include :u<lb/>
classification, addn<lb/>
and signature of tht authorts<lb/>
are limited to tw<lb/>
double-spaced or nee<lb/>
letters are subject to edit 1 !<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, w . ?<lb/>
attacks will be permute v.<lb/>
faculty and siat! writing leth r- ' ?<lb/>
page are reminded that they are tin<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
King Seen As Democratic Populist  Patriot<lb/>
By TAYLOR BRANCH<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
There was always a special patriotism<lb/>
to the speeches of Martin Luther King.<lb/>
No other American orator could bring<lb/>
audiences to their feet by reciting three<lb/>
full stanzas of "My Country, 'Tis of<lb/>
Thee From there, he often soared<lb/>
across the American landscape in<lb/>
perorations calling on freedom to ring<lb/>
"from the granite peaks of New Hamp-<lb/>
shire from the mighty Alleghenies of<lb/>
Pennsylvania from the snow-capped<lb/>
Rockies of Colorado from Lookout<lb/>
Mountain in Tennessee! Let it ring<lb/>
from Stone Mountain in Georgia<lb/>
On Jan. 20, King's own name will be<lb/>
tolled from those hilltops. Children will<lb/>
let fly balloons in Maryland and<lb/>
Arizona, and pilgrims will retrace the<lb/>
steps of his marches. By act of Con-<lb/>
gress, duly signed by the president, his<lb/>
birthday will be celebrated as our 10th<lb/>
federal holiday on the third Monday of<lb/>
this and every succeeding January. Of-<lb/>
ficially, King's Birthday joins New<lb/>
Year's Day, Christmas, Labor Day, In-<lb/>
dependence Day and the other five<lb/>
working days on which the government<lb/>
closes its doors.<lb/>
The enshrinement is a remarkable<lb/>
phenomenon. It was accomplished less<lb/>
than 18 years after King's murder, in<lb/>
the month when he would have turned<lb/>
but 57 years of age.<lb/>
By contrast, George Washington's<lb/>
Birthday was not made a federal holi-<lb/>
day until 1879, 80 years after his death.<lb/>
Lincoln, whose birthday is celebrated in<lb/>
32 states, came closest to federal<lb/>
recognition in 1920, but Southerners<lb/>
killed the House bill in the Senate.<lb/>
Ironically, the creation of the holiday<lb/>
owes something to a negative trend in<lb/>
contemporary race relations. In 1983,<lb/>
with the Reagan administration propos-<lb/>
ing tax exemptions for segregated<lb/>
schools and delaying an extension of the<lb/>
Voting Rights Act, some Republican<lb/>
leaders decided to appease black voters<lb/>
with a holiday. The leaders of the King<lb/>
Holiday Commission know they are not<lb/>
riding an unmixed tide of national senti-<lb/>
ment, and that many regard his new day<lb/>
as a political gesture, a throwaway holi-<lb/>
day for blacks.<lb/>
The King Holiday bill reached the<lb/>
House floor with scarcely a flicker of<lb/>
outside notice and passed 338-90.<lb/>
Republican leaders bypassed the com-<lb/>
mittee process and placed the House bill<lb/>
directly on the Senate voting calendar,<lb/>
in a procedure normally reserved for<lb/>
minor business. There it passed 78-22.<lb/>
Every Southern Democrat except Sten-<lb/>
nis of Mississippi voted for it. So did<lb/>
Strom Thurmond, Jeremiah Demon<lb/>
and Paul Laxalt, three of the four con-<lb/>
servative Republicans who had issued a<lb/>
report opposing the holiday as<lb/>
premature and too costly.<lb/>
In Senate debate, Jesse Helms of<lb/>
North Carolina attacked King as a com-<lb/>
munist sympathizer, or worse, and<lb/>
sought to open sealed FBI files to prove<lb/>
it. He relished the point that it was a<lb/>
liberal attrney general, Robert Ken-<lb/>
nedy, who had authorized the original<lb/>
wiretaps on King. When a reporter ask-<lb/>
ed President Reagan later that day<lb/>
whether he thought King had been a<lb/>
communist sympathizer, Reagan<lb/>
replied, "Well, we'll know in about 35<lb/>
years, won't we?" He meant that the<lb/>
answer had to await the court-ordered<lb/>
date for the unsealing of the FBI bugg-<lb/>
ing material. So Reagan, while announ-<lb/>
cing that he would sign legislation<lb/>
honoring King above nearly all the<lb/>
Founding Fathers, reserved judgement<lb/>
about King's basic loyalty to the coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
Reagan's remark was fatuous as well<lb/>
as stunning. The sealed records from<lb/>
King's FBI file do not address the ques-<lb/>
tion of King's political allegiance.<lb/>
Those records, by the tens of thousands<lb/>
of pages, are available for public inspec-<lb/>
tion in the FBI Reading Room. The<lb/>
sealed ones are about King's personal<lb/>
life, especially his extramarital sex life,<lb/>
as intercepted by FBI bugs and<lb/>
wiretaps.<lb/>
Even Sen. Helms did not dare to ad-<lb/>
dress this subject directly, and this was<lb/>
perhaps his only area of agreement with<lb/>
King's most ardent supporters. Skit-<lb/>
tishness about speaking personally of<lb/>
King is almost universal. His enemies<lb/>
seem to fear that to do so would<lb/>
backfire, or expose their utter lack of<lb/>
knowledge about him as a human being,<lb/>
while his admirers seem to fear that<lb/>
anything less than perfection will slide<lb/>
or be twisted into degradation.<lb/>
Questions of identity dissolve in the<lb/>
insecurities of race. King lived nearly his<lb/>
entire life calling himself a Negro in-<lb/>
stead of a black man. The very name of<lb/>
his race was in flux, and for most of his<lb/>
years the personal attributes of Negroes<lb/>
were nearly invisible within the white<lb/>
world.<lb/>
The young King is generally por-<lb/>
trayed as a well-educated but conven-<lb/>
tional Southern Baptist minister, whose<lb/>
transformation into a man of stature<lb/>
began suddenly when the Montgomery<lb/>
bus boycott made him a celebrity in na-<lb/>
tional race politics. In fact, by in-<lb/>
heritance and oratorical gifts, King was<lb/>
a prince within his national church long<lb/>
before the 1955 boycott. While still a<lb/>
student, he established a reputation that<lb/>
brought him invitations to preach in the<lb/>
largest black churches. When he left<lb/>
college to attend a Pennsylvania<lb/>
seminary in 1948, he was the only<lb/>
member of his integrated class wealthy-<lb/>
enough to support himself without at<lb/>
least part-time work.<lb/>
While other aspiring leaders of both<lb/>
races kept clamoring for their moments<lb/>
in the White House, King chose to stay<lb/>
away. "He's cancelled two engagements<lb/>
with me, and I don't understand it<lb/>
President Johnson complained in a<lb/>
private memo. At the end. King was not<lb/>
in the company of white presidents or<lb/>
black elites, but marching with the gar-<lb/>
bage men of Memphis.<lb/>
This downward thrust makes him a<lb/>
transcendent figure rather than merely a<lb/>
romantic one.<lb/>
Inescapably, the meaning of King's<lb/>
life springs from religion as much as<lb/>
politics. His religious beliefs never were<lb/>
orthodox. He studied at a seminary<lb/>
teeming with free-thinking professors<lb/>
who doubted, for instance, the existence<lb/>
of the historical Moses. King adapted to<lb/>
such skepticism more readily than most<lb/>
of his classmates because he was sear-<lb/>
ching for an honest way to recover from<lb/>
a prolonged spell of blanket disbelief.<lb/>
In particular, he was troubled by<lb/>
liberal theology's answer to the age-old<lb/>
problem of reconciling the idea of God<lb/>
with the presence of evil in the world.<lb/>
King rejected the progressive notion<lb/>
that intellectual and scientific progress<lb/>
could steadily reduce evil, and thereby<lb/>
the need to explain it. He stubbornly<lb/>
refused to believe that education or<lb/>
comfort made people less sinful. On the<lb/>
contrary, he thought these attainments<lb/>
fed the central moral sin of pride.<lb/>
Not until late in his studies did King<lb/>
find a way to join his yearning for<lb/>
justice in the world to an idea of God in<lb/>
the universe. He fixed upon the theory<lb/>
that from human self-centeredness<lb/>
comes an ingrained capacity for<lb/>
"enemy thinking or self-justifv<lb/>
moral codes. These accommodate<lb/>
removal or blotting out of ?eopk as in<lb/>
racial segregation In extreme form<lb/>
can invert morality altogether, as w<lb/>
the most heinous sins of ordinal<lb/>
become the sacred dutv or n<lb/>
Klansmen, or terrorists<lb/>
King merely resolved that it was<lb/>
possible, by supreme acts of faith .<lb/>
human will, to combat enemy thinli<lb/>
without falling prey to it. to affirm that<lb/>
"the arm of the moral universe is long,<lb/>
but it bends toward justice Bv s<lb/>
efforts, he sought to uphold the ex-<lb/>
istence of God. Far from being a com<lb/>
fortable or conventional theology,<lb/>
was nearly a desperate one, linking<lb/>
King's personal religious doubts not on-<lb/>
ly to the plight of his race but also to the<lb/>
fate of the bomb-threatened globe.<lb/>
King's version of the American<lb/>
Dream had nothing to do with the tinsel<lb/>
ot prestige or windfall riches. Indeed,<lb/>
he sought to reclaim the sacredness ol<lb/>
free human character in a country he<lb/>
saw as glutted with wealth and power.<lb/>
His deity was a personal God whose<lb/>
benevolence could be believed com<lb/>
municated - even demonstrated - a<lb/>
when his crowds responded to the words<lb/>
of his favorite prophet, Amos, that<lb/>
"justice shall run down like waters and<lb/>
righteousness like a mightv stream "<lb/>
This was the spirit of the civil rights<lb/>
movement, which lived in the bot-<lb/>
tomless passion of his speeches.<lb/>
Among American holidavs, King's<lb/>
Birthday alone stands in honor of a<lb/>
preacher, a Ph.D a black man, and a<lb/>
martyr who was wiretapped and reviled<lb/>
by officials of the same government that<lb/>
elevated him. He never held or sought<lb/>
public office, but he shaped more<lb/>
sweeping political change than any<lb/>
politician or private citizen of his era.<lb/>
Ca,<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
How do you think the<lb/>
to terrorit ad<lb/>
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V ?iar a<lb/>
Scol Haerthey<lb/>
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continue w<lb/>
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Donna Mulik<lb/>
Food and N<lb/>
"I guess the U.S.<lb/>
okav for the time being We 1<lb/>
need to take a I<lb/>
soon ' I<lb/>
advantage<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST C AROI IN1AN<lb/>
JANUARY 16, 1986<lb/>
0R0,<lb/>
T0N<lb/>
I<lb/>
Jl<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Voice<lb/>
How do you think the I nited Stales should respond<lb/>
to terrorist acts on U.S. eitizens?<lb/>
democrats<lb/>
rum Rules<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
the<lb/>
i<lb/>
Patriot<lb/>
? -<lb/>
<lb/>
E<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
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<lb/>
believed, com-<lb/>
i " ited as Vmos, (hat<lb/>
all run diters, and<lb/>
ess ikea rr<lb/>
le :ivil rights<lb/>
rnen which lived in the hot-<lb/>
tssion of his speeches<lb/>
oong American holidays. King's<lb/>
Ja alone stands in honor of a<lb/>
Icier, a Ph.D a black man, and a<lb/>
1 who was wiretapped and reviled<lb/>
tticials of the same government that<lb/>
kted him. He never held or sought<lb/>
Ik office, but he shaped more<lb/>
Ipmg political change than any<lb/>
Brian or private citizen of his era.<lb/>
<lb/>
C hris McPhatter<lb/>
Criminal Justice sophomore<lb/>
"I feel that President Reagan is<lb/>
doing the right thing by cutting<lb/>
off connections between the U.S<lb/>
and Libya<lb/>
Dwanna MeNeely<lb/>
Business Management junior<lb/>
"What President Reagan is do-<lb/>
ing now is right. 1 just don't want<lb/>
a war<lb/>
v<lb/>
Scot Hagerthev<lb/>
Physical Therapy freshman<lb/>
"We definitely should take a<lb/>
stand. We should place boycotts,<lb/>
embargos and sanctions (on ter-<lb/>
rorist countries.) If terrorism<lb/>
continue, we should take<lb/>
militarv action<lb/>
Annette Benthall<lb/>
Early Childhood Education<lb/>
junior<lb/>
"1 don't think military action<lb/>
would do any good because that's<lb/>
just what they are doing to us<lb/>
Donna Mulik<lb/>
Food and Nutrition Junior<lb/>
"I guess the U.S. is handling it<lb/>
okay for the time being. We will<lb/>
need to take action some time<lb/>
soon to stop them from taking<lb/>
advantage of Americans<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini<lb/>
g<lb/>
S<lb/>
1<lb/>
s<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
5<lb/>
S<lb/>
5<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
Read<lb/>
Jimmy Hardwick<lb/>
Education sophomore<lb/>
"Many times the U.S. has been<lb/>
caught up in the political arena,<lb/>
putting the bodies, minds and<lb/>
lives of young men on the line<lb/>
when the leaders of the countries<lb/>
could have been dealt with in-<lb/>
stead. 1 am not against taking<lb/>
military action against the highest<lb/>
powers of a country in the form<lb/>
of a coup, especially in a situa-<lb/>
tion that could become another<lb/>
Vietnam<lb/>
The<lb/>
Information Age Brings Hope<lb/>
(CPS) ? While they may not<lb/>
be able to tell it while they're<lb/>
beating the pavement looking for<lb/>
work in what recent reports<lb/>
predict will be a tight job market<lb/>
this spring, students will be sit-<lb/>
ting pretty when the Information<lb/>
Age finally dawns, social<lb/>
forecaster and author John<lb/>
Naisbett says.<lb/>
Job applicants are going to<lb/>
find the employment market shif-<lb/>
ting more and more in their favor<lb/>
as firms will compete to hire<lb/>
declining numbers of college<lb/>
graduates, he predicts.<lb/>
And in a seller's market,<lb/>
Naisbett ? author of<lb/>
Megatrends, the successful book<lb/>
about emerging social, economic<lb/>
and political trends ? says<lb/>
students are entitled to ask ques-<lb/>
tions like: What is the company's<lb/>
vision? Can employees par-<lb/>
ticipate in it and reap benefits,<lb/>
perhaps through employee stock<lb/>
ownership plans? Is there profit-<lb/>
sharing for all, and are women<lb/>
paid fairly?<lb/>
The questions are far from im-<lb/>
pudent, Naisbett says. And<lb/>
what's more, a quickly-growing<lb/>
number of young, generally high-<lb/>
tech companies actually expect<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The companies, which tend to<lb/>
be less hierarchical than Fortune<lb/>
500 firms and to concentrate<lb/>
more on "nurturing" employees,<lb/>
are leading the way toward re-<lb/>
inventing the corporation,<lb/>
Naisbett asserted in a recent in-<lb/>
terview.<lb/>
Not coincidentally, Naisbett<lb/>
discusses these new-age firms at<lb/>
length in his new book, "Re-<lb/>
Inventing the Corporation<lb/>
He also notes collegians are in<lb/>
a good position to take advantage<lb/>
of them in the job market.<lb/>
New companies are springing<lb/>
up at a rate unequalled since the<lb/>
1950s, but the fine balance of<lb/>
labor and capital has shifted<lb/>
significantly since then, he says.<lb/>
Labor used to be cheap, and<lb/>
money dear. Now, he explains,<lb/>
labor is the most valued resource.<lb/>
"It's because companies know<lb/>
they need creative minds that can<lb/>
apply technical knowledge<lb/>
Naisbett says. "A knowledge of<lb/>
software isn't as valuable as be-<lb/>
ing able to design software pro-<lb/>
grams that revolutionize in-<lb/>
dustry<lb/>
To get jobs in the Information<lb/>
Age, Naisbett recommends<lb/>
students "not concentrate on<lb/>
specific information skills, but<lb/>
learn how to learn and how to<lb/>
think<lb/>
"As we become more high-<lb/>
tech, we are also becoming more<lb/>
high-touch he says, citing a<lb/>
renaissance of interest in the arts<lb/>
and literature.<lb/>
Naisbett attributes the rise of<lb/>
the "nurturing company" to the<lb/>
rise of corporate women who see<lb/>
a manager as a nourisher, not an<lb/>
order-giver. Women are also<lb/>
brining intuition ? another<lb/>
characteristic of entrepreneurial<lb/>
times ? to the Information Age.<lb/>
But many campus placement<lb/>
officials warn students had best<lb/>
think twice before grilling pro-<lb/>
iClass if ieds<lb/>
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spective employers about world<lb/>
visions during interviews.<lb/>
"Companies are marketing<lb/>
themselves differently because<lb/>
they see what's on the horizon,<lb/>
and that's a lot less graduates<lb/>
agrees John Shingleton, place-<lb/>
ment director at Michigan State.<lb/>
But it's still not a seller's<lb/>
market for the non-technical stu-<lb/>
dent, he says, and the role rever-<lb/>
sal Naisbett envisions during job<lb/>
interviews is "a ways off<lb/>
Naisbett predicts liberal arts<lb/>
students will be increasingly<lb/>
valuable in a "high-touch" socie-<lb/>
ty because of their ability to app-<lb/>
ly knowledge and create.<lb/>
While Shingleton agrees those<lb/>
abilities can be invaluable,<lb/>
businesses have yet to seek them<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Major companies like General<lb/>
Motors have announced they like<lb/>
liberal arts students, but I don't<lb/>
see them recruiting these people.<lb/>
Instead, they take people with the<lb/>
technical training to do the job<lb/>
now, and that's who they<lb/>
recruit<lb/>
At best, a liberal arts degree is<lb/>
considered "an added skill<lb/>
because it suggests an ability to<lb/>
synthesize information says<lb/>
Richard Hill, executive vice presi-<lb/>
dent of the National Association<lb/>
of Personnel Consultants.<lb/>
For the young, bright and well-<lb/>
educated, "we already have<lb/>
something of a seller's market<lb/>
Hill adds, but that doesn't mean<lb/>
corporations are changing as<lb/>
quickly as Naisbett suggests.<lb/>
"I don't see companies becom-<lb/>
ing less hierarchical, or, for that<lb/>
matter, changing their marketing<lb/>
strategies that much in the next<lb/>
three years he explains. "They<lb/>
don't want to make a guess about<lb/>
which way things will go<lb/>
Hill agrees with Naisbett's<lb/>
observation that diverse educa<lb/>
tions have great appeal to many<lb/>
employers.<lb/>
"They like the balance or<lb/>
diversity: a technician with liberal<lb/>
arts courses, a journalist with a<lb/>
technical minor, an attorney with<lb/>
a chemistry or biology degree<lb/>
he adds.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0006"/><lb/>
T HI hAST CAROL IN1AN<lb/>
JANLARV 16. 1986<lb/>
Black Enrollment In College May Drop<lb/>
(CPS) ? There will be fewer<lb/>
black students in college in 1990<lb/>
than today if present trends con-<lb/>
tinue, says a new study by the<lb/>
Southern Regional Education<lb/>
Board (SREB).<lb/>
Since 1976, while a greater<lb/>
percentage of college-aged<lb/>
students have been registering tor<lb/>
classes, black students' rate of in-<lb/>
crease for college attendance has<lb/>
trailed the total enrollment<lb/>
growth by a larger and larger<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
And since 1982, growth "has<lb/>
been at a standstill says Joseph<lb/>
Marks, author of the SREB<lb/>
study, "The Enrollment oi Black<lb/>
Students in Higher Education:<lb/>
Can Declines Be Prevented?"<lb/>
Marks found that while more<lb/>
black students are going to col-<lb/>
lege each year, their enrollment<lb/>
growth rate actually declined by<lb/>
over 8 percent from 1976 to 1982.<lb/>
At the same time, white<lb/>
students' college-going rates in-<lb/>
creased, even though whites' high<lb/>
school enrollment and gradua-<lb/>
tion rates suffered a greater<lb/>
decline than blacks<lb/>
Moreover, the number of black<lb/>
students completing college in-<lb/>
creased onlv 3 percent from 1976<lb/>
to 1982.<lb/>
But from the mid-1960s<lb/>
through 1970, black students'<lb/>
graduation rates grew a whopp-<lb/>
ing 60 percent, thanks to "suc-<lb/>
cessful integration" and "people<lb/>
realizing the door to education<lb/>
was open<lb/>
Marks blames black students'<lb/>
inability to obtain financial aid<lb/>
and better job prospects for mak-<lb/>
ing "the college-going rate plum-<lb/>
met<lb/>
Financial aid also played a ma-<lb/>
jor role in black students'<lb/>
droupout rates, the SREB found.<lb/>
It also said a scarcity of minority<lb/>
professors and administrators<lb/>
made black students feel more<lb/>
isolated and less comfortable<lb/>
staying in school.<lb/>
The SREB's report said it<lb/>
hoped to improve high school<lb/>
retention levels and to "give<lb/>
students a better college prep<lb/>
education while in high school<lb/>
Secondary schools should also<lb/>
provide better college advice<lb/>
earlier in high school, Marks<lb/>
recommends.<lb/>
The SREB's concern, Marks<lb/>
says, is "educating students well<lb/>
enough so they can handle college<lb/>
academics once they've been<lb/>
recruited<lb/>
The SREB feared the school<lb/>
reform movement, begun in the<lb/>
mid-70s, slowed the growth of<lb/>
black enrollment. Marks found<lb/>
higher admissions standards did<lb/>
indeed keep some black students<lb/>
out of college.<lb/>
In a paper published separately<lb/>
last week, Stanford professor<lb/>
Henry Levin found many of the<lb/>
school reform measures adopted<lb/>
in recent years ignore the needs of<lb/>
as many as 30 percent of the na-<lb/>
tion's students.<lb/>
Marks, for one, is confident<lb/>
"quality improvement" and in-<lb/>
creased minority enrollment can<lb/>
co-exist.<lb/>
"Good preparation - the high<lb/>
school level is the key to this pro-<lb/>
blem he says. "We're telling<lb/>
the states that by improving high<lb/>
school educations and improving<lb/>
college preparation, we can raise<lb/>
the academic level of minorities<lb/>
so they can still make the higher<lb/>
admissions requirements<lb/>
But "even a well-prepared stu-<lb/>
dent can't go anywhere if he can't<lb/>
afford it he adds, citing lack of<lb/>
financial aid as the main culprit<lb/>
in keeping black students oul oi<lb/>
college.<lb/>
As legislators worked to extend<lb/>
financial aid to the middle class<lb/>
lr the late 1970s, they inadver-<lb/>
tantly hurt the lowei income<lb/>
students - then the primarv n<lb/>
pients ol finan ial aid bv<lb/>
redistributing same amount<lb/>
of funds to more people. Ma<lb/>
explains.<lb/>
"By the earl) 1980s, w became<lb/>
apparent that while<lb/>
amount of money given in ?<lb/>
Grants was growing, each studei I<lb/>
was getting less<lb/>
I he maximum Pell Grant wa<lb/>
$1,600 in 1974 lo keep up .<lb/>
inflation and increased cents,<lb/>
im grant should I<lb/>
 t0 $3,000 b 1982. bul<lb/>
? d n was onl Si ,800<lb/>
While Marks savs "a huge<lb/>
federal increase" in financial<lb/>
could solve the pi<lb/>
declining black enrollment, he<lb/>
pec' ' . - s will continue<lb/>
slash aid - and blacks' chan<lb/>
llege<lb/>
HOKII()S UP<lb/>
K) 12th WEEK<lb/>
Of PREGS 1<lb/>
1195 ? 3 weeks<lb/>
cling 1<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 West Morgon St. Raleigh, N.C<lb/>
ECU'S Student Union Will<lb/>
ExpierenceCornplete Turnover<lb/>
r'rom Slaff Reports<lb/>
The ECU Student Union will<lb/>
be experiencing a complete tur-<lb/>
nover in staff within the next<lb/>
month. Kay Jones, Student<lb/>
Union secretary, will be accepting<lb/>
aplications for Student Union<lb/>
president and vice president until<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 24, and for chairper-<lb/>
sons until Wednesday, Feb. 5.<lb/>
The Student Union is the prin-<lb/>
cipal programming organization<lb/>
of the University. It organizes,<lb/>
sponsors and promotes events<lb/>
ranging from major concerts in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum to fine arts and<lb/>
cultural-entertainment programs,<lb/>
including weekly free films, guest<lb/>
speakers and entertainers and<lb/>
special events such as "Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall<lb/>
The new staff, which will be<lb/>
chosen bv the Union's Board oi<lb/>
Directors, will be responsible for<lb/>
selecting, planning and im-<lb/>
plementing projects such as those<lb/>
described above.<lb/>
The Student Union president<lb/>
administers the operations of the<lb/>
organization, recommends policy<lb/>
changes and appoints committee<lb/>
chairpersons. To applv for the<lb/>
position oi president, a student<lb/>
must have a minimum grade<lb/>
point average of 2.5.<lb/>
The Student Union vice presi<lb/>
dent aids the president in carrying<lb/>
out his or her responsibilities and<lb/>
takes over the presidents job in<lb/>
the event oi the president's<lb/>
absence. The vice president sue<lb/>
ceeds the president if the latter<lb/>
position becomes vacant and<lb/>
must meet the same qualifica-<lb/>
tions as those established for the<lb/>
president. Both the president and<lb/>
the vice president are chosen bv<lb/>
the Union's Board of Direci<lb/>
Since committees handle all<lb/>
Student Union programming,<lb/>
their number and areas ol<lb/>
responsibility are determined bv<lb/>
the president, subject to approval<lb/>
by the Union's Board oi Direc-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
A committee chairperson must<lb/>
State SupremeCourt<lb/>
Refuses To Review<lb/>
(CPS) ? In what may be the<lb/>
last of the anti-war era college<lb/>
trials, the California Supreme<lb/>
Court last week effectively told a<lb/>
professor fired for his anti-war<lb/>
activities in 1972 that he could<lb/>
have his job back.<lb/>
The case, one lawyer claims,<lb/>
means college professors have a<lb/>
more limited freedom of speech<lb/>
than other people do.<lb/>
Specifically, the court refused<lb/>
to review the case of former Stan-<lb/>
ford professor H. Bruce<lb/>
Franklin, whom Stanford fired in<lb/>
1972 for making anti-war<lb/>
speeches the previous year, and,<lb/>
Stanford officials said, inciting<lb/>
students to riot.<lb/>
Franklin was suing to force<lb/>
Stanford to reinstate him.<lb/>
It was the only time Stanford<lb/>
ever has fired a tenured pro-<lb/>
fessor .<lb/>
"We are certainly gratified<lb/>
says David Heilbron, attorney<lb/>
for Stanford, which at the time<lb/>
was widely-criticized by some<lb/>
faculty groups for allegedly try-<lb/>
ing to dampen the campus anti-<lb/>
war movement by punishing<lb/>
Franklin.<lb/>
"The university's position has<lb/>
been vindicated Heilbron<lb/>
asserts.<lb/>
Franklin, now a professor at<lb/>
Rutgers University, disagrees. "I<lb/>
am not the main victim he says.<lb/>
"The main victim is the people<lb/>
who would hear the (anti-war)<lb/>
view, the American people<lb/>
Stanford fired Franklin for<lb/>
disrupting a January, 1971 cam-<lb/>
pus speech by former U.N. Am-<lb/>
bassador Henry Cabot Lodge. It<lb/>
also disciplined Franklin for<lb/>
allegedly encouraging students to<lb/>
break into Stanford's computa-<lb/>
tion center ? where the school<lb/>
conducted research for the Pen-<lb/>
tagon ? and damage computers<lb/>
in February of the same year.<lb/>
Stanford, Franklin says, was<lb/>
"one of the universities central to<lb/>
the war in Southeast Asia<lb/>
Some computation center<lb/>
clerks, he remembers, noted the<lb/>
school was devising a plan, called<lb/>
GAMUT-H, to invade North<lb/>
Vietnam by land, sea and air.<lb/>
The court is saying that even<lb/>
advocating civil disobedience<lb/>
may justify the firing of a pro-<lb/>
fessor, says Margaret Crosby, the<lb/>
attorney for the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union (ACLU) who<lb/>
represented Franklin.<lb/>
See SUPREME Page 7.<lb/>
205 ? 5th SI<lb/>
757-3636<lb/>
Ear In<lb/>
Or<lb/>
Call Ahead For<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
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Have an East Carolina Steakout<lb/>
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HOURS: Lunch Mon-Fri 11:00 a.m2:30 p.m.<lb/>
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With This Coupon Only ? Through Sat 1-18<lb/>
be a full-time student and have a<lb/>
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endeavors to have represented on<lb/>
the committee all segments oi the<lb/>
membership oi the Student<lb/>
Union, which consists oi all<lb/>
students who pay activity fees.<lb/>
According to outgoing Student<lb/>
Union President Michael Smith,<lb/>
the new president and vice presi-<lb/>
dent will actually be in training<lb/>
until April when they take over.<lb/>
Smith adds. "Working in Stu-<lb/>
dent Union is a great opportunity<lb/>
to meet other students and facul-<lb/>
ty members, and it's a lot oi fun<lb/>
to work on things like the<lb/>
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tures. It's also the best uav to<lb/>
make things that you want to see<lb/>
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Join The<lb/>
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j?j?i?j?j?i?i?ii?<lb/>
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The deadline is fast approaching for students interested in<lb/>
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allowance. The scholarships are awarded on merit and, generallly,<lb/>
if you have at least a 2.5 cumulative grade point average (GPA),<lb/>
2.0 in nursing, you will be competitive for a scholarship. It is<lb/>
important to note that one does not have to be currently enrolled in<lb/>
the Army ROTC program to apply. For more information, contact<lb/>
Captain Alvin Mitchell at 757-6967 or stop by room 319 Erwin<lb/>
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<lb/>
New<lb/>
WASHINGTON!<lb/>
million men wl<lb/>
know, birth com<lb/>
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wl he need<lb/>
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But resea<lb/>
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Saturday11:00<lb/>
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n 319, Erwin<lb/>
THEEASl (? Akoi INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 16. 1986<lb/>
New'Pill'Subject Of Research<lb/>
V ASHINGTON (UPI) - As the<lb/>
millions of women who use them<lb/>
know, birth control pills have<lb/>
disadvantages, not the least of<lb/>
which is the need to remember to<lb/>
take one every day.<lb/>
But researchers at Rutgers<lb/>
t niversity are testing an adhesive<lb/>
skin patch to deliver contracep-<lb/>
tive drugs that would only have<lb/>
to be changed once a week, pro-<lb/>
siding the correct dosage directly<lb/>
the bloodstream.<lb/>
"It we do it this va. we are<lb/>
able to optimize the therapeutic<lb/>
efficacy, and also we are able to<lb/>
prolong the duration o' the treat-<lb/>
ment said Yie W. Chien, chair-<lb/>
nan of the Rutgers College of<lb/>
Pharmacy Department of Phar-<lb/>
maceutics.<lb/>
"Instead of a woman taking<lb/>
one pill a day. she would need on-<lb/>
U to use one (a patch) once every<lb/>
week. It would also minimize the<lb/>
side effects because the concen-<lb/>
tration of drug in the body is<lb/>
maintained at a constant level<lb/>
(with) no fluctuation<lb/>
Chien, a professor of industrial<lb/>
pharmacy, also heads Rutgers'<lb/>
Controlled Drug Delivery Resear-<lb/>
cher Center, which he establish-<lb/>
ed. He and colleagues are work-<lb/>
ing on novel drug delivery<lb/>
systems.<lb/>
Research on transdermal<lb/>
delivery of other drugs led them<lb/>
to investigeate the possibility of<lb/>
using a skin patch for contracep-<lb/>
tion. They are also testing pat-<lb/>
ches for liver and heart disease<lb/>
and cancer.<lb/>
"This is very, very new he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Patches containing an antimo-<lb/>
tion sickness drug and patches<lb/>
with nitroglycerin, used to treat<lb/>
angina pectoris or chest pain, are<lb/>
already on the market.<lb/>
A patch delivers controlled<lb/>
doses of drugs ? in the case of<lb/>
contraception, estrogen and pro-<lb/>
gestin, varying according to<lb/>
which week of the cycle the<lb/>
woman is on. However, much<lb/>
lower doses would be required.<lb/>
This, theoretically, would reduce<lb/>
side effects.<lb/>
"If you take a drug orally, bas-<lb/>
ed on biomedical knowledge,<lb/>
about 90 percent or more will be<lb/>
metabolized by enzymes in the<lb/>
liver. So actually only 5 to 10 per-<lb/>
cent is effective Chien said, "if<lb/>
you deliver through skin, you can<lb/>
reduce the dose by tenfold<lb/>
Pills provide a surge of medica-<lb/>
tion that drops off later, while a<lb/>
skin patch would deliver constant<lb/>
doses. Differences in skin<lb/>
permeability would probably<lb/>
change the absorption rate only<lb/>
10 percent in either direction,<lb/>
Chien said.<lb/>
The patch is being tested on<lb/>
animals now so the researchers<lb/>
can calculate dosages and rates of<lb/>
absorption. Human testing using<lb/>
large groups of volunteers may<lb/>
begin in early 1987. If everything<lb/>
goes right, the product could be<lb/>
on the market in late 1989.<lb/>
Although Chien's team is<lb/>
determined to develop a con-<lb/>
traceptive patch, the researcher,<lb/>
who previously worked in private<lb/>
industry researching drug<lb/>
delivery, said there is no intention<lb/>
of rushing things.<lb/>
"We want to make sure the<lb/>
type of drug we develop if safe<lb/>
and efficacious Chien caution-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
gearges<lb/>
air designers<lb/>
For The Latest<lb/>
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Duke Will Grant Nixon Honorary Degree<lb/>
Dl RHAM, NC (CPS) ?<lb/>
Somewhat motivated by the<lb/>
specter of Richard Nixon, Duke<lb/>
I niversity says it will grant<lb/>
Chrysler chairman and business<lb/>
superstar lee Iacocca a honorary-<lb/>
degree rext spring after all.<lb/>
Officials say there was never a<lb/>
question about giving Iacocca a<lb/>
degree, despite a nationally-<lb/>
indicated column that claimed<lb/>
they were going to refuse to grant<lb/>
one.<lb/>
The school's Academic Coun-<lb/>
cil recently approved giving a<lb/>
degree to Iacocca, with "only a<lb/>
few negative votes<lb/>
In November, nationally-<lb/>
syndicated columnist Robert<lb/>
Novak claimed some members of<lb/>
Duke's Academic Council<lb/>
wanted to prevent Iacocca from<lb/>
getting a degree when he delivers<lb/>
he commencement address next<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
ovak likened the alleged<lb/>
satisfaction with Iacocca to<lb/>
ke's 1983 decision not to host<lb/>
Richard Nixon Presidential<lb/>
I ibrarv.<lb/>
Ihc columnist blasted coin,<lb/>
opponents to lacocca's degree a-<lb/>
"a bunch ot hoity-toitics who<lb/>
wouldn't even commit to the Nix<lb/>
on I ibrary<lb/>
Nixon himself dropped Duke<lb/>
list of locales when<lb/>
Duke wanted to insure public ac-<lb/>
cess to the Nixon records and to<lb/>
scale down the size of the<lb/>
museum attached to the library.<lb/>
I he Ubrarv is now being built in<lb/>
San Clemente, Cal with help<lb/>
from a foundation associated<lb/>
with Chapman College.<lb/>
Duke's trustees, moreover, had<lb/>
approved giving Iacocca a<lb/>
honorary degree in September.<lb/>
"We have been wondering<lb/>
where Mr. Novak got this from<lb/>
Duke official William Green<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"To my knowledge, the<lb/>
Academic Council had not<lb/>
discussed the degree when the<lb/>
Novak column appeared Green<lb/>
explains. "He (Novak) was fac-<lb/>
tually wrong<lb/>
Novak declined to tell a Col-<lb/>
lege Press Service reporter how<lb/>
he got the story of the supposed<lb/>
anti-Iacocca sentir. ent.<lb/>
About 20 council members did<lb/>
receive a letter from Slavic<lb/>
Languages Prof. Magnus Kryn-<lb/>
ski, who protested Iacocca was a<lb/>
"faddish" choice for commence-<lb/>
ment speaker. Krynski, who does<lb/>
not sit on the council, called<lb/>
Iacocca a "demagogue and a rab-<lb/>
ble rouser who is intellectually<lb/>
lacking in depth<lb/>
"Mr. lacocca's ac-<lb/>
complishments certainly tit the<lb/>
criteria for honorary degrees a;<lb/>
Duke. His accomplishments are<lb/>
quite remarkable Green main-<lb/>
tains. "There is nothing that says<lb/>
businessmen can't receive<lb/>
honorary degrees<lb/>
Iacocca has received nine<lb/>
honorary degrees, including ones<lb/>
proffered at commencement ad-<lb/>
dresses at Massachusetts Institute<lb/>
of Technology in 1985, l.ehigh in<lb/>
1984 and Michigan in 1983. Alysia Hilton, lacocca's cor-<lb/>
Iacocca has gotten more than respondence coordinator.<lb/>
250 requests to speak at com- "We're getting at least five a<lb/>
mencements this spring, adds week<lb/>
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Supreme Court<lb/>
Continued From Page 6.<lb/>
Bui the American Association<lb/>
ot Universit) Professors<lb/>
Vl P), which undertakes to<lb/>
publicize and stop instances in<lb/>
which administrators diminish<lb/>
campus tree speech, tends to<lb/>
agree with Stanford.<lb/>
"We vsere asked to review the<lb/>
ase. Nothing seemed sufficient!)<lb/>
out of line to call for a full<lb/>
A AI I' investigation the<lb/>
VAUP's Jordon Kurland recalls<lb/>
The ruling "does not broaden or<lb/>
narrow the law (protecting free<lb/>
speech)<lb/>
Crosby contends various alum-<lb/>
ni groups pressured Stanford to<lb/>
get rid of Franklin because they<lb/>
were upset by his "radical"<lb/>
views.<lb/>
"The school docs not respond<lb/>
to alumni pressure replies Stan-<lb/>
ford spokeswoman Karen Bar-<lb/>
tholomew.<lb/>
Few professors actually were<lb/>
fired for protesting against the<lb/>
Vietnam war. Kurland reports.<lb/>
mmmmm.<lb/>
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DATE: January 13-17, 1986<lb/>
PLACE: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
TIME: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Special Features: Rock Star Photos<lb/>
Movie Star Photos<lb/>
Wildlife Prints<lb/>
Buttons<lb/>
Matting Available, Silver and Wood Frames<lb/>
?JL " ' T f  iH ,<lb/>
A<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0008"/><lb/>
nil FAST AROi INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
IAN1 -H ' '<lb/>
Though Knave At Heart,<lb/>
The King Was Cool<lb/>
B DOUG ROBKKsON<lb/>
stiff Wmrr<lb/>
In oui society, rock performers<lb/>
are often viewed as god-like<lb/>
figures who have miraculously<lb/>
risen above the common masses<lb/>
into a pseudo-heaven tilled with<lb/>
tame and fortune. But with the<lb/>
possible exception of the Beatles.<lb/>
 celebrity has ever receiv<lb/>
ed ? monumental acclaim<lb/>
and fanatical devotion as the late<lb/>
Elvis Presle<lb/>
lived, Elvis would<lb/>
i his 51st birthdav<lb/>
v x lor the youth ol<lb/>
1 Ivis may seem to be<lb/>
chaic relit ol a more<lb/>
simple pas' Bui it was Elvis who,<lb/>
grinding and gyrating behind his<lb/>
the never-ending<lb/>
string ck performers. And in<lb/>
comparison to the scantily-clad,<lb/>
txp outing performers of<lb/>
" ?' Ot's<lb/>
almost<lb/>
ha e elel<lb/>
on Januai<lb/>
l)Sl k<lb/>
quam<lb/>
Yei<lb/>
mei;<lb/>
evil<lb/>
iv. Elvis vvas one<lb/>
figures in<lb/>
and arguably,<lb/>
st significant in-<lb/>
preseni culture,<lb/>
luring the<lb/>
f the 1950s,<lb/>
ts a base<lb/>
 I ite, sanitai<lb/>
era His slurred<lb/>
dirty and wild<lb/>
smooth, vai<lb/>
? e ? vals<lb/>
candalous asD(<lb/>
a renc<lb/>
resonated with their delivery.<lb/>
Elvis' hip-sw inging, pumping and<lb/>
grinding style forced l:d Sullivan<lb/>
to censor the singer from the<lb/>
waist down on national televi-<lb/>
sion, much to the dismay of<lb/>
America's teenagers.<lb/>
Despite the sexual undertones<lb/>
ot his bump and grind, Elvis ap-<lb/>
peared almost unsuspectingly in-<lb/>
nocent He can ied his fame,<lb/>
glamour, and sexuality with the<lb/>
down home simplicity ot a back<lb/>
country Southern bo. It was a<lb/>
combination that set ablae the<lb/>
frozen spirits of the 50s' youth.<lb/>
Although his popularity leapt<lb/>
to stratospheric heights, Elvis re-<lb/>
mained a country boy. Without a<lb/>
doubt, he had a unique talent in<lb/>
his endearingly imperfect voice.<lb/>
his rough-hewn playfulness, his<lb/>
smoldering, curled-lip smile that<lb/>
conveyed unspoken messages to<lb/>
women everywhere. But. Elvis<lb/>
never owned the wil and wisdom<lb/>
ol a latter generation's John I en<lb/>
non, for instance, nor did Elvis<lb/>
ever solely compose even one of<lb/>
his hit songs<lb/>
This dispantv between Elvis'<lb/>
personal simplicity and the<lb/>
monumental dimensions of his<lb/>
legend prohabh accounts for his<lb/>
undying popularity. Hvis was a<lb/>
king to the masses of common<lb/>
people. He was the common<lb/>
denominator through which<lb/>
every truck driver, store clerk,<lb/>
waitress, and gas station youth<lb/>
co ii i j pr n  ex-<lb/>
travagani fantasies the lavish<lb/>
weali pink Cadillacs, and<lb/>
' f adi ?i ine fans.<lb/>
- i  ' Elvis was<lb/>
that his simplicity lent itself to<lb/>
supporting such fantasy lives.<lb/>
That is why his fans so reverently<lb/>
adored him, so grievously<lb/>
mourned his passing, and refuse,<lb/>
even now, to release the memory<lb/>
of the promise he held.<lb/>
Perhaps it was his own enor-<lb/>
mous popularity that destroyed<lb/>
Elvis. His "Aloha From Hawaii"<lb/>
concert in 1973 was beamed via<lb/>
satellite to more than half the<lb/>
population of our planet. By the<lb/>
time of his death in 1977, Eh is'<lb/>
image had become the most wide-<lb/>
lv reproduced on Earth.<lb/>
Yet, at the center of this<lb/>
monumental legend stood a man,<lb/>
who despite his magnified image,<lb/>
remained a banal, country boy A<lb/>
boy who was isolated from the<lb/>
world by his own popularity A<lb/>
boy who lived in a topsy-turvey<lb/>
world govened only by his moods<lb/>
and appetites. A boy who,<lb/>
ultimately, was destroyed bv a<lb/>
myth he could never live up to,<lb/>
yet one he could never betrao<lb/>
Elvis will not be remembered<lb/>
as the bloated effigy of his<lb/>
former self that died in Memphis<lb/>
more than eight vears ago. Elvis<lb/>
Presley, the man, has passed<lb/>
away. But Elvis, the legend, has<lb/>
been wholly transformed into<lb/>
another dimension composed ot<lb/>
magnetic tape, films, and televi-<lb/>
sion. It is m this electronic alter-<lb/>
universe that Elvis seems super-<lb/>
naturally and eternallv to dwell<lb/>
among us. The King is dead<lb/>
1 ong live the King<lb/>
Thinking Solid This Week<lb/>
Hv V R K)M)<lb/>
involves<lb/>
tie con-<lb/>
<lb/>
simp<lb/>
(vertices), how<lb/>
Igesl are required to<lb/>
each vertex to every<lb/>
te I ? ? example case<lb/>
aitl ' n vertices, re-<lb/>
quires mx edges. Whai about the<lb/>
general tase of n dots?<lb/>
rhe solution exemplifies the<lb/>
elegance dd power of a simple<lb/>
counting argument. Begin with n<lb/>
isolated vertices (fig. 2a). Con-<lb/>
nect one vertex to every other<lb/>
vertex I here are n- edges. Pick<lb/>
a second vertex. Because one<lb/>
vertex has been used, n-2 verti.es<lb/>
remain to be connected. Thus,<lb/>
the number of edges added at this<lb/>
stage is n-2 (fig. 2b). Continue us-<lb/>
ing this method until, finally, one<lb/>
I his t<lb/>
remaining edge - added 1<lb/>
tially, 'he tota<lb/>
needed u ? fully co<lb/>
is the sum of the edges added at<lb/>
each stage fiat is the un 1 i ?<lb/>
four vertices the answei is (3 plus<lb/>
2 plus h sn Whai I general<lb/>
case of n vertices?<lb/>
A technique deriv : by ai I<lb/>
Friederich Gauss in 1786 (as a<lb/>
boy of nine) solves the problem<lb/>
J. G. Buttner, Gauss'<lb/>
teacher assigned class a<lb/>
please ee FRY Ol I . pane M<lb/>
Elvis Presley<lb/>
?ce ma be the most popular icon in ihe world.<lb/>
A Long-Time Partier<lb/>
Revisits Downtown<lb/>
B PA I MOI i)<lb/>
?f ?rilti<lb/>
"Faculty 86" Holds Reception Friday<lb/>
tI evs Bureau<lb/>
"Faculty '86: I eaching Artists<lb/>
ai 1 (I an exhibition of art by<lb/>
East Carolina University School<lb/>
ol Art faculty members, opened<lb/>
in Gray Gallery Monday and will<lb/>
remain on view through Feb. 1.<lb/>
According to Perry Nesbitt,<lb/>
director of Gray Gallery, the<lb/>
showing consists oi a full range<lb/>
? media, including drawings.<lb/>
paintings, sculptures, water-<lb/>
colors, printmaking,<lb/>
photography, textiles, art metal,<lb/>
wood and ceramics<lb/>
"Members of the commercial<lb/>
art and environmental design<lb/>
faculty will be exhibiting draw-<lb/>
ings and finished pieces as well<lb/>
Nesbitt said.<lb/>
A faculty reception, which is<lb/>
free and open to the public, will<lb/>
be held Friday from 7:30 to 9:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Exhibitors are: oe Buske.<lb/>
Charles Chamberlain, Robert<lb/>
Edmiston, Sara Edmiston,<lb/>
Michael Ehlbeck, Ray Elmore,<lb/>
Janet Fischer, Marilyn Gordlev,<lb/>
Tran Gordlev. Paul Hartley,<lb/>
William Holley, Norman Keller,<lb/>
Richard Laing, Edward Levine,<lb/>
Mind- Machanic, Craig<lb/>
Malmrose, Clarence Morgan.<lb/>
Sergio Ortiz, Betty Petteway,<lb/>
Robert Rasch, Roxanne Keep.<lb/>
Betsy Ross. Dorothy Satterfield,<lb/>
John Satterfield, Donald Sex-<lb/>
auer. Terry Smith, Melvin Stan-<lb/>
forth, Henry Stindt. and Michael<lb/>
Voors.<lb/>
Gray Gallery hours are Mon-<lb/>
day through Saturday from 10<lb/>
a.m. until 5 p.m. and until 8 p.m.<lb/>
on Wednesdavs<lb/>
A Show Hung Well<lb/>
B TON Rl MPI I III Sr? ima<lb/>
m?hhk? i s!0(arohna Umy. Gray Gallery, and Ludwig Bradly, gallery assistant, put the finishing<lb/>
touches on the exhibition Faculty '86: Teaching Artists at ECU" which began Monday. Paintings, watercolors, sculptures,<lb/>
photographs and textiles are among the many different types of media displayed in the show. The pieces will be on view through<lb/>
1 he old dinosaur is dead ? or<lb/>
quickly dying. Nope. Downtown<lb/>
ain't what it used to be. The crazy<lb/>
days ot w ild (I do mean wild) par-<lb/>
ty ing and cheap beer are now '<lb/>
be placed in the archives of "Par-<lb/>
ties Past. ' Fear not fellow fry<lb/>
brains, that era is being ushered<lb/>
out by a new, more radical one:<lb/>
the era ofPeople who can af-<lb/>
ford to take a mortgage out on<lb/>
their car for a night on the<lb/>
town<lb/>
Does anybody remember what<lb/>
Downtown used to be like'1 The<lb/>
scene Downtown was different<lb/>
two or three years ago. A dude<lb/>
could go out, catch a bu (which<lb/>
so often needs to be done on<lb/>
weekends) "get up" with a<lb/>
member of the fairer gender, and<lb/>
still wake up with enough change<lb/>
to buy that all-important first<lb/>
Pepsi of the day. Seems folks<lb/>
would've had the sense not to<lb/>
disrupt a system that had been<lb/>
working so well for so long. But<lb/>
Nooooo, the "powers that be"<lb/>
had to start screw in' around with<lb/>
everything.<lb/>
First it was that narrow little<lb/>
bat to which future yuppies seem<lb/>
to be drawn. You know what I'm<lb/>
talking about ? the bar with the<lb/>
simply "huge" pool tables. The<lb/>
bar that plays music virtually in-<lb/>
distinguishable from that of any<lb/>
Hare Krishna commune. That's<lb/>
the one. This bar has always been<lb/>
expensive ? why they went<lb/>
private two years ago I'll never<lb/>
know. Even when they were<lb/>
public I couldn't afford ? nor<lb/>
did I want ? to drink there.<lb/>
Next is the acid rock bar.<lb/>
C'mon guyswhat the hell hap-<lb/>
pened to ya? Two years ago, you<lb/>
people were kickin' ass. You used<lb/>
to play jammin' rock and roll ?<lb/>
not that Twisted Sister. Dokken<lb/>
crud ? 1 mean good tune. like<lb/>
the Who. early Journey, and the<lb/>
Stones. Now I have to listen to<lb/>
some maniacal psycho freak tell<lb/>
me how he's come to having his<lb/>
"bails to ihe wa . Wl<lb/>
worse, 1 have i<lb/>
foil<lb/>
. isa<lb/>
ds ? oi arc vol: a<lb/>
S ape up ? ai  ider why<lb/>
. can only d<lb/>
weekends<lb/>
Now we con i - a vhere<lb/>
the people who di I and<lb/>
fix thangs" dwell ? :he<lb/>
Industrial Tech majors. Even the<lb/>
name of this bar typifies the per-<lb/>
sonality of its clientele Simply to<lb/>
enter this bar sou must wear a<lb/>
shirt with a collar. I'm a poor<lb/>
'py - I win a<lb/>
shirt with a collar. Besides, who<lb/>
wants to drink in a bar where all<lb/>
people drink Michelob 1 s<lb/>
d talk about government<lb/>
misrepresentation in Boi<lb/>
Spare me.<lb/>
Well, we're down l as-<lb/>
respectable drinking pond<lb/>
they actually serve beer at<lb/>
reasonable prices ? this bat<lb/>
sin Dly has other problems Firs<lb/>
it's small. incredibly<lb/>
smallminiscule. Second is their<lb/>
choice oi television programm-<lb/>
ing. One can't sit down for a<lb/>
burger and a beer without being<lb/>
forced to view the starving m<lb/>
Ethiopia. 1 truly, sympathize with<lb/>
these people, but I. too, must eat<lb/>
I astiv is this establishment's<lb/>
clientele. 1 don't consider mysell<lb/>
a snob - those of you who know<lb/>
me. both of you, realize this But<lb/>
1 just can't force myself to drink<lb/>
in a bar where all the guvs are<lb/>
named either Skip. Chip, oi Jeff<lb/>
1 refuse.<lb/>
Soooo, 1 guess I've prettJ<lb/>
much chopped everybody up<lb/>
Hell, now even if I wanted t0<lb/>
drink in a bar, nobody would let<lb/>
me That's all right, though I<lb/>
still have all of my Jimim Buffett<lb/>
albums, and Overton's sells brew<lb/>
at a pretty good price. Now all I<lb/>
have to do is think of a wav to get<lb/>
all the women to mv house<lb/>
1 ve got it. Ladies, there is ab-<lb/>
solutely no cover charge - but<lb/>
there is tipping.<lb/>
Try Out<lb/>
1 '?tinu-d f<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
WSB'<lb/>
i<lb/>
S<lb/>
Tone<lb/>
Take A<lb/>
JOIN NO<lb/>
<lb/>
- <lb/>
o<lb/>
CALI<lb/>
FRE<lb/>
THE<lb/>
SouthPa<lb/>
<pb facs="00057793_0009"/><lb/>
I HI JASfAkOI ISIAN<lb/>
JAM.AkY 16, Ml<lb/>
Try Out Some Mathematics In Your Valuable Spare Time<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
tiresome problem gt iranteed to<lb/>
wile away the alien in (and to<lb/>
give Buttner a bre. - tiom in-<lb/>
tellectual strain) Th problem ?<lb/>
add all the numbc 1 through<lb/>
100. Gauss had an insight involv-<lb/>
ing a re-arrangement and<lb/>
simplification of the problem.<lb/>
The answer, armed at without<lb/>
pause ? 5050. following a<lb/>
similiar tack, we will arrive at the<lb/>
sum oi all numbers n- through 1<lb/>
(Fig. 3).<lb/>
Aha! Momentary insight<lb/>
resolves insurmountable situa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
A simplifying viewpoint may<lb/>
take a thousand years to evolve.<lb/>
The Pvthagoreans recognized<lb/>
that there are five (Platonic)<lb/>
solids with regular faces. The<lb/>
cube is one. Lach face of the cube<lb/>
is congruent with every other<lb/>
face. Why these five? There is no<lb/>
solid with congruent pentagram<lb/>
for faces.<lb/>
l.eohnard Euler counted the<lb/>
number of corners (vertices),<lb/>
edges and faces ot each Platonic-<lb/>
solid. Luler numbers are derived<lb/>
from the relationship between<lb/>
vertices, edges and faces (fig. 4).<lb/>
Each Platonic solid has Euler<lb/>
number 2. Here, counting of dif-<lb/>
ferent qualities shows a relation-<lb/>
ship not realized before. What<lb/>
tvpe of figure has Luler numbers<lb/>
1 and -1? H. B. Griffith's Sur-<lb/>
faces is an excellent introduction<lb/>
to numerical relationships bet-<lb/>
ween geometrical objects.<lb/>
Finally, what kind of problems<lb/>
exist where counting creates<lb/>
boundary conditions for a solu-<lb/>
tion but yields no specific infor-<lb/>
mation about the solution? The<lb/>
science of numbers, or com-<lb/>
binatorics, according to Claude<lb/>
Berge, "obtains exact formulas<lb/>
for the number of configurations<lb/>
satisfying certain specified pro-<lb/>
perties<lb/>
There is a class of problems,<lb/>
finite in nature, whose solution<lb/>
would require the fastest com-<lb/>
puter billions of years.<lb/>
An example involves a typing<lb/>
monkey. The monkey is con-<lb/>
strained to type no more than<lb/>
1000 symbols per sequence.<lb/>
Fig. 1<lb/>
Fig. 2a<lb/>
Fig. 2b I<lb/>
Figures Vertices Edges Faces<lb/>
Tetrahedron<lb/>
Cube<lb/>
Octahedron<lb/>
Dodecahedron<lb/>
Icosahedron<lb/>
4<lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
12<lb/>
9<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
12<lb/>
20<lb/>
Fig. 4<lb/>
Gauss's Method:<lb/>
1 ?23 ?? 98 -99100<lb/>
1 ?100?299398?50 51<lb/>
N?5<lb/>
Stage 1 N-U4<lb/>
Stage II N-23<lb/>
? l ?<lb/>
3N-2 N-l<lb/>
101 101 101<lb/>
50 Pairs 50(10115050<lb/>
101<lb/>
1 ? N-l2 ? N-2N-3 ? .?<lb/>
N<lb/>
N<lb/>
N<lb/>
N-l Pairs (N-l)N<lb/>
Fig. 3<lb/>
1000<lb/>
34<lb/>
Each Svmbol has a 1 in 34<lb/>
Chance of Being Selected<lb/>
Fig. 5<lb/>
A Box Of Mathematical Fig.s<lb/>
WSB's Voice<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
EXTRAVAGANZA<lb/>
(L'PI) ? From the simple<lb/>
hillbilly days of Dixie to the cur-<lb/>
rent boom times of the Sun Belt,<lb/>
the South and radio station WSB<lb/>
grew up together.<lb/>
The history oi the relationship<lb/>
between the self-proclaimed<lb/>
"Voice of the South" ? indeed,<lb/>
its call letters stand for<lb/>
"Welcome South, Brother" ?<lb/>
and the region it helped raise is<lb/>
being preserved in an immense<lb/>
archival collection that includes<lb/>
thousands of phonograph<lb/>
records and other memorabilia.<lb/>
There was no more room for<lb/>
the records, tapes, log books, let-<lb/>
ters, scripts, photographs,<lb/>
microphones and turntables that<lb/>
had been accumulating since<lb/>
WSB first went on the air in 1922<lb/>
with a meager 100 watts of<lb/>
power. It was the first radio sta-<lb/>
tion in the Southeast, hitting the<lb/>
airwaves just two years after Pitt-<lb/>
please see VOICE, pa;e 10<lb/>
Cancun, Mexico March 8, 1986<lb/>
Air Travel From Miami<lb/>
7 Nights Hotel Including Taxes<lb/>
T?-ansfers From Airport<lb/>
Bahamas Cruise March 9, 1986<lb/>
4 Days of Cruising m the Bahamas<lb/>
All Meals and Entertainment on Ship<lb/>
Port Taxes and Gratuities<lb/>
$387 pt person<lb/>
$356 pt person<lb/>
Vy<lb/>
Space Limited<lb/>
Make Your Deposits Now<lb/>
Coe in for brochure<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC<lb/>
19CotancheStreet Greenville NC<lb/>
P?-one 757 0234<lb/>
Assuming there are 34 symbols<lb/>
(26 letters, seven punctuation<lb/>
marks and a blank) to cl<lb/>
from, how long would il take- the<lb/>
monkev to reproduce the Gel<lb/>
tysburg Address<lb/>
The Address represents a uni-<lb/>
que sequence of symbols The<lb/>
number ot combinations ot sym-<lb/>
bols is shown in tig. 5. The<lb/>
monkev could produce rhe Ad-<lb/>
dress perfectly the first time, but<lb/>
this is unlikely.<lb/>
Students probably should<lb/>
avoid this method ol producing<lb/>
"that perfeci theme paper A<lb/>
computer cnuld run through<lb/>
every combination oi symbols. It<lb/>
would take a very, long time, but,<lb/>
at some point, it would recreate<lb/>
every piece ol literature extant<lb/>
f untorlunatelv, this column<lb/>
i, and create new literature b<lb/>
old authors, and even (.omplete<lb/>
unknown works.<lb/>
Unfortunately, a humar,<lb/>
presence is required to filter the<lb/>
information and extract penmen'<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
Professionally<lb/>
Prepared<lb/>
Resumes<lb/>
CALL 355-6810<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
January Specials<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Any One Or Any Combination<lb/>
Shrimp, Oysters, Trout,<lb/>
Clam Strips, Deviled<lb/>
Crabs,Flounder<lb/>
'Up To 4 he<lb/>
$?99<lb/>
6<lb/>
Alaskan Crab Legs Or<lb/>
6 Steamed Shrimp<lb/>
Served With Fried Or Baked Potato, Cole Slaw,<lb/>
Hushpuppies.<lb/>
9<lb/>
jGE??.viu.<lb/>
.V" v<lb/>
Family Restaurants<lb/>
 ? , . ? i<lb/>
. a lable<lb/>
It he world.<lb/>
ne Partier<lb/>
)ovvntown<lb/>
vs hai<lb/>
?<lb/>
?he<lb/>
per-<lb/>
;r a<lb/>
poor<lb/>
rd a<lb/>
? Besides, ??<lb/>
e all<lb/>
b Light<lb/>
I! vernment<lb/>
B ?1<lb/>
the last<lb/>
? . -nd<lb/>
beer at<lb/>
First,<lb/>
i<lb/>
I is their<lb/>
elevision programm-<lb/>
: am for a<lb/>
beer -?? th n being<lb/>
mg in<lb/>
ve with<lb/>
e, but ! must eat.<lb/>
ment's<lb/>
e 1 dor - myself<lb/>
o know<lb/>
realize this. But<lb/>
myself to drink<lb/>
ill the guys are<lb/>
ither Skip, Chip, or Jeff.<lb/>
1 guess I've pretty<lb/>
much chopped everybody up.<lb/>
Hell, now even if I wanted to<lb/>
drink in a bar, nobody would let<lb/>
me. That's all rightthough. I<lb/>
still have all of my Jimmy Buffett<lb/>
albums, and Overton's sells brew<lb/>
at a pretty good price. Now all I<lb/>
have to do is think of a way to get<lb/>
all the women to my house<lb/>
I've got it. Ladies, there is ab-<lb/>
solutely no cover charge ? but<lb/>
there is tipping.<lb/>
STILL NOT OVER<lb/>
THE HOLIDAYS<lb/>
Tone Your Body Back In Shape At<lb/>
THE<lb/>
x<lb/>
Take Advantage of Our Special Student Rates<lb/>
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THE<lb/>
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Includes:<lb/>
Steam<lb/>
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Free Weights<lb/>
Aerobics 52 times a week<lb/>
New Wolff System<lb/>
Tanning Bed<lb/>
$4.00 per visit<lb/>
10 visits $30.00<lb/>
 ?? . ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057793_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
HI I AS I c AK( 1 iM N<lb/>
I AM tO lf. !S86<lb/>
Dooneshurv<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
(f<lb/>
,?J<lb/>
c55<lb/>
a ? - <lb/>
0<lb/>
-4<lb/>
? ?? , ?.???? ??<lb/>
9?w v ' net ??'??? ?<lb/>
.?:? v ???- KAl 4TCU0 <lb/>
i m ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
RL4M6R<lb/>
<lb/>
! ? v<lb/>
<lb/>
?AtV<lb/>
'<lb/>
Q ? ? ???: v 50<lb/>
?? . ?<lb/>
<lb/>
lw<lb/>
.??<lb/>
 <lb/>
? ?  - K ? '<lb/>
AHBAl -?<lb/>
 '? - M<lb/>
J ?'<lb/>
- flf<lb/>
d &amp;r'l<lb/>
 -J.?<lb/>
Foce 0 The South Lives<lb/>
continued from paj? 9<lb/>
kOk <lb/>
A SI<lb/>
40-<lb/>
(apanes( irrender ending Wi d<lb/>
w at 11 ai e pi esei v ed on lai ge<lb/>
 discs, the forerunners oi<lb/>
gnetic recording tape<lb/>
UsH started small, so small in<lb/>
fact it was mereh an offshoot oi<lb/>
 i ? Journal and had its<lb/>
. bi adcasting studio in an<lb/>
?mpt room at the newspaper.<lb/>
 ? station as physical-<lb/>
ly small, it was di enormous<lb/>
breakthrough tor the South. It<lb/>
introduced listener- to the strange<lb/>
new world of immediate news<lb/>
I<lb/>
WSB<lb/>
eel in<lb/>
:<lb/>
WSB<lb/>
see<lb/>
WsH ai 1. ? tl<lb/>
?. eai 1 ' ??.ink;<lb/>
mplei<lb/>
Mike<lb/>
aaei ? 1 Vsi <lb/>
much<lb/>
.hill, plus<lb/>
 ' Itsu 1, foi a time, provided educa-<lb/>
 1939 ?????.te nal programs ? spelling bee<lb/>
M C pun hasectui es and story-telling to the<lb/>
ai urnal atlanta school system. WSB also was viewed as<lb/>
gi a and becamesomething ol a new toy for the<lb/>
? ? rated, so toomasses.<lb/>
I1 stationHenry Ford, the car magnate.<lb/>
50 " H ' '?? :Hjvas so impressed after visiting<lb/>
d 11sWSB in its early days that he<lb/>
ti ind icrosswent home to Michigan and ap-<lb/>
aftei dark,plied for a broadcasting license.<lb/>
playlisi towardFord later installed a transmitter<lb/>
pular music.in his Highland Park plant to<lb/>
 history. toosupply entertainment for his<lb/>
Rooei' dw Chur-employees.<lb/>
theceremon ot the<lb/>
' ? ?<lb/>
w here i Id be preserved<lb/>
future ions tor t;<lb/>
joyn : study<lb/>
1 he coll of arly 55,000<lb/>
graphs runs<lb/>
ol musical taste I rom<lb/>
Joe Stafford and Pie I Pipei<lb/>
Herb pei i ind the '<lb/>
Brass, fi n M<lb/>
Boy George, from the Ragi<lb/>
kascaK to "Christmas in the<lb/>
Stars rlic Star Wars yuletide<lb/>
album featuring the single,<lb/>
"What Can You Get a Wookiee<lb/>
for Christmas (When He Already<lb/>
Owns a Comb ?)<lb/>
Said Paton, "It appears that<lb/>
one hadn't been played too<lb/>
often<lb/>
There is evidence ol a heavy in-<lb/>
fluence of religious and hillbilly<lb/>
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For more than three decades.<lb/>
New York photographer Chuck<lb/>
Stewart has been part of the veil-<lb/>
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joying an uncommon intimacy<lb/>
with many oi' the most for-<lb/>
midable creators of the music.<lb/>
Chuck Stewart's Jazz Files,<lb/>
photographs by Charles Stewart<lb/>
and text by Paul Carter Harrison<lb/>
(published by New York Graphic<lb/>
Society Books Little, Brown,<lb/>
October 18, 1985) is a lively in-<lb/>
troduction to these musicians,<lb/>
centered on Stewart's portraits.<lb/>
The emphasis oi Chuck<lb/>
Stewart Jazz Files is on current-<lb/>
ly active performers ? here are<lb/>
David Murray, Wynton Marsalis,<lb/>
and Lester Bowie ? but also in-<lb/>
cluded, mostly in performance,<lb/>
are their great seniors ? Duke<lb/>
Ellington, Count Basic. Billie<lb/>
Holliday, and on to Dizzy<lb/>
Gillespie, Charlie Mingus and<lb/>
Miles Dais. Sections based on<lb/>
instrumental groups include<lb/>
anecdotal passages from the per-<lb/>
formers themselves, and each is<lb/>
introduced by Obie Award-<lb/>
winning playwright Paul Carter<lb/>
Harrison, who conveys informal-<lb/>
ly the evolution ol a particular<lb/>
sound or musical attitude. Har-<lb/>
rison's interviews with Chuck<lb/>
Stewart evoke this fascinating<lb/>
world with vivid sketches oi in-<lb/>
dividual performers and tales tiotl and brilliant artistry Jazz<lb/>
suggesting something of the dit- great Billy Taylor contributes a<lb/>
ficulties they face, their dedica- foreword.<lb/>
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0NS0LI DATED<lb/>
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Monday, February 3, 1986<lb/>
Hendnx Theatre, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Admission: ECU Students S3.00<lb/>
ECU Faculty anu Staff :7 50<lb/>
Public and a1 door, $9.00<lb/>
Tickets at Centrol Ticket Ottice<lb/>
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I fudcni I nion Specialoncert<lb/>
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ECU Students can now ride to and from the ECU School of<lb/>
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Tickets may be picked up at Student Government Transit Office (2nd<lb/>
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GREENVILLE AREA TRANSIT (GREAT) ROUTE 2<lb/>
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10th Street (Kings R 14<lb/>
Village Green (5th Street) 15 a<lb/>
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<lb/>
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1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057793_0011"/><lb/>
Paper<lb/>
I Ml S K(M INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 16. lSf<lb/>
Page 1 1<lb/>
t nn 1 ? DRENr V<lb/>
l Ul ANYTIME J<lb/>
Mr? Shopping Contor<lb/>
vania<lb/>
5000<lb/>
me is over<lb/>
?v. V ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
li ? mi ir "<lb/>
s i<lb/>
Lasf Second Tap-In<lb/>
Bucs Defeat Indians<lb/>
!ln? tini defeated W illiam X 1ar on Monday niht. He'll need to be in this position<lb/>
travels in Wilmington lo battle the Seahawks and center Brian Rovwon (25?.<lb/>
B SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
SporU Kdilor<lb/>
WILL1AMSBURG, Va.<lb/>
Thanks to a Curt Vanderhorst<lb/>
tap-in in the final seconds of<lb/>
regulation play, the ECU Pirates<lb/>
picked up their second con-<lb/>
ference victory by defeating<lb/>
William &amp; Mary 54-52 Monday<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
The win marked the first con-<lb/>
ference road victory for the Bucs<lb/>
since the 1982-83 season (Har-<lb/>
rison's first) when ECU topped<lb/>
George Mason 68-65 in the open-<lb/>
ing round o' the ECAC-South<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Junior forward Marchell<lb/>
Henry paced the Pirates with 18<lb/>
points. Vanderhorst was the only<lb/>
other Buc in double figures with<lb/>
11.<lb/>
Although the Indians outre-<lb/>
bounded the Pirates 29-22, ECU<lb/>
forced William &amp; Mary into 10<lb/>
turnovers. Pirate coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison was pleased with win<lb/>
but did see some areas to be im-<lb/>
proved upon.<lb/>
"Winning a close one on the<lb/>
ioad can't help but create<lb/>
positive things Harrison said.<lb/>
"I was disappointed to let them<lb/>
dictate the tempo of the game.<lb/>
"We must continue to improve<lb/>
and stick to what we do in prac-<lb/>
tice, we've been having the<lb/>
tendency to go away from what<lb/>
we've been practicing Harrison<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The game was close from the<lb/>
onset. Both teams swapped<lb/>
baskets until the Pirates went on<lb/>
an eight-point scoring surge.<lb/>
Jumpers by William Grady and<lb/>
V anderhoi t gave ECU a 15-7 ad-<lb/>
vantage with 12:24 to play in the<lb/>
opening period.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary retaliated by<lb/>
scoring the next five points,<lb/>
chopping the Buc lead to three<lb/>
(15-12) with 10:03 left to play<lb/>
Four of those points came from<lb/>
guard Scott Coval.<lb/>
The second 10 minutes of the<lb/>
opening period remained close as<lb/>
the lead changed hands on six dif-<lb/>
ferent occassions. A Scott Hardy<lb/>
layup gave the Bucs a 25-24 lead,<lb/>
and after a Mark Batel free<lb/>
throw. Hardy canned a 17-foot<lb/>
jumper to give the Pirates a 27-25<lb/>
lead at the intermission.<lb/>
Hardy supplied a needed sein-<lb/>
ing punch and ECU coach<lb/>
Charlie Harrison praised his<lb/>
senior guard's all-around play.<lb/>
"Scotty's played extremely<lb/>
well in the last five games Har-<lb/>
rison said. "His assist turnover<lb/>
ratio has been three-and-a-half to<lb/>
one ? and that's very positive<lb/>
The second half saw the Pirates<lb/>
come out of the box quickly. The<lb/>
Bucs, in fact, shot a red-hot 57.9<lb/>
percent from the floor in the se-<lb/>
cond haK. ECU opened its big-<lb/>
gest lead (39-29) on a nine-fool<lb/>
jumper by Henry, with 15:13<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Once again the Indians came<lb/>
roaring back as they went on a<lb/>
12-2 scoring surge, knotting the<lb/>
game at 41-41 with 9:19 left to<lb/>
play. Forward ken Lambiotte<lb/>
(yes, the brother of N.C. State's<lb/>
freshman Walker Lambiotte) led<lb/>
the way for William &amp; Mary<lb/>
I ambiotte scored 10 o the 12 In-<lb/>
dian points in that run.<lb/>
A Keith Sledge 17 footei then<lb/>
broke the droughl foi the Bucs,<lb/>
regaining the lead tor II 43-41<lb/>
with 9:02 lett to play<lb/>
With 4:28 remaining, a pair <lb/>
laik Batzell tree throws gave<lb/>
William Ai Mar) their larf<lb/>
lead, a 52-49 advantage A<lb/>
turned out, these weo final<lb/>
points by the Indian- a th Buc<lb/>
defense took control.<lb/>
A Vanderhorst jumper fi<lb/>
the left corner and a tree throw<lb/>
set up the game's final play.<lb/>
When Hardy's long jumper<lb/>
bounced ofl the right side I<lb/>
rim, Vanderhorst was there ?<lb/>
the follow, just before tl<lb/>
buzzer.<lb/>
The 54-52 vici es EC1 a<lb/>
2-2 conference mark and an<lb/>
overall mark oi 7-7. "he seve<lb/>
wm tor the Bucs matches tl<lb/>
season total o a year at .<lb/>
junior forward Henrv is happ;<lb/>
heat W &amp; M arid is satisfied to He-<lb/>
at .500<lb/>
"It (the win) give- us a lot<lb/>
confidence Henrv said. "It"<lb/>
Curt's first win over William &amp;.<lb/>
Marv and we're lool<lb/>
on il<lb/>
"I'm Happv to be 7-7 ?<lb/>
time. We could be<lb/>
we're content righi i  Henry<lb/>
added. "We thought we'd be I<lb/>
tei this yeai md ?<lb/>
that"<lb/>
The loss V a. Ml 0 ; :<lb/>
the C AA .1- i : 8<lb/>
The Pit<lb/>
this Saturd :n they "<lb/>
Wilmingti I i<lb/>
foe I-W<lb/>
ECU Swimmers Face Wilmington Saturday<lb/>
iiv )i)Mi,(,Shs<lb/>
)<lb/>
uttle<lb/>
i M t k<lb/>
ave had in a<lb/>
a ? tl  a ie i hem,<lb/>
ac K be He expects<lb/>
: the<lb/>
men than the women, who heex-<lb/>
a ? pects to win without much trou-<lb/>
?  ?. ble.<lb/>
"We ? eased as we can be<lb/>
a ' iur teams' p.<lb/>
? Kobe said I iates<lb/>
ti e now 1 3-3 overall. " '<lb/>
? e best ? ? ve've<lb/>
 had<lb/>
s fat as I ike f i he<lb/>
.<lb/>
. ? aiac tei tzed by a strong i re ?:<lb/>
. ? e sw immers, w hile<lb/>
 the<lb/>
depi<lb/>
I he :nen squa ai i N W is<lb/>
easily the stronger ol Ip e two,<lb/>
u d is lead by tw<lb/>
lividua D i Hoosier was the<lb/>
85 1 astern Intercol t giate<lb/>
Petei v kes was a freestyle<lb/>
in the same meet<lb/>
One advantage the Pirates will<lb/>
, trom swimming against the<lb/>
Seahawks in Wilmington will be<lb/>
that thev will have the experience<lb/>
ol swimming in tl . p ?1 thai is to<lb/>
be used in the ference cham-<lb/>
ship. Their biggest challenge will<lb/>
probably come from James<lb/>
Madison University, whieh is<lb/>
slightly favored in both the men's<lb/>
and women's divisions.<lb/>
following the conference tour-<lb/>
nament, the men will go on to<lb/>
compete in the Independent Na-<lb/>
"We are pleased as we can be with our<lb/>
teams' performance this year This is<lb/>
the best bunch of kids we've ever had. "<lb/>
?Rick Kobe<lb/>
pionships Getting familiar with<lb/>
thai pool cannot but help the<lb/>
Bucs when the CAA conference<lb/>
tounament rolls around.<lb/>
Indeed, that competition is jus;<lb/>
around the : rner tor the Pirates,<lb/>
who have an excellent chance to<lb/>
tionals, one of the most<lb/>
prestigious invitational tour-<lb/>
naments in the country. Among<lb/>
the Pirates' foes in that competi-<lb/>
tion will be Miami, Southern Il-<lb/>
linois, Tulane and Florida State.<lb/>
I his meet will be a step up for<lb/>
ual medley, and take the conference champion- ECU which competed in the<lb/>
Eastern Regionals until this year.<lb/>
The Eastern Regionals is tradi-<lb/>
tionally a prestigious meet, bui<lb/>
has recently been losing some I<lb/>
its top competitors. It used<lb/>
field 16 collegiate teams, but that<lb/>
number has now dropped to 10,<lb/>
and with the withdrawal of ECU,<lb/>
nine.<lb/>
"The Eastern Regionals is a<lb/>
meet we (ECU) have grown out<lb/>
oi said Kobe. "It's a dying<lb/>
meet, losing participants almost<lb/>
every year recently, and it's also<lb/>
very expensive since it's usually<lb/>
held in Cleveland or Pittsburgh<lb/>
and our kids have to pay their<lb/>
own way<lb/>
While the intensity of this<lb/>
year's competition begins to<lb/>
build, coach Kobe has been look-<lb/>
ing to next year's potential swim-<lb/>
ming talent since last August.<lb/>
At this point Kobe has a 'pool'<lb/>
of about 50 potential Pirate<lb/>
swimmers, which he will pare<lb/>
down to the f to 21<lb/>
women he will need il "86 'We<lb/>
recruit a lot of kid<lb/>
the process ol elimii ai Soi<lb/>
oi them go else and<lb/>
don't eventually make the cuts<lb/>
What the c - .ng<lb/>
stafl want- is student-ai<lb/>
This means kids w h ? II l<lb/>
have trouble wi u idemics,<lb/>
ting the coaches concei<lb/>
attention on swimming.<lb/>
Among the areas thai E( I<lb/>
recruits many ol its athletes :<lb/>
are the Virginia-Mary land<lb/>
Washington DC. area. Florida<lb/>
and New Jersey, is well as here in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The ECU swimming pi -<lb/>
performance has beer: ris -<lb/>
steadily during the past few<lb/>
years. With the continued dedica-<lb/>
tion and persistence of its<lb/>
veterans plus the flow oi new<lb/>
freshmen talent it should keep<lb/>
going nowhere but up<lb/>
Tracksters Shine In<lb/>
Hilton Invitational<lb/>
SI I sIMPsON<lb/>
r in-<lb/>
-<lb/>
I ee Mi Neil<lb/>
ams had excellentshow-<lb/>
I ich Bill Car-<lb/>
either won or placed<lb/>
every event, while<lb/>
i Wayne Miller's ladies also<lb/>
 i arson was pleased<lb/>
? un's performance.<lb/>
- is the best start we've ever<lb/>
hadarson said. "Everybody<lb/>
.n the team did weli<lb/>
sels good about how<lb/>
his team will perform this season.<lb/>
"It's early, but we could be as<lb/>
.1 as we've ever been he<lb/>
uated.<lb/>
I ee Ms Neil, who had a<lb/>
fabulous freshman season, con-<lb/>
tinued on his winning ways by<lb/>
ishing first in the 60 yd. dash.<lb/>
McNeil's winning time of 6.22<lb/>
second- set a new meet record.<lb/>
"1 ee had an outstanding per-<lb/>
formance added Coach Car-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Craig White and W alter<lb/>
Southerland picked up where<lb/>
teammate McNeil left oi. White<lb/>
and Southerland placed first and<lb/>
second respectively in the 60 yd.<lb/>
high hurdles. White's winning<lb/>
time was 7.53 seconds, while only<lb/>
.01 second behind him came<lb/>
Southerland at 7.54. David<lb/>
Parker was fifth in the race with a<lb/>
time of 7.80 seconds.<lb/>
The 3(X) yd. dash ended in a tie<lb/>
with Nathan McCorkle taking a<lb/>
share of first place honors. His<lb/>
tying time was 32.9 seconds.<lb/>
Third belonged to John I ee, who<lb/>
ran a 33.1.<lb/>
The men's mile relay came<lb/>
down to a photo finish between<lb/>
North Carolina State University<lb/>
and ECU. The judges decided<lb/>
N.C. State was first. The Pirate<lb/>
relay team consisted of Julian<lb/>
Anderson first, followed by<lb/>
Rueben Pierce, Ken Daughtery,<lb/>
and anchoi Phil Estes. The mile<lb/>
time was 3:25.<lb/>
See Women, Page 14<lb/>
Emory Investigated<lb/>
For Paying Players<lb/>
BT1MCHAM)I.KR<lb/>
sports U nter<lb/>
A ?irr rrpnrt<lb/>
I ast Carolina University is in<lb/>
the process of investigating<lb/>
evidence that football players<lb/>
who played under former coach<lb/>
Id Emory received cash<lb/>
payments.<lb/>
The report of these allegations<lb/>
surtaced Tuesday in the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Record:<lb/>
University officials found out<lb/>
about the incidents in the state at-<lb/>
torney general's office as they<lb/>
were waiting to defend the<lb/>
University in a lawsuit filed by<lb/>
Emory last March.<lb/>
Don Powers, defensive coor-<lb/>
dinator, said Tuesday that the<lb/>
Pirates coaching staff knew<lb/>
nothing of an investigation by the<lb/>
school. "This is all news to us<lb/>
Powers told wire service<lb/>
reporters. "Gosh, our staff is<lb/>
completely unaware of all of<lb/>
this<lb/>
Head Coach Art Baker and<lb/>
Athletic Director Ken Karr were<lb/>
unable to be reached for com-<lb/>
ment. Pirate quarterback Ron<lb/>
Jones said he was "shocked"<lb/>
when told of what had happened.<lb/>
"I've never heard of anything<lb/>
like that in this program, " said<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Emory was contacted Tuesday<lb/>
by phone and he stated that he<lb/>
ran the football team according<lb/>
to the rules, denving entirely the<lb/>
report. "The only thing I can say<lb/>
is that I've got 26 years of<lb/>
coaching philosophy and reputa-<lb/>
tion stated Emory, "I ain't<lb/>
never paid an athlete anything.<lb/>
The five years I was at ECU, we<lb/>
had the cleanest program in<lb/>
America<lb/>
' 7 ain 7 never paid an<lb/>
athlete anything. M<lb/>
?Ed Emory<lb/>
Emory said he has never been<lb/>
questioned by the NCAA about<lb/>
anything, and would be willing to<lb/>
answer any questions put to him.<lb/>
"When I got fired, I asked<lb/>
whether I had any NCAA<lb/>
violaions, or any reported viola-<lb/>
tions he said, "I was given a<lb/>
firm 'No' by school officials<lb/>
Emory said that the news was<lb/>
"devastating "I want to finish<lb/>
my career in college coaching<lb/>
he said. "When you get tarnish-<lb/>
ed, it's tough<lb/>
No details concerning the cash<lb/>
payments were made available.<lb/>
"We did make a report to the<lb/>
NCAA concerning some problem<lb/>
we had discovered said David<lb/>
Stevens, attorney for the Univer-<lb/>
sity. "We're in the process of<lb/>
putting together a report for the<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
This Just Ain't My Day'<lb/>
Ed Emory may have seen happier days during his 8-3 season, but<lb/>
dosen't show it here in this '83 photo.<lb/>
HL i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057793_0012"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0014"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 16, 1986<lb/>
13<lb/>
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?<lb/>
? -?<lb/>
?? Spring A ctivities<lb/>
B JEANETTE ROTH<lb/>
M?ff Wnlrr<lb/>
fter a long, leisurely holiday<lb/>
break, Ihe Department of<lb/>
imural Recreational Services<lb/>
 read) to get back into the swing<lb/>
: things with a whole calendar<lb/>
: activities and events for spr-<lb/>
 1 he courts will be alive this<lb/>
estei as intramural basketball<lb/>
cads up the calendar. Other ac-<lb/>
vities on January's agenda in-<lb/>
clude the annual swim meet and<lb/>
acquetball doubles.<lb/>
Before moving ahead, con-<lb/>
gratulations are in order for<lb/>
.everal teams taking the number<lb/>
spots in last fall's events. In<lb/>
n volleyball, the men's<lb/>
easonal power, The Lucky<lb/>
even, proved true to their names<lb/>
as they defeated second-ranked<lb/>
07 Spikes and fifth-ranked Phi<lb/>
kappa tau to take the men's all<lb/>
pus championship. In ladies<lb/>
ei action, The Good, Bad and<lb/>
gh won then second straight<lb/>
campus volleyball champion-<lb/>
ship bv downing residence hall<lb/>
tders, 1 he Gumby's.<lb/>
Seventeen males and two<lb/>
females headed up the free throw<lb/>
contest competition. I ast year's<lb/>
male champion, Garv Bishop<lb/>
failed to enter this year's event so<lb/>
e poll was wide open and<lb/>
awaiting a new champion. Tak-<lb/>
i the number one spot into the<lb/>
semi-finals was Kenny Murphv,<lb/>
followed by Darryl Bess and<lb/>
Michael Little each with 23 of 25.<lb/>
However, in final play, the top<lb/>
eight shooters played musical<lb/>
baskets, drastically changing<lb/>
their ranking in the final poll. As<lb/>
the last roundball sailed through<lb/>
the hoop, Michael Little out-<lb/>
finessed his competitors, captur-<lb/>
ing top honors. Billy Hamilton,<lb/>
ranked fourth in the semi-finals,<lb/>
pulled up to the second position<lb/>
with excellent shooting down the<lb/>
wire.<lb/>
The ladies competition includ-<lb/>
ed only two hoopsters, Lynette<lb/>
Ginn and Karen Vlahos. Ginn<lb/>
captured the championship with<lb/>
a two-shot lead over Vlahos.<lb/>
Aerobicizers beware! Drop-in<lb/>
classes will be available January<lb/>
13-23 in Room 108 Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Classes will be held<lb/>
Monday-Thursday at 5:15 p.m.<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday classes<lb/>
will also meet at 4:00 p.m. First-<lb/>
session registration will be held<lb/>
January 20-24. All faculty, staff<lb/>
and students are encouraged to<lb/>
register. The cost is minimal and<lb/>
great benefits can be gained<lb/>
through this invigorating exercise<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Do vi i need to earn a few ex-<lb/>
tra backs for rainy day weather,<lb/>
or would you just like to earn<lb/>
nonev Joing your favorite hob-<lb/>
bV ell. the Department of<lb/>
lni.am.iral-Recreational Services<lb/>
a variety of job opportunities<lb/>
available. Photographers are<lb/>
needed to help capture the sights<lb/>
of intramural sports. If you are<lb/>
interested, call 757-6387 and ask<lb/>
for J.R. An appointment will be<lb/>
made promptly. Experience in<lb/>
developing and, of course,<lb/>
action-shot picture taking is<lb/>
desired. The Publicity Depart-<lb/>
ment also has an excellent oppor-<lb/>
tunity available for East Carolina<lb/>
art majors, or anyone talented<lb/>
with pen-in-hand. Artists will be<lb/>
hired this semester for work<lb/>
displayed all around campus to<lb/>
help promote the IRS. Call<lb/>
757-6387 and ask for J.R.<lb/>
Although a portfolio is desired<lb/>
upon interview, it is not required.<lb/>
If you want to get in on all the<lb/>
basketball action this semester,<lb/>
officials will be hired for this<lb/>
most challenging event on Mon-<lb/>
day, January 20 at 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym Room 102. The<lb/>
first officials clinic will be held to<lb/>
inform all interested parties<lb/>
about the program. No ex-<lb/>
perience is necessary.<lb/>
Be sure to sign up for<lb/>
January's first special event, the<lb/>
video games tournament that will<lb/>
be held January 22.<lb/>
For more information on any<lb/>
or all activities and services<lb/>
within the Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices, call 757-6387.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Crush fclassified<lb/>
Conference Rival<lb/>
Bv IIMCIHMH.KR<lb/>
sports W nler<lb/>
rhe I ad Pirates successfully<lb/>
ecord to 12-5 with an<lb/>
ressive 89-54 victory ?xcr<lb/>
? ference rival William &amp; Marv<lb/>
' ? . . ehi in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Loraine Foster<lb/>
rhe Pirates who held a 42-2<lb/>
ftime lead, quickly jumped to<lb/>
a 22 point lead. 52-30. with 16:35<lb/>
left in trie game and never looked<lb/>
back alter that. The quick spurt<lb/>
in the second half was helped<lb/>
greatly bv Delphine Mabry, who<lb/>
scored eight of her 13 points in a<lb/>
six-minute span of the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The first half was close only<lb/>
for a short time. William &amp;<lb/>
Mary only led once during the en-<lb/>
tire game at 4-2. The key spurt<lb/>
for the first half was a 12-point<lb/>
run by ECU. With 16:23 to go in<lb/>
tl e half, Karen Jordan sank two<lb/>
tree throws to tie the game at six<lb/>
all. With 12:12 left in the half,<lb/>
the Pirates had gone ahead 18-6.<lb/>
I oraine Foster had six points<lb/>
during that run.<lb/>
Head Coach Emily Marwaring<lb/>
said that she felt that the intensity<lb/>
level oi the Pirates was excellent.<lb/>
"The defense played great man<lb/>
to man" added Marwaring.<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg was once again<lb/>
one of the leading scorers for the<lb/>
game. She contributed 14 points<lb/>
to the Pirates total.<lb/>
Assistant Coach l.ilion Barnes<lb/>
commented on Bragg's outstan-<lb/>
ding play of late. "I feel that she<lb/>
could start on any Division I<lb/>
team stated Barnes.<lb/>
Also in double figures for the<lb/>
Pirates was Loraine Foster, who<lb/>
chipped in a team-high 16 points,<lb/>
followed by Mabry with 13. Two<lb/>
other Pirates finished in double<lb/>
tigures. Lisa Squirewell and<lb/>
Alma Bethea each had 10. Bethea<lb/>
also led the team in rebounds,<lb/>
pulling down 10.<lb/>
Other scorers for ECU were<lb/>
Rose Miller with 6 Crystal Grier<lb/>
with 5, Cathy Ellis and Gretta<lb/>
O'Neil with four apiece. Roun-<lb/>
ding out the Pirate scorering were<lb/>
therese Dorkin with 3, and<lb/>
Monique Pompili and Chris<lb/>
O'Connor each with two.<lb/>
For the game ECU shot 51.9<lb/>
percent from the floor compared<lb/>
to 35.7 percent for William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The next contest for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates will be this Saturday at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington will be their<lb/>
opponent. Both teams will enter<lb/>
the game with unbeaten con-<lb/>
ference marks of 2-0.<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
SENIORS! SENIORS! SENIORS<lb/>
En,oy the last phase of our college<lb/>
career employment S8.F Com<lb/>
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April 17-19<lb/>
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In Style On A<lb/>
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Caps Originally 10.95<lb/>
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Members Get Discounted Rates on Suntana<lb/>
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GOLD'S AEROBICS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057793_0015"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
HI EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IANI ARV 16,1986<lb/>
Ray Martinez: A Man Of Many Talents<lb/>
B (.KORC.K I HRKKWITTS<lb/>
HI Sr? Rutt?u<lb/>
GREENVH LE  "I've never<lb/>
really been impressed with sports<lb/>
except as a test of what you have<lb/>
done m youi training says Dr.<lb/>
Ra Martinez, a one-time<lb/>
engineering student whose<lb/>
coaching brought a trophy ease<lb/>
lull of glittering championships<lb/>
to ECU in the 1950s and 1960s.<lb/>
"To me the most important<lb/>
thing (about sports) is practice<lb/>
says Martinez, who was ECU's<lb/>
tii st collegiate su imming and div -<lb/>
ing coach.<lb/>
" lo tell you the truth, 1 think<lb/>
hat an age group swim meet<lb/>
where you have all these kids<lb/>
Mining together is about as e-<lb/>
tig as watching the grass grow .<lb/>
I de imperial i thing is how well<lb/>
the chiH ?id LMd he learn<lb/>
anythin<lb/>
Martinez, professoi and chair-<lb/>
an of the Department of<lb/>
Health, Physical Education,<lb/>
Recreation and Safety for the<lb/>
past six years, plans to retire at<lb/>
the end of this academic year<lb/>
after 32 years at ECU. He was a<lb/>
pioneer in developing and using<lb/>
scientific techniques in coaching,<lb/>
and his swimmers and divers<lb/>
brought ECU two NAIA national<lb/>
championships. He produced 20<lb/>
national championship swimmers<lb/>
and 45 All Americans.<lb/>
By studying swim strokes and<lb/>
dives with motion pictures and<lb/>
computers and applying the prin-<lb/>
ciples of mechanics and motion,<lb/>
he was able to convert wildly<lb/>
thrashing arms and legs into fine-<lb/>
tuned swimming machines. By<lb/>
today's standards, this use of<lb/>
technology in athletics is called<lb/>
biomechanics. Martinez was<lb/>
years ahead o his time.<lb/>
"A favorite uncle used to tell<lb/>
me that 1 would make a good<lb/>
engineer because o' my interest m<lb/>
model airplanes, Martinez<lb/>
recalls. He fashioned his models<lb/>
from strips of balsa, paper and<lb/>
thick rubber bands and studied<lb/>
their flight, then entered them in<lb/>
take-off and flight competition in<lb/>
his hometown, New Orleans, La.<lb/>
He completed two years of<lb/>
engineering studies at Louisiana<lb/>
State University. But while in the<lb/>
Army Air Corps in World War<lb/>
II, he developed an interest in<lb/>
swimming. When he returned to<lb/>
LSU it was to pursue a double<lb/>
major in math and physical<lb/>
education. With a master's<lb/>
degree earned in 1950, he became<lb/>
a special field representative in<lb/>
first aid and water safety for the<lb/>
American Red Cross and was a<lb/>
Red Cross researcher at the<lb/>
Helsinki Olympics in 1952.<lb/>
He also worked as an instruc-<lb/>
tor at the Red Cross Aquatic<lb/>
school in Brevard, N.C and<lb/>
there came in contact with East<lb/>
Carolina officials. In 1953, he<lb/>
was hired by ECC President John<lb/>
D. Messick to become swimming<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
Pretty soon, Martinez also was<lb/>
teaching first aid classes for<lb/>
Greenville's first rescue squad-a<lb/>
squad that was to win national<lb/>
championships and international<lb/>
recognition.<lb/>
He completed doctoral degree<lb/>
work at the University of Iowa in<lb/>
1960 and also opened a swim<lb/>
training facility in Greenville<lb/>
which attracted swimmers from<lb/>
all over the United States,<lb/>
Canada and foreign countries.<lb/>
Part of his success as a swim<lb/>
coach was due to "doing things<lb/>
differently in training he says.<lb/>
"We had weight training when<lb/>
few coaches were pushing it for<lb/>
swimmers. Also, isometric exer-<lb/>
cises were used. We took chances<lb/>
and experimented with different<lb/>
regimens of exercise<lb/>
"But it all paid off. It made<lb/>
more of a thinking man's type of<lb/>
workout he recalls.<lb/>
In addition to coaching swim-<lb/>
mers, Martinez also taught health<lb/>
and physical education classes.<lb/>
directed the intramurals program<lb/>
and for four years coached the<lb/>
tennis team.<lb/>
The highlight of his career as a<lb/>
coach came in 1968, his last year<lb/>
of coaching. ECU hosted the<lb/>
AAU Indoor National Cham-<lb/>
pionships, a qualifying meet for<lb/>
the Olympics in Mexico City. The<lb/>
event was held in the new Minges<lb/>
Coliseum natatorium.<lb/>
"By every standard, we put on<lb/>
the best meet that has ever been<lb/>
held he says.<lb/>
Now, Martinez says, "we need<lb/>
a biomechanist to work with the<lb/>
medical school, physical theapy,<lb/>
physics, biology and the perform-<lb/>
ing arts<lb/>
"If we had a biomechanist in<lb/>
association with what we already<lb/>
have-the medical school, the<lb/>
human performance lab, the<lb/>
special education lab and sports<lb/>
medicine-we could become a<lb/>
satellite to the Olympic Training<lb/>
Village in Colorado Martinez<lb/>
says.<lb/>
In addition to chairing the<lb/>
health, physical education,<lb/>
recreation and safety depart-<lb/>
ment, Martinez continues his<lb/>
research in cinemagraphic studies<lb/>
of swimming. He stresses the<lb/>
value of sports as a worthwhile<lb/>
pursuit and the need for more<lb/>
academic and scientific ap-<lb/>
proaches to sports studies.<lb/>
Baker, Heath Conclude College Careers<lb/>
Great<lb/>
B BOBGEWAREl II<lb/>
t 1 sports Infnrmalhtn<lb/>
Senior tailback loin Baker tell<lb/>
onlv yards shorl ol" becoming<lb/>
FC1 's all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
Rie High Point, native needed<lb/>
I on) Baker<lb/>
ard- m the Pirate's<lb/>
?ason-ending game at I SI to<lb/>
lace Carlester Crumple! as the<lb/>
ool's all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
Baker suttered a fractured<lb/>
.i in the first quarter and was<lb/>
held to just 12 yards. That left<lb/>
Baker with 2,285 career rushing<lb/>
Us,<lb/>
kiood tor No.<lb/>
on the<lb/>
hing list behind Crurnpler's<lb/>
,889. Baker's final 1985 total o<lb/>
951 yards also left him 49 ards<lb/>
ol becoming onlv the fifth<lb/>
k in ECl history to rush for<lb/>
00 in a season. Those 951<lb/>
Is rank as the sixth best<lb/>
.ingle-season effort b an 1-CL'<lb/>
tnningback.<lb/>
Bakei ended his career at 1 C I<lb/>
the No. 9 spot on the all-time<lb/>
Women<lb/>
Runners<lb/>
Perform<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Coach Wayne Miller and assis-<lb/>
tant coach Rodney Blacknall<lb/>
took four members of the lady's<lb/>
?quad to the meet. They were<lb/>
l.inda Gillis, Lisa Poteat,<lb/>
Carolyn Martin and Sonya<lb/>
Baldwin.<lb/>
"The ladies put forth a tremen-<lb/>
dous effort stated Rodney<lb/>
Blacknall. "They reallv did<lb/>
well<lb/>
Blacknall also feels the team<lb/>
will have a good season. "I think<lb/>
we'll do reallv well this season<lb/>
he said. "Barring injuries, we<lb/>
should be fine<lb/>
Linda Chilis placed second for<lb/>
the Ladv Pirates in the 60 yd.<lb/>
dash. She ran a time of 7.21<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs took two of top<lb/>
three spots in the 300 yd. dash.<lb/>
Lisa Poteat came in second with a<lb/>
38.8 and Sonya Baldwin got third<lb/>
with a mark of 39.6.<lb/>
A fourth-place finish in the tri-<lb/>
ple jump belonged to Carolyn<lb/>
Martin. Her jump covered a<lb/>
distance of 35 feet 10 inches.<lb/>
T he ladies had a time of 4:18 in<lb/>
the mile relay, good enough for<lb/>
third place. Gillis ran the first leg<lb/>
of the relay, followed by Poteat<lb/>
and Martin, with Baldin running<lb/>
the anchor leg.<lb/>
Lee McNeil was named the<lb/>
men's meet's most valuable run-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
The ne t meet is the Eastman<lb/>
Kodak Invitational on Jan. 17-18<lb/>
in Johnson City, Tenn.<lb/>
offense list with his 2,285 vards.<lb/>
His 1985 efforts earned Baker<lb/>
first-team All Southern Indepen-<lb/>
dent honors along with<lb/>
Associated Press honorable men-<lb/>
tion All-America distinction.<lb/>
record career point total to 251.<lb/>
Heath ended his career as<lb/>
ECU's all-time leading scorer<lb/>
with those 251 points as he sur-<lb/>
passed Carlester Crurnpler's<lb/>
previous record of 222 Oct. 5 in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium against Miami-<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
Heath ended his career as a<lb/>
Pirate with the following school<lb/>
records-<lb/>
Field Goals  Season: 16<lb/>
Field Goals  Career: 53<lb/>
Extra Points  92<lb/>
Total Points - Career: 251<lb/>
Longest Field Goal  58<lb/>
Texas-Arlington<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
Heath owns the tour longest<lb/>
field goals in ECU history (58,<lb/>
53, 52, 51 and 50) and is the only<lb/>
kicker in school history to be suc-<lb/>
cessful on a field goal of 50 or<lb/>
more yards. His 59 points led the<lb/>
Pirates in scoring for 1985 and<lb/>
marks the fourth time in four<lb/>
seasons Heath was ECU's leading<lb/>
scorer.<lb/>
Jr. Sirloin<lb/>
&amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Mon-Fri.<lb/>
No Take Outs<lb/>
Please<lb/>
V<lb/>
4 yieat place fa eat!<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Jeff Heath<lb/>
Baker finished his career with<lb/>
nine 100-yard single-game ef-<lb/>
forts, including three in 1985 <lb/>
164 vards vs. Southwest Texas<lb/>
State. 14" yards vs. Southwestern<lb/>
1 ouisiana and 130 vs. Tulsa.<lb/>
CAREER RUSHING I 1ST<lb/>
1. Carlester Crumpler2,889<lb/>
2. TONY BAKER2.285<lb/>
3. Theodore Sutton2,730<lb/>
4. Butch C olson2.5 12<lb/>
5. Anthony Collins2.20"<lb/>
Senior placekicker Jeff Heath<lb/>
closed with a bang in ECU's<lb/>
season-ending loss to LSL The<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va native kick-<lb/>
ed three field goals and ac-<lb/>
counted for nine o the Pirates'<lb/>
15 points, pushing his school<lb/>
Norton Wins Picks<lb/>
FINALFINALOVERALL<lb/>
STANDINGSWEEK<lb/>
TOM NORTON7-5104-47<lb/>
SHEWS MEWS6-6103-48<lb/>
JOHN PETERSON6-6102-49<lb/>
SCOTT COOPER6-6101-50<lb/>
"D.J. WATTS"7-5101-50<lb/>
RICK McCORMAC7-5101-50<lb/>
BILL DAWSON7-5100-51<lb/>
TODD PATTON5-792-58<lb/>
Hooker Memorial Christum Church<lb/>
(Dlectplee of Christ)<lb/>
1111 Grernvtllc Blvd 756 2275<lb/>
cs<lb/>
3<lb/>
"<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
"In fssentiais. 'llmt<lb/>
In non-t!ss?ntials. ttdom<lb/>
In aU things J.oa<lb/>
? <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
R?v H Vann Koighl<lb/>
Special Classes For College Students<lb/>
9:45 a.m. Christian Education (aU ages)<lb/>
11:00 a.m. Worship- Open Communion<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Student Union Vice President<lb/>
Deadline: Januan 24. 1986<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Committee Chairpersons<lb/>
Deadline: February 5, 1986<lb/>
for the 1986-87 Term<lb/>
Any full time student can apply<lb/>
Applications available at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Information Desk<lb/>
Due to the Fire at<lb/>
FOR HEADS ONLY<lb/>
Melody Furci and Beth Long<lb/>
Will Be Working with the Fine Staff of<lb/>
SHEAR HAIR DESIGN<lb/>
Located on 14th St. next to Sammy's Country Cooking.<lb/>
752-9706<lb/>
(Tina Furci's clients may contact Melody or Beth for more information)<lb/>
HOME C<lb/>
? :?<lb/>
Large Plate ? All You Can Eat Vegetables,<lb/>
1 Meat, Bread &amp; Tea $4.07 plus Tax<lb/>
MEAL PLANS AVAILABLE ? $2.50Plate<lb/>
512 E. 14th St. Near Dorms<lb/>
Call for Take-Outs 752-0476<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
, ? , .?? <lb/>
??!??'<lb/>
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TRY HARDEE'S NEW ' POUND BURGERS<lb/>
Our Thickest, Juiciest, Most Delicious Ever!<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Haraees restaurants<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order per coupon<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
with any other otters<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
-t<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Haraees restaurants<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order oer coupon<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
vvith any other o'fers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Hardees restdurants<lb/>
Pease present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order per coupon<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
with any other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
Offer good dui j regular breakfast hours at participating naraee ?? -<lb/>
taorants Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon, roe<lb/>
customer per isil i e order oer<lb/>
coupon Customer must pay a .<lb/>
sales tax due Not good in : 11<lb/>
btnation .?. It r , other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6.1986<lb/>
<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Hardees restaurants<lb/>
Pease present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order per coupon.<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
with any other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Haraees restaurants<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order per coupon<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
with any other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
-I-<lb/>
Offer good after breakfast hours at participating Haraees restaurants<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per customer<lb/>
per visit One order per coupon<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax<lb/>
due Not good in combination<lb/>
with any other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
sf due?? ?iraeesfooaSyster-<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast hours at participating Hardees res<lb/>
taurants Please present coupon before ordering Limit one coupon per<lb/>
customer per visit One order per<lb/>
coupon Customer must pay any<lb/>
sales tax due Not good m com-<lb/>
binofion with ony other offers<lb/>
Expires Feb. 6,1986.<lb/>
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