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<pb facs="00057846_0001"/>
?<lb/>
?hE<lb/>
(Earoliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.61 N0.5<lb/>
Thursday, September 11,1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
Circulatioa 12,000<lb/>
ECU Football Team Placed On Probation<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
l .v ywrlt KdJtor<lb/>
The East Carolina football<lb/>
program has been placed on pro-<lb/>
bation by the NCAA for one year<lb/>
because of rules violations that<lb/>
occurred during former head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory's tenure.<lb/>
However, the team does not<lb/>
face any sanctions during the<lb/>
probationary period.<lb/>
The probation penalty, which<lb/>
began Sept. 4, is no more than a<lb/>
simple 'slap on the wrist<lb/>
Basically it is a public reprimand<lb/>
and censure toward the program.<lb/>
There will be no restrictions on<lb/>
scholarships, recruiting, televi-<lb/>
sion appearances (the game<lb/>
against Miami, Fla. will be<lb/>
televised nationally on WTBS) or<lb/>
post-season contests, according<lb/>
to ECU Chancellor John How ell.<lb/>
The NCAA required that ECU<lb/>
develop a rules-education pro-<lb/>
gram for athletic department<lb/>
employees, and submit a progress<lb/>
report to the NCAA bv Jan. 1,<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
"When 1 first saw evidence of<lb/>
what had happened, I had a sink-<lb/>
ing feeling at the pit of my<lb/>
stomach Howell said. "I was<lb/>
not sure of the seriousness of it<lb/>
all. But when 1 saw they were<lb/>
minor infractions, I was<lb/>
relieved<lb/>
The penalty, which Howell<lb/>
called, "as mild as they (NCAA)<lb/>
could make it in today's athletic<lb/>
climate<lb/>
The infractions occurred from<lb/>
1979-84 under former coach<lb/>
Emory, who was abruptly<lb/>
dismissed in December of 1984<lb/>
for unspecified reasons. In<lb/>
?XMwtfc? Baaory yrowiAadl the<lb/>
following March to file a $1.4<lb/>
million suit against the universi-<lb/>
ty, Howell and Athletic Director<lb/>
Ken Karr ? claiming breech of<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
Emory later settled the suit out<lb/>
of court for $139,000.<lb/>
The ECU report submitted to<lb/>
the NCAA showed the following<lb/>
violations:<lb/>
?Three checking accounts were<lb/>
maintained for the football pro-<lb/>
gram that were not authorized by<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
?A freshman football player<lb/>
was allowed to participate in a<lb/>
junior varsity game under an<lb/>
assumed name so he would not<lb/>
lose a year of eligibility.<lb/>
?Graduate assistant coaches<lb/>
were used to recruit off campus.<lb/>
?An athlete's bill for a written<lb/>
examination was paid for by<lb/>
Emory's account.<lb/>
?A payment was guaranteed<lb/>
for several athletes' tuition bills.<lb/>
?The arranged purchase (on<lb/>
credit) of two golf shirts, a jacket<lb/>
and hat for 60 members of the<lb/>
football team at a sporting goods<lb/>
store in Wilson. To date, 30 of<lb/>
these have not been paid for.<lb/>
Emory had denied the allega-<lb/>
tions in a report, which the<lb/>
university submitted to the<lb/>
NCAA last April.<lb/>
Howell said ECU told the<lb/>
NCAA of its investigation and<lb/>
then met with officials of the<lb/>
NCAA in Kansas. The NCAA re-<lb/>
quested a revised report to be sent<lb/>
to the committee. The report was<lb/>
completed in January.<lb/>
A hearing was held in Col-<lb/>
orado Springs, Colo in August,<lb/>
with both the NCAA and ECU<lb/>
officials agreeing that a small<lb/>
number, of "minor, technical<lb/>
violations of NCAA Legislation<lb/>
had in fact occurred Howell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Howell stated thai the NCAA<lb/>
informed him of the penalties on<lb/>
Sept. 3, and that he told the<lb/>
See NCAA page 15.<lb/>
Before and After<lb/>
J ? NUMIItT - TH1 .AST CA?OL<lb/>
INIAM<lb/>
During his reign at ECU, former coach Ed Emory (left) committed plays its first Home game Saturday against the West Virginia Moo-<lb/>
numerous miniscule rules violations, causing the NCAA to put the taineers at 7 p.m. Tickets are available at MendenhaD Student<lb/>
ECU program on a one-year probation as second-year head coach Center and Minges Colliseum.<lb/>
Art Baker (right) and his Pirates begin their 1986 season. The team<lb/>
Job Placements<lb/>
Center Assists In Future Careers<lb/>
Cunanan Lobbies For<lb/>
Student Financial Aid<lb/>
By PATTI KEMMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
According to Steve Cunanan,<lb/>
SGA president, approximately 75<lb/>
percent of the students at ECU<lb/>
would not be able to afford the<lb/>
education they are now receiving<lb/>
if it were not for financial aid.<lb/>
Cunanan and 15 other SGA<lb/>
presidents from the UNC system<lb/>
are now in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
lobbying for financial aid.<lb/>
"The purpose of our trip will<lb/>
be to voice our concerns about<lb/>
the mounting problems within<lb/>
financial aid Cunanan said in a<lb/>
press conference Wednesday.<lb/>
Cunanan is meeting with the<lb/>
Secretary of Education, William<lb/>
Bennett, Senators Jim Broyhill<lb/>
and Jesse Helms, and all of the<lb/>
N.C. Congressmen.<lb/>
"We hope they will remember<lb/>
our visit next time a vote comes<lb/>
up said Cunanan, "We want<lb/>
them to be aware that what they<lb/>
are doing is affecting the<lb/>
students<lb/>
Cunanan commented that he<lb/>
felt ECU's Financial Aid Office<lb/>
has been doing an excellent job.<lb/>
The backup in the financial aid<lb/>
process this semester has been<lb/>
blamed on a new process of veri-<lb/>
fying applications.<lb/>
"The Federal Government has<lb/>
consistently altered the regula-<lb/>
tions that this office (Financial<lb/>
Aid) must follow and has created<lb/>
unnecessary delays by changing<lb/>
the rules after the game has<lb/>
startedCunanan said.<lb/>
He added, "students are<lb/>
frustrated, they need their<lb/>
money<lb/>
According to Cunanan, the<lb/>
campaign to simplify the finan-<lb/>
cial aid process will not stop with<lb/>
the trip to Washington.<lb/>
"A lot of people aren't sure<lb/>
this is something we should be<lb/>
lobbying against because it is a<lb/>
political issue said Cunanan,<lb/>
"Education is not a political issue<lb/>
? it's an investment<lb/>
By CAROLYN DR1SCOLL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Now is the time for seniors and<lb/>
graduating seniors to register at<lb/>
the Career, Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Service, according to<lb/>
Furney James, director.<lb/>
"The biggest question with<lb/>
seniors he said, "Is 'What do<lb/>
we do now?' If they come over<lb/>
here, we'll tell them what to do<lb/>
and how to register with us<lb/>
The services offered by CP&amp;P<lb/>
are free. To register, students can<lb/>
pick up a packet at Bloxton<lb/>
House, fill out the information<lb/>
and return it. The packet includes<lb/>
a resume (either a form resume or<lb/>
your own) and three forms of<lb/>
faculty references.<lb/>
Once registered, students are<lb/>
on a mailing list and will receive<lb/>
information on firms who will be<lb/>
coming to ECU to interview<lb/>
seniors, beginning October 7.<lb/>
Their resumes, once on file, may<lb/>
also be sent by CP&amp;P to<lb/>
employers who contact them<lb/>
seeking information on<lb/>
graduating seniors.<lb/>
Record Enrollment<lb/>
By DEANNE COOPER<lb/>
Starf Writer<lb/>
For the 1986 fall semester,<lb/>
ECU has a record enrollment,<lb/>
14,464 students.<lb/>
According to J. Gilbert Moore,<lb/>
registrar, this total includes<lb/>
12,058 undergraduate and 2,406<lb/>
graduate students. The total<lb/>
number translates to 6,232 male<lb/>
students and 8,232 female<lb/>
students.<lb/>
There are several good reasons<lb/>
why students are choosing ECU.<lb/>
"East Carolina's reputation is<lb/>
getting better said John M.<lb/>
HoweU, ECU Chancellor, "East<lb/>
Carolina has been ranked seventh<lb/>
out of 158 comprehensive univer-<lb/>
sities in the South<lb/>
Charles Seeley, director of<lb/>
undergraduate admissions, said<lb/>
he thinks students are staying in<lb/>
school longer and working harder<lb/>
t their education.<lb/>
"Twenty years ago if you<lb/>
didn't graduate in four years, you<lb/>
were nuts Mr. Seeley com-<lb/>
mented But, this is no longer<lb/>
the case<lb/>
Although there are more<lb/>
students on campus, the<lb/>
egistrar's office is not having<lb/>
problems with excessive paper-<lb/>
work. Mr. Moore said this is<lb/>
because computers are more<lb/>
widely used.<lb/>
This year, some students may<lb/>
have experienced difficulty with<lb/>
class scheduling. However, the<lb/>
problem is not within the<lb/>
registrar's office, it is because of<lb/>
limited classroom space. Next fall<lb/>
the problem of limited seating<lb/>
will be somewhat alleviated when<lb/>
the new classroom building is<lb/>
scheduled to open.<lb/>
Some students also had dif-<lb/>
ficulty being placed in dorms.<lb/>
This problem was mostly en-<lb/>
countered by male students since<lb/>
women's housing outnumbers<lb/>
that of men's.<lb/>
No plans are currently being<lb/>
implemented to build more hous-<lb/>
ing because off-campus housing<lb/>
arrangements seem to off-set on-<lb/>
c am pus placements, said Mr.<lb/>
Dan Wooten, director of housing<lb/>
operations. There will, however,<lb/>
be a change in the ratio of men's<lb/>
beds to women's.<lb/>
ECU is the third largest univer-<lb/>
sity in North Carolina in terms of<lb/>
enrollment, making it an attrac-<lb/>
tion for many students.<lb/>
James notes, "Many firms<lb/>
recruit in the fall but do not come<lb/>
back in the spring because<lb/>
they've already interviewed<lb/>
enough applicants<lb/>
Recruiters, he said, come from<lb/>
many different fields. Among<lb/>
some of the firms whose<lb/>
representatives will be on campus<lb/>
in October are Burlington In-<lb/>
dustries, Electronic Data Systems<lb/>
(EDS), Price Waterhouse,<lb/>
Deloitte Haskins and Sells, and<lb/>
Sherwin Williams.<lb/>
According to James, on the<lb/>
average, of all of the students<lb/>
who use the services at CP&amp;P,<lb/>
70-75 percent find job placement.<lb/>
"Getting people motivated on<lb/>
this is the main problem. Our ad-<lb/>
vice to the students is ? for your<lb/>
own benefit, don't procrastinate,<lb/>
don't put it off - start now said<lb/>
Jim Westmoreland, assistant<lb/>
director of CP&amp;P.<lb/>
The importance of registering<lb/>
on time is echoed by Laura<lb/>
Cobb, who graduated in May<lb/>
1986 with a degree in<lb/>
mathematics.<lb/>
She saidI have been looking<lb/>
for a job, but I can't get past the<lb/>
receptionists in the offices I've<lb/>
been to<lb/>
Cobb, who graduated with a<lb/>
3.9 GPA continued, "I never<lb/>
bothered to fill out the forms<lb/>
here (at CP&amp;P); I figured I'd be<lb/>
able to get a job as soon as I<lb/>
started looking. But now I'm<lb/>
hoping I can get some help here<lb/>
On the other hand, her hus-<lb/>
band Scott, who graduated in<lb/>
May with a degree in industrial<lb/>
technology and a minor in<lb/>
business, is employed at a job he<lb/>
got through an interview at<lb/>
CP&amp;P.<lb/>
He said, "I never realized how<lb/>
easy I had it while I was here,<lb/>
with CP&amp;P setting up interviews,<lb/>
and offering workshops. I watch-<lb/>
ed a lot of people sit back and do<lb/>
nothing, but I had a job when I<lb/>
walked out of the graduation<lb/>
ceremony<lb/>
He added, "You have got to<lb/>
take advantage of it while you're<lb/>
here, because you don't realize<lb/>
now how tough it is once you get<lb/>
out<lb/>
We cannot say it enough, the<lb/>
year goes so quickly. Seniors do<lb/>
not have that much time left,<lb/>
James said.<lb/>
Westmoreland said, "We want<lb/>
to make this enjoyable. If we can<lb/>
help students get started, they'll<lb/>
realize that there are a lot of op-<lb/>
portunities out there. We en-<lb/>
courage students to come in and<lb/>
take a look at the materials we<lb/>
have. If they have questions, we<lb/>
want them to feel free to stop in,<lb/>
although sometimes an appoint-<lb/>
ment is a good idea<lb/>
In the upcoming weeks, CP&amp;P<lb/>
wll be holding workshops for<lb/>
writing resumes and going on job<lb/>
interviews. The times of the<lb/>
workshops will be posted around<lb/>
campus as well as in Bloxton<lb/>
House.<lb/>
In addition to helping seniors<lb/>
and graduating seniors, CP&amp;P<lb/>
offers information that may be of<lb/>
interest to underclassmen, said<lb/>
James.<lb/>
"We have a lot of career infor-<lb/>
mation that has been useful in the<lb/>
past in helping students decide on<lb/>
a major or field of study he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bloxton House is located between<lb/>
Greene Dorm and Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Illegal Cablevision Offenders<lb/>
Could Face A Serious Penalty<lb/>
By LESLEY DEES<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
The illegal hookup of cablevi-<lb/>
sion by off-campus students liv-<lb/>
ing in apartments is "becoming<lb/>
quite a problem according to<lb/>
John Pait, general manager of<lb/>
Greenville Cable TV.<lb/>
Although students are not the<lb/>
only lawbreakers, they make up a<lb/>
large percentage of the offenders,<lb/>
according to Pait.<lb/>
Cablevision theft, which is a<lb/>
state and federal offense, carries<lb/>
a serious penalty.<lb/>
"For the first offense, we<lb/>
usually go back and disconnect<lb/>
the cable said Pait. But he<lb/>
adds, "We have prosecuted a<lb/>
few. The second offense is handl-<lb/>
ed by the courts and the offender<lb/>
could be sentenced to jail and<lb/>
have a permanent criminal<lb/>
record<lb/>
Greenville Cable TV is now us-<lb/>
ing equipment that can detect an<lb/>
unlawful hookup without having<lb/>
to make periodic checks at apart-<lb/>
ment complexes.<lb/>
Illegal cablevision hookups are<lb/>
not only detrimental to the of-<lb/>
fender, but also to other cablevi-<lb/>
sion users.<lb/>
"It interferes with the picture<lb/>
and signal levels of other<lb/>
subscribers' cable explained<lb/>
Pait.<lb/>
The rate for basic cablevision,<lb/>
which is channels 2-13 is $13.05<lb/>
per month.<lb/>
One person using cablevision<lb/>
illegally for a year adds up to<lb/>
$156.60. All of the illicit hookups<lb/>
make up a tremendous loss by the<lb/>
cable companies.<lb/>
In order to make restitution for<lb/>
the loss, rates are increased for<lb/>
the paying customer.<lb/>
"Anytime someone is doing<lb/>
something illegally like that, it<lb/>
always pushes the rates up for<lb/>
our paying viewers Pait said.<lb/>
Pait feels that the idea of "get-<lb/>
ting something for nothing" is<lb/>
extremely unfair to those who are<lb/>
paying for their cablevision.<lb/>
Pait said, "They think they're<lb/>
getting over on us (cable com-<lb/>
pany) but we know what's hap-<lb/>
pening<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials.<lb/>
Features<lb/>
4 ?Students offered ski trip,<lb/>
 J through HPERS ? tec ENTER<lb/>
.14 TAINMENT page 9.<lb/>
.15 ?Ecsteni power West Virvtek ia.<lb/>
H ades FkUca Sta4aai Sa<lb/>
.13 for ECU'a hoaae<lb/>
SPORTS page 15.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057846_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11, 1986<lb/>
Sept. 2, 1986<lb/>
2:35 a.m. - Three Slay dorm<lb/>
students and one Tyler dorm stu-<lb/>
dent were observed with posses-<lb/>
sion of marijuana, drug<lb/>
paraphernalia and beer, in Slay-<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
10:50 a.m. - A room in Memorial<lb/>
Gym was reported broken into<lb/>
and the larceny of property from,<lb/>
by unknown person.<lb/>
10:50 a.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and larceny of property from<lb/>
her vehicle, while parked in the<lb/>
commuter lot east of College Hill<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
2:30 p.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and larceny of property from<lb/>
his vehicle, while parked in the<lb/>
commuter lot east of College Hill<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
11:10 p.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
was arrested for intoxicated and<lb/>
disruptive behavior and for<lb/>
trespassing north of Greene<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
Sept. 3, 1986<lb/>
12:08 a.m. - Two males from<lb/>
Benson, N.C. were banned from<lb/>
campus for being unescorted in<lb/>
White Dorm.<lb/>
8:03 a.m. - A Fleming Dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the larceny of a<lb/>
watch from her vehicle parked<lb/>
north of Jenkins Art building.<lb/>
2:30 p.m. - A Belk dorm resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of his bike<lb/>
from the bike rack north of<lb/>
Aycock Hall.<lb/>
2:30 p.m. - A Jarvis resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and larceny of items from her<lb/>
vehicle which was parked in resi-<lb/>
dent lot north of Jenkins Art<lb/>
building.<lb/>
3:35 p.m. - Two Slay Hall<lb/>
residents reported being harass-<lb/>
ed by an unidentified white male<lb/>
in their dorm room.<lb/>
5:00 p.m. - An Umstead resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of his front<lb/>
licence plate.<lb/>
8:10 p.m. - A Fleming resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and larceny from her vehicle<lb/>
while parked northeast of Gar-<lb/>
rett.<lb/>
Sept. 4, 1986<lb/>
12:30 a.m. - A PTA delivery man<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and the larceny of two pizzas<lb/>
from his vehicle while parked<lb/>
west of Aycock dorm.<lb/>
1:26 a.m. - An Aycock resident<lb/>
was observed in violation of the<lb/>
alcoholic beverage policy south<lb/>
of Fletcher hall.<lb/>
1:15 p.m. - A room in Ragsdale<lb/>
was reported broken into and<lb/>
entered by an unknown person.<lb/>
3:00 p.m. - A Jarvis resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing of his vehicle while parked<lb/>
north of Jenkins Art building.<lb/>
10:50 p.m. - An Aycock resident<lb/>
was observed consuming alcohol<lb/>
under age on Mall Drive, south<lb/>
of Fletcher Hall.<lb/>
11:00 p.m. - Two Aycock<lb/>
residents and a Garrett resident<lb/>
were observed consuming mixed<lb/>
drinks southwest of Gerrett<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
11:45 p.m. - A Garrett dorm resi-<lb/>
dent and friend were observed<lb/>
consuming beer on Mall Drive,<lb/>
south of Fletcher Dorm.<lb/>
Sept. 5, 1986<lb/>
10:45 a.m. - A Belk dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the larceny of his<lb/>
wallet containing his bank card<lb/>
and the unauthorized use of that<lb/>
card at the bank machine at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
10:40 p.m. - A Belk resident was<lb/>
arrested for DWI and careless<lb/>
and reckless driving. The student<lb/>
was also written up for alcoholic<lb/>
beverage violation after stating<lb/>
that he had been consuming<lb/>
spirituous liquor in his room<lb/>
prior to driving.<lb/>
Sept. 6, 1986<lb/>
9:05 a.m. - A Clement dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the breaking and<lb/>
entering of her room by unknown<lb/>
person.<lb/>
8:30 a.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of bike<lb/>
equipment and tools from her<lb/>
bicycle located south of the<lb/>
Health Science Library.<lb/>
10:30 p.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
was arrested for trespassing after<lb/>
being banned and carrying a con-<lb/>
cealed weapon.<lb/>
10:45 p.m. - A Kingston Place<lb/>
resident was charged with<lb/>
careless and reckless driving in<lb/>
connection with an incident on<lb/>
College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Sept. 7, 1986<lb/>
12:34 a.m. - An Aycock resident<lb/>
reported that there was a dead<lb/>
copperhead snake in the 1st floor<lb/>
east wing bathroom of Aycock<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
2:14 a.m. - A Jones dorm resi-<lb/>
dent was found to be in posses-<lb/>
sion of and consuming an<lb/>
alcoholic beverage while under<lb/>
the age of 21 and possessing a<lb/>
false ECU ID.<lb/>
2:40 a.m. - An Aycock dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the breaking, enter-<lb/>
ing and tampering with of his<lb/>
vehicle by known persons.<lb/>
10:46 p.m. - A Slay resident was<lb/>
charged with driving careless and<lb/>
reckless causing damage to<lb/>
another student's vehicle.<lb/>
Sept. 8. 1986<lb/>
3:15 p.m. - An Aycock resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing and larceny of money from<lb/>
his room.<lb/>
5:25 p.m. - A White Hall resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of her bike<lb/>
from under the breezeway east of<lb/>
the Biology Building.<lb/>
Sept. 9, 1986<lb/>
7:00 p.m. - An Umstead hall resi-<lb/>
dent reported the breaking and<lb/>
entering and larceny of his stereo<lb/>
from his vehicle while parked at<lb/>
the east end of the Ninth Street<lb/>
parking lot.<lb/>
7:50 p.m. - A Greenville resident<lb/>
was arrested for intoxicated and<lb/>
disruptive behavior. Six other<lb/>
Greenville residents were banned<lb/>
from campus due to an incident<lb/>
that occured in the commuter lot<lb/>
on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
8:15 p.m. - A Garrett dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the breaking and<lb/>
entering and larceny from his<lb/>
vehicle while parked in the Third<lb/>
and Reade Street freshman lot.<lb/>
Sept. 10, 1986<lb/>
12:20 p.m. - Two Greenville<lb/>
residents were in possession of<lb/>
and consuming beer while being<lb/>
under age.<lb/>
Mendenhall Undergoes Summer Changes<lb/>
ByLOL'ISE SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
was busy getting a new face this<lb/>
summer as a result of a number<lb/>
of changes that have taken place.<lb/>
According to Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander, Director of University<lb/>
Unions, these changes were made<lb/>
because it is "important for us to<lb/>
provide the best service and the<lb/>
best programs to the entire<lb/>
University community<lb/>
Most of the renovation occur-<lb/>
red on the second floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Because of the<lb/>
amount of programs presented<lb/>
and the number of people work-<lb/>
ing on the events, the program<lb/>
staff needed more space.<lb/>
Therefore, the little-used<lb/>
Music Listening Center was<lb/>
transformed into new Program<lb/>
Offices, and also provided a new<lb/>
place for the Student Fund Ac-<lb/>
counting Office. The Business<lb/>
Office staff moved into the of-<lb/>
fices vacated by the Program<lb/>
staff, and the old Student Fund<lb/>
Accounting rooms are now pro-<lb/>
viding extra space for both the<lb/>
SGA and the Student Union of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
The art gallery in the second<lb/>
floor lobby is also being expand-<lb/>
r i TlTnur,<lb/>
ed. The north lobby wall will now<lb/>
be available for display, which<lb/>
enlarges the total display area by<lb/>
nearly 50 percent. Also, the cor-<lb/>
ridor on the south side of the lob-<lb/>
by has been closed off for storage<lb/>
space and a control center.<lb/>
There will be someone on duty<lb/>
during the Center's entire<lb/>
operating hours to prevent theft<lb/>
of art exhibits and run the Music<lb/>
Listening Center. Music will now<lb/>
be heard through headsets at sta-<lb/>
tions in the upstairs lobby area.<lb/>
Alexander said that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Center staff is hopeful that<lb/>
these changes will attract major<lb/>
art shows and make the second<lb/>
floor a more pleasant place for<lb/>
students to read, study, or listen<lb/>
to music.<lb/>
On the first floor, changes<lb/>
have been made in the Snack Bar.<lb/>
ECU has contracted with a new<lb/>
food service organization, Can-<lb/>
teen Corporation. Although most<lb/>
of the old staff has remained,<lb/>
there are a few differences in the<lb/>
Snack Bar, including a new Bake<lb/>
Shoppe.<lb/>
There has been some renova-<lb/>
tion on the basement level, as<lb/>
well. The areas on either side of<lb/>
the large-screen TV viewing space<lb/>
have been made into six small<lb/>
rooms. These spaces were<lb/>
RACK ROOM<lb/>
SAVE UP TO<lb/>
60<lb/>
OPEN MON-SAT 10-9 except Niki ?" &amp; Reebok<lb/>
SUNDAY 1-6<lb/>
branded shoes<lb/>
Greenville Buyers Market<lb/>
Memorial Dive<lb/>
xgcoggocoo<lb/>
ryywwnrr rBBQBOQJ - ?-nrlr.r)r)nn(-MJOOO(XMjmjUlt<lb/>
oooooooooooccl<lb/>
originally designed for foosball<lb/>
and other table games, but use of<lb/>
these areas had dwindled greatly.<lb/>
The six new rooms, three on each<lb/>
side, will be used for meetings<lb/>
and recreational events such as<lb/>
bridge and chess tournaments.<lb/>
The rooms are separated by por-<lb/>
table partitions which can be<lb/>
removed to provide larger<lb/>
meeting areas.<lb/>
According to Alexander, all of<lb/>
the construction done inside the<lb/>
Student Center this year was paid<lb/>
for with a special reserve fund.<lb/>
This fund was set up when<lb/>
Mendenhall was built, and is used<lb/>
exclusively to cover renovations.<lb/>
In addition to the physical<lb/>
changes taking place at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, there have been<lb/>
some personnel changes, as well.<lb/>
This year, the Program Office<lb/>
will be occupied virtually by an<lb/>
all new staff. Both John Curtis,<lb/>
Assistant Program Director and<lb/>
Coordinator of Publicity and<lb/>
Promotion, and Linda Barkand,<lb/>
Assistant Program Director and<lb/>
Coordinator of Leisure Services,<lb/>
have left the Student Center. Pro-<lb/>
spective replacements are now be-<lb/>
??ing interviewed.7 r-<lb/>
Tequila Bar<lb/>
a Weekly Specials<lb/>
Sunrise Sunday: $2:oo per serve<lb/>
Melo-Mondays: $2.25 per serve<lb/>
Toasty-Tuesday; $2.25 per serve<lb/>
Wednesday: $1.75 Pirates Cane Muitney<lb/>
Tonic Thursday: SI. 75 per serve<lb/>
Fried Friday: Get Fried Early at<lb/>
our new Attitude Adjustment hour at<lb/>
4:30; end the night upside down!<lb/>
Saturday Night Specials<lb/>
"House Drink" ? Tequila Blues<lb/>
(Look for our new "Lagoon " Bar)<lb/>
Located Outside<lb/>
109 E. 5th St.<lb/>
752S936<lb/>
1<lb/>
nautilus<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Fitness Center<lb/>
8,000 lbs. Olympic Weights<lb/>
Private Nautilus Room<lb/>
Sauna<lb/>
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Personalized Training Programs<lb/>
1-on-l Instruction<lb/>
New Extended Hours<lb/>
Fall Student Special<lb/>
$50.00 Semester<lb/>
$120.00 Year<lb/>
Limited Time Only<lb/>
1002 Evans Street<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
-? !?.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Family<lb/>
GREENVILLE - A gift of<lb/>
46-and-one-haif acres from an<lb/>
area family has provided Easi<lb/>
Carolina University with iu firt<lb/>
natural area.<lb/>
The property, located one mile<lb/>
west of Falkland, was donates b<lb/>
Laurie and Rod EHis of Wiater-<lb/>
ville and their son, Howard, of<lb/>
San Diego, Calif.<lb/>
"My husband and 1 have<lb/>
always enjoyed in things of<lb/>
nature said Mrs. Eats We<lb/>
like the idea thai the property will<lb/>
be preserved and wed for<lb/>
study<lb/>
The property i$ ideal for field<lb/>
trips and research projects<lb/>
because of its proximity to cam-<lb/>
pus and untouched environmen-<lb/>
tal diversity. "One spcciaJ beauty<lb/>
of this property is thai it has been<lb/>
logged selectively and at a<lb/>
number of different times rather<lb/>
than simply clear-cut said Dr<lb/>
Vince Bellis, an ECU biologist.<lb/>
"This gives students an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to observe both young and<lb/>
relatively mature forest en-<lb/>
vironments within a short<lb/>
distance of each other. They can<lb/>
see everything from young ernes<lb/>
on the edge of the property to<lb/>
huge beech trees in the ravines<lb/>
that arc 150 to 200 years old<lb/>
Some of the most interesting<lb/>
areas on the property are the<lb/>
steep north-facing ravines with<lb/>
their cool, moist environment.<lb/>
"Because of the drainage, a<lb/>
number of plants end animals<lb/>
normally found only in the Pied-<lb/>
mont and the mountams emeC'<lb/>
Bellis said. "Galax, mountain<lb/>
laurel and at leant one type of<lb/>
salamander are several examples.<lb/>
Peace<lb/>
Group<lb/>
Organized<lb/>
By VIRGINIA LA LNGSTON<lb/>
r?r<lb/>
ville citizens met and formed the<lb/>
Central American Peace Project.<lb/>
The group was formed b Mike<lb/>
Hamer and Ray Lee. Lee has<lb/>
been involved in Central<lb/>
American peace wodfc m Ohio<lb/>
while Hamer spent six months in<lb/>
Nicaragua in 19?4 working with<lb/>
Witness for Peace<lb/>
Both felt that now was the Dm<lb/>
to form ? tttxmm geeup to<lb/>
educate the public about alter-<lb/>
natives to the nxeseai admuusua-<lb/>
tion's policy m Central America.<lb/>
CAPP, as the group is known,<lb/>
plans to accomplish this by pro-<lb/>
viding films, speakers and<lb/>
legislative informanftn to chur-<lb/>
ches, a vie m??mmtnm end<lb/>
other groups that wast te study<lb/>
the Centiei Ammim situeuon.<lb/>
It is possible thei the gesnp wiC<lb/>
even mobitae ?oi? rirjouii<lb/>
disapproval.<lb/>
CAPP will mejsi next Wedftm-<lb/>
day, Sept. tt? eg 7 pjm eft the<lb/>
home of 1 lamer on lerii Sueu.<lb/>
For more inf emusm about the<lb/>
Central Anserine Pence rnip?i<lb/>
contact Hamer at 1304349 or<lb/>
Lee at 830021.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?v ? U?<lb/>
X. C<lb/>
"?fsy: ? .<lb/>
<lb/>
lww<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0003"/><lb/>
THEEASTCAROIINIAN<lb/>
SEPTMEMBER11. 1986<lb/>
 ycock resident<lb/>
 g And enter-<lb/>
mone from<lb/>
 te Ha!l resident<lb/>
ol tier hike<lb/>
vvva east of<lb/>
ad hall resi-<lb/>
 i .md<lb/>
? s stereo<lb/>
parked at<lb/>
N Street<lb/>
; -evident<lb/>
? cated and<lb/>
S x ther<lb/>
Mnned<lb/>
incident<lb/>
' er lot<lb/>
m resi-<lb/>
nig and<lb/>
om his<lb/>
the Third<lb/>
c ireenv llle<lb/>
sion o<lb/>
e being<lb/>
flanges<lb/>
ations.<lb/>
physical<lb/>
he Stu-<lb/>
' ave been<lb/>
inges, as well.<lb/>
. am Office<lb/>
' ualh by an<lb/>
Curtis,<lb/>
and<lb/>
blicity and<lb/>
la Barkand,<lb/>
Director and<lb/>
' Leisure Services,<lb/>
v . le ' C enter. Pro-<lb/>
' - are now be-<lb/>
ina<lb/>
er<lb/>
'eights<lb/>
oom<lb/>
Bed<lb/>
'rograms<lb/>
urs<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
<lb/>
Family Gives Area To ECU As Gift<lb/>
GRF.FNVII I F ?;?? e ???. .   J<lb/>
GREENVILLE A gift of<lb/>
46-and-onc-half acres from an<lb/>
area family has provided East<lb/>
Carolina Univ?r?ty witn its fun.<lb/>
natural area.<lb/>
The property, lace ted one mile<lb/>
west of Falkland, was donated by<lb/>
Laurie and Reid Elks of Wiater-<lb/>
ville and their son, Howard, of<lb/>
San Diego, Calif.<lb/>
"My husband and I have<lb/>
always enjoyed the things of<lb/>
nature said Mrs. EHis. "We<lb/>
like the idea thai the property will<lb/>
be preserved an4 ?cd for<lb/>
study<lb/>
The property is ideal for field<lb/>
trips and research projects<lb/>
because of its proximity to cam-<lb/>
pus and untouched environmen-<lb/>
tal diversity. "One special beauty<lb/>
of this property is that it has been<lb/>
logged selectively and at a<lb/>
number of different times rather<lb/>
than simply clear-cut said Dr.<lb/>
Vince Bcllis, an ECU biologist.<lb/>
'This gives students an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to observe both young and<lb/>
relatively mature forest en-<lb/>
vironments within a short<lb/>
distance of each other. They can<lb/>
see everything from young pines<lb/>
on the edge of the property to<lb/>
huge beech trees in the ravines<lb/>
that are 150 to 200 years old<lb/>
Some of the most interesting<lb/>
areas on the property are the<lb/>
steep north-facing ravines with<lb/>
their cool, moist environment.<lb/>
"Because of the drainage, a<lb/>
number of plants and animals<lb/>
normally found only in the Pied-<lb/>
mont and the mountains exist<lb/>
Bellis said. "Galax, mountain<lb/>
laurel and at leaat one type of<lb/>
salamander are several examples.<lb/>
Peace<lb/>
Group<lb/>
Organized<lb/>
By VIRGINIA JJMNCSTOS<lb/>
Staff fHilar<lb/>
Last Tucsaa-y evemoc Gxflen-<lb/>
ville citizens met and formed the<lb/>
Central American Peace Project.<lb/>
The group was fprtaed by Mike<lb/>
Hamer and hay Lee. Lee has<lb/>
been involved in Ctntral<lb/>
American peace works i? Ohio<lb/>
while Hamer spent six months in<lb/>
Nicaragua in 1984 working with<lb/>
Witness for Peace.<lb/>
Both felt that now vuas the time<lb/>
to form a dtiwu group to<lb/>
educate the public about alter-<lb/>
natives to the ereteai admirruttra<lb/>
tion's policy in Central America.<lb/>
CAPP, as the group is known,<lb/>
plans to accomplish this by pro-<lb/>
viding films, speakers and<lb/>
legislative information to chur-<lb/>
ches, civic orgamVcatioaa and<lb/>
other groups that want te study<lb/>
the Cenurai American situation.<lb/>
It is possible that the group will<lb/>
even mobilize to voice ci&amp;iicm<lb/>
disapproval.<lb/>
CAPP will oet nun TftiillMi<lb/>
day, Sept. 1?, at 1 fj. at the<lb/>
home of Hatter on Jarrn Steed.<lb/>
For more information atoottf fhe<lb/>
Central Ajoericae Peace PuijuA,<lb/>
contact Hamer at 830-3349 or<lb/>
Lee at 830,0828.<lb/>
of ECU's<lb/>
and former<lb/>
"The presence of these small<lb/>
pockets of plants and animals<lb/>
outside their normal range invites<lb/>
some interesting scientific ques-<lb/>
tions Bellis added. "How and<lb/>
when did they first become<lb/>
established here? Are these<lb/>
populations genetically different<lb/>
from those in the mountains and<lb/>
Piedmont since they are physical-<lb/>
ly separated?"<lb/>
Many ECU professors are<lb/>
already familiar with the proper-<lb/>
ty; the university has been leasing<lb/>
it from the Ellis family - at a<lb/>
token rate of $1 per year - since<lb/>
1966. The original agreement was<lb/>
arranged by Dr. Joseph G.<lb/>
Boyette, dean<lb/>
Graduate School<lb/>
biology professor.<lb/>
"1 knew this piece of land<lb/>
when I was a boy Boyette said.<lb/>
"When 1 began to teach here, I<lb/>
wanted to take some classes out<lb/>
there. I called Reid and asked her<lb/>
if it would be all right, and she<lb/>
said it was. Later on she agreed to<lb/>
lease it to us<lb/>
The gift culminated a six-year<lb/>
effort by Robert H. Franke.<lb/>
director of ECU Sponsored Pro-<lb/>
grams, who is also Mrs. Ellis'<lb/>
Sunday school teacher. "I was<lb/>
convinced by people like Joe<lb/>
Boyette and Vince Bellis that this<lb/>
was indeed a piece of valuable, ir-<lb/>
replaceable property Franke<lb/>
said. "It seemed a shame to not<lb/>
try to do something about it, par-<lb/>
ticularly when Miss Reid had<lb/>
already shown that she was con-<lb/>
scious of its importance to the<lb/>
university by leasing it.<lb/>
'As she got older and as more<lb/>
and more land of comparative<lb/>
significance was plowed up for<lb/>
condominiums, it seemed all the<lb/>
more important to nail down the<lb/>
property<lb/>
Prior to the gift, ECU was the<lb/>
only major university in North<lb/>
Carolina that didn't own a<lb/>
natural area. The lack of such an<lb/>
area presented difficulties for<lb/>
faculty and graduate students<lb/>
wanting to do research due to<lb/>
uncertainties concerning future<lb/>
use of any land they might select.<lb/>
"With the guarantee of having<lb/>
continuous access to it, people<lb/>
will be less hesitant to start<lb/>
research projects said Dr.<lb/>
Charles E. Bland, chairman of<lb/>
the Department of Biology. "I'm<lb/>
sure there will be graduate<lb/>
students who will be very in-<lb/>
terested in studying the animals<lb/>
and plants in the area<lb/>
The Falkland tract will also be<lb/>
used by other departments. The<lb/>
School of Art has cited a need for<lb/>
a natural area for on-site drawing<lb/>
classes and as a demonstration<lb/>
area for seminars on design and<lb/>
the natural environment.<lb/>
According to geology's Dr. Lee<lb/>
J. Otte, field trips are essential<lb/>
for classes in geomorphology,<lb/>
sedimentary geology, geological<lb/>
mapping and environmental<lb/>
geology.<lb/>
"Ideally, we should be taking<lb/>
our students on field trips every<lb/>
weekend Otte said. "If you<lb/>
have to depend on private lan-<lb/>
downers for access to a piece of<lb/>
land, you don't know from day<lb/>
to day if you'll get on or not<lb/>
Dr. Robert C. Wendling,<lb/>
Sidewalk Sale<lb/>
Parking Lot of Chico 's Mexican Restaurant<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 13 ? 7-11 AM<lb/>
Jits<lb/>
Mexican Res taut an!<lb/>
521 CoUnche St.<lb/>
We've Expanded To<lb/>
Serve You Better!<lb/>
Reserve Our Fiesta<lb/>
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wrgMJW?gPgW<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
'?jtf&amp; ?<lb/>
FSrfjMfc C3<lb/>
&amp;S ' '?<lb/>
?<lb/>
4 tecU place to emtf<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Sizzlin<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Leisure Systems Studies assistant<lb/>
professor, said a natural area<lb/>
would be used in his outdoor liv-<lb/>
ing skills and resource manage-<lb/>
ment classes.<lb/>
"Last spring we did a recrea-<lb/>
tion and parks master manage-<lb/>
ment plan for Edgecombe Coun-<lb/>
ty Wendling said. "The<lb/>
students had to inventory the<lb/>
fauna and flora and attempt to<lb/>
identify the best use of the site<lb/>
based on what tht management<lb/>
objectives of the owner were. A<lb/>
natural area will come in useful<lb/>
for projects such as that<lb/>
The Department of Science<lb/>
Education offers several courses<lb/>
which require outdoor settings.<lb/>
In these classes students learn<lb/>
how to measure such en-<lb/>
vironmental factors as air<lb/>
temperature, light intensity,<lb/>
and barometric pressure<lb/>
in microhabitats.<lb/>
A natural area will also<lb/>
enhance the environmental health<lb/>
program. "This program trains<lb/>
students in assessing the impact<lb/>
of the development of land and in<lb/>
evaluating sites that are suitable<lb/>
for development said Dr. Ber<lb/>
nard E. Kane, environmental<lb/>
health professor. "This requires<lb/>
field trips where students ma<lb/>
sample and study soil types,<lb/>
vegetation, landscape position<lb/>
and drainage patterns<lb/>
"We appreciate the gift very<lb/>
much said Chancellor John M.<lb/>
Howell. "The fact that there's<lb/>
not much land left that is in a<lb/>
natural state makes this gift in-<lb/>
valuable to us<lb/>
For your Copezio Dancewear, tap shoes,<lb/>
ballet shoes, jazz shoes, let our<lb/>
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(formerly of CjMoflu Concept;<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0004"/><lb/>
QUr iEaflt (Earnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
TOM LUVENDER, General Manager<lb/>
Daniel Maurer. Managing ??<lb/>
PATTI KEMMIS. News Editor STEVE FOLMAR, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Scott Cooper, cmu e? Anthony Martin, abiwso?a Manage,<lb/>
RlCK MCCORMAC, Co-sports Editor MEG NEEDHAM, Circulation Manager<lb/>
John Shannon. sw, Shannon Short, production Manager<lb/>
Pat Molloy, &amp;.???.?? u DeChanile Johnson. An Director<lb/>
September 11.1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Financial Aid<lb/>
Giving Government An Ear Full<lb/>
Yesterday evening, SGA Presi-<lb/>
dent Steve Cunanan and student<lb/>
body presidents from 15 other UNC<lb/>
system schools left for Washington<lb/>
D. C. where they will express their<lb/>
concern over that growing moun-<lb/>
tain of bureaucratic red tape known<lb/>
as financial aid.<lb/>
They are taking this action in<lb/>
response to the backlog difficulties<lb/>
occuring at universities nationwide.<lb/>
This semester financial aid offices<lb/>
around the country have been<lb/>
swamped by discontented students,<lb/>
more so than usual. The lines have<lb/>
grown longer, forms have become<lb/>
more abundant, delays are the<lb/>
norm and frustration abounds.<lb/>
And it's all the federal governments<lb/>
fault.<lb/>
True, it seems the federal govern-<lb/>
ment is a scape goat for most all of<lb/>
our financial problems, but in this<lb/>
case it's true. Backups in form pro-<lb/>
cessing have been caused by a new<lb/>
budget act passed by Congress.<lb/>
Now, the government requires<lb/>
that 50 percent of all aid applica-<lb/>
tions and 100 percent of all<lb/>
Guaranteed Student Loan applica-<lb/>
tions must have the authenticity of<lb/>
their information verified.<lb/>
This results in the distribution of<lb/>
new forms (which are mailed to<lb/>
students and then back to the<lb/>
university) to verify the old forms,<lb/>
a very time consuming process.<lb/>
What's worse is that students are<lb/>
only receiving the proper forms<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Far be it from us to deny the<lb/>
federal government the right to<lb/>
weed out those who cheat the<lb/>
system. Hey, more power to them.<lb/>
But did they have to implement<lb/>
such a dramatic change of policy<lb/>
now, just as the fall semester is get-<lb/>
ting underway? It looks like some<lb/>
one on capital hill slept through one<lb/>
logic class too many.<lb/>
While in D.C the 16 student<lb/>
body presidents will meet with<lb/>
senior officials of the Department<lb/>
of Education, both North Carolina<lb/>
Senators and several members of<lb/>
the House of Representatives.<lb/>
Hopefully, Cunanan and company<lb/>
can bend enough ears to get at least<lb/>
one popularity-hungry politician to<lb/>
pay attention.<lb/>
The need for action in this matter<lb/>
is apparent, just what type of action<lb/>
to take is unclear. The federal<lb/>
government could continue with<lb/>
this new policy of verification and<lb/>
plod on, hoping in vain that it will<lb/>
get better with time, or it could<lb/>
switch back to the old system.<lb/>
Either way, delays will still be<lb/>
unreasonably long and the students<lb/>
will, in the end, be forced to deal<lb/>
with some one else's mistake.<lb/>
Let's hope the least this commit-<lb/>
tee of student body presidents can<lb/>
do is keep things from getting<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
?Campus Forum<lb/>
BACCHUS Co-Presidents State<lb/>
Views On New Drinking Age Law<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
As most ECU students know by now,<lb/>
the legal drinking age has been raised at<lb/>
ECU from 19 to 21 as of Aug. 1. Also,<lb/>
the same drinking age was instituted<lb/>
statewide Sept. 1. As Co-Presidents of<lb/>
ECU'S chapter of BACCHUS (Boosting<lb/>
Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the<lb/>
Health of University Students), former-<lb/>
ly the Campus Alcohol and Drug Pro-<lb/>
gram, we would like to state our views<lb/>
on this change.<lb/>
Our organization has always stressed<lb/>
the importance of drinking responsibly.<lb/>
We are not, as many people think, an<lb/>
anti-drinking group. Our group's main<lb/>
purpose has always been to educate<lb/>
ECU Students on Alcohol and Drug in-<lb/>
formation. We have always had an im-<lb/>
portant role in offering fellow students<lb/>
individualized counseling and referrals<lb/>
to professional services in our area.<lb/>
The new drinking age has put our<lb/>
group in a somewhat difficult position<lb/>
because now over 90 percent of ECU<lb/>
students are unable to drink legally.<lb/>
Therefore, it appears that our theme of<lb/>
responsibility can only extend to 10 per-<lb/>
cent of the student body as far as legal<lb/>
alcohol consumption is concerned.<lb/>
While we all know that the new law is<lb/>
not going to stop all underage people<lb/>
from drinking alcohol, our group is go-<lb/>
ing to be faced with the dilemma of<lb/>
responding to the problems that our<lb/>
fellow students encounter due to viola-<lb/>
tions of this law.<lb/>
We take no specific position on the<lb/>
new age change. Our group does not get<lb/>
into politics, but we pre sympathetic to<lb/>
the problems created Dy the law change.<lb/>
BACCHUS is concerned about the<lb/>
welfare of ECU students in reference to<lb/>
their alcohol use. We are certain that<lb/>
there are many of you who will continue<lb/>
to drink despite the loss of our legal<lb/>
right to do so. However, we live in a<lb/>
democratic society and we must abide<lb/>
by the law and work positively to try to<lb/>
make necessary changes.<lb/>
We at BACCHUS are here to provide<lb/>
information about alcohol and drugs<lb/>
hopefully to prevent a problem before it<lb/>
becomes one. If you are interested in<lb/>
finding out more about our group,<lb/>
come by our office at 301 Erwin or<lb/>
come to our meeting in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 242 on Sept. 11 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Keith Kaut and,<lb/>
Karen Palmer,<lb/>
Co-presidents.<lb/>
XSN'T THERE 3?L MM CfN<lb/>
Tr15 ON GftDDftFl"<lb/>
BLftME.<lb/>
SQfUloOK VS<lb/>
Tax<lb/>
Film Tells Of Russian Starvation<lb/>
Twenty Questions time<lb/>
? It happened in 1932-1933 and there<lb/>
were approximately 10 million victims.<lb/>
? Russia. Well, sort of: the Ukraine.<lb/>
? Of starvation.<lb/>
? No, not drought: cultivated starva-<lb/>
tion. You know, where there is actually<lb/>
food, but the people one intends to<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
sTaearenpennitteatornove to where<lb/>
the food is, and the food is not permit-<lb/>
ted to be moved to where the people who<lb/>
are supposed to starve are.<lb/>
Well, the implied questions and the<lb/>
explicit answers give it away, but giving<lb/>
it away is precisely the problem. Not<lb/>
many people know that between 1932<lb/>
and 1933, Josef Stalin decided to crush<lb/>
the people of the Ukraine.<lb/>
The neatest way to effect this was to<lb/>
starve them to death. This was done by<lb/>
going in and removing the wheat ? not<lb/>
an easy project. It's something like go-<lb/>
ing into Iowa and removing all the<lb/>
wheat, and then moving in a division or<lb/>
two whose responsibility is to keep the<lb/>
borders, in this case the borders of the<lb/>
Ukraine (which by the way is the largest<lb/>
state in Europe, incorporated by force<lb/>
into the Union of Soviet Socialist<lb/>
Republics), locked tight in order to pre-<lb/>
vent people from moving out or food<lb/>
from getting in.<lb/>
A good year for old Joe. He managed<lb/>
in that one episode to kill more people<lb/>
than Hitler killed in his slaughterhouses.<lb/>
In fact, he killed more people than were<lb/>
killed on all the battlefronts of World<lb/>
War I, up until then the heaviest hitter<lb/>
of any war in history.<lb/>
Comes now the story of a small Cana-<lb/>
dian company that resolved to com-<lb/>
memorate this spectacular act of<lb/>
genocide, on its 50th anniversary. That<lb/>
was 1983, when "Harvest of Despair"<lb/>
was produced. Initiatives were instantly<lb/>
taken to sell the one-hour documentary<lb/>
to the networks, but neither CBS nor<lb/>
NBC nor ABC was interested, not-<lb/>
withstanding that the documentary was<lb/>
winning prizes abroad.<lb/>
And here we pause in our narrative,<lb/>
having just viewed the documentary: It<lb/>
is not pleasant viewing. A camera can<lb/>
show the emaciated corpses of children<lb/>
for only so long before causing the<lb/>
viewer to feel a certain itch, not entirely<lb/>
unlike the kind of itch one feels inspec-<lb/>
ting, oh, the torture room at the<lb/>
Chateau at Chinon, or the collection in<lb/>
Leningrad at the Museum of the History<lb/>
of Religion and Atheism ? a collection<lb/>
of torture instruments used during the<lb/>
Inquisition,and serving, one supposes,<lb/>
as prototypes for use in the Lubyanka<lb/>
and throughout Gulag.<lb/>
But one views such things ? for in-<lb/>
stance, long accounts of life in Hitler's<lb/>
elimination centers ? not for pleasure<lb/>
but for instruction. And it was the naive<lb/>
assumption of the producers of<lb/>
"Harvest of Despair" that there would<lb/>
be a lively interest in the West to see the<lb/>
evidence of one of the most spectacular<lb/>
acts of human cruelty in history.<lb/>
Moreover, not something entirely irrele-<lb/>
vant to a continuing understanding of<lb/>
the Soviet Union and its policies.<lb/>
Why is thatBecause official Soviet<lb/>
history simply denies that the famine<lb/>
ever took place ? denies it quite<lb/>
categorically.<lb/>
When Prime Minister Brian Mulroney<lb/>
of Canada made a pious reference to the<lb/>
Ukrainian famine on its 50th anniver-<lb/>
sary, he received a tongue-lashing from<lb/>
the Soviet ambassador ? an official<lb/>
protest, as though a reference to the<lb/>
Ukrainian massacre was on the ordc <lb/>
a reference to the Protocols of the<lb/>
Learned Elders of Zion ? a forgers.<lb/>
Mikhail Gorbachev, profiled a season<lb/>
ago by Time magazine, is thus referred<lb/>
to: "Gorbachev looks well tanned, just a<lb/>
bit ruddy in the cheekHe laughs easi-<lb/>
ly(His eyes) are an intense, dark<lb/>
brownThe voice is extraordinai.<lb/>
deep but also quite softlow and<lb/>
melodious<lb/>
He voiced his concern to Time ovei<lb/>
the "hundreds of millions of people go-<lb/>
ing hungryWe, all of us, just hac i<lb/>
right to ignore the situation<lb/>
Well, planned starvation isn't on! a<lb/>
historical memory. It has been going on<lb/>
in Ethiopia on a pretty grand scale, and<lb/>
Ethiopia is for all intents and purposes j<lb/>
satellite state of the Soviet Union.<lb/>
Mr. Gorbachev can't begin to fight<lb/>
hunger by encouraging starvation. And<lb/>
if he is against ignoring hunger, then he Al<lb/>
should be against ignoring the hunger f<lb/>
and starvation effected b ifte pnm:ipa<lb/>
figure in the development of the So te-<lb/>
state, Papa Stalin. A continuing failure<lb/>
by the Soviet state to acknowledge the<lb/>
atrocity of 1932-1933 is, in effect, a con-<lb/>
tinuing ratification of that atrocity.<lb/>
The documentary will be shown on<lb/>
network by PBS on Sept. 24, and there is<lb/>
no way to avoid mentioning that it will<lb/>
be shown as part of a two-hour "Firing<lb/>
Line" program, of which I act as the<lb/>
host. I can't really recommend that you<lb/>
watch it, for reasons listed above. But it<lb/>
is important that you not forget that<lb/>
harvest of despair, that it live in the<lb/>
memory ? like the Nazi Holocaust ? as<lb/>
evidence of man's long bestial reach in<lb/>
our time.<lb/>
What To Expect From Tax Reform<lb/>
COUEGt P?SS SffiVtCt<lb/>
?fc-?W5t JfcDWVU'<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
TV New Republic<lb/>
Stifle those second thoughts about tax reform.<lb/>
Now that passage of tax reform seems inevitable, the<lb/>
doubters are getting one last say. They would have you<lb/>
believe America is about to wake up with a head-splitting<lb/>
hangover and the horrifying discovery that during the<lb/>
previous night's festivities it got married to a gorilla.<lb/>
In econometric laboratories across the nation, hugh com-<lb/>
puter models churn out their ludicrously precise prognoses<lb/>
(growth down 0.3 percent, predicts Wharton Econometrics).<lb/>
Journalists round up the usual quotable suspects: Allen Sinai<lb/>
of Shearson Lehman Brothers (the chance of a recession has<lb/>
doubled), former Council of Economic Advisers Chairman<lb/>
Murray Weidenbaum (unemployment up half a percent),<lb/>
Lawrence Chimerine of Chase Econometrics (no likely effect<lb/>
over ten years), Edward Yardeni of Prudential-Bache<lb/>
Securities ("This is the wrong time").<lb/>
These people make a fine living as consultants to business.<lb/>
Do they believe in capitalism? The philosophy of this reform<lb/>
is to get the government out of the way and let capitalism do<lb/>
its thing by taxing all types of economic activity more equally.<lb/>
If you believe in capitalism, how can that be bad?<lb/>
The economic landscape will change, of course. Near my<lb/>
office in Washington is the notorious "hotel corner where<lb/>
three large luxury hotels have popped up in a year. Trouble is,<lb/>
there aren't enough customers. Those hotels never would<lb/>
have been built except for the "incentives" this tax reform<lb/>
eliminates. But how do empty hotel rooms add to our na-<lb/>
tional prosperity? In the future, hotel builders will look for<lb/>
customers first.<lb/>
Wall Street's takeover mania also will cool. The misguided<lb/>
1981 tax act gave huge depreciation write-offs to new pur-<lb/>
chasers of business assets. This has had the perverse effect of<lb/>
making any company that hasn't changed hands for a couple<lb/>
of years more valuable to outsiders than to its current owners<lb/>
(who have used up the best part of their write-offs). Reform<lb/>
will slow the pointless churning of assets. Businesses will be<lb/>
more likely to stay put in the hands of those who can run<lb/>
them most productively.<lb/>
Heavy industry is moaning the loss of the investment tax<lb/>
credit for machinery. Yet study after study showed that this<lb/>
credit cost the government more in lost revenue than it added<lb/>
to business investment (since most investments that got the<lb/>
credit would have been made anyway).<lb/>
Venture capitalists, meanwhile ? belying their self-image<lb/>
as business buccaneers ? whine that they will have to pay the<lb/>
same 28 percent top rate on their capital gains that other in-<lb/>
vestors pay on dividends and interest. But why should the<lb/>
government favor one form of investment over another?<lb/>
What upsets the business community most is the five-year,<lb/>
$120 billion shift in the tax burden from individuals to cor-<lb/>
porations. Even this, though, can be defended on pure<lb/>
capitalist grounds. It's true, as the business mantra has it,<lb/>
that "corporations don't pay taxes, only people pay taxes<lb/>
But this doesn't mean that corporate profits shouldn't be tax<lb/>
ed, in one way or another.<lb/>
Corporate profits are a form of return to capital, and<lb/>
there's no reason people ? corporate stockholders ?<lb/>
shouldn't be taxed on the return to capital. In recent years,<lb/>
the share of revenue coming from the corporate income tax<lb/>
has plummeted, the capital gains loophole has been expand-<lb/>
ed, and the estate tax has been virtually abolished.<lb/>
Meanwhile, inflation has pushed working people into<lb/>
higher brackets, and the Social Security payroll tax has con-<lb/>
tinued its relentless climb. As an overall result, more and<lb/>
more of the tax burden has shifted from capital to labor ?<lb/>
that is, salary and wages.<lb/>
The current reforms merely push the process back a bit.<lb/>
Fairness alone would justify this shift. But economic efficien-<lb/>
cy also dictates that labor shouldn't bear a disproportionate<lb/>
share of the tax burden.<lb/>
By raising taxes on labor and reducing taxes on capital, the<lb/>
government has been encouraging businesses to replace peo-<lb/>
ple with machines. This makes no more sense than using the<lb/>
tax code to promote one form of investment over another.<lb/>
Tax reform will reduce this inefficiency.<lb/>
Ah, but what about the $11 billion extra that this supposed-<lb/>
ly revenue-neutral bill will draw from the economy next year ?<lb/>
Won't that risk pushing us into recession?<lb/>
The answer is that anyone who thinks $11 billion one way<lb/>
or another can dramatically affect a $4.5 trillion economy<lb/>
must have a heart attack every time he opens the newspaper<lb/>
Responsible estimates of next year's deficit have varied far<lb/>
more than $11 billion over the past few weeks. The runawa<lb/>
farm program along will be adding an unexpected $15 billion<lb/>
to the deficit next year. So relax.<lb/>
Butbutbutisn't this radical experiment just too riskv<lb/>
at a moment when we're tottering on the brink of a recession<lb/>
anyway? Shouldn't we put it off?<lb/>
Answer: till when? In political reality, it's now or never<lb/>
Anyway, like the fellow who's going to stop smoking right<lb/>
after Christmas, there'll always be another excuse. Like th<lb/>
cure for any addiction, tax reform will bring some withdrawa<lb/>
symptoms. But pretty soon we're gonna feel great.<lb/>
Mr. Michael Kinsley is the editor of the New RenuhT<lb/>
magazine, excerpts from which can occasionally be found'<lb/>
these pages. <lb/>
WASHINGTON, DC. (CPS) -<lb/>
The tax reform bill now before<lb/>
Congress will have an "almost<lb/>
vindictive" effect on colleges if it<lb/>
is passed, educators say.<lb/>
The bill?which many<lb/>
observers expect to pass both the<lb/>
House and Senate this mon-<lb/>
th?would cripple many campus j<lb/>
fundraising efforts and require rl<lb/>
some students to pay taxes on<lb/>
money they get through financial<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
Others say it effectively would<lb/>
make diplomas about 15 percent<lb/>
more expensive than they are I<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Observers fret tax reform will<lb/>
ignite a chain reaction of cost in-<lb/>
creases that cut donations to col- s<lb/>
leges, drive up tuition, increase d<lb/>
students' debt burden, take a big-<lb/>
ger tax bite out of students after<lb/>
they graduate, make Dnvate col-<lb/>
leges vastly more expensive than<lb/>
public colleges, and even drive<lb/>
some students out of college <lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
It "will seriously compromise<lb/>
the vitality of American colleges n<lb/>
and universities states Bill<lb/>
Kroger of the American Council<lb/>
on Education (ACE). "It will im-<lb/>
pose serious financial hardships<lb/>
on both colleges and students<lb/>
Educators most fear two provi-<lb/>
sions of the bill:<lb/>
One provision affects how<lb/>
private colleges can raise money<lb/>
by selling tax exempt bonds.<lb/>
When colleges sell, say, a $500<lb/>
bond, plus interest, to the buyer<lb/>
quarterly. Since the interest<lb/>
payment?which is profit to the<lb/>
buyer?is tax exempt, the bond i<lb/>
U.S. Corn<lb/>
MOSCOW (UPl) ? U.S. News<lb/>
and World Report correspondent<lb/>
Nicholas Daniloff has been<lb/>
charged with three counts of es- <lb/>
pionage, his wife said today. But<lb/>
he still believes the case will be <lb/>
solved diplomatically before it<lb/>
comes to trial.<lb/>
Mrs. Daruloif visited her hus-<lb/>
band in his cefl in Moscow's<lb/>
Lefortovo prison Tuesday where<lb/>
he has been held since his arrest til<lb/>
Aug. 30.<lb/>
After reviewing the notes she b?<lb/>
had taken during her visit, she w<lb/>
told reporters today that her hus-<lb/>
band said the formal indictment<lb/>
mentioned three specific charges.<lb/>
She said one charge against her j<lb/>
husband was that he "used his<lb/>
status as a foreign journalist to ch<lb/>
Bell Towe<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Faculty Facilities<lb/>
Committee met last Thursday<lb/>
and approved the Senior Bell<lb/>
Tower.<lb/>
The proposal for the tower was<lb/>
made last year, by Kirk Shelley,<lb/>
the 1985-86 Senior Class presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The idea prompted a design<lb/>
contest for the project. Greg<lb/>
Jackson's design was chosen by<lb/>
the students through an East<lb/>
Carolinian poll.<lb/>
The project now has a design<lb/>
and moral support, but it needs<lb/>
financial support.<lb/>
According to Steve Cunanan,<lb/>
SGA president, the tower will<lb/>
cost approximately $110,000.<lb/>
When asked if the new monu-<lb/>
ment will cause a tuition hike,<lb/>
Cunanan said, "No. This is<lb/>
strictly a senior class project. The<lb/>
pli<lb/>
dil<lb/>
alt<lb/>
yei<lb/>
sel<lb/>
sol<lb/>
ei<lb/>
THE<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
Drink S<lb/>
Whill<lb/>
Do Yoi<lb/>
Visit our convenient It<lb/>
8 AM-i:<lb/>
AMFI<lb/>
2 Color TV<lb/>
Gamf<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
when using<lb/>
Mad ?s-?t??.i?w?Ww???w)Wte??M?fcrWi?i inn "t rn ?m$0?0lu? J' ?? ?????mf i il?"W'?-????????  ???-?w?aB?3 ??-uv?A?m,?muk' "<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11, 1986<lb/>
 yw<lb/>
a<lb/>
A<lb/>
CI?IN BLftME<lb/>
r. ?<lb/>
tarvation<lb/>
?Lait<lb/>
I<lb/>
urpv<lb/>
win<lb/>
I<lb/>
begin to :<lb/>
ng staration. And<lb/>
gainst ignoring hunger, then he<lb/>
-e against ignoring the hunger<lb/>
anon effected hs the principal<lb/>
-merit of the So iei<lb/>
pa Stalin continuing failure<lb/>
oie' ,? acknowledge the<lb/>
)f 1932-1933 is, in effect, a con-<lb/>
? ' I hat atrocity.<lb/>
documentary will he shown<lb/>
work by PBS on Sept. 24, and there is<lb/>
way to avoid mentioning that it will<lb/>
shown as part of a two-hour "Firing<lb/>
i e ' program, of which 1 act as the<lb/>
t. I can't really recommend that you<lb/>
latch it, for reasons listed above. Bui il<lb/>
important that you not forget tl<lb/>
ev! of despair, that it live in the<lb/>
lemory ? like the Nazi Holocaust - a<lb/>
ice of man's long bestial reach in<lb/>
ne.<lb/>
ax Reform<lb/>
community most is the five-year,<lb/>
he tax burden from individuals to al-<lb/>
though, can be defended on pure<lb/>
s true, as the business mantra has it,<lb/>
jn't pay taxes, only people pay taxes<lb/>
that corporate profits shouldn't be tax<lb/>
)ther.<lb/>
are a form of return to capital, and<lb/>
people ? corporate stockholders<lb/>
the return to capital. In recent years,<lb/>
looming from the corporate income tax<lb/>
lapital gains loophole has been expand-<lb/>
has been virtually abolished.<lb/>
n has pushed working people into<lb/>
pe Social Security payroll tax has con-<lb/>
limb. As an overall result, more and<lb/>
;n has shifted from capital to labor ?<lb/>
fees.<lb/>
Is merely push the process back a bit.<lb/>
Justify this shift. But economic efficien-<lb/>
ibor shouldn't bear a disproportionate<lb/>
fcn.<lb/>
labor and reducing taxes on capital, the<lb/>
encouraging businesses to replace peo-<lb/>
is makes no more sense than using the<lb/>
me form of investment over another,<lb/>
this inefficiency.<lb/>
Ithe $11 billion extra that this supposed-<lb/>
wi!l draw from the economy next year0<lb/>
ig us into recession?<lb/>
myone who thinks $11 billion one way<lb/>
itically affect a $4.5 trillion economy<lb/>
ck every time he opens the newspaper.<lb/>
of next year's deficit have varied far<lb/>
lover the past few weeks. The runaway<lb/>
ill be adding an unexpected $15 billion<lb/>
So relax.<lb/>
I't this radical experiment just too nsk<lb/>
re tottering on the brink of a recession<lb/>
put it off?<lb/>
In political reality, it's now or never<lb/>
hv who's going to stop smoking righ;<lb/>
rll always be another excuse. Like the<lb/>
! tax reform will bring some withdrawal<lb/>
soon we're gonna feel great.<lb/>
is the editor of the New Repuhlk<lb/>
which can occasionally be found in<lb/>
Tax Bill Could Hurt Universities<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) -<lb/>
The tax reform bill now before<lb/>
Congress will have an "almost<lb/>
vindictive" effect on colleges if it<lb/>
is passed, educators say.<lb/>
The bill?which many<lb/>
observers expect to pass both the<lb/>
House and Senate this mon-<lb/>
th?would cripple many campus<lb/>
fundraising efforts and require<lb/>
some students to pay taxes on<lb/>
money they get through financial<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
Others say it effectively would<lb/>
make diplomas about 15 percent<lb/>
more expensive than they are<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Observers fret tax reform will<lb/>
ignite a chain reaction of cost in-<lb/>
creases that cut donations to col-<lb/>
leges, drive up tuition, increase<lb/>
students' debt burden, take a big-<lb/>
ger tax bite out of students after<lb/>
they graduate, make private col-<lb/>
leges vastly more expensive than<lb/>
public colleges, and even drive<lb/>
some students out of college<lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
It "will seriously compromise<lb/>
the vitality of American colleges<lb/>
and universities states Bill<lb/>
Kroger of the American Council<lb/>
on Education (ACE). "It will im-<lb/>
pose serious financial hardships<lb/>
on both colleges and students<lb/>
Educators most fear two provi-<lb/>
sions of the bill:<lb/>
One provision affects how<lb/>
private colleges can raise money<lb/>
by selling tax exempt bonds.<lb/>
When colleges sell, say, a $500<lb/>
bond, plus interest, to the buyer<lb/>
quarterly. Since the interest<lb/>
payment?which is profit to the<lb/>
buyer?is tax exempt, the bond<lb/>
buyer gets a break on his taxes<lb/>
while the college gets to use the<lb/>
buyer's $500 for a while.<lb/>
But with tax reform, private<lb/>
colleges can't have more than<lb/>
$150 million in tax exempt bonds<lb/>
out at any one time.<lb/>
The other provision makes<lb/>
large private donations of stock,<lb/>
real estate or other appreciable<lb/>
property subject to a minimum<lb/>
tax.<lb/>
Since both measures would<lb/>
change the major tax breaks peo-<lb/>
ple get for donating to colleges,<lb/>
the colleges are worried people<lb/>
will stop giving.<lb/>
While the bond limits will af-<lb/>
fect only 20 to 25 top private<lb/>
schools, "those are the ones that<lb/>
do the lion's share of research<lb/>
Kroger explains.<lb/>
"It will keep them from raising<lb/>
money in that fashion. One top<lb/>
university already has nearly $200<lb/>
million in bonds outstanding,<lb/>
and they can't issue any more un-<lb/>
til they knock down that total<lb/>
The school, Boston University,<lb/>
needs at least another $50 million<lb/>
in bond money to complete some<lb/>
new buildings.<lb/>
"It seems almost vindictive on<lb/>
the part of those who wrote the<lb/>
bill says Stanford spokesman<lb/>
Larry Horton.<lb/>
The measure could force some<lb/>
schools to raise tuition to get the<lb/>
money they'd ordinarily get by<lb/>
selling bonds, he adds.<lb/>
At private colleges, "tuition<lb/>
rates and overhead usually are<lb/>
higher than at public schools<lb/>
Horton says. "This measure will<lb/>
force that gap to increase, mak-<lb/>
ing it increasingly difficult for<lb/>
private universities to be truly<lb/>
competitive with public univer-<lb/>
sities<lb/>
But the law also will hurt col-<lb/>
leges that don't care about tax ex-<lb/>
empt bonds.<lb/>
A reform provision to change<lb/>
the way donors figure out the tax<lb/>
they owe on the things they give<lb/>
to colleges could cost higher<lb/>
education as much as $1.2 billion<lb/>
annually in charitable receipts.<lb/>
"It will cut donations because<lb/>
it will be more difficult for people<lb/>
to donate property and other<lb/>
gifts Kroger says.<lb/>
"Most major gifts to colleges<lb/>
are appreciable assets like stock<lb/>
and real estate Stanford's Hor-<lb/>
ton explains. "It's very rare for<lb/>
someone to write a sizable check<lb/>
for a cash donation<lb/>
But the bill would limit tax-<lb/>
payer deductions for those stock<lb/>
and real estate gifts to the price<lb/>
the taxpayer originally paid for<lb/>
the gifts.<lb/>
For example, a donor buys a<lb/>
house in 1975 for $50,000. Since<lb/>
then, the house has appreciated<lb/>
in value to $75,000. Under cur-<lb/>
rant law, the donor could deduct<lb/>
$75,000 from his or her taxes.<lb/>
Under the tax reform bill, the<lb/>
donor could deduct only the<lb/>
$50,000 he or she originally paid<lb/>
for the house. He or she would<lb/>
have to pay taxes on the other<lb/>
$25,000.<lb/>
In general, schools that depend<lb/>
on donations to keep their en-<lb/>
dowment coffers growing will<lb/>
U.S. Correspondent Charged<lb/>
MOSCOW (UPI) ? U.S. News<lb/>
and World Report correspondent<lb/>
Nicholas Daniloff has been<lb/>
charged with three counts of es-<lb/>
pionage, his wife said today. But<lb/>
he still believes the case will be<lb/>
solved diplomatically before it<lb/>
comes to trial.<lb/>
Mrs. Daniloff visited her hus-<lb/>
band in his cell in MoscoW's<lb/>
Lefortovo prison Tuesday where<lb/>
he has been held since his arrest<lb/>
Aug. 30.<lb/>
After reviewing the notes she<lb/>
had taken during her visit, she<lb/>
told reporters today that her hus-<lb/>
band said the formal indictment<lb/>
mentioned three specific charges.<lb/>
She said one charge against her<lb/>
husband was that he "used his<lb/>
status as a foreign journalist to<lb/>
convey to the U.S. Central In-<lb/>
telligence Agency and Special<lb/>
Services of the U.S.A informa-<lb/>
tion harmful to the security of the<lb/>
Soviet Union between 1982 and<lb/>
1986<lb/>
She said the second court ac-<lb/>
cused Daniloff of working with<lb/>
the CIA. tp "enlist or recruit" a<lb/>
Soviet citizen to spy' against Ms<lb/>
country. The citizen was iden-<lb/>
tified only as "Ramon<lb/>
Mrs. Daniloff said her hus-<lb/>
band had indeed met "Ramon<lb/>
who was posing as a Russiani Or-<lb/>
thodox priest about two years<lb/>
ago, but broke off contact after<lb/>
he suspected Ramon was a KGB<lb/>
informant.<lb/>
"The third count is the cat-<lb/>
chall. It is so vague it is mean-<lb/>
ingless she said.<lb/>
"He believes all these legalities<lb/>
are irrelevant. He does not want<lb/>
legal help. This is a political case<lb/>
not a legal one she said.<lb/>
The Izvestia newspaper Mon-<lb/>
day said that a Soviet citizen,<lb/>
"Ramon had received a letter<lb/>
from U.S. Embassy Second<lb/>
Secretary Paul Stombaugh, who<lb/>
was expelled in June 1985 for<lb/>
spying, The letter mentioned con-<lb/>
tacts with a journalist who was<lb/>
not identified. Izvestia said the<lb/>
journalist haas Daniloff.<lb/>
"Nick still believes it will be<lb/>
resolved diplomatically Mrs.<lb/>
Daniloff said. "The Soviets<lb/>
basically are preparing this in-<lb/>
dictment against him in case all<lb/>
else fails<lb/>
Bell Tower Needs Funding<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Faculty Facilities<lb/>
Committee met last Thursday<lb/>
and approved the Senior Bell<lb/>
Tower.<lb/>
The proposal for the tower was<lb/>
made last year, by Kirk Shelley,<lb/>
the 1985-86 Senior Class presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The idea prompted a design<lb/>
contest for the project. Greg<lb/>
Jackson's design was chosen by<lb/>
the students through an East<lb/>
Carolinian poll.<lb/>
The project now has a design<lb/>
and moral support, but it needs<lb/>
financial support.<lb/>
According to Steve Cunanan,<lb/>
SGA president, the tower will<lb/>
cost approximately $110,000.<lb/>
When asked if the new monu-<lb/>
ment will cause a tuition hike,<lb/>
Cunanan said, "No. This is<lb/>
strictly a senior class project. The<lb/>
plan to raise money will involve<lb/>
different groups, like the 1986<lb/>
alumni and future alumni. As of<lb/>
yet, no specific groups have been<lb/>
selected, but I should have<lb/>
something more concrete, by the<lb/>
end of September<lb/>
He added, "I would like to<lb/>
give credit to Cindy Kittrell of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Center, and Kirk<lb/>
Shelley. They are responsible for<lb/>
the fund raising idea<lb/>
According to Cunanan, the<lb/>
money will not be easy to raise.<lb/>
He said, "Unless someone<lb/>
unexpectedly donates a sizeable<lb/>
amount of money, it will be at<lb/>
least another five years before the<lb/>
location is chosen, or any ground<lb/>
is broken<lb/>
Cunanan added, "The 1987<lb/>
Senior Class is eager to start this<lb/>
project. ECU has no monumen-<lb/>
tal focal point as a whole.<lb/>
Hopefully, the Bell Tower will<lb/>
provide something like this for<lb/>
niversity<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
111 West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
"Shue Repatr Ai The Iti Best"<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
suffer the most.<lb/>
"We're not in the tax exempt<lb/>
bond business says James<lb/>
Sankovitz, Marquette<lb/>
University's vice president of<lb/>
government affairs. "But we're<lb/>
capital fundraisers, and the bill<lb/>
will have a major adverse impact<lb/>
on large donations of appreciated<lb/>
property<lb/>
Sankovitz says the bill won't<lb/>
affect donors of smaller<lb/>
monetary gifts, "but for others it<lb/>
will destroy the economic incen-<lb/>
tive factor of giving when they<lb/>
lose the advantage of deductabili -<lb/>
ty for gifts<lb/>
Students with graduate grants<lb/>
to cover living costs will end ud<lb/>
THE WASH HOUSE<lb/>
Drink Some Suds<lb/>
While You<lb/>
Do Your Duds<lb/>
Visit our convenient location on uthSt.<lb/>
8 AM-12 Midnight<lb/>
AMFM Music<lb/>
2 Color TV's with Cable<lb/>
Game Room<lb/>
2 Liter Pepsi 75<lb/>
when using our facilities.<lb/>
paying taxes on any aid not ear-<lb/>
marked specifically for education<lb/>
needs. Some experts claim such<lb/>
taxation could raise the cost of a<lb/>
diploma as much as 15 percent.<lb/>
"Graduate students, as a rule,<lb/>
are frugal Sankovitz says.<lb/>
"Imposing this tax is too much to<lb/>
ask. And it will economically in-<lb/>
fluence a student's decision of<lb/>
where to go to school. Students<lb/>
won't want to go to higher tuition<lb/>
schools<lb/>
And after graduation, students<lb/>
would find the interest on their<lb/>
student loans is no longer tax-<lb/>
deductible. Currently, nearly half<lb/>
of all college students use some<lb/>
type of loan to finance their<lb/>
educations. Some graduate owing<lb/>
$10,000 or more in education<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
"These provisions will cut<lb/>
alumni gifts because the large<lb/>
debt burdens and the taxable in-<lb/>
terest will make alums feel if they<lb/>
manage to pay off the loans, that<lb/>
will be enough of a gift to their<lb/>
alma mater Sankovitz says.<lb/>
The ACE's Kroger asserts,<lb/>
"the only (way) to help schools<lb/>
make up lost income from bonds<lb/>
and donations will be higher tui-<lb/>
tion. And with tuition going up<lb/>
and federal aid going down,<lb/>
students who can't afford an<lb/>
education will be further squeez-<lb/>
ed out<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
LADIES NITE<lb/>
Every Sunday<lb/>
Guys $1.50<lb/>
9:00-2:00 AM<lb/>
All Ladies 50C<lb/>
10 Draft All Nite<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
RAFT NITE<lb/>
Thursday, Sept 11, 1986 9:00-2:00 AM<lb/>
Guys $1.50 Ladies $1.00<lb/>
10 Draft All Nite<lb/>
RUSH SIGMA TAU GAMMA<lb/>
Brotherhood of Value<lb/>
MON<lb/>
Sand Bar Party<lb/>
Virgin Drinks<lb/>
Hors d'Oeuvres<lb/>
Beach Music<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
Casino Night<lb/>
Valuable Prizes<lb/>
Virgin Drinks<lb/>
Hors d'Oeuvres<lb/>
WED<lb/>
Down Home<lb/>
Chicken Picken<lb/>
with all the<lb/>
fix'ens<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
Animal House<lb/>
Rock &amp; Roll<lb/>
STRIVING FOR EXCELLENCE<lb/>
Highest Fraternity GPA On Campus<lb/>
2nd Runner-Up Chancellor's Cup<lb/>
ENTER THE TRADITION ? PIKAPPAALPHA<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 15 17 7:00PM THE ATTIC<lb/>
r  -<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
?i i ? tJkM0m M .? m ? m ? i.i? pi ?m?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0006"/><lb/>
?THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 11. 1986<lb/>
Drug A buse Questioned By A dministrators I Dau8hter<lb/>
(CPS)  Duke students returned<lb/>
to campus last week to find their<lb/>
administrators may soon ask<lb/>
them to prove they don't abuse<lb/>
drugs.<lb/>
At the same time, a Texas<lb/>
school district announced it<lb/>
would test all students involved in<lb/>
extracurricular activities for the<lb/>
presence of illicit drugs in their<lb/>
systems.<lb/>
And the U.S. House of<lb/>
Representatives voted to em-<lb/>
power the U.S. Dept. of Educa-<lb/>
tion to withhold federal funds<lb/>
from colleges that don't have<lb/>
drug abuse prevention programs.<lb/>
The much-ballyhooed "war on<lb/>
drugs in short, seemed to be<lb/>
closing in on every collegian in<lb/>
the U.S. in recent weeks.<lb/>
Colleges have been adopting<lb/>
tough new sanctions to discipline<lb/>
students caught using illicit<lb/>
drugs, and looking into ways to<lb/>
catch the students in the first<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Freshmen at Mount St. Mary<lb/>
College in New York, for exam-<lb/>
ple, are being greeted by a drug<lb/>
education program at orienta-<lb/>
tion, while the presidents of Ohio<lb/>
Wesleyan, Newberry College and<lb/>
Westminister College (Mo.) sent<lb/>
letters to their students warning<lb/>
of tough new drug policies this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Athletes have been facing such<lb/>
sanctions for a while now.<lb/>
About 100 colleges now<lb/>
regularly screen their athletes for<lb/>
drug use, the American Council<lb/>
on Education (ACE) estimated<lb/>
last week, adding the practice is<lb/>
spreading.<lb/>
The National Collegiate<lb/>
Athletic Association (NCAA)<lb/>
will start giving athletes in NCAA<lb/>
championship events drug tests<lb/>
this school year.<lb/>
Close scrutiny of students now<lb/>
may spread beyond athletic<lb/>
departments into the general stu-<lb/>
dent body, too, thanks to a recent<lb/>
House Education and Labor<lb/>
Committee vote to send $350<lb/>
million to states to help fight stu-<lb/>
dent drug abuse and a White<lb/>
House announcement that it<lb/>
might favor spending $100<lb/>
million to eradicate abuse in the<lb/>
nation's schools.<lb/>
And if a different drug bill now<lb/>
in Congress passes, colleges will<lb/>
have to have some sort of drug<lb/>
abuse prevention program to re-<lb/>
main eligible to receive other<lb/>
kinds of federal student aid and<lb/>
college funding.<lb/>
While federal officials swear<lb/>
they won't start testing the entire<lb/>
American student body, Duke's<lb/>
flirtation with a cam pus wide<lb/>
drug program affecting all<lb/>
students started with the same<lb/>
kind of athletic department pro-<lb/>
gram scores of schools have<lb/>
adopted.<lb/>
Duke doesn't test its athletes,<lb/>
Butters explains, but requires<lb/>
those who fear they have a pro-<lb/>
blem to report it "to someone<lb/>
who will make sure that student is<lb/>
cared for<lb/>
"The coach will not know. The<lb/>
team will not know. The parents<lb/>
will not know. But, if the pro-<lb/>
blem is not self-reported, that<lb/>
athlete is gone with no second<lb/>
chance<lb/>
Such programs already have<lb/>
taken a radical turn through the<lb/>
general student population in the<lb/>
Hawkins Independent School<lb/>
District in Texas, where all<lb/>
students involved in extracur-<lb/>
ricular activities started taking<lb/>
mandatory drug tests last week.<lb/>
Student council members,<lb/>
cheerleaders and athletes are all<lb/>
being tested, says Superintedn-<lb/>
dent Coleman Stanfield.<lb/>
Stanfield adds testing will be<lb/>
"random, at regular intervals<lb/>
throughout the school year<lb/>
Few foresee testing college stu-<lb/>
dent government officers,<lb/>
however, and few officials out-<lb/>
side athletic departments support<lb/>
applying drug programs to<lb/>
nonathlete students.<lb/>
"I'm personally not comfor-<lb/>
table with it says Suzanne<lb/>
Wasiolek, Duke's dean for stu-<lb/>
dent life.<lb/>
"We're being asked to solve a<lb/>
problem that may have started in<lb/>
seventh grade Butters says.<lb/>
The publicity and pressure now<lb/>
building to mount anti-drug cam-<lb/>
paigns tend to create a false im-<lb/>
pression that schools "can solve<lb/>
the problem alone adds Robert<lb/>
Atwell, president of the<lb/>
American Council on Education<lb/>
(ACE).<lb/>
Besides, college officials are<lb/>
unsure such programs are<lb/>
workable.<lb/>
"It must be remembered that<lb/>
two-thirds of the more that seven<lb/>
million full-time students live off<lb/>
campus Atwell points out.<lb/>
Most students, moreover, are<lb/>
adults. "More than half of all<lb/>
college students are 22 years of<lb/>
age and older, and more than a<lb/>
third are 25 and older Atwell<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
But students, used to adult<lb/>
responsibilities in other parts of<lb/>
their lives, may not have the right<lb/>
to escape drug programs that<lb/>
presume them guilty or threaten<lb/>
to expell them, administrators<lb/>
say.<lb/>
"By attending Duke Wasiol-<lb/>
ed contends, "students agree a<lb/>
person's rights are defined by the<lb/>
rules and regulations of the<lb/>
university<lb/>
Workable or not, Wasiolek<lb/>
believes finding a university<lb/>
without a program of some sort<lb/>
may soon be "difficult though<lb/>
"I don't think most will move in<lb/>
the direction of mandatory<lb/>
testing" even with the threat of a<lb/>
cut-off of federal aid hanging<lb/>
over them.<lb/>
Federal Judge Faces Impeachment<lb/>
cheson?s<lb/>
FAMILY BUFFET<lb/>
500 mm<lb/>
GrMnv?? Btvd.<lb/>
 355-2172 I<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
d<lb/>
Lunch 11 BjniMfun<lb/>
Otnnar 4 pm pjn.<lb/>
(Opan Al Day Sunday<lb/>
11 ajiL-tpjn.)<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) A<lb/>
special impeachment committee<lb/>
is ready to hear arguments today<lb/>
on House motions alleging im-<lb/>
prisoned federal Judge Harry<lb/>
Claiborne should be kicked off<lb/>
the bench without another trial.<lb/>
House documents filed August<lb/>
20 and made public Tuesday<lb/>
alleged Clairborne has had his<lb/>
"day in court" and his tax eva-<lb/>
sion convictions are reason<lb/>
enough for the Senate to remove<lb/>
him from office.<lb/>
Claiborne is scheduled stand<lb/>
trial before the full Senate Sept.<lb/>
29, after the committee gathers<lb/>
evidence and hears testimony of<lb/>
witnesses next week. Only the<lb/>
Senate can remove a federal<lb/>
judge from office, and its pro-<lb/>
cedures are independent of the<lb/>
courts. Pretrial motions filed by-<lb/>
nine members named to act as<lb/>
prosecutors asked the Senate to<lb/>
treat Claiborne's tax convictions<lb/>
as established fact and to find<lb/>
him guilty of misbehavior and<lb/>
high crimes in office, thereby<lb/>
avoiding the trial.<lb/>
The House said that since a<lb/>
court jury found Claiborne guilty<lb/>
of a felony offense there is no<lb/>
need to present further evidence.<lb/>
If the Senate were to decide<lb/>
Claiborne was not guilty of such<lb/>
misconduct, it "would under-<lb/>
mine both the judicial and the im-<lb/>
peachment process the House<lb/>
motion said.<lb/>
"Recognition of the conviction<lb/>
by the Senate will not cause any<lb/>
injustice to Judge Claiborne. He<lb/>
has had a full day in court the<lb/>
document said.<lb/>
Claiborne is the first Federal<lb/>
Judge in 50 years to face an im-<lb/>
peachment trial, and the commit-<lb/>
tee is the first ever formed to hear<lb/>
impeachment evidence.<lb/>
Sen. Charles Mathias, R-Md<lb/>
the committee chairman, said he<lb/>
would rule on the motions after<lb/>
the panel hears arguments.<lb/>
"We are dealing with a new<lb/>
procedure Mathias said, "The<lb/>
committee of 12 will make a<lb/>
record (to be) available to the full<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
Mathias said it was "more effi-<lb/>
cient to do this by committee"<lb/>
than take up the Senate's time<lb/>
during the rush toward adjourn-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Claiborne, 69, chief judge of<lb/>
the U.S. District Court for<lb/>
Nevada, is serving a two year<lb/>
sentence at Maxwell Air Force<lb/>
Base for failing to report nearly<lb/>
$107,000 on his 1979 and, 1980<lb/>
tax returns.<lb/>
He refused to suit the bench or<lb/>
give up his annual $78,700<lb/>
judicial salary, leading the House<lb/>
to impeach him - a procedure<lb/>
similar to indictment - on four ar-<lb/>
ticles passed in July charging tax<lb/>
convictions, misbehavior, high<lb/>
crimes, and bringing disrepute<lb/>
upon the judiciary.<lb/>
Help Yourself Home Cooking<lb/>
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ALL YOU CARE TO EAT<lb/>
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One Low Price Does It All!<lb/>
Entrees ? Dessert ? Salad Bar . Vegetables ? Drinks<lb/>
Lunch 11 a.m3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Dinner 4 p.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Great Food Within Your College Budget!<lb/>
FARM<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
SUPERMARKETS AND<lb/>
SUPER SAVING CENTERS<lb/>
ECU Floral Corsages<lb/>
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LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An<lb/>
eleven year old girl turned in her<lb/>
parents for growing marijuana in<lb/>
their backyard, saying a police<lb/>
anti-drug program and a similar<lb/>
action by a teenager last nv<lb/>
inspired her to go to authorr<lb/>
The girl was taken into pr<lb/>
ttve custody at her school T -<lb/>
day, and police confiscated a 3<lb/>
1 2-foot marijuana plant bu;<lb/>
not arrest the parents pen<lb/>
'urther investigation off:<lb/>
?aid.<lb/>
The incident was the second<lb/>
-ummer in which a young .<lb/>
went to the authority i<lb/>
accusations against her pare<lb/>
In the earlier incident a 13-<lb/>
old Orange County girl turner<lb/>
her parents for allege<lb/>
Con Artis<lb/>
Taking Mo<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPIi - ??<lb/>
??" "<lb/>
times, fathered J<lb/>
left a trail of brol<lb/>
well as empt.<lb/>
the target I<lb/>
Louis Car! . 42 eet-<lb/>
talked his way into th<lb/>
women from Long Island<lb/>
George and<lb/>
throughout the count<lb/>
John Kelly, commander I<lb/>
Special Frauds I ?<lb/>
'Hegoe? after then gsac-<lb/>
counts, credit card<lb/>
anything else is i<lb/>
benefitKelly sa:j V<lb/>
Don Juan me $50,00<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Police believe Carlua<lb/>
has operated under a nurr-v I<lb/>
aliases, is back in<lb/>
AMERICA'S<lb/>
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Tuesday at 7:3<lb/>
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For information, a<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057846_0007"/><lb/>
?EEASTJCAROUN1ANSEPI 7<lb/>
istrators<lb/>
- ghts are defined by the<lb/>
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Daughter Turns Parents In<lb/>
I-OS ANGELES (UP1) - An<lb/>
eleven year old girl turned in her<lb/>
parents for growing marijuana in<lb/>
their backyard, saying a police<lb/>
anti-drug program and a similar<lb/>
action by a teenager last month<lb/>
inspired her to go to authorities.<lb/>
The girl was taken into protec-<lb/>
tive custody at her school Tues-<lb/>
day, and police confiscated a 3<lb/>
1 2-foot marijuana plant but did<lb/>
not arrest the parents pending<lb/>
further investigation officers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The incident was the second<lb/>
this summer in which a young girl<lb/>
went to the authorities with drug<lb/>
accusations against her parents.<lb/>
In the earlier incident a 13-year<lb/>
old Orange County girl turned in<lb/>
her parents for alleged cocaine<lb/>
use after attending an anti-drug<lb/>
lecture at a church. She is being<lb/>
allowed to remain at home pen-<lb/>
ding the outcome of drug posses-<lb/>
sion charges against her parents.<lb/>
The unidentified Los Angeles<lb/>
girl said she discovered that the<lb/>
plant growing in her yard was<lb/>
marijuana after officers from the<lb/>
police department's DARE (Drug<lb/>
Abuse Resistance Education)<lb/>
Program talked to her grammar<lb/>
school class about the dangers of<lb/>
drug use, Sgt. Nate Atkins said.<lb/>
She told her principal she did<lb/>
not want to live in a house where<lb/>
marijuana has being grown and<lb/>
called. The girl will remain in<lb/>
protective custody pending a<lb/>
hearing by the County Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Social Services,<lb/>
Atkins said.<lb/>
Officers said the girl indicated<lb/>
she was inspired by news reports<lb/>
of the case of Deanna Young, 18,<lb/>
who reported her mother and<lb/>
father to police in Tustin, Calif<lb/>
last month.<lb/>
Bobby and Judith Young were<lb/>
arrested after their daughter car-<lb/>
ried a trash bag containing about<lb/>
$2,800 in cocaine into police<lb/>
headquarters.<lb/>
The story caught the national<lb/>
interest, including that of the first<lb/>
lady Nancy Reagan.<lb/>
The Youngs were cleared Mon-<lb/>
day of charges they were unfit<lb/>
parents, but they still face court<lb/>
proceedings for drug violations.<lb/>
Con Artist Wanted For<lb/>
Taking Money From Wives<lb/>
NEW YORK (I PI) - A burl<lb/>
con artisl who married nine<lb/>
time lathered 35 children and<lb/>
left a trail of broken hearts - as<lb/>
well as empty pocketbooks - is<lb/>
the target of a police manhunt.<lb/>
1 ouis Carlucci, 42, has sweet-<lb/>
talked his wa into the lives of 15<lb/>
women from 1 ong Island to I ake<lb/>
George and possibly many more<lb/>
throughout the country, said 1 ;<lb/>
John Kelly, commander of the<lb/>
Special Frauds I nit.<lb/>
"He goes after their sav mgs ac-<lb/>
counts, credit cards, and<lb/>
anything eUe is a fringe<lb/>
benefitKelly said Monday. The<lb/>
Don Juan ol some $50,000 he<lb/>
said<lb/>
Police beliee Carlucci, who<lb/>
has operated under a number of<lb/>
aliases, is back in town, after<lb/>
"going under" in 1984.<lb/>
Carlucci, 5 feet 11 inches tall<lb/>
and weighing 240 pounds, has<lb/>
fathered 35 children and married<lb/>
at least nine times, police said.<lb/>
"Carlucci, is a very, very<lb/>
smooth talker, capitalizing on<lb/>
other people's weaknesses Kel-<lb/>
ly said. "A lonely woman look-<lb/>
ing for companionship was ripe<lb/>
for this guy<lb/>
Passing himself off as an en-<lb/>
treprenuer, Carlucci met women<lb/>
through dating services, often<lb/>
marrying them and then per-<lb/>
suading them to fork over their<lb/>
life savings to help him in a<lb/>
business venture.<lb/>
He conned a 42- year- old<lb/>
Queen's woman into paying for<lb/>
their honeymoon in 1981, ex-<lb/>
plaining that his own funds were<lb/>
"tied up<lb/>
The honeymoon was really<lb/>
over when the couple returned<lb/>
and moved to a Bronx apart-<lb/>
ment, where Carlucci allegedly<lb/>
kept the woman a prisoner for<lb/>
four weeks. After he cleaned<lb/>
$20,000 from her bank account,<lb/>
he disappeared. Even then, the<lb/>
woman hesitated before contac-<lb/>
ting police.<lb/>
L,The woman's reactions rang-<lb/>
ed from embarrassment to<lb/>
despair, to a sense of having been<lb/>
taken, to absolute anger Kelly<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The lieutenant said his Special<lb/>
Frauds Unit now has six com-<lb/>
plaints reporting losses of more<lb/>
than $50,000. He would not iden-<lb/>
tify anv of the women.<lb/>
AMERICA'S<lb/>
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Biology Building, Room 103<lb/>
9:00 p.m. Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesday-5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Newman Center<lb/>
(followed by a fellowship dinner)<lb/>
? SHARE THE WORD BIBLE STUDY<lb/>
Tuesdav at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at the Newman Center<lb/>
S All are welcome<lb/>
 For information, call 752-4216<lb/>
PlIMHmNllfHfHllllllltMIHHItNntimiHItlllUlMMINIIIIIIHtlllllHUmillHIIIIIIItlllUllllllllllllllllllltllllllllii I<lb/>
Black Sororities<lb/>
Host<lb/>
?<lb/>
5<lb/>
i<lb/>
5<lb/>
I<lb/>
A Fall Rush<lb/>
Black Sorority Informal Fall Rush<lb/>
September 14, Registration $1.00 and Reception<lb/>
7:00 Mendenhall Multi-purpose Room<lb/>
September 15, Rush Party, Alpha Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 16, Rush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 17, Rush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 18, Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 19, Social, TBA<lb/>
September 22, Rush Party, Alpah Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 23, Rush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 24, Rush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7.00<lb/>
September 25, Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
k<lb/>
"I<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CARQ1INIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11, 1986<lb/>
Disaster<lb/>
ANAHEIM, CALIF. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Nearly one million people may<lb/>
develop cancer and more than<lb/>
half of them may die as a result<lb/>
of radiation released from the<lb/>
Chernobyl nuclear disaster, a<lb/>
scientist said.<lb/>
Speaking at the 192nd annual<lb/>
meeting of the American<lb/>
Chemical Society, Dr. John Gof-<lb/>
man of the University of Califor-<lb/>
nia at Berkeley said Tuesday that<lb/>
500,000 people will develop fatal<lb/>
malignances and an additional<lb/>
470,000 will develop cancers that<lb/>
can be effectively treated.<lb/>
Gofman said he is not op-<lb/>
timistic about the future of peo-<lb/>
ple affected by Chernobyl's<lb/>
fallout, saying the lowest possible<lb/>
number of cancer cases caused by<lb/>
Chernobyl would be 600,000.<lb/>
"The number of 600,000 is<lb/>
staggering Gofman said. "But<lb/>
it is actually a lower limit on the<lb/>
consequences because I have ex-<lb/>
cluded the doses from (many of<lb/>
the radioactive elements).<lb/>
"It's futile to hope for a safe<lb/>
dose of radiation that will not in-<lb/>
duce cancer in humans he said.<lb/>
Gofman's estimates of the<lb/>
amount of radiation released<lb/>
when the Soviet reactor caught<lb/>
fire and exploded April 26 show<lb/>
the number of cancer and<lb/>
leukemia cases will exceed the<lb/>
number estimated by Dr. Robert<lb/>
Gale, a UCLA bone marrow<lb/>
specialist who treated Chernobyl<lb/>
victims within days of the<lb/>
disaster.<lb/>
Gale estimated that no more<lb/>
than 200,000 cases of cancer will<lb/>
develop in people affected by<lb/>
fallout from the accident. He said<lb/>
it would take 20 years for many<lb/>
cases to appear.<lb/>
Of Cancer<lb/>
??i<lb/>
'I would like to say that I<lb/>
respect Dr. Gale highly as a bone<lb/>
marrow transplant surgeon and I<lb/>
am aware of no qualifications he<lb/>
has to speak to the issue of radia-<lb/>
tion induction in cancer Gof-<lb/>
man said.<lb/>
He said he disagreed with data<lb/>
Gale used to calculate how much<lb/>
radiation it would take to cause a<lb/>
person to develop cancer.<lb/>
Gofman said his estimate of<lb/>
600,000 cancer cases as a direct<lb/>
result of Chernobyl is at the<lb/>
lower end of a scale of<lb/>
possibilities because that number<lb/>
omits cases of thyroid cancer,<lb/>
which "are less life-threatening<lb/>
than other types of cancer<lb/>
Gale, who recently returned<lb/>
from the Soviet Union, where he<lb/>
conferred with doctors about<lb/>
developing a major<lb/>
epidemiological study of Cher-<lb/>
Gofman said because radiation<lb/>
from the reactor was carried by<lb/>
the wind across Europe and<lb/>
throughout the world, cancer<lb/>
may occur as a direct result of<lb/>
Chernobyl in at least 20 coun-<lb/>
tries, including the United States,<lb/>
where a radioactive cloud passed<lb/>
over the Pacific Northwest.<lb/>
The Soviet Union has predicted<lb/>
26,500 deaths from the Cher-<lb/>
nobyl accident in the next 70<lb/>
years, according to Western ex-<lb/>
perts.<lb/>
The latest death toll from the<lb/>
accident stood at 31.<lb/>
nobyl victims, said Gofman's<lb/>
figures probably illustrate the<lb/>
worst that could happen.<lb/>
"We used the data from<lb/>
Hiroshima and Nagasaki to<lb/>
calculate the likelihood of any<lb/>
dose of radiation causing<lb/>
cancer Gale said.<lb/>
R<lb/>
U<lb/>
S<lb/>
H<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
sept<lb/>
700-1100<lb/>
Israeli Warplanes Drop Bombs<lb/>
SIDON, Lebenon (UPI) ?<lb/>
Israeli warplanes and gunedats<lb/>
attacked suspected Palestinian<lb/>
targets near the southern cities of<lb/>
Gidon and Tyre, dropping<lb/>
dozens of bombs and bombar-<lb/>
ding a refugee camp, Lebanese<lb/>
reports today.<lb/>
Hospital souces in Sidon, 24<lb/>
miles south of Beirut, said three<lb/>
people, including two Palestinian<lb/>
guerrillas, were killed and 19 peo-<lb/>
ple, including guerrillas and<lb/>
civilians, were wounded in the<lb/>
raid early today. The attack also<lb/>
destroyed and set ablaze several<lb/>
buildings and depots.<lb/>
There were no immediate<lb/>
reports of casualties in the Tyre<lb/>
area, 46 miles south of the<lb/>
capital, where Lebanese sources<lb/>
said a refugee camp came under<lb/>
fire at dusk Tuesday.<lb/>
Israel confirmed the Sidon at-<lb/>
tack but not the attack in the<lb/>
Tyre area.<lb/>
The planes struck a mile north<lb/>
of the southern Lebanese port of<lb/>
Sidon at dawn, making two bom-<lb/>
bing runs on what the Israeli<lb/>
military termed 'a terrorist<lb/>
base" of the pro-Syrian Popular<lb/>
Struggle Front<lb/>
Palestinian and Moslem militia<lb/>
gunners, using jeep mounted<lb/>
guns and heavy anti-aircraft bat-<lb/>
teries, opened fire on the<lb/>
warplanes and the gunboats,<lb/>
witnesses said.<lb/>
"The target was used as a<lb/>
departure base for the PSF and<lb/>
an arms and ammunition<lb/>
dump said a spokesman for the<lb/>
Israeli Defense Forces in Tel<lb/>
Aviv, "All planes returned safely<lb/>
to base and reported accurate<lb/>
hits<lb/>
A witness said the jets "drop-<lb/>
ped dozens of bombs" on the<lb/>
base, which was used by the PSF<lb/>
and other Palestinian groups and<lb/>
was in the industrial area of<lb/>
Sidon.<lb/>
The air strike came just four<lb/>
days after two Arabs tossed hand<lb/>
grenades and opened fire on wor-<lb/>
shippers at a synagogue in the<lb/>
Turkish city of Istanbul, killing<lb/>
21 Jews and themselves.<lb/>
Israeli leaders have vowed to<lb/>
avenge that attack, but the IDF<lb/>
said today's raid was "in direct<lb/>
retaliation" for a foiled PSF at-<lb/>
tempt to send guerrillas from the<lb/>
same base into Israel by sea dur-<lb/>
ing the night.<lb/>
The military said four guer-<lb/>
rillas left the Sidon base in a rub-<lb/>
ber dinghy and headed<lb/>
southward under cover of<lb/>
darkness but were caught be an<lb/>
Israeli patrol boat on a routine<lb/>
sweep south of Sidon.<lb/>
The patrol boat fired on the<lb/>
dinghy and hit it, forcing the<lb/>
guerrillas on the shore. The IDF<lb/>
said at least one of them was<lb/>
wounded but declined to give<lb/>
details on the fate of the other<lb/>
three.<lb/>
XHJL-FtAin<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
THE<lb/>
DECC<lb/>
500 ELIZABETH ST 757 1897<lb/>
3<lb/>
&amp;b<lb/>
If you didn't get your copies at<lb/>
KINKO'S<lb/>
you paid too much<lb/>
enel Ion<lb/>
Benetton<lb/>
638B Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
355-7473<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
10-6 M-T-W<lb/>
10-9 Th-F<lb/>
10-6 Sat<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
7:00am -10:00pm<lb/>
321E 10th St Saturday<lb/>
752-0875 9:00am - 6:00pm<lb/>
GO PIRATES<lb/>
After you've tackled West Virginia, come<lb/>
tackle a juicy hamburger at Wendy's. Drop<lb/>
back for Crispy Chicken Nuggets. Go long for<lb/>
a Garden Fresh Salad. Or go for two with a<lb/>
Chili and a Frosty.<lb/>
Come see us before or after the game at any<lb/>
of our convenient locations.<lb/>
Come score with winners, Wendy's and<lb/>
Pirates!<lb/>
f<lb/>
502 E. Tenth St<lb/>
103 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
624 S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Open 'til Midnight<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
11 p.m. Sunday-Thurs.<lb/>
rm f ast auoi<lb/>
Cartoon.<lb/>
Lives O<lb/>
B MIC AH HARRIS<lb/>
On August 26,<lb/>
American comediai l<lb/>
entertained world-side i 1<lb/>
for nearly lift) years passe <lb/>
in general obscurity. Few<lb/>
whom he made laugh r <lb/>
his name and ev A<lb/>
recognize his fa<lb/>
He was Fred A<lb/>
preferred the nicl <lb/>
and had a har<lb/>
Mich celehritie- as , .<lb/>
Daffj Ducky, and I<lb/>
well as playing ra<lb/>
Oscar-winning i<lb/>
n.<lb/>
Over the decade . 1- . a<lb/>
brand of cartooi <lb/>
a. distinguish:<lb/>
Several recurring I<lb/>
account for 'his. For exampk <lb/>
had a fondness I<lb/>
fions of figure ol spei<lb/>
In "The Shooting i<lb/>
McGoo" the villain<lb/>
as looking "like a man wii<lb/>
foot in the grave Sure em <lb/>
he is limping i<lb/>
wuck in ad I<lb/>
with tombstone and hi v.<lb/>
A v-rtual org ol<lb/>
puns as "Symphony in Sia<lb/>
wherein the entire sto-<lb/>
HPERS<lb/>
B JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
W hile mos:<lb/>
to stay cool, sonit a<lb/>
enthusiasts are getting theii ? i<lb/>
coasted. They "re con:<lb/>
siiiprcwcdejiiiLcl gjui .<lb/>
not one but mo ski trips arc be-<lb/>
ing offered bv ECU this ear<lb/>
The Department of He.<lb/>
Physical Education, keeu<lb/>
and Safetv (HPERS) ha<lb/>
sponsoring a class m snow skiing<lb/>
for 18 vears now. Stude<lb/>
want to satistv their P.E. ? .<lb/>
ment without running t <lb/>
lap or waiting in line . a<lb/>
bow and arrow can choose<lb/>
stead to travel to Steamtx<lb/>
ings, Colorado<lb/>
action on the ski slopes<lb/>
course it costs a little more -<lb/>
trip to Colorado, r ed<lb/>
spring break. March 9<lb/>
16, runs $500 ? but m<lb/>
students who have taker, the rj<lb/>
think it's worth it, according I<lb/>
coordinator Karen Israel.<lb/>
"The difference between <lb/>
trip and the one ottered bj the<lb/>
Student Union is that out trip<lb/>
tied in with a course said Israel<lb/>
o<lb/>
?l<lb/>
fp<lb/>
Brice Street can be<lb/>
Greenville audiences<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
many other I<lb/>
r<lb/>
mmmnn<lb/>
mmmntim,? jBHmMtig,<lb/>
it ? ? n n ii mi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0009"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
H<lb/>
BDA CHI<lb/>
LPHA<lb/>
700-1 100<lb/>
L-HAin<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
( c<lb/>
S)<lb/>
Br I'M ST 757 1897<lb/>
t get your copies at<lb/>
NKO'S<lb/>
u paid too much<lb/>
321 E 10th St<lb/>
752-0375<lb/>
" riday-Friday<lb/>
7:00am- 10:00pm<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
9.00am - 6:00pm<lb/>
TM<lb/>
I<lb/>
ien 'til Midnight<lb/>
lay and Saturday<lb/>
L Sunday-Thurs.<lb/>
THFEASTCAROIINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
SEPTEMBER II. 1986 Page 9<lb/>
Cartoonist Had Hand In The<lb/>
Lives Of Famed Characters<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
On August 26, 1980, an<lb/>
American comedian who had<lb/>
entertained world-side audiences<lb/>
for nearly fifty years passed away<lb/>
in general obscurity. Few of those<lb/>
w horn he made laugh even knew<lb/>
his name and even less would<lb/>
recognize his face.<lb/>
He was Fred Avery, but he<lb/>
preferred the nickname "Tex"<lb/>
and had a hand in the careers of<lb/>
such celebrities as Porky Pig,<lb/>
Daffv Duck, and Droopy, as<lb/>
well as playing mid-wife to that<lb/>
Oscar-winning rabbit. Bugs Bun<lb/>
nv.<lb/>
0er the decades, Tex Averv's<lb/>
brand of cartoons has remained<lb/>
as distinguishable as a signature.<lb/>
Several recurring types of gags<lb/>
account for this. For example, he<lb/>
had a fondness for literal depic-<lb/>
tions o figures of speech.<lb/>
In "The Shooting of Dan<lb/>
McGoo" the villain is described<lb/>
as looking "like a man with one<lb/>
foot in the grave Sure enough,<lb/>
he is limping along with one foot<lb/>
s uck in a clod o' earth complete<lb/>
with tombstone and lily.<lb/>
A virtual orgy of such visual<lb/>
puns was "Symphony in Slang"<lb/>
wherein the entire storv is a series<lb/>
of literal translations oi such<lb/>
phrases as "down in the dumps<lb/>
"raining cats and dogs "fed<lb/>
her a line etc etc.<lb/>
The producers of Airplane and<lb/>
Airplane II scored success by<lb/>
employing this seemingly original<lb/>
approach. But in fact, Avery had<lb/>
been doing such stuff decades<lb/>
earlier<lb/>
Another Aery trademark was<lb/>
his cartoon cast's full awareness<lb/>
that they were animated drawings<lb/>
and in an animated movie. So, it<lb/>
was not unusual for two<lb/>
characters in pursuit of another<lb/>
to suddenly find themselves and<lb/>
their surroundings in black and<lb/>
white. Retracing their steps, they<lb/>
find a sign reading "Technicolor<lb/>
Ends Here<lb/>
In the "Screwy Truant the<lb/>
cartoon is disrupted by a wolf<lb/>
pursuing Red Riding Hood.<lb/>
Screwball Squirrel, the cartoon's<lb/>
star, called the wolf aside and<lb/>
proved to him he's in the wrong<lb/>
cartoon by pulling down, shade-<lb/>
like from thin air, the opening<lb/>
credits depicting Screwy's face,<lb/>
logo, and the legend, "Directed<lb/>
bv Tex A . er<lb/>
But perhaps Avery's most<lb/>
stunning gag of this type is in the<lb/>
"Magical Maestro We've all<lb/>
laughed at a twitching hair<lb/>
shadow which gets projected on<lb/>
the screen along with the film.<lb/>
Avery intentionaly had a hair<lb/>
animated into the film with<lb/>
typical spasmodic movement <lb/>
until one ofthe characters grabs it<lb/>
and throws it out of the scene!<lb/>
The animated hair was so realistic<lb/>
that projectionists were trying to<lb/>
blow it out of the projector gate.<lb/>
Avery, like many successful ar-<lb/>
tists, created to please himself.<lb/>
Subsequently, his cartoons were<lb/>
adult oriented. His sexy, show-<lb/>
girl character, Red, was the<lb/>
epitomy of licentiousness.<lb/>
She appeared under aliases of<lb/>
Red Hot Riding Hood, Little Eva<lb/>
and the lady known as Lou in<lb/>
various cartoons, always<lb/>
stimulating Avery's an-<lb/>
thropomorphic wolves to new<lb/>
heights of self-inflicted abuse:<lb/>
eating their fingers, detaching<lb/>
their heads and banging them on<lb/>
the table, or burning their snouts<lb/>
off with a cigarette.<lb/>
Red was capable of sending<lb/>
even lethargic Droopy into<lb/>
ecstatic fits. Her debut in "Red<lb/>
Hot Riding Hood" was so<lb/>
popular with the World War II<lb/>
military audiences that her se-<lb/>
cond appearance in "The<lb/>
Shooting of Dan McGoo" was<lb/>
See ARTIST'S, Page 11<lb/>
HPERS Offers Ski Vacation<lb/>
B JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
Vilr Idilut<lb/>
While most of us are struggling<lb/>
to stay cool, some snow skiing<lb/>
enthusiasts are getting their skis<lb/>
czossed. They're confused by an<lb/>
uiipto?ede,iit?d glut oj choice ?<lb/>
not one but two ski trips arc be-<lb/>
ing offered by ECU this year.<lb/>
The Department of Health,<lb/>
Physical Education, Recreation<lb/>
and Safety (HPERS) has been<lb/>
sponsoring a class in snow skiing<lb/>
for 18 years now. Students who<lb/>
want to satisfy their P E. require-<lb/>
ment without running endless<lb/>
laps or waiting in line to use a<lb/>
bow and arrow can choose in-<lb/>
stead to travel to Steamboat Spr-<lb/>
ings, Colorado, for eight days of<lb/>
action on the ski slopes. Of<lb/>
course it costs a little more ? the<lb/>
trip to Colorado, planned for<lb/>
spring break, March 9 through<lb/>
16, runs $500 ? but most<lb/>
students who have taken the trips<lb/>
think it's worth it, according to<lb/>
coordinator Karen Israel.<lb/>
"The difference between this<lb/>
trip and the one offered by the<lb/>
Student Union is that our trip is<lb/>
tied in with a course said Israel.<lb/>
Students can take beginning, in-<lb/>
termediate or advanced snow ski<lb/>
ing ? PHVE 1150, 1151 or 1152<lb/>
? and receive credit tot it.<lb/>
The class meets on campus<lb/>
about ten times, and covers the<lb/>
history, fundamentals, clothing<lb/>
and equipment necessary for<lb/>
snow skiing. Preparation for the<lb/>
trip also includes physical condi-<lb/>
tioning with specialized exercises.<lb/>
The course is finished when the<lb/>
trip is over, immediately after<lb/>
spring break.<lb/>
"1 think this is the first time<lb/>
ever for a ski trip out West said<lb/>
Israel. Usually the class stays<lb/>
closer to home; for instance, this<lb/>
semester a trip is being offered to<lb/>
Snowshoe in West Virginia. This<lb/>
trip traditionally takes place over<lb/>
Christmas break, and there are<lb/>
still a few spaces left although it's<lb/>
too late to add the class for<lb/>
credit. Interested faculty, staff<lb/>
members and students can con-<lb/>
tact Israel at home at 355-6215.<lb/>
Those who want to forego the<lb/>
structure of a class-related trip<lb/>
can wing it to Keystone with the<lb/>
Student Union Travel Commit-<lb/>
tee's Colorado Ski Trip, also<lb/>
planned for spring break, March<lb/>
7 through 12 Featured locations<lb/>
on this trip are Keystone Moun-<lb/>
tain, North Peak and Arapahoe<lb/>
Basin.<lb/>
The Colorado Ski Trip has<lb/>
room for 40 skiers, eight to a con-<lb/>
dominium. A fee of $550 in-<lb/>
cludesround trip airfare on Pied-<lb/>
mont, from Kinston to Denver<lb/>
and back; transfer transportation<lb/>
while in Colorado; full ac-<lb/>
comodations and four days'<lb/>
worth of lift tickets.<lb/>
According to Liz D upree, Stu-<lb/>
dent Union President, tickets are<lb/>
already selling. "Go ahead and<lb/>
start signing up said Deupree,<lb/>
"even though the deadline for the<lb/>
full balance is not until January<lb/>
30 Students can get more infor-<lb/>
mation by contacting the office<lb/>
of the Student Union in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Surely any confusion resulting<lb/>
from the multiple ski trip offer-<lb/>
ings has been cleared up by now.<lb/>
All that remains is to choose your<lb/>
ride and hope for heavy snow.<lb/>
Brice Street<lb/>
Brice Street can be seen Saturday ??!? ? The Attic. They have played their distinct brand of rock for<lb/>
Greenville audiences oa many other occasions.<lb/>
Jagged Edge<lb/>
Hank Williams Jr. Expounds On His Life<lb/>
And Reflects On His Long Career<lb/>
NASHVILI E, Tenn. (UPI) -<lb/>
Hank Williams Jr s hallmark is<lb/>
to live out the sonc- he sings<lb/>
These days, both Hank Jr. and<lb/>
his songs are laid back, and his<lb/>
legion of fans, particularly young<lb/>
ones, love it.<lb/>
In a capsule, Hank Williams<lb/>
Jr. is at the top of his profession<lb/>
and a case could be made that he<lb/>
is currenth one o the top two or<lb/>
three acts in country music.<lb/>
In fact, he has had one more<lb/>
No 1 chan singles than his legen-<lb/>
dary father, who registeied seven<lb/>
in his short career, and has 11<lb/>
albums certified gold after selling<lb/>
500,000 or more copies. Between<lb/>
Oct 23. 1982 and Oct. 30, 1982<lb/>
Hank Williams Jr. had nine<lb/>
albums on The Billboard charts ?<lb/>
a feat unmatched by any other<lb/>
living artist.<lb/>
He hardly ever gives inter-<lb/>
views. "I just go click when<lb/>
somebody asks 'How's your dad-<lb/>
dy getting along he explains.<lb/>
Hank Williams died Jan. 1, 1953<lb/>
Hank Jr. has homes in Mon<lb/>
tana and Paris, Tenn the latter<lb/>
being where his entire business<lb/>
operation is located.<lb/>
It is not by accident that Paris<lb/>
is near Kentucky Lake, a paradise<lb/>
for fishermen and hunters. And<lb/>
that may be the secret for Hank<lb/>
Jrs success. When he does<lb/>
music, it's flat out music. When<lb/>
he's hunting or fishing it's fiat<lb/>
out hunting and fishing.<lb/>
Williams was asked about his<lb/>
success in drawing young people<lb/>
to his concerts and in buying his<lb/>
records.<lb/>
He explained it thi ?. iy<lb/>
"I think all you ha e to do is<lb/>
listen to the music. How many<lb/>
hillbillies record with Huev<lb/>
Lewis, Tom Petty, Dickie Belts<lb/>
and John lee Hooker? It's as<lb/>
simple as that. That's the nottom<lb/>
line. When the (young people)<lb/>
listen to mv albums thev don't get<lb/>
a bunch of songs about I'm<lb/>
drunk again and mv dain's<lb/>
gone<lb/>
"In fact thev doi- ce" a single<lb/>
one like that. I made a conscious<lb/>
decision not to do those songs a<lb/>
long time ago when 1 kiot serious<lb/>
about mv music I'm going to try<lb/>
to make happv songs ,?r some<lb/>
political songs, like 'A Country<lb/>
Boy Can Survive ? something<lb/>
people can get excited about<lb/>
Williams' love of the outdoors<lb/>
is obvious. A case in point is his<lb/>
latest single, "Country State of<lb/>
Mind It appears headed to be<lb/>
his ninth No. 1 single.<lb/>
It's about being hot in the sum-<lb/>
mer sun, gnawing a hickory twig,<lb/>
fishing on a creek bank, sipping<lb/>
that homemade wine and if the<lb/>
sun doesn't come up tomorrow,<lb/>
"people, 1 have had a good<lb/>
time<lb/>
The song itself is a story.<lb/>
Williams redid an unsolicited<lb/>
tape he received in the mail ? a<lb/>
very rare event in the music<lb/>
business. He gave the amateur<lb/>
writer credit on the song<lb/>
Williams said he recently came<lb/>
into contact with a couple of<lb/>
"older" ladies who told him thev<lb/>
like such things a- '?Am<lb/>
Misbehavm a No. 1 song for<lb/>
him earlier this vear<lb/>
"That's all well and good but<lb/>
neither one of them have pre<lb/>
bably bought a record in 20 or 30<lb/>
vears. It's a good thing I make ail<lb/>
them other kinds of records for<lb/>
those young kids William<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In most of his more recent<lb/>
albums, the 3" vear-oid singe'<lb/>
musician has included songs iike<lb/>
"Ain't Misbehavm "Harvest<lb/>
Moon" and other standards<lb/>
"When my kids hear that the<lb/>
say, 'That's a nice one. He wrott<lb/>
that one Todav's generation has<lb/>
never heard Harvest Moon St<lb/>
Louis Blues' and aii those othei<lb/>
great sTmgs:TDuirrTe WafFm<lb/>
the fast-paced '80s world here<lb/>
and I like to do those song<lb/>
they've never heard. There's go<lb/>
ing to be a lot more of them<lb/>
"But they want to hear them<lb/>
from the right kind of person<lb/>
Thev want to be cool. The; are<lb/>
not going to go hear them from<lb/>
Johnny Mathis. that's for sure<lb/>
These are great things and<lb/>
thev've never heard them<lb/>
Reflecting a bit on his career,<lb/>
Williams said he started earlv and<lb/>
saw everyone else make mistakes<lb/>
"And then 1 nearly more or less<lb/>
killed myself in a mountain fall if<lb/>
Montana. You've got to take<lb/>
control. That's the bottom line "<lb/>
Williams was catapulted 500 feet<lb/>
down the mountain The mishap<lb/>
required a long period of physical<lb/>
rehabilitation.<lb/>
From The Not So flight<lb/>
On Getting Lost At State<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
tatmmumrmt txlitor<lb/>
It was a lost weekend. We lost<lb/>
the game. I lost control. And<lb/>
everybody else was just lost.<lb/>
Life, no matter how cruel,<lb/>
trudges on.<lb/>
In retrospect, I still had an<lb/>
amazingly good time. Last<lb/>
weekend in Raleigh was high on<lb/>
the list of contenders for<lb/>
"weekends I won't forget<lb/>
Not surprisingly, it's also a<lb/>
weekend I can't remember.<lb/>
It ail started on Saturday<lb/>
morning when some friends<lb/>
decided to play Rambo and take<lb/>
out my bedroom door with an<lb/>
Uzi ? well, it wasn't really an<lb/>
Uzi, but at 10 on a Saturday<lb/>
morning, (which traditionally<lb/>
follows a Friday night),<lb/>
knuckles on wood is an<lb/>
awesome simulation,<lb/>
i "Wake up, Pat. We have to<lb/>
go to Raleigh Obviously my<lb/>
friends and I were experiencing<lb/>
a breakdown in communica-<lb/>
tions. "Toajwefpo I mumbl-<lb/>
ed. Which, when loosely<lb/>
translated means "leave me<lb/>
alone, or I will give you a<lb/>
lobotomy<lb/>
No chance. Stephen initiated<lb/>
a conversation, not noticing I<lb/>
was asleep ? which is usually<lb/>
how I hold a conversation with<lb/>
him anyway.<lb/>
The other Steve (they like to<lb/>
keep their names simple so as<lb/>
not to confuse each other) was<lb/>
playing dirty. He simply popped<lb/>
the top to a Pepsi and held it<lb/>
under my nose ? which, at that<lb/>
point was located where my<lb/>
chin should have been ? it was<lb/>
a long, hard night.<lb/>
Anybody who has gone out,<lb/>
drunken enough beer to own<lb/>
stock in Anheuser Busch, and<lb/>
WAHEURPHT.<lb/>
vfcSdrm cpTof<lb/>
RRlEXlH jklA?<lb/>
lived to tell about it knows how<lb/>
good that Pepsi tastes in the<lb/>
morning. I got out of bed.<lb/>
Being the gracious dudes they<lb/>
are, they fed me (cold<lb/>
McDonald's fries) and dressed<lb/>
me (underwear and tennis<lb/>
shoes); they even brushed my<lb/>
teeth (with hot, stale beer).<lb/>
And then we were cruisin<lb/>
Road trips are always fun.<lb/>
They give friends time to learn<lb/>
something new about each<lb/>
other. Thev also give you a few<lb/>
hours in a car with a bong. Now<lb/>
1 may have dreamed this, but<lb/>
I'm pretty sure we plowed a<lb/>
whole new passing lane onto<lb/>
264 West. Never before have so<lb/>
few smoked so much in such a<lb/>
short span.<lb/>
By game time, things were<lb/>
really happening. We had mov-<lb/>
ed the party to the Carter -Finley<lb/>
parking lot ? which is about a<lb/>
light year away from the<lb/>
stadium. It was a grusome<lb/>
scene. Gone was a fifth of rum,<lb/>
two cases of Budweiser, a half-<lb/>
gallon of vodka, and everyone's<lb/>
sense of coordination<lb/>
Bill had taken to introducing<lb/>
himself to anything that<lb/>
salivated. This included a<lb/>
shitkicker State fan who snottily<lb/>
explained that he attended a<lb/>
classier university than ECU ?<lb/>
all the while this same Skoal<lb/>
sucker was relieving himself on<lb/>
a Cadillac.<lb/>
I guess it's good ettiquette at<lb/>
State not to piss on anything<lb/>
less than twenty grand.<lb/>
From here, I could go into the<lb/>
game, but it's been done far too<lb/>
many times. I think I'll just go<lb/>
straight to the after-the-game<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Leaving the game was cer<lb/>
See HAVING, Pate 11<lb/>
nm ? -iivmmviimmim<lb/>
timmmmm ??"? ?????. ?,?? m m ?,r.r.grJnB(tiniJ)rLiriJXrMvr<lb/>
MtrfNi f nil iMuo,<lb/>
? )<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THEEAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER II. 1986<lb/>
Digging Up Things To Do In Greenville<lb/>
By DALE SWANSON<lb/>
?rif Writer<lb/>
You know, having become<lb/>
something of a permanent fixture<lb/>
of quiet sophistication here in<lb/>
General Greene's town, 1 am con-<lb/>
stantly stopped around town for<lb/>
the latest news in what's-to-do.<lb/>
And, with the dawning of a new<lb/>
prohibition, I've become<lb/>
swamped with the echoing ques-<lb/>
tion, "Hey, Delbert, like what do<lb/>
we do now? We can't go<lb/>
downtown anymore, and like,<lb/>
dorm rooms are just total bum-<lb/>
mers. So, what do we do?<lb/>
Study?"<lb/>
Well, in most cases, studying<lb/>
probably wouldn't be all that bad<lb/>
an idea. But, you see what hap-<lb/>
pens when the academic pressure<lb/>
to overperform is too great? Just<lb/>
look at the recent demonstration<lb/>
of pent-up frustrations that near-<lb/>
ly leveled that small town west of<lb/>
Raleigh (you know the place I'm<lb/>
talking about).<lb/>
Such an outburst would be ex-<lb/>
tremely detrimental to our fine<lb/>
reputation as students with a pro-<lb/>
fessional attitude toward socializ-<lb/>
ing. We know the value of an en-<lb/>
joyable evening out in maintain<lb/>
ing an equilibrium between mind-<lb/>
warping study and over-<lb/>
indulgence.<lb/>
So, what to do?<lb/>
Did any of you know that there<lb/>
are other theaters on this campus<lb/>
other than Hendrix (Free Flix)?<lb/>
It's true. And contrary to<lb/>
popular belief, I found that live<lb/>
performances at ECU are an<lb/>
awful lot better than they're<lb/>
cracked-down to be. Have you<lb/>
ever really given a live play or an<lb/>
orchestra a fair chance?<lb/>
I was hauled down to McGin-<lb/>
nis Theater by a lovely young<lb/>
thang early this past summer. She<lb/>
payed for the tickets and, with a<lb/>
gleam in her sparkling blue eyes,<lb/>
promised a full evening of enter-<lb/>
tainment. How could I refuse<lb/>
The play, as it turned out, was<lb/>
first-class. Michael Learned, of<lb/>
"The Waltons" fame, starred in<lb/>
the Off-Broadway play, Ladies<lb/>
In Retirement. The last time I'd<lb/>
seen a live production like that<lb/>
was as a youngster growing up in<lb/>
a large northern city. This ECU<lb/>
production wasn't the most<lb/>
memorable experience of my life,<lb/>
but the re-introduction really<lb/>
turned my head. I ended up at-<lb/>
tending the rest of the Summer<lb/>
Theater shows and look forward<lb/>
to the up-coming performances<lb/>
there. By the way, Miss Blue-<lb/>
Eyes was duly shown apprecia-<lb/>
tion for exposing me to this new<lb/>
form of entertainment.<lb/>
If your interest has been pi-<lb/>
qued, then you're really in for a<lb/>
treat with the top-notch enter-<lb/>
tainment that's been lined up for<lb/>
the newly renovated Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Then, if that doesn't sound all<lb/>
that great, (and if it doesn't then<lb/>
you deserve those impure white<lb/>
powders,) there are a few other<lb/>
things any of you newly under-<lb/>
age people can do.<lb/>
The Elbo Room is still allowing<lb/>
eighteen-year-olds and so are The<lb/>
Attic and The New Deli. My<lb/>
highest recommendation goes to<lb/>
The New Deli, however. Live<lb/>
music in North Carolina, at least<lb/>
on the small club circuit, is<lb/>
among the best in the nation<lb/>
If you like big, slick,productions,<lb/>
maybe the Attic is the place for<lb/>
you, though you'll have to get a<lb/>
membership if you don't want to<lb/>
pay through the nose everytime<lb/>
you go in the door.<lb/>
Sororities Contribute To Life<lb/>
By KAREN HEIM<lb/>
M?f f Writer<lb/>
Sorority Rush Sign Up. You<lb/>
heard these four words buzzing<lb/>
across campus last week. And not<lb/>
really knowing what you were<lb/>
"rushing" for, you signed up any<lb/>
way.<lb/>
By now you've already begun<lb/>
formal rushing, going to all the<lb/>
sororities and meeting so many-<lb/>
girls that your head is still spinn-<lb/>
ing in the morning.<lb/>
Because it is still the beginning<lb/>
of the week you may have many<lb/>
unanswered questions about<lb/>
what being in a sorority really<lb/>
means.<lb/>
Joining a sorority can be lots<lb/>
of fun but it also involves respon-<lb/>
sibility and obligation. Laura<lb/>
Sweet, Panhellenic advisor at<lb/>
ECU, says that before you make<lb/>
this commitment you should talk<lb/>
to your parents and share the<lb/>
literature you receive during<lb/>
rush. You and your parents<lb/>
should be aware of the respon-<lb/>
sibilities and expectations you<lb/>
will have as a sorority member.<lb/>
Although each house may vary<lb/>
on certain expectations, they all<lb/>
ask that you be responsible in<lb/>
three ways: financially, by paying<lb/>
chapter dues and assessments on<lb/>
time; academically, by maintain-<lb/>
ing an average to above average<lb/>
g.p.a. (some sororities have study<lb/>
hours to this end) and finally by<lb/>
being an active member of the<lb/>
sorority.<lb/>
Being an active member of any<lb/>
organization requires time<lb/>
management skills. Being an ac-<lb/>
tive member of a sorority, as one<lb/>
girl put it, "is a commitment <lb/>
hard work, yet very rewarding<lb/>
Sororities can help you to<lb/>
decide what your priorities<lb/>
should be while in college, and<lb/>
how to put these priorities into<lb/>
effect. Many members are active-<lb/>
ly involved within their own<lb/>
group and in other campus ac-<lb/>
tivities while still maintaining<lb/>
their grades and holding a job on<lb/>
the side. No, they are not your<lb/>
sorority superwomen ? they mav<lb/>
be found in many sororities.<lb/>
Sorority members have often<lb/>
been asked what sororities are<lb/>
for. The answer is. not to party<lb/>
with the fraternities. Each sorori-<lb/>
ty has a philanthropy (a charity<lb/>
group) that they support through<lb/>
various fundraisers and in any<lb/>
other way they can. Laura Sweet<lb/>
noted that the sororities were<lb/>
very busy working on charity<lb/>
projects last year, almost on a<lb/>
weekly basis.<lb/>
Although they work hard on<lb/>
their own, sororities also pull<lb/>
together to tackle big projects.<lb/>
Some of these include a campus<lb/>
cleanup, working for the ECU<lb/>
Alumni Telethon, baking cakes<lb/>
on faculty anpieciation day, and<lb/>
holding an Easter egg hunt for<lb/>
the faculty and staff's children.<lb/>
Panhellenic is the nucleus that<lb/>
holds the sororities together. A<lb/>
few representatives from each of<lb/>
the twelve sororities comprise<lb/>
Panhellenic under the guidance<lb/>
and dedication of Laura Sweet.<lb/>
She explains that "Panhellenic is<lb/>
like a small tamily within itself,<lb/>
and although sororities are<lb/>
naturally competitive during<lb/>
rush, after rush they are all very<lb/>
compatible with each other<lb/>
Two scholarships are given by<lb/>
Panhellenic each year. One is<lb/>
awarded to the greek woman with<lb/>
the highest GPA and another to<lb/>
the greek pledge with the highest<lb/>
GPA.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Student<lb/>
Life, Dr. Meyers, feels that<lb/>
"sororities add to the quality of<lb/>
life on the ECU campus by stress-<lb/>
ing academics, participating in<lb/>
campus activities and by being<lb/>
active members in the ECU com-<lb/>
munity He also thinks<lb/>
sororities give girls opportunities<lb/>
to develop leadership skills and<lb/>
teach girls how to get along in a<lb/>
group.<lb/>
One sorority member said,<lb/>
"being in a sorority gives you a<lb/>
sense of belonging. When I was<lb/>
getting ready to come back this<lb/>
semester I felt like I was coming<lb/>
home instead of coming back to<lb/>
school, because to me my sorori-<lb/>
ty is a home<lb/>
Being in a sorority doesn't end<lb/>
when your college career does.<lb/>
Membership, once initiated, is<lb/>
for life through alumni status.<lb/>
Dedicated alumni with extra time<lb/>
can become chapter advisors to<lb/>
collegiate members.<lb/>
As another sorority girl put it,<lb/>
"Sorority membership means<lb/>
friendships and close bonds that<lb/>
last long after your college career<lb/>
has ended<lb/>
Explore the freedom and pleasure of dance<lb/>
Down East Dance has a creative ann<lb/>
positive approach to cance making II i<lb/>
total and fun experience Each class is<lb/>
more man just another lesson<lb/>
it's a gratifying adventure<lb/>
sharec through movement<lb/>
- :<lb/>
m baiiel<lb/>
are avaiiaoie (also availaDle for child<lb/>
Call now for more mh rrr<lb/>
down cwst<lb/>
dance<lb/>
419 Evans St. Mai<lb/>
758 8198<lb/>
Within walking distance from campus<lb/>
HAWAIIAN BASH!<lb/>
Don H Miss The Last Great Bash Of The Summer<lb/>
Grab your jams and come to the Delta Sigma PhiDelta 'zeta Beach Da7t7m<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium after the West Virginia Game. The Blow Out starts at<lb/>
10:00 p.m. There will be contests and prizes given! Tickets will be sold outside the<lb/>
Student Store, at the game and at the door so be sure to be there!<lb/>
Sponsored by Coca-Cola and Marsh's Surf-N-Sea<lb/>
t$00tmmii&amp;xr ?tf <lb/>
,n0,mmm?,0inmm&amp;i1? m<lb/>
'He<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
Shares<lb/>
fX N?v?t ttAI<lb/>
Although Georgia arust Cherv!<lb/>
Goldsleger is several hours from<lb/>
her home base in Athens, she is<lb/>
excited about parucipaung ?<lb/>
ECU's artist in residence pro-<lb/>
gram. She describes her par<lb/>
ucipation as good experience for<lb/>
herself and her students<lb/>
"In any teaching situation<lb/>
when you are dealing with new<lb/>
people, you constantly get new<lb/>
insights and ideas Goldsleger<lb/>
said. "It is a different kind of<lb/>
feedback<lb/>
Goldsleger believes that her<lb/>
work will help to enrich her<lb/>
students as well. "1 try to work<lb/>
with students to develop their<lb/>
own ideas and styles. I don't ad-<lb/>
vocate one style over another,<lb/>
especially mine<lb/>
A selection of Goldsleger-<lb/>
work will be on exhibit at Gray<lb/>
Gallery until Saturday, Sept. 2<lb/>
In addition, Goldsleger will pre-<lb/>
sent a lecture on Monday, Sep-<lb/>
15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. She will explain how<lb/>
her work has developed into the<lb/>
Artist's Infiu<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
played as a U.S.O. performance<lb/>
With all the recent restrictions<lb/>
on "violent" cartoon-<lb/>
"cute" character, always a part<lb/>
of the animation stable, has<lb/>
become dominant. Such<lb/>
characters are considered safe bur-<lb/>
only if you discount their ability<lb/>
to sicken.<lb/>
They sickened Avery, too.<lb/>
What a vicarious thrill, then, is<lb/>
the opening of "Screwball Squir-<lb/>
rel A cutesy, Disney-type<lb/>
Having A Mi<lb/>
And Complex<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
tamly a tnck. Not only d? we<lb/>
have to endure 57,000 loud-<lb/>
mouthed drunks, who stomped<lb/>
our collective asses, we had one<lb/>
in the car.<lb/>
Please believe, folks that one<lb/>
State fan in the car is worth a<lb/>
million in an open field.<lb/>
Stephanie, Stephen's sister (sim-<lb/>
ple minds, simple names) was<lb/>
about as happy as a "hog in<lb/>
slop as people from Raleigh<lb/>
say.<lb/>
"Hey, hey, EC, you don't<lb/>
look so good to me Yeah,<lb/>
babe. Hows about I reach<lb/>
around and scatter your frontal<lb/>
obe a bit, then everything will<lb/>
ook just ducky. No offense, of<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR "<lb/>
Kasha Syx<lb/>
l<lb/>
ECU Adm.<lb/>
$ 1 00 wcoupon<lb/>
ECU Adm.<lb/>
wcoupon<lb/>
i<lb/>
$1 50<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0011"/><lb/>
ville<lb/>
enter-<lb/>
fup for<lb/>
right<lb/>
bid all<lb/>
f! then<lb/>
white<lb/>
vMher<lb/>
.der<lb/>
I - ing<lb/>
re The<lb/>
Attic and The New Deli. My<lb/>
higher recommendation goes to<lb/>
The New Deli, however. Live<lb/>
music in North Carolina, at least<lb/>
on the small club circuit, is<lb/>
among the best in the nation .<lb/>
1 you like big, slick,productions,<lb/>
mavbe the Attic is the place for<lb/>
sou, though you'll hae to get a<lb/>
membership if you don't want to<lb/>
pa through the nose evervtime<lb/>
ou go in the door.<lb/>
Ml.<lb/>
( '<lb/>
419 Evans St. Mai!<lb/>
758 8198<lb/>
i stance from campus.<lb/>
?<lb/>
rff<lb/>
U<lb/>
fcir<lb/>
I<lb/>
'h party in<lb/>
ut starts at<lb/>
'd outside the<lb/>
ere!<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11,1986<lb/>
11<lb/>
ECU's Artist In Residence<lb/>
Shares Her Experiences<lb/>
ECT NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Although Georgia artist Cheryl<lb/>
Goldsleger is several hours from<lb/>
her home base in Athens, she is<lb/>
excited about participating in<lb/>
ECU's artist in residence pro-<lb/>
gram. She describes her par-<lb/>
ticipation as good experience for<lb/>
herself and her students.<lb/>
"In any teaching situation<lb/>
when you are dealing with new<lb/>
people, you constantly get new<lb/>
insights and ideas Goldsleger<lb/>
said. "It is a different kind of<lb/>
feedback<lb/>
Goldsleger believes that her<lb/>
work will help to enrich her<lb/>
students as well. "I try to work<lb/>
with students to develop their<lb/>
own ideas and styles. I don't ad-<lb/>
vocate one style over another,<lb/>
especially mine<lb/>
A selection of Goldsleger's<lb/>
work will be on exhibit at Gray<lb/>
Gallery until Saturday, Sept. 27.<lb/>
In addition, Goldsleger will pre-<lb/>
sent a lecture on Monday, Sept.<lb/>
15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. She will explain how<lb/>
her work has developed into the<lb/>
encaustic style.<lb/>
The Greeks first used this form<lb/>
of art to incorporate heated<lb/>
waxes and oil paints in their pain-<lb/>
tings. It was not until the 17th<lb/>
century that an effort was made<lb/>
to revive the technique. Today,<lb/>
most artists view this art form as<lb/>
too burdensome.<lb/>
The creative ideas for<lb/>
Goldsleger's work come strictly<lb/>
from her imagination. There is a<lb/>
constant thematic presence of<lb/>
folding chairs in her drawings.<lb/>
"Most of my work has the feel-<lb/>
ing of an interior. Even the ex-<lb/>
terior views have been opened up,<lb/>
roofs removed for inspection.<lb/>
Populated densely or sometimes<lb/>
sparsely with chairs, my pieces<lb/>
refer to human presence and<lb/>
absence Goldsleger said. "My<lb/>
interests lie in how we conceive<lb/>
ideas and relationships and also<lb/>
in the many alternative ways<lb/>
these things could be conceived<lb/>
An Atlanta reviewer compares<lb/>
Goldsleger with French artist<lb/>
Duchamp, who took otdinarv<lb/>
objects and gave them meaning.<lb/>
A New York reviewer describ-<lb/>
ed Goldsleger's work as "ar-<lb/>
chitectural fantasies ? like<lb/>
something done by Piranesi with<lb/>
a fondness for folding chairs<lb/>
"The architecture is viewed<lb/>
conceptually incorporating what<lb/>
we can know about space verses<lb/>
what we can actually see if we are<lb/>
in it Goldsleger said. "Similar<lb/>
in many respects to Eastern art,<lb/>
there is not one location from<lb/>
which the whole is viewed. The<lb/>
viewer must visually walk around<lb/>
the buildings, rooms, and walls<lb/>
to take in the total image<lb/>
Goldsleger, who is teaching<lb/>
three classes at ECU, finds that<lb/>
the School of Art has an excellent<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"ECU students are serious<lb/>
producing artists. They are well<lb/>
informed and have a grasp of<lb/>
what art is. This is a credit to the<lb/>
students and the faculty<lb/>
At the end of the semester,<lb/>
Goldsleger will return to Athens<lb/>
to prepare for a show in January<lb/>
at the Bertha Urdang Gallery in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
SIGMA PHI<lb/>
EPSILON<lb/>
Artist's Influence Still Felt In Eighties<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
played as a U.S.O. performance.<lb/>
With all the recent restrictions<lb/>
? n "violent" cartoons, the<lb/>
"cute" character, always a part<lb/>
of the animation stable, has<lb/>
become dominant. Such<lb/>
characters are considered safe but<lb/>
only if you discount their ability<lb/>
to sicken.<lb/>
They sickened Avery, too.<lb/>
What a vicarious thrill, then, is<lb/>
the opening of "Screwball Squir-<lb/>
rel A cutesy, Disney-type<lb/>
squirel is skipping through the<lb/>
woods, gathering acorns in his<lb/>
itty-bitty basket.<lb/>
Then he encounters Screw<lb/>
who asks, "What's this cartoon<lb/>
going to be about?" The squirrel<lb/>
replies, "About me and all my<lb/>
forest friends: Charlie Chip-<lb/>
munk, Wallace Woodchuck,<lb/>
Barney Bear<lb/>
"Oh no! Not that Screwy<lb/>
moans, then leads the little squir-<lb/>
rel behind a tree, and promptly<lb/>
beats the snot out of him.<lb/>
Avery's influence on the<lb/>
animation industry cannot be<lb/>
over estimated. His cartoons<lb/>
remaim colorful and fresh in the<lb/>
1980s. Perhaps no better epitaph<lb/>
could rest on Tex Avery's<lb/>
gravestone than his own surname<lb/>
which is derived from an Anglo-<lb/>
Saxon word meaning "king of<lb/>
the elves His "enchanted draw-<lb/>
ngs" will continue to work their<lb/>
special magic for years to come.<lb/>
LIFETIME<lb/>
EXPERIENCE<lb/>
September 15-17<lb/>
7:00-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Need A Ride?<lb/>
Contact the Sig Ep House<lb/>
505 E. 5th St. (Across from Garrett Dorm)<lb/>
757-0487<lb/>
Having A Memorable Time At State<lb/>
And Completely Forgetting About It<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
tainly a trick. Not only did we<lb/>
have to endure 57,000 loud-<lb/>
mouthed drunks, who stomped<lb/>
our collective asses, we had one<lb/>
in the car.<lb/>
Please believe, folks that one<lb/>
State fan in the car is worth a<lb/>
million in an open field.<lb/>
Stephanie, Stephen's sister (sim-<lb/>
ple minds, simple names) was<lb/>
about as happy as a "hog in<lb/>
slop as people from Raleigh<lb/>
say.<lb/>
"Hey, hey, EC, you don't<lb/>
look so good to me Yeah,<lb/>
babe. Hows about I reach<lb/>
around and scatter your frontal<lb/>
obe a bit, then everything will<lb/>
ook just ducky. No offense, of<lb/>
course ? it's only a game.<lb/>
I think I'll end this article<lb/>
here. I'm getting a little worked<lb/>
up. It's just that I'm ashamed to<lb/>
admit that people from NC<lb/>
State can get on my nerves like<lb/>
they do.<lb/>
Afterall, who wants to I6se a<lb/>
football game to a student body<lb/>
who categorizes chewing tobac-<lb/>
co as one of the four food<lb/>
groups? Not me, dude.<lb/>
?ew  ' ?<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR " 1<lb/>
Kasha Syx j<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECUAdm. !<lb/>
$ II 00 wcoupon<lb/>
THE HOME OF SOUTHERN GENTLEMEN<lb/>
ECUAdm.<lb/>
wcoupon<lb/>
i<lb/>
$1 50<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Seafood night with shrimp<lb/>
and oysters on the halfshell<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
"THE PLAAD" ?9k<lb/>
Battle of the Bands<lb/>
Champions<lb/>
Tri-Sig Sorority Night<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
"WAX IMAGES"<lb/>
Chapel Hill's hottest new<lb/>
band.<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Char-broiled Chicken Pick in<lb/>
For ridet and information pleos? coll 757-0128 or 752-2124 and wo ore located at 500 East 11th St<lb/>
 ? i?i ? mmm ii ji m in ? tm mi<lb/>
?fci<lb/>
4miim m mhui"<lb/>
tLi w<lb/>
iftft<lb/>
?.4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
JMjASTCAROLINlAN SEPTEMBER 11.<lb/>
1986<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Rush<lb/>
For Those Exceptional Gentlemen Serious About A Lifetime Committment To Excellence<lb/>
What Is Kappa Sigma?<lb/>
Kappa Sigma is one of the oldest<lb/>
and largest college fraternities.<lb/>
Presently there are 201<lb/>
Undergraduate Chapters and<lb/>
Colonies at leading colleges and<lb/>
universities throughout the United<lb/>
States and Canada.<lb/>
What Is The Purpose Of<lb/>
Kappa Sigma?<lb/>
Kappa Sigma is basically a<lb/>
college social fraternity. Its goals<lb/>
are many, but all center on the<lb/>
promotion of friendship, loyalty,<lb/>
and brotherly feeling.<lb/>
? "? . s: ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Famous Kappa Sigmas<lb/>
Robert Redford Lanny Wadkins<lb/>
Rick Barry William Hewlett<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett Willard F. Rockwell<lb/>
Sen. Robert Dole Gen. Samuel Phillips<lb/>
Richard Crenna<lb/>
What Does Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Offer Its Members?<lb/>
) Introduction to new people<lb/>
2. Development of a man's<lb/>
organizational ability.<lb/>
J. Job references from alumni<lb/>
4 Assistance in or out of school<lb/>
5. Leadership in school<lb/>
6. Social in -Jvement<lb/>
7. Lifetime friendships<lb/>
8. Sense of identity through<lb/>
group experience<lb/>
V. Added motivation to remain<lb/>
n school<lb/>
10. Sense of unity through<lb/>
common ideals<lb/>
RUSH SCHEDULE<lb/>
MONDAY, SEPT 15-7-11 PM<lb/>
Monday Night Pigskin Pizza Bust <lb/>
Pre-Game Warmup: ECU GOLDEN GIRLS<lb/>
PTA Pizza<lb/>
8 ft. TV for the Game<lb/>
TUESDAY, SEPT 16-7-11 PM<lb/>
 Rock-N-Roll Rush Blowout <lb/>
With THE USUALS<lb/>
All your favorite snacksbeverages<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, SEPT 17-7-11 PM<lb/>
 Formal Rush Night <lb/>
EEE Sorority will be present to assist with Rush<lb/>
Address<lb/>
700 EAST 10th STREET<lb/>
(Beside Darryl's)<lb/>
If you need more info or a ride<lb/>
Call 752-5543<lb/>
' <lb/>
m ?-<lb/>
? ? "?????-??i" " m i? m j?. tt ii?i?ixhii<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
When You Strive For Excellence . .<lb/>
Strive for Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Beac<lb/>
B MKHKI I ESHEE<lb/>
Go! the back to schoc<lb/>
Need a break from w ?<lb/>
ing for a good nme'1<lb/>
answer is yes, thai<lb/>
first "Fall Fest 86" a:<lb/>
port the Arthritis I<lb/>
The Fall Fest will<lb/>
of the hottest he<lb/>
OMEGA PSi P.<lb/>
? e? ? ? -<lb/>
s tMraavMa, a r ? ? ?<lb/>
AM aracaaai m<lb/>
?ff <lb/>
IMaa '0 r? .<lb/>
our OMEGA ESSEN E<lb/>
Su" Sec" ??<lb/>
Par ?ore - ?<lb/>
NCSTUDENT LEG S aU<lb/>
n:on rnE?i<lb/>
NCS <lb/>
' or a mmn <lb/>
It Menoera ?- ?<lb/>
'ffj'fc amm tl<lb/>
Ques' ana. t?<lb/>
??5631 aJCSl - -<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL !<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
Te ??<lb/>
??MM ?t ' ? - .<lb/>
M De f er Or .<lb/>
Jj- 4 pen<lb/>
HONOR BOARD<lb/>
Sep'e oe- lit ??<lb/>
?e"or-s<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
D- e t ? f sc ? - -<lb/>
Cru?oe for Ckr ?? a-<lb/>
T-Hjrvia, ?? x pan i lm<lb/>
1MB Tre( 'tjsors ?? <lb/>
anc sooc BtOi  See ya<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA<lb/>
The 0'S' "d. ?ec ?-<lb/>
C'ap'er of Aipna pti Alpha - -<lb/>
ceesec ?o announce ma r a w?e?-<lb/>
m?l im?r A nil eilaU . .<lb/>
encouraoec aryj n? tag ? ? ?<lb/>
oorougni, mrwii Sunday Sec-<lb/>
7 pm ,n m? caoori.a ?? ,? I<lb/>
Cultural center Orra to .rnpre?? w <lb/>
"rt <lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
IS your GPA 3 3 or Dee- I<lb/>
W 3 anc ?? ccd . howrV<lb/>
S QTl P 5 NMJ MOTOr C-e <lb/>
fWiowuc mee g 'or a ntareste<lb/>
 '? oe heio a' 5 c or Sec I<lb/>
See ,x -fc<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
nm firjr -nee- ? .<lb/>
Reput ca-s ? a a a -<lb/>
25' Menoer-a ntaraataa<lb/>
v 'eo c a"eo<lb/>
ECU SURPING<lb/>
The HrtM Marl imj ???-<lb/>
Mroea Tfce'ea? ? <lb/>
??? Sec  a- af a, , ,<lb/>
tt? -nee-? I yaj wanf I<lb/>
?m- m unawa ?: ?- - . - .<lb/>
or Cee a 'Si ?? i s.<lb/>
vc a fwncl or ? M? ItK<lb/>
Georseto- Ac-i gcuj<lb/>
1??3 a"c ??5 ? oce ? ? bwcf<lb/>
Birl? ?ovj ca- s - ?- -<lb/>
New "ifoe-j ?e com) j.<lb/>
2ND ANNUALLIFE S A<lb/>
HEALTH AFFAIR<lb/>
The ?ho aii-j Lrles a Naarrh Att<lb/>
be heic fVeo Sec" D ?-or- ie a<lb/>
??erioeraii Spec a srea. ?<lb/>
? v?il?)t?e Sporjorec r. ?e es a-<lb/>
RetJOerice Cowc S'oe ?M ? ?,<lb/>
I'M irtrmt' Qeca'ora S'<lb/>
?APTIST STUDENT UNION<lb/>
The Bac ?? Maaaal unam hat ? s. v.<lb/>
Or M onoa v s a"c a - -for?a worsf r se .<lb/>
an Thurvaav ca 'ec ??. SE Dc<lb/>
?W' S arKJ iO' -<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The AAirxr ry a-j ce? taaaai<lb/>
?r"?o a recepf or - - anarol hi mil<lb/>
?t fhe ieaon.a S ft- i" MrajAiHat a<lb/>
CMi'urai Cf'tr or P' Sec- ' from J<lb/>
???' ECU t'uder-hi a-c ??? ?? ? ? - ec<lb/>
same ano afvjre ?? shf-<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Minority a,rrt Co?- - ? e S<lb/>
a??t union ? not actec" ?? soc ? anara<lb/>
?? rn?moer? Members" r ope-<lb/>
?Raaenri of a mirortv o'Ouc a<lb/>
?jraatad oersori ahooio stop an e sc3e-<lb/>
OHice in Menoena :? ?r y'a<lb/>
0W?ri?Y for ar ape ca on<lb/>
YOU'<lb/>
re<lb/>
TJ ?<lb/>
Showdate<lb/>
(ptember 11-1<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
lendrix Theatre!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0013"/><lb/>
13<lb/>
-<lb/>
Beach Band To Play At Festival<lb/>
Hx Mil MM I I- SHI K N<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
i a<lb/>
0RG4<lb/>
Alpha phi t<lb/>
 V-<lb/>
- -<lb/>
PHI SIGW<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUB<lb/>
ECU SURF<lb/>
2ND ANNUAL L<lb/>
HEALTH AFP,<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION<lb/>
-<lb/>
s<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Mr B . ' . ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
? ?- . , ? V .<lb/>
, A' r V- ' ?<lb/>
i s<lb/>
mnt<lb/>
n 1 to<lb/>
?<lb/>
i iced<lb/>
Rok Mount is the home ol this<lb/>
band, which formed five years<lb/>
Breeze has released several<lb/>
songs, "Hello, Goodbye being<lb/>
one ol their top hits<lb/>
North lower, which was form-<lb/>
ed in 1975, is from Raleigh<lb/>
North lower originated as a<lb/>
barbershop quartet at UNC.<lb/>
Since then North Tower has<lb/>
soared in popularity. This band<lb/>
specializes in top fort) bea I<lb/>
musk<lb/>
Finally, the Embers vull he pre-<lb/>
sent at the Fall Pest Some<lb/>
this band originated bea h m .<lb/>
in Raleigh The are one ol the<lb/>
more popular beach bands<lb/>
around. Among the Emb<lb/>
singers are Jackie (.ore and H I<lb/>
by Tomlinson.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
w<lb/>
i)<lb/>
Hai<lb/>
?<lb/>
9 <lb/>
 <lb/>
t<lb/>
Save your breath<lb/>
Plant a tree to make<lb/>
more oxygen<lb/>
WHN A MURDf R CAS<lb/>
tt THtS SHOCKIMC<lb/>
iVMKW DO rOU TRlTST<lb/>
rOW EMOTIONS<lb/>
OR YOUR FVIDf MCI7<lb/>
rr<lb/>
R<lb/>
EDGE<lb/>
Q<lb/>
Showdate<lb/>
September 11-14<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
a?r Srp'<lb/>
? ? ' g ? f as<lb/>
. ? v. ? f ?? f ? T <lb/>
?? f h-?- ? . . j? Ra Rim<lb/>
 Honor; ??r<lb/>
 ?? ? . ig jrri 5<lb/>
 ?. ? ? ? . ? u ? h . .<lb/>
XJ ? ? . - I . . . ? ?, ?<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
EATING DISORDERS<lb/>
SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
? <lb/>
eld ever . ???- r . ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
(S4<lb/>
 ??? . ? ? ?<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS<lb/>
? . ? ?.? - ? s. M ?<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
METHODIST STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
jnt 6 30 <lb/>
? ? ' . ' A ?<lb/>
in . ? ?<lb/>
? ? a ? . .<lb/>
 <lb/>
V Jt, ?<lb/>
e it$2.00 t.eryddy Til S 30 PM<lb/>
H. RI HI RS<lb/>
R<lb/>
h Iirtv<lb/>
. B V K i<lb/>
S 1 IO if<lb/>
Starts I umnrrov<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0014"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER II, 1986<lb/>
13<lb/>
S<lb/>
?:<lb/>
ilU<lb/>
hutpii Sigrna<lb/>
Members?<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
?ol<lb/>
. n<lb/>
- . . <lb/>
Beach Band To Play At Festival<lb/>
By MICHELLE SHEER AN<lb/>
?M Writer<lb/>
Got the back to school blues?<lb/>
Need a break from work? Look-<lb/>
ing for a good time? If your<lb/>
answer is yes, then come to the<lb/>
first "Fall Fest 86" and help sup-<lb/>
port the Arthritis Foundation.<lb/>
The Fall Fest will feature three<lb/>
of the hottest beach music bands<lb/>
in Eastern North Carolina. So try<lb/>
to make it out to the Pitt County<lb/>
Fairgrounds on Sunday from 1 to<lb/>
7 p.m. The rain location will be at<lb/>
T.Ws Nitelife.<lb/>
Gates will open at 11 a.m.<lb/>
Tickets are only $8 in advance<lb/>
and $10 at the door. Advanced<lb/>
tickets are already selling well.<lb/>
The first band is called Breeze.<lb/>
and they play beach music<lb/>
Rocky Mount is the home of this<lb/>
band, which formed five years<lb/>
ago. Breeze has released several<lb/>
songs, "Hello, Goodbye being<lb/>
one of their top hits.<lb/>
North Tower, which was form-<lb/>
ed in 1975, is from Raleigh.<lb/>
North Tower originated as a<lb/>
barbershop quartet at UNC.<lb/>
Since then North Tower has<lb/>
soared in popularity. This band<lb/>
specializes in top fortybeach<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Finally, the Embers will be pre-<lb/>
sent at the Fall Fest. Some say<lb/>
this band originated beach music<lb/>
in Raleigh. They are one of the<lb/>
more popular beach bands<lb/>
around. Among the Embers'<lb/>
singers are Jackie Gore and Bob-<lb/>
by Tomlinson.<lb/>
NC STUDENT LEGISLATURE<lb/>
If you really care, then VOICE YOUR OPi<lb/>
NIONI The East Carolina Delegation to the<lb/>
NCSL will hold a fall semester organna<lb/>
tional meeting on Monday at 7 pm. Room<lb/>
212. Mendenhall Veteran Legislators ana In<lb/>
ferested new students make plans to attend<lb/>
Questions or information, call Gordon at<lb/>
754-631 NCSL The Campus Voice!<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
The international Student Association<lb/>
would like to inform all members that there<lb/>
W'H be elections on Sat at Menoenhaii room<lb/>
212 at 4 pm<lb/>
HONOR BOARD<lb/>
Attention all members Just a reminder<lb/>
that we have a case tonight Thursday<lb/>
September 11th at 5 30 in room 241<lb/>
Men den hall<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Prime Time is sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ We get together every<lb/>
Thursday at 730 pm in Brewster Room<lb/>
102 B Three reasons to have fun. fellowship<lb/>
and good Bible teaching See you there<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA<lb/>
The distinguished men of the Eta Nu<lb/>
Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity are<lb/>
pleased to announce ther fall semester for<lb/>
msi smoker AH interested young men are<lb/>
encouraged and invited to attend You will<lb/>
be thoroughly impressed Sunday. Sept 14 at<lb/>
7 pm m the Ledonia Wright Alro-?merican<lb/>
Cultural Center Dress to imprni. see you<lb/>
there 0<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
IS your GPA 3 3 or better ana do you have<lb/>
between 3 and 96 credit hours? Then Ph,<lb/>
Sigma Pi is the Honor Fraternity tor you! A<lb/>
foiiowup meeting for an interested students<lb/>
will be held at 5 pm on Sept 11 in Austin 13<lb/>
See you there!<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The first meeting of tte ECU College<lb/>
Republicans will be held on Tues Sept 16 m<lb/>
221 Mendenhall Interested students are .n<lb/>
vited to attend<lb/>
ECU SURFING<lb/>
The first meeting if tonight at 8 pm m 221<lb/>
Mendenhall The team tryouts will be Sun<lb/>
day. Sept 21 at Matteras You must attend<lb/>
the meeting if you want to tryout for the<lb/>
team if unable to atend call Blair at 7S8 8393<lb/>
or Cree at 758 9627 A special nocturnal<lb/>
social function will follow the meeting at<lb/>
Georgetown Apts ECU'S club of the year ,n<lb/>
1983 and 1985 is open to all beach lovers (yes<lb/>
girls, you can join the club if you don't surf)<lb/>
New members welcome Be there!<lb/>
2ND ANNUAL LIFE'S A<lb/>
HEALTH AFFAIR<lb/>
The 2nd Annual Life's A Health Affair will<lb/>
be held Wed Sept 17 from 3-6 pm at<lb/>
Mendenhall Special give-aways will be<lb/>
available. Sponsored by the West Area<lb/>
Residence Council. Student Health Center,<lb/>
and intramural Recretional Services<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union has at S2 supper<lb/>
on Mondays and an informal worship service<lb/>
on Thursdays called PAUSE Drop by 511 E<lb/>
10th St and loin Inl<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Minority Arts Committee will be spon<lb/>
soring a recaption in honor of the renovation<lb/>
y the Ledonia S. Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center on Fri, Sept 1 from 5 7 pm<lb/>
Mi ECU students and faculty are invited to<lb/>
:ome and share this event.<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Minority Arts Committee o? the Stu<lb/>
lent union is now accepting applications for<lb/>
iew members Membership is open to<lb/>
students of all minority groups. All in<lb/>
terested persons should stop by the Student<lb/>
Union office in Mendenhall 234 or contact<lb/>
for an application.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The "Fest of 86" should be<lb/>
lots of fun with music and danc-<lb/>
ing. Organizer Ben Bunch said,<lb/>
"We are happy to undertake this<lb/>
event in Greenville, and I am<lb/>
counting on the ECU students'<lb/>
support<lb/>
Dominos Pizza, WDLX 93<lb/>
Pepsi, T.Ws Nitelife and<lb/>
Hardee's are only a few of the<lb/>
many sponsors for the first "Fall<lb/>
Fest Net proceeds from the fest<lb/>
go to the Arthritis Foundation.<lb/>
Save your breath.<lb/>
Want a tree to make<lb/>
more oxygen.<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
The brothers of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity<lb/>
I throwing a party tonight from 10 pm until<lb/>
All proceeds will go to our 3rd Annual<lb/>
Achievement Week program We would also<lb/>
like to invite all interested ladies to attend<lb/>
our OMEGA ESSENCE interest meeting oo<lb/>
Sun , Sept 14 at 8 pm ,r Room 4 Mendenhall<lb/>
For more irtfor contact any member of the<lb/>
"a'ernity<lb/>
Showdate<lb/>
September 11-14<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
GRADUATING?<lb/>
Seniors and Graduate Students are en<lb/>
couraged to pick up a REGISTRATION<lb/>
PACKET at the Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service You are able to leave a<lb/>
resume with us ana establish a place to put<lb/>
letters of reference on file You will be able<lb/>
to interview on campus if you meet the<lb/>
qualifications of the employers who come to<lb/>
campus between October and April. Those<lb/>
who wait will miss the chance to interview on<lb/>
the 40 already scheduled interviewing per<lb/>
sons commg m October You need to return<lb/>
the cards and resumes in the REGISTRA<lb/>
TION PACKET as soon as possible Recom<lb/>
mended that it be in for those interviews by<lb/>
mid Sept<lb/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega serv.ce fraternity will<lb/>
be having rusn on Sept 22 24 We invite all<lb/>
students to rush this coed fraternity that<lb/>
believes in service to campus, community,<lb/>
ano the nation An information booth will be<lb/>
run the 16 19 of Sept m front of the student<lb/>
store or m Mendenhall Come by and join us<lb/>
today'<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
The first meeting of East Carolina Honors<lb/>
Organization will be held on Thursday. Sept.<lb/>
11 at 5:00 in the Honors Lounge Rawl Rm.<lb/>
200 Anyone currently taking Honors classes<lb/>
or anyone with an interest In the program Is<lb/>
invited to attend. Contact Brian Burke<lb/>
752 4999 for information or if you cannot at-<lb/>
tend<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
You don't have to be an athlete to loin us<lb/>
for fun and fellowship tnery Wednesday<lb/>
night at 7 pm in Rawl 130. Come check us<lb/>
out!<lb/>
LSSSOCIETY<lb/>
LSS Society meeting 7:30 Thursday, Sept.<lb/>
11 at Cubbies.<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS<lb/>
A free mini class offered by the East<lb/>
Carolina Counseling Center for students<lb/>
You can: identify sources of stress, make<lb/>
positive changes, manage your response to<lb/>
stressful situations, leam to relax and Im-<lb/>
prove self confidence. Sept. 15,17,It,22<lb/>
EATING DISORDERS<lb/>
SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
The Eating Disorders Support Group is<lb/>
held every Wednesday from 5-4 pm in Room<lb/>
10 at the Student Health Center For more in<lb/>
formation contact Judith Yongue, MO at<lb/>
757 4841<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
Fall Graduates: in order to receive your<lb/>
Nursing Pin in December, orders must be<lb/>
placed in the Student Store. Wright Building<lb/>
no later than September 19, 19M. Orders<lb/>
should be placed at the Jewelry Counter<lb/>
Orders must be paid in full when the order is<lb/>
placed.<lb/>
METHODIST STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Friday night, 6:30 pm, we are painting the<lb/>
beach mural downstairs Wear old clothes<lb/>
and come for an evening of fellowship, pizza,<lb/>
and hard work. Everyone is welcome The<lb/>
Center is located at 501 E. 5th St across from<lb/>
Garretf dorm. 758-2030 Sponsored by<lb/>
Presbyterian and Methodist Campus<lb/>
Ministries.<lb/>
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSI<lb/>
onsoiidafld<lb/>
Tmiairfs<lb/>
All Seats $2.00 Everyday Til 5:30 PM<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
SfcliO (aHsi Sif.ua. Sh(M C<lb/>
- ,<lb/>
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:15<lb/>
HEARTBURN<lb/>
Ends Today! ? R ?<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7.00-9:00<lb/>
Killer Party<lb/>
Ends Today! ? R <lb/>
 hi<lb/>
BACK TO<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
; 13-3 13-3<lb/>
PfcU<lb/>
"V?-?<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow<lb/>
"It may be one of the best<lb/>
horror films of the last decade ? Philip Sulman<lb/>
ssssa<lb/>
J<lb/>
'???i?i ????j-i Kumnjim mm<lb/>
rh<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0015"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 11. 1986<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
faPfaK: "facing me<lb/>
wkxor of Umax to<lb/>
c omic strip reap before<lb/>
PUBLICATION '<lb/>
term<lb/>
REAP it<lb/>
rrl?<lb/>
NO TIME<lb/>
NO TIME'<lb/>
PONT YOU<lb/>
tWNTAN<lb/>
OPINION <lb/>
no' ihavent<lb/>
time to pv ir<lb/>
OVER' I PONT<lb/>
imant TV<lb/>
hear '<lb/>
III JUST<lb/>
cnecKim<lb/>
seeum<lb/>
me ears<lb/>
arecmsep<lb/>
wears<lb/>
are aosep<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
A<lb/>
yttwfm. vj<lb/>
Undercover Cats<lb/>
By PARKER<lb/>
nope.<lb/>
I PONT<lb/>
bETIT<lb/>
9N<lb/>
OH, COME OS<lb/>
REAP IT<lb/>
AOAIN '<lb/>
<lb/>
d<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
5EE ITA COMIC<lb/>
AucuORy on me futtli<lb/>
Of wpeqvitep uwe<lb/>
I mNK me imry punch<lb/>
LINE SUMS IT UP<lb/>
PONT YOU ?<lb/>
WELL PON I<lb/>
you OPT IT ?<lb/>
15 IT EVEN<lb/>
MOPERATEIY<lb/>
AMUSlNO <lb/>
<lb/>
15 THIS A IT'S A<lb/>
TARfiNPJLA HOUSe<lb/>
ITH6R6.<lb/>
?Ml SIC: relish m thru<lb/>
Of FlNAUy PISCOVERINO ONES<lb/>
C0lC STRIP REPROPVCEP<lb/>
ON A TYPICAL AVERAOt<lb/>
?'? WCAN NEWSPAPER"$<lb/>
TmCfiL VERfloe COMICPA&amp;<lb/>
HMM<lb/>
X<lb/>
o.<lb/>
f$<lb/>
<lb/>
TQn-O-Rama<lb/>
UN<lb/>
HERE IT 15 '<lb/>
NO NO WAIT<lb/>
irs JU5T A TIRE AP<lb/>
- THERE tT15 '<lb/>
NO NO IT5 JU5T<lb/>
AN INK SMUPfrE<lb/>
Sneed<lb/>
D9?d?HERit SEEMS<lb/>
UKE ONE SEMESTER Of<lb/>
COLLEGE HAS "<lb/>
By BRYANT<lb/>
BV LATTIMORE-rORR Tooth<lb/>
M. <lb/>
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<lb/>
fei<lb/>
By BRYANT<lb/>
321<lb/>
-Hfer<lb/>
BLAMl<lb/>
O<lb/>
3 LIKE<lb/>
? DREAM<lb/>
Vol.1 o<lb/>
rt7??g<lb/>
Walkin' ihe Plank<lb/>
?' ?? ? gjg -J, ?zz, <lb/>
Voez A mkn<lb/>
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UNDERCOVER<lb/>
CATS SOLVE<lb/>
MYSTERY<lb/>
The Beast Carolinian<lb/>
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By Robert Mazzoii<lb/>
Sid Fruik. proprietor of ;hi bar -ih. a<lb/>
lier. semper compu uncuU dei ??rf h-<lb/>
MARTIAN WOMAN<lb/>
RAISED BY WOLVES<lb/>
GIVES BIRTH TO<lb/>
ELVIS-AND LIVES?<lb/>
By Jeff Parker <lb/>
Photo by Daniel Maurer<lb/>
(toHYJcK5fVggffT3<lb/>
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By FRIEDRICH<lb/>
Campus Comics<lb/>
I ChTH.I KNOW<lb/>
How Much yoo<lb/>
U? YOUR NEW<lb/>
ErrSIlLCRUlXE.<lb/>
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n vcwovj Houi rr<lb/>
WILL 60 ALOiT<lb/>
ftMNWHEltE AND<lb/>
IT'S SO mucpoM<lb/>
TO RltEi.<lb/>
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BUT YOU'VE 6CT TO STAY I<lb/>
00T OP THE BATHROOM,<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Mongrel<lb/>
4 Epiclike<lb/>
narratives<lb/>
9 Timid<lb/>
12 Beverage<lb/>
13 Around<lb/>
14 Garden tool<lb/>
15 Coveted<lb/>
17 Forays<lb/>
19 Mountains of<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
20 Ripped<lb/>
21 Tibetan priest<lb/>
23 Coming in best<lb/>
time<lb/>
27 Forebodings<lb/>
29 Precious metal<lb/>
30 Either's partner<lb/>
31 Footlike part<lb/>
32 Self-esteem<lb/>
34 Slender finial<lb/>
35 Printer's<lb/>
measure<lb/>
36 Cure<lb/>
37 Monster<lb/>
39 Pennant<lb/>
42 Extremely<lb/>
terrible<lb/>
43 Wooden vessels<lb/>
44 Landed<lb/>
46 Dwell<lb/>
48 Speech<lb/>
Impediment<lb/>
51 Firearm<lb/>
52 Ceremonies<lb/>
54 Greek letter<lb/>
56 Bitter vetch<lb/>
56 Shatter<lb/>
57 Condensed<lb/>
moisture<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Uncouth person<lb/>
2 Rubber tree<lb/>
3 Recommences<lb/>
4 Girl's name<lb/>
5 White poplar<lb/>
6 Deity<lb/>
7 Symbol for gold<lb/>
6 Walked leisurely<lb/>
9 Glisten<lb/>
10 Brick-carrying<lb/>
device<lb/>
11 Affirmative<lb/>
16 Country of Asia<lb/>
18 Dry<lb/>
20 Walked on<lb/>
21 Runs easily<lb/>
22 Catkin<lb/>
24 Nimble<lb/>
25 Deep sleep<lb/>
26 Threefold<lb/>
28 Orators<lb/>
33 Male sheep: pi.<lb/>
34 Sent forth<lb/>
36 Flock<lb/>
38 Prepare for<lb/>
print<lb/>
40 Showers<lb/>
41 Evaluates<lb/>
45 Extravagant<lb/>
46 Mature<lb/>
47 Prickly envelope<lb/>
of fruit<lb/>
46 Music: as<lb/>
written<lb/>
49 French for<lb/>
"summer'<lb/>
50 Uncooked<lb/>
53 Negative prefix<lb/>
m 3 a<lb/>
V 1 3<lb/>
N OlN<lb/>
S ?V4<lb/>
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S ti 3<lb/>
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i?H ?n , ? n?i .?.? m ??.???? - h<lb/>
?ejMMmlfcr' "in' i' rfr inn inn i?i 0y ni 'rn'i'ni-i " ? - ?<lb/>
Although Shelton Bnani m<lb/>
Nehlen's troops nill b? read<lb/>
ECU Fi<lb/>
B RICK McCORViAC<lb/>
The ECU Athletic Marl<lb/>
Department, in conjunction w<lb/>
local merchants, will once <lb/>
sponsor a number of prom 1<lb/>
this football season. I<lb/>
The first of the promo J<lb/>
oe held at this Saturday' (<lb/>
against West Virginia. K; <lb/>
Fried Chicken is spor 1<lb/>
Pom-Pon Day. with 6,000 P J<lb/>
and Gold Pom-Pon? 4<lb/>
distributed as fans enter the J<lb/>
test.<lb/>
The Pom-Pon gieaa wi<lb/>
coincide with the tradu<lb/>
tailgating parties that are a j<lb/>
of even, football Satin<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
In addition to supplying<lb/>
Pom-Pons. KFCii <lb/>
$1 from the purchase of ea<lb/>
Pirate Tailgate Special<lb/>
ECU Scholarship Fund<lb/>
program will be in effc<lb/>
every Pirate home game.<lb/>
Other promotions - a <lb/>
the upcoming season incluck 1<lb/>
"Ain't It Great To 1 <lb/>
promotion, which a  p acJ<lb/>
for the Southwestern L .<lb/>
gwrie. The grand-prize wi j<lb/>
will receive a trip for four<lb/>
Miami from Delta Airli<lb/>
Nehlen<lb/>
By SPORTS ST AH<lb/>
Although Vev:<lb/>
University partisans m j<lb/>
pecting an easy time<lb/>
day on the basis ol ECl 's<lb/>
season-opening loss, the I<lb/>
think twice, warns<lb/>
knowledgeable Mountaineei<lb/>
COach Don Nehlen.<lb/>
irS<lb/>
i<lb/>
Virfiaia coach Dob Nehlen, w<lb/>
bwt week, dosefl't nnderestiniai<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0016"/><lb/>
By PARKER<lb/>
THfc EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
5 y.v ? '<lb/>
? 2?<lb/>
?r-<lb/>
<lb/>
??APY<lb/>
strr<lb/>
By BRYANT<lb/>
k I Knew I WAS Too<lb/>
TOGO TO 8fc TRl?  jJ<lb/>
?fi0<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11, 1986 Page 15<lb/>
Although Shelton Bryant's illustration depicts a sluggish West Virginia Mountaineer, you can bet Don<lb/>
Nehlen's troops will be read to pla on Saturday night. But, so will Art Baker's Pirates!<lb/>
ECU Football Promotions<lb/>
By BRYANT<lb/>
m<lb/>
olinian<lb/>
B RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Co.Sports Ldltoc<lb/>
The ECU Athletic Marketing<lb/>
Department, in conjunction with<lb/>
iocal merchants, will once again<lb/>
sponsor a number of promotions<lb/>
this football season.<lb/>
The first of the promotions will<lb/>
be held at this Saturday's game<lb/>
against West Virginia. Kentucky<lb/>
Fried Chicken is sponsoring<lb/>
Pom-Pon Day, with 6,000 Purple<lb/>
and Gold Pom-Pons to be<lb/>
distributed as fans enter the con-<lb/>
test.<lb/>
The Pom-Pon giveaway will<lb/>
coincide with the traditional<lb/>
tailgating parties that are a pan<lb/>
of every football Saturday at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
In addition to supplying the<lb/>
Pom-Pons, KFC will also donate<lb/>
$1 from the purchase of each<lb/>
Pirate Tailgate Special to the<lb/>
ECU Scholarship Fund. This<lb/>
program will be in effect for<lb/>
every Pirate home game.<lb/>
Other promotions slated for<lb/>
the upcoming season include the<lb/>
"Ain't It Great To Tailgate"<lb/>
promotion, which will take place<lb/>
for the Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
game. The grand-prize winner<lb/>
will receive a trip for four to<lb/>
Miami from Delta Airlines, five<lb/>
days and four nights at the<lb/>
Sheraton Bal-Harbor, four<lb/>
tickets to the ECU-Miami game<lb/>
on Thanksgiving Day, and com-<lb/>
plimentary passes to a number of<lb/>
local tourist attractions.<lb/>
The third promotion will take<lb/>
place during the Georgia<lb/>
Southern game, which will also<lb/>
be Homecoming. In addition to<lb/>
the traditional Homecoming ac-<lb/>
tivities, Coca-Cola and BB&amp;T<lb/>
will sponsor youth-jersey day,<lb/>
giving away 1,250 jerseys.<lb/>
Domino's Pizza will sponsor<lb/>
Seat Cushion Day during the<lb/>
Southern Miss game, while the<lb/>
Cincinnati game will close the<lb/>
season with Senior Day and<lb/>
Scout Day.<lb/>
As usual, the marketing<lb/>
department has tried to provide a<lb/>
number of different events to<lb/>
promote interest not only among<lb/>
the student body but to people of<lb/>
all ages.<lb/>
"We've tried to have promo-<lb/>
tions that will attract not only the<lb/>
students but all members of the<lb/>
family as well ECU Marketing<lb/>
Director Lee Workman said.<lb/>
"This is going to be another good<lb/>
vear for promotions and we're<lb/>
really looking forward to the<lb/>
season and all of the festivities<lb/>
that go along with Pirate foot-<lb/>
Nehlen Expects Tough Game<lb/>
The Pirates were topped 38-10<lb/>
hv North Carolina State last<lb/>
weekend but Nehlen feels the<lb/>
score was a bit misleading.<lb/>
"They fell apart for some<lb/>
reason or other in the fourth<lb/>
quarter Nehlen said Monday.<lb/>
"There was a fumble, they<lb/>
dropped a punt and they threw an<lb/>
interception. They just did some<lb/>
dumb things and, boom, North<lb/>
ball<lb/>
Marketing Assistant John<lb/>
Althoff praised the ECU students<lb/>
for making the promotion so suc-<lb/>
cessful in the past.<lb/>
"We have one of the best stu-<lb/>
dent body's in the country<lb/>
Althoff said. "I know they will<lb/>
come out and support us just as<lb/>
they have in the past ? and we<lb/>
appreciate it<lb/>
Althoff also mentioned the<lb/>
Tri-Sigs and Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma as being "instrumental" in<lb/>
conducting the many promo-<lb/>
tions, saying that he and the<lb/>
whole marketing department<lb/>
would like to express their<lb/>
"sincere appreciation for all of<lb/>
the help these two sororities have<lb/>
given<lb/>
There will be an auction at the<lb/>
Pirate Club Building Friday night<lb/>
at 8pm. Among the items to be<lb/>
auctioned off are: An Ernest<lb/>
Byner jersey, two ECU football<lb/>
helmets, anlndependence Bowl<lb/>
jersey, an autograph football, a<lb/>
pick-up truck, a VCR, a set of<lb/>
tires and a number of gift cer-<lb/>
tificates. All people are encourag-<lb/>
ed to attend, and proceeds will go<lb/>
to the ECU Scholarship Fund.<lb/>
Carolina State had two or three<lb/>
touchdowns just like that<lb/>
Nehlen figues his team should<lb/>
improve in certain areas in its<lb/>
first road game, set for Saturday<lb/>
in the confines of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
"If we don't (watch out for<lb/>
them), then we're not concen-<lb/>
tating as players and not doing<lb/>
our jobs as coaches he said.<lb/>
The Moutaineers launched the<lb/>
new campaign with a 47-14<lb/>
thrashing of Northern Illinois at<lb/>
Mountaineer Field.<lb/>
After viewing game films of<lb/>
the victory over the Huskies,<lb/>
Nehlen said he was pleased that<lb/>
the Mountaineers were penalized<lb/>
only four times. All on the<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
"That's encouraging the<lb/>
seventh year coach said, "Maybe<lb/>
we didn't execute as well as we'd<lb/>
like, but we at least didn't have<lb/>
any confusion where to go and<lb/>
when to go<lb/>
Nehlen also was happy with his<lb/>
offense averaging eight yards per<lb/>
play and a 19-point splurge near<lb/>
the end of the first half. "Those<lb/>
were things I really liked he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Senior tailback John Holifield,<lb/>
who led the team with 11 rushes<lb/>
for 98 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns, was named offen-<lb/>
sive champion of the game.<lb/>
Holifield played only the first<lb/>
half because of a sore knee.<lb/>
Senior defensive tackle Jeff<lb/>
Lucas was named defensive<lb/>
champion with seven solo tackles<lb/>
and two assists.<lb/>
Despite the competitive<lb/>
schedule that Nehlen's Moun-<lb/>
taineers face, he insists his troops<lb/>
aren't looking past the Pirates.<lb/>
"I hope our bovs are ready for<lb/>
ECU he said, "heck, I know<lb/>
they have talent and they have<lb/>
one of the toughest schedules<lb/>
around<lb/>
Ficklen Home Opener<lb/>
Mountaineers Invade<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
&amp; RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sparta E4Hart<lb/>
A powerful West Virginia<lb/>
Mountaineer team, under the<lb/>
direction of seventh-year head<lb/>
coach Don Nehlen, visits Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Saturday for ECU's<lb/>
1986 home opener. West<lb/>
Virginia's trip to Greenville<lb/>
marks their first arrival since<lb/>
1970, when they upended the<lb/>
Pirates 28-14.<lb/>
The Mountaineers finished<lb/>
their 1985 campaign with an im-<lb/>
pressive 7-3-1 record, including<lb/>
victories in their final three games<lb/>
of the season. However, the<lb/>
seven wins were not enough to<lb/>
earn West Virginia a post-season<lb/>
bowl bid.<lb/>
Nehlen has turned the Moun-<lb/>
taineers into an Eastern power,<lb/>
after inheriting a squad that suf-<lb/>
fered through four-consecutive<lb/>
losing seasons. The seven wins<lb/>
last year were the fewest under<lb/>
Nehlen since his inaugural 6-6<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
After last week's 47-14 maul-<lb/>
ing of Northern Illinois, the<lb/>
Mountaineers will hope to use<lb/>
their aggressive, overpowering<lb/>
style against ECU. Coach Art<lb/>
Baker ranks the West Virgina<lb/>
program among some of the na-<lb/>
tion's best.<lb/>
"They are in a class with Penn<lb/>
State and Auburn Baker said.<lb/>
"They are a nasty, rough,<lb/>
agressive, hard-nosed football<lb/>
team<lb/>
West Virginia offensively runs<lb/>
the Multiple "I but basically<lb/>
tries to dominate their opponents<lb/>
physically with their running<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"West Virginia is the type of<lb/>
team that runs the ball right at<lb/>
"They are in a class<lb/>
with Penn State and<lb/>
Auburn. They are a<lb/>
nasty, rough, ag-<lb/>
gressive, hard-nosed<lb/>
football team<lb/>
?Art Baker<lb/>
you assistant coach Paul<lb/>
Anderson said at Monday's press<lb/>
conference. "It's not that they<lb/>
can't pass the ball, but they have<lb/>
been successful in the past ? just<lb/>
overpowering people<lb/>
physically<lb/>
Replacing NFL first-round<lb/>
draft pick Brian Jozwiak and<lb/>
Chuck Joliff at the tackle posi-<lb/>
tions will be the biggest hole to<lb/>
fill on the offense. Center Brian<lb/>
Smider earned a letter last year<lb/>
along with Milton Redwine (both<lb/>
at 285).<lb/>
Running behind the mammoth<lb/>
offensive line will be senior<lb/>
tailback John Hollifield and<lb/>
fullback Chris Peccon. Hollifield<lb/>
rushed for 98 yards on just 11<lb/>
carries and his backup Pat Ran-<lb/>
dolph gained 88 yards on just<lb/>
three carries against Northern Il-<lb/>
linois last Saturday.<lb/>
Quarterback Mike Timko v.a<lb/>
less than impressive last week<lb/>
completing just six of 19 passes<lb/>
with one interception. However,<lb/>
he did throw for 112 yards and<lb/>
one touchdown. Last year's QB.<lb/>
John Talley, was the leading<lb/>
receiver in the opener with two<lb/>
catches for 30 yards, including a<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Defensively, the Mountaineers<lb/>
boast four All-America can-<lb/>
didates. Defensive end Matt<lb/>
Smith, who led the team in<lb/>
tackles in '85, returns along with<lb/>
Jeff Lucas, who had nine stops<lb/>
from his tackle position.<lb/>
Noseguard David Grant (6-4.<lb/>
280) is another candidate for<lb/>
post-season honors and had six<lb/>
tackles in the Mountaineer<lb/>
opener. The final candidate is<lb/>
free safety Travis Curtis, who led<lb/>
the team in interceptions, is<lb/>
known as one of the team's most<lb/>
See DEFENSE, page 17<lb/>
NCAA Rules; Ho well Reacts<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
NCAA the following day that<lb/>
ECU would not appeal.<lb/>
Howell said the NCAA was<lb/>
mostly interested in the bank ac-<lb/>
counts and according to officials,<lb/>
the accounts were not authorized<lb/>
by the university and that they<lb/>
(the accounts) were used for<lb/>
"permissible purposes<lb/>
Chairman of the NCAA In-<lb/>
fractions Committee, Frank<lb/>
Remington, told UPI wire service<lb/>
that the accounts were "not used<lb/>
with the intention to provide im-<lb/>
proper payments or financial aid<lb/>
to prospective or enrolled<lb/>
student-athletes.<lb/>
"Instead, the account was used<lb/>
to pay costs incurred in operating<lb/>
the football program that either<lb/>
were unbudgeted or unauthorized<lb/>
by athletics administrators<lb/>
Remington added.<lb/>
Remington went on to say that<lb/>
the one-year probationary period<lb/>
and an institutional rules-<lb/>
education program were ad-<lb/>
ministered to ECU to ensure that<lb/>
the university maintains a clean<lb/>
football program.<lb/>
Contributing a great deal to this<lb/>
story was Rick McCormac and<lb/>
Tim Chandler.<lb/>
The following is a Tuesday<lb/>
release from the office of the<lb/>
chancellor concerning ECU's<lb/>
newly obtained probation.<lb/>
 am pleased to announce that<lb/>
East Carolina University has con-<lb/>
cluded its cooperative efforts<lb/>
with the NCAA to bring a final<lb/>
resolve to questions that were<lb/>
raised regarding the conduct of<lb/>
the ECU Football Program from<lb/>
1979-1984.<lb/>
On Apr. 23, 1985, I issued a<lb/>
letter of self-report to the NCAA<lb/>
which contained a number of<lb/>
suspected violations of unknown<lb/>
magnitude. This self-report was<lb/>
immidiately followed with a<lb/>
meeting in Kansas between ECU<lb/>
and NCAA officials to determine<lb/>
the course of action to be follow-<lb/>
ed. The NCAA directed ECU,to<lb/>
conduct a self-investigation and<lb/>
report its findings for review by<lb/>
the NCAA Enforcement and<lb/>
Compliance Services. An exten-<lb/>
sive investigation was conducted<lb/>
over the next several months and<lb/>
on Jan. 21, 1986, I filed the in-<lb/>
vestigation findings, including<lb/>
the supporting documentation,<lb/>
with the NCAA.<lb/>
The NCAA Enforcement and<lb/>
Compliance Services performed<lb/>
their investigation and verifica-<lb/>
tion work over the next several<lb/>
months and issued an Official<lb/>
Letter of Inquiry on June 20,<lb/>
1986.<lb/>
In accordance with NCAA<lb/>
procedures, ECU prepared and<lb/>
filed its response with the NCAA<lb/>
Committee on Infractions to<lb/>
establish the issues to be<lb/>
deliberated at the official hearing<lb/>
which was scheduled and held at<lb/>
Colorado Springs, Colo on<lb/>
Aug. 17, 1986. A brief, friendly-<lb/>
meeting was begun and conclud-<lb/>
ed with substantial agreement<lb/>
between ECU officials and<lb/>
NCAA enforcement represen-<lb/>
tatives, that a small number of<lb/>
minor, technical violations of<lb/>
NCAA Legislaton had in fact oc-<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
Frank J. Remington, Chair-<lb/>
man of the NCAA Committee on<lb/>
Infractions, informed me and the<lb/>
other institutional represen-<lb/>
tatives, that the Committee fin-<lb/>
dings and any resulting penalties<lb/>
would be sent to me as Chief Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Officer within two weeks.<lb/>
The confidential letter and<lb/>
report were received on Sept. 3,<lb/>
1986 and on Sept. 4, 1986, I ad-<lb/>
vised Walter Byers, NCAA Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Director, and Frank J.<lb/>
Remington, that ECU would not<lb/>
exercise its right to appeal any of<lb/>
the findings or penalties of the<lb/>
confidential report. In the fin-<lb/>
dings there were seven incidents<lb/>
of Institutional violations of<lb/>
NCAA legislation which fall into<lb/>
the classification of minor infrac-<lb/>
tions which did not afford East<lb/>
Carolina University a competitive<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
The penalties were: a public<lb/>
reprimand and censure will be<lb/>
issued by the NCAA and the In-<lb/>
stituion will be placed on proba-<lb/>
tion for one year.<lb/>
The reqirement to be met dur-<lb/>
ing probation is that we develop<lb/>
and implement a rules education<lb/>
program for Athletic Department<lb/>
staff members and report our<lb/>
progress to the SCAA on or<lb/>
before Jan. 1, 1987.<lb/>
It is particularly noteworthy<lb/>
that no additional penalties wen<lb/>
levied against the Institution, in-<lb/>
dividual sports progams, or any<lb/>
Athletic Department personnel.<lb/>
ECU is not restricted for post-<lb/>
season competition, Tl' ex-<lb/>
posure, recruiting, or personnel<lb/>
duties.<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Thur. Sept. 11, 1959<lb/>
Pittsburgh relief pitcher<lb/>
Elroy Face ends a personal<lb/>
two-season 22-game winning<lb/>
streak when the Pirates lose to<lb/>
the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-4.<lb/>
The w inning pitcher in relief of<lb/>
starter Sandy Koufax is Chuck<lb/>
Chum, who scores his third and<lb/>
final major league victory<lb/>
Face finishes the 1959 season<lb/>
with an 18-1 record.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John Howell is pleased that the university has con-<lb/>
cluded ill efforts to resolve the NCAA sanctions.<lb/>
 v?'Wi?i.i.<lb/>
? a it -?. - ??????-????<lb/>
?.?????imh wai<lb/>
i.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0017"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THEEAST CAROLINIANSEPTEMBER 11, 1986<lb/>
7<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Welcome Back Pirates<lb/>
CHI OMEGA: This Friday night we<lb/>
are all mentally and physicall<lb/>
prepared tor an evening of intense<lb/>
enjoyment We hope you are ready<lb/>
for the same Remember if you<lb/>
can't hang, drink Tang See you at<lb/>
11 p.m. The Sig Eps PS Watch out<lb/>
for a mad dawg running around in<lb/>
his birthday suit<lb/>
AOTT CAR WASH: Come to<lb/>
Hardee's on loth St. between 10 and 2<lb/>
on Saturday and let the AOTT's<lb/>
wash your car! YOU KNOW that you<lb/>
want a clean car to tailgate in at the<lb/>
WVU game!<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI. Car wash, Friday<lb/>
at i at the Shell Station in front of<lb/>
Farm Fresh. Also, house cleanup<lb/>
Sunday at 2 Both events are man<lb/>
aatory<lb/>
ALL SORORITIES: The brothers of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi would like to wish<lb/>
everyone good luck during rush<lb/>
STRATTON: Where in the hell is<lb/>
Johnny Paycheck? I'm 37 years old.<lb/>
Amen The Pro Cooler Player.<lb/>
SIGMA NU: The Knights of Sigma<lb/>
Nu will be having their Fall Rush<lb/>
next week. The parties will be held<lb/>
Mon Thurs in Jones Cafeteria from<lb/>
8 11 pm. We encourage all males on<lb/>
campus that are serious about being<lb/>
Greek to attend! For info call<lb/>
758 0870 and ask for Gene, Dave or<lb/>
Cheeto.<lb/>
SIGMA NU B R OT HER sTA IT L<lb/>
SISTERS: Remember to wear your<lb/>
togas for Saturday's game and the<lb/>
festivities afterwards. Remember<lb/>
Cheeto says, "If you can't wear your<lb/>
togas wear nothing at all<lb/>
FOUND: Ladies' watch. Call<lb/>
757 6324 to identify and claim.<lb/>
HOMEMADE HOT WAFFLE<lb/>
CONESMI: We'll fill'em with your<lb/>
favorite HOMEMADE ICE CREAM,<lb/>
?op it with HOT FUDGE, tne CAN<lb/>
3Y, real WHIPPED CREAM, and a<lb/>
CHERRY Utterly Delicious<lb/>
FOR SALE: Is it true you can buy<lb/>
jeeps for U4 through the U.S.<lb/>
government? Get the facts today!<lb/>
Call 1 312 742 1142, ext. 5271 A.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
? i<lb/>
ATTENTION: Tutor needed for In<lb/>
tro. to Logic 1500 immediately.<lb/>
Please call David at 752 1182.<lb/>
WANTED: Need dependable person<lb/>
to answer telephones. Light typing.<lb/>
Hours 8:30 12:30 Mon. Fri. Call Pam<lb/>
at 758 6200<lb/>
TYPING: Professional service at<lb/>
low rates includes: proofreading,<lb/>
spelling and grammatical correc<lb/>
tions; 12 yrs. experience; familiar<lb/>
with all university formats. Cindy:<lb/>
757-0398 anytime after 6 p.m.<lb/>
THIS PICTURE'S BEEN<lb/>
MISSING SOMETHING<lb/>
?????-?? <lb/>
NEED A D.J.?: Are you having a<lb/>
party and need a D.J.?: For the best<lb/>
in top 40, beach and dance call<lb/>
Morgan at 758 7967. Reasonable<lb/>
rates. References on request.<lb/>
WANTED: MALE DIVERS FOR<lb/>
THE ECU DIVING TEAM. An ex<lb/>
cellent opportunity to be a varsity<lb/>
athlete. Call John Rose or Rick<lb/>
Kobe at 757 6490<lb/>
CLAUDIA: Congratulations, little<lb/>
sis! You made it to sisterhood! Love,<lb/>
Amy (YBS)<lb/>
HANKS HOMEMADE ICE<lb/>
CREAM: Coupon in Sept 9 issue ex<lb/>
pires Mday, Sept 15, 1986<lb/>
WANTED: Female student to assist<lb/>
housewife with house cleaning and<lb/>
child care in exchange for room and<lb/>
board. Near campus. 757 1798.<lb/>
RUSH PHI TAU: Sept 15 17, 7 p.m.<lb/>
Do it) Mother would want you to!<lb/>
ALPHA SIGS: We hope you and the<lb/>
Alpha Sigs from ACC are as psyched<lb/>
as we are about Friday night! Looks<lb/>
like it's going to be an all-nighter<lb/>
Love, the AOTTs.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female<lb/>
roommate wanted to share two<lb/>
bedroom apt. $97.50month and Vi<lb/>
utilities. Close to campus. Student<lb/>
preferred. Call ater 5, 758 3205.<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER-<lb/>
VICE: Word processing. The<lb/>
Dataworks specializes in student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertions,<lb/>
theses, resume's and more. All work<lb/>
is computer checked against 50,000<lb/>
word electronic dictionary. Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1.75 per page, in-<lb/>
cluding paper (call for spedific<lb/>
rates.) Call Mark at 757 3440 after 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
RUSH PHI KAPPA TAU: Rush Phi<lb/>
Tau, Rush Phi Kappa Tau, Rush Phi<lb/>
Tau. Rush Phi Kappa Tau, Rush Phi<lb/>
Tau, Phi Kappa Rush Tau Confused<lb/>
about RUSH? Check ou the res, but<lb/>
NO DOUBT PHI KAPPA TAU IS<lb/>
THE BESTIr<lb/>
501, SURPRISE! SURPRISE! The<lb/>
Dest REAL dream I've ever haa<lb/>
Love, 105<lb/>
AOTT: Congratulations to our new<lb/>
sisters: Amy Campbell, Diane<lb/>
Felton, Kim King, Claudia Wiles,<lb/>
and Laura Wood. Welcome to<lb/>
sisterhood! Love, your sisters<lb/>
TO MY NEIGHBORS: Mel, Tobi,<lb/>
Nancy and Suz. I support you all the<lb/>
way with ZTA: Best wishes Love<lb/>
ya'H, Eric Weninger (Happy Birth-<lb/>
day)<lb/>
LOST: Heavy gold braided bracelet<lb/>
wheavy clasp. Of great sentimental<lb/>
value. Reward of greater worth of<lb/>
fered. Please call 752-3774 or<lb/>
758 4809 Lost between central cam<lb/>
pus and 3rd. St.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL WORD PRO<lb/>
CESSING: All your typing needs 7<lb/>
days a week on our State of the-Art<lb/>
equipment which features a letter<lb/>
quality IBM Printer. Pick-up and<lb/>
delivery available. 355-7595.<lb/>
It's You!<lb/>
OPEN LATE SEPT 13th AFTER ECU vs.<lb/>
WEST VA<lb/>
Weekend Special<lb/>
Your Choice of our three All You Can Eat<lb/>
Specials just $12.95<lb/>
Sunday Buffet $6.95<lb/>
10 Off with ECU ID.<lb/>
RUSH: Tonight and tomorrow only!<lb/>
Little sister rush at the Sig Tau<lb/>
house 8 30 until Call for hoes<lb/>
757 0)27 Come party with us.<lb/>
SPRING GRADUATES<lb/>
more days!<lb/>
Only 240<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Ill N. Library St.<lb/>
S150 a month plus utilities shared.<lb/>
Wash, dryer and phone Steve Mit<lb/>
chem 752 8519.<lb/>
KATZ PERSONALIZED COM-<lb/>
PUTER DATING SERVICE: Is Of<lb/>
fering special low rates to students.<lb/>
Call or write for more information,<lb/>
355 7595 or P.O Box 8003, Green<lb/>
ville, NC 27835.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dodge Colt, runs good.<lb/>
Will take ANY reasonable offer. Call<lb/>
now. 758 6680, Catherine.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI'S: Thefunstarts<lb/>
at 12 so ou better be ready, 'cause<lb/>
on Pref Night you'll party with Phi<lb/>
Tau Freddie! A shot to get started<lb/>
and a toast for all, loud music, danc<lb/>
mg, we'll have a ball! It'll be great<lb/>
there's no doubt, cause Friday night<lb/>
we're gonna BLOW IT OUT!<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI RUSH INFO : P<lb/>
kaopa Phi will have an information<lb/>
table in front of the student store to<lb/>
day and tomorrow Anyone in-<lb/>
vested is invited to stop by.<lb/>
ADPIs We'll sv with the short<lb/>
hearo around the world Surfs up<lb/>
Bring your bail money to pay the jail<lb/>
keeper We'll party all night and<lb/>
sleep all day. The sip'n grip crew<lb/>
SIGMA TAU GAMMA: Brother rush<lb/>
is Mon Thurs A fraternity where<lb/>
you can be yourself<lb/>
KA LITTLE SISTERS: Welcome<lb/>
back! Our first meeting will be Sept.<lb/>
14 at 7 pm. It's very important ou<lb/>
attend. Mandatory! Let's make this<lb/>
a GREAT semester.<lb/>
FOUND: Black lab puppy around<lb/>
3rd &amp; 4th Streets, last Monday night,<lb/>
Sept 1. Call 758 4019.<lb/>
WANTED: 2 roommates to share<lb/>
bedroom at Georgetown Apts.<lb/>
Prefer non smokers. Call 757 3038<lb/>
Rent S117month.<lb/>
WANTED: Used scuba gear in good<lb/>
condition and reasonable price.<lb/>
Phone: 753 2245.<lb/>
FOR SALE: O'Sullivan wood stereo<lb/>
cabinet, 5 shelves with double smok<lb/>
ed glass doors. $50. Call 758-7723.<lb/>
Give a hoot.<lb/>
Don't pollute.<lb/>
Forest Service, 1 LS.D.A. ?3<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ross 10 speed bike, 2<lb/>
yrs. old, like new. $85 includes<lb/>
lockchain. Call Betsy at 752 4973 or<lb/>
758 2874.<lb/>
LIFE'S A HEALTH AFFAIR: Spend<lb/>
a healthy afternoon with us at the<lb/>
2nd Annual Life's A Health Affair,<lb/>
Wed . Sept. 17 from 3-6 pm at<lb/>
Menoenhall Student Center. Fun,<lb/>
games, exhibits, free give a ways<lb/>
Sponsored by the West Area<lb/>
Residence Council, Student Health<lb/>
Service and intramural Recrea<lb/>
tional Services<lb/>
HEY TKE'S: Better get some rest<lb/>
cause Pref Night with Delta Zeta is<lb/>
going to be the best! We love ya.<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
See CLASSIFIEDS, page 18<lb/>
ABORTOSS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
1205 Abortion from 1? to 18 weeks a!<lb/>
additional cost. Pregnant Test, Birth Control.<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toll tree<lb/>
number: 1-800-532-5384) between 9 am and 5<lb/>
p m. weekdays. General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
SIGMA NU: The Knights of Sigma<lb/>
Nu W'H be meeting this Thurs night<lb/>
at Pizza Hut on loth st at 8 pm We<lb/>
will be tailgating before Saturday's<lb/>
game in the parking lot at Rose High<lb/>
School starting around 4 pm There<lb/>
win be a post game party at Gene's<lb/>
apt Wear our togas!<lb/>
TO ALL THE WILD WOMEN AT<lb/>
ECU: Kenny Bourgeois is out there<lb/>
waiting for you! Room 216A Scott<lb/>
Dorm, ph 758 7719<lb/>
SIGMA NU: The Knights Of Sigma<lb/>
Nu will be having their regular<lb/>
meeting in Room 221 Mendenhali<lb/>
Sunday night at 930 pm. Lil Sisters<lb/>
are asked to meet upstairs in<lb/>
Mendenhali at 830 on Sunday for a<lb/>
special meeting.<lb/>
MICHELLE E The trip on bus No<lb/>
1 with SPE started out to fun indeed<lb/>
Bacardi, Seagrams ana vodka in<lb/>
hana. the trip to State promised to be<lb/>
grand. But just outside Raleigh you<lb/>
were such a sight, that Virginia<lb/>
Gentleman did not do you right The<lb/>
smell of VG all over the floor, made<lb/>
all of bus no 1 run for the door<lb/>
Thanks to everyone who watched<lb/>
her ou guys were great,so Tara and<lb/>
Barb could go watch NC. State.<lb/>
SCOTT AVERY: I'm glad you can<lb/>
play but please be carefulAnne<lb/>
HEY NOW DEADHEADS: Miss the<lb/>
DC shows? This Friday at 10 pm<lb/>
we'll hear it on WZMB, 91 3 FM.<lb/>
Every Friday night from 8 pm to<lb/>
midnight is ROCK-OUTLET with<lb/>
DEAD REDD Enjoy the show!<lb/>
Jerry is OK !<lb/>
SCUBA DIVERS: The Coral Ree.<lb/>
Dive Club will hold the 1st meeting<lb/>
of the semester at Hooters, Thurs.<lb/>
911 at 10 pm. Nominations for club<lb/>
officers will be taken. Please attend!<lb/>
SCOTT AND TIM: Sorry youhad to<lb/>
see me in such great shape at the<lb/>
tailgate party, but next time you<lb/>
great sportswriters lose your press<lb/>
passes, come find me and let's par<lb/>
ty! Love, Anne, the typesetter from<lb/>
Jersev<lb/>
NEW Try one of Hank's NEW<lb/>
Treasure Chest Treats<lb/>
Guaranteed to make your evening<lb/>
complete<lb/>
Scholarships for<lb/>
medical and senior<lb/>
pre-med students<lb/>
Medical school costs are rising every day<lb/>
They're climbing faster than many students can<lb/>
handle without the right kind of financial help.<lb/>
If you're a medical student, the Air Force may<lb/>
have the best answer for you. We offer an excel-<lb/>
lent scholarship program that can ease the finan-<lb/>
cial strain of medical or osteopathy school and<lb/>
allow you to concentrate on your studies. Par-<lb/>
ticipation is based on competitive selection. Let<lb/>
the Air Force make an investment in your profes-<lb/>
sional future. For more information contact:<lb/>
TSgt. McCullen<lb/>
919-<lb/>
856-4130<lb/>
A great way of life<lb/>
Tailgating Baskets<lb/>
For 2 or More<lb/>
Wine or imported heer<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese Cn issants<lb/>
New York Cheesecake<lb/>
Pepperoni, Cheese &amp; Crackers<lb/>
Pirates's Handful of Candy<lb/>
Purple &amp; Gold Jellybeans, etc.<lb/>
Plates, Forks &amp; Cups Included.<lb/>
$24.99<lb/>
Pick up Saturday before the game<lb/>
Call ahead for your baskets<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
iMM'HHMIMmiHHIIIIIIIimillMIIMIIIIIIIM.HMIH.HHIIHHIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIg<lb/>
TO THE OWNER OF THE BLUE<lb/>
NISSAN PICKUP: State Tailgate<lb/>
was a blast. Sorry we missed you<lb/>
Potato salad was great, where are<lb/>
you parking Saturday? The party<lb/>
from 647 Ramada? Get it right Bill<lb/>
YUM Homemade Oreo Ice<lb/>
Cream with MSiM Cands blended<lb/>
ir.to it. YUM Only at Hank's<lb/>
Homemade Ice Cream (beside Wen<lb/>
dy's). It can't be beat<lb/>
SCOTT SNYDER: BrylCream, a lit-<lb/>
tle dab will do ya! Use as directed<lb/>
RRRRRR<lb/>
Every Thursday Night Is<lb/>
TACO NIGHT<lb/>
Two Great Tacos for only. 99<lb/>
60 oz. Pitchers $1.99<lb/>
Offer Good From 7p.rnU p.m. - Not Valid on Deliveries<lb/>
ALL DAY FRIDAY<lb/>
32 oz. Bucket of Your Favorite Draft<lb/>
THE VESSEL, THE BANDIT AND<lb/>
SHAW CHEVETTE: Stop on the<lb/>
highway for a piss. Girls OTR. Who<lb/>
bled on the sheets? David needs nan<lb/>
dy help. Run, Andrew run. Making<lb/>
babies at A&amp;P Get your foot out of<lb/>
my back. Ricky and Helen get a cab. QQ? 1<lb/>
Bill's escort service, we left your I  ? yr I<lb/>
muffler in Raleigh. Continue this 215 " I,0"rth Street 752-2183 i<lb/>
f aturday. miniumnunmin?tminimiiimimiiiiiiiimiiimmHiiiiimiimimmimiimHifi<lb/>
I? ?.<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
$1 99<lb/>
VP A ? plus tax<lb/>
FOR ONE COMPLETE<lb/>
2-PIECE PACK<lb/>
2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
1 Small Mashed Potato and Gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
1 Medium Drink<lb/>
Expires Dec. 31, 1986<lb/>
HowTo Improve<lb/>
AtlheBeach<lb/>
If you're finding your bathing suit<lb/>
tighter than usual, nows a fitting time to<lb/>
join The Spa. Students can join The Spa<lb/>
on a monthly basis for only $25 per<lb/>
month. That's $25 for 30-days without<lb/>
any strings attached.<lb/>
The Spa offers 52 aerobics work-<lb/>
outs every week, exercise machines, free<lb/>
weights, steam room, sauna and whirl-<lb/>
pool. Plus, there are plenty of trained<lb/>
instructors to help you shape up.<lb/>
So. if your body is flunking the<lb/>
beach test, call or dnp bv The Spa for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Impn ?ving y ?ur grades at the beach<lb/>
simply requires a little home work.<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
best health club lvalue.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK.SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GRtENVILLE 756 7991<lb/>
ounu<lb/>
AH-Amreu, C .ndtdt. <lb/>
est Virginia b<lb/>
Lmcnca candidates<lb/>
linebacker Matl 5<lb/>
Ive back Travis .<lb/>
Uard David Grai a<lb/>
ickle Jef? 1 ttca men<lb/>
on in numerou<lb/>
lecklis!<lb/>
efense<lb/>
Continued from p?t- i?<lb/>
icious hiti<lb/>
Perhaps th<lb/>
A a. defensive unii is the r<lb/>
mg of the ei<lb/>
le corner. Sta<lb/>
enn Curei<lb/>
lollev and at the<lb/>
)ts.<lb/>
"The'r<lb/>
Highest, m<lb/>
lefense! n the land<lb/>
Oommented 'Tne-<lb/>
fressive and i<lb/>
(500<lb/>
Standard<lb/>
Dek<lb/>
ROTAfO<lb/>
,22<lb/>
SZZy-<lb/>
35,<lb/>
ELECTRONIC SHOWROOM<lb/>
Athletics .<lb/>
a<lb/>
Frorem.ry men e, <lb/>
' Wh-te' ft ,tock r . p. . t<lb/>
mtramtrots ?e en<lb/>
onore' n one sp 1<lb/>
Social Life . . .<lb/>
It never con be s<lb/>
eno a gocxi soc : fe Ge ?<lb/>
different peoce -<lb/>
kn ' group One se?<lb/>
? oppcx hes ? ?<lb/>
Events such Cb 3 ? ??<lb/>
some dJ -t<lb/>
. ?ne vea<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
. 422 vv 5- St<lb/>
 Number of Chapte<lb/>
Dae one P oce jf F<lb/>
N a e Un ve-s <lb/>
I Nc' one He<lb/>
F'ce' ty Cc rj ?(<lb/>
; PhiianX' c Qi - ?<lb/>
?" Assooatior<lb/>
 Who' one ? ? - -<lb/>
<lb/>
' -cs a coec rroteT .<lb/>
I Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
I 210 Wh -<lb/>
' Nun-ibe- of Chapters N<lb/>
: Date and Place of F<lb/>
: Mi0r-<lb/>
 Fratem ty Cc ? - .<lb/>
r PhilantvopiC Oc<lb/>
. What makes 5 Frolem -<lb/>
BroVs he . - -e's<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi ?<lb/>
510 E 5- 5-<lb/>
Numte- of O<lb/>
Date one P j. e<lb/>
College c " J ? t New <lb/>
Nat'ona Mej v.<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Frote ty Co ? .s<lb/>
F lontfvopit<lb/>
What makes -<lb/>
The Fnotem ty of I<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
500 E 111Si<lb/>
Number c Chapte s v-<lb/>
Dote and Place of ecv - . -<lb/>
Washington one Lee<lb/>
Nationo HeooquOp?? <lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
FrQtem,tS Colors (<lb/>
rh.ianthfop'C Orojontzol '?' ? Dysl<lb/>
What makes th,s F-atp ? -<lb/>
1st fratenn,t on Compus<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
700 E 10 St<lb/>
Numbe o Chapters Not 3e? 200<lb/>
Date and Place a4 Founding Decembe 10<lb/>
Universe Of V-rgmia<lb/>
Naticnoi Headquarters La<lb/>
Chylottesville Virginia<lb/>
y Fratem,ty Colors Scarlet vv- ?? 5 ee<lb/>
l Philonthropic Organization W<lb/>
J What mokes this Frate <lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
? E Ei.zooetf Si I<lb/>
iNumber of Chopters Nationally Over 20C<lb/>
Date ond Place of Founding Nove<lb/>
Poston University<lb/>
(National Headquarters Location inc<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Proierntty Cotors Purple Green Gold<lb/>
Philonthrop?c Organization March ai<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
AX<lb/>
?<lb/>
 .<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0018"/><lb/>
Back Pirates<lb/>
I RE'S BEEN<lb/>
OMETHING<lb/>
X<lb/>
i.<lb/>
ou!<lb/>
13th AFTER ECU vs.<lb/>
F <lb/>
id Special<lb/>
1 ? You an Eat<lb/>
$12.95<lb/>
I fet $6.95<lb/>
i<lb/>
hoot.<lb/>
ollute.<lb/>
<lb/>
CA5101J5<lb/>
Is Baskets<lb/>
More<lb/>
red beer<lb/>
Croissants<lb/>
?secake<lb/>
?ese &amp; Crackers<lb/>
dful of Candy<lb/>
ellybeans, etc.<lb/>
i Cups Included.<lb/>
.99<lb/>
the name<lb/>
?<lb/>
(iretnilie Square<lb/>
3<lb/>
rove<lb/>
. shapx <lb/>
 flunk- j ' i<lb/>
 p by T' 5pai<lb/>
it the beach<lb/>
I ttle home work<lb/>
GreenvtUe's<lb/>
health dub vabte.<lb/>
PHNGCENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE 756-7991<lb/>
Mountaineer Deft<lb/>
All-Amreica Candidates<lb/>
est Virginia boasts four All-<lb/>
America candidates in 1986.<lb/>
Linebacker Matt Smith, defen<lb/>
?e back Travis Curtis, middle<lb/>
guard David Grant and defensive<lb/>
tackle Jeff Lucas received men-<lb/>
tion in numerous preseason A-A<lb/>
checklists.<lb/>
Smith has quietly earned a<lb/>
reputation as one of college foot-<lb/>
ball's more outstanding player's.<lb/>
The 6-3, 235-pound senior was in<lb/>
on five tackles, four of them solo<lb/>
stops, against Northern Illinois<lb/>
and shows a career total of 139<lb/>
solo tackles and 76 assists.<lb/>
Curtis is one of the hardest hit-<lb/>
Defense Paces WV<lb/>
Continued from page IS<lb/>
vicious hitters.<lb/>
Perhaps the strong point in the<lb/>
V Va. defensive unit is the retur-<lb/>
ning of the entire secondary. At<lb/>
the corners, Stacy Smith and<lb/>
Benny Cureton return with Larry<lb/>
Holley and Curtis at the safety<lb/>
spots.<lb/>
"They're probably one of the<lb/>
toughest, most intimidating<lb/>
defenses in the land Anderson<lb/>
commented. "They are very ag-<lb/>
gressive and won't back down<lb/>
from anyone<lb/>
Sophomore Charlie Bauman<lb/>
retuns to handle the placekicking<lb/>
duties. In his freshman season,<lb/>
Bauman connected on 14 of 21<lb/>
fieldgoal attempts while nailing<lb/>
all of his PAT's. Lance Carion<lb/>
returns to do the punting chores.<lb/>
Carion is currently averaging<lb/>
40.0 yards per punt.<lb/>
The Moutnaineers own a 4-0<lb/>
lead in the series between the two<lb/>
schools as they topped ECU 30-3<lb/>
in their last meeting in '83.<lb/>
TJHNSTON International Ltd.<lb/>
TELEPHONES<lb/>
Great For Homes, Dorms,<lb/>
Offices and Apartments.<lb/>
A variable In:<lb/>
Beige ? White ? Cocoa<lb/>
Brown ? Harvest Gold<lb/>
(500)<lb/>
Standard<lb/>
Desk<lb/>
ROTARY<lb/>
(2200)<lb/>
Trendline<lb/>
Desk<lb/>
U-TOUCH<lb/>
(2500)<lb/>
Standard<lb/>
Desk<lb/>
U-TOUCH<lb/>
' Athletics<lb/>
Fraternity men enoy on oct.ve athletic existence<lb/>
Whether it be trocV meets" field events or<lb/>
intramurals, we enjoy competing against one<lb/>
another in one sport or another<lb/>
Social Life<lb/>
AZP<lb/>
It never can be said that fraternity people don't<lb/>
en(oy a good social life Getting to know many<lb/>
different people is only natural among such a close<lb/>
knit group One seems to fall into a wealth of<lb/>
opportunities for things to do with his spare time<lb/>
Events such as Greek Week is ust an example of<lb/>
some of the activities that fraternities plan during<lb/>
the year<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
422 W 5th St 757-3516<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 6, 1845<lb/>
Yale University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location Delaware, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Cardinal ond Stone<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization American Lung<lb/>
Association<lb/>
What makes this fraternity unique<lb/>
It was a coed fraternity at one time.<lb/>
Ben<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
210Whichard 757 0351<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding; August 8, 1839,<lb/>
Miami, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Pmk and Blue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization<lb/>
Whot makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Brothers helping Brothers<lb/>
azo<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
510 E 5th St 752 9608<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding December 10, 1899,<lb/>
College of the City of New York<lb/>
National Headquarters Location Indianapolis,<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Nile Green, White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
The Fraternity of Engineered Leadership<lb/>
Kappa Alpha l<lb/>
500 E 11th St 752 1005<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 21, 1865,<lb/>
Washington and Lee<lb/>
National Headquarters Location Atlanta,<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Crimson and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
Whot makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
1st fraternity on Compos <lb/>
Kappa Sigma IX JL<lb/>
700 E 10th St 752-5543<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 200<lb/>
Dote and Ploce of Founding: December 10, 1869,<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location.<lb/>
Cnarlottesvilie, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Scarlet, White, Green<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
500 E ElizobethSt 752-6159<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Dote ond Ploce of Founding November 2, 1909,<lb/>
Boston University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location: Indianapolis,<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Purple, Green, Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
ters to play the game. A starter<lb/>
since the third game of his<lb/>
freshman season, he came up<lb/>
with two tackles and two assists<lb/>
against the Huskies and has a<lb/>
career total of 105 solo stops and<lb/>
66 assists.<lb/>
Grant, who was named to the<lb/>
Football News freshman All-<lb/>
America team in 1984, came up<lb/>
with five solo tackles and an<lb/>
assist, two of them for a loss, in<lb/>
the Northern Ulinios game. He is<lb/>
considered a sure-fire pro pro-<lb/>
spect.<lb/>
Lucas also has definite pro<lb/>
potential; he registered seven<lb/>
tackles and two assists against<lb/>
NI. During his West Virginia<lb/>
career, Lucas has come up with<lb/>
48 solo tackles and 36 assists.<lb/>
Other West Virginia Players<lb/>
To Watch ? Tailback John<lb/>
Holifield turned in a solid perfor-<lb/>
mance in the season opener with<lb/>
98 yards on just 11 carries, scor-<lb/>
ing two touchdowns. He also<lb/>
snagged two passes for 21 yards.<lb/>
Wide receiver John Tally ad-<lb/>
justed to his new position in the<lb/>
season opener. The former<lb/>
quarterback caught two passes<lb/>
for 30 yards and a touchdown,<lb/>
and also completed one pass for<lb/>
six yards and another score.<lb/>
Tailback Undra Johnson also<lb/>
turned in a good afternoon's<lb/>
work with 70 yards rushing on 12<lb/>
carries. Tailback Pat Randolph<lb/>
established a new record for the<lb/>
longest run from scrimmage with<lb/>
a 96-yard TD scamper.<lb/>
East Carolina Players To<lb/>
Watch ? The Pirates are led by<lb/>
quarterback Charlie Libretto,<lb/>
who completed 14 of 26 passes<lb/>
for 169 yards with two intercep-<lb/>
tions in the setback to North<lb/>
Carolina state. Fullback Anthony<lb/>
Simpson carried the ball 13 times<lb/>
for 48 yards and a touchdown<lb/>
against the Wolfpack, while<lb/>
tailback Jarrod Moody caught<lb/>
five passes for 55 yards. On<lb/>
defense, linebacker Vinson Smith<lb/>
was charted with 10 tackles and<lb/>
defensive end Walter Bryant was<lb/>
in on eight stops.<lb/>
West Virginia-ECL ? West<lb/>
Virginia has started the season<lb/>
2-0 each of the six previous<lb/>
seasons under Coach Don<lb/>
NehlenMike Timko brings a<lb/>
4-0 record into the East Carolina<lb/>
game as West Virginia's starting<lb/>
quarterback. He led the Moun-<lb/>
taineers to season-ending trium-<lb/>
phs over Rutgers, Timple and<lb/>
Syracuse in 1985 and engineered<lb/>
last week's 47-14 victory over<lb/>
Northern IllinoisArt Lewis (10<lb/>
Years) and Ira Rodgers (nine<lb/>
seasons) are the only coaches<lb/>
with longer tenures than Don<lb/>
Nehlen in WVU history East<lb/>
Carolina returns 14 starters from<lb/>
last season's 2-9 team West<lb/>
Virginia and East Carolina face<lb/>
two common opponents in Penn<lb/>
State and Miami (Fla.) in<lb/>
1986The Mountaineers and<lb/>
Pirates meet again next season on<lb/>
Oct. 3 at Mountaineer<lb/>
FieldWVU returns to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium on Oct. 8, 1988Satur-<lb/>
day's victory over Northern Il-<lb/>
linois gave West Virginia a 30-7-1<lb/>
record in Mountaineer Field since<lb/>
the stadium opened in<lb/>
1980Since the 1981 season,<lb/>
WVU is 27-4-1 at homeAlso<lb/>
since 1981, the Mountaineers oun<lb/>
a 43-16-1 recordIncluding four<lb/>
bowl games, West Virginia has<lb/>
played on the road 34 times under<lb/>
Don Nehlen, owning a 19-15<lb/>
recordWest Virginia returns<lb/>
home next week to host rival<lb/>
Maryland while the Pirates travel<lb/>
to Auburn.<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARMY<lb/>
WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT.<lb/>
Hie hardest thing about break<lb/>
ing into professional<lb/>
music is-well, break-<lb/>
ing into professional<lb/>
music. So if you're<lb/>
looking for an oppor-<lb/>
tunirv to turn your<lb/>
musical talent into<lb/>
a full-time perform-<lb/>
ing career, take a<lb/>
good look .it th<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
It s not<lb/>
all parades<lb/>
and John Philip<lb/>
Sousa. Army<lb/>
bands nxrk.<lb/>
waltz and boogie<lb/>
as well as march,<lb/>
and they perform<lb/>
before concert au-<lb/>
diences as well<lb/>
as spectators<lb/>
W ith an average<lb/>
of 40 performances a month, there's<lb/>
also the opportunity tor travel -<lb/>
not only across Amenca, but possibly<lb/>
abroad.<lb/>
Most important, you can<lb/>
expect a first-rate pro-<lb/>
fessional environment<lb/>
from your instructors,<lb/>
facilities and fellow<lb/>
musicians. The Army<lb/>
has educational<lb/>
programs that<lb/>
an help you<lb/>
pavfororf-<lb/>
dutv lnsrruc-<lb/>
t tion. and it<lb/>
you qual-<lb/>
ity, even<lb/>
help you<lb/>
repay<lb/>
your<lb/>
federally-insured<lb/>
student loans<lb/>
If you can sight -<lb/>
read music, performing in the Army<lb/>
could be your big break Write:<lb/>
Chief. Army Bands Office, Fort<lb/>
Benjamin Harrwn IN 421o-VA;<lb/>
Or call toll tree 1-800-1 ISA-ARMY<lb/>
ARMY BAND.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE<lb/>
winterIfratcrmtv (tuuuctl<lb/>
September 1986<lb/>
Welcome New Male Students:<lb/>
On behalf of the Inter-Fraternity Council, it is my privilege to<lb/>
welcome you to East Carolina University. I would like to take this op-<lb/>
portunity to inform you of our fraternity system's official recruit-<lb/>
ment period, "RUSH This is the time set aside to let the fraternity<lb/>
system at East Carolina demonstrate the many positive attributes that<lb/>
can enhance one's college experience.<lb/>
The fraternity system at East Carolina has much to offer the am-<lb/>
bitious college man. Opportunities exist in leadership, fellowship,<lb/>
academic achievement, community service, campus involvement, in-<lb/>
tense athletic competition, and numerous other areas which can help<lb/>
one attain personal achievement goals. A greater number of men are<lb/>
realizing these benefits as fraternity membership climbs at East<lb/>
Carolina, as well as nationwide.<lb/>
Beginning the week of September 11, many fraternities will be hav-<lb/>
ing "open" rush parties foi all interested men wishing to affiliate with<lb/>
a fraternity. An opportunity is being provided for you to visit all the<lb/>
fraternity houses in search for the group that best suits you. To aid<lb/>
you in your search, buses will be running to all the fraternity houses<lb/>
from the College Hill bus stop. We ask that you please take advantage<lb/>
of this service.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
ft ill fraternities hurt my grades!<lb/>
? No. meres every evidence m0r (o.n,ng c<lb/>
fraternity improves your chonces of graduating<lb/>
? 33 of men on campus without fratem,ties ??<lb/>
graduate, and<lb/>
? 65 of all frafemrv -e- 5-2CKjC.e<lb/>
? Scholarship programs of fratcm ? es ?oduce<lb/>
greater academy success, a-d bee' ac- eve-e<lb/>
for yOu<lb/>
Fraternity Life . . .<lb/>
To be m a fraternity lS r?ot merely to be .n a social<lb/>
dub Fraternities are a way of life We share<lb/>
expenses as well as exper.ences and we are<lb/>
responsible to each other for ou' own actions We<lb/>
live off campus for the most pet ve? we are ery<lb/>
active on compus We en0 a good 'eiat.onship<lb/>
with our university s admin,strati or Qnd W me pas'<lb/>
few decodes, have become a ma(or pan- of me<lb/>
university's student life<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
ITT<lb/>
David Dupree<lb/>
1FC President<lb/>
505 E 5th St 752 294<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Almost 300<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding Novembe' 1 190!<lb/>
University of Richmond Vrgm a<lb/>
National Heodquarters Location Rc-y<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Purple Red<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization Heart Fund<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Diversify<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
506 W 5th St<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally CXer<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding June 28 1920<lb/>
Central Missouri State Teachers College<lb/>
National Heodquarters Locatior Waer-s&amp;urg<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Fatemity Colors Blue ond White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization Greenv e Boss Cub<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Academics<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
757)! 2!<lb/>
00<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
210 ?HICHAD II DO ?<lb/>
?AST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
!?) ?5?-114UlJ<lb/>
? CKEENVILLF. M C 2'IJ4<lb/>
dkt<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St. 752-4379<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 100<lb/>
Date and Ploce of Founding: March 17, 1906,<lb/>
Miami University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location: Oxford, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Havod Red and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: CARE<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique.<lb/>
Encourage Brothers to be involved in campus<lb/>
functions.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
210Whichard<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: March 1, 1868,<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location. Memphis,<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Garnet and Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Group effort in reaching goals<lb/>
nKO<lb/>
riKA<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
803 Hooker Rood 756-3540<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 120<lb/>
Date ond Ploce of Founding: December 10, 1904,<lb/>
College of Charleston, SC<lb/>
Notional Heodquarters Location: Chorlotte, North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Gold, White, Blue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: PUSH<lb/>
(Play Units for the Severly Handicapped)<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Strongest Alumni Association<lb/>
Sigma Nu 2 N<lb/>
1301 CotoncheSt. 758-7640<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date ond Ploce of Founding: January 1, 1864,<lb/>
Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Virginia<lb/>
National Heodquarters Location. Lexington,<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Black, Gold, White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Kidney Foundation<lb/>
What mokes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Founded against hazing<lb/>
951 E 10th St 758 8222<lb/>
Number of Chapters NationaMv Csc 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding January 10. 1899<lb/>
Illinois Wesleyon University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location Indianapolis.<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Cherry Gray<lb/>
Philanthrope Organization St Judes Children's<lb/>
Hospital<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Diversity and Teamwork<lb/>
Theta Chi<lb/>
210 Whtchard<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally l55<lb/>
Date ond Ploce of Founding 1856, Norwich<lb/>
University, Norwich, Vermont<lb/>
National Headquarters Location Trenton New<lb/>
Jersey<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Red ond While<lb/>
Philanthropic Organ izottons<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Personal development ond service to Alma<lb/>
ex<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
Mpnday (15th) thru Thursday (18th)<lb/>
7:00-11:00<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
2ipWh?chard<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 150<lb/>
Date ond Place of Founding 1898, Cork College<lb/>
New York City<lb/>
National Headquarters Location New York City<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Blue, White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organfeotion<lb/>
Whot mokes this Fro?nitty Unique<lb/>
Stress Scholastics, Oose-kmt members<lb/>
'?"????? - ? - <lb/>
A<lb/>
I<lb/>
 n<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0019"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11.1966<lb/>
New CAA Coaches Get Wins<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
The Colonial's two new head<lb/>
coaches made debuts last week.<lb/>
James Madison blanked Robert<lb/>
Morris 5-0 for Tom Martin, and<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington stumped Bap-<lb/>
tist College 3-0 for Jackie<lb/>
Blackmore.<lb/>
It was Martins's 120th win as a<lb/>
college coach (he was previously<lb/>
head coach at West Virginia<lb/>
Wesleyan for eight season and at<lb/>
Tri State Uinversity for one<lb/>
year).<lb/>
Balckmore's win was his first a<lb/>
College helm; he was UNCW's<lb/>
assistant coach last season.<lb/>
George Mason's high-scoring<lb/>
Sam Sumo made hes first game<lb/>
of the season a good one, scoring<lb/>
twice to lead the Patriots past<lb/>
Howard 3-0. Sumo, a<lb/>
sophomore, issed GMU's first<lb/>
two games, both losses, when he<lb/>
could not travel from his home in<lb/>
Liberia to the U.S. He arrived at<lb/>
GMU in the middle of last week.<lb/>
Working It!<lb/>
Double Plays: Chris Clay and<lb/>
Mike Dee scored twice each in<lb/>
Navy's 4-0 win over St. John's.<lb/>
Kurt Leudy tallied twice in James<lb/>
Madison's 5-0 triumph over<lb/>
Robert Morris. Ron Raab netted<lb/>
a pair in William&amp;Mary's 5-1 vic-<lb/>
tory over Mary Washington, and<lb/>
Ricky Dahan scored twice in the<lb/>
Tribe's 5-3 overtime loss to<lb/>
Loyola. Sam Sumo got two goals<lb/>
in George Mason's 3-0 decision<lb/>
over Howard. Jamie Reibel kick-<lb/>
ed in a pair in East Carolina's 3-0<lb/>
win over Francis Marion.<lb/>
American took runner-up<lb/>
honors in the Oneonta State<lb/>
"Mayor's Cup" tournament last<lb/>
weekend. The Eagles fell to<lb/>
Evansville 3-0 in the title match.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary senior captain<lb/>
Scott Bell will set a school career<lb/>
record with his next goal. He's<lb/>
currently tied for the lead at 36.<lb/>
Freshman Tim Leahy plays<lb/>
defense for Richmond, but he's<lb/>
one of the team's scoring leaders<lb/>
with a goal and assist in two<lb/>
games.<lb/>
James Madison's season-<lb/>
opening win over Robert Morris<lb/>
was the Dukes seventh-straight<lb/>
season-opening win.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary has already<lb/>
played and lost two overtime<lb/>
games: 2-0 at Connecticut and<lb/>
5-3 to Loyola. The Tribe led<lb/>
Loyola 3-1 before the<lb/>
Greyhounds scored twice in the<lb/>
last five minutes of regulation.<lb/>
In James Madison's 1-0 win<lb/>
over Georgetown, junior Eric<lb/>
Miller scored the only goal, his<lb/>
first in college play.<lb/>
American was ranked 18th,<lb/>
George Mason 20th in Soccer<lb/>
America magazine's pre-season<lb/>
Division I poll.<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
NEED A DE JAYET: Are you hav<lb/>
ing a party and need a D.J.? For the<lb/>
choice in rock, bop, mid-60's, beach,<lb/>
funk, rap, soul, dance, saving and<lb/>
oldies. Contact the TRASHMAN at<lb/>
752 3587. Best rates in the south.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Burndt orange carpet,<lb/>
IV x 12 great for dorm rooms! Us<lb/>
ed only i semester, excellent condi<lb/>
tion, vacuumed often, a real bargain<lb/>
for 150, or make offer Call Mark at<lb/>
758 9414<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SERVICES: Typ<lb/>
ing resumes, term papers, thesis<lb/>
papers. Call SDF Professional Com<lb/>
puter Services Inc 106 E. 5th St<lb/>
(near Cubbies) Greenville. 752 3694<lb/>
TYPING ALL KINDS: SI 25<lb/>
page. Call 752 2100 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
per<lb/>
FOR SALE: Living room furniture<lb/>
couch, chair, ottoman, coffe and 2<lb/>
end tables. Excellent condition, S400<lb/>
Call 752-1446 daily or 758-9122 nights.<lb/>
YARD SALE: Corner of Lawerance<lb/>
St. and 11th St. One block up from<lb/>
Wendy's on 10th St. Saturday the<lb/>
13th. 8-2.<lb/>
WATERBED FOR SALE: King size<lb/>
waterbed ro sale. Semi waveless,<lb/>
heater included. Less than 6 months<lb/>
old Headboard included. $250 Call<lb/>
758 9768 after 12 noon. Ask for Craig<lb/>
IBM-XT CO MPUTER: 2 360k<lb/>
FLOPPIES, 640 K ON SYSTEM<lb/>
BOARD, COLOR GRAPHICS<lb/>
CARD, AMBER MONITOR, PRO<lb/>
PRINTER AND SOFTWARE<lb/>
SETUP. 11 MONTHS OLD<lb/>
S2,450NEG CALL 752 0735 NOW<lb/>
FOR SALE: Alvarez guitar wcase<lb/>
S395 Bundy Saxophone wcase 1175<lb/>
Dunlop Max 200 G Tennis Racket<lb/>
$80 Can 758 0559<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 blocks from ECUT<lb/>
bedroom upstairs apt Large v ng<lb/>
room, bath and kitchen stove 8no<lb/>
refrigerator furmshed Screeneo ,n<lb/>
porch, ver n.ce $250month r?n<lb/>
758 1274 after 6 p m<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 blocks from ECU 1<lb/>
bedroom with private entrance<lb/>
Utilities paid $160month can<lb/>
758 1274 after 6pm<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brother Electric<lb/>
typewriter, built in correction, pica<lb/>
and script ball elements, carrying<lb/>
case. Good condition, $35. Call Bet<lb/>
sy. 752 4973 or 758 2874.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Camaro, V 6,<lb/>
5 speed, t tops, AMFM auto reverse<lb/>
cassette deck, low miles, excellent<lb/>
condition, MUST SEE. $6,500 FIRM<lb/>
756 6805<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Mazaa Rx 7 jet<lb/>
Black, 20.000 miles, all the exVas<lb/>
$10,400 firm! 758 4341 evenings anc<lb/>
weekends<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR SUBLET:<lb/>
Everything furnished Rmggod<lb/>
Towers room 103 '1 350 Call<lb/>
7 58 V459<lb/>
McCrady Renamed<lb/>
Bern McCrady, a junior from<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C has been re-<lb/>
named to the North Carolina<lb/>
Amateur Sports rowing team last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
McCrady, a political science<lb/>
major, says he was unable to<lb/>
compete in the Amateur games<lb/>
because of personal problems this<lb/>
summer. However, McCrady<lb/>
feels he is well prepared for the<lb/>
upcoming competition and is op-<lb/>
timistic.<lb/>
"Well, 1 feel like I'm in the<lb/>
best shape of my life right now<lb/>
McCrady said after a morning<lb/>
workout. "If everything goes<lb/>
well, I hope to be very com-<lb/>
petitive in my next outing. I've<lb/>
been working hard and I feel<lb/>
something good is going to hap-<lb/>
pen.<lb/>
The next competition for Mc-<lb/>
Crady is the Junior Challenge at<lb/>
Lake Hyco in Person County in<lb/>
mid December.<lb/>
Cleansweep Sale<lb/>
12 Price On All<lb/>
Summer Merchandise<lb/>
Tom Togs Factory Outlet<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave, Greenville<lb/>
EVERYTHING DIRECT FROM FACTORY<lb/>
HUGE SAVINGS ON CALCULATORS<lb/>
Wfcri<lb/>
 Hmmm Names That Wo Cannot Menttcm<lb/>
TROCADERQ<lb/>
cssani<lb/>
X For An All-American Family Meal<lb/>
SUMMER, FALL, AND WINTER MERCHANDISE<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
MON-SAT 10:00-6:00<lb/>
Located In H? WKoUmU Aim<lb/>
Jn Hm rtar ot ft builtf ng<lb/>
MEN'S, LADIES, CHILDREN'S, AND INFANTS WEAR<lb/>
New<lb/>
All-American Food Bar<lb/>
Meats<lb/>
Salads<lb/>
1<lb/>
Hot Vegetables<lb/>
Breads<lb/>
Desserts<lb/>
? Boat<lb/>
moac<lb/>
a a a c2 r'<lb/>
BoonoS<lb/>
E0 3 030000C<lb/>
EL 5400 Special Price<lb/>
EL 5500IISoentrfic<lb/>
CE 126P Thermal Print'<lb/>
iEr29PThrrnj(Pnntf<lb/>
EL 506P Sontifc<lb/>
EL 512P Scientific<lb/>
EL 5510 Financial<lb/>
EL 5520 Scientific<lb/>
EL S15SScJ?'SontiTic<lb/>
$35 00<lb/>
70 00<lb/>
55 00<lb/>
. 7000<lb/>
'500<lb/>
26 00<lb/>
70 00<lb/>
70 00<lb/>
1900<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Instruments<lb/>
Tl 36 SLR Solar Scientific<lb/>
Tl 74 serf Basic Programmable<lb/>
PC 324 Thermal Printer<lb/>
Tl 55 ill Scientific<lb/>
Tl 5310 Deaktop Financial<lb/>
Tl BAH Financial<lb/>
$'800<lb/>
94 00<lb/>
69 00<lb/>
33 00<lb/>
8500<lb/>
30 0C<lb/>
K HEWLETT<lb/>
.rM PACKARD<lb/>
HP 1 'C Scemif:<lb/>
HP '2CF,nanciai<lb/>
HP 15C Scient.f<lb/>
HP-iec Programmer<lb/>
HP-18C Nem BuemeasConeunant<lb/>
hP-4'Cv Aavenceo P'ogr?mmati<lb/>
hp-4'Cx Aenc?G Progfmmac?e<lb/>
82 KMACa-d Reader<lb/>
82!53AOct Wan3<lb/>
82'43A T??erma Pnte<lb/>
$4100<lb/>
T2O0<lb/>
72 00<lb/>
86 00<lb/>
'35 00<lb/>
?26X<lb/>
'79 00<lb/>
'380C<lb/>
9' 00<lb/>
27500<lb/>
Ft '5M Scientific<lb/>
c "OOOGGrmofticDii<lb/>
c " 3600P Scientific<lb/>
c? 45! SDia- Scientific<lb/>
c? 8100 Scientific witCot<lb/>
F x 90 C -edit Caro Scientific<lb/>
c ? 995 Soar Scemif<lb/>
? 4o00P Scientific<lb/>
e" ? c P'ogrammer<lb/>
IUX<lb/>
54 30<lb/>
190C<lb/>
21 00<lb/>
30 0C<lb/>
'900<lb/>
27 00<lb/>
3' 00<lb/>
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aALL Eta Mgggggaag<lb/>
655 7 N L11<lb/>
(312631 7800<lb/>
Chicago IL bOt4-j<lb/>
(312)677 7660<lb/>
CO KROGERINC FOR ALL YOUR<lb/>
Tailgate Party<lb/>
Needs!<lb/>
Register lo Wfflll<lb/>
Pirate Football Tickets<lb/>
2 Pairs To Be Owen Away<lb/>
For Each Home Game Register Now!<lb/>
All For Only<lb/>
$3.89<lb/>
Dozens of delicious choices.<lb/>
Fill your platter and come<lb/>
back for more as often as you<lb/>
likeThe All-American Food<lb/>
Barsm?loaded with everyone's<lb/>
favorite foods.<lb/>
Quality meats, all-natural salad<lb/>
selections, hot vegetables, hot<lb/>
breads, tempting desserts. The<lb/>
All-American Food Barsra?now<lb/>
there's even more to enjoy at<lb/>
Western Steer.?<lb/>
Because You Want An<lb/>
All-American Family Meal<lb/>
sm<lb/>
ASSORTED TOPPINGS<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
10<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
69<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH<lb/>
S10 ADD L<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
6.5<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
WISE NATURAL<lb/>
RIDGES OR<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
99<lb/>
Ltr<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
DIET PEPSI.<lb/>
PEPSI FREE OR.<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
99<lb/>
GRIND IT<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Spotlight<lb/>
Bean Coffee<lb/>
1<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
$199<lb/>
W LIMIT<lb/>
1 WITH<lb/>
HO ADO L<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
Magic Tree<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
99<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
OLD FASHION<lb/>
White<lb/>
Bread . .<lb/>
16<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
25<lb/>
TASTY<lb/>
Western Steer<lb/>
1<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEAKHOVSE<lb/>
?1986 Wistern Steer-Mom 'if Itars, Inc.<lb/>
3005 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Weiners<lb/>
79<lb/>
JUMBO SUPER SWEET<lb/>
Honeydew<lb/>
Melons<lb/>
OFF LABEL<lb/>
Close Up<lb/>
Toothpaste<lb/>
$<lb/>
4-6<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Tube<lb/>
?J03<lb/>
?129<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
WHITE MOUNTAIN<lb/>
Wine<lb/>
Coolers<lb/>
VHS Video Movie Rentals<lb/>
$<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Btls<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Hundreds of favorite movfom<lb/>
to efiooee troml<lb/>
Natural Flavor<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
is<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
199<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
Items Is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale In<lb/>
each Kroger sav-on except<lb/>
as specifically noteo In this<lb/>
ad. if we do run out of an<lb/>
Item we will offer you your<lb/>
choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available,<lb/>
reflecting the same sav-<lb/>
ings or a ralncheck which<lb/>
will entitle you to pur-<lb/>
chase the advertised item<lb/>
at the advertised price<lb/>
within M days. Only one<lb/>
vendor coupon win be ac-<lb/>
cepted per Kern.<lb/>
Go Krogering<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
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Canadian Sunrise Biscuit.<lb/>
Start your day right with the new Canadian Sunrise Biscuit from Hardee's. We sandwich egg,<lb/>
cheese and two kinds of bacon between our famous Rise and Shine" buttermilk biscuit. And<lb/>
serve it up hot for a truly unique homemade taste. Try our new Canadian Sunrise Biscuit. It's<lb/>
worth getting up for every morning.<lb/>
Hardee's Recipe for our new Canadian Sunrise Biscuit.<lb/>
A thick slice of Canadian bacon<lb/>
Three crisp strips of hickory-smoked bacon<lb/>
Farm-fresh, Grade A egg<lb/>
Real American cheese<lb/>
All sandwiched in a Rise and Shine<lb/>
buttermilk biscuit<lb/>
Hardee's quality It's no secret.<lb/>
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REGULAR ROAST BEEF<lb/>
SANDWICH, LARGE FRIES AND<lb/>
MEDIUM SOFT DRINK $2.29<lb/>
2ria,pa!ICipa,in9 restaurants. Please present coupon<lb/>
Svnv<lb/>
pay any sales tax aue Coupon not<lb/>
goop in compmation with any other<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of V Offer<lb/>
good after regular breakfast hours<lb/>
through September 24,1986<lb/>
1"?86 "ar dees Food Systems, inc<lb/>
Vbrdegr<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
REGULAR COFFEE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE OF CANADIAN SUNRISE<lb/>
BISCUIT AND HASH ROUNDS POTATOES<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants. Please present coupon<lb/>
oetoreordering Onecouponpercustomer.perorder.please Customermust<lb/>
pay any sales tax due Coupon not <lb/>
good m combination with any other ? If<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1: Offer ?????  A?. ?<lb/>
goodduringregutarbreoicfasthours f f?<lb/>
through September 24.1986 lCJIlUlCrllaJb<lb/>
1?86 Hardees r-ooa Systems inc<lb/>
BIG DELUXE BURGER,<lb/>
REGULAR FRIES AND<lb/>
LARGE SOFT DRINK $2.39<lb/>
22MiCipat,n? Hardees restaurants Please present coupon<lb/>
pay any sales tax due Coupon not <lb/>
good in combination with any other Ml ? p<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1C Offer Umci JMkM<lb/>
Sood after regular breakfast hours ?Ml Ifir<lb/>
irough September 24.1986 1 ICJIUICSnJk<lb/>
E "86 Hardees Food Systems, inc<lb/>
 -<lb/>
<lb/>
TWO REGULAR ROAST BEEF<lb/>
SANDWICHES $2.39<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon<lb/>
PaSZfnTS?0mer perorder p,easCustome?must<lb/>
pay any sales tax due Coupon not<lb/>
good m combination with any other<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1: Offer<lb/>
good after regular breakfast hours<lb/>
Sept 25-Oct.8,1986<lb/>
"86 -iOfdee5cooaSyst?<lb/>
Vfardeer<lb/>
FREE REGULAR COFFEE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE OF CANADIAN SUNRISE<lb/>
BISCUIT AND HASH ROUNDS POTATOES<lb/>
3upon no<lb/>
good m combination with any otne<lb/>
offers Cash value 1 i00of 1? Offer<lb/>
good during regular breakfast hours<lb/>
Sept.25-Oct.8,1986.<lb/>
must<lb/>
Harder<lb/>
4-<lb/>
24 LB: CHEESEBURGER,<lb/>
REGULAR FRIES AND<lb/>
LARGE SOFT DRINK $2.19<lb/>
2T?r 2??? afPalc'Paf'ng Hardees restaurants Please present coupon<lb/>
Sn?S Onecoupon percustomer. perorder pease Customermust<lb/>
pay any sales tax due Coupon not<lb/>
good m combination with any other<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1: Offer<lb/>
good after regular breakfast hours<lb/>
Sept. 25-Oct. 8,1986<lb/>
1386 HaraeesFooa Systems x:<lb/>
 Pre cooked weight<lb/>
Vfardeer<lb/>
EEEE ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE OF CANADIAN <lb/>
BISCUIT AND HASH ROUNDS POTATOES<lb/>
w2i,tiClt,n9Hardeesres,aurantsPleasepresentcoupon<lb/>
good in combination with any other MB ? m<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1C Offer Wl Mm!m<lb/>
I ?86. MardeesFoodSystems inc ,???.<lb/>
FREE ORANGE JUICE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE OF CANADIAN SUNRISE<lb/>
BISCUIT AND HASH ROUNDS POTATOES<lb/>
pay any sales tax due Coupon not<lb/>
good in combination with any other<lb/>
offers Cash value 1100 of 1" Offer<lb/>
good during regular breakfast hours<lb/>
Sept. 25-Oct. 8,1986.<lb/>
1986 Hardees food Systems nc<lb/>
Hardear<lb/>
<pb facs="00057846_0022"/>
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