<?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="00057802_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.60o.3tt- ? ?<lb/>
Tuesday, February 18, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Weddington,SchIafly Debate;<lb/>
Abortion Point Of Contention<lb/>
ByPATTIKFMMIS<lb/>
The right to equal pay. the<lb/>
right to abort a fetus, and the<lb/>
success of Reaganomics were<lb/>
among the topics argued not only<lb/>
by the debators, but also b the<lb/>
audience Monday night iri Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre.<lb/>
The debators. Phyllis Schlafly<lb/>
and Sarah Weddington, discuss-<lb/>
ed everything from the appoint-<lb/>
ment of Supreme Court Judges to<lb/>
the number of sex partners a h<lb/>
school student has or should<lb/>
have. The debate, sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Student Union forum<lb/>
Commute, was held Monday<lb/>
night at 8:00 in Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
and witnessed bv a near capac<lb/>
crowd.<lb/>
Sarah Weddington, chief ass -<lb/>
tant to Jimmy Carter tor<lb/>
Women's and Minority Affairs,<lb/>
is a foremost attorney in the<lb/>
feminist movement not to men-<lb/>
tion the victorious lawyer in the<lb/>
Supreme Court case legalizing<lb/>
abortion. She stresses women no<lb/>
longer want the "American Kit-<lb/>
chen "Women todav want<lb/>
education for their children, de-<lb/>
cent housing, and good jobs<lb/>
summed Weddington.<lb/>
Schlafly stressed the women in<lb/>
America are luckv that they are<lb/>
regarded so highly and not forced<lb/>
out into the work field. She<lb/>
reportedOur status of women<lb/>
makes us unlike almost any other<lb/>
sountrv Schlafly, a top ranked<lb/>
woman on the Republican com-<lb/>
mittee, noted author oi main<lb/>
?ks including several against<lb/>
ERA, continued throughout the<lb/>
debate to cntize the women's<lb/>
movement and defend President<lb/>
Reagan.<lb/>
One of the many topics which<lb/>
was brought up several times was<lb/>
abortion. "1 believe in maximum<lb/>
choice, as long as it's not killing<lb/>
anyone else argued Schlaflv.<lb/>
But when, argued Weddington.<lb/>
did the fetus become a human?"<lb/>
Weddington stressed she did<lb/>
think the father should be involv-<lb/>
ed in the decision, but that the<lb/>
final choice should be to the<lb/>
woman since "the greatest im-<lb/>
pact is cm her bodv and life<lb/>
Schlaflv argued "neither man<lb/>
nor women should have that<lb/>
choice<lb/>
Although the use of contracep-<lb/>
tives is one wav to avoid the<lb/>
possibility oi requiring an abor-<lb/>
tion, Schlaflv ngly<lb/>
against the distr ibuti m<lb/>
traceptives in public<lb/>
Wedding i .<lb/>
ing oi no sch hich<lb/>
provided such devic<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
ed the giou<lb/>
believes infu<lb/>
to al fly came<lb/>
right back ?<lb/>
? is still a<lb/>
W eddington sumn<lb/>
men: bv <lb/>
was ma I<lb/>
jus' go<lb/>
it wa<lb/>
The subie f Rea<lb/>
opened mam<lb/>
Weddii g'<lb/>
e DEBATE pa 5<lb/>
Ratings Based on Teacher Evaluations<lb/>
The Battle Is Joined<lb/>
I H Ml MRr HI<lb/>
I br k marnlimsn<lb/>
Phvllis Schlafly and arah Weddington squared oft in a debate<lb/>
Monday night in Hendriv I heater. Weddington is the foremost at-<lb/>
torney in the feminist movement and Schlafly is the leading oppo-<lb/>
nent of the ERA. For further details see the related story on page 1.<lb/>
By JENNIFER MYERS<lb/>
Miff ttnlcr<lb/>
Beginning this Apt il EC!<lb/>
students will be able I<lb/>
university teachers eacl<lb/>
instead of once a year. leather<lb/>
evaluations are used I<lb/>
determine a p r o f e<lb/>
classroom performai ce<lb/>
The Institutional Research<lb/>
Center distributes, collects.<lb/>
processes the forms. The results<lb/>
are seen only b the individual<lb/>
teacher and the chairman o that<lb/>
department.<lb/>
fash department on campus<lb/>
an ECU Faculty Code, which<lb/>
is a poliv sta'mg how much<lb/>
evaluations weigh: in rating the<lb/>
tructor along with other fac-<lb/>
tors sucl .is :eaJc effec-<lb/>
tiveness and publications oi the<lb/>
instructor, or other criteria<lb/>
depending on the department.<lb/>
According to Dean olpe,<lb/>
: ? Academic Ai'airs. "The<lb/>
evaluations are used for feedback<lb/>
on the individual teacher, to le'<lb/>
him or her know the strong and<lb/>
weak points, a  . te is<lb/>
doing. The evaluations are also a<lb/>
means of letting the department<lb/>
chairman know the teaching<lb/>
fectiveness of the instructor. I: is<lb/>
one important but small part oi<lb/>
the teacher<lb/>
These evaluations plav an im-<lb/>
portant part in the ratings of eac I<lb/>
teacher. According to Ussery,<lb/>
"the personnel divisions oi each<lb/>
department are required to use<lb/>
the evaluations to some extent,<lb/>
along with other information, in<lb/>
evaluating each teacher. The si .<lb/>
dent plays an important role<lb/>
this. h e v<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
Wed ? -one else<lb/>
it 'hese e<lb/>
? 1 hej are the n 51 .om-<lb/>
petair judg luse they ki ??<lb/>
.<lb/>
-<lb/>
 ne can ai<lb/>
like the<lb/>
Ussery stated that 1 a<lb/>
evaluai<lb/>
ner. ECU use<lb/>
trdized ai<lb/>
Plan Ensures Best Educators;<lb/>
Scholarships For Brightest Campus Will Enforce Law<lb/>
Bv MIKFLtDWK k<lb/>
Nr?s Fditor<lb/>
A loca ed cat 1 ? .<lb/>
present lawmake<lb/>
multi-million dollar pi in 1<lb/>
sure that North arolii<lb/>
have "the be  j 1 .<lb/>
public scho tea<lb/>
future<lb/>
Jay Robinson, sl-<lb/>
ot' the Charlotte-Mecklenburg<lb/>
county schools; is devising a<lb/>
scholarship program for high<lb/>
school students who wait! to<lb/>
become public school ;cachcrs.<lb/>
Charles Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education here at<lb/>
ECU, said he thinks the idea is a<lb/>
good one and would support such<lb/>
a project.<lb/>
"1' sounds like of good idea<lb/>
event hough there are limited<lb/>
funds; it would highlight the im-<lb/>
portance ol teacher education<lb/>
Coble said. Moreover, he added<lb/>
the scholarships would .is' as a<lb/>
lighthouse tor other students<lb/>
According to Coble, other<lb/>
states have tried simular projects<lb/>
and that they have worked except<lb/>
for a few problems. One ol those<lb/>
problems Coble said is the pro-<lb/>
bability of a student who started<lb/>
college intending to tead: chang-<lb/>
ing his or hers maior.<lb/>
"It has been suggested to give<lb/>
scholarships to those people who<lb/>
have already entered the upper-<lb/>
division of teacher education in<lb/>
order to combat the problem<lb/>
students changing their majors<lb/>
Coble said in a telephone inter-<lb/>
v lew .<lb/>
V ?? ;eiess. Coble said the<lb/>
is to keep the esteem ot the<lb/>
teaching profession rising, and<lb/>
" e proposed scholarships<lb/>
. : an idication of the rising<lb/>
esteem accorded to teachers and<lb/>
'iie teaching profession.<lb/>
"1 teel like we need to do<lb/>
something pretty dramatic in<lb/>
order o start attracting bright,<lb/>
talented public school teachers<lb/>
Robinson said Monday, "I here<lb/>
is going to be a real shortage in<lb/>
both numbers and quality<lb/>
1 he project, which he hopes to<lb/>
introduce to the General<lb/>
Assemblv this year, calls for<lb/>
awarding scholarships to 500<lb/>
qualified high school seniors each<lb/>
vear. The students would each<lb/>
receive $5,000 a year during their<lb/>
lour vears of college.<lb/>
The state would guarantee the<lb/>
teaching scholars jobs after<lb/>
graduation, and, in return the<lb/>
tents would agree to teach in<lb/>
North Carolina public schools<lb/>
for at least five years.<lb/>
"We've got to offer scholar-<lb/>
ships competitive with the best<lb/>
scholarships if we want to attract<lb/>
some of the best and brightest in-<lb/>
to teaching he saidYou can't<lb/>
offer a $1,000 scholarship and be<lb/>
competitive<lb/>
North Carolina will need as<lb/>
many as 38,000 teachers, one<lb/>
estimate says, at a time when<lb/>
universities and teaching colleges<lb/>
are producing fewer teachers<lb/>
The state's recently approved<lb/>
basic education plan calls for<lb/>
16,000 more teachers m addition<lb/>
to replacing retiring teachers,<lb/>
whose number "will be larger<lb/>
than ever in the i980 Robin-<lb/>
son said.<lb/>
"With the magic 30-year retire-<lb/>
ment benefit cycle coming up,<lb/>
with the basic education plan,<lb/>
plus increasing student enroll-<lb/>
ment, you see a decreasing<lb/>
number of good teachers<lb/>
Robinson said. "I think it's an<lb/>
absolute design for disaster not to<lb/>
respond to those clear signs<lb/>
"I think this is obviously one<lb/>
ot the ways to recognize<lb/>
teachers said Zane Eargle.<lb/>
superintendent of Winston-<lb/>
Salem Forsyth County schools.<lb/>
"This would give us teachers for<lb/>
at least four or five years. If we<lb/>
have them that long, we might<lb/>
have a good chance of convincing<lb/>
them that teaching was a good<lb/>
choice for them permanently<lb/>
"Certainly, it's worth looking<lb/>
at and studying said state Rep.<lb/>
William Watkings, D Granville,<lb/>
Chairman of the House Ap-<lb/>
propriations Committee. "It's<lb/>
just a matter of whether the<lb/>
money is there of w hether this is a<lb/>
year to jump into it<lb/>
Gov. James Martin has pro-<lb/>
posed to attract public school<lb/>
teachers by allowing prospective<lb/>
teachers to finance their educa-<lb/>
tion at low-interest rates.<lb/>
B PAITl KEMM1S<lb/>
Uimf Sr? Mn?<lb/>
Due to a Federal Mandate the<lb/>
N.C. General Assembly raised<lb/>
the legal age, as of Sept. 1, 1986.<lb/>
for purchase, possession, and<lb/>
consumption of all alcoholic<lb/>
beverages to 21.<lb/>
How will this affect the LCI<lb/>
campus? According to Carolyn<lb/>
Fulgham. Dean of Resident Life,<lb/>
approximately 4,900 of 5.500<lb/>
Night Transit Stops<lb/>
Bv LANCE SEAR<lb/>
si.fl Wnlrr<lb/>
The SGA Night Transit as of<lb/>
next semester will discontinue<lb/>
their services due to the increased<lb/>
drinking age.<lb/>
According to SGA President<lb/>
David Brown, "the Transit just<lb/>
isn't going to be very cost effi-<lb/>
cient. It will have to look for<lb/>
other sources to fund it<lb/>
September 1. 1986. will mark<lb/>
the date that North Carolina will<lb/>
change the drinking age to 21.<lb/>
and according to Kirk Shelley.<lb/>
SGA Legislative Speaker, "fun-<lb/>
ding a program that will effect<lb/>
only eight percent of the student<lb/>
body isn't good business.<lb/>
"However, this semester's<lb/>
Night Transit has been a pleasant<lb/>
surprise ? people have been pil-<lb/>
ing onto the bus in recent<lb/>
weeks<lb/>
Costs to operate the Night<lb/>
Transit run near S4.000. "Carpet<lb/>
sales, the Joint Judiciarv Trust<lb/>
Fund and Refridgerator Rentals<lb/>
paid for the Transit's<lb/>
operation Brown said. "We<lb/>
owe that to the good work the<lb/>
Appropriations Chariman<lb/>
Dwayne Wiseman did<lb/>
However, when the drinking<lb/>
age does change to 21, the SGA<lb/>
feels the efforts of Wiseman, and<lb/>
others, can be put to better use<lb/>
stude<lb/>
be 1. -e : ext ? B<lb/>
there be<lb/>
policy ?<lb/>
1 ne -<lb/>
law ii said I ulgham<lb/>
"We've alwavs c: I 1 ced the<lb/>
age before and we will continue<lb/>
to do so<lb/>
According to Fulgham, Resi-<lb/>
dent Advisors and Security Per-<lb/>
sonnel will enforce the rules in<lb/>
the usual fashion. Rooms will not<lb/>
be searched, but if an R.A or<lb/>
Security Guard does see alco<lb/>
in the room of a minor, it will be<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
The new state law makes it<lb/>
clear that anyone 19 or 20 who is<lb/>
caught purchasing or with the<lb/>
possession ot alcohol is not com-<lb/>
mitting a crime, but an infrac-<lb/>
tion. An infraction is an unlawful<lb/>
act that is not a crime, and in this<lb/>
case, will be punishable bv a fine<lb/>
not more than S25.<lb/>
N.C. Collects Unpaid Taxes<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (LPI) ? The<lb/>
state Department of Revenue has<lb/>
turned over to a private collection<lb/>
iummm??w????i??<lb/>
On The inside<lb/>
Announcements2,<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
Pens are most dangerous<lb/>
tools, more sharp by odds<lb/>
Than swords, and cut more<lb/>
keen than whips or rods.<lb/>
?John Taylor<lb/>
agencv the chore of tracking<lb/>
down about $900,000 from peo-<lb/>
ple who have left North Carolina<lb/>
without paying their taxes.<lb/>
Financial Collection Agencies<lb/>
Ltd is investigating 1,519 delin-<lb/>
quent accounts in hopes of collec-<lb/>
ting back taxes 'hat the Revenue<lb/>
Department has been unsuc-<lb/>
cessful in retrieving.<lb/>
"These are the bottom of the<lb/>
barrel ? accounts that we<lb/>
haven't had any luck with<lb/>
ourselves said James Sentor,<lb/>
deputy secretary of revenue.<lb/>
"Other states have done this<lb/>
(turned to private enterprise for<lb/>
back tax collection) and have had<lb/>
success, and we wanted to try it<lb/>
Before the state enlisted the<lb/>
help of private enterprise, the At-<lb/>
torney General's Office handled<lb/>
the collection of delinquent taxes<lb/>
owed by people or businesses<lb/>
who had left the state. But of-<lb/>
ficials hope the private company<lb/>
can do it more economically<lb/>
while relieving some burden from<lb/>
the attorney general's staff.<lb/>
The Revenue Department turns<lb/>
over accounts to the private agen-<lb/>
cy only as a last resort, Sentor<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Mary Cockerham, the agency's<lb/>
supervisor for North and South<lb/>
Carolina, said that the company-<lb/>
had no figures available on the<lb/>
amount of taxes collected but<lb/>
that they were showing "very<lb/>
good results<lb/>
Dorm Life<lb/>
i ? HI M1FUT T fjmt (mnUmm<lb/>
Dorm life, come this Fail, will not be as fun as it used to be because a new N.C. law will go into ef-<lb/>
fect that raises the drinking age to 21. For further details see the related story on page 1.<lb/>
a ? - -<lb/>
e .<lb/>
.<lb/>
 ? - ????? I<lb/>
??<lb/>
f"PIW"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0002"/><lb/>
JTHE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18, 1986<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BIBLE TALK<lb/>
A practical ?nformai Oiscusvon ex lut Boie<lb/>
?? appiteo to our i v?'ooay Gun 713 Oar<lb/>
'ett Dorm at 7 jo j 30 pm ana 70 C Beik<lb/>
Dorrr- at 9 ? 10 JO pm G.n? 313 Cotton<lb/>
H?' at 9 30 10 JO pm Thnejrf ,Vfr, j?<lb/>
dav Everyone nv eo<lb/>
DO YOU GO DOWN?<lb/>
Tut iev'? to'mec Corai Reet Dve Club i)<lb/>
"oidmg a meeting Feo 24 from 7 ?pm in<lb/>
room 748 Mendenhan Vembershpi ana a<lb/>
Spring Break trip to the taou'ous Fior.aa<lb/>
Keys wih oe discussea All interested non<lb/>
j.vers nciuded are welcome Join the club<lb/>
,ha'( going somewhere The Corai Reel<lb/>
D ?p C ub<lb/>
PRE MED<lb/>
?  e.r -neeting crt Alpha EpS'ion Dt'a <lb/>
he heid on Tuesday Fee 18 at 00pm n<lb/>
room 30? Flanagan The guest speake' w M<lb/>
be Dr Coco DDS no Drill speak abOUl I s<lb/>
e?pe' e" es n Sent sfi . A ntcrasim)<lb/>
? 'f are we<lb/>
SLACK ALUMNI ASSOCIATION<lb/>
T here will be a meeting tne ECl B a. h<lb/>
Assocaton or Monday Va<lb/>
"J8 Tr,e me rtg wtl te held a" Vein I ?<lb/>
studen CeriVr room 248 a 6 00pm<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
thers ot Alpha Ph, Alpha and Omega<lb/>
I s o- '?(??? lies will be t-avmg a Lin,ted<lb/>
Fraternal jam Thursday Fee 20 a' '??<lb/>
' ?'  Ever yore s  fed I<lb/>
?lm? Jut and be a par" ot h'Stor, ana ro pa'<lb/>
c.pate m a dognasi. ac ce ce too cold<lb/>
- 1 ? Kh ?  tamisi tl 90 Be<lb/>
? e<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
ere? Be a meeting tonight at 6 30 pm r.<lb/>
? ?  Wfioenfisi Qr Harold Zallen<lb/>
? :?'??? lot ?? ?? state house will be ou-<lb/>
FREE TAX HELP!<lb/>
! ' ea' . ? ? accou-<lb/>
Mr - q a "ee -a" crepara<lb/>
the s'uden' booth<lb/>
steers w b working<lb/>
Thursdays from be?<lb/>
pedera' forms anc<lb/>
at e jpoi -oques'<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
Members piease g<lb/>
? ' ? . f - boa<lb/>
'?JtS ft ru -a? seas<lb/>
ind reward - ? 1<lb/>
? ntor meCPA ear<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
ADVENTURES<lb/>
? '  s popular 'ee<lb/>
?- lays ants ? ?? lank boa' 0 e aa<lb/>
&amp; ' Jive rK ijdes 'jius a"<lb/>
icfcpacks and weights -  ?'<lb/>
" - ?: - J1 i-ijwa-c: johnsor<lb/>
oreaas :a .  ;??<lb/>
ay s-  . - ? 1383 ?-????(<lb/>
 " -i H a, 5 hart Director ? ? q -1<lb/>
v -14" Ope" waer certifications<lb/>
JON JORDAN ECU PHOTO LAB<lb/>
Watch Out<lb/>
One of the more common<lb/>
sights on campus is bicycles ?<lb/>
especially during the warm<lb/>
weather. Bicyclists, remember<lb/>
the ECU Traffic regulations<lb/>
say that riding on the<lb/>
sidewalks is illegal, as riding<lb/>
down a one-way street is too.<lb/>
Watch out, or you may get a<lb/>
ticket from a friendly campus<lb/>
policeman.<lb/>
2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
(Original Recipe? or<lb/>
Extra CrispyTM<lb/>
1 small mashed potato<lb/>
and gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
1 Medium Drink<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Crirtsl s spons<lb/>
Prime Time this Thursday night at<lb/>
I 30pm in the Old joyner Library second<lb/>
tioor Please ioin us tor tun fellowship ano<lb/>
B-ble study We art looking forward to<lb/>
meeting you<lb/>
BLACK GRADUATE<lb/>
SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
There wm te a meeting erf fe B a <lb/>
Graduate Support Group Sund. a1 E<lb/>
in nenaenhaii ai nTeres'ed persons are<lb/>
v'ted to attena For more informatio<lb/>
Dwight at 75? 9267<lb/>
FERRARA 1986<lb/>
The deadi.ne tor subm.ssion of appi -<lb/>
?o participate in the Ferra'a Iv8? pi igra<lb/>
as been e?tendeo Appica' 1 toper.<lb/>
until February 28 information aboc H s<lb/>
program is available by a - '57 4; ?<lb/>
T his study abroad tor college crec <lb/>
s open to ECU students s'uaer ??<lb/>
schools and tc 'he public<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS<lb/>
A free mini class offer e- r ?<lb/>
Counseling Cer - . lentil,<lb/>
sources of stress ake pos ' <lb/>
"anage your response to stress!<lb/>
t'Ons. 'earn v- .pia. mpr  sell fide<lb/>
Tuesday February 25 Thursday f?<lb/>
27 Tuesday War. ' 4 ??v.a, Va-<lb/>
Plan to attend all four n eel rigs<lb/>
meetings will be (rom ?- 1. ? A<lb/>
Anne<lb/>
BLACK AWARENESS MONTH<lb/>
tree t gti diooo press - ? - ? -<lb/>
ee" ijs w be he d Friday<lb/>
tl Menoenha; STuoen Centei I<lb/>
?ptr as oa ? " ? B  - a  esi<lb/>
11 ' v ? es Sponsorec by Kappa<lb/>
fratern  Associai I . ? ??<lb/>
ana ?? ? ? ?? ? Hean . ?<lb/>
Nofcomi! regory <lb/>
PIRATE WALK<lb/>
ECU AMBASSADORS<lb/>
' ir get jr general meeting Wed<lb/>
February Wth at 5 1 5pm ,n the Multipurpose<lb/>
at Menden' a<lb/>
VISUAL ARTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
? . sua Arts Com"? "ee wmio like to re<lb/>
nients here a'E CU about the 198<lb/>
liiurr.naartcompetit.on Th.s contest is open<lb/>
? . East Cai ; na Student currently<lb/>
test S 1 '??? ' all forms of<lb/>
"led-a and N . ?- ? ? ???.? lot mi' piece is<lb/>
? loitars upoi-subni.ssion Works are to<lb/>
be subn rted ? ? ?'? Ihrougti the 21st<lb/>
pi  room 212 Mendenhaii<lb/>
? ? ' ? K5 - ? 'ake place on the<lb/>
'??  ? it a I an amount of S600<lb/>
ere w . 1 be a re eption on the 24tr<lb/>
? ? - ? I you have an, iuest.onscaii<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB<lb/>
?<lb/>
lact<lb/>
1 ? ? ? a<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
s ? ei xirnament<lb/>
lief at '58 8325<lb/>
- -ti 28 and<lb/>
?<lb/>
AF ROTC<lb/>
? iei<lb/>
' es and e?<lb/>
???<lb/>
ooks and HOC oe' n<lb/>
?? . - ?. ing Tesi<lb/>
- ??' - .ar T T hur s<lb/>
? . ?  .<lb/>
1 ? arsnips for the fa<lb/>
? t Air For<lb/>
? A .<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
? ?? . . ? . . ?<lb/>
. - ?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECECC<lb/>
-?<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
ECC - ? ext meeting<lb/>
lav c at?. a ? ? ' - Hi . ? . ? . - ?<lb/>
peake<lb/>
AFROTC<lb/>
-<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
-<lb/>
? -?<lb/>
NC STATE PARKS<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH<lb/>
M<lb/>
j'gec ? . s ? v -<lb/>
BCC Ihesf - ?<lb/>
a TSl 65??<lb/>
Soccer Coaches (Indoor Soccer)<lb/>
Part-time coaches, work 10-20 hours weekly.<lb/>
Hours Monday-Friday, 3-5:30 and a couple of<lb/>
evenings, 7-9:00. Indoor soccer games at Elm<lb/>
Street Gym.<lb/>
Must posses skills and be able to coach,<lb/>
officiate youth ages 5-18, in soccer fundamentals.<lb/>
Contact the Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department, 752-4137, ext. 262, 259, for<lb/>
application information. Application deadline is<lb/>
Friday, March 7. $3.46hr.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
RENT<lb/>
Going Home For The Summer<lb/>
But Need A Place For The Fall?<lb/>
Tar River Estates has a summer special for<lb/>
ECU students - Rent an apt. by March 1 st &amp;<lb/>
keep your appartment RENT FREE for June &amp;<lb/>
July! For details call or come by Tar River<lb/>
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spacious clubhouse, swimming pool, and picnic area by the<lb/>
river. Conveniently located near East Carolina University -<lb/>
with SGA Transit service Come by today or Call:<lb/>
TarRivery<lb/>
ESTATE-<lb/>
752-4225<lb/>
i 400 Willow St<lb/>
Office Hours<lb/>
M-F9 0O5 30<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 1 00 5 00<lb/>
' ?? I '? Corporation<lb/>
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FOR ONE COMPLETE<lb/>
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PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
pn. Beta Lambda will meet wed Fee !? at<lb/>
3 00 m Raw! J42 We will nave a speaker<lb/>
Lloyd Gardener who ?. II tam about state<lb/>
competition<lb/>
SOCCER PLAYERS<lb/>
AM people interested in participating ? the<lb/>
f CU Women's Soccer Cub indoor socce'<lb/>
tournament please contact i-sa<lb/>
Grosshandier at 7S8 8325 Tne tournament<lb/>
will be held Feb ?8 and Marcr- I 8.T- ?.<lb/>
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NO NEWS<lb/>
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Interested In<lb/>
Studying A broad?<lb/>
Information on academic exchange<lb/>
opportunities throughout the world through<lb/>
the International Student Exchange Program<lb/>
(ISEP), at ECU. Cost Information availahle<lb/>
from:<lb/>
Dr. R. Hursey Jr.<lb/>
ISEPoordinator<lb/>
Austin 222<lb/>
Rhone 757-64IX (work)<lb/>
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ENGINEERINGSCIENCES<lb/>
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The Army is looking for 1986 graduates in Engineer-<lb/>
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You've worked long and hard to earn your Bachelor<lb/>
of Science degree. A commission in the Army is a good<lb/>
way to use your technical expertise while gaining<lb/>
valuable supervisory experience. And the opportunity is<lb/>
available now!<lb/>
An Army placement officer is available to discuss op-<lb/>
portunities and qualifications with those about to<lb/>
receive degrees in Engineering or Science. Contact him<lb/>
direct to arrange an appointment convenient for you.<lb/>
Call:<lb/>
Captain Mallette<lb/>
752-2908<lb/>
Cpt. Mallette will be conducting interviews ot<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Office<lb/>
on 13 Feb. from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.<lb/>
ARMYOFFICER.<lb/>
BE ALLYOU CAN BE<lb/>
New B<lb/>
From Stafl Krpi.n.<lb/>
Reagai Adminisi<lb/>
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SPEND AUEEK- NO<lb/>
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AND SIGN UP<lb/>
Reservations Any T<lb/>
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After Feb. 14, Full Pa<lb/>
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Seats Still Availabl<lb/>
Spontofea Dv Campui Moving mm<lb/>
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I Ml IAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18, 1986<lb/>
NO NiWS<lb/>
IS BAD NEWS<lb/>
,nd SAVE!<lb/>
my<lb/>
I<lb/>
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off<lb/>
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hile gaining<lb/>
.nd the opportunity is<lb/>
ible to discuss op-<lb/>
those about to<lb/>
?cience. Contact him<lb/>
convenient for you.<lb/>
ferviews at<lb/>
jnt Office<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
ER<lb/>
A<lb/>
New Budget Cuts Education<lb/>
From Slaff Reports<lb/>
The Reagan Administration's<lb/>
proposed budget cuts in aid to<lb/>
education would, it" adopted,<lb/>
"close the book on the federal<lb/>
commitment to education<lb/>
reform" triggered by the Ad-<lb/>
ministrations' own "Nation at<lb/>
Risk" report, declares the Na-<lb/>
tional Education Association.<lb/>
"The Administration is fond<lb/>
oi saying it seeks character, con-<lb/>
tent and choice in education<lb/>
notes NEA President Mary Hat-<lb/>
wood Futrell. "but this new<lb/>
budget has no character, little<lb/>
content, and no choice<lb/>
The Administration budget<lb/>
proposals, which call for an<lb/>
overall cut of more than 15 per-<lb/>
cent in education programs, were<lb/>
sent to Congress for the 198"<lb/>
Fiscal Year February 5<lb/>
Chancellor John How ell said<lb/>
he was not sure if the budget cuts<lb/>
would go through Congress and<lb/>
if they did he would not be pleas-<lb/>
ed. "The point I want to make is<lb/>
over the years the Reagan Ad-<lb/>
ministration has made bigger cuts<lb/>
and Congress has gone ahead and<lb/>
appropriated the money<lb/>
Howell said.<lb/>
Student financial aid would<lb/>
bear the brunt of the cuts said<lb/>
Howell. "It causes students to<lb/>
become discouraged and not app-<lb/>
ly and try to get the aid he add-<lb/>
ed. Howell added the biggest pro-<lb/>
blem with the whole issue of<lb/>
budget cutting is the uncertainty<lb/>
that goes with it.<lb/>
Futrell said the Administra-<lb/>
tion's proposed education cuts<lb/>
would "sabotage the education<lb/>
renaissance" President Reagan<lb/>
lauded in his February 4 State of<lb/>
the Union Address. The cuts,<lb/>
Futrell said, would come at a<lb/>
time when schools can least af-<lb/>
ford them.<lb/>
"The proposed federal educa-<lb/>
tion cuts could force states and<lb/>
local communities to either raise<lb/>
axes or cut education<lb/>
programs adds the NEA Presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
In the new budget. President<lb/>
Reagan is asking for about S23<lb/>
billion in domestic program cuts<lb/>
it affect education directly or<lb/>
indirectly ? while adding about<lb/>
$33 billion to military spending.<lb/>
The Administration suggests<lb/>
reducing the federal education<lb/>
budget to $15.2 billion in Fiscal<lb/>
1987. This is $3.2 billion less than<lb/>
the original 1986 education ap-<lb/>
propriation. In 1985, the federal<lb/>
government provided $19.1<lb/>
billion in aid to education.<lb/>
The Administration's propos-<lb/>
ed cuts come on top of $678<lb/>
million that will be slashed from<lb/>
federal education programs<lb/>
March 1 under the Ciramm-<lb/>
Rudman-Hollings budget law.<lb/>
The federal government's new<lb/>
fiscal year begins October 1.<lb/>
NEA President Futrell notes<lb/>
that the education share of the<lb/>
federal budget dollar has shrunk<lb/>
significantly since the Reagan<lb/>
Administration took office in<lb/>
1981. In 1980, for every 100<lb/>
federal budget dollars spent.<lb/>
Si.10 was spent on elementary<lb/>
and secondary education. If the<lb/>
Administration's budget pro-<lb/>
posals are adopted, elementary<lb/>
and secondary schools would get<lb/>
only 66 cents of every 100 federal<lb/>
dollars spent ? a 40 percent<lb/>
decline.<lb/>
"Quality education ? our<lb/>
greatest resource and the best in-<lb/>
vestment we can make to ensure a<lb/>
strong economy in the future ?<lb/>
cannot withstand these kinds ol<lb/>
draconian cuts Futrell sas<lb/>
The NEA president points out<lb/>
that many states are now suffer-<lb/>
ing some of the worst times since<lb/>
the Great Depression as farm<lb/>
bankruptcies, falling energy<lb/>
prices that slice production taxes.<lb/>
and factory closures threaten a<lb/>
decent standard of living foi<lb/>
millions of Americans<lb/>
"All is not well out there<lb/>
despite the rosy picture the Ad-<lb/>
ministration attempts to paint of<lb/>
the nation's economic<lb/>
landscape says Futrell.<lb/>
The heaviest of the federal<lb/>
education cuts, Futrell adds,<lb/>
would come in vocational educa-<lb/>
tion and in financial aid for col-<lb/>
lege students.<lb/>
Many education aid programs,<lb/>
including general aid (impact aid)<lb/>
for school districts that have a<lb/>
high concentration of military or<lb/>
other federal installations, would<lb/>
be eliminated entirely under the<lb/>
Administration's 1987 budget<lb/>
proposals.<lb/>
Most federal education pro-<lb/>
grams, particularly those pro-<lb/>
grams for elementary and secon-<lb/>
dary schoolchildren, provide ser-<lb/>
vices to poor, handicapped and<lb/>
minority children.<lb/>
The Reagan Administration<lb/>
budget proposal also calls for<lb/>
1986 rescissions ? Si billion in<lb/>
cuts that will automatically go in-<lb/>
to effect in 45 days if Congress<lb/>
fails to act ? in vocational<lb/>
education, college student aid<lb/>
libraries, immigrant education,<lb/>
and many other programs.<lb/>
'o make matters worse, Futrell<lb/>
notes, the Administration is pro-<lb/>
posing school voucher, tuition<lb/>
tax credit, and other legislation<lb/>
would weaken public<lb/>
schools. "The Administration's<lb/>
proposal to convert the existing<lb/>
federal compensatory education<lb/>
Ltram (Chapter 1) into a<lb/>
vouchei system, says Futrell. is<lb/>
nothing more than a ruse to<lb/>
divert tax dollars from under-<lb/>
funded public schools to pay for<lb/>
private schools. The Administra-<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tail<lb/>
Little Sister Rush<lb/>
Wed. February 19th<lb/>
Thurs. February 20th<lb/>
(In i. ; ? ?<lb/>
Come See What Makes Us Best.<lb/>
Call 752-4379 For More Info<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
with Campus Marketing<lb/>
YOUR BEST DEAL TO FLORIDA<lb/>
S PRING BREAK: March 8-16<lb/>
YOU DRIVE :<lb/>
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WE DRIVE rHE party starts here)<lb/>
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INCLUDES<lb/>
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SPEND A WEEK - NOT A FORTUNE<lb/>
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Rob PearSal<lb/>
AND SIGNUP 752-4801<lb/>
Reservations Any Time<lb/>
Call 752-4801<lb/>
Or Come By 113 N. Eastern St.<lb/>
(5th House on Left)<lb/>
After Feb. 14, Full Payment<lb/>
Required<lb/>
Seats Still Available<lb/>
tion proposes freezing spending<lb/>
for Chapter 1 at $3.2 billion for<lb/>
Fiscal 1987.<lb/>
In higher education, some $1.4<lb/>
billion less in college student<lb/>
financial asistance, reports the<lb/>
American Council on Education.<lb/>
There are currently about 5.7<lb/>
million college students receiving<lb/>
grants or loans.<lb/>
Cuts in higher education pro-<lb/>
grams would eliminate millions<lb/>
of dollars for poor as well as<lb/>
middle-income students and shut<lb/>
the door for most students for<lb/>
low-income families to attend the<lb/>
college of their choice. The cut-<lb/>
back proposed for the special<lb/>
allowance to college loan lenders<lb/>
threatens the collapse of the en-<lb/>
tire Guaranteed Student Loan<lb/>
program, the largest of the stu-<lb/>
dent aid programs, which now<lb/>
aids more than three million<lb/>
students.<lb/>
More than 800,000 of the near-<lb/>
ly three million students receiving<lb/>
Pell Grants ? 290.000 this fall<lb/>
alone ? would lose their eligibili-<lb/>
ty for aid if the Administraiton<lb/>
proposals are approved by Con-<lb/>
gress. And special remedial pro-<lb/>
grams for nearly 500,000 disad-<lb/>
vantaged students would be cut in<lb/>
half.<lb/>
"Cuts in education and in<lb/>
other domestic programs that af-<lb/>
fect our daily lives constitute a<lb/>
double or even triple whammy<lb/>
explains NEA President Futrell.<lb/>
"States are going to be hard-<lb/>
pressed to make up lost federal<lb/>
funds for education at the same<lb/>
time they face huge shortfalls in<lb/>
other vita! services<lb/>
We Don't Want To<lb/>
Take It With Us!<lb/>
A?LE<lb/>
Everything's<lb/>
Reduced!<lb/>
Shoes ? Tights<lb/>
eotards ? Warm-Ups<lb/>
And Much More<lb/>
?No (redit Cards, plea.se<lb/>
on You '11 Find Us In<lb/>
Our New Location<lb/>
 Arlington Boulevard<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
Professionally<lb/>
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Call 355-6810-<lb/>
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422 Arlington Blvd. 756-6670<lb/>
LEARN HOW<lb/>
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. : ? war the wings of in Army aviator, stop by<lb/>
Cpt. Mallette 752-2908<lb/>
Planning &amp; Placement Office<lb/>
13 Feb.<lb/>
9 a.m. to 12 noon<lb/>
ARMY<lb/>
BE ALLYOU CAN<lb/>
New Location<lb/>
909 S. Evans<lb/>
Around the corner from the old Szechuan Garden<lb/>
Pirate Special<lb/>
Only $2.15<lb/>
Served with Egg Drop Soup or Wanton Soup, Hot tea or Iced Tea<lb/>
 Chicken Chow Mein, Fried Rice<lb/>
 Roast Pork Egg Foo Young, Fried Rice<lb/>
 Sweet &amp; Sour Pork, Fried Rice<lb/>
? ? Pirate Special with Egg Roll $2 55<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
Only $2.75<lb/>
Served with Egg Drop Soup or Wanton Soup, Hot Tea or Iced Tea<lb/>
MONDAY: Chicken with Green Pepper &amp; Onion, Egg Roll &amp; Fried Rice<lb/>
TUESDAY: Roost Pork with Vegetable, Egg Roll &amp; Fried Rice<lb/>
WEDNESDAY: Chicken with Almonds, Egg Roll &amp; Fried Rice<lb/>
THURSDAY: Sweet &amp; Sour Chicken, Egg Roll &amp; Fried Rice<lb/>
FRIDAY. Beef with Chinese Vegetable, Egg Roll &amp; Fried Rice<lb/>
New Larger More Varied<lb/>
Sunday Buffet<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
Take Out Service - 757-1818<lb/>
All ABC Permits<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0004"/><lb/>
Si? iEaat (Sar0Htiian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
TOM I l VEND! K?, , Han.gr,<lb/>
I STON1 . Mmhj .<lb/>
MlKI 1 I l) IC K Vn .<lb/>
Scoi i Cooper, v ?.<lb/>
Danh i Mm r k.<lb/>
Jons Sh NN().<lb/>
Di t n-ii i Johnson, i<lb/>
ClKI (, WlM HESTER, D i <lb/>
Am honv Martin, r. ??. i<lb/>
John Pi ii ksos,  ??<lb/>
Shannon SHORT, p . wa?r,<lb/>
l)i huh Stevens, &amp;<lb/>
&amp;m w&amp;HaQitwew?. VNivwp&amp;mx' sca<lb/>
1 cbni.t: 18, 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Pas<lb/>
Debate<lb/>
Comparable Worth Proposal<lb/>
Last night in Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Sarah Weddington and Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly debated over topics rang-<lb/>
ing from abortion to the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment. An issue which<lb/>
also figured prominently into the<lb/>
debate was a proposal aimed at<lb/>
eliminating discrimination against<lb/>
women who are confined to the<lb/>
"pink collar" ghetto. This proposal<lb/>
has been christened the comparable<lb/>
worth proposal because it is design-<lb/>
ed to insure that women get equal<lb/>
pay for comparable work even<lb/>
though, that work may be different<lb/>
from that done by men.<lb/>
In order to understand the com-<lb/>
parable worth proposal one must<lb/>
first understand the nature of the<lb/>
problem that it seeks to address.<lb/>
First, in the American economy<lb/>
women are largely confined to jobs<lb/>
that pay poor wages, while men<lb/>
working similar jobs, even within<lb/>
the same industry, earn significant-<lb/>
ly higher wages, for example,<lb/>
within the food and beveridge in-<lb/>
dustry the workers who earn the<lb/>
most money are brewery workers.<lb/>
In 19S1 they earned around $496 a<lb/>
week, high on the scale of<lb/>
American industrial workers. The<lb/>
lowest paid food industry workers<lb/>
are found in poultry dressing<lb/>
plants. T "hey earned an average of<lb/>
S169 a week in 1981 ? a poverty<lb/>
level wage for a worker with three<lb/>
dependents. 85 percent of brewery<lb/>
workers are men while 53 percent of<lb/>
poultry dressers are women.<lb/>
More than 90 percent of the<lb/>
workers who make tires or inner<lb/>
tubes out of rubber are men, and<lb/>
they earned about S450 a week.<lb/>
Two-thirds of the workers who<lb/>
make toot wear out of rubber are<lb/>
women and the) earn $169 a week.<lb/>
The apperal clothing industry has<lb/>
traditionally been among the<lb/>
poorest-paying industries in<lb/>
America. Apparel workers averag-<lb/>
ed only about $175 a week in 1981,<lb/>
barely above the federal poverty<lb/>
line for a family of four. Thus it<lb/>
shouldn't surprise anyone to<lb/>
discover that more than four out of<lb/>
five clothing workers arc women.<lb/>
Yet within this generally poor in-<lb/>
dustry there is a category of<lb/>
workers who make automotive and<lb/>
apparel trimmings. In contrast to<lb/>
all other apparel workers, these<lb/>
workers make S400 a week ? far<lb/>
above the average for American<lb/>
manufacturing. Half of these<lb/>
workers, also in contrast to other<lb/>
apparel workers, are men. And the<lb/>
list goes on.<lb/>
Moreover this state of affairs has<lb/>
only deteriorated under the Reagan<lb/>
administration with poverty among<lb/>
single female headed households in-<lb/>
creasing and the federal commit-<lb/>
ment to social programs and<lb/>
fighting for equality decreasing.<lb/>
Of course the statistics cited<lb/>
above say nothing about the fact<lb/>
that women earn consistently less<lb/>
than men even doing the same jobs<lb/>
as men.<lb/>
More to the point, women are<lb/>
not getting anything near adequate<lb/>
compensation for their years of<lb/>
schooling relative to men. A man<lb/>
with a high school diploma still<lb/>
makes more on the average than a<lb/>
woman with a college diploma.<lb/>
What all of this suggests is that<lb/>
sex-based wage discrimination is<lb/>
rampant in the American economy<lb/>
and bold steps must be taken to end<lb/>
it. What tiie comparable worth pro-<lb/>
posal would mean is that the<lb/>
government would establish some<lb/>
means bv which it would evaluate<lb/>
the comparability of jobs and make<lb/>
recommendations on wage levels<lb/>
tor public employees accordingly.<lb/>
In other words, the government<lb/>
would presumably be setting an ex-<lb/>
ample which private employers<lb/>
would be expected to follow in br-<lb/>
inging an end to discrimination.<lb/>
I his is not withoul precedent.<lb/>
The State Employee's Union for<lb/>
the state of ashington won a com-<lb/>
parable wortli decision against the<lb/>
state in 1982 in U.S. Federal Court<lb/>
and was ordered to pay back pay<lb/>
and to pay equal pay in the future.<lb/>
And in 1981 the Supreme Court<lb/>
joined in this recognition that une-<lb/>
qual pav for jobs of comparable<lb/>
worth is discriminatory, though it<lb/>
tailed to define how the problem<lb/>
was to be solved or to address the<lb/>
comparable wortli issue. Also as<lb/>
early as 1945 representative Claude<lb/>
Pepper and another legislator put<lb/>
forth the "Equal Pav Act which<lb/>
would have required equal pay for<lb/>
comparable work, though it was<lb/>
defeated.<lb/>
Women are not in lower paying<lb/>
occupations because the free<lb/>
market has magically decided that<lb/>
these occupations are worth less<lb/>
than those filled by men. They are<lb/>
in those occupations because it is<lb/>
profitable for employers to pay low<lb/>
wages. And the only way to redress<lb/>
this injustice is for the government<lb/>
to intervene in the marketplace ?<lb/>
not to destroy it, but to humanize it<lb/>
and make it more democratic. It<lb/>
has done so to some extent with the<lb/>
1964 Civil Rights Act. It should<lb/>
continue that tradition by im-<lb/>
plementing the comparable worth<lb/>
proposal.<lb/>
y<lb/>
Philippines May Not Be Ready<lb/>
APOPT<lb/>
BABVWC<lb/>
C0M65 WtTH W66P0RT<lb/>
BIRTH CeRTlFlCATF,<lb/>
ANPUNUMITBP5WI56<lb/>
BANK ACCOUNTS,<lb/>
to vour poor W A femmSmi mmm <lb/>
l&amp; AIRFORCE ffiAtoBMCMPOUBfi&amp;rMRCO$)<lb/>
Democracy Doesn't Work<lb/>
l! is time, thanks largely to<lb/>
developments in the Philippines, to say<lb/>
some unkind tilings about democracy.<lb/>
The first of these is thai democracy does<lb/>
not necessarily usher in virtuous govern-<lb/>
ments or tolerable human conditions.<lb/>
The second is that democracy, par<lb/>
ticularly in its currently accepted,<lb/>
fanatical application (one-man. one<lb/>
vote) is nothing more than a Western<lb/>
superstition. We are entitled to our<lb/>
superstitions and to our taboos, hut it<lb/>
does not make much sense to assume<lb/>
that they are readily universalized.<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
B VW1 1.1AM K. BtMTA JR.<lb/>
Tvao episodes, illustrative in purpose.<lb/>
The movie, a doen years ago, and the<lb/>
startled reaction to il b an American<lb/>
who saw it in Lagos, Nigeria Scene: an<lb/>
18th-century American slave ship,<lb/>
engaged in transporting West fricans<lb/>
for sale in the slave markets<lb/>
Charleston, S.C. There is a mutiny hy<lb/>
the blacks against the white captain and<lb/>
his white crew. But it is suppressed, the<lb/>
ring leaders of the mutiny are<lb/>
segregated, and they are made to walk<lb/>
the plank. Wild cheering from the au<lb/>
dience. "What goes on here?" the<lb/>
American asked himself.<lb/>
His host, a native Nigerian and a pro-<lb/>
fessor of anthropology, explained that<lb/>
Africans are trained to believe in the ab-<lb/>
solute authority of the chief. And the<lb/>
chief, in this picture, was the captain of<lb/>
the vessel, and that mattered more than<lb/>
that he was corralling Africans into lives<lb/>
of slavery in the New World.<lb/>
It was certainly self-serving when<lb/>
President Marcos told me eight years<lb/>
ago on television that the American<lb/>
legacy ol democracy had not been firmly<lb/>
enough rooted in the Philippines. But, ai<lb/>
the same time, he was absolutely right.<lb/>
One doe not deduce from his be<lb/>
right that he should also be preside<lb/>
for-life, but it is true thai democracy had<lb/>
become a sham before President Marcos<lb/>
invoked martial law in 1ST2. Contenders<lb/>
were luring private armies, and were<lb/>
then ? as now ? refusing to abide bv<lb/>
the apparent results ol elections. 1; is<lb/>
-ate to sav simplv that democracv was<lb/>
not working, and democracv has ha-<lb/>
had a workout under Mr. Marcos ol the<lb/>
kind that gives us confidence it is now<lb/>
ready to work.<lb/>
Democracy is primarily valuable, the<lb/>
late Max Eastman wisely summarized in<lb/>
a book on political philosophy, as a<lb/>
negative instrument, a way tor a people<lb/>
to sa: We do not desire the existing<lb/>
rulers to continue to rule. 1 he notion<lb/>
that democracv is actually aninstrumt<lb/>
bv which the people can fine-tune pubh.<lb/>
policy is a Western superstition, along<lb/>
with the notion that anyone I 8 vears old,<lb/>
whether literate or illiterate, instructed<lb/>
oi dumb, should participate in political<lb/>
decision-making.<lb/>
They are talking now about elections<lb/>
in Haiti where HO percent oi the people<lb/>
are illiterate and about one-man one-<lb/>
vote in South Africa. The Washington<lb/>
Post editorializes, with reference to<lb/>
Subic Bay and Clark field in the Philip<lb/>
pines and the implied threat against<lb/>
them if Mrs. Aquino should win: "He is<lb/>
right: The bases are important to the<lb/>
United States. But they are not more im-<lb/>
portant than the condition oi democracy<lb/>
in the Philippines What utter<lb/>
nonsense. We hope thai<lb/>
rule will come to the Philippim<lb/>
whether or not it does, we have imp<lb/>
responsibilities in the W.<lb/>
that have nothing whatever l<lb/>
civic progress m that country.<lb/>
J Whal matters mosl is the -<lb/>
? liberty. John Stuart Mill, the pr<lb/>
don: a ? v estern democracy.<lb/>
this when he opted I<lb/>
intentioned, rather than d<lb/>
an instrument oi totalitaria<lb/>
chaos. Ask not, in frica<lb/>
Vmerica, how many people voted I<lb/>
the incumbent governor: ask wl<lb/>
of life are the people permitted I<lb/>
Are they tree' Are they protected fi<lb/>
' itrary rule'7 Are their holding<lb/>
from inflation and theflC an tl .<lb/>
the country with their saving<lb/>
Proceed to deplore this b<lb/>
allegiance to authority, as we all<lb/>
?v ii away as a fact of life ii<lb/>
pan ? the world. It certainly has ii<lb/>
- when the Hitlers and<lb/>
Stalins tind it easy to conscript<lb/>
Holbca . maintenance men.<lb/>
Next: n American scholar. <lb/>
research into the balloting aftei one<lb/>
those elections we in effect presidt<lb/>
in South Vietnam during that country'<lb/>
brief interregnum with self-rule, elici<lb/>
from the majority of the pea- .<lb/>
terviewed an attitude toward whal<lb/>
were doing that amounted to condesc<lb/>
sion over Western eccentricities<lb/>
idea, as one man put it, that bv di<lb/>
a piece ot paper in thai box, over aga<lb/>
that other box, von were substantially <lb/>
even intelligently guiding vour i m<lb/>
future was ? well, he just laughed<lb/>
"Democracv" may triumph, ii<lb/>
Philippines, and life max become n<lb/>
intolerable as the result.<lb/>
Reagan Cuts In Education Unsound<lb/>
By DARRYL K. BROWfN<lb/>
WASHINGTON last month, a<lb/>
White House advisory panel handed in<lb/>
the preliminary results of its study on the<lb/>
"Health of U.S. Universities and Col-<lb/>
leges It concluded "substantially<lb/>
greater investments" by the federal<lb/>
government are necessary for American<lb/>
campuses to upgrade deteriorating<lb/>
research facilities, outdated equipment<lb/>
and understaffed science and engineer-<lb/>
ing faculties.<lb/>
This month, the White House released<lb/>
its proposed budget, which discontinued<lb/>
federal loan assistance to upgrade<lb/>
academic facilities and college housing.<lb/>
It also requested that such funds for this<lb/>
year be rescinded.<lb/>
There's something to be learned here<lb/>
about this administration's priorities,<lb/>
and how much those are based on<lb/>
evidence and common sense. When a<lb/>
panel headed by a corporate<lb/>
businessman (the chairman of Hewlitt-<lb/>
Packard) says colleges need substantial<lb/>
assistance in order not to hinder the<lb/>
training of scientists and engineers and<lb/>
to slow research for industrial and<lb/>
military development, most people<lb/>
would not think to instead do away with<lb/>
that assistance. How does one read that<lb/>
report and decide to increase defense<lb/>
spending 8 percent, instead of 6 or 7 per-<lb/>
cent and also heed the caveat of one's<lb/>
own White House Science Advisory<lb/>
Panel?<lb/>
In the wake of that (naturally) little-<lb/>
publicized study and the continuing<lb/>
scrutiny of public education that brings<lb/>
calls for reform, the president's budget<lb/>
reduces spending for education by $2.5<lb/>
billion and cuts higher education ap-<lb/>
propriations much more than the<lb/>
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings deficit reduc-<lb/>
tion law requires. Reagan's State of the<lb/>
Union address mentioned rising SAT<lb/>
-cotes and prayer in schools (why not<lb/>
prayer foi schools), but his budget<lb/>
eliminates a small program known as the<lb/>
Perkins Scholarships, which go to bright<lb/>
students planning careers in teaching.<lb/>
Perhaps the advisory panel will take<lb/>
comfort if those declining facilities<lb/>
receive less wear and tear, which could<lb/>
happen if the Guaranteed Student Loan<lb/>
program collapses. The American Coun-<lb/>
cil on Education and others believe that<lb/>
is very possible under the Reagan plan;<lb/>
at minimum it would be drastically cut.<lb/>
President Reagan would like to cut the<lb/>
interest subsidy to banks, which makes<lb/>
students safer and cheaper loan risks<lb/>
Without that subsidy, many banks may<lb/>
simply pull out of the GSL program and<lb/>
stop making loans, which 3 million<lb/>
students now use. The presidential<lb/>
budget is less severe, though, on PLUS<lb/>
loans, which have high interest rates and<lb/>
which students must begin repaying<lb/>
while still in college.<lb/>
The Reagan cuts in Pell Grants would<lb/>
make 290,000 students ineligible, and<lb/>
would reduce the awards for another<lb/>
half million recipients, whose family in-<lb/>
come are under $20,000. Other odds and<lb/>
ends would also get the ax: Supplemen-<lb/>
tal grants, State Incentive Grants, most<lb/>
graduate student aid.<lb/>
Further, the administration put forth<lb/>
no alternative to student aid as it does<lb/>
for other government handouts it dis-<lb/>
dains, such as welfare. Conservatives at<lb/>
least advocate jobs instead of aid to the<lb/>
poor, saying those who will work will<lb/>
subsist and perhaps prosper. For college<lb/>
students, they cut grants and loans but<lb/>
also work study. And by some abysmal<lb/>
wisdom, cooperative education too, in<lb/>
which students not only gain career skills<lb/>
and pay their tuition, but also give back<lb/>
10 times more to the Treasury through<lb/>
income taxes than is spent funding co<lb/>
programs. One would expect this<lb/>
ministration to innovate a work sch<lb/>
that allow- students to earn<lb/>
education through effort.<lb/>
Tuitions have doubled in ten v.<lb/>
which means colleges are having<lb/>
time making ends meet. The Re.<lb/>
budge; cuts their assistance and adds<lb/>
their costs of the work-stud prog-<lb/>
Students depend on loans now n<lb/>
than ever, yet the Reagan budget v-<lb/>
make less loans available and those lefi<lb/>
more expensive. It does nothing I<lb/>
alleviate that loan burden, nor to ins<lb/>
faith in the work ethic by making w<lb/>
harder to get, or by making more work<lb/>
hours necessary to meet rising college<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
Congressional Democrats have an<lb/>
idea oi what to do with the Rea,<lb/>
budget: hold public hearings around the<lb/>
country and let citizen's know what-<lb/>
it (or out of it) for them. Thev feel co-<lb/>
dent Reagan's fiscal wish list will cause<lb/>
mourning in America. The show needs<lb/>
to play on American campuses.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica<lb/>
tions Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two tvpewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neat I v printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for b.evi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
1<lb/>
I have heard <lb/>
about whal t onstiiut.<lb/>
balanced diet. Whal sh<lb/>
Ha <lb/>
New ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
Cor<lb/>
Wint<lb/>
All Ski C<lb/>
40 to<lb/>
All Warm-lps<lb/>
40 to 50 oft<lb/>
Iod vA"?terv<lb/>
Rej. $35.00<lb/>
SKIS<lb/>
Dvnastar<lb/>
Sk R lurtknecks<lb/>
Tucsdav, Feb s 1<lb/>
10<lb/>
Wednesday, February 19,<lb/>
10<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18, 1986<lb/>
Debate Rages<lb/>
 Work<lb/>
I haw heard a lot recently<lb/>
about what constitutes a proper,<lb/>
balanced diet. What should I eat?<lb/>
Hardh a d.s goes by without<lb/>
eone telling us what we<lb/>
aid and should not eal<lb/>
Newspapers, magazines, televi-<lb/>
. books, and radio give lots<lb/>
idvice about the "idea! diet<lb/>
lusion, however, ts because we Jo not know igri about nutrition to iden the perfect die! for each in<lb/>
! l(dividua Mi people diffei . needs a<lb/>
. sical a ?  - rtei con<lb/>
? egnanc and 1!<lb/>
 - asmmended Dietary ? i (R DA) are su ?. . and and vitamins ad Fot the I S. I ? t wl and<lb/>
trs, and alcohol) is sensi-<lb/>
. eave;s can irante  w all being.<lb/>
I ? . jnvironment, in<lb/>
pptng<lb/>
tinst<lb/>
. or<lb/>
on Unsound<lb/>
<lb/>
? :heme<lb/>
 llege<lb/>
years,<lb/>
. a hard<lb/>
Reagan<lb/>
adds tO<lb/>
g ram.<lb/>
 more<lb/>
gel will<lb/>
.osc left<lb/>
hing to<lb/>
to instill<lb/>
? ng work<lb/>
?mure work-<lb/>
l allege<lb/>
have an<lb/>
the Reagan<lb/>
and the<lb/>
?iw what's in<lb/>
-?v feel confi-<lb/>
sl will cause<lb/>
show needs<lb/>
ruses.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
arolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
ill points of view. Mail or<lb/>
I our office in the Publica-<lb/>
? g, across from the en-<lb/>
 r I ihrarv.<lb/>
r purpo verification, all let-<lb/>
include the name, major and<lb/>
ation, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted.<lb/>
1 isted below are some general<lb/>
dietary guidelines for the average<lb/>
?mci ican.<lb/>
? Eat a variety ol foods daily in<lb/>
adequate amounts, including<lb/>
fruits, vegetables, whole-grain<lb/>
and enriched breads, cereals and<lb/>
other product; made from grain,<lb/>
milk, cheese, yogurt, and othei<lb/>
products made from milk, meats,<lb/>
poultry, fish, eggs, and dry beans<lb/>
and peas.<lb/>
? Maintain your desirable weig<lb/>
Eat slowly, lake smaller portions,<lb/>
and avoid "seconds la: more<lb/>
fruits, vegetables, and whole<lb/>
grains and less fai dv.J fa<lb/>
foods, sugar, sweets, and di<lb/>
less alcoholic beverages Increase<lb/>
your physical actis it.<lb/>
? Eat foods with adequate starch<lb/>
and fiber, including whole-gi i<lb/>
and cereals, fruits,<lb/>
vegetables, and dry beans and<lb/>
peas Eating foods high in fibei<lb/>
duce s nip<lb/>
toms  chronic constipation,<lb/>
di erticulai disease, and<lb/>
ii ritable bow I It has<lb/>
also been suggested tha<lb/>
: ma increas(<lb/>
developing col<lb/>
? . ?id sugai becaus . ides<lb/>
it ic's but few otl er is<lb/>
? Avoid too much<lb/>
Continued Krom Page I.<lb/>
issue o working women deserv-<lb/>
ing credit for child care, Schlafh<lb/>
was insistent that women should<lb/>
not be drafted into the military.<lb/>
Schlafly demanded that to give<lb/>
credit to working mothers was<lb/>
unfair to those mothers who<lb/>
choose to slay home with their<lb/>
children. Weddington<lb/>
saidThere are mothers who<lb/>
need to make an income and I<lb/>
think they deserve good child<lb/>
care<lb/>
()n the subject ol women in the<lb/>
military, Schlafly jeering urged<lb/>
"it von want to fight for your<lb/>
country, run, don't walk . to the<lb/>
oU'kc and sign up she accused<lb/>
men, however, ot not being<lb/>
"wimpy enough to let their wives<lb/>
go oui into the fields and fight<lb/>
Weddington debated the fad<lb/>
that most of the women in the<lb/>
military have as high, if not<lb/>
higher, 1Q as the men in the<lb/>
military. She remarked. "Iqual<lb/>
rights means equal respon-<lb/>
sibilities<lb/>
While Weddington openly<lb/>
defended formei President<lb/>
Carter's views, Schlafly wasted<lb/>
no time defending Reagon's. At<lb/>
one point, Schlafly accused the<lb/>
V artet administration ol only ap-<lb/>
pointing members who went<lb/>
along with Carter's beliefs. Wed<lb/>
dington quickly, and firmly, an-<lb/>
nounced. "You are absolutely<lb/>
wrong. I he people appointed<lb/>
i ol had those qualities, but<lb/>
they were never questioned it<lb/>
 had them before they were<lb/>
appointed<lb/>
Schlafly commended Reagan<lb/>
making nine million more<lb/>
jobs available for Americans dur-<lb/>
his term in office. One<lb/>
member o the audience ques<lb/>
re 1 h ise jobs were and<lb/>
who wa: g them.<lb/>
Sv hlafh ottered an explaina<lb/>
tion thai women choose the<lb/>
degrees that they earn, s i<lb/>
refore, are setting themselves<lb/>
up for their salaries. She also ad-<lb/>
ded "I don't believe women are<lb/>
underpaid Weddington argued<lb/>
back that fields which were once<lb/>
stereotyped as being female are<lb/>
Gordon's 6oii<lb/>
&amp; Shi Shop<lb/>
Winter Clearance Sale<lb/>
Beginning hen. 12 <lb/>
All Ski Clothing &amp; Accessories<lb/>
40 to 80 off res, price<lb/>
All Warm-Ups<lb/>
40 to 50 off regular price<lb/>
1od Sweaters<lb/>
Reg. $35.00<lb/>
Now S19.M5<lb/>
Closing out on<lb/>
Junior lod Pants<lb/>
Reg. S22.00 now $7.95<lb/>
BOOTS<lb/>
40 to 50 off reg. price<lb/>
SKIS30 to 50 off<lb/>
Dvnastar ?01in 'Rossignol ?Hart<lb/>
 ?   ?  sale price $11.40<lb/>
sk R 1 urtleneeks K<lb/>
Located on 264 Bpass<lb/>
next to (,reenille IV &amp; Appliance<lb/>
&amp; kappa Sigma<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Tuesday, February 18, 1986<lb/>
9:00-1:00 a.m.<lb/>
10C Draft All Nite<lb/>
Adm. $1.50 Guys<lb/>
$1.00 Ladies<lb/>
&amp; Pi kappa Phi<lb/>
Present<lb/>
<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Wednesday, February 19, 1986 9:00-1:00 a.m.<lb/>
10 Draft All Nite<lb/>
Adm. $1.50 Guys<lb/>
$1.00 Ladies<lb/>
still being underpaid, such as<lb/>
educators and nurses. She made<lb/>
no move to agree with Schlafh<lb/>
about women being paid fairly.<lb/>
After a round of audience<lb/>
questions, ranging from the<lb/>
availability of contraceptives to<lb/>
gaining fair salary for educators,<lb/>
the dabate came to an end. One<lb/>
of the questions asked was how<lb/>
each was going to continue<lb/>
strengthening her cause.<lb/>
"We are going to continue<lb/>
reintroducing FRA to Congress.<lb/>
Right now we don't have enough<lb/>
votes, it just depends who is put<lb/>
into office next commented<lb/>
Weddington.<lb/>
Schlafly calmly replied. "We<lb/>
won't have any trouble defeating<lb/>
ERA<lb/>
The debators not only<lb/>
disagreed on the subjects thev<lb/>
discussed, but also who came out<lb/>
with the most support. According<lb/>
to Schlafly, "The response was<lb/>
great, and the majority was<lb/>
definately with me<lb/>
Weddington stressed that she<lb/>
was "very happy to see the<lb/>
response the debate received. It is<lb/>
good to see people really think<lb/>
and .react, not just lie back and<lb/>
accepl things the way thev are.<lb/>
The people here at ECU proved<lb/>
they wanted to think. 1 sensed a<lb/>
large amount o support tor<lb/>
Phyllis Sehlaflv, but just as large<lb/>
amount for mysell<lb/>
St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
WELCOMES YOU<lb/>
401 East Fourth Street<lb/>
The Rev. Lawerence P. Houston, Jr , Rector<lb/>
The Rev. Middleton F. Wotten, 111, Associate Rector<lb/>
Marty Gartman, Directory of Campus Ministry<lb/>
LENTEN SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
7:30 a.m. ? Holy Eucharist<lb/>
9:00 a.m. ? Holy Eucharist<lb/>
10:00 a.m. ? Christian Education ? Parish Hall<lb/>
11:00a.m. ? Holy Eucharist<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
5:30 p.m. ? livening Prayer<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
5:30 p.m. ? Evening Prayer<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
5:30 p.m. ? Holv Eucharist<lb/>
6:30 p.m.  STUDENT FELLOWSHIP SUPPER<lb/>
7:15 p.m. ? Video Series: "What Episcopalians Believe"<lb/>
Thursday Friday<lb/>
5:30 p.m. Evening Prayer<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
9:X) a.m. ? Morning Prayer<lb/>
See For Yourself<lb/>
STUDE vrOPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
We arc looking for girls in-<lb/>
terested in being counselors ?<lb/>
activity instructors in a private<lb/>
girls camp located in Hender-<lb/>
SOnville, NC. Instructors need-<lb/>
ed especially in Swimming<lb/>
(WSI), Horseback riding, Ten-<lb/>
nis, Backpacking, Archery,<lb/>
Canoeing, Gymnastics, Crafts<lb/>
Also, Basketball, Computers,<lb/>
Drama, Nature study, Field<lb/>
Hockey. It your school offers a<lb/>
Summer Internship program,<lb/>
we will be glad to help. In-<lb/>
quiries: Morgan Haynes, P.O.<lb/>
Box 400-C, Trvon, , 28782.<lb/>
on All Frames, Sunglasses,<lb/>
and Contact Lenses<lb/>
Everyday.<lb/>
Now tt-rc arc ri KaUirr trm .rter HI) Jillercrt mule u vi?i?r<lb/>
' .11 tcriAa sjvuip i! N ? . '?? tt rcjraui rccui prvc I"he<lb/>
K- sat at IT Haa. jnl I Eye l arc i ena ji iJc Tipm Annex<lb/>
In lditki. l-c iAjjiiiiiit??. arc avaiiabk af I"hc hye Cire Ccnur<lb/>
No ajvinCin 'txtvW tail fof cxjjji hiurs<lb/>
ft llaAi<lb/>
"??? StT<lb/>
OPTOMETNC<lb/>
CrtE CAA? 0EKTCR<lb/>
tor rraim Selection and Kve Rxuminationv<lb/>
11 t.rnrntillc Blvd iliptun nnr?i<lb/>
Phone 75t-MM<lb/>
)r Peter Hoilis<lb/>
O.D.<lb/>
.A.<lb/>
?<lb/>
"<lb/>
r<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0006"/><lb/>
1IH I AM i AUDI INIAN<lb/>
3M COUNTY<lb/>
Haley Answered Cal<lb/>
To Find His Roots<lb/>
By JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
M?l. Miit.r<lb/>
Alex Haley, best known .is<lb/>
autl 01 of Roots, will speak ai<lb/>
Hendrix I heater tonight at<lb/>
p.m. Haley will talk aboul<lb/>
changing role of the family in<lb/>
American life, particularly in<lb/>
relation to the subject ol Black<lb/>
History in America, in a lecture<lb/>
entitled "The Background ol<lb/>
Roots: The Significance ol the<lb/>
I amily<lb/>
For Haley, the subject is a par-<lb/>
ticularly vital and relevant one.<lb/>
B vii in 1921 in a rural Tennese<lb/>
ill-town called Henning,<lb/>
best selling author has experie<lb/>
ed the pride of possessing<lb/>
ancestral heritage, and the<lb/>
ficulty of discovering the ;<lb/>
ulars of t hat am t<lb/>
firsthand. His latest book, nai<lb/>
alter his childhood hometowi<lb/>
chronicles his impressions ol rl<lb/>
place and time, and highlit i<lb/>
important role his family played<lb/>
m preserving the history that<lb/>
became Roots.<lb/>
I he well-known stoi ol Kunta<lb/>
Kinte and his capture into siacrv<lb/>
was only an or a! legend, passed<lb/>
among Haley's relatives during<lb/>
miniscences on the front<lb/>
porch, until Alex concretized the<lb/>
information through painstaking<lb/>
research. But thai record was un-<lb/>
written until much later, after<lb/>
Haley had made his reputation as<lb/>
a writer. I he toad to becoming a<lb/>
prominent writer was a long otic<lb/>
Males graduated from high<lb/>
school at 15, and entered college<lb/>
?n Mississippi, only to transfer<lb/>
North c arolina, at<lb/>
i ty reacher's College,<lb/>
aduate, opting<lb/>
?ng stints<lb/>
ped his<lb/>
g, which<lb/>
landed him a position<lb/>
1 oasi c iuard.<lb/>
from<lb/>
inste<lb/>
PR m<lb/>
Broadway At ECU<lb/>
the Coast Guard he was 38 years<lb/>
old, and determined make a liv-<lb/>
ing at writing. Eventually he was<lb/>
assigned by Playboy to interview<lb/>
Malcolm . The interview led to<lb/>
a book -? The Autobiography of<lb/>
Malcolm X ? which was so suc-<lb/>
cessful that Alex Haley's reputa-<lb/>
tion became firmly established.<lb/>
At this point in his life, Haley<lb/>
must have felt the need to answer<lb/>
some inner call or compulsion,<lb/>
because the work he embarked<lb/>
upon after his first bestseller ran<lb/>
contrary to what most people<lb/>
would expect. Instead o' settling<lb/>
into the comfortable life of a suc-<lb/>
cessful and respected writer and<lb/>
social figure. Hale) began his<lb/>
massive research for Roots The<lb/>
story of his trials during tins<lb/>
twelve-year excavation into fami-<lb/>
ly and cultural history would<lb/>
comprise a book in itself (or at<lb/>
least a lecture or two ? "The<lb/>
Background of Roots"?).<lb/>
rhe hardship Haley brought<lb/>
on himself during his researches<lb/>
(which would have seemed<lb/>
unreasonable to most people and<lb/>
included a trans-Atlantic voyage<lb/>
' the hold ol a ship), paid off.<lb/>
With the publication of Roots,<lb/>
Alex Haley's good fortune soared<lb/>
unimagined, global propor-<lb/>
tions. Between the ABC televi-<lb/>
sion s-ncs based on the work and<lb/>
es in the multi-millions of<lb/>
dollars for its paperback ver-<lb/>
sion. Rooix became one of the<lb/>
most popular stones ever to hit<lb/>
the media.<lb/>
roday, ten years alter Roots'<lb/>
initial publication, Halev has<lb/>
relaxed into a role more like what<lb/>
people expect trom an extremely<lb/>
successful writer. He is touring<lb/>
college campuses, holding rap<lb/>
sessions with students, and<lb/>
generally playing the teacher, an<lb/>
act thai will surely benefit all of<lb/>
those seriously interested parties<lb/>
who would like to dig for their<lb/>
ow n roots.<lb/>
In his lecture tonight, Alex<lb/>
Halev will reveal some of the<lb/>
background behind his now-<lb/>
egendary project. Admission is<lb/>
free, so come hear this Pulite;<lb/>
Pne winner's story from his own<lb/>
ips.<lb/>
44 Chicken Action With Recoil<lb/>
9 ?<lb/>
Art. ? ' n?Druar -4 at 7-30 p.m. in the lecture hall at the School of<lb/>
Restaurant In Review<lb/>
Fast Food Alternative<lb/>
By DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
Crackling Comedy<lb/>
ny Wednesday, by Muriel<lb/>
Resnik, has been on Broadv<lb/>
over two and one-half years.<lb/>
"Good fun. A crackling g<lb/>
champagne of a comedy<lb/>
Ellen Gordon is a girl who just<lb/>
can't say no very oftei<lb/>
especially to l'ycoon John<lb/>
Cleaves, lor Internal Revenue<lb/>
purposes, she is a tax dodge His<lb/>
corporate returns list no e<lb/>
ecutive sweetie, only the ex<lb/>
ecutive suite she occupies reni<lb/>
tree. Casanova John, however is<lb/>
irrai ge to meei<lb/>
week any<lb/>
v ednesd<lb/>
a a ?zy lit) le love nest until<lb/>
? - retari; dent" sends a<lb/>
young, eligible out-of-town<lb/>
businessman to the apartment.<lb/>
followed soon by the Tycoon's<lb/>
wife d the fun really begins.<lb/>
It's a captivating and light<lb/>
hearted comedy that for 982 per-<lb/>
formances kept Broadway au-<lb/>
diences steadfastly entertained,<lb/>
the funniest, wittiest<lb/>
comedies of the decade said<lb/>
critic Emory Lewis of Cue<lb/>
Magazine.<lb/>
The ECU Student Productions<lb/>
Committee will present Any<lb/>
H ednesday, by the Alpha-Omega<lb/>
Players, this Friday and Saturday<lb/>
at 6:30 p.m. at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Tickets are still on<lb/>
sale at the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at Mendenhall, S9 for ECU<lb/>
students and guest, $14 all others.<lb/>
No tickets will be sold at the<lb/>
d<lb/>
si.ft Wrilrr<lb/>
Are you tired of IV dinners<lb/>
and hamburgers? Submarines<lb/>
and Pizza?<lb/>
Well, you're in luck. Now<lb/>
there's a Greenville restaurant<lb/>
with good, sit-down food that<lb/>
even students can afford.<lb/>
Caitlyn's, located in the<lb/>
southwest corner of The Plaza<lb/>
shopping center, has been open<lb/>
since November of last year, but<lb/>
many people don't know about it<lb/>
yet.<lb/>
Caitlyn's is a cafeteria, but<lb/>
don't stop reading. The food is<lb/>
tastier and more varied than that<lb/>
of most cafeterias you would run<lb/>
across.<lb/>
The fare at Caitlyn's ranges<lb/>
TON M'MFI.E - Ml Nnrt<lb/>
Opera Theatre<lb/>
A bnde, portrayed by Renee Sullivan of Wilson (center) and her hw ?f hrirf.? ia  .<lb/>
all the fixings A daily special is<lb/>
run Monday through Saturday<lb/>
tor $3.54, which includes an en-<lb/>
tree, two vegetables, bread and<lb/>
butter and a beverage.<lb/>
Among the entrees available<lb/>
are roast beef, chicken (baked.<lb/>
fried, teriyaki), turkey and dress<lb/>
ing, flounder, trout (fried, or<lb/>
broiled upon request), and<lb/>
various Chinese dishes All dishes<lb/>
offered at Caitlyn's can also be<lb/>
ordered take-out style.<lb/>
A large variety ol vegetables<lb/>
are offered daily including broc-<lb/>
coli (with or without cheese<lb/>
sauce), corn, green beans,<lb/>
potatoes (mashed, boiled,<lb/>
scalloped or baked), peas and<lb/>
mixed vegetables. A vegetable<lb/>
plate is available which includes<lb/>
four vegetables, bread and butter<lb/>
and a beverage for S2.99<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday<lb/>
nights, a prime rib special is serv-<lb/>
ed for $4.99. Many other Green-<lb/>
ville restaurants offer similar fare<lb/>
for $10-512.<lb/>
Obviously, one of the things<lb/>
that make Caitlyn's appealing,<lb/>
especially to college students, is<lb/>
the price. The cost of an average<lb/>
dinner at Burger King is com-<lb/>
parable in price to a meal from<lb/>
Caitlyn's. But the food from<lb/>
Caitlyn's just doesn't taste as if it<lb/>
came from a cafeteria.<lb/>
According to Gary Gallo, who<lb/>
along with his brother James<lb/>
owns the restaurant, that is<lb/>
precisely their aim.<lb/>
"We try to run a restaurant<lb/>
that's a cut above the average<lb/>
cafeteria Gallo said. "A lot of<lb/>
cafeteria food is pretty bland. We<lb/>
spice up our food a little more,<lb/>
and try to offer more variety<lb/>
Another factor that makes the<lb/>
food here have a more home-<lb/>
cooked taste is the Gallo<lb/>
brothers' attitude toward buying<lb/>
processed foods.<lb/>
"We don't buy a lot of pro-<lb/>
cessed items Gallo added. "We<lb/>
try to go for as home-like a pro-<lb/>
duct as possible. We make all our<lb/>
own breads, pastries and pud-<lb/>
dings ? excepting cakes. Those<lb/>
 ? iap ???.<lb/>
we can buy better than we can<lb/>
make<lb/>
The atmosphere in Caitlyn's<lb/>
distinguishes it from the generic<lb/>
look of many restaurants of its<lb/>
type. The interior is open and<lb/>
airy. Hanging and potted plants<lb/>
decorate the walls and hang from<lb/>
the ceiling, lending color to the<lb/>
subtle shades used in the decor.<lb/>
The tables are spaced widely<lb/>
enough to give customers some<lb/>
elbow room.<lb/>
The only drawback is the lack<lb/>
of intimacy in the main dining<lb/>
area, which results from too little<lb/>
screening between tables.<lb/>
However, Gallo plans to add<lb/>
more large plants and dividers to<lb/>
achieve a greater degree of<lb/>
privacy.<lb/>
One of the most attractive<lb/>
features of the restaurant's<lb/>
layout is its split level area on the<lb/>
west side. About 20 of the 50 or<lb/>
so tables are in this area, which<lb/>
also includes three large picture<lb/>
windows which face the sunset.<lb/>
Prior to coming to Greenville,<lb/>
the Gallos worked in the<lb/>
restaurant business in Charlotte<lb/>
The section of the The Plaza<lb/>
which houses Caitlyn's was once<lb/>
Valentine's Cafeteria, which was<lb/>
in business there for about five<lb/>
years. The Gallo brothers<lb/>
renovated both the dining and<lb/>
kitchen areas extensively<lb/>
According to Gallo, there were<lb/>
two reasons for the name<lb/>
Caitlyn's First, some per-<lb/>
sonal research determined that<lb/>
people tended to remember<lb/>
names with hard "C" sounds in<lb/>
them. Second, they liked the<lb/>
name Caitlyn, which belonged to<lb/>
 imle girl they knew ?<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Gallo stressed that he and his<lb/>
brother stood behind the quality<lb/>
of their product. " <lb/>
"Anything we serve that peo-<lb/>
ple aren't satisfied with weSl<lb/>
replace with another dish or re-<lb/>
fund their money. We feel that<lb/>
customers are doing us a favor by<lb/>
coming inhere, not the other way<lb/>
around, so we want them to le<lb/>
feeling they had a good meal ?<lb/>
w1<lb/>
?'$<lb/>
?<lb/>
-y<lb/>
fi I<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
ech Phobia<lb/>
Try<lb/>
?<lb/>
space V I<lb/>
a<lb/>
Slow<lb/>
p you<lb/>
ii ur speal<lb/>
i ap<lb/>
.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
One show nigl<lb/>
Doors open at<lb/>
Amateur Hot<lb/>
Following the Cor<lb/>
For Show<lb/>
Information<lb/>
Call 758-3943<lb/>
Rt 264 Bypass N?<lb/>
A orivatc dab<lb/>
$1.00 OffW<lb/>
Wednesday, Fi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0007"/><lb/>
OM COUNTY<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
I Ml hM KdllMAN<lb/>
1 1 UKl KV 18, IV8f<lb/>
rnative<lb/>
-<lb/>
ii<lb/>
was<lb/>
-<lb/>
na<lb/>
I<lb/>
remember<lb/>
tnds in<lb/>
liked the<lb/>
? belonged<lb/>
knew m<lb/>
ed That he and his<lb/>
? hind the quality<lb/>
pi<lb/>
? thing we -erve that peo-<lb/>
ttisfied with we will<lb/>
with another dish or re-<lb/>
thcir money. We feel that<lb/>
mei s are doing us a favor by<lb/>
6 n here, not the other way<lb/>
-e want them to leave<lb/>
feeling they had a good meal<lb/>
f til<lb/>
' vV - v<lb/>
vj<lb/>
<lb/>
fa<lb/>
F?-<lb/>
11 m? rtrw<lb/>
SCHNflU fcKS iVI<lb/>
WUUi ,1 WORKON<lb/>
OH GOP.<lb/>
rw HIT<lb/>
w, i Hn<lb/>
f?PK '<lb/>
xi<lb/>
?3:<lb/>
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Chilling Armegeddon Novel<lb/>
"SK<lb/>
? (<lb/>
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Jj?<lb/>
1 J56 vt wAW6"<lb/>
???? ?' "? tffT7<lb/>
HOOP WAN ??, ?<lb/>
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rwt  ? thwii-<lb/>
vIWTlV VOU.<lb/>
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BAMi<lb/>
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(<lb/>
if<lb/>
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 V<lb/>
 HOW UAM AM<lb/>
UX ' TH? rVWfJt1 6tfA?5<lb/>
a w 7-i man iht<lb/>
tnma? (vjt rut ppct<lb/>
anu v?c <lb/>
c-r<lb/>
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1VUCK AXIS FffOrVI Hto<lb/>
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VWbHfeK 017 MTH CW?<lb/>
9C0W1Q Iht LOW?R<lb/>
SPlNi"<lb/>
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cr<lb/>
FOtC<lb/>
GrVC? AW N<lb/>
Mi5b?5 THE<lb/>
WHOU THING.<lb/>
UPI ? Of all the end ot the<lb/>
world as we know it books that<lb/>
have been written since H.G.<lb/>
Wells' War of the Worlds,<lb/>
Margaret Atwood s The Hand-<lb/>
maid's Tale is among the most<lb/>
improbable.<lb/>
But it is also one of the most<lb/>
chillingly fascinating, with its vi-<lb/>
sions of Biblically subservient<lb/>
women and a society drawn from<lb/>
a feminist's nightmare.<lb/>
The book's style is like a<lb/>
dream, skipping from past to pre<lb/>
sent to future in the mind's eve<lb/>
view of a woman known onlv hv<lb/>
the name of the man she serves<lb/>
Off red.<lb/>
Offred is one of the chosen<lb/>
women, the handmaiden of the<lb/>
Lord, whose role in this new<lb/>
society is to bear children foi the<lb/>
barren wives oi' the upper class.<lb/>
Offred speaks with a kind oi<lb/>
fatalistic desperation, recalling<lb/>
her life with her husband and<lb/>
daughter betore women were<lb/>
reduced to their roles as silent,<lb/>
subseiv lent shadows.<lb/>
"I have them, these attack<lb/>
the past, like taintness, a wave<lb/>
sweeping over mv head<lb/>
Sometimes it can hardly be<lb/>
borne<lb/>
Offred's story jumps back and<lb/>
forth like any reminiscence, but<lb/>
Atwood's crystalline wrii<lb/>
prevents confusion, and the story<lb/>
becomes instead like a web in<lb/>
which the rcadet becomes en-<lb/>
tangled ii is almost like<lb/>
reading a diary<lb/>
It is like readme' a diary, the<lb/>
diary oi a victim ot a brui<lb/>
ralistic nation ol zealots -<lb/>
use the name ol (?d to bl<lb/>
power to themselves.<lb/>
I he knots and twists in the<lb/>
tory finally resolve themsel<lb/>
? to a degree ? and the r<lb/>
closes abruptly, but not jarringly,<lb/>
with an inventive epilogue<lb/>
 emiinst, fundamentalist,<lb/>
anyone who loves to be consum<lb/>
? will enjoy <lb/>
Handmaid's Tale<lb/>
Va .?.I has outdone herse<lb/>
a ? a parable ol an immoral<lb/>
n hiding its sins behind a sh<lb/>
?  r it calls morality.<lb/>
ll()RTH)S I P<lb/>
l() 12th M I IK<lb/>
Or tRl (, 1 C <lb/>
Siv Abortion froi - ?<lb/>
additional cost Pregnancy rest, <lb/>
and Pro 1 . inscling. Foi<lb/>
I urthcr ? Free<lb/>
? 1 goo 532 ? ?84) - etwo ?<lb/>
P m weekda) s Gei "le<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
eech Phobia?<lb/>
Try Speakeasy, Inc.<lb/>
ask dps<lb/>
Jen:<lb/>
1 ? 1 Sfh a m as 1. Irn .<lb/>
?<lb/>
. , ? rmula <lb/>
be a iiood<lb/>
s means being<lb/>
11 sell a- othei -<lb/>
.1 p<lb/>
bjective<lb/>
c as ii ei s !?ee<lb/>
?s ?'?<lb/>
al ig style<lb/>
u Build<lb/>
vv I al vou<lb/>
is: "1<lb/>
: ? dent<lb/>
"The best<lb/>
. e ac r oss is<lb/>
stance - !cet<lb/>
?veighi even<lb/>
? elaxed<lb/>
gestures and<lb/>
? uural by just letting<lb/>
1 ;ier than<lb/>
. them, rhe im-<lb/>
member is that<lb/>
lei and torso<lb/>
think more<lb/>
? g youi whole body<lb/>
oui speaking than<lb/>
appropriate<lb/>
and pause. One o<lb/>
the best things you can do tor<lb/>
yourself ? and your audience ?<lb/>
during a presentation is to stop<lb/>
talking. It's a good way to collect<lb/>
your thoughts, decide what to sav<lb/>
next and let your audience digest<lb/>
your previous comments, h also<lb/>
allows you time to inhale to give<lb/>
your voice the breath support it<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
Open your mouth and really<lb/>
articulate. If your mouth isn't in-<lb/>
volved in what you're saying, it<lb/>
won't matter how much the rest<lb/>
of vou is involved.<lb/>
Reallv see your audience. Real<lb/>
eve contact doesn't mean scann-<lb/>
ing the audience. It means look<lb/>
ing at and seeing each individual<lb/>
a if he or she were the onlv per<lb/>
son in the room.<lb/>
Lstablish a clear objective.<lb/>
Even the most effective speaking<lb/>
style won't work for you if you<lb/>
don't know what you want to get<lb/>
across to your audience<lb/>
Don't take yourself too<lb/>
seriously. Executives who have<lb/>
earned reputations for "doing<lb/>
things right" often strive for<lb/>
perfection when they speak. But<lb/>
perfection is an unrealistic goal<lb/>
for anyone.<lb/>
Don't take speaking for<lb/>
granted just because you do it<lb/>
every day. Be as concerned how<lb/>
vou speak in everyday personal<lb/>
encounters as vou are with a<lb/>
scheduled presentation. Whether<lb/>
you're talking to one person or a<lb/>
thousand, the challenge is<lb/>
same: to make a meaningful con-<lb/>
nection with your audience, to<lb/>
make something happen.<lb/>
Co Krogering and celebrate<lb/>
D<lb/>
Festa Italiana!<lb/>
.<lb/>
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OPEN 2a HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
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2s i 49 i-<lb/>
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Wednesday, February 19<lb/>
?- i ?<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0008"/><lb/>
I HI l-ASlAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
1 I HKIARY 18, I ?<lb/>
IH HI MHIKI I h. t i ? xJim.ti<lb/>
Seahawks Top Bucs<lb/>
In CAA Battle<lb/>
B X Ol I COOPKR<lb/>
Brian Rowsom's 19-second<lb/>
? spui red a tough UNC-<lb/>
v nington team past the Pirates<lb/>
t night in Minges Col-<lb/>
Seahawk victory pulled<lb/>
I i o within one game of<lb/>
I ates in the CAA. UNC-W<lb/>
to .1 5-7 mark w hile the<lb/>
1 to a 6-6 conference<lb/>
g.<lb/>
i all scorers with 25<lb/>
Bobby Jo Springer had N<lb/>
Cherry was the onl<lb/>
aw k scorei in double<lb/>
? also grab<lb/>
even rebounds.<lb/>
V ??. all thai was at stake tor<lb/>
iad ' was no wonder<lb/>
ild be a phy sical game.<lb/>
. both, teams compiled a<lb/>
43 fouls while tour<lb/>
disqualified with<lb/>
al fouls apiece.<lb/>
coach Charlie Harrison<lb/>
pointed with the loss,<lb/>
ed by the effort of his<lb/>
i game up on<lb/>
n Harrison said.<lb/>
- tunate thai we didn't<lb/>
game. We played ex-<lb/>
md we played<lb/>
kids Cer-<lb/>
awa<lb/>
 Hat<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
'? i<lb/>
I U<lb/>
. i-2 a tfiei<lb/>
r<lb/>
' 5 tO<lb/>
$4 B<lb/>
isl<lb/>
first<lb/>
? <lb/>
tme was tied<lb/>
assions.<lb/>
? c herry  umper tied<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
lues. Feb. IX. 17<lb/>
tba pitcher Eddie Feigner<lb/>
e las, Willie<lb/>
?. Brooks Robinson,<lb/>
Clemente, Maury Wills<lb/>
n Killebrew in succes-<lb/>
ing a celebrity exhibition<lb/>
Feigner and his team.<lb/>
worldwide as King and<lb/>
irt, are so invincible that<lb/>
pitcher has only three<lb/>
' ie lei - behind him.<lb/>
the game 18-18 with 7:51 left in<lb/>
the first period. Henry then toss<lb/>
ed in consecutive buckets to put<lb/>
ECU up 22-18.<lb/>
The Pirates did not connect on<lb/>
another field goal throughout the<lb/>
first half. However. Sledge, Jack<lb/>
Turnbill and Vanderhorsl sank a<lb/>
pair of free throws each, giving<lb/>
the Bucs a 28-27 halftime lead.<lb/>
After a Cherry five footer put<lb/>
the Seahawks up 29-28 just<lb/>
seconds into the second half,<lb/>
I NC W never trailed. The<lb/>
Pirates remained close<lb/>
throughout the second half as<lb/>
thev closed to within one point on<lb/>
six separate occassions.<lb/>
The Pirates had a chance to tie<lb/>
when Bass scored inside and drew<lb/>
a foul. He came up short on the<lb/>
free-throw attempt as UNC-W<lb/>
led 40-39 with 1 1:23 still to play.<lb/>
 Sledge slam cut the Seahawk<lb/>
margin to one (46-45) with 8:40<lb/>
left to play. I N( -W managed to<lb/>
hold on as this proved to be the<lb/>
closest that ECU would get.<lb/>
The Seahawks then wen; on to<lb/>
outscore the Pirates 18-8 over the<lb/>
next six minutes of plav, in-<lb/>
cluding eight points from center<lb/>
Rowsom.<lb/>
UNC-Wilmi ngi on , w ho<lb/>
desperately needed a win to stay<lb/>
in the CAA race for fourth place,<lb/>
opened a 64-53 lead on a Cherry<lb/>
lav up and two-shot (deliberate)<lb/>
foul wnh 2:2 emaining.<lb/>
The Pirates could gel no closer<lb/>
seven (64 57) as I N <lb/>
sank 1 1 of their last 13 free-throw<lb/>
mpts, dropping the Bucs<lb/>
loss foi the Bucs marks<lb/>
rd in 11 out<lb/>
liseum<lb/>
1L ssed in sever: ol 1 I<lb/>
field for 17 points and five<lb/>
rebounds in the losing eff i<lb/>
Vanderhorsl added 15 and five<lb/>
rebounds along with tour assets<lb/>
Hardy connected on five of eight<lb/>
shots for 10 points and a game-<lb/>
high six assists.<lb/>
"1 have to give Wilmington<lb/>
credit Harrison said.<lb/>
"Rowsom got them going, and<lb/>
little by little took the game<lb/>
away<lb/>
The Pirates will conclude their<lb/>
home schedule against non-<lb/>
conference foe C eniral Connec-<lb/>
ticut. This game will mark the<lb/>
final home appearances for<lb/>
Vanderhorsl and Hardy. The<lb/>
Pirates will conclude their regular<lb/>
season on the road against<lb/>
George Mason on Feb. 22 and<lb/>
James Madison on Feb. 24.<lb/>
Ladies Crush 'Hawks<lb/>
Conclude In Minges<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
SporU Wrtltr<lb/>
The Lady Pirates finished their<lb/>
road schedule for this season with<lb/>
an impressive 6716 victory over<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington Saturday The<lb/>
two remaining games for ECL<lb/>
will be in the home confines of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
With the win, the Bucs moved<lb/>
to 19-6 overall, and 9-1 in the<lb/>
CAA. They remain one ga<lb/>
behind James Madison, wl<lb/>
they will face ir. their last gam<lb/>
the season on Feb. 24.<lb/>
The Pirates got of! to a<lb/>
start Saturday, trailing bv<lb/>
many as seven points dSi 12)<lb/>
14 minutes left in the I<lb/>
I isa Squirewell's two I<lb/>
put LC I on top 22 2 a<lb/>
never trailed again 1<lb/>
then rolled to a 31-21 lead I<lb/>
settling for a halftime lead I<lb/>
32-30.<lb/>
In the second half, the P<lb/>
defense totally dominated p<lb/>
as thev outscored the Hawks<lb/>
35 16<lb/>
Head coach Emily Manwa<lb/>
said that detense really he <lb/>
Pirates. " Thev only<lb/>
baskets in the se md<lb/>
stated lanwai<lb/>
Another ke to tl<lb/>
cording to Manwaring, a<lb/>
Keith Sledge's dunk brought the Pirates to within one 46-45 with 8:40 foul situation. "W<lb/>
left in ihe gamt I N(Wilmington picked up thi-CAA victory 75-67. to their 20<lb/>
'SLEDGE' HAMMER!<lb/>
"We got 1" points at the free-<lb/>
throw line<lb/>
The Pirates held the Hawks,<lb/>
re in the t?p ten in field-<lb/>
goal percentage in the nation, to<lb/>
a 41 percent average from the<lb/>
r, including a 31-perceni<lb/>
in the second half. The<lb/>
44 percent from the<lb/>
field for the game.<lb/>
E( i ah ndd the advantage in<lb/>
? department with oo-?<lb/>
 i( -Wilmington turned it<lb/>
: 31 times.<lb/>
I ah Manwaring said that the<lb/>
ered the Pirates early,<lb/>
?. were able to take them<lb/>
is they built up<lb/>
in I he Pirates<lb/>
. ar-<lb/>
-<lb/>
they way as Lisa<lb/>
wed bv<lb/>
 Bethea with 14, Sylvia<lb/>
. in 13, and 1 ora<lb/>
irier, (.red O'Neill.<lb/>
im Williams<lb/>
i<lb/>
M Pompili l unded<lb/>
point.<lb/>
<lb/>
ght.<lb/>
?'<lb/>
M<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
Swim Teams Capture First, Second<lb/>
B DWID McGINNESS<lb/>
11 ? 11<lb/>
captured<lb/>
pionship at -<lb/>
.on fere: "A<lb/>
f<lb/>
( h<lb/>
Bruce Brockschmidt<lb/>
Ihe Pirate women nearly<lb/>
equalled the feal ol their male<lb/>
counterparts, coming from<lb/>
ake second place<lb/>
erfully deep James<lb/>
im.<lb/>
 they were all season, the<lb/>
Bui men were lead bv sophomore<lb/>
Bruce B ? I midr. w ho netted<lb/>
:e individual wins, including<lb/>
two ECU v arsity records.<lb/>
"Bn the most outst<lb/>
he meet head<lb/>
swim coach Rik Kobe said. He<lb/>
cut three seconds ofl his 4m if<lb/>
lividual medley) time, and<lb/>
broke a varsity record in the 200<lb/>
backstnike<lb/>
Othei outstanding individual<lb/>
formers included Al Smith.<lb/>
who took home a win in the 100<lb/>
breastroke, Keith Kaut. who nail-<lb/>
ed second in the 50 and 100<lb/>
freestyle, and Kevin Hidalgo,<lb/>
i captured second in the 200<lb/>
butterfly.<lb/>
In relay action, the team of<lb/>
Brockschmidt, Hidalgo. Kaut<lb/>
and David Killeen won the 400-<lb/>
.i 800 freestyle relays.<lb/>
Brockschmidt, Hidalgo, Kaut<lb/>
and Ronald Fleming came home<lb/>
with a win in the 400-medley<lb/>
relay as we<lb/>
As a teat<lb/>
mance was<lb/>
the 14 comp<lb/>
in their events K<lb/>
and<lb/>
mam<lb/>
" We' re<lb/>
Kobe "We ??<lb/>
"They trained harder<lb/>
this season than any<lb/>
other team I've<lb/>
trained.<lb/>
?Scott Hernon<lb/>
petition to lock dowi<lb/>
conference chain;<lb/>
we are happy as we can be<lb/>
Although the men tool<lb/>
the conference championship,<lb/>
performance ol the women was<lb/>
perhaps even more impress<lb/>
The 1 adv Pirates came<lb/>
from a disappointing<lb/>
place after the first day ol c<lb/>
I c ach<lb/>
team,<lb/>
?<lb/>
- Bucs<lb/>
performed<lb/>
in (the<lb/>
n's)<lb/>
Hernon "They<lb/>
m than<lb/>
ained. They<lb/>
.ally<lb/>
e<lb/>
he I ady<lb/>
Wilm-<lb/>
? Caycee Po<lb/>
Went ink.<lb/>
the 100 and<lb/>
ke, A'hile teammate<lb/>
? in the 100<lb/>
 placing highly in the com-<lb/>
ia Miller with a<lb/>
sh in the 1650<lb/>
t and Lori Liv-<lb/>
second in the 200<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wei - isistently per-<lb/>
see WOMEN, page 10<lb/>
WZMB's McVey, Har ward Successful Duo<lb/>
Bv JANE! SIMPSON<lb/>
to a brilliant idea by-<lb/>
ports director. Mike<lb/>
i nant<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
McVey, the ECU campus radio<lb/>
on is not only filling the air<lb/>
vith music, but also with<lb/>
?<lb/>
ad been going to the men's<lb/>
ketl - tmes and I went to<lb/>
. ladies (plav) one night and<lb/>
ced that the P.rate Sports<lb/>
Network didn't cover the 1 adv<lb/>
Pii . ames Mc ey said.<lb/>
"So I called up (ECU) Sports In-<lb/>
formation and found out that<lb/>
they (the Pirate Sports Network)<lb/>
didn't carry the women's games,<lb/>
md would give us the right to<lb/>
broadcast the sanies<lb/>
This is how it all came about,<lb/>
where WZMB's broadcasts of<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball all began.<lb/>
McVey handles the play-by-<lb/>
play duties while WZMB's Spike<lb/>
Har ward does the color commen-<lb/>
tating.<lb/>
It didn't take long for McVey's<lb/>
idea to become reality. "I took it<lb/>
11 our general manager (Kate Ab-<lb/>
bott) and got the idea approved<lb/>
said McVey. "Then 1 called up<lb/>
coach Manwaring and explained<lb/>
the situation to her. We got<lb/>
everything finalized and went<lb/>
with it<lb/>
Coach Manwaring was quite<lb/>
happy and appreciative of<lb/>
WZMB's coverage of her Lady<lb/>
Pirates. "I was happy that<lb/>
students at our campus radio sta-<lb/>
tion think that our Lady Pirate<lb/>
basketball program is worthy of<lb/>
their attention and their efforts<lb/>
stated Manwaring. "We really<lb/>
appreciate them helping to pro-<lb/>
mote our outstanding athletic<lb/>
achievements.<lb/>
"As players, female athletes<lb/>
haven't had the opportunity lor a<lb/>
lot of media exposure Manwar-<lb/>
ing said. "They probably ap-<lb/>
preciate it more than a male<lb/>
athlete does. I think they work<lb/>
harder when they know there's<lb/>
more to basketball than just<lb/>
walking out on the court to prac-<lb/>
tice and to play.<lb/>
"A lot ol other people are in-<lb/>
terested in what they're doing<lb/>
and that helps them become bet-<lb/>
ter players added Manwaring.<lb/>
McVey and Harward don't just<lb/>
show up at Minges Coliseum ten<lb/>
minutes before a game and put<lb/>
on a headset. Preparation for a<lb/>
game takes up quite a bit of time.<lb/>
"I work on it hard for about<lb/>
two days stated McVey. "We<lb/>
have to get all the stat's from<lb/>
both teams. I have to go through<lb/>
them and make out a sheet of all<lb/>
the players and the percentages<lb/>
for the year, as well as some in-<lb/>
teresting facts to relay to the<lb/>
listeners. Usually, we try to get an<lb/>
interview with Coach Manwaring<lb/>
too<lb/>
"We put a lot of preperation<lb/>
into it added Harward. "Mike<lb/>
more so than me, because he<lb/>
organizes and gets all the statistic<lb/>
sheets and programs from the<lb/>
other schools. I'll spend a couple<lb/>
of hours looking over the players<lb/>
and getting some background in-<lb/>
formation, such as where they're<lb/>
from and their high-school<lb/>
background. I just try to get the<lb/>
feel of their name and all that<lb/>
Harward was quite excited<lb/>
with McVey's idea and the<lb/>
chance to work with a good<lb/>
friend. "As soon as Mike<lb/>
presented his idea to me, I was all<lb/>
for it said Harward. "I<lb/>
thought it was a great idea.<lb/>
"First of all, it gave me the<lb/>
chance to work with Mike. He's a<lb/>
friend ol mine and 1 respect him a<lb/>
lot for his sports knowledge<lb/>
Harward continued. "1 also<lb/>
thought it would be great to bring<lb/>
our listeners 1 ad Pirate basket-<lb/>
ball. "Not much publicity is put<lb/>
into the women's basketball team<lb/>
and they've had such good team's<lb/>
over the vears<lb/>
Harward i- also a big sports<lb/>
tan and feels that he has gained<lb/>
valuable experience ?"I've aiwavs<lb/>
been a big sports fan. This was a<lb/>
gieal chance for me. I've gotten<lb/>
some good experience he said.<lb/>
McVey has complete control of<lb/>
the broadcast and sets the outline<lb/>
for the broadcast. "I set up the<lb/>
entire pre-game show, half-time<lb/>
show, and post-game show<lb/>
w as going to happen the first time<lb/>
we went on the air, but it went so<lb/>
smoothly Harward added.<lb/>
"Mike was so professional and<lb/>
easy to work with<lb/>
McVey also thinks highly of<lb/>
Harward. "Spike and 1 do a real<lb/>
pood job together said .McVey.<lb/>
"The first couple of games we<lb/>
had a problem ot talking over<lb/>
e ich other, but we finally devised<lb/>
a swem that when he wants to<lb/>
speak, he'll give me a cue and I<lb/>
then know to be quiet.<lb/>
"He'll keep it short con-<lb/>
tinued McVey. "He's a real good<lb/>
color man. He's real<lb/>
knowledgable about basketball<lb/>
and he doesn't say stuff that<lb/>
doesn't make sense. He commen-<lb/>
tates on the game or what's hap-<lb/>
"Ifeel like I'm doing a service to the Lady Pirates<lb/>
and Vm glad because they are a good basketball<lb/>
team. They e one of the best athletic team's here<lb/>
at the university<lb/>
?Mike McVey<lb/>
McVey stated. "1 make the<lb/>
outline, get the interviews, and<lb/>
find all the stats. Then Spike and<lb/>
I will sit down before the game<lb/>
and go over it all.<lb/>
"Basically, 1 do what 1 want to<lb/>
within the show, within the limits<lb/>
of what the FCC will allow and<lb/>
what I know a play-by-play man<lb/>
should do<lb/>
According to Harward, McVey<lb/>
is a very good play-by-play man.<lb/>
"Mike is really easy to work<lb/>
with Harward explained.<lb/>
"He's very professional, both in<lb/>
his delivery and his background<lb/>
in getting the facts.<lb/>
"I was a little wary of what<lb/>
pening during the game.<lb/>
Coach Manwaring seems to<lb/>
think very highly of both Har-<lb/>
ward and McVey. "1 think Mike<lb/>
and Spike are very enthusiastic<lb/>
about what they're doing<lb/>
stated Manwaring. "They really<lb/>
care about doing a good job. 1<lb/>
think it helps us as a program and<lb/>
them as students at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Conveying a picture using only<lb/>
words is one of the hardest<lb/>
aspects of broadcasting, accor-<lb/>
ding to McVey.<lb/>
"The big thing about broad-<lb/>
casting a game is that it's radio<lb/>
and not television said McVey.<lb/>
"You have to convey that pic:<lb/>
to your audience. When they are<lb/>
listening, they have to be able to<lb/>
visually see what I say. and that<lb/>
the most difficult thing. "1 have<lb/>
to put a court in front of them<lb/>
and let them see the action<lb/>
Harward deals with broad<lb/>
casting the games in his own wav .<lb/>
"I pretend I'm talking to just<lb/>
person he said. "I'm trvmg to<lb/>
explain what's happening during<lb/>
the game, so they can get a men-<lb/>
tal image<lb/>
Harward also shows the tin1'<lb/>
and professionalism of a color<lb/>
commentator.<lb/>
"Basically, the only time I in-<lb/>
terject is maybe to say what the<lb/>
team should do to come back or<lb/>
what they should do to win<lb/>
commented Harward.<lb/>
"I point out mistakes or good<lb/>
plays and strategies ? things like<lb/>
what kind of defense thev're in,<lb/>
what kind of pressure they're go<lb/>
ing to put on, (and) keys to the<lb/>
game, like rebounding and such.<lb/>
McVey feels Manwaring is<lb/>
pleased with their broadcasts<lb/>
"Personally, I think she loves<lb/>
it stated McVey. "I told her<lb/>
about it and she was outwardly<lb/>
excited, but shocked. I think<lb/>
she's happy someone wanted to<lb/>
promote the women's basketball<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"I feel like I'm doing a service<lb/>
to the Lady Pirates and I'm glad<lb/>
because they are a good basket-<lb/>
ball team McVey acknowledg-<lb/>
ed. "They're one of the best<lb/>
athletic team's here at the univer-<lb/>
sity. You can go to a game and<lb/>
there may be 200 to 400 people<lb/>
there. I would like to see them get<lb/>
more support<lb/>
McVey knows that without a<lb/>
little help from your friends some<lb/>
be done Two of the<lb/>
or contributors to the broad-<lb/>
- are the Sports Information<lb/>
Ofl ice and engineer Mike<lb/>
Buscemi.<lb/>
"The Sports Information<lb/>
Dept. has been very helpful with<lb/>
our broadcasts said McVey.<lb/>
"Thev are the ones that get us the<lb/>
statistics, set up ur line, and<lb/>
ke sure we have everything we<lb/>
need. Rob Wilson and Bob Gen-<lb/>
narelli do a very good job helping<lb/>
Us<lb/>
"Our broadcasts wouldn't be<lb/>
possible without Mike Buscemi<lb/>
stated McVey. "He goes with us<lb/>
and runs the (control) board. We<lb/>
don't go bv a stop watch for our<lb/>
breaks when we have promos, he<lb/>
gives us our cues. He also takes<lb/>
care of all the technical aspects.<lb/>
"He really makes the game<lb/>
flow a lot easier for us. We don't<lb/>
have to worry about anything but<lb/>
watching the game and doing the<lb/>
action McVey added.<lb/>
Cietting along helps a great deal<lb/>
in anything, but especially in<lb/>
broadcasting a sporting event.<lb/>
I ike Dick Enberg and Al Mc-<lb/>
quire or Rick Barry and Bill<lb/>
Russell, a play-by-play man and<lb/>
the color commentator need to<lb/>
get along ? and McVey and Har-<lb/>
ward do just that.<lb/>
"Spike and ! have never<lb/>
disagreed about a play said<lb/>
McVey. "We even try to add a<lb/>
little comedy in, everv once in a<lb/>
while<lb/>
WZMB's next two broadcasts<lb/>
will be on Feb. 22 against George<lb/>
Mason and then on Feb. 24<lb/>
when the Lady Pirates will try to<lb/>
avenge their early season loss to<lb/>
the CAA's league-leading Lady<lb/>
Dukes ot James Madison.<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
 PERSONALS<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
qjW and ivDP<lb/>
Scoop<lb/>
ZBT A &amp;' '<lb/>
s.sters meet<lb/>
Thursday c'<lb/>
ZBT Than<lb/>
Ssters tor a<lb/>
I rfSSion puf<lb/>
yy T. Happy ?'<lb/>
illy par<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
FeD 18<lb/>
? emoer Be<lb/>
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RUSH<lb/>
PHI KAPPA<lb/>
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1<lb/>
? ' ? ? "<lb/>
PIKA5<lb/>
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,AA PHI E<lb/>
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DELTA ZETi<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
DELTA ZET?<lb/>
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APPA SIGS<lb/>
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SIG EPS <lb/>
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51R L S: fi<lb/>
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sage C<lb/>
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LOST<lb/>
-  ?<lb/>
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SasKea<lb/>
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HI KAPPA TA<lb/>
U S H<lb/>
- " -<lb/>
I AST CHANCE<lb/>
r sprin<lb/>
"s t ca.s ' ;<lb/>
? uaed Ca<lb/>
N OW ' C? ?<lb/>
lecide!<lb/>
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NEED A RIDE TO v ?OR<lb/>
SPRING BREAK?<lb/>
' ding a bus ?<lb/>
uded call 758<lb/>
One test v<lb/>
you kiicy<lb/>
it htM I<lb/>
Yes No<lb/>
DD<lb/>
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built up<lb/>
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players<lb/>
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u. Sylvia<lb/>
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i total.<lb/>
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Pirates<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mason.<lb/>
Second<lb/>
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lelping<lb/>
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iscemi<lb/>
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mos, he<lb/>
ikes<lb/>
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ike the game<lb/>
We don't<lb/>
?. ?. 'fwng but<lb/>
:ing the<lb/>
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especially in<lb/>
r'ing event.<lb/>
ind M Mc<lb/>
? B rj dnd Bill<lb/>
play man and<lb/>
entator need to<lb/>
! McVey and Har-<lb/>
fiat.<lb/>
"Spil ? j I have never<lb/>
eed about a play said<lb/>
'We even try to add a<lb/>
medy in, every once in a<lb/>
WZMB's next two broadcasts<lb/>
w iil be on Feb. 22 against George<lb/>
n and then on Feb. 24<lb/>
when the Lady Pirates will try to<lb/>
avenge their early season loss to<lb/>
the C Wv league-leading Lady<lb/>
; .un.es Madison,<lb/>
I HI 1 AMAKOI INI V-<lb/>
 I HKl Akl IK, 1986<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
BAHAMAS Are calling my name<lb/>
A and WDR Take me away.<lb/>
r<lb/>
IB! All Brothers, Pledges and Lil'<lb/>
iters meet at Menaenhall 221 on<lb/>
sday at 7<lb/>
;BT Thanx Don and all the Lil<lb/>
sters ?or a great V day party That<lb/>
punch really did its job.<lb/>
 1 Happy Birthday! Now you can<lb/>
? . parry LEGALLY, that is!<lb/>
? King of you on this special<lb/>
. Feb 18 will always be a day to<lb/>
bef Be home around 5 for a<lb/>
. surprise! Love Always.<lb/>
ATTENTION: SCUBA EN-<lb/>
THUSIASTS: The newly formed<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club is holding a<lb/>
meeting Feb. 24 from 79 p.m. in<lb/>
room 248 Mendenhall. Spring Break<lb/>
trip and memberships will be<lb/>
discussed. All those interested and<lb/>
non divers included are welcome.<lb/>
Join the club that's going<lb/>
somewhere The Coral Reef Dive<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
LOST: Navy purse on purple bus<lb/>
Thurs. afternoon (2-13-86) Reward<lb/>
$20. No questions asked! If found<lb/>
notify Amelia at 758 1023.<lb/>
LOST: Green Army napsack on<lb/>
ECU bus night of 2 11 86. If found<lb/>
please call 752 8108.<lb/>
LOST: Beige colored purse<lb/>
call Yusotf 758 6285<lb/>
Please<lb/>
SH S gma Tau Gamma Little<lb/>
Brother Rush Serving<lb/>
iv rite beverage 9 TONITE.<lb/>
?? e Sig Tau House<lb/>
HI KAPPA TAU LIL SISTER<lb/>
sH: Will be Weds<lb/>
' vie Phi Tau house at 9 Come<lb/>
d to party with the funnest<lb/>
ampus<lb/>
?VS. We had a wonderful time at<lb/>
fine s social One thirty ar<lb/>
j much too soon Hope we can<lb/>
hearts together agam<lb/>
. ove. The Aloha Xis<lb/>
? A PHI EPSILON: And Pan<lb/>
? ib's present the 1st Annual<lb/>
3awg Happy Hour That's<lb/>
folks the Maddawg himself,<lb/>
? nes Green lil will be at<lb/>
s on autographs and answer<lb/>
- about his early years. $2<lb/>
ers all night long. "He<lb/>
ln'1 sit He wouldn't beg, he<lb/>
? i : ad d<lb/>
EITA ZETA: Congratulations to<lb/>
?  s sters Beth Eury, Beth<lb/>
ldsm ?' Sharon Goodwin, Karen<lb/>
racey Grimaldi, An<lb/>
? ? Maggie Lawrence, Donna<lb/>
Sue Moritz, Sherry Roll<lb/>
?ort, Julie Smith, Terry<lb/>
" md Natalie Thigpen. and<lb/>
orrance We love you, your<lb/>
'a Zeta Sisters<lb/>
?ELTA ZETA: HAPPY HOUR at<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 19<lb/>
appa SIGS The Graffetti Social<lb/>
-  Id success We ail agree it<lb/>
e of our best Tequi la<lb/>
es, shots, and beer did us<lb/>
. ? R ? now we must keep our<lb/>
f sight Had a blast!<lb/>
. ? ? r i -<lb/>
G EPS N ?  Waste was the<lb/>
? ?? tor the night with<lb/>
? ?? rs and beer .?.? lid ' up<lb/>
 ? -  ? : n trieaark from head<lb/>
??? . - - ppec and<lb/>
i si ??? A'e I'ked 't fine but not<lb/>
'? " ? bel nds of Dana, James &amp;<lb/>
?? L .? fi Sigs.<lb/>
;RI.S Rus! p Kappa Tau Little<lb/>
sters. Wednesday. Feb. 19th.<lb/>
ome and party with the jamminest<lb/>
.s on campus Call 752 4379 for<lb/>
OST: Gold nugget necklace at<lb/>
ige Clinic Tuesday Feb 4<lb/>
? rmat on please call Susan at<lb/>
OST: Navy pocketbook with<lb/>
 a Aaliet, etc inside Not much<lb/>
ey mainly sentimental items<lb/>
? sc returen S25 reward. No ques<lb/>
iSked Just PLEASE PLEASE<lb/>
RN Call 752 2648 anytime!<lb/>
? ?? Rawl or Brewster on cam<lb/>
HI KAPPA TAU LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
JSH: Wed &amp; Thurs (invitation)<lb/>
' 9:00 until. Call 752 4379 for<lb/>
?'formation,<lb/>
AST CHANCE Cruise to Mexico<lb/>
? spring break! Great deal $445. 5<lb/>
jhts 6 days, tips and gratuities in<lb/>
Call 758 0074 or 752 3178<lb/>
Only a few weeVs left to<lb/>
.EED A RIDE TO MIAMI FOR<lb/>
('RING BREAK?: If interested in<lb/>
. a bus, keg and bar possible in<lb/>
call 758 0074 or 752 3178.<lb/>
LOST: Burgundy Saddlebred<lb/>
keychain in case in the area of<lb/>
Mendenhall parking lot, Joyner<lb/>
Library and the Art Bldg. Reward<lb/>
Call 753 3917<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI: We are please<lb/>
to announce our newly elected ex<lb/>
ecutive officers! President Donna<lb/>
San March, Vice President Wendi<lb/>
Terrell, Pledge Trainer Jennifer<lb/>
Brewer, Recording Secretary Cari<lb/>
Miller, Treasurer Beth Herrington,<lb/>
Rush Chairman Paige Luther,<lb/>
Social Chairman Kathy Kittrick,<lb/>
House Manager Blair Barnes, Cor<lb/>
responding Secretary Stephanie II<lb/>
ey; Reporter Historian Julie Wells,<lb/>
Execs At Large Carol Gilbert and<lb/>
Laura Ewmg, and Panhellenic<lb/>
Delegate Naomi McLaurin. Con<lb/>
gratulations! It looks to be another<lb/>
jammin' good year!<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
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Art Electronic equipment Call<lb/>
756 5265.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Thrift Shop 429<lb/>
Evans St Special of this week will<lb/>
be coats $2, womens jackets 50c<lb/>
ladies blouses 3 pcs for $1, men's<lb/>
shirts 3 pcs. for $1, skirts $1 or $2,<lb/>
jeans $1, ladies pants $1, beautiful<lb/>
suits $5 S10, ladies coats $5<lb/>
SENIORS! SENIORS! SENIORS<lb/>
Enjoy the last phase of your college<lb/>
career employmentS&amp;F Com<lb/>
puters is offering a package price to<lb/>
help you send out your resumes in<lb/>
eluding all of the following: Letter<lb/>
quality typed resumes, Mail merged<lb/>
cover letters (name and address of<lb/>
each company as inside mailing ad<lb/>
dress on letter), Letter quality typed<lb/>
envelopes with company address<lb/>
and your return address on<lb/>
envelope, Everything folded, stuffed<lb/>
and even stamped, A listing of com<lb/>
panies sent to (for your follow ups)<lb/>
Just bring us your handwritten<lb/>
resume and cover letter and the<lb/>
businesses you with to apply to and<lb/>
we'll do the rest Per resume for<lb/>
your namesaddr. (we stuff) $2 30<lb/>
(min 10 resumes) (we stuff and<lb/>
stamp) $1.90 (2 page resume prices<lb/>
slightly higher) This offer absolute<lb/>
ly expires March 15, 1986. S&amp;F Com<lb/>
puter Company, 115 East Fifth St<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834 757 0472<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Resumes<lb/>
term papers, theses Low rates<lb/>
Spelling and grammatical correc<lb/>
tions included. Cindy 757 0398 after<lb/>
5:30 p.m.<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc Call<lb/>
758 6011 and leave a message<lb/>
FOR SALE: Math Statistics 3228. All<lb/>
problems worked in current book<lb/>
and workbook Make an "A" Call<lb/>
Bob at 752 2579 or 758 1400<lb/>
FOR SALE: 81 Honda Prelude con<lb/>
version convertable White over<lb/>
dark blue, stereo and air 51 000<lb/>
miles, $4,300 negotiable or assume<lb/>
payments at $175 per month Call<lb/>
758 5111<lb/>
THE $500 A MONTH PLAN: Work at<lb/>
home, receive money daily. For<lb/>
complete set up rush $1 to Umversi<lb/>
ty Publications P O Box 2392,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27836 2392.<lb/>
WETSUIT: O'Neill "Otter full suit<lb/>
Medium, velcro neck, very good con<lb/>
dition. A steal at$40 Call Jim after 6<lb/>
at 758 6089<lb/>
LOOK GREAT AT NO COST: Har<lb/>
cut and style to compliment your<lb/>
facial shape and bone structure Ab<lb/>
solutely free for 1st haircut by a New<lb/>
York City trained hair stylist Pro<lb/>
fessional image Consultants<lb/>
756 1945<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 ft refridgerator $100<lb/>
negotiable. Call 758 8019<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Non<lb/>
smoker, $140 per month, 2 utilities,<lb/>
 phone 756 0433.<lb/>
GERMAN TUTOR: German native<lb/>
needs work tutoring can help with<lb/>
German classes. Call 752 0373<lb/>
BABYSITTING WORK WANTED:<lb/>
Day or night, experienced with<lb/>
children. Call 752 0373<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share<lb/>
two bedroom house with couple 808<lb/>
Mumford Rd Rent is $83<lb/>
utilities and cable Deposit $53 mus'<lb/>
like cats Available now 757 1160<lb/>
Meianie or Reagan.<lb/>
4th FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: For nice 2 bedroom<lb/>
duplex 1 mile from campus in quiet<lb/>
neighborhood Fireplace and<lb/>
sundeck $93 75 - ' 4 utilities Please<lb/>
call 75? 0319<lb/>
IP<lb/>
i pti<lb/>
University Optometric Eye Clinic<lb/>
DR. DENNIS O'NEAL<lb/>
Comprehensive Eye Examinations<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
Soft, Hard, Gas Permeable Tinted<lb/>
Extended Hear, Contacts for Astigmatism<lb/>
Glasses (One Day Service in Must Cases)<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty Discounts on Contacts &amp;<lb/>
Glasses<lb/>
Convenient to Campus<lb/>
Evening &amp; Sat Appointments Available<lb/>
612 E. 10th Street<lb/>
(Across from campus security)<lb/>
758-6600<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N C 33 LGreenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Phone 75? 3172<lb/>
(Past Riverh!uff AptS.)<lb/>
?j;lUi?<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp<lb/>
$3<lb/>
25<lb/>
$325<lb/>
Hours 4:30-9:30 Mon. Sat.<lb/>
- NEWLY REMODELED -<lb/>
 <lb/>
Create<lb/>
cleanness<lb/>
A litter bit<lb/>
at a time.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1986 MISS VENl S-USA I(,l ANT <lb/>
? Kill ROI IV I INAI S<lb/>
() PI RFORMINC IALEN1<lb/>
Here s your chance to represent North<lb/>
ua ir. the 1986 Miss Venus USA<lb/>
win prizes &amp; awards valued<lb/>
at S20 000 The state finals will be held May<lb/>
18 it the Raleigh Marriott Hotel If you are<lb/>
single at least 18 and UNDER 29 as of Oct<lb/>
1 1986 you may quality For FREE entry<lb/>
information, send name, address, age &amp;<lb/>
pnoru Pageant Productions 2258<lb/>
N B 1 St Suite 12 Alexandria.<lb/>
'03-379-1414<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
Low, Low<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
NvVL<lb/>
Interest Free<lb/>
Payment Plan<lb/>
Available<lb/>
'1<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
On All Rings<lb/>
Special<lb/>
$10.00 Deposit<lb/>
Special<lb/>
ECU Student Store<lb/>
Wed. Feb. 19 &amp; Thurs. Feb. 20<lb/>
TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
if<lb/>
HiRFF JONES<lb/>
Oi?'iior at Ct'Tlion Compsny<lb/>
One test where only<lb/>
you know the score.<lb/>
(Check One)<lb/>
Yes No<lb/>
an<lb/>
an<lb/>
an<lb/>
DD<lb/>
Do you want to be the<lb/>
only one who knows<lb/>
when you use an early<lb/>
pregnancy test?<lb/>
Would you prefer a test<lb/>
that's totally private to<lb/>
perform and totally<lb/>
private to read?<lb/>
Would you like a lest<lb/>
that's portable, so you<lb/>
can carry it with you and<lb/>
read it in private?<lb/>
And how about a simple,<lb/>
one step test with a dra<lb/>
made color change that's<lb/>
easy to read and is 98<lb/>
accurate?<lb/>
GO FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARMY<lb/>
WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT.<lb/>
If you checked "Yes" to<lb/>
the above, EPT PLUS is for<lb/>
you. Use it, and only you<lb/>
will know your test score.<lb/>
The hardest thing about break-<lb/>
ing into professional<lb/>
music is- well, break-<lb/>
ing mto professional<lb/>
music. So it you re<lb/>
looking for an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to turn your<lb/>
musical talent into<lb/>
a full-time perform-<lb/>
ing career, take a<lb/>
good kxk at the<lb/>
Army<lb/>
its not<lb/>
all parades<lb/>
and John Philip<lb/>
Sousa. Army<lb/>
bands rock,<lb/>
waltz and boogie<lb/>
as well as march,<lb/>
and they perform<lb/>
before concert au -<lb/>
diences as well<lb/>
as spectators.<lb/>
With an average<lb/>
of 40 performances a month, there s<lb/>
also the opportunity tor travel<lb/>
not only across America, but possibh<lb/>
abroad.<lb/>
Most important, you cm<lb/>
expect a first-rate pro-<lb/>
fessk nal environment<lb/>
from your instructors,<lb/>
facilities and fellow<lb/>
musicians. The Army<lb/>
has educational<lb/>
programs that<lb/>
can help you<lb/>
pay forotT-<lb/>
duty instruc-<lb/>
tion, and it<lb/>
vou qual-<lb/>
ify, even<lb/>
help you<lb/>
repay<lb/>
your<lb/>
federally-insured<lb/>
student bans.<lb/>
Itvoucansmht-<lb/>
read musu p rton ling in the Arm<lb/>
reak Write:<lb/>
Chief, Arm Bands Office, Fbn<lb/>
Benjamin Harrison. IN 46216-5005.<lb/>
On , I SOC USA-ARMY<lb/>
ARMY BAND.<lb/>
BE AU YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
 ? ?: ???<lb/>
NMMMMB<lb/>
????? ?<lb/>
?r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI S I i. KO! 1MN<lb/>
M-BRl'ARY 18, 1986<lb/>
Power Weight Lifting Meet<lb/>
1 he Depari mem ol<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
? old its annual powei weight<lb/>
it'tn eel Wed Feb. is at<lb/>
J (a in<lb/>
The IRS H ord<lb/>
by<lb/>
Jeannette Roth<lb/>
 eai 's meet vmII begin a!<lb/>
:h the ladies of ECU<lb/>
the competition.<lb/>
located on the<lb/>
S reel Mall in dow mown<lb/>
Spectators are en<lb/>
?me out and watch<lb/>
ei and women of<lb/>
?s n u eight<lb/>
?restling has<lb/>
mi-iinal stage with<lb/>
upsets I as!<lb/>
i men's 200 lb.<lb/>
. 'Big Don'<lb/>
- ci ?'i Mark<lb/>
paved the<lb/>
a fa I<lb/>
t '? be held<lb/>
al Gyn Kul<lb/>
- v dek and<lb/>
fa 'heir<lb/>
Feb 22, all final<lb/>
held dui ing the<lb/>
askei bal game<lb/>
. ai ed! 1 he In-<lb/>
Swin ? eel will begin<lb/>
th( Minges<lb/>
With close<lb/>
a ai ming up 1 i<lb/>
the N1<lb/>
March 19.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M &amp; W 2 pm-5 pm<lb/>
T &amp; Th 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
Friday 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am 5 pm<lb/>
Sun 1 pm-? pm<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CHECKOUT<lb/>
(Memorial Gym Rm 115)<lb/>
M-Fh 9 am-9 pm<lb/>
Friday 9 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 1 pm-5 pm<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
M &amp; F 1:30 pm-6 pm<lb/>
T &amp; Th 3 pm-5 pm<lb/>
TRAINING ROOM<lb/>
M Th 10 am-12 am<lb/>
M lh 2 pm-6 pm<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M 1 7 am 8 am<lb/>
Ml 12 noon 1:30 pm<lb/>
M &amp; W J:30 pm 7:30 pm<lb/>
T &amp; Th 3:30 pm 6:30 pm<lb/>
Friday J:30 pm 6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am 5 pm<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 8 pm 10 pm<lb/>
Sun 1 pm-5 pm<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M Th 9 am-9 pm<lb/>
Friday 9 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 1 pm-5 pm<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M 1 3 pm-7 pm<lb/>
This Style rome<lb/>
With Single Vision R<lb/>
Lenses for only<lb/>
$27<lb/>
95<lb/>
All Other Fromes<lb/>
30 to 60 OFF<lb/>
with purchase of RX Lenses<lb/>
RAY BAN Sunglasses 30 OFF<lb/>
fC?<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
OHer Good Through 2 14 86<lb/>
Open Mon -Pri 9am til 5 30 p m<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE<lb/>
SUN FEB 16 THRU<lb/>
SAT. FEB 22 AT<lb/>
A4PIN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
ITEMS NOT<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
TOOTHER<lb/>
RETAIL DEALERS<lb/>
OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE<lb/>
RIGHT TO LIMIT<lb/>
QUANTITIES<lb/>
P Kappa Phi are<lb/>
l'I eei<lb/>
I<lb/>
the supermarket with iitHtf?7ffl<lb/>
&amp; a,Mlaraunb<lb/>
See<lb/>
Stor(. For Of<lb/>
nan muei eai ed<lb/>
? Sneal ei Sam<lb/>
Hei e ai e the<lb/>
as!<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH ANY ADVERTISED GROCERY FEATURE PRICE IN GREENVILLE.<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current<lb/>
Week Food Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items or Equal Quality<lb/>
MhN<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
Fryer Leg Qtrs<lb/>
20 OFF POULTRY<lb/>
YOUNG N TENDER<lb/>
f Breasts<lb/>
JUICY SWEET RED OR THOMPSON WHITE<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
B"<lb/>
e e n<lb/>
10 LBS. OR<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE<lb/>
Family Pack<lb/>
-<lb/>
ir ?<lb/>
&amp;fi<lb/>
I<lb/>
-?v<lb/>
! amural , m$<lb/>
cheduled ft<lb/>
is beei - ancelled. l,<lb/>
practicing vour<lb/>
iff<lb/>
tan sw inging<lb/>
?? its The pre-<lb/>
urnament v.Ul<lb/>
Fi March 21. The<lb/>
deadline is K ed<lb/>
Women<lb/>
Conclude<lb/>
Season<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
? ;a ?. and is ac<lb/>
Hernon, the best<lb/>
 the 1985-86<lb/>
happy with her<lb/>
? ear and at the<lb/>
but thought she<lb/>
? een capable of a lit-<lb/>
? .??. consistent this<lb/>
a : the two event con-<lb/>
m pi n, "I till wanted<lb/>
 ? . the kind of at-<lb/>
ide a winning compctetive<lb/>
mer needs.<lb/>
Wentink dropped two full<lb/>
nds in the Finals of the 10C)<lb/>
tstroke to nail first in the<lb/>
<lb/>
Both Kobe and Hernon would<lb/>
thank the entire men's and<lb/>
men's teams for their dedica-<lb/>
tion and effort during the entire<lb/>
on.<lb/>
? couldn't have asked any<lb/>
re from my girls Hernon<lb/>
aid "They gave everything, and<lb/>
met all my goals for the season<lb/>
"I've never seen such team uni-<lb/>
and spirit Kobe said.<lb/>
"Everybody went crazy when we<lb/>
it; lumping into the pool and<lb/>
. their lungs out. Seventy-<lb/>
ol our kids are still<lb/>
too hoarse to talk today<lb/>
The coaches would like to ex-<lb/>
tend their special appreciation to<lb/>
the graduating seniors: Keith<lb/>
Kaut. Andy Cook, David<lb/>
Robacewski, Eric Hawkins and<lb/>
Nancy Cook.<lb/>
DIET COKE ? TAB ? SPRITE ? MELLO YELLO<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
2<lb/>
liter<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
99<lb/>
0<lb/>
DIXIE CRYSTALS<lb/>
Pure<lb/>
Cane<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
J5 88'<lb/>
0 ?<lb/>
Ttc '<lb/>
L<lb/>
5 lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
88<lb/>
0<lb/>
LIMIT ONE OF CHOICE WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY lOW PRICE<lb/>
SELECT MEDIUM<lb/>
Yellow Onions<lb/>
DUKE'S<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
SUNSHINE REGULAR ? UNSALTED<lb/>
p<lb/>
I<lb/>
30<lb/>
C 3<lb/>
3 1b.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
38<lb/>
C<lb/>
WHITE<lb/>
32 OZ.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Krispy Saltines I Round lop Bread<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
v<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIMIT FOUR WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT E VE RVDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
BUTTER-REGULAR<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
3 b 168<lb/>
can I<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
3 128<lb/>
c?n I<lb/>
-? LIMIT ONE OF CHOICE WITH AODtTlONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
PLAIN OR SELF RISING<lb/>
Red Band Flour<lb/>
5,b AQc<lb/>
bag T<lb/>
DOUBLE Q" ? IN OIL ? OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk Light Tuna<lb/>
6.5 oz.<lb/>
can<lb/>
LlMlT TWO WITH AOOlTlONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
CREAM OR WHOLE KERNEL CORN<lb/>
FRENCH KITCHEN STYLE OR REGULAR CUT GREEN BEANS<lb/>
Green<lb/>
nt Vegetables<lb/>
3<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
? 25?<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
1<lb/>
00<lb/>
COBLE<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE WITH EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
12 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd Greenville, N.C. OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
OPEN Mon. 7 A.M.<lb/>
CLOSE Sat. 11 RM. OPEN SUNDAYS 7'? m 11"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057802_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>