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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057821_0001"/>
?hc<lb/>
darolitttart<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No.0 Jf Wednesday, May 28, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5 ,000<lb/>
ECU Drops Monitor<lb/>
Research, Preservation<lb/>
Afternoon Delight<lb/>
JIM I Mil.INS IW h?,i( .roll<lb/>
Sitting on the porch with a glass of iced tea and company of the opposite sex is a southern tradition<lb/>
here in North Carolina. Kiplanlemmons and Lisa Peterson recreated this tradition by sitting on the<lb/>
porch outside Cotten Hall Tuesda to enjo the Heather.<lb/>
Enrollment Rises<lb/>
Students Gain Edge<lb/>
By JILL MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Maritime History<lb/>
and underwater research pro-<lb/>
gram will phase out their involve-<lb/>
ment in the research and preser-<lb/>
vation work associated with the<lb/>
USS Monitor this summer due to<lb/>
insufficient staff and facilities.<lb/>
ECU has worked with the Na-<lb/>
tional Oceanic and Atmospheric<lb/>
Administration to co-ordinate<lb/>
studies at the wreck site of the<lb/>
USS Monitor. The site is located<lb/>
about 16 miles south east of Cape<lb/>
Hatteras.<lb/>
In 1983 ECU was involved in<lb/>
an expedition to the site which<lb/>
recovered the anchor of the civil<lb/>
war vessel. The anchor is the<lb/>
largest artifact to have been<lb/>
recovered from the site.<lb/>
Until the beginning of this<lb/>
month the anchor had been at<lb/>
East Carolina undergoing preser-<lb/>
vation. According to Gordon P.<lb/>
Watts Jr an assistant professor<lb/>
in the ECU maritime historv and<lb/>
underwater preservation pro-<lb/>
gram, the preservation of the an-<lb/>
chor was virtually complete ex-<lb/>
cept for some final touch up<lb/>
work when the anchor was mov-<lb/>
ed to the University of South<lb/>
Carolina at Columbia. The<lb/>
preservation process will be com-<lb/>
pleted there. Watts said it was<lb/>
more practical and economical to<lb/>
send the anchor to USC.<lb/>
The decision by ECU to phase<lb/>
out their Monitor related ac-<lb/>
tivities was based primarily on<lb/>
the need to focus on other<lb/>
research projects and teaching<lb/>
duties in the Maritime History<lb/>
and underwater research pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
William N. Still Jr co-<lb/>
director of the ECU program<lb/>
pointed out that ECU did not<lb/>
have the staff or facilities needed<lb/>
for further Monitor work. Still<lb/>
was also quoted in the Sews and<lb/>
Observer saying, "1 will be the<lb/>
first to say that losing the<lb/>
Monitor is going to hurt us. It has<lb/>
brought lots of credibility and<lb/>
visibility<lb/>
When ECU pha<lb/>
Monitor related activities, no<lb/>
other state agencies or institu-<lb/>
tions will be directly involved<lb/>
with the project.<lb/>
David Brooks, head of the<lb/>
State Department of Cultural<lb/>
Resources' Archaeology and<lb/>
historic preservation section, said<lb/>
his office had completed their<lb/>
NOAA sponsored research pro-<lb/>
jects and reports last summer<lb/>
Now it will be up to the '<lb/>
government to determine <lb/>
should be done<lb/>
site and with articles<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Despite the<lb/>
ECI - Wa<lb/>
continue<lb/>
technical c <lb/>
with Monitor Research.<lb/>
The aforen<lb/>
scheduled<lb/>
Greenville in late i i<lb/>
displayed f ?? iev t<lb/>
it is to be sent to &amp;<lb/>
the NOAA.<lb/>
B RUST HARRINGTON<lb/>
siaff Writer<lb/>
This summer there will be<lb/>
4,888 students attending the first<lb/>
summer session of summer<lb/>
school ? almost 350 more than<lb/>
last year's .otal of 4,547.<lb/>
There are many reasons wh)<lb/>
they are taking advantage of the<lb/>
opportunities offered by the<lb/>
University's summer program,<lb/>
from boosting their GPA to "ad-<lb/>
vancing" themselves, and even to<lb/>
escape a "five year plan" as one<lb/>
student put it.<lb/>
Whatever reasons students<lb/>
have for attending summer<lb/>
school, they are the ones that<lb/>
have the most to show tor it.<lb/>
ccording to c . G Moore,<lb/>
Vice-Chancellor for Business Af-<lb/>
fairs, the summer school pro-<lb/>
gram allow v for summer employ-<lb/>
ment for the faculty. The tax-<lb/>
payers, he added, can get some<lb/>
use out of the facilities they<lb/>
finance through 54-percent of<lb/>
their tax dollars, sai 1 Moore.<lb/>
It is estimated summer school<lb/>
will cost 1.6 million dollars in<lb/>
1986. with an estimated $900,000<lb/>
coming from tuition reciepts and<lb/>
the remaining sum from alloca-<lb/>
tion of State tax revenues. Moore<lb/>
stated the funding is brought<lb/>
through the State treasury, where<lb/>
a budget is proposed for the<lb/>
operations of the University<lb/>
system. The schools then are<lb/>
allocated the funds on a three-<lb/>
month basis.<lb/>
Moore said in the case of the<lb/>
summer program it, "operates as<lb/>
an auxiliary enterprise ? what it<lb/>
takes in is what it spends on the<lb/>
allocation He also added the<lb/>
funding spent on education by<lb/>
the State is the combined total of<lb/>
revenues generated by Income,<lb/>
Sales, and Use taxes.<lb/>
Remedial Courses Offered<lb/>
Summer Instructors Chosen By<lb/>
Priority System, Course Demand<lb/>
B BETH WHICKER<lb/>
Assislant News Fdiior<lb/>
Students who are returning to<lb/>
school this summer may find the<lb/>
same instructors in their depart-<lb/>
ments as were there last summer,<lb/>
due to the priority system that<lb/>
most ECU departments use to<lb/>
determine summer school in-<lb/>
structors.<lb/>
According to Trenton Davis,<lb/>
associate vice chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Support and coor-<lb/>
dinator of Summer School, the<lb/>
specific department determines<lb/>
what instructors will teach the<lb/>
courses offered. Previous sum-<lb/>
mer demand determines the<lb/>
courses offered by each depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"Only courses in demand are<lb/>
taught although we have to offer<lb/>
enough courses to give a student<lb/>
a good selection said Davis.<lb/>
"It's all a matter of demand.<lb/>
As a university we have to be self<lb/>
supporting he added.<lb/>
Davis explained very few<lb/>
graduate students are able to<lb/>
teach during summer school due<lb/>
to the priority system.<lb/>
"Ninety-five percent or more<lb/>
instructors teaching in summer<lb/>
school have a nine month con-<lb/>
tract. The other five percent<lb/>
teaching have just signed a con-<lb/>
tract that does not start until the<lb/>
fall explained Davis.<lb/>
There is a total of 277 mstuc-<lb/>
tors who will be teaching the<lb/>
summer sessions.<lb/>
Davis said ECU is the only in-<lb/>
stitution in the UNC system that<lb/>
determines summer pay by<lb/>
percentages of the base salary-<lb/>
plus receipts.<lb/>
"Last year the average summer<lb/>
school instruuetor made $4,200<lb/>
per session he said.<lb/>
"Compared to other schools in<lb/>
the UNC system ECU pays better<lb/>
than most said Davis.<lb/>
According to Davis, over 90<lb/>
percent of the budget, which con-<lb/>
sists of student fees and a smail<lb/>
state allocation, goes to instruc-<lb/>
tor's salaries.<lb/>
For the upcoming second ses-<lb/>
sion, Davis said the types of<lb/>
couses offered will change,<lb/>
because of the diffrenttypes of<lb/>
students expected to enroll.<lb/>
Business and Education classes<lb/>
are predominate because many-<lb/>
teachers and businesspeople have<lb/>
the time to attend classes.<lb/>
"Still the bottom line is to of-<lb/>
fer the courses needed by the<lb/>
students said Davis.<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) ? One-<lb/>
fourth of the freshmen enrolled<lb/>
in the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system last fall took a<lb/>
remedial math or English course,<lb/>
which officials say shows flaws in<lb/>
public education and the system<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
They say the numbers also<lb/>
reveal major differences in the<lb/>
way remedial programs are ad-<lb/>
ministered within the 16-campus<lb/>
system and the universities' at-<lb/>
tempts to recruit more minorities<lb/>
by accepting students with low<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Tests and<lb/>
then providing them with<lb/>
remedial courses.<lb/>
"We have an obligation to ex-<lb/>
tend the university to those who<lb/>
would benefit said CD.<lb/>
Spangler Jr UNC system presi-<lb/>
dent and former state Board of<lb/>
Education chairman. "Just<lb/>
because they haven't got the<lb/>
basics (in high school) doesn't<lb/>
mean they couldn't by good<lb/>
university students<lb/>
Spangler predicts that the<lb/>
system, which now must "direct<lb/>
abnormal amounts of attention<lb/>
to remedial instruction will<lb/>
show improvements in four years<lb/>
because "we are going to see a<lb/>
much better student coming from<lb/>
the public schools<lb/>
Spangler bases his optimism on<lb/>
new requirements in public<lb/>
schools and tougher college ad-<lb/>
mission standards, but other<lb/>
educators say the state must I<lb/>
more drastic action to stop what<lb/>
they call a steady erosion of the<lb/>
value of a college degree.<lb/>
 study<lb/>
Regional Education B<lb/>
North Car<lb/>
follow the<lb/>
Southeastern states<lb/>
working to produce studei<lb/>
See MORE Pagt 2.<lb/>
Residents Link To<lb/>
Raise Needed Money<lb/>
(UPI) ? North Carolinians join-<lb/>
ed hands Sunday and formed<lb/>
spiritual links with the nation-<lb/>
wide Hands Across America<lb/>
chain to raise money for the<lb/>
hungry and the homeless.<lb/>
A chain of more than 2,500<lb/>
people ? in some places two peo- than a mile,<lb/>
pie deep ? snaked around the<lb/>
State Capitol in Raleigh and spill-<lb/>
ed onto nearby sidewalks. People<lb/>
of all ages joined hands under<lb/>
overcast skies on the tree-shaded<lb/>
Capitol grounds, singing "We<lb/>
are the World" and "America<lb/>
the Beautiful<lb/>
About 2,000 people lined an<lb/>
11-mile stretch in Charlotte.<lb/>
More than 100 people joined<lb/>
?<lb/>
hands around the Cap<lb/>
lighthouse and even mor<lb/>
the beaches of the Banks.<lb/>
Organizers oi Hand- A<lb/>
Elizabeth City esti $3,50<lb/>
was raised at a water;1<lb/>
festival, which stretched m<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
coincided with the su<lb/>
4, 1 5 2-mile Hand- c<lb/>
America chain stretching<lb/>
New York to Call tor ma. whi<lb/>
organizers hoped to produce ! 0<lb/>
million. Money raised in North<lb/>
Carolina was earmarked for I<lb/>
tood banks and community<lb/>
shelters.<lb/>
See HANDS Page 2.<lb/>
World Leaders Confer To End Crisis<lb/>
Wall To Become Border<lb/>
BERLIN (UPI) - The three<lb/>
Western Allies occupying Berlin<lb/>
fear East Germany is seeking to<lb/>
make an international border out<lb/>
of the Berlin Wall that divides the<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifiedsio<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features$,<lb/>
Sportsg<lb/>
? Scott and Rick analyze the<lb/>
NBA player draft. See page 8.<lb/>
The youth of America is its<lb/>
oldest tradition. It has been<lb/>
going on now for tree hundred<lb/>
years.<lb/>
? Oscar Wilde<lb/>
city into Western and communist<lb/>
halves, an allied spokesman said<lb/>
today.<lb/>
But West Berlin based Allied<lb/>
officials could not confirm news<lb/>
reports citing other Western<lb/>
allied sources in East Berlin that<lb/>
the allies might be provoked into<lb/>
severing relations with East Ger-<lb/>
many over the latest Berlin<lb/>
dispute.<lb/>
In Washington, a senior State<lb/>
Department official said the<lb/>
United States is making "inten-<lb/>
sive efforts" to see whether East<lb/>
Germany has added border con-<lb/>
trols in Berlin that would con-<lb/>
stitute an internatinal frontier.<lb/>
The official in Washington<lb/>
said American diplomats are<lb/>
crossing in and out of the western<lb/>
See WESTERN Page 5.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Soviet leader Mikhail<lb/>
Gorbachev conferred with<lb/>
Libya's second in command in<lb/>
Moscow today and Syrian Presi-<lb/>
dent Assad visited Greece's prime<lb/>
minister in apparent stepped up<lb/>
efforts to resolve the crisis of<lb/>
American, French and British<lb/>
hostages held in Lebanon.<lb/>
In Beirut, the war of nerves<lb/>
over the fate of 21 hostages<lb/>
heightened when an anonymous<lb/>
caller claiming to speak for the<lb/>
Islamic Jihad organization said<lb/>
the group will execute all its cap-<lb/>
tives. Political sources said they<lb/>
doubted the authenticity of the<lb/>
telephone threat to Christian<lb/>
Voice of Lebanon radio station in<lb/>
East Beirut.<lb/>
The sources in Beirut said<lb/>
Islamic Jihad usually com-<lb/>
municates by typewritten<lb/>
statements with accompanying<lb/>
photographs. The sources also<lb/>
said a telephone call Monday<lb/>
purported by the pro Iranian<lb/>
Jihad said the group would<lb/>
release two of its French hostage<lb/>
and none were released.<lb/>
A total of 21 foreigners, in-<lb/>
cluding five American s and nine<lb/>
Frenchmen, have been abducted<lb/>
in Lebanon. In addition to the<lb/>
Frenchmen and American, two<lb/>
Britons, an Irishman, and Italian<lb/>
and a South Korean are missing<lb/>
in Lebanon.<lb/>
The Islamic Jihad pro Iranian<lb/>
Shiite Moslem extremists claim-<lb/>
ed it was kidnapped eight of the<lb/>
Frenchmen and killed one of<lb/>
them, and has taken responsibili-<lb/>
ty for kidnapping the five<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
In Athens, Syrian President<lb/>
Gorbachev<lb/>
Harez Assad met Tuesday for<lb/>
four hours with Prime Minister<lb/>
Andreas Papandroeu for talks in<lb/>
which he dencounced terrorism<lb/>
but distinguished it from<lb/>
"resistance against colonialism<lb/>
"It was a very interesting<lb/>
analysis, We discussed all the<lb/>
problems of the Eastern Mediter-<lb/>
ranean Papandreou said after<lb/>
the talks on the second day of<lb/>
Assad's three day visit.<lb/>
Syria is influential with<lb/>
Lebanon's Moslem militias, and<lb/>
a high ranking French envoy has<lb/>
been in Damascus since Saturday<lb/>
for talks regarding the hostages.<lb/>
Diplomatic sources said the<lb/>
earliest any development in the<lb/>
hostage case could be expected is<lb/>
Thursday, the day after Assad's<lb/>
scheduled return from Greece.<lb/>
Other sources said the process<lb/>
could take another week or two<lb/>
weeks, if not longer.<lb/>
Talks were proceeding also in<lb/>
Damascus between Omran<lb/>
Adhan, a Syrian born Paris<lb/>
businessman who some news<lb/>
reports said received telephone<lb/>
calls form Mitterrand's Elysee<lb/>
palace after arriving in Syria.<lb/>
The French Embassy imposed<lb/>
a news blackout on the activities<lb/>
of the envoys, most of whom ar-<lb/>
rived in Damascus Saturday.<lb/>
In Moscow, Soviet leader<lb/>
Minhail Gorbachev conferred<lb/>
with Abdel Salm Jalloud, the se-<lb/>
cond most powerful member of<lb/>
the Libyan government, shortly<lb/>
before the secheduled arrival of<lb/>
the vice president of Syria , Abdel<lb/>
Halim Khaddam.<lb/>
The official Tass news agency<lb/>
said Abdel Salair Jalloud, who<lb/>
had already held talks with Prime<lb/>
Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov, be.<lb/>
talks in the Kremlin with Gor-<lb/>
bachev.<lb/>
The Meeting continued the<lb/>
high-level access given the visiting<lb/>
Libyan since his Monday arrival,<lb/>
underlining the importance at-<lb/>
tached to the talks bj Moscow<lb/>
Western diplomatic specula-<lb/>
tion on the purpose oi the sur-<lb/>
prise visits centered on efforts to<lb/>
coordinate policy in the fact of<lb/>
the U.S. threat to retaliate for<lb/>
terrorist attacks.<lb/>
In Beirut, the anonymous<lb/>
telephone caller told the Chi<lb/>
tian Voice of Lebanon radio sta-<lb/>
tion: "We will execute all the<lb/>
Americans, four French and a<lb/>
British hostage today and we will<lb/>
dump their bodies somwhere in<lb/>
(Moslem) West Beirut<lb/>
An official at the Christian east<lb/>
Beirut based radio station said he<lb/>
could not authenticate the call.<lb/>
Islamic Jihad, which began ab-<lb/>
ducting Westerners in Moslem<lb/>
West Beirut in March 1984, has<lb/>
demanded changes in U.S. and<lb/>
French policy in the Middle East<lb/>
and the release of 17 people jailed<lb/>
for a series of bombings of<lb/>
Western targets in Kuhait on<lb/>
Dec. 12, 1983.<lb/>
?? jr <lb/>
 ?r im 0 . ? m<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057821_0002"/><lb/>
JHE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MA1! 28, 186<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
I' t? . fid fcnnu?l f as' ? are Sdk a Olyrr<lb/>
? SotttM Maratt ? vci'Eia-s<lb/>
?ar? n G-ee-v r ? Saturday &amp; Snaa,<lb/>
?  &amp; .v: '??? v ? s wofif s ana coea<lb/>
am? trcr Easv Norm Carolina or<lb/>
etl g n &amp;reev ;e Do pa? ca tor t"<lb/>
? . 'aM'iDON roungsters mc aouits in<lb/>
ssV' - C 'as' f-a-e "as 'eaevi jp a ft<lb/>
?r e Rp'pfl' o" ac Park<lb/>
taper t merit lo put on t I ? ec sc?'ca<lb/>
event wi ' ?? ?s( fund 'c sodpch" ? ?<lb/>
spec a ? 'i CS scc's onyj'a'i Tere<lb/>
?? be is - - r. ? ? rr ?? jcre<lb/>
? :e ? a t si ? s<lb/>
rtiu ugi eat hanca tor a rou igmm<lb/>
students s - - ? es ?? a's<lb/>
?eoc MM rj ? ge' a grea' MfltMl a<lb/>
'f' I you 0? ? 'ea a'e e'es'ec<lb/>
' P'a - S tottba ntravega ta<lb/>
-veasr i ee - e Recreation and Partis<lb/>
It -5: ?137 ? ?t ? tor more rM<lb/>
v. ' - -e' - ? . i - - . a. ' v<lb/>
. -<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
iTEN OSNiRSiN&amp;VAjODS Bever<lb/>
? Enterprisaa announces ? met t set<lb/>
s" os tot Fa I9M '  ? ?? scftoiarsriips<lb/>
 Pr ???'JM te nurs.ng n-a.ors '<lb/>
oeots"a'e academi ? fvpn ana a-<lb/>
n'ees n turSvj'ng ge"ontotOG a rs .<lb/>
I'SOfpO r'Ufirrw-s FOT furl<lb/>
formation ser V Va? a' OH ce 24? Scnooi ol<lb/>
. ? Farranca ottica tM ScH?<lb/>
Nurs<lb/>
BIBLETALK<lb/>
s<lb/>
EATING DISORDERS<lb/>
xe Eang D.soroers Support Group for<lb/>
women tn bul'm.a anoreaa Tervosa or<lb/>
' are?.a ?in continue tn,s summer Ses<lb/>
s ons Mln oe heia on May 2' June 10 ana<lb/>
? .4 tr0m 4 5 p -T- ,? room 120 8t the Stu<lb/>
der" Mea'tn Server<lb/>
EASTGALLERY<lb/>
Nev. Water. ?SD, A ?. ngu Ar<lb/>
s s 'Kep' on Sunaa, vta, i8 ?. , - <lb/>
?- i !??<lb/>
?h.t,t?? uaec ?,  <lb/>
sponsored b, me Green e Museum ? Art<lb/>
isi ,a er, M A( tor BxevaP0<lb/>
- ? - NC 8J4 0 . -M WJ7<lb/>
Vore ?7VC System Freshman<lb/>
Require Remedial Courses<lb/>
Continued From Page I.<lb/>
mee! higher standards set b<lb/>
' 'ieir colleges.<lb/>
In an article in The News<lb/>
?bserer of Raleigh Sunday, the<lb/>
ewspaper released findings ol its<lb/>
' ugh the UNC systen<lb/>
mong " e findings ere thai<lb/>
wed ' devc- p -v a<lb/>
? al pn gra resu e in a<lb/>
dge ' i irses, sta<lb/>
irds and rep ning metl ds thai<lb/>
? e statewide com pai - n ind<lb/>
were ep<lb/>
?i I<lb/>
the test,<lb/>
 s V<lb/>
In iQfi<lb/>
Li ' e ' can puses<lb/>
ed  have be ov, <lb/>
. i  p<lb/>
I k owesi<lb/>
lasi fall 902 Ihe ac-<lb/>
f fres v -<lb/>
 ei ??, i a<lb/>
? 2t<lb/>
nculum.<lb/>
rwo years ago, when Spangler<lb/>
vas Education Board chairman<lb/>
lamented that high schools<lb/>
were sending too many graduates<lb/>
l 'liege without preparing them<lb/>
ege work.<lb/>
'We s h ou Id not keen<lb/>
Hands Stretch<lb/>
Across State<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
"It's too early to say how<lb/>
much money wee raised said<lb/>
Greg Kirkpatrick, organizer of<lb/>
Hands Across the Capital and<lb/>
director of the Food Bank of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Kirkpatrick estimated 2,500<lb/>
people attended the Raleigh func-<lb/>
tion and predicted participants<lb/>
would leave the event with a new<lb/>
sense of responsibility toward<lb/>
others. Kirkpatrick urged them to<lb/>
gel involved in community ef-<lb/>
forts to aid the needy.<lb/>
'I think an event like this can<lb/>
change people's lives because it<lb/>
-Tens them up to others<lb/>
Kirkpatrick said. "We're not just<lb/>
being hip by being here. We're<lb/>
here to express our abiding con-<lb/>
cern tor Americans and <lb/>
Carolinians who are hungry and<lb/>
homeless<lb/>
Live music and balloons<lb/>
drifted through the tree-and-<lb/>
ue-lined Capitol grounds.<lb/>
Several participants said the<lb/>
ed the eei ? j enhance<lb/>
social awareness<lb/>
What's New<lb/>
Posters and Poster Frames ? Tee<lb/>
Shirts ? Cards ? Prisms ? Hand-<lb/>
Crafted Jewelry ? And Much<lb/>
More to Surprise and Delight You<lb/>
Gai?da!fs<lb/>
"The Best Lo ? ? Place In Town'<lb/>
756-7235<lb/>
Open 10 to 10<lb/>
Mon-Sat<lb/>
ai ses al<lb/>
?<lb/>
imposs b<lb/>
' pro-<lb/>
tuai ? e si id ' s w ? ? ave to<lb/>
 remed i n in col-<lb/>
 Spangler -aid at a January<lb/>
;4 board meeting.<lb/>
"It's  ?? the responsibility ol<lb/>
.  versit ss;<lb/>
bac k<lb/>
?<lb/>
Resea<lb/>
? e a<lb/>
f $70 a si<lb/>
tii le "<lb/>
&amp; I<lb/>
e.x-<lb/>
<lb/>
Give a hoot.<lb/>
Don't pollute.<lb/>
s<lb/>
HORTlOS UP<lb/>
f() 12th WEEK<lb/>
Ol PRECNA XCY<lb/>
gna<lb/>
Pregnancy? g. For<lb/>
cal ? ? free<lb/>
$00-532-5384) bet<lb/>
? i eneralanes i i ava ibl<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
MALPASS MUFFLER<lb/>
AND PARTS 7<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
Your Complete<lb/>
Parts and Service <lb/>
Headquarters I<lb/>
2616 East 10th Street ? Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
WELCOME STUDENTS<lb/>
Now Open For Your Convenience<lb/>
OVERTON'S SOUP &amp; SALAD<lb/>
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Angela Centanm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057821_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 28, 1986<lb/>
 vV<lb/>
dalfs<lb/>
Sew<lb/>
Frames ? Tee<lb/>
? Prism ? Hand-<lb/>
 And Much<lb/>
nd Delight You<lb/>
dalf sr<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
Who is your all-time favorite rock singer or group?<lb/>
Open 10 to 10<lb/>
Mon-Sat<lb/>
N.C. Study Shows Racism Across U.S.<lb/>
Sarah Tavlor<lb/>
Junior, English<lb/>
"The Stones, They got a better<lb/>
heat. I don't like the newer<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
Chris Buck<lb/>
Sophomore, L ndecided<lb/>
"I like them all. Each one is<lb/>
different and thev all add to<lb/>
life<lb/>
17<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
ilete7<lb/>
?rvice 1PTK6 7 6<lb/>
le( NC 27834<lb/>
Bridgette Thompson<lb/>
Sophomore, Elementary<lb/>
Education<lb/>
"1 have a lot of favorite<lb/>
groups, not just a particular<lb/>
one<lb/>
Michael Purvis<lb/>
Senior, industrial Technology<lb/>
"Luther Van Dros. Because I<lb/>
like mellow music, and 1 think<lb/>
Luther is the number one mellow<lb/>
artist<lb/>
?'<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Reward Manley<lb/>
Senior, Industrial Technology<lb/>
"Whitney Houston. She has a<lb/>
real good voice, and I like her<lb/>
body. Her music isn't too fast<lb/>
nor too slow<lb/>
Angela C entanni<lb/>
Senior, Interior Design<lb/>
"Bruce Springsteen. I really<lb/>
don't know ? his music is good,<lb/>
and everyone can enjoy it<lb/>
(UPI) ? More blacks arrested<lb/>
for serious crimes are sent to<lb/>
prison than whites similarly<lb/>
charged ? and race appears<lb/>
more a factor in such cases in<lb/>
northern courtrooms than those<lb/>
of southern states, a university<lb/>
researcher says.<lb/>
A recent study showed all 39<lb/>
states with blacks making up at<lb/>
least 3 percent of the state sent a<lb/>
higher percentage of the minority<lb/>
population than whites to prison.<lb/>
"There has been a tendency to<lb/>
locate racism in the south and ig-<lb/>
nore it in others, but this implies<lb/>
there is racism in the court<lb/>
systems of all states Darnell<lb/>
Hawkins, an associate professor<lb/>
of sociology at North Carolina<lb/>
and co-author of the study, said<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
For example, blacks in New<lb/>
Jersey and Michigan are arrested<lb/>
for 37 percent of the major<lb/>
crimes. But, in both states, blacks<lb/>
make up more than two-thirds of<lb/>
the prison populations. In North<lb/>
Carolina, blacks are arrested for<lb/>
50 percent of the major crimes<lb/>
and make up 55 percent of the<lb/>
prison population ? a closer cor-<lb/>
relation between crimes and<lb/>
sentencing.<lb/>
The study examined only the<lb/>
imprisonment after arrest for a<lb/>
major felony, ignoring misde-<lb/>
meanor and traffic offenses.<lb/>
Hawkins used an elaborate for-<lb/>
mula to calculate what he called<lb/>
the level of imprisonment unex-<lb/>
plained by the arrest numbers.<lb/>
States with the highest percen-<lb/>
tages of disproportionate senten-<lb/>
cing, according to Hawkins,<lb/>
were: New Mexico, 78 percent;<lb/>
New Jersev, 74; Arizona and<lb/>
Washington with 60 percent; and<lb/>
Michigan, 62 percent.<lb/>
States with the lowest percen-<lb/>
tages of excessive black imprison-<lb/>
ment, according to Hawkins,<lb/>
were: Missouri and Indiana, each<lb/>
with 4 percent; Mississippi, 10<lb/>
percent; Tennessee, 12 percent;<lb/>
and North Carolina, 19 percent.<lb/>
Next in line were Georgia, West<lb/>
Virginia and Alabama.<lb/>
"The difference in the<lb/>
numbers appears to be the treat-<lb/>
ment of whites, not blacks<lb/>
Hawkins said.<lb/>
Hawkins noted some states<lb/>
might send 2,000 out of every<lb/>
100,000 blacks to prisons, but on-<lb/>
ly 60 whites per 100,000. A<lb/>
typical southern state might im-<lb/>
prison 2,000 blacks but also 300<lb/>
whites per 100,000.<lb/>
The difference in states' im-<lb/>
prisonment rates could be due to<lb/>
several interweaving factors that<lb/>
include economics and religious<lb/>
histories, Hawkins said. He sug-<lb/>
gested southern states were more<lb/>
willing to send whites as well as<lb/>
blacks to prison for crimes<lb/>
against property, while other<lb/>
states did not incarcerate many<lb/>
whites for such crimes.<lb/>
"You used to hear people say<lb/>
that blacks in one state were more<lb/>
likely to commit certain crimes<lb/>
than blacks in other states, i find<lb/>
that basically racist said<lb/>
Hawkins. "I don't believe tracks<lb/>
in one state are more likely to<lb/>
commit a crime than othei <lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
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i . ? . Shannon Short, ????,?,? ?,??,<lb/>
Mav 28. 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Teaching<lb/>
How Should Teachers Be Taught?<lb/>
What's one of the biggest pro-<lb/>
blems with the American education<lb/>
system today? Teachers ? more<lb/>
specifically, teacher education.<lb/>
The debate over teacher educa-<lb/>
tion has been raging for sometime<lb/>
and there is no doubt it will con-<lb/>
tinue to do so far into the future.<lb/>
Some, like American Educational<lb/>
Research Association President<lb/>
David Berliner, believe the key to<lb/>
producing good teachers is educa-<lb/>
tion courses.<lb/>
1 he opposing camp, of which<lb/>
Education Policy Studies Director<lb/>
Denis Doyle is a member, feels too<lb/>
much emphasis has been placed on<lb/>
education courses and not enough<lb/>
on subject matter.<lb/>
rhese two professionals met last<lb/>
rhursda) to debate their positions<lb/>
at UN( Chapel Hill. But what<lb/>
can one sa about such a debate<lb/>
when both sides are in the right?<lb/>
I et's look at both positions brief-<lb/>
ly. During the debate. Berliner said.<lb/>
"in general, knowing one's subject<lb/>
matter does nol neccessarily make<lb/>
one a good teacher<lb/>
How true Man is the time we've<lb/>
i across a brilliant professor or<lb/>
a knowledgeable high school<lb/>
teachei onlj to discover they lack<lb/>
the tea skills to communicate<lb/>
then knowledge.<lb/>
Doyle, however, claims, "you<lb/>
can't teach what you don't know<lb/>
1 his brings back memories o the<lb/>
coach teachers man of us en-<lb/>
countered in high school. For those<lb/>
ol you fortunate enough not to<lb/>
e me: them, these are men for<lb/>
whom teachii quiremeni for<lb/>
coaching. Thev an n assigned<lb/>
not v<lb/>
unlike<lb/>
Out<lb/>
either<lb/>
ilth or histor) classes, classes<lb/>
the subject matter taught is<lb/>
al tor college admissions,<lb/>
Math or English,<lb/>
point is this; too much ol<lb/>
one ol these schools ol<lb/>
thought can produce an unprepared<lb/>
teachei and prove detrimental to<lb/>
students' education. So why not<lb/>
akc the best ol both worlds'?<lb/>
Time magazine reported on the<lb/>
release ol a stud) done by the<lb/>
Carnegie orum on Education and<lb/>
1 conom) concerning the upgrading<lb/>
ol teachei training and salaries. In-<lb/>
cluded in the suggestions made by<lb/>
the stud) was a proposal to<lb/>
eliminate undergraduate education<lb/>
degrees. Instead, students would be<lb/>
required to complete Bac-<lb/>
calaureates in arts and sciences<lb/>
followed by a proposed Master's in<lb/>
Teaching.<lb/>
This would assure a fine balance<lb/>
between education courses and<lb/>
courses in the student teacher's<lb/>
field of concentration.<lb/>
Also proposed in the study was<lb/>
the establishment of a board to set<lb/>
nation-wide teaching standards for<lb/>
teacher certification. At present,<lb/>
certification is awarded by in-<lb/>
dividual states according to varying<lb/>
criteria. This places teachers in an<lb/>
akward position as certification in<lb/>
one state may not be recognized in<lb/>
another until certain additional<lb/>
training is complete.<lb/>
lor instance. North Carolina's<lb/>
Teacher Certification is readily ac-<lb/>
cepted in onl) 26 states. An educa-<lb/>
tion student seeking work in one of<lb/>
the remaining 24 states may be re-<lb/>
quired to complete additional re-<lb/>
quirements set forth by that state.<lb/>
Finally, The study proposes that<lb/>
teachers who display progressive<lb/>
levels o' skill be rewarded with an<lb/>
average sal an of $35,500. Increas-<lb/>
ing teachers' salaries is one o the<lb/>
biggest steps we could take in im-<lb/>
proving oui education system. As<lb/>
the National Education Association<lb/>
has stated time and again, the quali-<lb/>
ty of education is linked to the level<lb/>
of teachers' salaries.<lb/>
The teaching profession has lost<lb/>
many prospective educators to<lb/>
private industry (especially in the<lb/>
Math and Science fields) due to in-<lb/>
adequate salaries. Few people are<lb/>
w tiling to commit their lives to a job<lb/>
worth, according to marketing<lb/>
perceptions, S25.25" a year.<lb/>
Do these proposals sound<lb/>
idealistic'7 Do they present more an<lb/>
educational Utopia than practical<lb/>
steps to improve education in this<lb/>
country? If so. then it may well be<lb/>
to our advantage. Keep in mind,<lb/>
one must know where he's going<lb/>
before he sets out on his journey,<lb/>
and believe us, the American educa-<lb/>
tion system has quite a trek ahead<lb/>
of it.<lb/>
If we only make it half the<lb/>
distance to this goal, then it is still a<lb/>
long way from where we stand now.<lb/>
And at present, from where we're<lb/>
standing, the view is not very good.<lb/>
jiorrWPisarnMUfStMJO ayr? gjjW?ggtfc iaa-<lb/>
Brno? mrr?, itsall mm mm our at we<lb/>
foop stamp office,<lb/>
a voice TDtp we to eive<lb/>
possessions MONev,<lb/>
F00P CLOTHING,<lb/>
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VJH5M VOU<lb/>
&amp;?CAM?A.<lb/>
PRoPHer?<lb/>
NO, THAT'S<lb/>
wHertr<lb/>
&amp;eCAM?A<lb/>
TeACHBR,<lb/>
rU4UUAXT&amp;fmM?SV4J'<lb/>
Pretoria Just Fighting Terrorism<lb/>
"U.S. Reacts With Outrage Files<lb/>
Formal Protest" was the headline in<lb/>
Los Angeles last Tuesday, the lead story<lb/>
describing the raids by South Africa on<lb/>
three neighboring capitals. Spokesmen<lb/>
for the American administration had a<lb/>
mosi difficult lime making their points<lb/>
exactly, and some of the most difficult<lb/>
questions weren't even asked.<lb/>
The first question, of course, is<lb/>
whether the government ot South<lb/>
Africa is expected to tolerate terrorist<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By WILLIAM F.BLCKLFA JR.<lb/>
A bad season to ask that question,<lb/>
here in the United States, but ot course<lb/>
the State Department took the offen-<lb/>
sive. There is absolutely no compai<lb/>
to be drawn, its spokesman said, bet-<lb/>
ween what we did to Libya and what<lb/>
South Africa did to Zimbabwe. Zambia<lb/>
and Botswana. The difference is ob-<lb/>
vious: I ibya is the headquarters of the<lb/>
international terrorism directed by<lb/>
Moarnmar Khadafy, whereas the<lb/>
African slates attacked by Pretoria are<lb/>
peace-loving neighboring countries.<lb/>
The trouble with that dismissal is that<lb/>
it presupposes thai South Africa was<lb/>
launching an attack against three peace-<lb/>
loving neighbors. But it wasn't doing<lb/>
that. It was attacking ? or trying to a:<lb/>
tack ? terrorist depots that had taken<lb/>
sanctuary in those countries.<lb/>
When, a few months ago. Israel at-<lb/>
tacked Tunisia, it was not attacking a<lb/>
moderate and relatively friendly North<lb/>
African state. It was attacking tenons;<lb/>
concentrations couched in that country.<lb/>
The difference is not hard to perceive.<lb/>
Well, was there prima facie justifica-<lb/>
tion for suspecting terrorist activity<lb/>
m here the targets lay'1<lb/>
I he director of the University ot<lb/>
Pretoria's Institute of Strategic Studies,<lb/>
Mike Hough, is . so tar as we know, a<lb/>
scholai a professional apologist.<lb/>
He has reported that the number of ter-<lb/>
rorist incidents m South Africa increas-<lb/>
ed to 136 in 1985 from 44 in 19H4, and<lb/>
that so fai in 196 there have been "0<lb/>
such incidents.<lb/>
But how on earth do South African<lb/>
revolutionaries get hold ot the relatively<lb/>
sophistuaTed weapons needed to carry<lb/>
on tenons- attacks ?<lb/>
I he weapons used bv the terrorists<lb/>
have st every case been of Soviet<lb/>
manufacture.<lb/>
"Il is obvious that RusMan mines and<lb/>
weapons can be brought into South<lb/>
Afric nc route only, through our<lb/>
neighboring states the Defense Force<lb/>
ol Pretoria was quoted. "These states<lb/>
have repeatedly been requested not I<lb/>
provide ass.stance to terrorists. Urgent<lb/>
appeals have been made to them to<lb/>
cooperate in this regard<lb/>
s where are we<lb/>
When I sered (briefly) in the United<lb/>
Nations, one ot my assignments was to<lb/>
seek to wrest from the Third Committee<lb/>
of the General Assembiv a comprehen-<lb/>
sive statement condemning terrorism. I<lb/>
gave a couple o uplifting speeches on<lb/>
the subject, and everyone would<lb/>
solemnly nod his head in agreement<lb/>
that terrorism was to be condemned.<lb/>
But o course, anyone who blew up an<lb/>
Uraeli athlete, as in Munich was not a<lb/>
terrorist, he was a freedom tighter. Ana<lb/>
anyone who blew up a Portuguese<lb/>
soldiei in Mozambique or Angola was<lb/>
run a terrorist ? he too was a freedom<lb/>
fighter. And. a fortiori, anyone who<lb/>
knocks off a white South, African is a<lb/>
freedom tighter<lb/>
I here is a sense il<lb/>
rather becomes, true Hi<lb/>
polemic of the victors, ir is ? ?<lb/>
repeated. Nobody thinks I V<lb/>
Begin as a terrorist, huT the Br<lb/>
certainly did in the immediate :<lb/>
years, when he was head ol i<lb/>
What the government I v<lb/>
is telling the world is quitt<lb/>
that although the<lb/>
? government, '<lb/>
going to let terrorists <lb/>
replacement. Meanwl<lb/>
Department, in il<lb/>
significant polemical problen<lb/>
I mean, did the episi ?? ? <lb/>
have to burden tl<lb/>
Robert Mugabe Zin I<lb/>
prime minster, h<lb/>
multiracialism in S ?utl I - .<lb/>
engaged in removing the<lb/>
chise in his own country. H<lb/>
as having spoken, "his <lb/>
with emotion to deplore the<lb/>
caused by the South, V<lb/>
count? Two dead. 10 injur<lb/>
what did Mugabe vome out<lb/>
said that the time had come I i<lb/>
babwe to give "more repeat "n<lb/>
support to "the African Nationa<lb/>
gress and other liberation mov<lb/>
fighting m South Africa<lb/>
How would you feel, if <lb/>
State Department, and you hast<lb/>
finished saving that the peace<lb/>
neighbors in South Africa were n.<lb/>
porting the terrorists' Robert M .<lb/>
was an accomplished terrorist<lb/>
fight to control Rhodesia, and he <lb/>
and now he is a statesman. I .<lb/>
American public needs to recognize<lb/>
to condone the struggle against tei<lb/>
rorists by Pretoria is not the equivalent<lb/>
of condoning apartheid.<lb/>
Network Interview Aids Terrorist Leader<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r 1 ttv?4, &amp;66W?CANT 1 HP-JP- TC THE ROSdiAKiSjX 1 BECAUSE :r 1 mm- Mk zp$ecR?r' i mm &amp; i vau.<lb/>
<lb/>
LT J SO FOR I IQJ X-v FURTHER M Pi 4tf'U? details IIi JJ ?1CK upA I<lb/>
Wiwm'tttAM&amp;ZMxTmFwnEe&amp;LlP<lb/>
B MKHAK1. WAI.ZHR<lb/>
n? Sr? KrpaMk<lb/>
In J, Bowyer Bell's book The Secret Army: The IRA,<lb/>
1916-1974 there is an extraordinary sequence o photos (not<lb/>
taken by Bell) titled "Bomb attack on Shipquay Street in<lb/>
Derry, 21 March 1972 The first picture shows three men<lb/>
leaning into the trunk of a car, "loading the bomb for<lb/>
delivery The second shows a quiet Shipquay Street<lb/>
"moments before the explosion The third is a picture of the<lb/>
same street, taken from the same angle, with the bomb ex-<lb/>
ploding, people running for cover. The fourth and las: picture<lb/>
is a close-up of "the damage done There are no dead bodies<lb/>
in sight, but even if not one was killed, that could hardly have<lb/>
been known before the bomb went off.<lb/>
Was it naive of me, when I first came upon these photos, to<lb/>
feel that something was very wrong? Do I misunderstand the<lb/>
photographer's trade? What did this man think he was doing?<lb/>
Why didn't he call the police ? or, at least, warn the people in<lb/>
the street?<lb/>
Overwhelmed with questions, I watched for reviews of the<lb/>
Bell book, but so far as I know no one said anything about this<lb/>
strange performance. To me it seems clear that the<lb/>
photogrpaher was a terrorist accomplice. I'm not sure what to<lb/>
say about the silent reviewers.<lb/>
All these questions came back to me when I watched the in-<lb/>
terview with Abu Abbas on NBC television. Here was a man<lb/>
wanted for murder calmly facing the camera and promising t<lb/>
commit more murders. That much was well worth seeing, o<lb/>
the general principle: know your enemy. But it is also impoi<lb/>
tant, as any military strategist will understand, to knoM m<lb/>
your enemy is. This knowledge NBC chose to conceal. I: .<lb/>
concealment was part of its bargain with Abu Abbas<lb/>
granted the interview on condition that NBC sas no<lb/>
?about where it took place, nothing about Abu Ab deout<lb/>
or about the government that provides it. Slav be I S<lb/>
telligence already has this information. If not, its a<lb/>
should begin to follow NBC reporters<lb/>
Still, the concealment was an act of complicity, dnl it v<lb/>
Abbas keeps his promises, it will have to be said that NBc<lb/>
helped him do so. Does anyone think this is courageous<lb/>
nalism? Once the deal was struck, surely no American ii<lb/>
Middle East was safer than NBC's correspondent. Abt.<lb/>
bas, after all, was getting exactly what he wanted, and had no<lb/>
reason to be angry. The rest of us, however, who are not ter-<lb/>
rorists have reason enough.<lb/>
Campus Forum-<lb/>
Professor Acknowledges 1986 Initiates<lb/>
On April 30 42 students were in-<lb/>
itiated into Beta Gamma Sigma the<lb/>
Business Administration honorary<lb/>
society. To the best of my knowledge,<lb/>
Beta Gamma Sigma is the largest,<lb/>
oldest, and most restrictive honorary<lb/>
society on campus. Only about 20<lb/>
percent of the Business Administra-<lb/>
tion programs in the United States are<lb/>
eligible for Beta Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Chapters. Only students majoring in<lb/>
Business Administration are eligible<lb/>
and then only after they have attained<lb/>
junior status and completed 30 credits<lb/>
at ECU. Only 5 percent of the juniors<lb/>
and 10 percent of the seniors are eligi-<lb/>
ble for induction. Since less than 50<lb/>
percent of the students who declare<lb/>
business as a major ever enter the<lb/>
school of Business, the selection is<lb/>
made from a select group of students.<lb/>
I feel strongly that these outstan-<lb/>
ding students deserve public recogni-<lb/>
tion. The participation of Chancellor<lb/>
Howell, Vice Chancellor Volpe, Dean<lb/>
Uhr, and James Bearden (Assistant to<lb/>
Chancellor Howell and National<lb/>
President of Beta Gamma Sigma) in<lb/>
the induction ceremonies attests to<lb/>
the recognition of these students by<lb/>
the University.<lb/>
On April 17, 13 days before the in-<lb/>
duction, I asked The East Carolinian<lb/>
to recognize these fine students along<lb/>
with the 1986 honorary initiate.<lb/>
Dispite the letter and three phone<lb/>
calls 1 do not believe these deserving<lb/>
students were ever recognized in The<lb/>
East Carolinian. 1 would like to take<lb/>
this opportunity to acknowledge the<lb/>
outstanding academic efforts of the<lb/>
1986 initiates.<lb/>
Dr.Robert Schellenberger<lb/>
Decision Sciences<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view, 1ail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance Oj Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
Western<lb/>
 "ritinued Horn <lb/>
V<lb/>
svndrom<lb/>
Via-<lb/>
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? Sepan<lb/>
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VOiCe TOIP Me TO 3lV?<lb/>
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lOSSeSSIONS MOMW<lb/>
'OP' CLOTHING<lb/>
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NHEM I<lb/>
3ECAM&amp;A<lb/>
EACH?R.<lb/>
vv?<lb/>
 ' 'tSVU-<lb/>
Terrorism<lb/>
Western Allies Seek Border<lb/>
(Ontinued From Page 1.<lb/>
rtion ol the divided citj to<lb/>
determine what controls have<lb/>
been added by the communists<lb/>
authorities. "The fact is. the<lb/>
on is unclear at this point.<lb/>
said the official, who requested<lb/>
anonymity.<lb/>
The delicate status of the city is<lb/>
governed by a 1971 four-power<lb/>
pact between the United States,<lb/>
France, and Britian, who control<lb/>
the western secotors, and the<lb/>
W hat new with toxic shock<lb/>
syndrome?<lb/>
It has been six years since toxic<lb/>
ck syndrome (TSS) made the<lb/>
eadlines when Rely tampons<lb/>
amoved from store shelves<lb/>
s e o t their<lb/>
The Health C olumn H<lb/>
Mar Flesha Adams<lb/>
link with TSS Foxic<lb/>
ck svndrome is a serious<lb/>
? is is. oiproblem that is<lb/>
Hist rj ia thezed b the follow me<lb/>
tirelessljims:<lb/>
? Menacl? idden tc ei<lb/>
most? omiting and disease<lb/>
tie postwar?dizziness when standing up<lb/>
' Irgun.? ti resembles sunburn<lb/>
V?severe muscle aches<lb/>
?? a)<lb/>
lesp -??. ated eyes<lb/>
Five percent ol the population<lb/>
isk ol developing 1 <lb/>
S"ase has struck men.<lb/>
ess,nen;<lb/>
? - have been<lb/>
M<lb/>
eaprtm?Seven out ol ten cases ol 1 ss<lb/>
babwe'sing women who<lb/>
?on users and I ss has<lb/>
Africa,been rep rted af let<lb/>
fran-erv and in a few<lb/>
e diaphi <lb/>
t)1 e symp-<lb/>
e carnagef TSS i pea; on the<lb/>
The' u da period.<lb/>
i henprevent<lb/>
Herss<lb/>
<lb/>
? re '<lb/>
?alternate tampons with<lb/>
sanitary pads during periods<lb/>
?use the least absorbent tam-<lb/>
pons that will control menstrual<lb/>
flow<lb/>
?do not wear tampons longei<lb/>
than 6-8 hours without changing<lb/>
them<lb/>
?do not use the contraceptive<lb/>
sponge during your period<lb/>
?be aware ol the warnig signs<lb/>
ol 1SS. Do not delav seeking<lb/>
medical attention if you develop<lb/>
symptoms of 1 Ss<lb/>
soviet Union. The Western na-<lb/>
tions still consider all of Berlin an<lb/>
occupied city even though the<lb/>
Soviet Union ended its occupa-<lb/>
tion in its sector, now East<lb/>
Berlin, and transferred authority<lb/>
to last Germany.<lb/>
The trouble began last Thurs-<lb/>
day when the Fast German<lb/>
Foreign Ministry informed<lb/>
Foreign missions in East Berlin<lb/>
that starting Monday diplomats<lb/>
would need to show their<lb/>
passports to cross between East<lb/>
and West Berlin.<lb/>
In the past, foreign diplomats<lb/>
accredited in Fast Berlin could<lb/>
move freely through the Berlin<lb/>
Wall checkpoints with their small<lb/>
red diplomatic passes issued by<lb/>
the Fast German Foreign<lb/>
Ministry.<lb/>
On Monday, communist<lb/>
guards still permitted diplomats<lb/>
from the three Western occupa-<lb/>
tion powers, the United States.<lb/>
Britian and France, to proceed<lb/>
with only their red pass. But<lb/>
diplomats from other countries,<lb/>
including West Germany, Italy<lb/>
and Denmark, were turned back<lb/>
when they tried to cross without<lb/>
passports.<lb/>
ONSOLIDATED<lb/>
"HEATRES<lb/>
Adults s2.n??<lb/>
CHILDREN -<lb/>
ANYTIME ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
758-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center ,<lb/>
LIVE ON STAGE ? Saturday May 31st<lb/>
Open 6:45  lights Start 7:30 PM<lb/>
KICKBOXING<lb/>
6 Bouts ? Tickets Now On Sale<lb/>
Seating Limited to Theatre Capacity<lb/>
 Plus On Screen ? The movie that made him a legend!<lb/>
Bruce Lee<lb/>
Enter The<lb/>
Dragon qr<lb/>
rHt hASI CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 28,<lb/>
IV86<lb/>
rt.i. m ?&amp;<lb/>
May 21<lb/>
12:02 a.m.<lb/>
Greenville resident was banned<lb/>
from campus after being observ-<lb/>
ed acting in a suspicious manner<lb/>
near the Wright Building.<lb/>
May 22<lb/>
1:50 a.m.<lb/>
A ECU student was arrested<lb/>
for DWI.<lb/>
May 23<lb/>
2:30 a.m.<lb/>
A Washington, N.C. resident<lb/>
was banned from the west end of<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
4:40 a.m.<lb/>
A officer reported discovering<lb/>
the door glass to east entrance of<lb/>
Clement dorm smashed by<lb/>
unknown persons.<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
12:15 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of a bicycle from<lb/>
South of Brewster Building.<lb/>
NEED MONEY?<lb/>
We Pay Cash For<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
CLASSRINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
Any Gold Or Silver Jewelry<lb/>
SILVER &amp; GOLD COINS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
We use gov't approved scales &amp; the latest up<lb/>
to the minute internal market prices on gold<lb/>
&amp; silver.<lb/>
Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
Greenville's Oldest &amp; Respected Dealer<lb/>
Corner of Evans &amp; 4th Street<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
FITNESSCENTER<lb/>
Formerly Nautilus<lb/>
ONE MONTH FREE!<lb/>
When you join our special summer fitness program.<lb/>
A $75.00 value for only $50.00<lb/>
SAVE $25.00<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
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ALL NEW PRIVATE NAUTILUS ROOM.<lb/>
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COUPON EXPIRES: 6-31-36<lb/>
were<lb/>
n his<lb/>
on,<lb/>
11 e<lb/>
e thai<lb/>
rrorist Leader<lb/>
and<lb/>
por-<lb/>
? ? here The he<lb/>
1 S. in-<lb/>
agents<lb/>
' Abu : BC<lb/>
 ;<lb/>
n the Abu Ab-id had no<lb/>
? ter-<lb/>
986 Initiates<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
? tiers<lb/>
' ? ? - Mail or<lb/>
in the Publica-<lb/>
Bu from the en-<lb/>
r purposi ? nation, all let-<lb/>
the name, major and<lb/>
fication, address, phone number<lb/>
ignature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
e limned to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
e-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
tters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
. obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
cutty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
ire reminded that they are limited<lb/>
one every five issues.<lb/>
? ana More:<lb/>
!<lb/>
TG<lb/>
t&amp;<lb/>
rr i l i j.TAJu,irAAJJUAJAAAA<lb/>
A LICENSEE OF GOLD'S GYM ENT INC<lb/>
LOCATED IN<lb/>
EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED<lb/>
CALL TODAY 758-4359<lb/>
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S FRIDAY MAY 30th<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Year<lb/>
the next 15 to join<lb/>
free Gold's T-shirt<lb/>
ft<lb/>
I- - T<lb/>
TT<lb/>
4-4-<lb/>
' I ! t<lb/>
-L4-<lb/>
? 4V<lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
'i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057821_0006"/><lb/>
?-???'<lb/>
HI I V<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Western Allies Seek Border<lb/>
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i ontinued From I'a I<lb/>
? i ficial, who requ<lb/>
anonvmit<lb/>
iei I nion I he v estei n na<lb/>
us still considei all ol Bi'tlm an<lb/>
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verned b a 1971 torn power Soviet I nion ended its occupa<lb/>
vestei<lb/>
I inited Stai<lb/>
itrol<lb/>
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Mai i lesha Kdains<lb/>
in its sectoi. now East<lb/>
Bi rlin, and transfei red authoi it<lb/>
to I 1 t iei many<lb/>
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da when the 1 .is: den<lb/>
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I us m 1 ast Bet lin<lb/>
diplon<lb/>
betwec<lb/>
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issued<lb/>
I I<lb/>
1<lb/>
M<lb/>
A<lb/>
Si i<lb/>
I<lb/>
? .<lb/>
ONSOUDATED<lb/>
HEATRES<lb/>
dultss2oo0<lb/>
7??;<lb/>
m<lb/>
75f-330-7 ? Gr??nvilla Squar Shopping C?nt?r<lb/>
 n i o s (,f<lb/>
Saturday May 31st<lb/>
- Stan  M PM<lb/>
KICKBOXING<lb/>
6 Houis Tickets Sow On Sale<lb/>
Seating !<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Bruce Lee ?<lb/>
Enter The<lb/>
I Dragon OE<lb/>
i'li ?A ?" - w<lb/>
Mas 21<lb/>
12 02 a.m.<lb/>
Greenville resident .t- banned<lb/>
in nil campus alter being obsen<lb/>
acting in a suspu ious mannet<lb/>
neai the V i ighi Building<lb/>
May 22<lb/>
1 50 a.m<lb/>
? 1(1 student a ,<lb/>
 DWI.<lb/>
May 2i<lb/>
2 10 a ni.<lb/>
 S ashington, N re<lb/>
was banned from tl<lb/>
4:40 a.m<lb/>
? officer repot<lb/>
: it glass ti i ea<lb/>
Clemen<lb/>
a pei ns<lb/>
Mas 24<lb/>
12:15 p.m.<lb/>
? (. ireenv ille 11 I<lb/>
. of a bi<lb/>
? B ? B ?<lb/>
NEED MONEY0<lb/>
We Pay Cash For<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
CLASSRINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
Any Gold Or Silver Jewelry<lb/>
SILVER &amp; GOLD COINS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
We use gov't approved stales &amp; the latest<lb/>
to the minute intern'l market prices on gold<lb/>
&amp; silver.<lb/>
Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
Greenville's Oldest &amp; Respected Dealer<lb/>
Corner of Evans &amp; 4th Street<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
FITNESS CENTER<lb/>
Formerly Nautilus<lb/>
ONE MONTH FREE!<lb/>
When you join our special summer fitness program.<lb/>
A $75.00 ie for only $50.00<lb/>
SAVE $25.00<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
1002 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
ALL NEW PRIVATE NAUTILUS ROOM.<lb/>
npic Weights<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES: 6-31-86<lb/>
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? Separate Locker Rooms For Men &amp; Women<lb/>
? Sauna<lb/>
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FREE AEROBICS<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
c<lb/>
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y-<lb/>
WITH MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
A LICENSEE OF GOLD'S GYM ENT INC<lb/>
LOCATED IN<lb/>
EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED<lb/>
CALL TODAY 758-4359<lb/>
DAYS<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
ENDS FRIDAY MAY 30th<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Year<lb/>
Plus the next 15 to join<lb/>
Vget a free Gold's T-shirt<lb/>
C<lb/>
kj<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057821_0007"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
I HI ASI (. AROI INIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
MAY 28. 1YH6<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Head For The Gorge<lb/>
Linville Falls<lb/>
One of the state's more scenic locations. I.insille Falls attracts<lb/>
sightseers and soul-searchers alike with its combination of beaut.<lb/>
grandeur and accessibility.<lb/>
BvJAY STONF.<lb/>
Something awful, loathesome<lb/>
and downright odious descends<lb/>
on a college student at the close<lb/>
of a semester and the end of final<lb/>
exams. Call it burn out, depres-<lb/>
sion or any number of other ad-<lb/>
jectives meant to suggest an im-<lb/>
balance of brain chemistry and<lb/>
you might be getting a rudimen-<lb/>
tary grip on the thing. But it is<lb/>
really something more.<lb/>
To cut right to the bone of the<lb/>
matter, then, at the close of this<lb/>
past spring semester 1 was feeling<lb/>
spiritually void and emotionally<lb/>
numb. I decided that the best way<lb/>
to deal with these symptoms was<lb/>
to take a road trip to a place verv<lb/>
different from Greenville. The<lb/>
trees had to be different and so<lb/>
did the weather. But what was of<lb/>
the utmost importance was that<lb/>
the spirit be elevated and in-<lb/>
vigorated rather than sucked<lb/>
down into the swampv mo;ass ot<lb/>
anomie.<lb/>
I decided on the North<lb/>
Carolina mountains and, more<lb/>
specificaly, Linville r a<lb/>
varietv of reasons As an<lb/>
unrepentant hippie friend of<lb/>
mine told me a few days back,<lb/>
every place has its own energy.<lb/>
Mountains, he claimed, have a<lb/>
different effect on a man's<lb/>
psyche than do swamps or<lb/>
beaches. In retrospect, 1 think he<lb/>
was right.<lb/>
Linville Gorge is actually a<lb/>
small canyon that has been cut<lb/>
out of the N.C. mountains by the<lb/>
Linville River. It is located just<lb/>
outside of Linville Falls, about 35<lb/>
miles north of Morganton and 22<lb/>
miles south of Boone.<lb/>
The Linville River ambles<lb/>
sometimes placidly and<lb/>
sometimes frenetically over a rug-<lb/>
ged rock-strewn landscape. Near<lb/>
the end of the Gorge it cascades<lb/>
magnificently in a series of water-<lb/>
falls which give the area its<lb/>
reputation as a tourist spot. The<lb/>
1 ails plus the Gorge's close prox-<lb/>
imity to other tourist attractions<lb/>
such as Grandfather Mountain<lb/>
and rweetsie Railroad make it an<lb/>
ideal stopping point on any tour<lb/>
of the Blue Ridge Parkway.<lb/>
On checking into camping<lb/>
regulations 1 discovered that it is<lb/>
necessary to have permits from<lb/>
. Forest Service to spend<lb/>
any weekend night in the Gorge,<lb/>
though weekday nights are open<lb/>
to all. On the particular weekend<lb/>
that I planned to go to the moun-<lb/>
tains I was disappointed to find<lb/>
that all 45 of the permits which<lb/>
the forest service gives out had<lb/>
been claimed. Consequently, 1<lb/>
reconciled myself to camping in<lb/>
the Federal Park Campground<lb/>
which borders the gorge.<lb/>
As it turned out, however, it<lb/>
was just as well that I stayed in<lb/>
the campground even though it<lb/>
cost $6 per night. Beginning the<lb/>
first afternoon it rained off and<lb/>
on during my whole trip.<lb/>
And yet I didn't feel that the<lb/>
trip was ruined. The<lb/>
thunderstorms in the mountains<lb/>
are beautiful. I watched from the<lb/>
Blue Ridge Parkway as lightning<lb/>
arced in long jagged talons into a<lb/>
valley below. And later, after the<lb/>
storm had abated, 1 pulled ovei<lb/>
to a spot marked as a "see<lb/>
view" and watched clouds :<lb/>
past beneath the peak I was stan-<lb/>
ding on. I believe it would have<lb/>
been enough to restore an<lb/>
atheist's faith in a higher force<lb/>
had one been there to see it<lb/>
When I ventured into the gorge<lb/>
itself, which is populated with a<lb/>
variety of wildlife, including<lb/>
bear, hawks, deer and some sa<lb/>
even mountain lion. 1 found<lb/>
several trails requiring different<lb/>
levels of skill. On one side all the<lb/>
trails were meticulously sculpted<lb/>
and laid out so that seniot<lb/>
citizens and small children can<lb/>
navigate them with little difficul-<lb/>
ty. On the other side there are<lb/>
more strenuous trails leading<lb/>
down to the river and ample trout<lb/>
fishii<lb/>
Huge fir and spruce trees jut<lb/>
boldly out from the walls of the<lb/>
Gorge and perfume the air<lb/>
Mountain laurel and rhododen-<lb/>
are also plentiful.<lb/>
maielv the rain did drive<lb/>
me ? the Gorge. But I<lb/>
entertain thoughts of going back<lb/>
with a tent, supplies and a fly, ?<lb/>
and hunkering down for a m<lb/>
w such excursions<lb/>
serve to put a foundation under<lb/>
and reconnect you with the<lb/>
things that are truly important.<lb/>
But I didn't mean to wax<lb/>
losophical. Suffice it to sa<lb/>
e Gorge is a lot like what<lb/>
; people tl when they<lb/>
the ideal camping trip<lb/>
their<lb/>
? ?"?? ,x' 'lu inv.ii, v?nik.ll is puputaicu wiin a<lb/>
PBS Portraying Carolina Indians Positively<lb/>
(LPl) 'American bearing gifts but their real eoal is dians whn tri.  iii <lb/>
(L P1) 'American<lb/>
Playhouse" consistently, dishes<lb/>
up the best PBS has to offer and<lb/>
the t h r ee-p ar t m i n i s er i e s<lb/>
"Roanoak" is the jewe of the<lb/>
playhouse season.<lb/>
I he mini (which aired its first<lb/>
segment Monday. lav 26 and<lb/>
will air : ext two Mon-<lb/>
days, June 2 and June 9. at 9<lb/>
p.m.) is fat with splendid<lb/>
c i n em at ogr ap h y, exq u i s<lb/>
costuming and crisp writing. <lb/>
a bonus of an aceI si<lb/>
story to boot.<lb/>
I he story begins in 1584 when<lb/>
English explorers dispatched by<lb/>
Sir Walter Raleigh cross the<lb/>
Atlantic and meet the natives of<lb/>
what is to become the "Lost Col-<lb/>
ony " o Roanoak.<lb/>
As the Brits meet the natives, it<lb/>
is clear that these are no ordinary<lb/>
Hollywood-type Indians. They<lb/>
are civilized, eloquent, educated.<lb/>
wary of the white man's ways,<lb/>
and they even have a sense of<lb/>
humor. Indeed, it is the "civiliz-<lb/>
ed" English who come of! as<lb/>
savages<lb/>
The intent of the maker-<lb/>
"Roanoak" was to bring to<lb/>
the story of the first attempt to<lb/>
establish an English colon) on<lb/>
this continent. Accuracy was<lb/>
paramount, and that is why the<lb/>
actors speak the Indian language<lb/>
ol Ojibwa, translated in subtitles<lb/>
When the English explorers ar-<lb/>
rive in the Carolinas, they are<lb/>
welcomed by the Roanoak and<lb/>
Croatoan Indians, tribes that are<lb/>
now extinct. The English come<lb/>
Summer Flick<lb/>
beating gifts but their real goal is<lb/>
to locate a deep water harbor for<lb/>
fleet to haul away treasure<lb/>
and supposedly fight off the<lb/>
"thieving" Spaniards.<lb/>
I he Indians are wary of these<lb/>
strangers but in an effort to learn<lb/>
more about them, the natives<lb/>
make them welcome.<lb/>
"They smell like rotten meat<lb/>
says one Indian woman.<lb/>
"More like dead snake says<lb/>
another.<lb/>
When the Indian women at-<lb/>
tempt to bathe the strangers, they<lb/>
dont't know how to take it.<lb/>
"Either this woman means to<lb/>
teed us or to eat us says an<lb/>
Englishman.<lb/>
When the time comes to return<lb/>
to England, the explorers bring<lb/>
back two Indians, who agree to<lb/>
go m an attempt to discover the<lb/>
strangers' strengths and<lb/>
weaknesses.<lb/>
The next year the English<lb/>
return with 600 men, mostly<lb/>
soldiers, whose attempt to found<lb/>
a settlement ends in bitter hostili-<lb/>
iv between the English and In-<lb/>
dian tribes.<lb/>
I ed by John White, another<lb/>
party arrives in 158 but the In-<lb/>
dians greet them with distrust.<lb/>
When the colony's crops fail.<lb/>
White leaves for England to<lb/>
restock supplies. He returns to<lb/>
find the colony abandoned, the<lb/>
people gone.<lb/>
It is White's drawings that in-<lb/>
spired the story of "Roanoak<lb/>
Ting Juarez, a young actor<lb/>
who plays Manteo, one of the In-<lb/>
'Short Circuit<lb/>
By FI) TOSCHAC H<lb/>
M.ft ?nir<lb/>
Short Circuit, John Badham's<lb/>
new movie about a sophisticated<lb/>
military robot that comes to life,<lb/>
may not be perfect, but it's enter-<lb/>
taining.<lb/>
Short Circuit follows the<lb/>
adventures of Number Five, one<lb/>
of several robots designed by in-<lb/>
ventor Newton Crosby (played by-<lb/>
Steve Guttenberg) for Nova<lb/>
Robotics to be the ultimate kill-<lb/>
ing machine.<lb/>
Number Five is just another<lb/>
robot until a stray bolt of lighten-<lb/>
ing brings him to life, and into<lb/>
the life of Stephanie Speck (Ally<lb/>
Sheedy). Stephanie is a caterer<lb/>
who also seems to be a one-<lb/>
woman SPCA. Her house teems<lb/>
with stray animals that she has<lb/>
adopted. Once convinced that<lb/>
Number Five is truly alive, she<lb/>
helps him run from Nova<lb/>
Robotics ? who want him<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
Like Badham's previous hit<lb/>
War Games, Short Circuit is a<lb/>
visually entertaining movie that<lb/>
touches the audience on an emo-<lb/>
tional level, telling us that "life is<lb/>
not a malfunction<lb/>
Unlike War Games however,<lb/>
this film is written in a way that<lb/>
may tire more mature viewers.<lb/>
Inconsistent dialogue makes it<lb/>
difficult to believe in Number<lb/>
Five. In one scene, he expresses<lb/>
complex ideas with impeccable<lb/>
grammar, and during the next he<lb/>
barely has Tarzan's grasp of<lb/>
English "Not disassemble<lb/>
Number Five he says;<lb/>
"Number Five alive<lb/>
Fisher Stevens plays Ben<lb/>
Jabituya, Guttenberg's fellow<lb/>
scientist. Ben is an Indian who's<lb/>
poor understanding of American<lb/>
slang provides a few laughs.<lb/>
"Bimbo says Ben at one point,<lb/>
meaning "bingo Some of the<lb/>
lines Stevens is given are inspired,<lb/>
but the affect is diluted by the<lb/>
fact that every word he utters is<lb/>
an attempt at this type of slang.<lb/>
Despite its faults, Short Circuit<lb/>
is a movie worth seeing Sheedy<lb/>
and Guttenberg are endearing in<lb/>
their roles; but even if they<lb/>
weren't, the antics of Number<lb/>
Five would save this film. Move<lb/>
over E.T.<lb/>
dians who travels to England,<lb/>
said that when he read the script<lb/>
he knew he had to be a par- ol<lb/>
"Roanoak <lb/>
"As I became involved in it I<lb/>
found out more .o.A more the im-<lb/>
portance ol this project said<lb/>
Juarez. "It would otter Indians<lb/>
the opportunity to see themselves<lb/>
portrayed in a very realistic, very<lb/>
humble manner and in a verv<lb/>
positive way .<lb/>
"This is verv important tor In-<lb/>
dian people, particularly in ;<lb/>
'act that we have been ;<lb/>
'rayed so negatively :<lb/>
and so badly in the past by<lb/>
Hollywood.<lb/>
Haircut Humor<lb/>
" - C verv . very proud<lb/>
"<lb/>
?, up in southern<lb/>
nia and studied literature<lb/>
ai - rd University before<lb/>
stt ROANOAK, page 7<lb/>
Just A Little Off The Top, Please<lb/>
By J. DAVID MATTHEWS<lb/>
Si.ff ?r,ir,<lb/>
Just what in the hell is going on<lb/>
here? I was riding through San-<lb/>
ford a few weeks ago. when I<lb/>
came across a sign that read,<lb/>
"Haircuts: Children, $5; Adults,<lb/>
S10 Would someone please ex<lb/>
plain this to me?<lb/>
I don't have a working<lb/>
knowledge of the world ot hair,<lb/>
but it seems pretty stupid to me to<lb/>
charge an adult twice as much as<lb/>
a kid for a haircut.<lb/>
Look at it this way. A grown<lb/>
man goes in to get his hair cut.<lb/>
styled or whatever (I'll get to that<lb/>
kettle of fish in a minute). He<lb/>
usually sits fairly still and allows<lb/>
his hair to be trimmed. No pro-<lb/>
blem, right?<lb/>
Then, some little yahoo who<lb/>
looks like Opie Taylor climbs in-<lb/>
to the chair like a tornado on the<lb/>
prowl. The barber has to chain<lb/>
the kid down in order to get a<lb/>
halfway decent 'doo on the<lb/>
clown. Ever wonder why some<lb/>
little boys sport the Moe Howard<lb/>
look' Because the barber will<lb/>
save a couple of tingers and a ton<lb/>
of energy by simply putting a<lb/>
bowl on the patient's head.<lb/>
And thev oniv charge half for<lb/>
that?<lb/>
Back to this so-called hair styl-<lb/>
ing business. Whatever happened<lb/>
:v the good old American hair-<lb/>
cut Every other Saturday morn-<lb/>
ing when I was little, I would ride<lb/>
my bike down to Uncle Pete's<lb/>
Barber Shop tor a haircut.<lb/>
Nothing more, nothing less. God<lb/>
forbid if Uncle Pete ever caught<lb/>
one o those rat tails in his chair!<lb/>
But the haircut is an old<lb/>
dinosaur now. Today, a person<lb/>
must get his hair teased and styl-<lb/>
ed and put some Mr. Moose on it<lb/>
and all of that crap. It's a cryin'<lb/>
shame, isn't it?<lb/>
And these salon persons don't<lb/>
just offer haircuts anymore. For<lb/>
starters, they now insist that your<lb/>
hair be washed before thev will<lb/>
pull out the scissors. They say bv<lb/>
doing this they can better "style"<lb/>
your hair. Don't be taken in by<lb/>
this communist propaganda. It is<lb/>
just a neat little way for them to<lb/>
comb another five bucks out of<lb/>
your wallet.<lb/>
Some of these places even have<lb/>
sun tan booths. Now I know I'm<lb/>
going to cry.<lb/>
Boy, 1 sure do miss the barber<lb/>
shop. I feel like a damn fool in<lb/>
those salon things. In a barber<lb/>
shop, a man can:<lb/>
(a.) Talk about politics and of<lb/>
important subjects,<lb/>
(b.) Talk about those of the total-<lb/>
ly opposite sex.<lb/>
(c.) Participate in the releasing<lb/>
all types of bodily noises without<lb/>
being stared at.<lb/>
(d.) Play checkers,<lb/>
(e.) Talk about the Friday night<lb/>
high school football game and<lb/>
the post-game fist-fight with<lb/>
which you swear you had nothing<lb/>
to do.<lb/>
Perhaps the greatest tragedy<lb/>
that has evolved from the new<lb/>
it of hair styling is the fact<lb/>
that if a person wants to get his<lb/>
ears lowered these days, he has to<lb/>
tke a $:?&amp;'? appointment!<lb/>
Never in my life have I heard of<lb/>
such a :hmg.<lb/>
p o i n t m e n t s are not<lb/>
necessary at a barber shop. Just<lb/>
walk in, sit down, and shoot the<lb/>
breee with everyone while<lb/>
waiting your turn in the chair.<lb/>
Never call a barber shop and ask<lb/>
for an appointment. Something<lb/>
like this will happen if you do:<lb/>
"Hev boys, some wimp wants to<lb/>
make an appointment<lb/>
"HaHaHa laugh the boys. It<lb/>
could scar a person for life.<lb/>
What this country needs are<lb/>
some old fashioned, back-to-the-<lb/>
cs, down home barber shops.<lb/>
All of these salons and hair villas<lb/>
are literally nothing more than<lb/>
clip joints. Do America a favor,<lb/>
gosh darnit. Get a haircut. But go<lb/>
easy on the sides.<lb/>
Short Circuit currently playing ?t the Buccaneer Theater, Introduces a new character Into the already lame aill? ?<lb/>
who stor In films; Number Five Is this one's name. In the scene above, Fisher Stevens, Steve Guttenburg .?J, J? IL?! "?<lb/>
believe Number Five is alive, try to coax the robot into trusting aaaL Shedy? who<lb/>
BLOOM COUNT<lb/>
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ttenburjj and All Sheedy. who<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29, 196<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
?' ? i ? -<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
OLNBK <lb/>
HBLt<lb/>
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Roanoak<lb/>
Settlers<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
moving to New York to pursue<lb/>
an acting career.<lb/>
He is a Yaqui Indian. Also on<lb/>
the cast were Cherokee, Sioux,<lb/>
Pueblo and Navaho Indians.<lb/>
"Everyone who has screened<lb/>
the film has loved it Juarez<lb/>
said. "It was interesting to hear<lb/>
some people mention how this<lb/>
film made them feel guilty. Hot-<lb/>
blooded, red-blooded, blue-<lb/>
blooded Americans teel guilty<lb/>
about tins film.<lb/>
"I don't think that was the in-<lb/>
tention but it was an interesting<lb/>
result. I think it will help the<lb/>
understanding of the Indian<lb/>
situation today m America<lb/>
I he Indians of the set did more<lb/>
than, act during the 48 davs of<lb/>
filming. The mimseries was<lb/>
originally scheduled to be pro-<lb/>
duced in 1984 in North Carolina,<lb/>
but a hurricane blew away the<lb/>
set. year later, a new set was<lb/>
structed in South Carolina<lb/>
but again a hurricane, this one<lb/>
named Gloria, threatened to halt<lb/>
production.<lb/>
1 he Indians took matters into<lb/>
ti own hands.<lb/>
"We prayed for the hurricane<lb/>
to pass us b 'uld<lb/>
continue with the journey<lb/>
luarez said "W I Indians<lb/>
l :is there:<lb/>
Ch? ? Sioux, Yaqui,<lb/>
Navaho, P<lb/>
"We all prayed and ottered<lb/>
. Greal Spirit and<lb/>
we were helped. I he hurricane<lb/>
didn't strike. Wewerever happ<lb/>
lat and we continued with<lb/>
"R ? le marve<lb/>
irney, one that educates as well<lb/>
as entei tains.<lb/>
a<lb/>
Tequila Bar Weekly Specials<lb/>
Sunrise Sunday: 12.00 per serve<lb/>
Melo-Mondays: $2.25 per serve<lb/>
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Wednesday: SI. 75 Pirates Cane Muitney<lb/>
Tonic Thursday: 11.75 per serve<lb/>
Fried Friday: Get Fried karlv at oar nen Attitude Adjust<lb/>
ment hour 4:30, end the mht upside down'<lb/>
Saturday Night Specials<lb/>
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Summer Movies<lb/>
At Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theater<lb/>
6 2<lb/>
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h ?o<lb/>
Footloose 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Risky Business 3:l() p.m.<lb/>
Hack to the tuture<lb/>
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Animal House<lb/>
Worst Movie Block-In<lb/>
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4 ttack of the Mushroom People<lb/>
Terror from Tiny Town<lb/>
E. T.<lb/>
Body Heat<lb/>
3:30 and 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
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Presents<lb/>
Draft<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
10<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Thursday, May 28 &amp; 29, 1986<lb/>
9:00-2:00 A.M.<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies<lb/>
DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
at a &amp;<lb/>
eat pri<lb/>
3:30 and 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
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Lunch<lb/>
Special<lb/>
MON-FRI 11-3<lb/>
5 oz. Sirloin<lb/>
with Baked<lb/>
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and Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
s4 yte?it ftlacc t eatf<lb/>
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rHE KASTC AROl INIAN<lb/>
Gennarelli<lb/>
Leaving<lb/>
For Texas<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Director Bob Gennarelli has<lb/>
resigned his position effective<lb/>
Mas 30, 1986 to become editor of<lb/>
the I onghorn Monthly, a<lb/>
magazine about Texas athletics.<lb/>
Gennarelli, a graduate of the<lb/>
University of Texas at Austin,<lb/>
has been SID at ECU for two<lb/>
years. Prior to coming to ECU,<lb/>
he served as Senior Assistant<lb/>
Sports Information Dirctor at the<lb/>
University of Houston. During<lb/>
his tenure at Houston, Gennarelli<lb/>
worked closely with the Cougar<lb/>
basketball team that made two<lb/>
consecutive appearances in the<lb/>
NCAA Championship game.<lb/>
"I've enjoyed my two years<lb/>
here Gennarelli said. "It's been<lb/>
a lot of fun and I've experienced<lb/>
a lot of new things<lb/>
While Gennarelli enjoyed the<lb/>
opportunity of working at a<lb/>
university striving to become a<lb/>
major football independent, he<lb/>
feels the magazine will also be a<lb/>
rewarding experience.<lb/>
"It's been a challange to be<lb/>
with a program like East<lb/>
Carolina that is building from the<lb/>
ground up. It won't be long<lb/>
before ECU will be able to play<lb/>
with the big name schools year in<lb/>
And year out Gennarelli said.<lb/>
"However, it will be just as big a<lb/>
challenge starting a magazine<lb/>
from scratch. Being a UT<lb/>
graduate, I know the interest in<lb/>
Texas sports is there and it won't<lb/>
take long before it (the I.onghorn<lb/>
Monthly) can become a great suc-<lb/>
cess<lb/>
The Sports staff at the East<lb/>
Carolinain would like to thank<lb/>
Gennarelli for all of his help in<lb/>
the past and v ish him the best of<lb/>
luck with his future endeavor.<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
Featured<lb/>
ECU's Winfred Johnson was<lb/>
featured in the May 26. 1986 edi-<lb/>
tion of Sports Illustrated.<lb/>
Johnson appears in the laces in<lb/>
the Crowd section for becoming<lb/>
the first piayer in NCAA history<lb/>
to hit 60 homeruns and pitch 30<lb/>
career victories.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 28, 1986<lb/>
FageS<lb/>
Cycling Team Busy<lb/>
In 1986 Campaign<lb/>
The Bicycle Post Cycling Team consists of from left to right): David Hawkins. Will Enecks ndv Wilson<lb/>
Mark Bailev and Kevin Moran. Not pictured is newcomer Ray Irvin.<lb/>
ECU Track Team Places Seventh<lb/>
B RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
The ECU men's track team.<lb/>
led bv an outstanding perfor-<lb/>
mance by sophomore sprinter<lb/>
Tee McNeill, finished in seventh<lb/>
place in the IC4A this past<lb/>
weekend in Villanova, Pd<lb/>
McNeill, who set a meet record<lb/>
in capturing the 200 meters in a<lb/>
time of 20.67 seeconds, scored<lb/>
15-and-a-hali ol the Pirates' total<lb/>
31 points. The 15-and-a-half<lb/>
points were the most scored bv<lb/>
any individual in the meet.<lb/>
McNeill also finished fourth in<lb/>
the 100 meters with a time of<lb/>
10.25 seconds, and he ran the an-<lb/>
chor leg of the Pirates' third-<lb/>
place 400-meter relay team.<lb/>
However, to label the Pirate ef-<lb/>
fort a one man show would be an<lb/>
error, as nine of the ten runners<lb/>
on the trip made it to the finals oi<lb/>
their events.<lb/>
The 1,600 meter relay team oi<lb/>
Phil Estes, Ruben Pierce, Kelwyn<lb/>
Love and Julian Anderson were<lb/>
declared the winners after<lb/>
Villanova was disqualified for<lb/>
making an improper exchange.<lb/>
Ihe Pirates' winning time was<lb/>
3:07.99, and according to Pirate<lb/>
coach Bill Carson, ECU forced<lb/>
the Wildcat mistake. "We forced<lb/>
the error in the 1,600 Carson<lb/>
said. "Thev were expecting to be<lb/>
out there all bv themselves and<lb/>
we pressed them on the anchor<lb/>
leg. On the final exchange, thev<lb/>
missed and the baton just Hew up<lb/>
in the air<lb/>
Freshmen Eugene McNeill and<lb/>
David Parker made the finals in<lb/>
100 meters and 1 10-meter hurdles<lb/>
respectively. They were the only<lb/>
freshmen represented in the top<lb/>
eight of either event.<lb/>
McNeill, brother of Lee,<lb/>
finished in sixth place in the hun-<lb/>
dred, with a time of 10.56<lb/>
seconds. Parker finished eighth<lb/>
in the hurdles with a time of<lb/>
14.34.<lb/>
The 400-meter relav team<lb/>
finished in third place in the com-<lb/>
petition with a time of 40.74<lb/>
seconds. The team is made up of<lb/>
the McNeill brothers (lee and<lb/>
Eugene), Chris Brooks and<lb/>
Nathan McCorkie.<lb/>
"It was a good performance<lb/>
finishing seventh Carson said.<lb/>
"We beat Manhattan, Seton<lb/>
Hall, Rutgers and George Mason<lb/>
and they are people we haven't<lb/>
beaten in the past "<lb/>
According to Carson. II<lb/>
could have placed even higher in<lb/>
the standings. "It was strange<lb/>
because we lost some points we<lb/>
had figured to get and picked<lb/>
some up that we didn't expect<lb/>
Carson continued. "We had a<lb/>
double error in the 400 meter<lb/>
relav . We made an error in the se-<lb/>
cond exchange and then we miss-<lb/>
ed the exchange on the anchor<lb/>
leg<lb/>
In addition to those mistakes,<lb/>
Lee McNeill slipped coming out<lb/>
of the blocks in the 100 meters,<lb/>
ee TRACKgTEgS, page 9<lb/>
Bv SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
( -SporU Htun<lb/>
The Bicycle Post and Down<lb/>
last Cycles are both sponsors of<lb/>
the Bicycle Post Team as they<lb/>
have been busy in competition in<lb/>
a variety of races throughout<lb/>
their 1986 campaign.<lb/>
The Bicycle Post team is made<lb/>
up of six members who race com-<lb/>
petitively. The Cycling Club, on<lb/>
the other hand, is a group oi<lb/>
about 25 who race for the enjoy-<lb/>
ment and relaxation ? not on a<lb/>
competitive basis.<lb/>
"We've done pretty good this<lb/>
year said club president and<lb/>
team member Will Enecks about<lb/>
the team's performance. "We're<lb/>
one of the best new teams<lb/>
around<lb/>
Pretty good may be an<lb/>
understatement. In seven races<lb/>
thus far this year, the team has<lb/>
picked up four first-place<lb/>
finishes, a second place and three<lb/>
third-place finishes ? in their<lb/>
respective categories.<lb/>
The United States C vcling<lb/>
federation is the governing body<lb/>
ol the U.S. Olympic Cycling<lb/>
I cam and thereby handles the<lb/>
team- from all around the nation.<lb/>
The US I tries to insure fair<lb/>
competition in both amateur as<lb/>
well as professional cycling. Fur-<lb/>
thermore, there are four<lb/>
categories in which each racer<lb/>
stands. I he are:<lb/>
1 - Internationa! C hampion.<lb/>
2- National Champion.<lb/>
3 senior 111 (when you place ?<lb/>
first, second or third in at least<lb/>
six racesi.<lb/>
4- Beknnnmk! Cateaorv.<lb/>
Danbury Road Race ? Bailey.<lb/>
3rd. Moran, 7th in men's Sr. IV<lb/>
Hanes Park nterium,<lb/>
Winston-Salem ? Bailey,<lb/>
Moran 5th in men's Sr. IV<lb/>
John Peterson Men<lb/>
Spruce Pine ? Bailey,<lb/>
Moran 6th in men's Sr. IV<lb/>
Greenville Time Trials<lb/>
Barry Scott, 3rd. Bailey, 4th<lb/>
David Hawkins, 5th in Men's Sr<lb/>
IV.<lb/>
Perhaps freshman Mark Bailev<lb/>
has achieved the most success as<lb/>
of late. Bailev, who hails !?<lb/>
layetteville, was named an V<lb/>
American in the men's Sr 1<lb/>
division and was immedia<lb/>
moved to the Sr. Ill categ<lb/>
when he won the 52-mile (<lb/>
Aiken Bicycle Criterium in<lb/>
Aiken. S.C.<lb/>
To the cyclists, the :<lb/>
racing is one of excitemi<lb/>
gratification, competition<lb/>
fun, according to Enecks.<lb/>
"There is a certain pleasure to<lb/>
be had in riding fast and <lb/>
the body to its limits i<lb/>
wrote in a statement. "Tl<lb/>
thrill to being in the mid<lb/>
mass of bicycles and riders<lb/>
speeding along at 30 miles<lb/>
hour, and there's a real<lb/>
worth that comes from hai I<lb/>
fort and physical achievemei<lb/>
The sport of bicycle racii<lb/>
very much a tea . ncept as well<lb/>
as a strategic battle, as Enecl<lb/>
plained. "We work I<lb/>
other, we work for the srinters ?<lb/>
Kevin and Mark<lb/>
"They stay behind us ? thev are<lb/>
our fastest sprinters. Thev<lb/>
save 25 percent ol their energy<lb/>
"We've done pretty good this year. He're one of the best<lb/>
new teams around. "<lb/>
?Will Kneck<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Wed. Mav 28, 1951<lb/>
Willie Mays collects his first<lb/>
major league base hit, a home<lb/>
run off Milwaukee's Warren<lb/>
Spahn. It will be Mays' only hit<lb/>
in his first 26 at-bats. Bv the<lb/>
time he retires in 1973, Mays<lb/>
will ammass 3,283 career hits<lb/>
and 660 home runs.<lb/>
Here are the 1986 Bicycle Post<lb/>
leant standings and individual<lb/>
placings:<lb/>
Griffon Shad Festival Race.<lb/>
Grifton Will Enecks, 1st in<lb/>
Veterans (over 35). Mark Bailev.<lb/>
1st men's in Senior IV. Kevin<lb/>
Moran, 2nd in men's Senior IV<lb/>
lour De Moore Road Race,<lb/>
Southern Pines ? Bailev. 1st in<lb/>
men's Sr. IV.<lb/>
Capital City Criterium,<lb/>
Raleigh ? Moran, 3rd in men's<lb/>
Sr. IV.<lb/>
(during a race)<lb/>
For those of you wl<lb/>
think the sport is danger<lb/>
think again. In the 52-mile Co<lb/>
Aiken Criterium, for example,<lb/>
there was a bad crash in the<lb/>
300 yards of the race. Enecks ex-<lb/>
plained that there were<lb/>
broken collarbones and a number<lb/>
of broken vertabraev<lb/>
The next action for the -<lb/>
will be this weekend when tl<lb/>
host the Greenville Downtown<lb/>
Criterium.<lb/>
B RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
and<lb/>
SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
What's wrong with being the<lb/>
'Big Man On Campus?' Hell, if<lb/>
we were playing bigtime college<lb/>
basketball, we damn sure<lb/>
wouldn't leave the trim-mings,<lb/>
not a second early! Realistically<lb/>
though, money may have the lure<lb/>
in pulling these 'blue-chippers'<lb/>
into the NBA.<lb/>
This year seven talented college<lb/>
underclassman will be giving up<lb/>
their remaining year(s) of<lb/>
eligibility for the bright-lights of<lb/>
pro hoops.<lb/>
The big men usually attract the<lb/>
most attention and this year is<lb/>
certainly no different. N.C.<lb/>
State's Chris Washburn is giving<lb/>
up his last two years while Mem-<lb/>
phis State's William Bedford<lb/>
forfeits his remaining senior cam-<lb/>
paign.<lb/>
The forwards make up the big-<lb/>
gest category as LSU's John<lb/>
Williams relinquishes two<lb/>
season's under Dale Brown and<lb/>
Walter "the Truth" Berry leaves<lb/>
Big East power St. Johns's after a<lb/>
sparkling junior year. University<lb/>
of District of Columbia (D.C.)<lb/>
and former Georgetown Hoya<lb/>
power-forward Michael Graham<lb/>
exits for the big leagues (who<lb/>
knows how many years he has<lb/>
left at D.C). A less heralded pro-<lb/>
spect from Georgia, Cedric<lb/>
Henderson, bolts three years ear-<lb/>
ly after being declared ineligible"<lb/>
in the wake of over 30 NCAA<lb/>
rules violations.<lb/>
The sole guard needs no in-<lb/>
toduction other than the<lb/>
"Pearl Syracuse's Dwayne<lb/>
Washington exits the shell of the<lb/>
Carrier Dome after two years<lb/>
under the wing of Jim Boeheim.<lb/>
The decision to leave is not an<lb/>
easy one for any of the players.<lb/>
LSU standout Williams described<lb/>
his feelings in an earlier news<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
"Tm doingone of the most<lb/>
Hardship Cases; NBA Draft<lb/>
rtDUAr ?:? .u: i  r<lb/>
painful things I ever did in mv<lb/>
life Williams said. "1 am<lb/>
resigning from LSU to pursue a<lb/>
pro basketball career<lb/>
Williams, a 6-8 forward from<lb/>
L.As Crenshaw High School,<lb/>
said "1 am doing this for one<lb/>
reason and one reason onlv: i<lb/>
have to support my mother and<lb/>
grandmother<lb/>
Some other reasons for leaving<lb/>
are the simple dislike of the<lb/>
academic rigors of college. And<lb/>
even others see it as a quick way<lb/>
of gaining fame and fortune.<lb/>
While some see instant success<lb/>
in the NBA, others have seen the<lb/>
reality of a tougher-than-<lb/>
anticipated career. For every<lb/>
Michael Jordan, Isiah Thomas or<lb/>
Earvin "Magic" Johnson there<lb/>
are the Dwayne Scales' (who left<lb/>
LSU after the 1980 season to play<lb/>
in Atlanta), Rob Williams' (who<lb/>
left Houston after his junior<lb/>
season) and Freeman Williams'<lb/>
(who departed from Portland<lb/>
State after leading the nation in<lb/>
scoring after a brilliant junior<lb/>
year) who are no longer in the<lb/>
NBA.<lb/>
However, there are a handfull<lb/>
of players who have left early and<lb/>
have reached the pinnacle of suc-<lb/>
cess. Heck the Lakers start three<lb/>
hardship cases. "Magic"<lb/>
Johnson, James Worthy (from<lb/>
North Carolina) and Byron Scott<lb/>
(from Arizona State) all left<lb/>
school before their time.<lb/>
Some other stars who were<lb/>
hardship cases include U-Mass of<lb/>
Amherst's Julius 'Dr. J' Erving,<lb/>
DePaul's Terry Cummings and<lb/>
Mark Aguirre, Maryland's Buck<lb/>
Williams and Brad Davis,<lb/>
Dominique Wilkins from<lb/>
Georgia, Iona's Jeff Ruland and<lb/>
Bridgeport's African import<lb/>
Manute Bol.<lb/>
The jury is still out on a few of<lb/>
the latest hardship cases.<lb/>
Oklahoma's Wayman Tisdale,<lb/>
Creighton's Benoit Benjamin,<lb/>
LSU's Jerry "Ice" Reynolds and<lb/>
Wake Forest's Kenny Green are<lb/>
vet to have li.ed up to their press-<lb/>
clippings after their initial<lb/>
season.<lb/>
While this year's class of early<lb/>
exits should continue the success<lb/>
of past hardship rookies, there<lb/>
are always one or two who should<lb/>
have waited out their time.<lb/>
If it were up to us, college<lb/>
would be the homestead for four.<lb/>
I ike fine wine, time can only<lb/>
refine. In other words, college is<lb/>
a time for maturing ? both on<lb/>
and off the court. Come on<lb/>
fellas stick around ? we got<lb/>
next up. Who's gonna' shoot the<lb/>
die.<lb/>
NBA Draft<lb/>
Analysis<lb/>
With the NBA Playoffs win-<lb/>
ding down, next up is the annual<lb/>
Player-Draft which takes place<lb/>
early next month.<lb/>
The draft order begins with the<lb/>
seven-team lottery, followed by<lb/>
the remaining 17 selections mak-<lb/>
ing up the first round. These<lb/>
teams pick in reverse order of<lb/>
their finish, in theory. However,<lb/>
trades may allow a team an<lb/>
earlier pick or an extra selection.<lb/>
The following is our attempt at<lb/>
an NBA draft analysis. For brevi-<lb/>
ty, we will limit ourselves to the<lb/>
opening round.<lb/>
Philadelphia (from LA Clip-<lb/>
pers): Brad Daughtery, L NC .<lb/>
Philly has Moses, but good, in-<lb/>
telligent big men with good hands<lb/>
are hard to come by. They can't<lb/>
pass him up.<lb/>
Boston (from Seatle): What do<lb/>
they need0 Maybe a guard, it so<lb/>
? Johnny Dawkins. Red (Auer-<lb/>
bach) will want raw talent, but<lb/>
whatever he does you can bet it<lb/>
will work. How about<lb/>
Maryland's Len Bias?<lb/>
Golden State: Joe Barry Carrol<lb/>
is improving, he just needs some<lb/>
help on the boards. Kenny 'Sky'<lb/>
Walker of Kentucky could fit in<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Indiana: Chris Washburn from<lb/>
N.C. State is too hard to pass up.<lb/>
This franchise has lost its chance<lb/>
on Sampson and Olajuwon and<lb/>
needs a big man with Wayman.<lb/>
New York: If anyone needs a<lb/>
guard, it's Hubie Brown's<lb/>
Knicks. Dawkins of Duke is the<lb/>
best of the lot and should be able<lb/>
to get the rock to Patrick and<lb/>
Bernard.<lb/>
Phoenix: If a center still re-<lb/>
mains, the Suns will not set<lb/>
without him. Memphis State's<lb/>
'Bedrock' Bedford should ease<lb/>
JIM LELTGENS - East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports editors Scott Cooper (right) and Rick McConnac (left) discuss<lb/>
the first-ever NBA PlayerDraft Preview in Tht East Carolinian<lb/>
the rebounding load on Nance<lb/>
and could hit 'Sweet D' on the<lb/>
outlet.<lb/>
Dallas (from Cleveland):<lb/>
Donaldson is doing the job, but is<lb/>
not the championship center. The<lb/>
Slavs are solid everywhere else. If<lb/>
a center should be around ?<lb/>
great. If not, go with best<lb/>
available pick. Auburn's Chuck<lb/>
Person.<lb/>
Cleveland (from Dallas):<lb/>
World B. needs a backcourt<lb/>
mate. Miami's Ron Harper could<lb/>
do the job.<lb/>
Chicago: Air Jordan and com-<lb/>
pany desperatelv need a center.<lb/>
Georgia Tech's John Salley runs<lb/>
the court well and would certain-<lb/>
ly add height in the paint.<lb/>
San Antonio: A center-<lb/>
forward would be perfect. How<lb/>
about Michigan's Roy Tarpley ?<lb/>
Detroit (from Sacramento):<lb/>
Laimbeer seems to fill the mid-<lb/>
dle, although he could use a hand<lb/>
on the glass. Guards are more<lb/>
than adequate. No lie, a power-<lb/>
forward is 'The Truth. St.<lb/>
John's Walter Berry that is.<lb/>
Washington: The frontcourt is<lb/>
well stocked with Manute and<lb/>
Ruland. With a strong pair of<lb/>
guards, a young John Williams<lb/>
from LSU would be enlightening<lb/>
if still around.<lb/>
New Jersey: With the absence<lb/>
of Michael Ray, a guard is need-<lb/>
ed to push the squad. What better<lb/>
than home-boy "Pearl"<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Portland: The Blazers need an<lb/>
outside shot and a backcourt<lb/>
mate who looks to fire away. Del<lb/>
Curry from Va. Tech is the player<lb/>
for Kiki and Co.<lb/>
Utah: The frontcourt seems to<lb/>
be taken care of. A bomber like<lb/>
Ga. Tech's Mark Price would en-<lb/>
joy his return to the west.<lb/>
Denver (from Dallas): Who's<lb/>
gonna run? What better than a<lb/>
thoroughbred from Louisville.<lb/>
Billy Thompson could fill the<lb/>
lane for Doug Moe's high-<lb/>
powered offensive Nuggets.<lb/>
Sacramento (from Detroit): In<lb/>
dire need of a big man, but<lb/>
what's left? Kansas' slow, bu:<lb/>
huge Greg Dreiling could be the<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
Denver: Another first-round<lb/>
pick for Moe. He dosen't select a<lb/>
stooge. UNLV's Anthony Jones<lb/>
loves he open-court offensive<lb/>
style here.<lb/>
AUanta: Coach of the Year<lb/>
Fratello wants someone to<lb/>
alleviate the scoring burden on<lb/>
Dominique. The Hawks mav<lb/>
want to take the chance with<lb/>
Michigan State's Scott Skiles.<lb/>
Houston: Their best year ever.<lb/>
However a point guard is needed<lb/>
and L'AB's Steve Mitchell should<lb/>
be available.<lb/>
Philadelphia: The 76ers would<lb/>
use their second pick in the open-<lb/>
ing round to get hometown pro-<lb/>
duct Harold Pressey of<lb/>
Villanova. Could be a sleeper.<lb/>
Milwaukee: Like many teams.<lb/>
a center wouldn't hurt. No<lb/>
desperate needs for Nelson's<lb/>
Bucks, but a defensive stopper<lb/>
and Mike McGee clone would be<lb/>
nice. Georgetown's David<lb/>
Wingate should be available.<lb/>
L.A. Lakers: A real sleeper<lb/>
here, unless you talk to CAA<lb/>
coaches. Richmond's John<lb/>
Newman is a player. Enough<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Portland (from Boston via<lb/>
L.A. Clippers): Duke's Mark<lb/>
Alarie is enough to spell Kiki. A<lb/>
heady player who would add to<lb/>
Jack Ramsey's patterned offense<lb/>
(provided Ramsey is still there)<lb/>
This concludes the opening<lb/>
round. However there are still<lb/>
quite a few names worth men-<lb/>
tioning. Illinois forward Efrem<lb/>
Winters and guard Bruce<lb/>
Douglas, Louisville guard Milt<lb/>
Wagner, Syracuse swingman<lb/>
Rafael Addison, N.C. State<lb/>
guard Nate McMillan and Kan-<lb/>
sas' guard Ron Kellog and for-<lb/>
ward Calvin Thompson and<lb/>
Duke swingman David Hender-<lb/>
son round out the list.<lb/>
Nathan Met orkie<lb/>
McCorkie competed<lb/>
Second Col<lb/>
Trick Ski<lb/>
Greenv<lb/>
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tor '<lb/>
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Ga a<lb/>
to a<lb/>
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?no guard Bruce<lb/>
Douglas, Louis iard Milt<lb/>
Wagner, Syracuse swingman<lb/>
Rafael Addison, NState<lb/>
guard Nate McMillan and Kan<lb/>
sas' guard Ron Keilog and for<lb/>
ward Calvin Thompson and<lb/>
Duke swingman David (lender -<lb/>
son round out the list.<lb/>
Tracksters Head For NCAA's<lb/>
( (intituled from page eight,<lb/>
causing him a bad stai i.<lb/>
( arson blamed hi? team's ei<lb/>
rors on a lack ol practice nine,<lb/>
due to the current resurfacing of<lb/>
Bunting 11 a<lb/>
"We jusi hav en'i had a ti ai k<lb/>
to prac tice i ?n and host were<lb/>
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Carson said "Wi<lb/>
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prav<lb/>
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Still, Carson wa i<lb/>
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aid.<lb/>
' .<lb/>
? .<lb/>
1 I ee<lb/>
McNeill foi his efforts M Neill<lb/>
in in eight race in two daj<lb/>
despite an injured ki.ee. si<lb/>
record in the 4x met<lb/>
his eighth ra<lb/>
Hi iwevei, his t<lb/>
100 meters<lb/>
?<lb/>
'ii<lb/>
" 1 ee went th<lb/>
(tu inding straij<lb/>
hundred. It wa<lb/>
 s leanii .<lb/>
i<lb/>
rreshma llei Par!<lb/>
ied special mention from the<lb/>
ich. "I was really proud of<lb/>
David Parker<lb/>
"Hi k a iver the<lb/>
fust hurdle that hurt him. But<lb/>
14 J4 is not a bad time. I jusi feel<lb/>
bad thai he did not finish in the<lb/>
ix .old win a medal<lb/>
Ihe future looks brighi for<lb/>
 arson's squad, however, as<lb/>
Parker was one of t o ui<lb/>
lassmen scoring tor the<lb/>
Pirates. Eugene McNeill and<lb/>
Julian Anderson are both<lb/>
treshmen while l.ee McNeill is<lb/>
just a sophomore.<lb/>
ECU'S next meet will be June<lb/>
4 7 at the N AA Championships<lb/>
in Indianapolis, Ind (Qualifiers<lb/>
tor the Pirates are I ee McNeill in<lb/>
the 100 and 200 meters, and the<lb/>
4tj0-meter relav team.<lb/>
Nathan Mc orkle (left) receives advice from coach Bill (arson trighu.<lb/>
McCorkle competed on the third-place 400-meter relav team<lb/>
Second Consecutive<lb/>
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within JO days Only one<lb/>
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oi the top prospects in the<lb/>
"I am ver pleased with this<lb/>
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would vi the) are the<lb/>
since I've been here e've<lb/>
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letes in the pasi. -i .? Smith is<lb/>
out first re.d hiue v hipp<lb/>
I i l swimming coach Kuk<lb/>
Kobe has announced the sign<lb/>
ol three more athletes to lettei<lb/>
? 't intent to sworn tor the Pira<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
And) lohns comes to ECl<lb/>
after a two yeat stay at Brevai i<lb/>
Community oliege<lb/>
Hollywood, r la I he Hollywi<lb/>
native earned junioi college A I<lb/>
meiua honors last season<lb/>
swimming the distance freest<lb/>
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c raig Faircloth : ounds out the<lb/>
Pirate men tor next veai ! ? ?<lb/>
W " thington, ?ruo nati<lb/>
junioi national qualifiei<lb/>
Kxt and 200 yard breaststoke<lb/>
lennifei Dolan completes the<lb/>
list ol I ady Pirates foi next yeai<lb/>
rhe Baton Rouge, I A produci<lb/>
was also junioi national qualifiei<lb/>
with the sprini freestyle events<lb/>
listed as tier sti ongesl<lb/>
"These three complete out<lb/>
recuriting foi the year<lb/>
Kobe "1 think ii s the best<lb/>
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foui ye I hae<lb/>
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? ! ? " aditj hi ol Pirate<lb/>
ming<lb/>
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<lb/>
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, a loy i McKay (iale<lb/>
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Most V a<lb/>
as the squad<lb/>
Id for the<lb/>
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ki<lb/>
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POCeONALS<lb/>
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.????? 1 SAT MAY 31 AT<lb/>
ami OWAiii iui<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
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Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current<lb/>
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f<lb/>
HELP WANTED Part tim? ? ?<lb/>
??' ? ' '  ettei<lb/>
conci ' . ??? ana<lb/>
?-?? ? ? p O Draper 1785.<lb/>
    - - n Pam<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED To<lb/>
ise SI25 a month<lb/>
- fr rr a-npus<lb/>
 - ? '52 8629 Ash tor Mark<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED To share 2<lb/>
apartmenl near<lb/>
 ;arge private room<lb/>
.? ? r- shed SI 50 tiqi"<lb/>
'?'??? ? -52 7651<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
for summer Furnished apt. $no<lb/>
a  2 utilities Personal<lb/>
?'ea a Oakmont Apar'<lb/>
all Tin at 756 5794<lb/>
OR 1 FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED F ir set jg session sum<lb/>
mer school ' ? oed duplex in<lb/>
quiet ne'ghborhooo 1 mile from ECU<lb/>
campus $93 75 tilities Please<lb/>
can 752 0319<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES NEEDED AT<lb/>
RIVER BLUFF $90 mo , ,<lb/>
j' lities Bedroom, is unfurnished Dut<lb/>
i can help in getting furniture Apt<lb/>
overlooks pool and has ECU bus ser<lb/>
call Tommy at 758 2403 or<lb/>
752 7017<lb/>
LOST German Sheppard puppy on<lb/>
campus Monday, May 26 He wears<lb/>
a coiiar with the name Storm on it If<lb/>
found, please call 758 2924<lb/>
MUTUAL SUPPORT: Are there any<lb/>
GWM's on or off campus who would<lb/>
benefit from a mutual support net<lb/>
work? Write to me in confidence<lb/>
P.O. Box 4273, Greenvi<lb/>
DOUBLE Q IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk Light Tuna<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHWSE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
IMITNE WfTH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
Armour Treet<lb/>
M T ONE W'TH AN A.<lb/>
Plj RCHASE AT<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
88c<lb/>
SAVE ON<lb/>
iA&amp;P Cola<lb/>
1703 GREENVILLE BLVD. ? OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
.OPEN MQN. 7 A<lb/>
CLOSE SAL 11<lb/>
liS (JPEN8yNDAf7A.ni-1l1M.l<lb/>
I<lb/>
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