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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057803_0001"/>
?he Saat darnlintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
 0I.66 o!3 -o Thursday, February 20. 1986<lb/>
Greenville, ,N.C<lb/>
12 Panes<lb/>
Circulation 12.(MM)<lb/>
Famed AuthorUrges<lb/>
Preservation Of Roots<lb/>
nn <lb/>
7YVr Beach<lb/>
IIM I M II. <lb/>
I  U ?' Jini.n<lb/>
lyler Beach opened tor a new season this week. But do not gel loo comfortable<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is famous for changing every five minutes.<lb/>
the weather in<lb/>
DOUGLAS ROBKRSON<lb/>
SMtOf V?f( Wrllrf<lb/>
Alex Haley, author o Roots<lb/>
and the Autobiography oj<lb/>
Malcolm X, told a capacity<lb/>
crowd in Hendrix Theater Tues<lb/>
day night that people need to<lb/>
earn to live better with one<lb/>
another.<lb/>
Haley was the featured speaker<lb/>
at the fifth annual ECU Lecture-<lb/>
Seminar Series.<lb/>
His comments during the lec-<lb/>
ture dealt primarily with the<lb/>
background oi his best-seller,<lb/>
Roots, and the sigmfigance oi the<lb/>
family in the United States<lb/>
"We're sharing one planet -<lb/>
that's all we've got. Unless we<lb/>
learn how to share it better, we<lb/>
will always have an undue<lb/>
amount oi problems he said<lb/>
Throughout the lecture, Hale<lb/>
said his childhood in Henninu.<lb/>
ECU Degree, Proven With Success<lb/>
By BL1H WHICKKK<lb/>
ws the high quality ol<lb/>
E( I degree according to<lb/>
ngelu Volpe, Vice t hancellor<lb/>
foi cademic Affairs.<lb/>
"The presence of the Medical<lb/>
s. ' . ll I<lb/>
enhanced the o eral<lb/>
? .<lb/>
i v e ! i: the<lb/>
g moi<lb/>
 taiity ?? the I nivei sit and<lb/>
ade Greenville the new cei<lb/>
? ' ea " care I he interaction<lb/>
ECU's n ediv a hool<lb/>
have been<lb/>
the school said<lb/>
<lb/>
ver satisfied with the quality<lb/>
;<lb/>
a '<lb/>
a :<lb/>
1?<lb/>
favi ?<lb/>
m, Apr<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Ian<lb/>
<lb/>
:es.<lb/>
' With 17 percent ol students<lb/>
tiled being from out of state,<lb/>
quality oi oui programs is ob-<lb/>
Lanier, Vice vious. For example, the Schools<lb/>
Institutional Ad- 0f Art and Musi are well known<lb/>
on the Eastern Seaboard<lb/>
compare Students from all across<lb/>
: a) United Slates are enrolled in<lb/>
? ' rt and Music Programs Volpe<lb/>
l ; Limes .<lb/>
rding to Furnej "We've had an outstanding<lb/>
r ol Placemeni School oi Business thai<lb/>
graduated many ambitious<lb/>
'v' ??  he students who now have success<lb/>
n?ols   stories said .lames. "Ron<lb/>
Dowdy, an E( I graduate in the<lb/>
60's, now owns a line o gift<lb/>
shops and recently challenged all<lb/>
new and increased donations pv<lb/>
1I graduates up to $100,000.<lb/>
I he owners of Pantry stores,<lb/>
Eugene Home and Samuel Wor-<lb/>
now are 60's graduates o the<lb/>
I C I business school.<lb/>
"The School ol Education lias<lb/>
mam superintendents in the<lb/>
?tate. some of the top jobs in<lb/>
education are held by ECU<lb/>
graduates said James<lb/>
"The graduates are indicative<lb/>
o the quality o' the school. We<lb/>
are chosen by how well our<lb/>
students have done said Volpe.<lb/>
P u 1 i 1 e r P r i e Winner,<lb/>
1 awerence Atkinson IV is a jour-<lb/>
nalism major from EC! .<lb/>
Graduate, John Beard, news<lb/>
anchor for KNBC in California<lb/>
won an Emmy Award for hosting<lb/>
an hour long documentary for<lb/>
children on traffic, fire, and<lb/>
swimming safety.<lb/>
Graduate Bill Lindsey was<lb/>
named as a '85 Vw York limes<lb/>
man o the year as a bright young<lb/>
leader o' America. Lindsey was<lb/>
chosen by Esquire as one o the<lb/>
top young leaders under 40 vears<lb/>
old.<lb/>
"Employers say 1(1<lb/>
graduates feel they have<lb/>
something to prove and work<lb/>
harder. A number of graduates<lb/>
in the workplace challenge other<lb/>
institutions graduates said<lb/>
L anier.<lb/>
Companies like IBM, Bur-<lb/>
roughs. Top hospitals, and Zerox<lb/>
have interviewed upcoming<lb/>
graduates for 20 years at ECU as<lb/>
well as students graduating from<lb/>
Davidson, UNC, and Duke<lb/>
said James.<lb/>
"Most students regard their<lb/>
degree as an achievement not a<lb/>
guarantee o success. An ECU<lb/>
degree gives the student an op-<lb/>
portunity to pursue their goals<lb/>
said I.anier.<lb/>
Civil Unrest Might Cause Martial Law<lb/>
MANII A. Philippines tl PI)<lb/>
Spain and West Germai vailed<lb/>
mbassadors from Manila<lb/>
lay and president Ferdinand<lb/>
Man  he might impose<lb/>
ma; tw to deal with an op-<lb/>
position campaign ol civil unrest.<lb/>
In other international reaction<lb/>
the widely discredited Feb.<lb/>
election, a Marcos<lb/>
spokesman said Soviet Am-<lb/>
bassador Vadim I Shabalin has<lb/>
"informally congratulated" the<lb/>
iident, who will encourage the<lb/>
expansion of trade with the<lb/>
Soviet Union.<lb/>
New Zealand Prime Minister<lb/>
David Lange, however, said in a<lb/>
etter released by his embassy that<lb/>
he will not congratulate Marcos<lb/>
on his re-election because ol<lb/>
"serious doubts about the<lb/>
credibility" of the voting.<lb/>
Foreign Ministry sources con-<lb/>
firmed that they had recieved no<lb/>
other letters ol congratulations<lb/>
for Marcos from foreign heads ol<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Western diplomats confirmed<lb/>
reports that the ambassadors o<lb/>
West Germany and Spain had<lb/>
been called home for consulta-<lb/>
tions and said the moves could<lb/>
have a "snowball effect<lb/>
Opposition leader Coraon<lb/>
Aguino and vice presidential run-<lb/>
ning mate Salvador Laurel who<lb/>
are seeking to make Marcos and<lb/>
international outcast, took their<lb/>
campaign of non-violent protest<lb/>
to i rally near the huge I S.<lb/>
Clark Air Base<lb/>
They ruled out any com-<lb/>
promise with Marcos and<lb/>
predicted he would be toppled<lb/>
within three months.<lb/>
Aguino said that in her meeting<lb/>
Monday with U.S. special envoy<lb/>
Philip Habib "I told him if 1 have<lb/>
to cooperate with Marcos, never<lb/>
mind, don't visit me<lb/>
In a seperate meeting Monday<lb/>
with Marcos, Habib told the<lb/>
president he risks the loss o' U.S.<lb/>
military and economic aid unless<lb/>
he makes democratic reforms and<lb/>
shares power with his opposition.<lb/>
The Washington Post reported<lb/>
citing administration officials.<lb/>
I he officials did not elaborate<lb/>
on what steps Marcos might take<lb/>
to accomplish this. However,<lb/>
Aguino advise; and former Sen.<lb/>
Ernesto .Maceda said Habib was<lb/>
told that the opposition's de-<lb/>
mand for Marcos to give up his<lb/>
office is not up for negotiation.<lb/>
"It's also non-negotiable on<lb/>
the part of Marcos until all the<lb/>
people are at his doorstep and<lb/>
when he looks behind and half<lb/>
his military is goneMaceda<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Habib met for 70 minutes to-<lb/>
day with Defense Minister Juan<lb/>
Ponce Emrile but no details of<lb/>
the meeting were released.<lb/>
Aguino told a crowd o about<lb/>
7,000 people in the town o<lb/>
Angeles, 60 miles north o<lb/>
Manila, that she will never agree<lb/>
to a new election and will meet<lb/>
with Japanese and West Euro-<lb/>
pean diplomats Thursday to seek<lb/>
recognition for her own govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Tenn. sparked his interest in<lb/>
geneology, and formed the origin<lb/>
of Roots. He also cited the days<lb/>
after his grandfather's death as<lb/>
the basis of his bes! seller.<lb/>
 A fter m gi andi at her' s<lb/>
death, my grandmother in<lb/>
her six sisters (from throughout<lb/>
the United Slates) to spend<lb/>
summer with hei. All the si ?<lb/>
would sit on the front porch dur-<lb/>
ing tlie eailv evening hours and<lb/>
talk about when they were little<lb/>
girls m Alamance County, North<lb/>
Carolina, I'hey would tell stones<lb/>
they heard of when then parents<lb/>
ha been slaves.<lb/>
"When I'm praised so much<lb/>
tor Roots. I like to think that was<lb/>
the summer when Roots was i<lb/>
ly born he added.<lb/>
ILiicv described his<lb/>
careei aboard a asi t luard ship<lb/>
during the late 144(n<lb/>
" )n board ship, I<lb/>
age i 'i being the m si pi<lb/>
ter w liter S ulors'<lb/>
number one pi i is meel<lb/>
girls, some to<lb/>
come to ask I<lb/>
love letters to girls I<lb/>
 - a great deal<lb/>
penning love letters, Haley<lb/>
some ol the sailors be. pay<lb/>
him foi his ser ices, " I hey<lb/>
volunteered . lollai<lb/>
per letter a me the<lb/>
idea thai tl ei e migl be<lb/>
something foi me . writing<lb/>
business<lb/>
Haley said fl - .nigh<lb/>
eight years his stories<lb/>
rejet I 1 I ron<lb/>
selling a short story tin $100.<lb/>
ftei retiring from the c oast<lb/>
Guard, he said he "gambled<lb/>
full-time career" as a freelai<lb/>
w riter.<lb/>
"I had a hard time foi about a<lb/>
year. I worked at Reader's Digest<lb/>
tor a while, then made a hie ju<lb/>
to a magazine called Plaho<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
While at the magazine. 11<lb/>
invented the "Playboy<lb/>
Interview<lb/>
"The most exhilerating one<lb/>
was with the merican Na<lb/>
George Rockwell. I did others<lb/>
with Cassius Clay (Muhammad<lb/>
Ah) and Johnny Caison. then I<lb/>
interviewed Malcolm X<lb/>
After his interview with<lb/>
Malcolm X, the black leader ask-<lb/>
ed Haley to write his<lb/>
autobiography.<lb/>
Haley began the actual work<lb/>
on Roots after finding his great-<lb/>
grandfather's name in the Ar-<lb/>
chives of the United States in<lb/>
w ashington, D.<lb/>
"I was drawn into the building<lb/>
by accident, 1 guess it was<lb/>
because I've always liked old<lb/>
things. looked up the 1H70 cen-<lb/>
sus record tor Alamance County<lb/>
and there on one of the<lb/>
rofilmed pages was my great-<lb/>
grandfather's name. I; hit me in<lb/>
e like a fist coming up<lb/>
from out of the pages he said.<lb/>
For the next nine vears, Haley<lb/>
researched his family's origins<lb/>
and wrote for three vears about<lb/>
ii begining in frica to the<lb/>
days of slavery in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Concerning historical ! I<lb/>
Ha lev said he urged ail<lb/>
Americans to preserve their<lb/>
e and remember I<lb/>
ancestors, "I urge all o yo<lb/>
through your attics and preserve<lb/>
ings you find there ? old<lb/>
ten things.<lb/>
" I here is i 2 we can do<lb/>
? ? honor ourselves than to<lb/>
making<lb/>
Haley<lb/>
our lives possible through their<lb/>
vears o suffering<lb/>
Haley is currently working on a<lb/>
novel to be entitled. Henning<lb/>
that describes the experiences of a<lb/>
child growing up in a small<lb/>
southern town during the 1920s<lb/>
md 1930s.<lb/>
former speakers oi the<lb/>
lecture-Series have included<lb/>
Dean Rusk. Ralph Nader, Frank<lb/>
Mankiewicz and Juan it a M.<lb/>
Kreps.<lb/>
Tutors Help ECU<lb/>
By DAWN SIFW RI)<lb/>
si?n Wnlrr<lb/>
Have you ever been in a<lb/>
"slump" during one of your<lb/>
classes? Well, you are not alone.<lb/>
"Many students have difficulty<lb/>
in at least one class during col-<lb/>
lege comments Patricia<lb/>
Everett, a Psychology major.<lb/>
Due to this simple observation by<lb/>
students and faculty, ECU offers<lb/>
a tutorial service tor its students.<lb/>
Students who wish to become<lb/>
See TUTORS Page 6.<lb/>
Debate Aroused Awareness<lb/>
By PATT1 KKMMIS<lb/>
The Schlafly-W eddington<lb/>
Debate Monday night was not a<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features7<lb/>
Sports10<lb/>
4 life spent in making<lb/>
mistakes is not only more<lb/>
honorable but more useful<lb/>
than a life spent in doing<lb/>
nothing.<lb/>
?Bernard Shan<lb/>
quiet one due to several topics<lb/>
that spurred response from most<lb/>
of the 627 people attending.<lb/>
Freshman Allen Manning,<lb/>
mediator of the debate, remark-<lb/>
ed, "I think it went great. The<lb/>
electricity coming from the au-<lb/>
dience was outstanding<lb/>
Rounds of applause,<lb/>
deragatory remarks, and ques-<lb/>
tions came at different and<lb/>
sometimes unexpected, intervals<lb/>
of the debate. Some of the topics<lb/>
included abortion, comparable<lb/>
worth and women in the<lb/>
military.<lb/>
The debators, Phyllis Schlafly<lb/>
and Sarah Weddington each had<lb/>
a chance to express her opinions<lb/>
on the issues and questions from<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
James Caldwell, a Junior ma-<lb/>
joring in Political Science, com-<lb/>
mented "1 think it was quite a<lb/>
honor for ECU to have two of<lb/>
the most prominent figures<lb/>
representing two different views<lb/>
of women's rights in society<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Forum, the debate at-<lb/>
tracted not only students and<lb/>
faculty, but also members of the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Kenneth Hammond, Program<lb/>
Director of University Unions,<lb/>
said "The debate materialized as<lb/>
anticipated, the spontaneity cer-<lb/>
tainly added a lot. The student<lb/>
and community response was ex-<lb/>
cellent, "I'd like to see another<lb/>
event of this nature very soon<lb/>
Visiting Author<lb/>
JIM I H TT.rNS- TW Fa?U mMh<lb/>
Alex Haley, author of Roots and Malcolm A, was welcomed to ECU Tuesday night by an over-<lb/>
whelming crowd. See related article on Page 1.<lb/>
<lb/>
m m "<lb/>
? r f<lb/>
A<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0002"/><lb/>
 j AMI -XKOMM-xn FEBRl ARV 20. 1986<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
rue accounting so .?'? will now .  ,<lb/>
on tuevuv March 4th a? 4 00 p ?<lb/>
Mendenhali R?w ;44 Our speaker will o?.<lb/>
Mr Mark Hoda wittl r?A ana a prP4en,a<lb/>
'ion on Management Accounting New<lb/>
memhers are euone-<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING ADVENTURES<lb/>
ng tueak March 14 986 D ve Pen<lb/>
" ' ' ? oa Keys ,?, Largo<lb/>
la The ?.cwias most popua' -eel<lb/>
? ve 0d,s afK) mgnti a two 'an ooa' dive<lb/>
? (tghl d ve m ludes tanks an<lb/>
backpacks and e.gt"s Alto snorke ??<lb/>
. edging ai Howai l<lb/>
reakfasl daily, swimn . - ??  ,<lb/>
bay snorkel r?g C osl SMS. I<lb/>
matnv call Ray Scharl ? ? ,<lb/>
'  ' ??1 . . ?al, <lb/>
ECU COUNCIL OF<lb/>
HONOR SOCIETIES<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE CLASSES<lb/>
SECOND BLOCK<lb/>
reg ???? ? ? I - sec i-<lb/>
? ? en e 1000 arereminded<lb/>
v lav Ma 3 Sec<lb/>
" ons . .33 4' 1 PCJ- iti ii ?  1,0<lb/>
AMERICAN MARKETING<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Be a'1 the PEP! -? ? ??<lb/>
AMV Pr?t - ' . ? ,A- ?<lb/>
BREAD FOR THE WORLD<lb/>
A ' ' ? - ?? U rop walk<lb/>
? ? it I ungei Sondav F ??? ? ?<lb/>
? <lb/>
?"?- ' ? Backets v.<lb/>
 ' ? ? ?'? ' ? ngned up<lb/>
g ?s 3 00 and I <lb/>
' ' Bai ? ? ,1 - ?? , .<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR<lb/>
ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY<lb/>
Students tor Economic Democracy will<lb/>
hold a meeting Sunday February 23 to<lb/>
discuss upcoming conferences, the Reagan<lb/>
tuts in student aid and voter registration lor<lb/>
the May pr,manes Rick Brown will also<lb/>
present a paper on the History of the Pro<lb/>
gressive Movement m North Carolina The<lb/>
meeting will be held at Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center m Room 248 at 5 30<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
We the ECU Gospel Choir cordially invite<lb/>
you to celebrate our third anniversary We<lb/>
will perform as will other choirs from<lb/>
kjnd the state Admission is tree, so come<lb/>
ina ioin us .n a spiritual celebration Sun<lb/>
?a rtruary 23 198 at 3 00 p m at Hen<lb/>
dnx Theater .n the Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Cen'er<lb/>
ECU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
There win Oe a meeting of the College<lb/>
Weoubicans on Tuesday February 25 in 221<lb/>
MenaenhaM<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
There will be a Psi Ch. meeting on Tues<lb/>
.ia? February 25, at 5 30. .n the Ps Ch,<lb/>
L 'b'ai y Ail members are urged to attend so<lb/>
we can discuss our spring plans<lb/>
BLACK GRADUATE<lb/>
SUPPORTGROUP<lb/>
There oe a meeting of the Black<lb/>
Graduate Support Group Sunday at 8 lSprr<lb/>
rt Menoenriall An .nteres'ed persons are in<lb/>
? eo V a'tenc For more information can<lb/>
Dwcit" at ?52 926?<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS<lb/>
'?  i'ass offered by the ECU<lb/>
- Center you .an identify<lb/>
? ? si-ess make positive changes<lb/>
? ??- your response to stressful situa<lb/>
ons learn te relax mprove self confidence<lb/>
Tuesday Feoruar, 25 Thursday February<lb/>
 Tuesday Marcn 4 Thursday March 6<lb/>
' 8 ' atte rj a Our meetings1 li A<lb/>
neel gs  ?? m 3 4p n 305 Ar 9, .<lb/>
THE EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
SECURITY COMMISSION<lb/>
The Empoloyment Security Commission<lb/>
will have representatives m the Lobby of the<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store to recruit<lb/>
students lor part time iobs as fasttood<lb/>
workers, cashiers, and sales clerks on<lb/>
Thurs Feb 27 from 9a m lp m<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
A general business meeting will be held<lb/>
Thurs Feb 20 at 7 00 p m in Mendenhali<lb/>
J44 AH new members and perspective<lb/>
members are invited to attend<lb/>
FREE TAX HELP<lb/>
The Accounting Society is offering tree tax<lb/>
services for federal returns at the Student<lb/>
Booth m Mendenhali from 4 6pm on<lb/>
Wednesdays and Thursdays Federal forms<lb/>
and instructions are available upon request<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
Accounting Society members are en<lb/>
couraged to sign up for our tree tutorng and<lb/>
'ax serv.ee programs Sign up sheets are<lb/>
posted on the accounting society bulletin<lb/>
board 3rd Moor Rawi This s excellent<lb/>
review lor the May CPA Let s get ready1<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB<lb/>
An people nterested in partpat,ng  me<lb/>
ECU women s indoor soccer tournament<lb/>
please contact i,sa Grosshandier at 758 8325<lb/>
The tournament will be held Feb 28 and<lb/>
March 1 g, 2 There will be a minimal fee<lb/>
AF ROTC<lb/>
A.r Force ROTC rs looking tor students seek<lb/>
? ng education, opportunities, ana ex<lb/>
per.ence A.r Force ROTC otters scholar<lb/>
sh,ps lor tuition books and $100 per month<lb/>
The Air Force Off,Cers Qualifying vv<lb/>
AFOQT ,s offered on 27 Februar, T-urs<lb/>
trom 1 00 6 00 Th.s .s necessar, n order to<lb/>
be cons,derea tor scholarships tor the fan<lb/>
semester of 1986 Alt interested students are<lb/>
urged to vis.t Maior Patton a' A r Force<lb/>
ROTC or 'he second floor o A- jht Annex or<lb/>
call 7S7 6598 for tu'her information<lb/>
DO YOU GO DOWN?<lb/>
The newly formed Coral Reef Dive Club is<lb/>
"olding a meeting Feb 24 from 7 9pm in<lb/>
room 248 Mendenhali Memberships and a<lb/>
Spring Break tr,p t0 the fabulous Florida<lb/>
Keys will be discussed All interested non<lb/>
divers included are welcome Join the tiub<lb/>
'hats going somewhere The Coral Reef<lb/>
Dive Club<lb/>
BLACK ALUMNI ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the ECU Black<lb/>
Alumn, Association on Monday, March 3,<lb/>
l?W The meeting will be held at Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center, room 248 at 6 00pm<lb/>
ATTENTION: 1985-84<lb/>
GRADUATES<lb/>
Our shipment of Announcements nave ar<lb/>
rived They may be picked up at your conve<lb/>
n.ence Announcements located at the<lb/>
Jewelry Counter ,n the Student Stores,<lb/>
Wnght Building The price of the an<lb/>
nouncements is ?2 for a package of five an<lb/>
nouncements<lb/>
THE INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
STUDENTS ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a party at the international<lb/>
house on Friday the 21st from 9 00p m ah<lb/>
are welcome<lb/>
DIVER DOWN <lb/>
?nose interested The Coral Reef D .f<lb/>
Club s holding a meeting Feb 24 Won.<lb/>
Irom 79 pm ,n Mendenhali Room 248<lb/>
Memberships, along with the SPRING<lb/>
BREAK TRiP to the Fabulous FLORIDA<lb/>
KEYS will be discussed Non divers are<lb/>
welcome, join the club that's gomg<lb/>
somewhere The Coral Reef D.ve Club<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH<lb/>
Positions avaabie tor industrial Hygene<lb/>
maior with Duke Power Compan, beginning<lb/>
summer 1986 Sophmore on.or status . ?<lb/>
GPA and willingness to work 'mw <lb/>
terms 'equ.red Saar,81 per houi ?<lb/>
? Identic credit available Contacl<lb/>
Cooperative Educa'ion 313 Raw<lb/>
NCSTATE PARKS<lb/>
Positions available 'or summer in NC State<lb/>
Parks For more information contact<lb/>
Cooperative Education 313 Rawi<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir will be holding it s an<lb/>
niversary service on me 23rd of Feoruar f at<lb/>
3pm The location will be Hendrix Theatre in<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center Admission s<lb/>
tree to an public<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
Several maior employers .<lb/>
INOT maiors for Coop position bag 1<lb/>
summer 1985 11 you are a sopnmore<lb/>
with a 2 5 GPA COnt? I ? t<lb/>
Paw to learn more at than -<lb/>
opportun-t.es<lb/>
THE BEST<lb/>
FOOT<lb/>
Llllllllll li.l I . ililllll ? I 1 I Ju.nl<lb/>
YOU'LL EVER<lb/>
PUT IN YOUR<lb/>
MOUTH.<lb/>
215 E 4th Street<lb/>
Tax Money Allowed For Private Schools<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (C PS) -<lb/>
A blind theology studeni can use<lb/>
state money tor tuition without<lb/>
violating the U.S Constitution,<lb/>
the U.S. Supreme Court has rul-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Secretary of Education<lb/>
William Bennett claims the deci-<lb/>
sion furthers his plans to allow<lb/>
parents to use public money to<lb/>
send children to religious or other<lb/>
private schools<lb/>
Civil rights watchdogs, on the<lb/>
other hand, say the court worded<lb/>
its decision in a way that will<lb/>
leave intact the effective separa-<lb/>
tion of church and state.<lb/>
In question was whether the<lb/>
Washington Department ol Ser<lb/>
vices for the Blind could did<lb/>
1 arr Witters, who wanted to use<lb/>
assistance money to attend a<lb/>
theology school.<lb/>
Washington's vocational pro-<lb/>
gram for the blind awards money<lb/>
directly to students, who are tree<lb/>
to choose their courses. Since the<lb/>
state didn't require Witters to use<lb/>
the money tor religious instruc-<lb/>
tion, his choice wasn't "a state<lb/>
endorsement ol religion the<lb/>
court ruled.<lb/>
In praising the decision. Ben-<lb/>
nett said the ruling supported his<lb/>
proposal to create edcation<lb/>
vouchers, which students can use<lb/>
to attend any school.<lb/>
Now, the government awards<lb/>
money directly to schools, which<lb/>
use it to educate whomever shows<lb/>
up tor classes. Under the<lb/>
voucher system - which critics<lb/>
say would get the government in-<lb/>
to the business of supporting<lb/>
church schools  students who<lb/>
didn't want to go to public<lb/>
schools could '?pay" tor private<lb/>
instruction by using "vouchers<lb/>
Though the court decided state<lb/>
aid to Witters wasn't a "direct<lb/>
subsidy" to a religious school, it<lb/>
sent the case back to the<lb/>
Washington Supreme Court to<lb/>
decide it" it is an excessive<lb/>
government entanglement with<lb/>
religion<lb/>
The American Civil LIverties<lb/>
I mon, though unhappy about<lb/>
the decision, downplayed its<lb/>
repercussions.<lb/>
"Though we'd like to see that<lb/>
federal funds aren't used tor<lb/>
religious education, period, this<lb/>
ruling will have only limited ef-<lb/>
fects says AC I U spokesman<lb/>
Charles Sims.<lb/>
"The decision was meant to<lb/>
apply to a higher education situa-<lb/>
tion in which funds were intended<lb/>
to reach broadly and weren't<lb/>
specified for religious education.<lb/>
So the court only created a small<lb/>
situation in which government<lb/>
money can be used (for religious<lb/>
purposes).<lb/>
"It's not a situation that can<lb/>
allow the general rule (pro-<lb/>
hibiting government support ot<lb/>
religion)<lb/>
The ACLU may or may not in-<lb/>
volve itself when the Witters' case<lb/>
returns to the state supreme<lb/>
court, Sims savs.<lb/>
Other colleges have been busv<lb/>
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"1 air. not vurpr<lb/>
Stan I " vj B .<lb/>
Hetnck. dean oi Academic v<lb/>
fairs a; Hood eg<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
"1 would expeel more women<lb/>
to hae humanistic values and<lb/>
be more likel to seek knowle<lb/>
for knowledge's sake she mw<lb/>
Hetnck herself recently finish-<lb/>
ed a study of how Hood's<lb/>
predominantly female student<lb/>
body changed its political and<lb/>
social views after going through<lb/>
four years of the school's liberal<lb/>
arts curriculum.<lb/>
Hetnck found seniors were<lb/>
considerably less materialists<lb/>
than they had been as freshmen,<lb/>
that the were more concerned<lb/>
about community welfare and<lb/>
developing a genera! philosophy<lb/>
of life.<lb/>
She found out by administer<lb/>
ing to Hood students the same<lb/>
survey given by the American<lb/>
Council on Education to some<lb/>
200,000 freshmen nationwide<lb/>
On a national scale, the ACE<lb/>
survey? created by UCLA and<lb/>
released in January? found<lb/>
beginning college freshmen are<lb/>
more materialistic than their<lb/>
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Campus Voice<lb/>
Where are you going for Spring Break?<lb/>
Reserve Officers<lb/>
Provide Safety<lb/>
Teresa Worrell<lb/>
Special Education<lb/>
"I'm going to Virginia Beach<lb/>
for half of the week, then I'm<lb/>
coming back to Greenville for a<lb/>
tew days, then I'm going home<lb/>
( hris Gre)<lb/>
Undecided<lb/>
"I'm going to New Haven,<lb/>
Connecticut to see m brother at<lb/>
Vale ?"<lb/>
 ? ?-mm<lb/>
F.thel Fordham<lb/>
Special Education<lb/>
"I'm not doing anything Not<lb/>
opening a book, nothing<lb/>
Patt Derin<lb/>
 us?: W handismii<lb/>
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ico, to Padre Island<lb/>
Abdullah Rahman<lb/>
Music Education<lb/>
"Probably going to New<lb/>
Jersev for a little while<lb/>
Richard ecellio<lb/>
Pri ted<lb/>
"1 going to 1)a Bead<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
It's late at night. A person is in<lb/>
the freshman parking lot van-<lb/>
dalizing an automobile. As if by<lb/>
magic, an officer of the East<lb/>
Carolina University Public Safety<lb/>
department arrives to investigate.<lb/>
That "magic" is often per-<lb/>
formed by a member of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Public Safety<lb/>
Reserve Unit. These student<lb/>
reserve unit members ? male and<lb/>
female ? are extensions of the<lb/>
eyes and ears of sworn police of-<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
Two-way radios are carried in-<lb/>
stead of weapons and their<lb/>
powers of arrest are those of or-<lb/>
dmarv citizens.<lb/>
The program which began in<lb/>
1M80 with five volunteers is now a<lb/>
force of 21 paid workers. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Kathleen Monahan,<lb/>
reserve unit coordinator, most<lb/>
applicants learn of the program<lb/>
by word-of-mouth. "The ap-<lb/>
plicants don't have to be in the<lb/>
field of corrections or social<lb/>
work Monahan said.<lb/>
"We have an English major,<lb/>
an industrial technology major<lb/>
and a graduate student in the pro-<lb/>
gram now. but most of our ap-<lb/>
plicants are corrections majors. It<lb/>
gives them a starting place on<lb/>
their career, and also, if they find<lb/>
that law enforcement is not exact-<lb/>
lv what they want to do, it gives<lb/>
them a chance to see that and go<lb/>
on to another field she said.<lb/>
Marcus Jeannette. a senior<lb/>
from Richmond, VA, has been a<lb/>
reservist for three-and-a-half<lb/>
years. Although he is graduating<lb/>
with a degree in environmental<lb/>
health, Jeannette hopes to work<lb/>
for the State Bureau of Investiga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Jeannette, vvho has the rank of<lb/>
sergeant ? the highest in the unit<lb/>
said that he never suspected<lb/>
campus police were as active<lb/>
in campus life as they are. "1<lb/>
never knew there were so many<lb/>
officers involved. There are<lb/>
undercover officers doing<lb/>
Survey Says Women Smarter<lb/>
PALO -1 TO. (A. (CPS)-<lb/>
Are women on campus more "in-<lb/>
tellectual "than men<lb/>
"Vup says a random sample<lb/>
of Stanford students.<lb/>
According to the suivev,<lb/>
females classified as "intellec-<lb/>
tuals" outnumber males classed<lb/>
as intellectuals by a two-to-one<lb/>
margin<lb/>
"It's obviously not a represen-<lb/>
tative sample. However, I don't<lb/>
think they (Stanford students) are<lb/>
different than students at other<lb/>
major research institutions ex-<lb/>
plains Herant Katchadounan,<lb/>
who conducted the study along<lb/>
with colleague John Boli.<lb/>
Stanford students were asked<lb/>
to fill out a questionnaire on their<lb/>
course plans and their attitudes<lb/>
about what they are studying.<lb/>
Depending on their answers,<lb/>
students were classified as "in-<lb/>
tellectual "careens<lb/>
"strivers" or "unconnected<lb/>
While "careerist" men tended<lb/>
to ignore liberal arts courses, "in-<lb/>
tellectual" women often took a<lb/>
substantial number of liberal arts<lb/>
courses, and maintained an in-<lb/>
terest in careers.<lb/>
"1 am not surprised by the<lb/>
Stanford findings says Barbara<lb/>
Hetrick, dean of Academic Af-<lb/>
fairs at Hood College in<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
"I would expect more women<lb/>
to have humanistic values and to<lb/>
be more likely to seek knowledge<lb/>
for knowledge's sake she says.<lb/>
Hetrick herself recently finish-<lb/>
ed a sudy of how Hood's<lb/>
predominantly female student<lb/>
body changed its political and<lb/>
social views after going through<lb/>
four years of the school's liberal<lb/>
arts curriculum.<lb/>
Hetrick found seniors were<lb/>
considerably less materialistic<lb/>
than they had been as freshmen,<lb/>
that they were more concerned<lb/>
about community welfare and<lb/>
developing a general philosophy<lb/>
of life.<lb/>
She found out by administer-<lb/>
ing to Hood students the same<lb/>
survey given by the American<lb/>
Council on Education to some<lb/>
200,000 freshmen nationwide.<lb/>
On a national scale, the ACE<lb/>
survey? created by UCLA and<lb/>
released in January? found<lb/>
beginning college freshmen are<lb/>
more materialistic than their<lb/>
??"?<lb/>
predecessors.<lb/>
The Stanford survev defined<lb/>
"striver" .i - ited<lb/>
toward c?. and uai<lb/>
pursuits rheytend - from<lb/>
lower econon<lb/>
than other students.<lb/>
" L neon nee I ed <lb/>
generally con ther fi m very<lb/>
high or low s k ial - atu Ian ilies<lb/>
"Intellectuals" tlh come<lb/>
from f am ilies o<lb/>
socioeconomic status, and their<lb/>
fathers often advanced degrees.<lb/>
"Careerists" are fi m a wide<lb/>
arrav of backgrounds, bui often<lb/>
have parents who emphasize<lb/>
careet success.<lb/>
While Stanford students<lb/>
changed categories throughout<lb/>
the four-year period they were<lb/>
observed, radical changes were<lb/>
rare, Katchadourian explains.<lb/>
While a "stnver" might<lb/>
become an "intellectual or a<lb/>
"careerist" could become a<lb/>
"stnver rarely would an "in-<lb/>
tellectual" become a "careerist"<lb/>
ol vice versa.<lb/>
Moreover, it was uncommon<lb/>
tor "strivers" to become "un-<lb/>
connected Katchadourian says.<lb/>
While Hood students changed<lb/>
their attitudes, Hetrick speculates<lb/>
they might be predisposed toward<lb/>
more humanistic values than<lb/>
students at large state univer-<lb/>
sities,<lb/>
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surveillance, detectives and other<lb/>
officers constantly observing the<lb/>
students, and at night they watch<lb/>
for people who might be breaking<lb/>
into cars he said.<lb/>
According to Monahan, Jean-<lb/>
nette has aided the ECU police in<lb/>
many arrests ? some of them<lb/>
major ? such as strong-arm rob-<lb/>
beries and helping catch people<lb/>
who were breaking into cars.<lb/>
"He has more court experience<lb/>
than any of the others she said.<lb/>
Reserve officer graduate stu-<lb/>
dent Janet Fasig of Spartanburg,<lb/>
SC, plans to teach English at the<lb/>
college level. Through her police<lb/>
work during the past three years,<lb/>
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badge and a gun she explained.<lb/>
University Police Chief Francis<lb/>
Fddings said, "I think it's a very<lb/>
good program. .we give<lb/>
students an opportunity to get a<lb/>
lot of OJT (on-the-job training)<lb/>
which helps them to decide if they<lb/>
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forcement<lb/>
Volunteer work ? up to 40<lb/>
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reserve officer. That work in-<lb/>
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time. By doing that, the student<lb/>
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He must also learn radio pro-<lb/>
cedures, techniques used in<lb/>
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While the students are doing<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057803_0004"/><lb/>
SH?e East QIarnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom 1 i vfNDiR ?&amp;??,<lb/>
Jay Stone, wj . .<lb/>
Greg Winchester, own,?<lb/>
Anthony Martin. ??? ???'<lb/>
? .John Peterson, cm!?<lb/>
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John Shannon, v<lb/>
DjChamu- Johnson<lb/>
t:ebruan 20. 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA Elections<lb/>
?? Changes May Discriminate<lb/>
A bill proposing rule changes for<lb/>
student government elections is<lb/>
slated to come up for consideration<lb/>
in the student legislature next Mon-<lb/>
day night. The bill will reportedly<lb/>
contain several suggested rule<lb/>
changes, but perhaps the most im-<lb/>
portant one will urge the legislature<lb/>
to adopt a majority electoral system<lb/>
to replace the plurality system<lb/>
which now exists.<lb/>
The plurality system currently in<lb/>
existence operates on the principle<lb/>
that the top vote- getter in an elec-<lb/>
tion with more than two people<lb/>
running will win the election. The<lb/>
majority system proposes thai if<lb/>
more than two people are running<lb/>
and the top vote getter does not get<lb/>
a majority of the student vote, or<lb/>
over 50 percent of the votes cast,<lb/>
then there will be a run-off between<lb/>
the two top vote-getters.<lb/>
On the surface of it certainly<lb/>
there would seem to be nothing ob-<lb/>
jectionable about the switch from a<lb/>
plurality to a majority system. But<lb/>
upon looking into the proposed<lb/>
switch a few of the majority<lb/>
system's defects spring quickly to<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
First, though it is alledged that a<lb/>
majority system is more democratic<lb/>
because only a candidate with a ma-<lb/>
jority of the vote is declared the<lb/>
winner through that system, the<lb/>
plurality system provides that in a<lb/>
close contest there will be a run-off<lb/>
also. Under the plurality system, if<lb/>
the second place candidate is within<lb/>
three percent of the total votes cast<lb/>
of the first place candidate, then<lb/>
there will be a run-off. That means,<lb/>
for example, that if 3.000 votes are<lb/>
cast in an election and the second<lb/>
place candidate is within 90 votes of<lb/>
the first place candidate there will<lb/>
be a run-off.<lb/>
Second, though this might not be<lb/>
the most important consideration,<lb/>
holding run-off elections in the fall<lb/>
and the spring would cost students<lb/>
an extra SI,000 or more. If a run-<lb/>
off is only held in the spring it will<lb/>
cost more than $500. Needless to<lb/>
say that these are funds that student<lb/>
organizations could put to use br-<lb/>
inging speakers to campus and pro-<lb/>
viding other needed services.<lb/>
Third, holding run-off elections<lb/>
is expensive for the candidates in-<lb/>
volved. Though ECU limits can-<lb/>
didates for SGA president to expen-<lb/>
ditures of $200 and candidates for<lb/>
class officers to Si00 a run-off<lb/>
could double the expense. How<lb/>
many students can afford to spend<lb/>
S400 to get elected SGA president?<lb/>
More to the point, is it fair that the<lb/>
student who can best afford to<lb/>
spend the required sum of money<lb/>
should win? It seems to me that<lb/>
such an arrangement might<lb/>
eliminate potential candidates who<lb/>
could be more qualified for the job.<lb/>
The last objection which can be<lb/>
raised to the proposal now allegedly<lb/>
under consideration is the same one<lb/>
raised by many civil rights leaders<lb/>
law s were<lb/>
course, be<lb/>
student is<lb/>
against dual primary systems<lb/>
employed in some parts of the<lb/>
south. (The dual primary system<lb/>
operates much the same way that<lb/>
the majority system would work ?<lb/>
if more than two candidates are<lb/>
running there would be a run-off<lb/>
between the top two vote-getters<lb/>
unless the top vote-getter receives a<lb/>
majority of the votes cast.) The<lb/>
proposal could be designed in such<lb/>
a way that it will discriminate<lb/>
against black and other minority<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
This is true because, though<lb/>
black candidates have often receiv-<lb/>
ed the most votes out of a field of<lb/>
three or more candidates, in the<lb/>
run-off primary civil rights leaders<lb/>
have shown that white voters have<lb/>
frequently joined together to defeat<lb/>
the black candidate. That the dou-<lb/>
ble primary is a racially motivated<lb/>
system is something that civil rights<lb/>
leaders have been arguing for some<lb/>
time based in part upon the time<lb/>
period in which it was first im-<lb/>
plemented, the same time that<lb/>
many other Jim Crow<lb/>
adopted.<lb/>
The objection will, ot<lb/>
raised that if a black<lb/>
qualified for office he will get white<lb/>
support. The sad fact is, however.<lb/>
that in this part of the country that<lb/>
has not proven to be the case.<lb/>
Whites generally are reluctant to ac-<lb/>
cept black leadership. They are<lb/>
more critical and suspicious of<lb/>
black candidates than they are of<lb/>
white ones and that translates into<lb/>
lower white support for black can-<lb/>
didates at the polls. Now, is it fair<lb/>
for blacks to see their political am-<lb/>
bitions thwarted by racism time and<lb/>
time again, even to see the electoral<lb/>
system changed so that it even<lb/>
works against their democratic<lb/>
aspirations?<lb/>
Now, is it fair for blacks to see<lb/>
their political ambitions thwarted<lb/>
by racism time and time again, even<lb/>
to see the electoral system changed<lb/>
so that it also works against their<lb/>
democratic aspirations? Most peo-<lb/>
ple would answer no to this, but<lb/>
they would also have a difficult<lb/>
time accepting the dual primary<lb/>
logic put forth above.<lb/>
It is as if, they might argue, that<lb/>
we must make the system less<lb/>
democratic so that blacks might<lb/>
have a chance to win. But that is<lb/>
not the case. The fact is that a<lb/>
system in which 49 percent of the<lb/>
voters and many times more poten-<lb/>
tial voters are unrepresented is not<lb/>
democratic to begin with. More to<lb/>
the point, a system which makes<lb/>
people feel that it is biased against<lb/>
them discourages participation.<lb/>
With the new system, therefore,<lb/>
we might be more certain of a ma-<lb/>
jority, but we might also constrict<lb/>
the pool of potential voters and<lb/>
candidates thereby making the<lb/>
system less democratic in the long<lb/>
run. That would be a mistake.<lb/>
TMfc EAST C AAoJ<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Disabled Students Denied Van<lb/>
Affiliates ot' Fasi Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity ? 1 wish io convey to you a pro-<lb/>
blem that either directly or indirectly<lb/>
affects us all. This problem pertains<lb/>
to the policy of disabled student<lb/>
transportation.<lb/>
As I formerly noted, this probiem<lb/>
affects each of us. "How?" you may<lb/>
inquire. Well, in respect to the fact<lb/>
that we are all citizens of America, a<lb/>
country that maintains a constitution<lb/>
which states that  All men are<lb/>
created equal and they are endowed<lb/>
bv their Creator with certain in-<lb/>
alienable rights, and among these are<lb/>
lite, liberty, and the pursuit of hap-<lb/>
piness  we are obliged not to<lb/>
deprive any citizen ot' any ot' these in-<lb/>
alienable rights. Thus, allow me to<lb/>
share with you some characteristics of<lb/>
the disabled student's transport<lb/>
system and various problems that<lb/>
disregard some ot' our constitutional<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Primarily, "The van service for<lb/>
disabled students is onlv obligated to<lb/>
carry out activities that the student<lb/>
transit system performs for able<lb/>
bodied students which is a point<lb/>
that was brought to my attention by<lb/>
Mr. C.C. Rowe, Director of Disabled<lb/>
Student Services. However, a' Mr.<lb/>
Rowe further emphasized to me in a<lb/>
recent discussion. "The handicapped<lb/>
students receive more services than<lb/>
what is required, in that there are<lb/>
times allocated tor free travel i.e.<lb/>
travel to grocery stores, shopping<lb/>
centers, doctor's offices, etc This<lb/>
free travel is scheduled weekly on<lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday bet-<lb/>
ween the hours of 2 P.M. ? 5 P.M<lb/>
Indeed, at first glance you may<lb/>
perceive no problem in this pro-<lb/>
cedure. However, if you pause briefly<lb/>
and review the free times listed above.<lb/>
you will notice that there are no<lb/>
transportation services provided on<lb/>
weekends ? the times in which many<lb/>
of us possess our most free time. In<lb/>
addition to this issue being my main<lb/>
concern, in that I am one of the<lb/>
disabled students affected, there are<lb/>
other disabled students who maintain<lb/>
this position as well. After becoming<lb/>
increasingly frustrated in trying to<lb/>
disperse my time into three hours, 2<lb/>
P.M. ? 5 P.M which happens to<lb/>
coincide with several oi my classes. I<lb/>
consulted Mr. Rowe, who referred<lb/>
me to Dr. Ann Rose, Assistant to the<lb/>
chancellor Director of Affirmative<lb/>
Action. Dr. Rose met with me Thurs-<lb/>
day, January 31. and later informed<lb/>
me thai she would be meeting with<lb/>
the university attorney to discuss the<lb/>
issue. Today, Februarv 11. twelve<lb/>
davs after conferring with Dr. Rose.<lb/>
Mr. Rowe relayed to me the outcome<lb/>
ot the discussion ? the van transport<lb/>
policy stands as is.<lb/>
Affiliates, how can this be? Can<lb/>
there be true equality for all it disabl-<lb/>
ed students are deprived ot the access<lb/>
to a van which sets idle in front of<lb/>
Slay Dormitory weekend after<lb/>
weekend? I think not' As the situa-<lb/>
tion now stands, disabled students<lb/>
must rely on a few good friends who<lb/>
are willing to carry them, and a<lb/>
wheelchair in most instances, in a<lb/>
passenger car rather than having ac-<lb/>
cess to the presently idle van. Does<lb/>
this particular policy conform to our<lb/>
right to happiness9 Upon evaluating<lb/>
the policy rather objectively. 1 feel<lb/>
that the question of happiness for the<lb/>
student is null and void.<lb/>
It any of sou concerned American<lb/>
citizens feel that my position main-<lb/>
tains a justifiable argument for allow -<lb/>
ing the van to operate on weekends<lb/>
please join me in my efforts to<lb/>
acheive the level of equality and hap-<lb/>
piness that we all. as American<lb/>
citizens are entitled to.<lb/>
Geoffrey Kenan<lb/>
Sophomore, Business<lb/>
Scholarship Stinks<lb/>
I'm a future North Carolina school<lb/>
teacher and I feel that the idea of<lb/>
"the best and brightest" slinks. If<lb/>
you look at this proposal, vou will see<lb/>
that $20,000 (4 X 5,000) ol the N<lb/>
Carolina tax paver's money<lb/>
toward a program thai<lb/>
guarentees a teacher tor five t<lb/>
Moreover, if you multiply 500<lb/>
(that's how many scholarships ???<lb/>
given per year) $5,000 you come I<lb/>
figure of $2,500,000 for I<lb/>
per vear.<lb/>
lusi thmk what could be d<lb/>
that $2,500,000 a vear it it wi -<lb/>
back into teacher's salaries at<lb/>
school systems. 1 believe thai<lb/>
make the field more ai<lb/>
salaries and benefits, pe<lb/>
-tart looking into tea.<lb/>
fession. lor e<lb/>
the taculty lounge and ever,<lb/>
the teachers in there stated that,<lb/>
onlv wav to get more people .<lb/>
teaching profession is to make<lb/>
salaries more attractive And also, it<lb/>
you increase "tie salaries ol teachers<lb/>
now, then vou will probablv keep<lb/>
more people in teachii<lb/>
The main reason io go into teadier<lb/>
education is thai, the professioi<lb/>
not looked upon a- ,t prestigious job<lb/>
bv mam people. Back in the '60s and<lb/>
earlier, teachers were held in I<lb/>
regard, however, in today's societv<lb/>
people usually judge the quality<lb/>
job, not by its standards, bul bv how<lb/>
much it will pav So. if you increase<lb/>
the salaries ot teachers and future<lb/>
ones, then I thmk that you will see<lb/>
more and more individuals going<lb/>
teacher education programs. Bv the<lb/>
way, remember that you could not<lb/>
read this letter without having had the<lb/>
benefit of a teacher.<lb/>
Chris TomaMv<lb/>
Senior, Historv Education<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letter.<lb/>
expressing all points ot view. <lb/>
drop them by our office in the Put<lb/>
turns Building, across from the i ?<lb/>
trance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
Black Universities Vital. Necessary<lb/>
RvniDDVI L- DDAIIA <lb/>
OH &amp;HALF OF THE CIMlHMKWl) FOR FWW6 WITH fASTHRAJ<lb/>
III<lb/>
By DARRYI K. BROWN<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Robert L.<lb/>
Albright, president of an historically-<lb/>
black college in Charlotte, N.C makes<lb/>
a case for the continuation of black col-<lb/>
leges in America that is a commentary<lb/>
on the social life and educational<lb/>
priorities at our nation's universities,<lb/>
and on the temper of our society as well.<lb/>
Albright is a black scholar who took<lb/>
his graduate degree from predominantly<lb/>
white universities, so he knows first-<lb/>
hand ac well as second the tensions and<lb/>
mixed emotions of blacks on white cam-<lb/>
puses. He remembers black<lb/>
undergraduates who "found it terribly<lb/>
difficult because they were fighting for<lb/>
acceptance, they were fighting social<lb/>
pressures, they were, quite frankly, fear-<lb/>
ful for the small number of black<lb/>
students. Also, knowing that people<lb/>
thought they were there because of some<lb/>
special program, not because of intellec-<lb/>
tual abilities, it reallv creates a terrible<lb/>
burden<lb/>
One purpose of black colleges is to<lb/>
ease that burden. Most schools are at<lb/>
least on their way to full integration, and<lb/>
racial tensions flare with less hostility<lb/>
and frequency these days. But while<lb/>
classes, dorms and cafeterir.s may be<lb/>
racially mixed, many social aspects of<lb/>
college life are not. Seen many in-<lb/>
tegrated fraternities lately? Social life is<lb/>
a large part of what makes a culture, and<lb/>
the cultural lives of black and white<lb/>
Americans, for a few good reasons and<lb/>
some bad, are still very different.<lb/>
There's a difference in ignoring race and<lb/>
accepting it. Too often the majority<lb/>
assumes integration means letting<lb/>
minorities join the club as it is rather<lb/>
than mixing, altering and enriching<lb/>
social life. An inflexible social at-<lb/>
mosphere can feel like a hostile one.<lb/>
Albright has written that "It is no<lb/>
secret that black institutions have been<lb/>
pioneers in developmental education<lb/>
and have done a far better job than most<lb/>
of their white counterparts in recogniz-<lb/>
ing the value-added approach to educa-<lb/>
tion. And as the plethora of laments<lb/>
over public education attests, it is not<lb/>
only black students who have some cat-<lb/>
ching up to do. But so far, white colleges<lb/>
seem uninterested.<lb/>
Few predominantly white colleges are<lb/>
going out of their way to recruit low-<lb/>
income, educationally disadvantaged<lb/>
minorities, finding most of their black<lb/>
students instead in the ranks of the slow-<lb/>
ly growing black middle class. That way<lb/>
there is less need for remedial education<lb/>
in the student body, though the need<lb/>
goes unmet in the larger community,<lb/>
save when it is served by black colleges.<lb/>
But even if white colleges made more<lb/>
diligent efforts to recruit and educate<lb/>
blacks and create a more supportive in-<lb/>
stitution, there would still be justifica-<lb/>
tion for black colleges. Albright makes<lb/>
the case that blacks should have the<lb/>
choice of attending a predominantly<lb/>
black college just as whites have the de<lb/>
facto option of a largely white one. But,<lb/>
you say, a black college is a less realistic<lb/>
environment, because those black<lb/>
graduates still must live in a<lb/>
predominantly white society. Yes, but<lb/>
the alumni of women's colleges face a<lb/>
world half-filled with men. .<lb/>
graduates of rehgious institutions musl<lb/>
survive in a secular nation. Those groups<lb/>
seem to be doing quite well.<lb/>
Black college graduates are douw fine<lb/>
also. Albnght felt decidedlv more secure<lb/>
in a majonty-white graduate program<lb/>
alter his undergraduate vears In a<lb/>
historically black college. And he has ,<lb/>
ong list of others who did the same He<lb/>
Whs to tell the story of Tommy<lb/>
Johnson, who apphed to the college over<lb/>
wh,ch Albnght presides with a total SAT<lb/>
score of 430 and a C-average from a<lb/>
small Mississippi high school. Hesitantlv<lb/>
adrn.tted, he graduated four vears later<lb/>
with honors. He then took his medical<lb/>
degree from the University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania.<lb/>
"While many people would argue<lb/>
Tommy Johnson ,s the exception 1<lb/>
 'r y?comc exam?ne our records<lb/>
vou I rind (here are thousands of Tom<lb/>
my Johnsons who come to our institu-<lb/>
tion, and frankly would not have been<lb/>
admlt,ed to other institutions Albnght<lb/>
says. We need more schools that will<lb/>
ake that kind of chance, and then take<lb/>
he care to produce tnat kind of<lb/>
triumph.<lb/>
Omyi Brown ,s a former Managin<lb/>
Editor of the East Carolinian who now<lb/>
works at the Youth Pohcy Institute and<lb/>
as an mtern at the Washington Post Mr<lb/>
Brown specializes m public poHcyau-<lb/>
anTh? reiT l? edicTon<lb/>
book related to that topic.<lb/>
Little Relief ij<lb/>
Farm<lb/>
Bs Fk SK KFHV1AS<lb/>
Bases Take P<lb/>
Neo-G<lb/>
Bv JIM U lSsl UN<lb/>
?s  <lb/>
:<lb/>
l M<lb/>
?<lb/>
dep.<lb/>
' ? a<lb/>
M all Street Journa<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
down the White<lb/>
expans oi -<lb/>
I rationale <lb/>
v ei ica, a<lb/>
calls tor support<lb/>
 jola. But .is we hast s<lb/>
repeatedlv . the s .<lb/>
cause i ' W or Id ?.<lb/>
the opposite: American p.<lb/>
the cause of many revolutii i<lb/>
the So icts foi aid. If there is a so<lb/>
world system" it is not because of<lb/>
tractiveness ot Soviet societv<lb/>
World revolutionaries, but bej<lb/>
American policy makers cann j<lb/>
the idea of genuine national sover<lb/>
in the colonial hinterland.<lb/>
All ot th's has been demonst<lb/>
most clearlv in recent weeks u<lb/>
Reagan administration's atJitudes<lb/>
actions regarding the Philippines<lb/>
1965 Marcos has ruled that countr<lb/>
an iron fist, while holding the<lb/>
hand out. In that time he haj<lb/>
cumulated vast holdings and the P<lb/>
pines have suffered the destruci<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0005"/><lb/>
? JtrZK&amp;Q&amp;A&amp;S,<lb/>
enied Van<lb/>
.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
en<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
Necessary<lb/>
and<lb/>
. ?ns must<lb/>
e groups<lb/>
: ting fine<lb/>
? e secure<lb/>
program<lb/>
. rars in a<lb/>
And he has a<lb/>
ante. He<lb/>
t Tommy<lb/>
college over<lb/>
with a total SAT<lb/>
rage trom a<lb/>
Hesitantly<lb/>
years later<lb/>
? his medical<lb/>
ersity of Penn-<lb/>
would argue<lb/>
the exception, I<lb/>
iur records<lb/>
:sands of Tom-<lb/>
?me to our institu-<lb/>
tnkly would not have been<lb/>
it ions Albright<lb/>
We need more schools that will<lb/>
e. and then take<lb/>
the care to produce that kind of<lb/>
triumph<lb/>
Darn I Brown is a former Managing<lb/>
Editor of the East Carolinian who now<lb/>
rks at the Youth Policy Institute and<lb/>
k as an intern at the Washington Post. Mr.<lb/>
Y Brown specializes in public policy ques-<lb/>
a tions as they relate to higher education<lb/>
it and he is currently doing research for a<lb/>
a book related to that topic.<lb/>
THE tASJ C MOl IHiN<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
THI EAST AKOl 1NIAN<lb/>
(IBRIARV 20. 1W<lb/>
Little Relief In Sight<lb/>
Farm Crisis Worsens As Banks Near<lb/>
B FRANK AKFRMAN<lb/>
I Vs.<lb/>
Foi many I S. tanners, having a<lb/>
good crop in 1985 meant having a bad<lb/>
yeai With world markets for<lb/>
agricultural exports shrinking, the last<lb/>
thing farmers needed was a bumper<lb/>
halves: to send then alreadv low crop<lb/>
prices even lower. Last spring an<lb/>
estimated 10-15 percent of farmers were<lb/>
labeled as not being creditworthy. Only<lb/>
about 5 percent were actually denied spr-<lb/>
ing planting loans, however. The rest<lb/>
were given a little more time to get bak<lb/>
E : feet, while the uiral banks, len-<lb/>
?ns, and farmers waited for<lb/>
improved farm economy<lb/>
t eai 's end.<lb/>
what they got. Alreadv<lb/>
 by low land values thai reduc-<lb/>
ers' assets, high interest rates.<lb/>
massive loans, the farm economy<lb/>
 as 1985 drew to a close. In the<lb/>
 . lartei alone, land values in some<lb/>
? the farm licit dropped bv 4-6<lb/>
( mmodity prices also con-<lb/>
I to fall, farmers had brought in<lb/>
harvests of important ex-<lb/>
ike corn and soybeans,<lb/>
twering 'heir world market<lb/>
V the crisis in the agricultural sector<lb/>
is becoming clear that<lb/>
m is inadequate to pay<lb/>
o itstanding loans. The in-<lb/>
tl . ? d to tanners are now in<lb/>
the 94 commercial banks<lb/>
e first 10 months of 1985.<lb/>
4 jverc banks thai leni more than 25<lb/>
? theii funds to farmers.<lb/>
V the massive Farm<lb/>
( redii System, is also in trouble. This<lb/>
svsi has supported farmers for<lb/>
? s, lost money last year<lb/>
el he Depression. In<lb/>
? ed the federal govern-<lb/>
.  .<lb/>
a app ng up its<lb/>
 new farm bill.<lb/>
t the irm bill and the<lb/>
? Svsi will determine the<lb/>
? ? iusands ot farmers<lb/>
and the financial system thai supports<lb/>
them. But it's unlikely that any solution<lb/>
will get at the roots of the problem: the<lb/>
macroeconomic policies thai have raised<lb/>
interest rates and shrunk U.S. exports.<lb/>
Farmers who have expanded into the in-<lb/>
ternational markets in the favorable<lb/>
1970s now find themselves unable to pav<lb/>
back their long- and short-term loans.<lb/>
While in large part the causes of the<lb/>
farm crisis can be traced to domestic<lb/>
policies, both the farm Credil System<lb/>
bailout and the new farm bill are being<lb/>
debated in the context of the federal<lb/>
budget deficit. With strong political<lb/>
pressure to reduce the deficit, the<lb/>
Reagan administration is more concern-<lb/>
ed about the billions of dollars it is being<lb/>
asked to pump into the farm economy<lb/>
than about the ong term economic ei<lb/>
feels o; a contraction in the agricultural<lb/>
sector. As the crisis spreads to the finan-<lb/>
cial sector, the pressure foi a bailout<lb/>
creases.<lb/>
The country's largest farm lender, the<lb/>
federal Farm Credit Svsiem accounts<lb/>
for about one-third ol the current S210<lb/>
billion farm deb: The system miners 12<lb/>
districts, each with a land, credit, and<lb/>
cooperative bank that provide funds tor<lb/>
crop land, short-term production ex-<lb/>
penses, and longer-term capital ex<lb/>
penscs, respectively. Originally funded<lb/>
by the federal government, the institu-<lb/>
tions derive some capital from the<lb/>
tanners who cooperatively own them. It:<lb/>
exchange for stocks in the banks, boi<lb/>
rowers deposit about 10 percent ol ir.<lb/>
loans there.<lb/>
The farm Credit Svstem also obtaii<lb/>
funds bv selling bonds on Wall Street it'<lb/>
large institutional investors I he<lb/>
securities are not actually guaranteed bv<lb/>
the federal government, hut hum in-<lb/>
vestors consider them to be as secure as<lb/>
government bonds. Until last tall, these<lb/>
bonds carried interest rates close to the<lb/>
low rates tor Treasury bonds, which in-<lb/>
vestors consider to he least nskv .<lb/>
The farm Credil System was pro-<lb/>
fitable about five years act' when the<lb/>
farm economy began t? decline and<lb/>
delinquent loans started to accumulate.<lb/>
Since 1981, the system's earnings have<lb/>
plummeted, falling from $994 million in<lb/>
1982 to $440 million in 1984.<lb/>
Throughout most of 1985, the Farm<lb/>
Credit System tried to conceal its finan-<lb/>
cial stress from its investors, and as late<lb/>
as July projected year-end earnings of<lb/>
more than $300 million. But in<lb/>
September it reported a third-quarter<lb/>
loss of $552.5 million, with anticipated<lb/>
losses of $2.5 billion for the fourth<lb/>
quarter when farmers' land loans came<lb/>
due. It subsequently asked for a federal<lb/>
bailout a $5.6 billion line of credit for<lb/>
its S"4 bilion loan portfolio. In order to<lb/>
placate investors, it continues to deny<lb/>
severe financial difficulties, insistiong<lb/>
that the real problems won't arrive for<lb/>
another year or two, by which time the<lb/>
government should have intervened.<lb/>
Privately owned agricultural banks<lb/>
arealso feeling the effects of the farm<lb/>
decline. At the end of 1984 these banks<lb/>
accounted for 23.5 percent of all U.S.<lb/>
farm debt. They generally provide<lb/>
about 40 percent tit all short-term credit,<lb/>
mainly capital for spring planting. After<lb/>
the 1985 crop came in, some farm<lb/>
economists estimated that half of all<lb/>
commercial bank farm debt would soon<lb/>
be uncollectible.<lb/>
Small agricultural banks felt the<lb/>
squeeze first. I he number of banks<lb/>
whose delinquent loans exceeded their<lb/>
capital surged to 402 in September, up<lb/>
from about 250 the fall before. Now<lb/>
largei banks are also feeling the<lb/>
pressure, although the larger they are.<lb/>
the less likely they are to fail. Bank of<lb/>
America, which registered a $338 million<lb/>
second quartei loss, has had problems<lb/>
with its SI. 1 billion agricultural port-<lb/>
folio. Similarly, Iowa's largest bank<lb/>
holding company, Hawkeye Bancorp of<lb/>
l)es Monies, showed a six-month net<lb/>
loss ol $6.5 million on its $1.9 billion of<lb/>
asset s.<lb/>
Hoping to stem their difficulties, this<lb/>
p: iv ate bankers began to lobby<lb/>
( apito) Hill to include them in any<lb/>
bailout til the farm Credit System. A<lb/>
number of Republican senators will be<lb/>
up for reelection in 1986, and their votes<lb/>
on the farm bill and Farm Credit System<lb/>
bailout may prove crucial to the- reelec-<lb/>
tion (and therefore to continued<lb/>
Republican control of the Senate). Still,<lb/>
it's not clear whether the agricultural<lb/>
banks will find the salvation they're<lb/>
seeking in Washington. If the Reagan<lb/>
administration operates true to form, it<lb/>
will let the small private banks fail, while<lb/>
preventing the failure of the Farm Credit<lb/>
system, which would have a far more<lb/>
dramatic effect on the larger financial<lb/>
system. In any case, bailing out the<lb/>
banks won't help farmers much ?<lb/>
they'll still have to repay their debts or<lb/>
face foreclosure.<lb/>
During the fall, Congress haggled<lb/>
over the two proposed bandaids for the<lb/>
farm economy ? the Federal Credit<lb/>
System bailout, and the Senate and<lb/>
House versions of the farm bill, which<lb/>
expired at the end of September.<lb/>
Although it has been rewritten every<lb/>
four years, since the 1930's the farm bill<lb/>
has consistently supported farmers with<lb/>
loans and subsidies intended to stabilize<lb/>
crop prices and supplement farmers' in-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Both the Senate and House voted-<lb/>
through bills that aimed to stimulate<lb/>
U.S. exports without increasing the<lb/>
federal government's expenditures. One<lb/>
way to increase exports is to lower what<lb/>
are called crop loan rates. If market<lb/>
prices fall too low, farmers can "lend"<lb/>
their crops to the government at these set<lb/>
prices, with the option of buying them<lb/>
back from stockpiles if market prices<lb/>
rise. Loan rates basically form the floor<lb/>
for farmers' crop prices, and therebv<lb/>
stabilize them. Free marketeers in Con-<lb/>
gress would like to lower loan rates for<lb/>
major crops in an effort to lower their<lb/>
prices and make them more competitive<lb/>
on the world market.<lb/>
While loan rates stabilize farmer's in-<lb/>
comes, another form of price supports,<lb/>
target prices, protect the level tit<lb/>
farmers' income. Target prices, which<lb/>
are much higher than loan rates, are us-<lb/>
ed to calculate subsidies to farmers: for<lb/>
each crop, farmers are guaranteed at<lb/>
least the target price. If market prices<lb/>
drop lower than the market price,the<lb/>
government essentially pays the farmers<lb/>
the difference.<lb/>
It's unclear whether lowering loan<lb/>
rates but maintaining target prices, as<lb/>
the farm bill may do, will make U.S.<lb/>
crops more competitive. Farmers will<lb/>
receive about the same income protec-<lb/>
tion as before, and have a little better ac-<lb/>
cess to export markets. But the markets<lb/>
lost over the past few years won't<lb/>
necessarily be easily regained. While the<lb/>
United States was regarded as the<lb/>
world's bread basket in the I970's other<lb/>
countries such as Argentina have since<lb/>
established themselves as producers of<lb/>
major crops like corn.<lb/>
The debate over the farm bill is largely<lb/>
being shaped by the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion's approach to the federal deficit.<lb/>
The cost of the agricultural subsidies will<lb/>
therefore be a major factor in the farm<lb/>
bill negotiations because they remain an<lb/>
obvious target for the Reagan ad-<lb/>
minstration, as it tries to cut expenses<lb/>
while maintaining military spending.<lb/>
last spring when framers and rural<lb/>
connunities were the only ones obviously<lb/>
threatened, the administration offered<lb/>
free-market solutions, proposing belt-<lb/>
tightening in place of bucks. Now that<lb/>
the financial system is threatened as<lb/>
well, the administration may relent, but<lb/>
only a little.<lb/>
It's dear that the government will<lb/>
have to spend money either to support<lb/>
farmers now or to bail tint the banks and<lb/>
Farm Credit Svstem later With land<lb/>
and commodity prices down, an J<lb/>
fewbuyers tor tarms or farmland in<lb/>
sight, the farm economy probably w<lb/>
be revived in the near future. The ad-<lb/>
ministration remains more concerned<lb/>
with dismantling the expensive<lb/>
agricultural support system and sustain-<lb/>
ing the lending institutions than with<lb/>
maintaining or increasing farm income.<lb/>
What seems most likely is that the<lb/>
tederal government will let the farm<lb/>
economv stagger along for a while<lb/>
longer before it decides to step in.<lb/>
Bases Take Precedence Over Democracy<lb/>
Neo-Colonialism U. S. Policy In Philippines<lb/>
Bv JIM WEINSTEIN<lb/>
V In These limes went to press, the<lb/>
ns were a dav off. It<lb/>
at ? ? ? t Aquino would<lb/>
a subs- . ority ot the vote,<lb/>
a as uncertain whether Ferdinand<lb/>
I Marcos would permit an honest<lb/>
.turn; tor hei to be declared the<lb/>
winner. Our primary concern is not the<lb/>
result, but the Reagan administration's<lb/>
role nt the election process m recent<lb/>
mom<lb/>
"The overriding U.S. goal in the<lb/>
" Jeane Kirkpatnck writes, "is<lb/>
to preserve the sovereignty of the in-<lb/>
dependent nations that exist there It<lb/>
"would be bad for them and tor us<lb/>
gues, it they were ?"incorporated<lb/>
'lie 'Socialist world svstem But<lb/>
gnty is not what the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration or conservatives in general<lb/>
are concerned about. Put simply, they<lb/>
oniv want the Third World to remain in-<lb/>
corporated into the American imperial<lb/>
system.<lb/>
President Reagan may actually believe<lb/>
it there would be mi "hot spots" in<lb/>
the world were it not for the Soviet<lb/>
l nion. That, at least, is what he told the<lb/>
H all Street Journal and what he said<lb/>
repeatedly until his meeting with<lb/>
Mikhail C.orbachov in Geneva cooled<lb/>
down the White House rhetoric. Soviet<lb/>
expansionism has been the administra-<lb/>
tion rationale for intervention in Central<lb/>
America, and the basis of conservative<lb/>
calls for support of Jonas Savimbi in<lb/>
Angola. But, as we have argued<lb/>
repeatedly, the Soviet Union is not the<lb/>
cause of Third World revolutions. Quite<lb/>
the opposite: American policy has been<lb/>
the cause of many revolutions turning to<lb/>
the Soviets for aid. If there is a "socialist<lb/>
world system" it is not because of the at-<lb/>
tractiveness of Soviet society to Third<lb/>
World revolutionaries, but because<lb/>
American policy makers cannot accept<lb/>
the idea of genuine national sovereignty<lb/>
in the colonial hinterland.<lb/>
All of this has been demonstrated<lb/>
most clearly in recent weeks in the<lb/>
Reagan administration's attitudes and<lb/>
actions regarding the Philippines. Since<lb/>
1965 Marcos has ruled that country with<lb/>
an iron fist, while holding the other<lb/>
hand out. In that time he has ac-<lb/>
cumulated vast holdings and the Philip-<lb/>
pines have suffered the destruction of<lb/>
their economy and almost 10 vears ol<lb/>
martial law (1972 81).<lb/>
This does not both, er Jeane<lb/>
Kirkpatnck, who points out that<lb/>
?'many, if not most, of the indeppendent<lb/>
(meaning dependent on the I .S I<lb/>
governments in the area" like South<lb/>
Korea and Taiwan ? also "exhibit<lb/>
authoritarian tendencies, have serious<lb/>
internal divisions, harbor low- level in-<lb/>
surgencies, suffer corruption and. in<lb/>
some cases, sponsor violenceIndeed.<lb/>
she argued, of 159 member states in the<lb/>
United Nations, "at least 100 are pro<lb/>
bably governed more poorly than the<lb/>
Philippines From her point o! view,<lb/>
Marcos is just one of the boys ? our<lb/>
boys.<lb/>
And, of course, the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration shared this view until<lb/>
recently. As George Bush told Marcos<lb/>
at an official dinner in the Philippines in<lb/>
1981, "We love your adherence to<lb/>
democratic principles and democratic<lb/>
processes. We will not leave you in<lb/>
isolation But, as was the case with<lb/>
true friends of earlier administrations ?<lb/>
the Shah of Iran, Anastasio Somoza<lb/>
Debale of Nicaragua and Ngo Dinh<lb/>
Diem of Vietnam ? administration of-<lb/>
ficials now fear that identification with<lb/>
Marcos at a time of growing anti-<lb/>
Marcos sentiment in the Philippines will<lb/>
generate a dangerous level of anti-<lb/>
American sentiment.<lb/>
So, like his counterparts in Iran,<lb/>
Nicaragua and Vietnam, Marcos is being<lb/>
put "in isolation" by his former<lb/>
benefactors. As the ew York Times<lb/>
explained, a "consensus has developed<lb/>
in the Reagan administration that the<lb/>
departure of President Ferdinand E.<lb/>
Marcos is critical to a non-Communist<lb/>
future for the Philippines and American<lb/>
interests in that country In short,<lb/>
Marcos has to go.<lb/>
None of this should be surprising to<lb/>
observers of Democratic and Republican<lb/>
administrations since the end of World<lb/>
War II. It's standard operating pro-<lb/>
cedure,and Reagan turns out to have no<lb/>
greater loyalty to his friends who come<lb/>
up short than did John F. Kennedy or<lb/>
Jimmy Carter. But there two aspects of<lb/>
the Philippine situation that are par-<lb/>
ticularly revealing: first, the casual way<lb/>
in which the administration and the<lb/>
mediadiscuss our intervention in the in-<lb/>
ternal affaires of the Philippines; se-<lb/>
cond, the admission by administration<lb/>
figures and the media that the Filipino<lb/>
insurgency has uo connection with either<lb/>
the Soviet I nion or China.<lb/>
Or. the firs: point, the January 26<lb/>
ew York Times offhandedly reported<lb/>
? the administration, after consider-<lb/>
ing the matter, had decided "not to<lb/>
push Mr Marcos from power by covert<lb/>
means, although that was considered by<lb/>
some officials, or by the public attacks<lb/>
on him, although officials have also<lb/>
come close to this<lb/>
Instead, the administration will simp-<lb/>
ly "distance itself" from the Filipino<lb/>
regime.This decision was not taken<lb/>
because anyone in the administration,<lb/>
or, indeed, in the loyal opposition in<lb/>
Congress, believes the United States has<lb/>
no right to set up or remove govern-<lb/>
ments in the supposedly sovereign na-<lb/>
tion of the Philippines, but for the more<lb/>
pragmatic reason that "very soon" they<lb/>
epect Marcos' health "will force him to<lb/>
withdraw from the sceneIn other<lb/>
words, what Kirkpatnck claims as the<lb/>
"overriding U.S. goal in the Pacific"<lb/>
was routinely overridden.<lb/>
For their own purposes, Marcos and<lb/>
his loyalists were quick to point out that<lb/>
administration actions are a form of col-<lb/>
onial interference. As a Marcos<lb/>
newspaper in Manila put it, the "Great<lb/>
White Father" is trying to undercut<lb/>
Philippine sovereignty. And as Marcos<lb/>
himself complained, he has been treated<lb/>
more fairly and favorably in recent mon-<lb/>
ths by the Soviet Union than by the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Which brings us to the myth of Soviet<lb/>
intervention. There is an armed revolu-<lb/>
tionary movement in the Philippines<lb/>
that calls itself Communist. It is, or<lb/>
was, Maoist ? which means that the<lb/>
Soviet Union has not supported it, but<lb/>
has gone out of its way to be friendly to<lb/>
the Marcos family, especially Imelda.<lb/>
China may have given some moral or<lb/>
material support to the rebels in the<lb/>
past, but does not do so now. So this in-<lb/>
surrection is not only indigenous, but<lb/>
cannot bv the wildest stretch of the im-<lb/>
agination be blamed on the "Evil Em-<lb/>
pire This has put a damper on ad-<lb/>
ministration and media rhetoric about<lb/>
the Filipino guerrillas.<lb/>
Instead, the strategic importance of<lb/>
the U.S. military bases in the Philippines<lb/>
has come to the fore as an issue that<lb/>
clearly carries greater weight than the<lb/>
nation's sovereignty, much less a sincere<lb/>
concern for the best interests of the<lb/>
Filipino people. When Marcos appeared<lb/>
strong, he was praised as a model of<lb/>
democratic statesmanship. Now he is a<lb/>
pariah. But Marcos has not changed,<lb/>
except temporarily to be a bit more<lb/>
liberal and less repressive in his<lb/>
desperate effort to retain power.<lb/>
This article is reprinted with permis-<lb/>
sion from In These Times, a bi-weekly<lb/>
based in Chicago.<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0006"/><lb/>
FHfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 20, 1986<lb/>
Presence Of MIA's Proven<lb/>
WASHINGTON (L PI) - A con-<lb/>
gressional team returning from<lb/>
two das of talks with Vietnamese<lb/>
officials in Hanoi has brought<lb/>
back the first official evidence<lb/>
that some men listed as missing in<lb/>
action are alive in Southeast<lb/>
Asia.<lb/>
The nine man delegation, led<lb/>
by Rep. Gerald Solomon, R<lb/>
NV. was to hold a news con-<lb/>
tererence today to report on the<lb/>
trip, during which Vietnamese<lb/>
L)epu! Foreign Minister Hoang<lb/>
Bich Son conceded, for the first<lb/>
time, that some Americans may<lb/>
be living in Vietnam by their own<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
According to the delegation,<lb/>
however, the foreign minister<lb/>
claimed the Vietnamese govern-<lb/>
ment is not aware of any specific<lb/>
cases of U.S. service men remain<lb/>
ing in Indochina.<lb/>
Although several American<lb/>
groups have visited Vietnam.<lb/>
none has come back with clear<lb/>
evidence that any American1, are<lb/>
there.<lb/>
However, Solomon told the<lb/>
NBC "Today" program,<lb/>
"There's no longer anv question<lb/>
that there are live Americans in<lb/>
Vietnam. The question is: Who<lb/>
are they, how main of them are<lb/>
there "<lb/>
Solomon said thev could be<lb/>
"prisoners of war  American<lb/>
that just stayed over after the<lb/>
war, or  deserters<lb/>
"We've received so main live<lb/>
sightings from so main different<lb/>
sources that there just cannot be<lb/>
anv question but what they're<lb/>
there. Because of this new a!<lb/>
titude of the Vietnamese govern-<lb/>
ment, we reallv believe that thev<lb/>
are now<lb/>
"The Vietnamese government<lb/>
has shifted from position of:<lb/>
'There are no Americans in Viet-<lb/>
nam' to a position that. ' I here<lb/>
are no Americans under their<lb/>
control to the final position as<lb/>
of this week that, ' 1 here are no<lb/>
americans under their control,<lb/>
but there could be Americans<lb/>
there thev are unaware ot<lb/>
Solomon said the deputv<lb/>
foreign minister "said to me and<lb/>
to the press, openly: That there<lb/>
could he Americans in the moun-<lb/>
tains, in the caves, in areas<lb/>
beyond then control "<lb/>
"That to me, is a significant<lb/>
breakthrough said Solomon,<lb/>
"and 1 think that it's going to<lb/>
lead tii, eventually, at least the<lb/>
accountability, ot some ot those<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
"We've seen this position<lb/>
change over the last 18 months<lb/>
said Solomon, who attributed<lb/>
this Hi the tact that "the country<lb/>
is in economic chaos, and I think<lb/>
that the Vietnamese government<lb/>
i-  desperate to gam recogni-<lb/>
tion or normalizations,<lb/>
something thai is going to lead to<lb/>
theii being able to improve their<lb/>
economy by acceptance by the<lb/>
rest ot the tree world<lb/>
" I he can't do that unless thev<lb/>
account tor these POWMIAs "<lb/>
Flooding,AvalanchesContinue in West<lb/>
(UPI) ? The Western Dei .ge<lb/>
moved into its second week today<lb/>
with forecasters offering no<lb/>
respite from the rain snow and<lb/>
wind that triggered Hoods and<lb/>
avlanches cut off entire towns<lb/>
and forced thousands to flee to<lb/>
high ground from California to<lb/>
C olorada.<lb/>
At least 5 people have been<lb/>
killed in the flooding, mud slides,<lb/>
avalanches and high surf spawn-<lb/>
ed by a series of storms that<lb/>
began Feb. 12. More than 8,000<lb/>
people fled the record floods in<lb/>
northern and central California.<lb/>
"I don't know what I'm going<lb/>
to do cued Kitty Ihacker. 55,<lb/>
one of 600 people airlifted out<lb/>
the hamlet ol Guerneville,<lb/>
isolated by the flooding Russion<lb/>
River Tuesday. "I don't have anv<lb/>
insurance. I don't know how I'm<lb/>
even going to start over<lb/>
She fell sobbing into the amis<lb/>
of National Guardsman a: a Red<lb/>
Cross Shelter in Santa Rov<lb/>
Refugees jammed Si. Elizabt<lb/>
Catholic Church in Guerneville, a<lb/>
resort town 70 miles north ot Sa<lb/>
Fransico where 20 inches ot ram<lb/>
have fallen.<lb/>
"I: was hell cold, most ot<lb/>
the people wet, the flooi con<lb/>
sntly wet" aid David<lb/>
Weaver, J8,  carpenter, "They<lb/>
ided out paper blankets and<lb/>
you put them on wet t and<lb/>
they turned to nu<lb/>
Die nver rose nearly 17 feel<lb/>
and sheriff's<lb/>
deputies p : by<lb/>
boai. looking : ?? o randed<lb/>
 Is<lb/>
"We are asking people '?<lb/>
Officers Supplement Safety<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
badges and puts them on the<lb/>
payroll.<lb/>
The normal work period is<lb/>
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m.<lb/>
to 5 p.m. During that time unit<lb/>
members keep a constanct check<lb/>
on the parking areas. Thev can<lb/>
work evenings and at other times<lb/>
as their class schedules permit.<lb/>
Additional work mav come dur-<lb/>
ing special events on weekends<lb/>
when they direct traffic or serve<lb/>
as parking lot attendants.<lb/>
"Their grades .ome first; if<lb/>
they've got a big test the follow-<lb/>
ing day, I'd rather they stay home<lb/>
and study. If their grades slip,<lb/>
they're put on probation until<lb/>
their grades are brought back<lb/>
up Monahan said. Only<lb/>
sophomores at least 18 years of<lb/>
age and with a grade point<lb/>
average of at least 2.5 can apply<lb/>
to become reserve members. "By<lb/>
the time you are a sophomore,<lb/>
you know the dorms, you know<lb/>
basically where all the places are<lb/>
on campus, how to give direc-<lb/>
tions and you have a little more<lb/>
confidence in<lb/>
Monahan.<lb/>
vourselt.<lb/>
While their activities are con-<lb/>
fined to the E( I ?ampus,<lb/>
members can report suspicious<lb/>
persons to the Greeenville Police<lb/>
Department with their radios.<lb/>
Many reserve officers have bee<lb/>
given letters of commendation<lb/>
for their work with the city police<lb/>
department.<lb/>
On two occasions, student<lb/>
ficers were called upon to assist in<lb/>
the training of the city r I<lb/>
rookies bv posing a rowdy<lb/>
troublemakers. Althougl<lb/>
regular city police officers and<lb/>
the magistrate were aware ol the<lb/>
training exercise, the rookies<lb/>
were not told until they had com-<lb/>
pleted all necessary procedures<lb/>
"It gives some of our reserve- a<lb/>
chance to see what it's like to be<lb/>
arrested, because through our<lb/>
local background check, we<lb/>
know that none ol them have<lb/>
ever known that feeling<lb/>
Monahan said.<lb/>
Some of the students who have<lb/>
?n in the Student Reserve <lb/>
e switched careers as a resuli<lb/>
? vvork with the unil 'M<lb/>
lated a couple ot y<lb/>
?? i<lb/>
Greenville Police I) em.<lb/>
Severa have gone<lb/>
Federal Bureau ot Invesi .<lb/>
an the civilian bra:<lb/>
Nava . . ,? Sei<lb/>
ices -aid Monahan.<lb/>
ate<lb/>
klder, 1 Cl 's pub;<lb/>
. -avs ol reserve unit,<lb/>
"I think it's damn good. 1 don't<lb/>
? we ever functioned<lb/>
Tutorial Service $<lb/>
Continued From Page .<lb/>
tutors should go to the Student<lb/>
Services office located in<lb/>
Whichard who then refers ap-<lb/>
plicants to the individual<lb/>
academic department he she re-<lb/>
quests. All applicants are screen-<lb/>
ed to determine their ability to<lb/>
help others in specific subjects.<lb/>
For those who need tutoring,<lb/>
the departments list available<lb/>
tutors. Tutors are listed through<lb/>
the departments to verify that<lb/>
they are qualified to tutor in a<lb/>
given area.<lb/>
Some of the tutors require pay-<lb/>
ment while some do not;<lb/>
"basaically, the merit of pay<lb/>
depends upon the tutor and the<lb/>
difficulty of the subject. For ex-<lb/>
ample, computer science will cost<lb/>
more, than say, English" ex-<lb/>
plains Lucy Wright, Assistant<lb/>
Dean of Student Services.<lb/>
Next week, an updated list of<lb/>
academic departments with<lb/>
available students will be com-<lb/>
pleted. At the currect time, some<lb/>
of the department include:<lb/>
Biology, Chemistry, Foreign<lb/>
Languages, Geography,<lb/>
Geology, History, Mathematics<lb/>
and Computer Science, Physics<lb/>
and Political Science.<lb/>
Other Services offered on a<lb/>
regular basis are those of the<lb/>
Math Lab, Writing Lab (both<lb/>
located in Austin), and the<lb/>
leading Lab (located in<lb/>
Ragsdale).<lb/>
Also, some peer services are of-<lb/>
fered through the residence halls.<lb/>
For these services contact Nancy<lb/>
Smith of Residence life for fur-<lb/>
ther information.<lb/>
"The sources are available to<lb/>
the students to take advantage"<lb/>
says Elmer Meyer Dean of Stu-<lb/>
dent Life. Dean Wright adds<lb/>
"the growth of the tutorial pro-<lb/>
gram depends upon the students.<lb/>
We would like very much for this<lb/>
program to expand<lb/>
If you need help in a class, do<lb/>
not wait until the end of the<lb/>
semester. Services are available.<lb/>
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mined 1 el<lb/>
V<lb/>
VJ kiK try!<lb/>
!&amp;:<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
.t<lb/>
Monty P<lb/>
Monl Pthon The Meaning of I<lb/>
TheaCre on Feb. 21 ? 22 at 11 p.m<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0007"/><lb/>
Q<lb/>
pocoiids<lb/>
AV V PM<lb/>
IN STOCK<lb/>
? , orite<lb/>
NAL ARTISTS<lb/>
$7 99<lb/>
tif $6.99<lb/>
$7 99<lb/>
$849<lb/>
$7 99<lb/>
$6 98<lb/>
S7 99<lb/>
$4 99<lb/>
$5 98<lb/>
$7 49<lb/>
TMF FASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
I l-BKI AK 20. IW<lb/>
dye<lb/>
Disney Sunday Movie Offers<lb/>
Touching Tale Of Freedom<lb/>
pal Church<lb/>
Ml 01<lb/>
? urih Streel<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
hr Special<lb/>
Party<lb/>
n Friday<lb/>
BO til 7:30<lb/>
c<lb/>
IHS and<lb/>
JOR LABELS<lb/>
P ARTISTS<lb/>
bRDABLE PRICES<lb/>
thing for Everyone<lb/>
p, Rock, Folk,<lb/>
Izz and Classics<lb/>
On Sale for Limited Time<lb/>
Shop Early for Best Selection<lb/>
1986<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
PI) Disney has done n<lb/>
1 t toi y of I inn Yann,<lb/>
i ambodian refugee who<lb/>
eked the socks off merica,<lb/>
v a beauty<lb/>
t dition ol the reincai -<lb/>
Dis ley Sunday Movie is<lb/>
ie Girl Who Spelled<lb/>
(ABC, Feb. 23, 7<lb/>
I nd ti ue to Disney form,<lb/>
drama has all the<lb/>
 ? ? the family. a mo -<lb/>
i family struggling for<lb/>
and ai taining t he<lb/>
dream li is 'old<lb/>
. eyes ol oung I inn<lb/>
 round-faced, bright-eyed<lb/>
td who learned<lb/>
pell freedom I he hard way<lb/>
hei mothei. and five<lb/>
? d sistei s were held in a<lb/>
 a rk camp in w ai -toi n<lb/>
dia foi years, rhey<lb/>
 aftei a torturous, HX)<lb/>
.  n ?? ck, and found<lb/>
refuge in Thailand. A relief agen-<lb/>
cy brought them to the United<lb/>
States, where they settled in<lb/>
Chattanooga, lenn and excell<lb/>
ed<lb/>
s soon as she entered school.<lb/>
Yann became an exceptional stu-<lb/>
dent, especially in spelling. Yann<lb/>
was so good thai she entered<lb/>
spelling bees and eventually won<lb/>
the Chattanooga city finals, good<lb/>
enough to win a trip to the i<lb/>
tionals in Washington. No; main<lb/>
girls gel phone calls from Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan wishing them luck.<lb/>
I oday. 1 inn Yann is 15 yeai s<lb/>
old, in the eighth grade, running<lb/>
cross-country foi the track team,<lb/>
living with tier family in theii<lb/>
own castle and enjoying being a<lb/>
teenagei in America. She even<lb/>
has a Tennessee twang, with a<lb/>
dash of teen-speak (lots ol you<lb/>
know 's and "like, you<lb/>
know's) Not a trace ol Cam<lb/>
bodia, except deep in hei eyes.<lb/>
In the movie, Wayne Rogers<lb/>
("M.A.S.H) and Mary Kay<lb/>
PlaceThe Bighilt) play George<lb/>
and Prissy Thrash, the couple<lb/>
who sponsored Yann's family,<lb/>
and lade Chinn plays 1 inn Yann.<lb/>
Chinn, a Canadian who speaks<lb/>
French, English, and Chinese,<lb/>
had little trouble picking up the<lb/>
Cambodian dialect.<lb/>
 inn thought about playing<lb/>
herself bui it wouldn'i have<lb/>
? oi ked<lb/>
?Tm a little big foi my part<lb/>
she said in a telephone interview<lb/>
mhattanooga "I'm older<lb/>
now a I'm a lot taller. I'm not<lb/>
really tall. It's jusi thai when I<lb/>
came here 1 was short, because ol<lb/>
malnutrition and all that. Now<lb/>
I 'm 5 " and a quartei. 1 like<lb/>
a nbui gers.<lb/>
set H M Page 8<lb/>
St. Elmo's Fire<lb/>
Ron I owe, Mare Wininjjham. Kmilio Esteves, Demi Moore. Jutid Nelson. ll Mieedy and Andrew Mc-<lb/>
( arthv star in the critically aclaimed motion picture 'St. Elmo's Fire plavinu rib. 20 22 in Hendriv<lb/>
I heatre at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Admission is free with a valid ECU ID card.<lb/>
Nominee<lb/>
l I'h - Geraldine Paj "Il sounds say, but<lb/>
ictress evera they n n - foi what<lb/>
yvorry ab ?uf 'l etl ei they did in the past, how .<lb/>
?. : wii an Oscai on her they have tailed to n<lb/>
for The Trip to Bountiful she<lb/>
was nominated foi said. As she spoke, :ked<lb/>
V td ? Award on seven ovei a nouvelle cuis<lb/>
is o<lb/>
. a<lb/>
nd I i Sq ?? ate<lb/>
itl the g nteel, Southei<lb/>
iness thai is hei tra<lb/>
and ol i stage.<lb/>
She recalled<lb/>
 ;? Trip to Bountiful in compt foi Best ctr n summer and<lb/>
Smoke, Sweet Bird of Youth,<lb/>
Interiors and foi Best Supporting<lb/>
ctres? Hondo, You're a Big<lb/>
ns and never<lb/>
dustry rec<lb/>
vas non<lb/>
 . ?. n Hortoi I ?te's<lb/>
d ? ;r Whoop<lb/>
three ? ?<lb/>
v ?: Bam '<lb/>
;a : . . and Meryl s"<lb/>
ldusi ? litiona<lb/>
Ihn ow,Peti 'n' Tiliie, and Tht<lb/>
Pope oj Greenwich Ullage and<lb/>
favoi aved<lb/>
pointed Oscai hopefuls, in these films wei . dei mding<lb/>
ally someone like Page who asarrie Watts<lb/>
id a long, distinguished "From my pom; ol view, t ar-<lb/>
eceived hei first rie was a lot more work nan the<lb/>
1961 But no othei roles. She is a n  older<lb/>
one will know tl t itcome until womai d it is a very sustained<lb/>
the cadem waros presenta- role i ij u n<lb/>
? mined 1 asi 1 exas widow in<lb/>
her 70s ? break away<lb/>
fe with I ' son and his<lb/>
irn l Bountiful,<lb/>
rural a vhere she was<lb/>
 her w<lb/>
impassion, .<lb/>
. :e of b ? . a :at y but<lb/>
slyh ful and<lb/>
"I've always played old<lb/>
es said, "It's my<lb/>
( a ie has wondeiful<lb/>
I've been observing old<lb/>
Aould ? how<lb/>
. hey behave ?<lb/>
? 1 was a ? my Ann:<lb/>
. Lu<lb/>
vs ur family<lb/>
?-l played lexandra del I ago<lb/>
; V an ? Sweet<lb/>
Hin! oj outh when 1 was in<lb/>
. Ie her in her<lb/>
I . audience<lb/>
ei N ou don't<lb/>
an  eesl it Hut I<lb/>
u hite Sights, one ol six films she<lb/>
made in 1985. I he others were<lb/>
Flanagan, in which she plays an<lb/>
Irish grandmother in her late 80s,<lb/>
Riders t the Sea. The Bride and<lb/>
v title Girl, yet to be released<lb/>
Her stage careei had been almost<lb/>
as busy.<lb/>
Page, who was elected to the<lb/>
rheatei Hall ol lame nearly a<lb/>
decade ago. is Artist m Residence<lb/>
ai the Mirror Repertory Com-<lb/>
pany which occupies a theater in<lb/>
Saint Peter's Church in midtown<lb/>
Manhattan She played there in<lb/>
The Madwoman of Chaillot<lb/>
before going into the current off<lb/>
Broadway production ol San<lb/>
Shepard's I Lie oj the Mind in<lb/>
role ol a slatternly, eccentric<lb/>
mother<lb/>
She was recently h ef<lb/>
for hypertension, winch caused<lb/>
hei to drop out ol the Shepard<lb/>
play, but she has been rehears<lb/>
foi a Mirroi company production<lb/>
ol W. Somerset Maughan's The<lb/>
Circle, scheduled to open Feb.<lb/>
2o. She plays the wicked 1 ady<lb/>
Kitty, as juicy a role as the com-<lb/>
edy otters.<lb/>
In addition she has had se<lb/>
teleision projects (si I<lb/>
l-mmv award foi Besl ctress 20<lb/>
years ago) including an episode<lb/>
? HB - "Hitchhiker" which<lb/>
k hei on location to Van-<lb/>
couver and Doris hase's one-<lb/>
woman Mdc drama, Table t i<lb/>
One " SI e also added Chaucer's<lb/>
The Wife of Bath's Tale to hei<lb/>
repertory I il readii<lb/>
and premiered it at Manhattai<lb/>
Y eat her this winter.<lb/>
"I've nevei been so busy in my<lb/>
. Page, with a sigh l<lb/>
: a suspiciously euphoric<lb/>
md. "I've never had work I<lb/>
? fered such variety . which is<lb/>
see PAGE, Patje 8<lb/>
From The Not So flight<lb/>
Pat's 'Personal9 Comments<lb/>
Pa<lb/>
ho<lb/>
thai a onderl . - . ' ;ca look a<lb/>
whethei house dress and Red White shts<lb/>
she does l .? must have 25 40-ish, smartly<lb/>
to make p unds - - - ' ageni ol<lb/>
a i. arrie Watts is a fluttery bui dancei Mil Bary iko in<lb/>
Illumina Competition Opens<lb/>
?i<lb/>
1 c<lb/>
? -<lb/>
I C I Student L nion<lb/>
v ? Committee will pre-<lb/>
annual art competition,<lb/>
lumina '86 This competition<lb/>
to all currently enrolled<lb/>
udents and to all forms ol<lb/>
jal art.<lb/>
ach participant will be limned<lb/>
ree entries with a S3 entry fee<lb/>
entry, lor the winners, cash<lb/>
zes totaling $600 will be<lb/>
arded. Works are to be sub-<lb/>
tted Feb.19 through 21, from 1<lb/>
p.m. to 5 p.m at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Room 212.<lb/>
Works will be exhibited Feb.<lb/>
23 through Match 2. with the<lb/>
reception being Feb. 24 from 6:30<lb/>
p.m. to 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
I he judges for this campus<lb/>
wide competition are led Potter,<lb/>
director o the Southeastern<lb/>
C enter tor Contemporary Art<lb/>
(SECCA) and the Associate<lb/>
Curator foi SECCA, Richard<lb/>
Craven. Potter has established<lb/>
Monty Python<lb/>
Monty Python's The Meaning of Life' will be playing in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on Feb. 21 ? 22 at 11 p.m.<lb/>
himsell as one ol the southeast's<lb/>
.op art jurors by judging over 2(H)<lb/>
ions throughout the<lb/>
southeast and nationally.<lb/>
Pottei has also exhibited his<lb/>
works at the Atlantic Center for<lb/>
the Arts in Daytona, Florida and<lb/>
the Galerie Jules La Forgue in<lb/>
New Orleans, l ouisiana, to men-<lb/>
tion two oi his many exhibitions<lb/>
during Ins distinguished career.<lb/>
I qually qualified. Craven has<lb/>
had exhibitions nationw ide and is<lb/>
currently in exhibition at the<lb/>
Mini Museum in Charlotte entitl-<lb/>
ed "Southern Comfort Discom-<lb/>
fort" (20 Southern artists).<lb/>
The Visual Arts Committee<lb/>
also books touring exhibitions<lb/>
from leading museums and<lb/>
distinguished artists to enhance<lb/>
ECU's fine an school. One recent<lb/>
exhibit of national prominence<lb/>
was the Smithsonian's colorful<lb/>
"Recent American Works on<lb/>
Paper" during the 1985 Fall<lb/>
Semester; and in April, the Visual<lb/>
Arts Committee will bring you<lb/>
the dazzling photography of<lb/>
Joseph Champagne. In other ex-<lb/>
hibitions, the Visual Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee has collaborated with the<lb/>
ECU School o An to present the<lb/>
watercolor paintings of Dr.<lb/>
William Holley, a professor at<lb/>
ECU and the graphic art of Com-<lb/>
mercial Art students.<lb/>
But these forms of media are<lb/>
not enough for Steven Zakely,<lb/>
president of the Visual Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee and a second year Business<lb/>
majorArt minor student. "The<lb/>
name 'visual arts' implies visual<lb/>
art, so we're trying to broaden<lb/>
our horizon from photography,<lb/>
graphics, and painting by attemp-<lb/>
ting to bring a laser show to the<lb/>
ECU campus this spring Zake-<lb/>
ly added, "We also have<lb/>
workshops, lectures, and<lb/>
demonstrations that present art<lb/>
majors with the business end of<lb/>
art<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
sinfl Untrr<lb/>
Well, once again, Valentine's Day has passed ns<lb/>
by. And once again. I am reminded why 1 feel<lb/>
repugnant at the very mention of the word "com-<lb/>
mitment<lb/>
1 have no idea how many times 1 have to sav it,<lb/>
or how many times it has to be proven, but love<lb/>
makes von numb from the neck<lb/>
up. It's all too true. How else<lb/>
could one justify drinking four-<lb/>
teen beers and a pint o bour-<lb/>
bon while attempting to explain<lb/>
to one's dog the pros and cons<lb/>
o a monogomous relationship<lb/>
with a woman?<lb/>
A perfect example of the<lb/>
idiotic things the lovelorn will<lb/>
sav can be found in "Love<lb/>
I ines published last Thursday<lb/>
in The East Carolinian. Folks, 1<lb/>
may be a cynic, but I haven't<lb/>
read such dribble since 1 glanced<lb/>
at the lyrics for Air Supply's last<lb/>
album. My Cod, people were drooling all over<lb/>
each other. To tell you the truth, 1 got the dry-<lb/>
heaves.<lb/>
Here now are what I consider to be prime ex-<lb/>
amples of what love does to the human mind. Be<lb/>
warned, it's not a pretty sight.<lb/>
When 1 read the first one, 1 thought, "MB,<lb/>
you're an animal Now 1 simply think MB is one<lb/>
of the more creative people on campus. Her<lb/>
message was this:<lb/>
Todd: I 'm glad you 're my valentine! I love you.<lb/>
I love you. I love you ? MB. Notice the two ex<lb/>
clamation marks at the end of her message. They<lb/>
L05T Wi VIR6INITY IF NG .<lb/>
500M MY BOYFRIEND RAlPh , . .<lb/>
BE. MAJ0RWM CnFLD REWARD<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLIKiU.N<lb/>
PF.R50NALS REQUIRED RtADlMu<lb/>
kind ol goe the multi-syllabi MB the extra em<lb/>
phasis she needs i ermessa oss Kind of<lb/>
warms the heart, doesn't it<lb/>
Here's one thai 1 still can't quite comprehend.<lb/>
I he person who wrote il obviously intended to<lb/>
compliment the person for whom it was written. 1<lb/>
guess 'his ins; goes one step further in proving mv<lb/>
theory of love-induced mind-mush. I am taking it<lb/>
for granted that a male wrote this foi his girlfriend<lb/>
I hope I'm not wrong.<lb/>
To my hi lie sex-kiUen:<lb/>
Thanks for the bestfivem onths<lb/>
oj my life. I'll love viv today,<lb/>
tomorrow, and forever. And<lb/>
here comes the clincher ?<lb/>
something 1 wouldn't have<lb/>
thought of, Lux V ?-<lb/>
Whoredog. Now that's affec<lb/>
lion - and thev sav romance is<lb/>
dead? Perish the thought .<lb/>
I hrough the years. I've<lb/>
mellowed (believe it or not) to<lb/>
the point where I can unders-<lb/>
tand people caring for other<lb/>
people. So. it came as no sur-<lb/>
prise to me when 1 read how Pa. Karen felt about<lb/>
Shannon.<lb/>
Shannon: Youness, meness, usness, weness.<lb/>
Happy Valentine's Day. From Pa. Karen I really<lb/>
feel that this can stand on its own. I mean, what<lb/>
more is there to sav'1 If anyone out there can tell<lb/>
me what the hell that's supposed to mean, let me<lb/>
know. Dan (my blood-thirsty editor) and 1 are<lb/>
completely bewildered.<lb/>
The last two classifieds to be reckoned with<lb/>
didn't appear in "love lines No, tliese are<lb/>
See MOLLOY, Page 8<lb/>
Madonna, Penn Co-star In Movie<lb/>
Shanghai Surprise, an action-<lb/>
packed motion picture adventure<lb/>
laced with romance and humor<lb/>
which will star Sean Penn and<lb/>
Madonna, began principal<lb/>
photography last month in<lb/>
Macao and Hong Kong for<lb/>
Handmade Films.<lb/>
Set in the mysterious, chaotic<lb/>
and often dangerous city of<lb/>
Shanghai during the late 1930s,<lb/>
Shanghai Surprise focuses on a<lb/>
sharp-witted and fairly honorable<lb/>
American fortune hunter and the<lb/>
beautiful and very honorable<lb/>
missionary who recruits him to<lb/>
unearth a legendary cache of<lb/>
stolen opium. To obtain it,<lb/>
however, they must confront a<lb/>
variety of unsavory adversaries<lb/>
who want the opium for<lb/>
themselves, and haven't a grain<lb/>
of honor at all.<lb/>
Penn has impressed critics and<lb/>
movie-goers alike with powerful<lb/>
performances in such films as<lb/>
The Falcon and the Snowman,<lb/>
Racing With The Moon, Bad<lb/>
Boys, Taps and Fast Times at<lb/>
Ridgemont High.<lb/>
Madonna made the often dif-<lb/>
ficult transition between the<lb/>
worlds of rock music and motion<lb/>
pictures look easy with her debut<lb/>
in Desperately Seeking Susan last<lb/>
year. Married in Malibu last<lb/>
August, this talented couple will<lb/>
appear together on the screen for<lb/>
the first time in Shanghai Sur-<lb/>
prise, a considerable coup for its<lb/>
producers.<lb/>
Director Jim Goddard brings a<lb/>
wealth o experience to his duties<lb/>
on Shanghai Surprise, and in-<lb/>
cludes three hit long-form televi-<lb/>
sion programs among his credits:<lb/>
the 1984 mii-series, "Kennedv<lb/>
and acclaimed productions of<lb/>
"Nicholas Nickeiby" and "Reil-<lb/>
ly: Ace of Spies<lb/>
Following four weeks of loca-<lb/>
tion work in Hong Kong, the pro-<lb/>
duction will return to Shepperton<lb/>
Studios for an additional month<lb/>
of sound-stage and location work<lb/>
in London.<lb/>
?-Jf ?<lb/>
? gf 4? ?? ? m<lb/>
 . v ' '<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
HI i s i k I IM <lb/>
i I UK I AfO :d. 1986<lb/>
i<lb/>
Arden Trio To Visit Feb. 25<lb/>
With the cancellation ol<lb/>
Rogeri Trio and the Quart<lb/>
Beethoven di Roma, the Kl<lb/>
( hambei Festival, co-sponsored<lb/>
by the Department ol I niversitx<lb/>
1 'ntons and the 1(1 School ol<lb/>
Music, has scheduled a pei<lb/>
mance ol the Arden I rio. 11<lb/>
concert will he held in Hendri.<lb/>
rheatre 1 eh. 25<lb/>
The memebers ol the Arden<lb/>
I no (pianist rhomas Schmidt,<lb/>
violinist Suzanne Ornstein, and<lb/>
cellist Cla Ruede) met as<lb/>
graduate students at the Yale<lb/>
School of Music in !v. and bi<lb/>
ing a rich varietv ol mi<lb/>
pei lence lo theii work as a trio.<lb/>
Individually, they have par-<lb/>
ed in nearly every facet of<lb/>
as musical life, from solo<lb/>
recitals and concerto appearances<lb/>
azz recordings and perfor-<lb/>
our nation's major<lb/>
VMtl<lb/>
I he have also been involved<lb/>
d . projects featuring<lb/>
omposers ranging<lb/>
Sondheim to Philip<lb/>
I io is expanding the<lb/>
k literature b com-<lb/>
a broad spectrum of<lb/>
an composers, including<lb/>
Pi ize winner Charles<lb/>
m u s<lb/>
from Si<lb/>
Glass<lb/>
chambt<lb/>
Wuorinen.<lb/>
Their 1981 New York debut<lb/>
vvas greeted with great critical ac-<lb/>
claim, affirming their reputation<lb/>
for virtuoso ensemble playing of<lb/>
the highest order. Since that time,<lb/>
they have toured to even more ac-<lb/>
claim from coast-to-coast, and<lb/>
have furthered their commitment<lb/>
to bringing chamber music to the<lb/>
broadest audience possible with<lb/>
their specially designed residen-<lb/>
ces.<lb/>
Tickets for this performance<lb/>
are available now from the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office in Mendenhall,<lb/>
Mon.? Fri. 11 a.m. ? 6 p.m.<lb/>
Ticket prices are $2 for ECU<lb/>
students and guest, $2 for Youth<lb/>
(high school and under), and $4<lb/>
for all others and at the door.<lb/>
If you have already purchased<lb/>
individual tickets to the Rogeri<lb/>
Trio or to the Quartetio<lb/>
Beethoven di Roma, or if you are<lb/>
a 1985-1986 Chamber Festival<lb/>
Series season ticket owner, you<lb/>
may be admitted to the concert<lb/>
with your current ticket. You will<lb/>
not need to turn in your old<lb/>
tickets to be able to enjoy the<lb/>
wonders and delights of the<lb/>
Arden Trio.<lb/>
AHORIIOW I r<lb/>
TO 12th I I h<lb/>
or ihi (, i v <lb/>
$195 Abon - ? ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
and I' ? '<lb/>
I<lb/>
- ? ' .<lb/>
<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
?M?? <lb/>
? -?-?-?'?<lb/>
TEQUILA BAR<lb/>
Opening Soon<lb/>
'r?T<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Young Girl Finds Freedom<lb/>
ContinuedFromPaye7<lb/>
Yann thoughno 1ewa<lb/>
"great eventhoUJ,hsMile<lb/>
memories procucetears.s<lb/>
recalls being atnmit V<lb/>
and drinking midd) u<lb/>
the journey<lb/>
"I cued aI u as<lb/>
parts. When ue esi<lb/>
Cambodia ti ? i ;<lb/>
any fo d<lb/>
all sick W<lb/>
we were gw tv<lb/>
A-ere i<lb/>
had off as w w "1?<lb/>
and all because11' w w<lb/>
in merica<lb/>
don't ha e ?<lb/>
family and 1<lb/>
Yann net<lb/>
childhood 5 i - ? s old <lb/>
? -1 u ? ? ip . ditches,<lb/>
lier, shaking in<lb/>
pa Idies providing<lb/>
Khmer Rouge<lb/>
i us all.<lb/>
lough food. We<lb/>
? wild berries<lb/>
HolKwood<lb/>
? Disney 1 and.<lb/>
; inds me ol<lb/>
W e used ;<lb/>
? d ol bamboo<lb/>
kind of<lb/>
' mei ica in ls?9<lb/>
sliding at<lb/>
ticing the<lb/>
. sponsor<lb/>
Molloy Considers Theory;<lb/>
Love-Induced Idiocy<lb/>
Continued from Pau??<lb/>
merely si up  pei<lb/>
have appeared r<lb/>
anything,<lb/>
even silliei I<lb/>
"Pumpkin<lb/>
Now, the<lb/>
usual drippy. sa<lb/>
sickening things<lb/>
?ays u hen I e's<lb/>
ending that 1<lb/>
eye.<lb/>
Pun nku<lb/>
one has eei<lb/>
hal you<lb/>
'he rest<lb/>
itself. You :<lb/>
exclamation poii<lb/>
Yeah, I'll he ; S u .<lb/>
the women dowi <lb/>
him. Cine me a break<lb/>
And now tor one o<lb/>
ever ap<lb/>
Vi'U<lb/>
.???<lb/>
 'he pain.<lb/>
. kids V I .<lb/>
kind ol thing<lb/>
' ctually,<lb/>
named<lb/>
ad ill<lb/>
about<lb/>
 find<lb/>
?n heers,<lb/>
I ai sounds<lb/>
 Manilow,<lb/>
cle - it may<lb/>
like a<lb/>
? eenie.<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. $3.46 hr.<lb/>
See For Yourself<lb/>
on All Frames, Sunglasses,<lb/>
and Contact Lenses<lb/>
Everyday.<lb/>
New tee k two baaoc urn tin NOD kflenn bma todam<lb/>
ftanacvayckysavmpol ?5I 60 tl rryuiu aiaii ,u? rhe<lb/>
Eye Sdr .n lie Ptaa, jni rhe Eye (arcami a ?tc -poo nx-x<lb/>
In vim.i. eye cvjimiuu.? we available at ih- Eye Care Ceaa<lb/>
No appantmeni rts Qfl Un t:X4UU <lb/>
I"he Mia.<lb/>
(???? "VvWI<lb/>
OPIOMC1NC<lb/>
?f? CARE 0CN1CR;<lb/>
For framr VUhIioii and Eye Kxaminations:<lb/>
12H (.rrrnwltr Bl?d I iplun nne?i<lb/>
ittonr 7S6-V-I4M<lb/>
Or. Peter Hollis<lb/>
house and I thought it was a cas-<lb/>
tle because it was so pretty. We<lb/>
stayed with them for four months<lb/>
until we got our own house. My<lb/>
mom found a job<lb/>
"It's all over now. 1 made it to<lb/>
Washington and that's all 1<lb/>
wanted to do. I got to see the<lb/>
president and that was great. 1<lb/>
would like to go to college. I'd<lb/>
like to study medicine and<lb/>
become a doctor. I just like to<lb/>
help people, you know. I think<lb/>
that would be neat if I could do<lb/>
that<lb/>
Indeed it would be neat, and<lb/>
even neater it Disney keeps bring-<lb/>
ing us tales like this.<lb/>
Appl for Membership Sow<lb/>
$2.00 first 500appli<lb/>
gel your applit ai<lb/>
I equila Bai<lb/>
Backstage Hair Design<lb/>
Ouii ksiUt r<lb/>
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?SSXSX5XSS?SXSr'??S&amp;Sr? . <lb/>
Page Prefers More Variety<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
mam beaut) ol repertorv. The<lb/>
Mirror compart) is where 1 gel<lb/>
m he's! roles.<lb/>
"Most o us do not have the<lb/>
opportunit) to explore our ver-<lb/>
satility, and the whole theater<lb/>
benefits from it when we do.<lb/>
I here's a sort o flatness that<lb/>
comes from everyone specializing<lb/>
i" one kind of part. When you<lb/>
pla a different par each night in<lb/>
repertorv. it keeps all ol them<lb/>
fresh.<lb/>
?Vkcd if she regretted being<lb/>
absent from Broadwa since<lb/>
Agnes of God in 1982, Page said<lb/>
that in her opinion "Broadway is<lb/>
shrinking so last you can hardl<lb/>
find it<lb/>
"When I look at the paper tor<lb/>
Broadway listings, everything I<lb/>
see is left over from last year<lb/>
Page described the roles she<lb/>
would particular!) relish doing in<lb/>
the future as. "Everything 1<lb/>
haven't tried vet As for her<lb/>
next time around on the wheel of<lb/>
life, she wants to be an ope: a<lb/>
singer, explaining. "I'm a Puc-<lb/>
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0NS0LIDATED<lb/>
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Special<lb/>
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Special<lb/>
ECU Student Store<lb/>
Thurs. Feb. 20<lb/>
TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. if<lb/>
HtPf JOMtS<lb/>
Difitiofi ol Cammtio Company<lb/>
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<lb/>
IHF FASTt'AKOI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
I I HRI Ak 20, I ?'<lb/>
Finale In Minges<lb/>
Pirates Devastate Blue Devils<lb/>
JIM I H H.fNs lr, l,<lb/>
Jack lurnbull (34 scores inside last night in ECU'S 97-68 Onset) ic<lb/>
tor in the Pirate's regular-season finale in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
BvSC'OTI COOPKR<lb/>
Sports fdll"r<lb/>
In their farewell regular-season<lb/>
appearance in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
the ECU basket hall team ran<lb/>
away from non-conference foe<lb/>
Central Connecticut 97-68 las!<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Seniors Curt Vanderhorsi and<lb/>
Scott Hardy definitely went out<lb/>
in style as the Pirates ran up their<lb/>
largest point total ol the season<lb/>
Vanderhorsi led the way for<lb/>
the Bucs with 19 points as a red<lb/>
hot William Grady added 18.<lb/>
Cirad. who connected on eight<lb/>
of 10 field goals and was two of<lb/>
two from the line, also grabbed a<lb/>
team-high eight rebounds while<lb/>
seeing just 1" minutes ol action.<lb/>
Marchell Henr added 14<lb/>
points to the Pirate roul while<lb/>
1 eon Bass chipped in 11. Hardy<lb/>
had eight along with a game-high<lb/>
six assists as .lack 1 umbill added<lb/>
six points Five other 1 C I<lb/>
placers totalled tour points<lb/>
apiece to the balanced scoring at<lb/>
tack<lb/>
Although the Pirates scored<lb/>
with reasonable ease, ECl coach<lb/>
Charlie Harrison felt the Bucs<lb/>
performed well in their set of<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
"Everything was coming easy<lb/>
tor us on the offensive end.<lb/>
When you score and score a lot,<lb/>
you can do it in two ways Har-<lb/>
rison said, "for the most part, we<lb/>
scored well within the confines of<lb/>
our offense<lb/>
I he Pirates, who improved<lb/>
their season mark to 12-13<lb/>
overall, dominated all statistical<lb/>
categories.<lb/>
ECU connected on 61.4 o its<lb/>
field-goal attempts, including a<lb/>
62.2 mark in the second half. The<lb/>
Pirate defense made the game-<lb/>
even more one-sided by holding<lb/>
the Blue Devils to a 41.5 percen-<lb/>
tage, including a 35.3 shooting<lb/>
effort in the second half.<lb/>
I he Pirates never trailed in the<lb/>
game and were tied at only one<lb/>
point (at 2-2) With Vanderhorsi<lb/>
connecting on his first tour sh<lb/>
the Pirates opened an earl) 12-6<lb/>
lead on a Grad lav up with 16:08<lb/>
left in the first half.<lb/>
Central Connecticut remained<lb/>
within sinking distance.<lb/>
however, the Pirates lead grew to<lb/>
nine (30-21) on a pair ol let' Kel<lb/>
iv tree throws. I he Blue IX'viN<lb/>
then put a scare into ECU tans as<lb/>
they chopped the margin to 30-27<lb/>
on a Scott Boslev jumper with<lb/>
35 left in the halt<lb/>
This threat was tor no! as the<lb/>
Bucs went on to score the next 1 1<lb/>
points over a three-minute spurt,<lb/>
opening a 41-27 lead on a H<lb/>
layup. I he Bucs wen! on to :ake a<lb/>
46-36 halt time lead.<lb/>
The second halt save the Pirates<lb/>
take full command ol the game<lb/>
A Bass lav up three minutes into<lb/>
action gave ECU a quick 54 38<lb/>
lead. The Blue Devil's I v rone<lb/>
Canino cut the Buc advantagi<lb/>
14 (62-48) with 12:4- lay<lb/>
This was the closest thai Central<lb/>
Connecticut would come.<lb/>
Over the next seven mmu'e- I<lb/>
plav, ECU outscored the Devils<lb/>
18-12 to take an 80-60 lead i<lb/>
Cradv follow shot<lb/>
The remaining five minute<lb/>
action saw a hit of 1<lb/>
from the Pirates. ira I<lb/>
resulted off the break with 3 55<lb/>
remaining, be followe I<lb/>
a reverse dunk from lie b 1) ?<lb/>
with 1.36 to play pah<lb/>
layups and 4 John Y<lb/>
lumper ended the scoring as<lb/>
Bucs won tjv 97 68<lb/>
1 ach hat li Hai<lb/>
team reallv same 1<lb/>
" 1 ' kid<lb/>
?<lb/>
kid- .Id Han<lb/>
" 11 s the fii ' ?<lb/>
<lb/>
" I w<lb/>
? ,<lb/>
foundati Ha<lb/>
his<lb/>
happy 1<lb/>
could be<lb/>
" T1 ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
play<lb/>
M Bu<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
;<lb/>
.<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ladies Conclude Against CAA Foes<lb/>
By IIMC HANDI ER<lb/>
Spn. ttritri<lb/>
I he 1 .id Pirates will finish<lb/>
. 1 regular season schedule with<lb/>
two games in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
I he first o the two will be<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
Saturdav aeai<lb/>
whil<lb/>
season finale will be<lb/>
1,000 points during their respec-<lb/>
tive careers. A third senior.<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg received one earlier<lb/>
this year<lb/>
Coach Manwaring said that it<lb/>
was a compliment to the progi<lb/>
to have three seniors plav all fout<lb/>
Manwaring also stated thai<lb/>
 hen all three of them are play<lb/>
ing well, the lean: will have a<lb/>
good came. I :<lb/>
??<lb/>
ree<lb/>
have<lb/>
urrentlv<lb/>
Maved<lb/>
sen:<lb/>
in 109<lb/>
games, with a record ol 66-43<lb/>
those games. More n pressive<lb/>
C A leader<lb/>
Both games will<lb/>
Monday aga<lb/>
James Madisi<lb/>
star; at 7:30.<lb/>
Pirate defeated George<lb/>
Mas n 72 M earlier this year on<lb/>
? ad Yicdd coach Emily<lb/>
Manwaring said that the Pirates<lb/>
will need to control Veronica<lb/>
Gilliard, nd ndd Williams ol<lb/>
George Mas<lb/>
' ! hey were the two players in<lb/>
.hie figures in the firs; game<lb/>
stated Manwaring<lb/>
Manwaring also said that she<lb/>
expect- a running game from<lb/>
George Mason. "They have a<lb/>
tendency to play rugged and<lb/>
fast Manwaring explained.<lb/>
"They create something out o<lb/>
nothing<lb/>
Saturday's game will have an<lb/>
added feature before the game<lb/>
starts. Lisa Squirewill and<lb/>
Loraine Foster, each seniors on<lb/>
the squad, will be presented a<lb/>
basketball in honor o( scoring<lb/>
I isa Squirewell<lb/>
years. "They have been good<lb/>
contributors to the team's suc-<lb/>
cess, and they have been the three<lb/>
leading scorers said Manwar-<lb/>
ing. "The team's success has<lb/>
revolved around their highs and<lb/>
lows added Manwaring.<lb/>
I oraine Foster<lb/>
their record over the pasl two<lb/>
years, which is currently 39-15.<lb/>
On Monday night, the Pirates<lb/>
will have a chance to gam revenge<lb/>
tor their only loss thus fai in the<lb/>
C A A James Madison, which is<lb/>
ranked No 18 in this week's<lb/>
Lagnaf Ninth In Nation<lb/>
By JOHN FAULCONER<lb/>
' imtribuiiag Unier<lb/>
With 32 states and 72 teams<lb/>
represented in the National Col-<lb/>
legiate Flag Football Tournament<lb/>
in New Orleans, La the Jarvis<lb/>
LAGNAF fared quite well in the<lb/>
five-day event.<lb/>
LAGNAF, who won ECU's<lb/>
all-campus title by defeating<lb/>
previously undefeated Bombs-<lb/>
quad, finished ninth in the nation<lb/>
out of the 72-team field.<lb/>
Before advancing to the single-<lb/>
elimination tournament,<lb/>
LAGNAF ran into some early<lb/>
trouble. Brigham Young's<lb/>
tenacious defense was too much<lb/>
for LAGNAF, as they shut out<lb/>
the ECU squad 20-0.<lb/>
In their second outing, the<lb/>
LAGNAF offense began to pro-<lb/>
duce as the defense came alive as<lb/>
well. The offense, led by Bill<lb/>
McShea, Troy Neal, Doug<lb/>
Mount and Don Terry, racked up<lb/>
25 points opposed to Indiana<lb/>
University's 12. The defense was<lb/>
spearheaded by Kenny Farmer.<lb/>
Rich Klein and Vernon Holmes.<lb/>
LAGNAF's third game saw<lb/>
them competing in the first-<lb/>
round of the single-elimination<lb/>
tounament. The ECU team was<lb/>
pitted against Valdosta State<lb/>
(Ga.). With a steady offensive<lb/>
performance by Holmes and a<lb/>
solid defense anchored by<lb/>
Richard Frazier, John Faulconer,<lb/>
Randy Kirkland and Farmer,<lb/>
LAGNAF held on to win a 13-12<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
West Virginia was the next op-<lb/>
ponent for the highly motivated<lb/>
LAGNAF squad. During the se-<lb/>
cond series of downs, and behind<lb/>
by seven (7-0), captain and<lb/>
quarterback Terry was lost for<lb/>
the remainder of the tourney with<lb/>
a sprained ankle. However,<lb/>
McShea stepped in and took con-<lb/>
trol of the Jarvis offense.<lb/>
McShea connected with Fraier<lb/>
for three touchdown passes as<lb/>
LAGNAF downed the Moun-<lb/>
taineers 28-14.<lb/>
In the final outing and their<lb/>
third contest of the day, the out-<lb/>
manned LAGNAF fell to a<lb/>
powerful Central Florida team<lb/>
that finished the tournament in<lb/>
third-place overall.<lb/>
LAGNAF's ninth-place overall<lb/>
finish (in the national tourna-<lb/>
ment) is the highest intramural<lb/>
standing in the school's history.<lb/>
In the opinion of QB Terry and<lb/>
his teammates, "Farmer would<lb/>
have definitely made the defen-<lb/>
sive Ail-American squad had we<lb/>
advanced to the top eight Terry<lb/>
explained. "We tared well con-<lb/>
sidering thai we were not plann-<lb/>
ing to organize a team in the<lb/>
beginning of the tall<lb/>
"It was quite an experience.<lb/>
We had as much tun competing<lb/>
as we did in the post-game par-<lb/>
ties Faulconer said. "I am<lb/>
pleased that we represented East<lb/>
Carolina University in such a fine<lb/>
way<lb/>
The whole LAGNAF squad<lb/>
would like to thank the<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices, the SGA, the central cam-<lb/>
pus ARC, Faulconer's Hard-<lb/>
ware, Dr. Jim Kirkland among<lb/>
others for their support in mak-<lb/>
ing the trip possible.<lb/>
1IM I ?l T(,FS llnliiKv.ilria,<lb/>
LAGNAF members: (back row L to R) Richard Frazier, Troy Neal,<lb/>
Kenny Farmer and Don Terry, (front row L to R) Randy Kirkland,<lb/>
Richard Kline and John Faulconer. Missing: Doug Mount, Bill<lb/>
T " McShea and Vernon Holmes.<lb/>
Associated Press Poll, will be in<lb/>
' wn tor the season finale of b<lb/>
tean<lb/>
! ? e Dukes, who triumphed in<lb/>
the first m 'eting earlier this yeai<lb/>
v2 55, are currently leading<lb/>
CAA with a 10-0 mark and a 23 2<lb/>
overall record.<lb/>
Coach Manwaring said tl<lb/>
lames Madison was an excel<lb/>
team. "They have every aspect<lb/>
they need stated Manwaring.<lb/>
 I hey have height, mside game.<lb/>
rebounders, and shooters<lb/>
Manwaring said that in the<lb/>
first game. James Madison's in-<lb/>
side attack hurt the Pirates. She<lb/>
feels that in ordei for the Bucs to<lb/>
be successful against the Dukes,<lb/>
they will need to be much more<lb/>
aggressive and get more rebounds<lb/>
than they did in the previous<lb/>
came.<lb/>
It the Pirates manage pull ofi<lb/>
victories over both George<lb/>
Mason and James Madison, a<lb/>
com flip would be held on Tues-<lb/>
day morning to decide whether<lb/>
JMU or ECU would get the first-<lb/>
round bye in the CAA conference<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Diver Campbell Makes<lb/>
Difference For Women<lb/>
B I) II) McGlNNESS<lb/>
"SC- the besi<lb/>
11 has e P:??<lb/>
diving coach lohn Rose<lb/>
in prod . .ami<lb/>
bell.<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Thurs. Feb. 20, 1980<lb/>
The Soviets fail to meet the<lb/>
deadline set by President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter for removing their troops<lb/>
from Afghanistan. In retaliation<lb/>
Carter announces his final, ir-<lb/>
revocable decision: American<lb/>
athletes will boycott the Moscow<lb/>
Olympic Games.<lb/>
Sherry C amphell<lb/>
In just her first yeai aT ECU,<lb/>
Campbell has already<lb/>
name in the ranks ol the ill-time<lb/>
Pirate diving greats t the CAA<lb/>
conference championships alone.<lb/>
she contributed M points (tv?<lb/>
second-place finishes) ne<lb/>
and three-meter events. In the<lb/>
process, she set two ECl vai<lb/>
records, while qualifying to the<lb/>
NCAA (nationals qualification)<lb/>
meet in Clemson, S.C. on Mai<lb/>
14-15.<lb/>
Coach Rose was impressed bv<lb/>
Campbell when she was the winn-<lb/>
ing competitor at the Atlantic<lb/>
Seaboard high-school champion-<lb/>
ships, which were held at Minges<lb/>
Natatorium last spring.<lb/>
"I saw her at the Atlantic<lb/>
k -v<lb/>
Scott Eaj.<lb/>
records in con<lb/>
'S tt Eaj<lb/>
k Sherrv<lb/>
1<lb/>
med wii<lb/>
?<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
? expev<lb/>
"I: (the sea<lb/>
1<lb/>
stated. "1 was<lb/>
the beg<lb/>
it (1<lb/>
"1f I hit every 11<lb/>
meei i, I could<lb/>
?<lb/>
( ampbell adds<lb/>
?Vcording Rose, w<lb/>
pbell sucl a s tccess<lb/>
consistency as .<lb/>
enthusiasm I<lb/>
"( onsistency and<lb/>
are her strong cards said Rose<lb/>
See RECORD, page 11<lb/>
-<lb/>
Final Game For ECU Senior Stars<lb/>
B JANET SIMPSON<lb/>
ECU's basketball game last<lb/>
night against Central Connecticut<lb/>
brought the curtain down on the<lb/>
careers of two of the Pirate's<lb/>
finest players. Pirate fans<lb/>
witnessed the ending of the Scot:<lb/>
Hardy-Curt Vanderhorsi Era (as<lb/>
far as regular-season home games<lb/>
are concerned).<lb/>
Everything must come to an<lb/>
end, but this is one of those en-<lb/>
dings that is both sad and happy.<lb/>
Yes we are sad because ECU<lb/>
home careers are coming to an<lb/>
end, yet we can be happy for hav-<lb/>
ing the opportunity to watch<lb/>
Hardy and Vanderhorst play and<lb/>
for the chance to get to know<lb/>
them as people too.<lb/>
Hardy had mixed emotions<lb/>
about his final hor  game. "It<lb/>
was a great feeling to win a game<lb/>
big like that ? where everybody<lb/>
gets to play he stated. "I only<lb/>
wish my parents could have been<lb/>
there.<lb/>
"It would have made things a<lb/>
lot easier and more rewarding<lb/>
Hardy added. "They (his<lb/>
parents) had a part in this to, for<lb/>
it was them who supported me<lb/>
along the way. 1 wish they could<lb/>
have been there to share it with<lb/>
me<lb/>
Vanderhorst also had mixed<lb/>
feelings about the game. "1 feel<lb/>
as though I'm going to miss<lb/>
basketball. 1; has been a part of<lb/>
my life now for ten years and<lb/>
here it is all about to come to an<lb/>
end said Vanderhorst. "I'm<lb/>
going to have a big empty space<lb/>
in my life, being this is my las;<lb/>
game at home.<lb/>
"I have memories I'll nevei<lb/>
forget here at ECU and I will<lb/>
never regret coming here<lb/>
Vanderhorst continued. "If I<lb/>
had to do it all over again, I'd<lb/>
still come to ECl "<lb/>
Hardy also feels he is going 10<lb/>
miss basketball. "I'm reallv go-<lb/>
ing to miss ? F01 t time.<lb/>
t as; c arolina has started w<lb/>
aillJ I'm a pa ed Hat<lb/>
dy, "It's been a c; eat two yeai's<lb/>
playing here<lb/>
" I hey exemplified the type ol<lb/>
person we want here a; 1c I <lb/>
coach c harlie Harris n <lb/>
"I'm happy tor those guys, I<lb/>
hope this will he one posi<lb/>
thing they'll remember<lb/>
Wednesday night we said<lb/>
good I ye to two very special peo<lb/>
pie, two guvs uho will be pr<lb/>
hard to replace, both on and 1 fi<lb/>
the court.<lb/>
Dive<lb/>
By DAVID McClNM<lb/>
 i<lb/>
n<lb/>
Dive '<lb/>
ing Breal ?'<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
We ? I<lb/>
w ee ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
sub ?<lb/>
and pai<lb/>
- I<lb/>
Sat M<lb/>
West .)? B<lb/>
are 5<lb/>
IRS Bow<lb/>
?<lb/>
;<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
Scott Hardy, Charlie Harrison and CuVTvdeVhorVt<lb/>
<lb/>
? -<lb/>
McD<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
The IRSH ord<lb/>
by<lb/>
StephanieIen<lb/>
?<lb/>
Record D<lb/>
( ontinut-d from pae 10<lb/>
es<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
Bel<lb/>
lived in On<lb/>
?<lb/>
a week B<lb/>
wer ties foi<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
g<lb/>
the<lb/>
?<lb/>
the<lb/>
dlV i<lb/>
praises<lb/>
Can<lb/>
?<lb/>
held<lb/>
the Vr<lb/>
so .is a ?<lb/>
v<lb/>
coach 1<lb/>
year, bu<lb/>
they 're not<lb/>
Tuesday i<lb/>
Ladies Ni<lb/>
$1.25 highballs<lb/>
2.75 pitchers<lb/>
Ladies Ad<lb/>
THUR<lb/>
featuring: Roast Bel<lb/>
macaroni &amp; cheese I<lb/>
chicken casserole<lb/>
lasagna<lb/>
6 vegetables &amp; roflsl<lb/>
$2.99 $3.50 wSola<lb/>
t ???-?<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0011"/><lb/>
I Hfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 20, 1986<lb/>
11<lb/>
Dive Keys With Coral Reef<lb/>
Devils<lb/>
pbell Makes<lb/>
i<lb/>
tor Women<lb/>
:i. pjut 11<lb/>
Senior Stars<lb/>
?a e<lb/>
B DAVID McGlNNESS<lb/>
rhe newly-formed Coral Reef<lb/>
Dive Club will be sponsoring its<lb/>
first major diving trip during Spr-<lb/>
Break 86.<lb/>
rhey will be travelling to Key<lb/>
West I la on t-n March 7, for a<lb/>
week of some of the best diving in<lb/>
continental United States.<lb/>
1 he basic itinerary for the trip<lb/>
s as follows. This schedule is<lb/>
jecl to personal preference,<lb/>
and participants are welcome to<lb/>
inge the duration of their own<lb/>
? ,i to suit their needs.<lb/>
Sat Mar. 8  Arrive at Key<lb/>
West at Boyd's Campsite. Rates<lb/>
$37.50 for five days for a<lb/>
k campsite. Skin diving, sun-<lb/>
and recovering from trip<lb/>
down will basically be all that<lb/>
happens.<lb/>
Sun Mar. 8 through Wed<lb/>
Mar. 12 ? Charter diving will be<lb/>
abvailable for those who are in-<lb/>
terested, as will snorkeling.<lb/>
Thur March 13 ? Head up to<lb/>
Orlando area, and get hotel<lb/>
rooms. Entertainment for the<lb/>
night will be at Roseo Grady's.<lb/>
This is a multiple-bar nightclub<lb/>
extravaganza with something to<lb/>
offer just about everyone.<lb/>
Fri March 14, Stop at Blue<lb/>
Springs State Park and dive the<lb/>
spring (marked as 120').<lb/>
Snorkelers are welcome. If you<lb/>
have never dived in a fresh-water<lb/>
Florida spring, you don't want to<lb/>
miss it. Head back to NC that<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
This trip promises to be one of<lb/>
the best this year. The<lb/>
temperature in Key West right<lb/>
now is 75 degrees, with 70-degree<lb/>
water temperature and 60' plus<lb/>
visibility. By Spring Break, con-<lb/>
ditions should be even better.<lb/>
Some of the dive activities will<lb/>
include a night dive at Key West<lb/>
(you can see the full moon from<lb/>
50' below the surface), lobster<lb/>
diving and Mangrove snorkeling.<lb/>
This is a channel cut in a key<lb/>
which provides a tidepool-like en-<lb/>
vironment with myriad marine<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Divers and non-divers alike are<lb/>
welcome on the trip. Costs<lb/>
should range from $250-$3OO<lb/>
depending on your tastes. Ex-<lb/>
penses include camping,<lb/>
We Don<lb/>
Take<lb/>
transportation, food, entertain-<lb/>
ment, hotel accomodations in<lb/>
Orlando and air for your tanks.<lb/>
If you wish to stay in a hotel, ex-<lb/>
penses will be accordingly<lb/>
greater.<lb/>
The dive club will be holding a<lb/>
meeting from 7:00-9:00 p.m<lb/>
Monday night in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. This meeting will<lb/>
be the information session for the<lb/>
trip, so all parties interested in<lb/>
going to Florida should attend.<lb/>
Inquire at the front desk for<lb/>
room number.<lb/>
Remember, both divers and<lb/>
non-divers are welcome, so in-<lb/>
dulge yourself! Go on down and<lb/>
party with the Coral Reef Dive<lb/>
Club, and do Spring Break the<lb/>
way its meant to be done.<lb/>
n't Want To I<lb/>
It With Us! I<lb/>
SAL?E<lb/>
Everything's<lb/>
Reduced!<lb/>
Shoes ? Tights<lb/>
Leotards ? Warm-L'ps<lb/>
And Much More<lb/>
?No Creditardv pleas<lb/>
Soon You 7 find Us In<lb/>
Our New Location<lb/>
644 Arlington Boulevard<lb/>
BARRE, ltdi<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd. 756-6670<lb/>
IRS Bowling; Tennis Tournaments<lb/>
c ict into the groove but not in<lb/>
? e gutter! That's exactly what<lb/>
e Soul Rollers have done, going<lb/>
the Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services Co-Rec Bowling Tour-<lb/>
ament. I oletta Lee and Marcus<lb/>
McDonald (188 points) helped<lb/>
ce iheir team, into first place<lb/>
he week of Feb. 3.<lb/>
The IRS Word<lb/>
by<lb/>
Stephanie Dew<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi "A" surely<lb/>
e the Rollers a run for their<lb/>
ney, as Jeri Hingl (199 points)<lb/>
Prys rolled superb<lb/>
games. The Soul Rollers high<lb/>
score was 1247.<lb/>
As of Feb. 14, the team rank-<lb/>
ings going tournament play were<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
1. Soul Rollers<lb/>
2. Delta Sigma Phi "A"<lb/>
3. Umstead Terminators<lb/>
4. Fantastic Four<lb/>
5. Phi Sigma Pi "A"<lb/>
Women (three-way tie)<lb/>
1. Ellen McDernett, Delta Sigma<lb/>
Phi "A"?164<lb/>
2. Cindy Cronk, Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
"B" ?164<lb/>
3. Bonita Bowdy, Soul<lb/>
Rollers?164<lb/>
Team High Score:<lb/>
1. Soul Rollers?1152<lb/>
2. Delta Sigma Phi "A'<lb/>
1094<lb/>
The high scores of the<lb/>
were as follows:<lb/>
week<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. Marcus McDonald, Soul<lb/>
Rollers?190<lb/>
2. Jeff Scott, Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
"B"?185<lb/>
3. Jim Branson, Super-<lb/>
sonics?161<lb/>
DO YOU LUV TENNIS? .If<lb/>
so, you will be anxious to see who<lb/>
this year's doubles tennis champs<lb/>
will be! Many IRS participants<lb/>
will be pairing off to take the<lb/>
1986 title.<lb/>
There will be both men's and<lb/>
women's open-intermediate-<lb/>
division title holders. Will Kevin<lb/>
Burke and Jeff Fecho combine<lb/>
racquets again to defend the<lb/>
men's 1985 dazzlin' doubles duo0<lb/>
Stay tuned as Sneaker Sam keeps<lb/>
you updated on these and other<lb/>
action-packed events.<lb/>
The walls could be caving in<lb/>
for racquetball opponents of the<lb/>
two undefeated open-division<lb/>
teams: Andy Altaian and Mike<lb/>
Shytle, Dave Patton and Rick<lb/>
Kobe. Both teams stand 3-0 in the<lb/>
third week of competition and<lb/>
will duel during the last week of<lb/>
the round-robin tournament.<lb/>
Roll out the red carpet for the<lb/>
dynamic intermediate-division<lb/>
duo, Edward Jimenez and Scott<lb/>
Heald. Will they rack the brains<lb/>
of Charles Musser and Burney<lb/>
Payne oi Robbi Tweed and Kim<lb/>
Swensoi? Exactly who wil, take<lb/>
this year s championship title?<lb/>
?lllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllltlllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII<lb/>
CLOSING<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
I SALE <lb/>
 Starts Thursday, February 20th<lb/>
 He are closing our doors DOWNTOWN after 29 years <lb/>
I with tremendous savings for you. 1<lb/>
25 to 75 ?o Off<lb/>
Record Diver Readies For NCAA Is<lb/>
JIM 1H H.I NV It,)<lb/>
rlie Harrison andurt anderhoot.<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
SI e's always at practice, work-<lb/>
hard, never (giving) any ex-<lb/>
 uses<lb/>
Campbell is used to dedicating<lb/>
;eli to hard work though.<lb/>
Befi . ming to Charlotte, she<lb/>
:d in Cincinnatti OH, where<lb/>
was able to practice five days<lb/>
a week But in Charlotte, there<lb/>
were no facilities for diving and<lb/>
?he had to<lb/>
ommute two hours to<lb/>
Columbia. S.C. twice each week<lb/>
to practice.<lb/>
So the biggest change for<lb/>
Campbell when she came to ECU<lb/>
was to get back on a five-day-per-<lb/>
jveek practice schedule.<lb/>
The FCC divers began their<lb/>
training this fall by going through<lb/>
same conditioning program<lb/>
ised hv the swim team. But once<lb/>
season starts, their practice<lb/>
nsists mostly of two hours of<lb/>
Jiving under the critical eye of<lb/>
r coach. They perform dive<lb/>
.? tei dive, while he points out ex-<lb/>
actly what they do wrong, and<lb/>
praises what thev do exactly<lb/>
right.<lb/>
Although coach Rose admits<lb/>
Campbell needs a little polishing,<lb/>
he is quick to point out that she<lb/>
held her own against divers from<lb/>
schools like N.C. State, UNC and<lb/>
the Naval Academy. And she did<lb/>
so as a freshman.<lb/>
Neither Campbell nor her<lb/>
coach really expected the kind of<lb/>
performance she has shown this<lb/>
year, but like true competitors,<lb/>
thev're not going to sit back and<lb/>
rest now.<lb/>
"I didn't expect to do this well<lb/>
at the beginning of the year<lb/>
Campbell said. "I just wanted to<lb/>
help the team and do the best that<lb/>
1 could<lb/>
"I was impressed when 1 saw<lb/>
her last year said Rose, "But 1<lb/>
didn't really realize she would go<lb/>
out and break varsity records in<lb/>
her first year. Still I think that<lb/>
with this year's experience behind<lb/>
her, she will be an even bigger<lb/>
help in competition next season<lb/>
However, before next year,<lb/>
Campbell has yet to compete in<lb/>
the NCAA zone meet at Clem-<lb/>
son. Although Rose admits<lb/>
hat the competition will be<lb/>
among the best in the nation, he<lb/>
stresses that Campbell is deter-<lb/>
mined to do her best.<lb/>
"She's strongwilled, and she's<lb/>
set a goal to do well at the zone<lb/>
qualifier Rose declared. "But<lb/>
the competition there is great,<lb/>
and our zone is one of the<lb/>
strongest in the country. We have<lb/>
to compete against Florida,<lb/>
Florida State. Auburn, Alabama.<lb/>
Georgia, Tennessee, UNC and<lb/>
N.C. State. And only the top five<lb/>
in the zone.meet go on to the na-<lb/>
tionals<lb/>
But who knows? Campbell has<lb/>
already surprised a few people,<lb/>
including herself. As the silver<lb/>
medalist at the CAA champion-<lb/>
ships, her contribution was in-<lb/>
strumental in earning the ECU<lb/>
women second place in the con-<lb/>
ference. She could well go on to<lb/>
be the first woman in ECU<lb/>
history to qualify for the NCAA<lb/>
nationals, and she has three more<lb/>
years to go.<lb/>
tetnbeck'a<lb/>
MEN'S SHOP<lb/>
427 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
??tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMHtiir<lb/>
jHBBa ??i??s?saSti?33<lb/>
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X?S?SSXS??-?SKS<lb/>
Tuesday is<lb/>
Ladies Nite<lb/>
Tm<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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s<lb/>
$1.25 highballs<lb/>
2.75 pitchers<lb/>
Ladies Admitted Free<lb/>
r f&amp;i<lb/>
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A ftsl ?.? ol It<lb/>
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Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Call collect:<lb/>
(919)856-4012<lb/>
THURS. Hot Buffet<lb/>
featuring: Roast Beef<lb/>
macaroni &amp; cheese<lb/>
chicken casserole<lb/>
lasagna<lb/>
6 vegetables &amp; rolls<lb/>
$2.99 $3.50 wSalad Bar<lb/>
Margarita nite<lb/>
$1.50 each<lb/>
$7.50 pitcher<lb/>
Air Force Officer Training School<lb/>
can be the start of a challenging<lb/>
and rewarding career for you.<lb/>
When you graduate, in 12 weeks,<lb/>
you'll be a commissioned officer in<lb/>
the Air Force. You'll enjoy<lb/>
benefits and entitlements such as<lb/>
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year, medical care, and much<lb/>
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Find out how you can put your col-<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057803_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THL I AST C'AROl 1NIAN<lb/>
M BKl KN 20, NS?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WANTED<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/>
RIDE NEEDED: Looking for a lift<lb/>
to New Jersey foi Spring Break. Will<lb/>
pay part of the gas Call 752 0796, ask<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED: To share<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED: To share 3<lb/>
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utilities (water and sewer free) Call<lb/>
752 2341 for more info<lb/>
LOST KITTEN: Black and white, 5<lb/>
month old kitten with red collar lost<lb/>
in Langston Park area Please call<lb/>
758 7733 if found $10 REWARD OF<lb/>
FERED!<lb/>
LOST 2 keys on a black scuba fin<lb/>
keychain Lost on campus If found<lb/>
please ran ?58 7064 Reward offered<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
SIG EPS GET READY FOR THIS<lb/>
WEEKEND The Sweetheart For<lb/>
mal is this Saturday so rest up and<lb/>
get ready to party your face off at<lb/>
the Elk's Lodge!<lb/>
PHI TAUS AND FRIENDS: Party<lb/>
at The Palace Sat<lb/>
night 10 until. BYOB<lb/>
ATTENTION Tne New Sororit<lb/>
win be sponsoring a pitcher and<lb/>
draft special at the Alley on Monday.<lb/>
FeD. 24, 9 until. Come on out and<lb/>
meet ECU'S Newest Sorority<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU: Are you ready<lb/>
for a dry campus? We're not Details<lb/>
to follow<lb/>
SZ: That beauty of yours, that 442<lb/>
may be the apple of your eye But<lb/>
Dr Olds, what we've shared in 5<lb/>
years, still proves you're one swell<lb/>
guy I LOVE YOU AT<lb/>
TKE HAPPY HOUR: Thursday<lb/>
night at the Treehouse. 8 30 11 00.<lb/>
$2 50 pitchers and .50' 3 draft<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: To all you<lb/>
Gatsby Guys" The twenties did<lb/>
roar at your house last night, you<lb/>
guys can really do it up right! So<lb/>
much fun we did have, no reason to<lb/>
pout Especially when we 000ted<lb/>
"Prohibition" Out! We were all<lb/>
floating, like "paper moons" You<lb/>
guys are great Let's do it again<lb/>
soon! Love, The Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
'Ga'sbv Gals'<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: HAPPY HOUR TO<lb/>
DAY at CUBBIES!<lb/>
STUDENTS: Do you want 2 months<lb/>
free rent?; Call 752 4225 or come by<lb/>
Tar River Estates Apts Office for<lb/>
information<lb/>
LAST CHANCE Cruise to Mexico<lb/>
for spring break! Great deal $445, 5<lb/>
nights, 6 days, tips and gratuities in<lb/>
eluded Call 758 0074 or 752 3178<lb/>
NOW! Only a few weeks left to<lb/>
decide!<lb/>
NEED A RIDE TO MIAMI FOR<lb/>
SPRING BREAK?: If interested in<lb/>
riding a bus, keg and bar possible in-<lb/>
cluded call 758 0074 or 752 3178<lb/>
ATTENTION: SCUBA EN<lb/>
THUSIASTS: The newly formed<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club is holding a<lb/>
meeting Feb. 24 from 7 9 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/>
L.P MISSY, WILL: The countdown<lb/>
has started, as the party gras calls<lb/>
us to the beautiful islands of the<lb/>
Bahamas. Get ready "roomies" for<lb/>
the week of O.C Vintage<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Wishes to thank all<lb/>
of our alumm who showed up to par<lb/>
ty this past weekend at Founder's<lb/>
Day all of the undergrads are ex<lb/>
cited abut the plans of the new<lb/>
house Your continued support is an<lb/>
inspiration to us all and we thank<lb/>
you<lb/>
PI KAPP CAR WASH: The Brothers<lb/>
of Pi Kappa Phi will be sponsoring a<lb/>
car wash this Saturday at the<lb/>
Firestone place on 264 by pass<lb/>
beside The Plaza. Come out and get<lb/>
you car sparkling clean. "We want<lb/>
your business<lb/>
PI KAPPSIG EP HAPPY HOUR:<lb/>
The brothers of Pi Kappa Phi and<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon will be having a<lb/>
joint happy hour at the Elbo this Fri<lb/>
day 3:30-7:00. Come out for some fun<lb/>
and good times with two of the best<lb/>
fraternities on campus.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: The Brothers and<lb/>
Litle Sister of Pi Kappa Phi are<lb/>
reminded of events this week<lb/>
Thursday, "A" team basketball at 8<lb/>
p.m. at Minges, Friday, Happy Hour<lb/>
at the Elbo. Saturday car wash at<lb/>
the Plaza and party afterwards.<lb/>
Monday Brotherhood at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 400 appointed, 500 ex<lb/>
ecutive meeting<lb/>
ALL GREEK KEG PARTY: Kickotf<lb/>
party Sunday for the Assassination<lb/>
Game at the Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
house. FromSOO-until. The cost is $3<lb/>
to play and $2 iust to drink. Can sign<lb/>
up at the party. Don't forget to bring<lb/>
our ID5!<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING: We otter , .<lb/>
penence in typing resumes, theses<lb/>
technical documents and term<lb/>
papers We manage and merge your<lb/>
names and addresses into merged<lb/>
letters, labels, envelopes or rolodex<lb/>
cards. Our prices are extremely<lb/>
reasonable and we always offer a 15<lb/>
percent discount to ECU students S<lb/>
&amp; F Professional Computer Co.<lb/>
(back of Frankhns) 115 E. 5th<lb/>
757 0472.<lb/>
SENIORS! SENIORS! SENIORS<lb/>
Enjoy the last phase of your coll <lb/>
career employment s&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 Li tl<lb/>
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cover letters (name ana addre<lb/>
each company as inside mailing<lb/>
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envelope, Everything folded, stuffed<lb/>
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Just bring us ?<lb/>
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we'll do the rest foi<lb/>
your names addi<lb/>
(min 10 resun es ???? stuff<lb/>
stamp) 51.90 2 pag resume pi<lb/>
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ly expires March :s<lb/>
puter Compaq ? 1st Fiftl<lb/>
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TYPING SERVICES<lb/>
term papers th se? . a<lb/>
Spelling ana gramn 11<lb/>
tions included Cind aftei<lb/>
5 30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Math Statistics 3228 All<lb/>
problems worked in current book<lb/>
and woikbook 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/>
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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/>
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LOOK GREAT AT NO COST: Hair<lb/>
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fac ial shape and bone structure Ab<lb/>
solutely free for Is' haircut by a New<lb/>
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51 on a I image Consultants<lb/>
756 1945<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING. Contact<lb/>
BECKY LATHAM 752 5998 (8 am 5<lb/>
pm 17 s experience in tpinq<lb/>
ses, scientific reports.<lb/>
muscripts, business and form let<lb/>
ALTERATIONS. Thrift Shop 429<lb/>
Evans St Special of this week will<lb/>
be coats $2, womens jackets 50c.<lb/>
ladies blouses 3 pes for $1, men's<lb/>
shirts 3 pes for $1, skirts $1 or $2,<lb/>
jeans $1, ladies pants $1, beautiful<lb/>
suits $5 $10, ladies coats $5<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2.5 Cubic<lb/>
refrigerator $100 Call 756 1095<lb/>
ft<lb/>
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL $5,195<lb/>
Cruise Daytona Beach with class<lb/>
1975 Triumph TR 6 New top, clu' I<lb/>
tires, nice sounds. Go for it! 756 7067<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Word processing The<lb/>
Dataworks specializes m student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertations,<lb/>
theses, resume's and more All work<lb/>
is computer checked against 50,000<lb/>
word electronic dictionary Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1 75 per page, m<lb/>
eluding paper (call for spe <lb/>
rates) Call Mark at 757 3440 after 7<lb/>
p m<lb/>
TYPING: All your typing needs<lb/>
aone by a professional secretary<lb/>
Call Doris at 355 2510 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Hillel Presents:<lb/>
Israeli Folk Dancing<lb/>
Sat. Night Feb 22nd<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Methodist Student Center<lb/>
501 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Rabbi Bonnie Koppell<lb/>
830-1138<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
tronic typewriter<lb/>
Can Janice at 355<lb/>
TYPING<lb/>
R . . . ?<lb/>
rate<lb/>
Y:lmYSl?Y.u.?4?.??n7X-<lb/>
zzz<lb/>
rrr.<lb/>
:zxrywM:yL<lb/>
SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
NAME BRAND SHOES ? .<lb/>
At Discount Prices<lb/>
Quality Casual Shoes $15<lb/>
Ladies Dress and Casual Shoes<lb/>
at discount prices<lb/>
Large Selection of Name Brand<lb/>
Tennis Shoes $12.88 to $29.88<lb/>
752-2332 one block off Evans Street<lb/>
zzzz.<lb/>
?? ??<lb/>
'<lb/>
'<lb/>
BfR pM<lb/>
"<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057803_0013"/><lb/>
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VV N 1 <lb/>
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4M<lb/>
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Friends don't let friends drive drunk.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>