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<pb facs="00057932_0001"/>
INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials???4<lb/>
StyleZZZ9<lb/>
SportsM?13<lb/>
Classifieds5<lb/>
STYLE<lb/>
Protective Intervention Course teaches self defense<lb/>
? see STYLE, page 9.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
????????<lb/>
Blue Devils pound Pirates in Monday action ? see<lb/>
SPORTS, page 13.<lb/>
aUje i?uBt (Earnimian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina .impus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.62 No. 26<lb/>
Tuesday, December 1,1987<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Chancellor withdraws plan for paving field<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Managing liitor<lb/>
Thegreen space at the bottom of<lb/>
College Hill Drive is no longer<lb/>
slated to be turned into a parking<lb/>
lot. according to a statement is-<lb/>
sued bv the ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Monday morning.<lb/>
The plan to pave the area, pro-<lb/>
posed as part of a plan by Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard R. Eakin, came<lb/>
under attack from student organi-<lb/>
zations and independent stu-<lb/>
dents when it was first announced<lb/>
Nov. 10.<lb/>
Eakin is to recommend the<lb/>
remaining portions of the plan to<lb/>
the Board oi Trustees on Friday.<lb/>
The original plan would have<lb/>
added 1,269 parking spaces at a<lb/>
cost of $936,000 ? increasing<lb/>
campus parking fees by $25 per<lb/>
student. The revised plan an-<lb/>
nounced Monday would would<lb/>
add 318 less spaces.<lb/>
If the rest oi the plan remains<lb/>
true its original intent (Eakin was<lb/>
unavailable for comment or<lb/>
elaboration on Monday), two new<lb/>
freshman lots containing 851<lb/>
spaces will be created near<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. One hundred<lb/>
spaces will be added to the exist-<lb/>
ing large lot at the bottom of Col-<lb/>
lege Hill. It is not known whether<lb/>
the parking fees will still be in-<lb/>
creased or not.<lb/>
However, SGA President Scott<lb/>
Thomas said he understood, in<lb/>
talking with the chancellor, that<lb/>
some of the proposed lots around<lb/>
the Minges area would be desig-<lb/>
nated as commuter parking with<lb/>
shuttle buses to the university.<lb/>
Thomas said he was pleased<lb/>
with the chancellor's decision.<lb/>
"It's a perfect example that<lb/>
compromise is better than con-<lb/>
frontation he said Monday af-<lb/>
ternoon. "There's a lot of support<lb/>
for the other points of his plan to<lb/>
pave the other three areas<lb/>
New plan affects grad assts.<lb/>
By EDDIE FITZGERALD<lb/>
Suit Writer<lb/>
The Southern Association ot<lb/>
Colleges and Schools (SACS) has<lb/>
adopted a new policy that will<lb/>
affect graduate teaching assis-<lb/>
tants at all accredited colleges in<lb/>
the southeastern region of the<lb/>
United States next semester.<lb/>
Graduate teaching assistants or<lb/>
teaching fellows must now have<lb/>
18 graduate semester hours in<lb/>
their respective fields of study<lb/>
before they can teach, according<lb/>
to SACS's Commission on Col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
This new policy does not affect<lb/>
those graduates who are assisting<lb/>
with laboratory or physical edu-<lb/>
cation activities, attending or<lb/>
helping prepare lectures, grading<lb/>
papers, keeping class records and<lb/>
similar assignments. However, it<lb/>
does affect those graduate assis-<lb/>
tants who are teaching for credit,<lb/>
unless the assistant is teaching<lb/>
remedial courses for institutional<lb/>
credit that docs not apply to anv<lb/>
degree program.<lb/>
There are about 300 graduate<lb/>
ccistants currently employed at<lb/>
iU, but not all of them will be<lb/>
affected, according to Joseph<lb/>
Bovette, dean of the graduate<lb/>
school at ECU.<lb/>
Many of the graduate assistants<lb/>
have 18 hours, or more of gradu-<lb/>
ate semester hours, or will have<lb/>
enough hours the Spring<lb/>
semester. And many more ? his-<lb/>
tory tutors, science lab assistants,<lb/>
etc. ? also will not be affected.<lb/>
Bovette said the departments<lb/>
probably most affected will be:<lb/>
English, Math, and Psychology.<lb/>
"Each department or school is<lb/>
going to work out its own pro-<lb/>
gram to get away from having<lb/>
graduate students assigned to full<lb/>
course responsibility Bovette<lb/>
said. "The graduate school has<lb/>
asked each department to explore<lb/>
ways of meeting the Southern<lb/>
Association's requirements<lb/>
In the English Department<lb/>
there are 51 graduate teaching<lb/>
assistants, 23 of them arc below<lb/>
the 18 hour requirement.<lb/>
Since this policy change came<lb/>
after registration for Spring<lb/>
semester the English Department,<lb/>
as an "emergency measure" to<lb/>
deal with the now unqualified<lb/>
graduate teaching assistants, is<lb/>
planning to combine live or six<lb/>
sections of freshman composition<lb/>
into one large section. This large<lb/>
section will be taught by faculty<lb/>
members, according to Douglas<lb/>
McMillan, director of graduate<lb/>
students for the English Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"Then the section will be bro-<lb/>
ken down at least once or twice a<lb/>
week into smaller sections with<lb/>
graduate teaching assistants tu-<lb/>
toring them he said.<lb/>
McMillan is expecting three of<lb/>
these large sections, with approxi-<lb/>
mately 150 students per class, for<lb/>
freshmen composition. "Next<lb/>
year we'll try to work out the<lb/>
schedules so there won't be those<lb/>
large sections he said.<lb/>
The only changes that will affect<lb/>
the graduate assistants, according<lb/>
to McMillan, is the duties as-<lb/>
signed to them. "They will still be<lb/>
paid the same, and be expected to<lb/>
work the same amount of hours<lb/>
for tutoring as they did for teach-<lb/>
ing he said.<lb/>
In the past, there were no re-<lb/>
strictions for ECU graduate stu-<lb/>
dents to teach other than comple-<lb/>
tion of undergraduate work and<lb/>
being enrolled in a graduate<lb/>
course. "They could start teaching<lb/>
as soon as they became graduate<lb/>
students McMillan said.<lb/>
Boyette said one of the main<lb/>
reasons for the policy change was<lb/>
because of "legitimate concern<lb/>
about taking a student who might<lb/>
have been a good undergraduate<lb/>
student but might really not have<lb/>
been outstanding, admitting him<lb/>
to graduate school, and immedi-<lb/>
ately assigning him to teach a col-<lb/>
lege course. So there is something<lb/>
a little bit lacking in quality about<lb/>
that he said.<lb/>
"In some cases we might have<lb/>
to draw money that's now in the<lb/>
graduate assistants' budget and<lb/>
use it. So it might mean that some<lb/>
graduate assistants might need to<lb/>
be discontinued and faculty hired<lb/>
to supervise groups of graduate<lb/>
assistants.<lb/>
"But I don't want to excite<lb/>
graduate students with the idea<lb/>
that, yeah, we're going to throw<lb/>
out several groups of graduate<lb/>
students and hire faculty, because<lb/>
we might be able to manage with-<lb/>
out doing that at all. We may keep<lb/>
the number of graduate students<lb/>
we have now and still hire some<lb/>
extra faculty to work closely with<lb/>
them<lb/>
Both McMillan and Boyette said<lb/>
the new rule is a positive move. "It<lb/>
will give a little uniformity to the<lb/>
teaching staff of freshman compo-<lb/>
sition McMillan said.<lb/>
"Right now there is a great<lb/>
unevenness. You've got every-<lb/>
thing from a brand new graduate<lb/>
student with no course work fin-<lb/>
ished, to a whole regular staff. So<lb/>
I think this is an improvement for<lb/>
the English Department and it<lb/>
should be across the board. We'll<lb/>
get better instructors for the fresh-<lb/>
men, and maybe for the graduate<lb/>
student, faster completion of their<lb/>
own program<lb/>
Thomas said it was important<lb/>
for the SGA to work with the<lb/>
chancellor on the parking<lb/>
problem. "I feel what we have to<lb/>
do on the part of student govern-<lb/>
ment is to try and come up with<lb/>
some alternatives. I feel we have<lb/>
to institute some sort of shuttle<lb/>
system. The transit buses already<lb/>
go by Minges Coliseum, but I<lb/>
think we are going to need to in-<lb/>
crease the frequency for the new<lb/>
lot<lb/>
In addition, Thomas said, more<lb/>
use must be made of available<lb/>
parking in lots like those near Belk<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Thomas said the plan was a<lb/>
positive step for the future. "A lot<lb/>
of people have been talking about<lb/>
a parking deck, but you have to<lb/>
look at prices he said. The chan-<lb/>
cellor had said in earlier debates<lb/>
that the deck cost much more per<lb/>
space than a flat lot.<lb/>
Thomas also said there must be<lb/>
an alternative place to park while<lb/>
a deck is being built over current<lb/>
spaces, and that Eakin's plan<lb/>
would help create those extra<lb/>
spaces.<lb/>
ECU students will be receptive<lb/>
to Eakin's new proposal, Thomas<lb/>
said. "I think the students will bt<lb/>
happy and very receptive to the<lb/>
new plan because that field was<lb/>
used for several things he said.<lb/>
The field is used for marching<lb/>
band practice, ROTC drills, intra-<lb/>
mural activities, residence hall<lb/>
events and individual pick-up<lb/>
games at various times during the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"We are currently short on<lb/>
space for recreation as it is. It 1 the<lb/>
plan to pave the field) really got<lb/>
the student's interest aroused as it<lb/>
did about two years ago when it<lb/>
wasalsoproposed'Thomassaid.<lb/>
"It shows the students do have<lb/>
some input on the decisions that<lb/>
are made at this campus he said.<lb/>
SGA discusses athletic facility;<lb/>
looks at rules for painting street<lb/>
'TU1??tS?'?N<lb/>
SGA President Scott Thomas<lb/>
issued an executive committee<lb/>
report on a new student recrea-<lb/>
tion center Monday in a regularly<lb/>
scheduled meeting of the legisla-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
After the report, the legislature<lb/>
discussed a resolution that would<lb/>
support giving organizations the<lb/>
right to paint insignias on the<lb/>
street in front of the ECU student<lb/>
store. The resolution was sent<lb/>
back to the Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee for further considera-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Student Recreation Center<lb/>
Committee report that Thomas<lb/>
issued at the meeting said there is<lb/>
"overwhelming support from the<lb/>
student body" for the building of<lb/>
a recreation center.<lb/>
Written support for the center<lb/>
included in the report came from<lb/>
the following organizations: Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, Panhellenic Council,<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council, Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services and the Student Resi-<lb/>
dence Association.<lb/>
The report follows the Nov. 2<lb/>
resolution passed by the SGA that<lb/>
states that Memorial Gym is "infe-<lb/>
rior" and that the students de-<lb/>
serve a new facility.<lb/>
The report will be sent to Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard R. Eakin and the<lb/>
Board of Trustees this week for<lb/>
consideration, according to Tho-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
"The Chancellor has indicated<lb/>
strong support for the center and<lb/>
will probably put it on his list for<lb/>
new construction on campus<lb/>
Thomas said.<lb/>
Legislator Tripp Roakes,<lb/>
speaking after Thomas' report,<lb/>
read a street painting resolution<lb/>
that calls for a "continuation of the<lb/>
painting of organizational insig-<lb/>
nias In reading the resolution he<lb/>
authored, Roakes said painting<lb/>
on the street has become a tradi-<lb/>
tion for organizations.<lb/>
Recently, the Student Store<lb/>
street was paved. Prior to the<lb/>
paving, tratermties and other<lb/>
campus organizations could ap-<lb/>
ply to the office of the assistant<lb/>
dean of student life for a permit to<lb/>
paint insignias on a designated<lb/>
area of the street.<lb/>
"It (the street) was a place<lb/>
where organizations could show<lb/>
their support and have recogni-<lb/>
tion Marty Helms said in favor<lb/>
of the resolution.<lb/>
But Helms said it is unfair for<lb/>
the Air Force ROTC to have its<lb/>
insignia on the sidewalk near the<lb/>
student store while other groups<lb/>
are not allowed to paint insignias<lb/>
on either the street or the side-<lb/>
walk.<lb/>
SGA Speaker Bennett Eckert<lb/>
disapproved of the resolution,<lb/>
saying that there would be great<lb/>
competition among student<lb/>
groups for space on the street.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA ap-<lb/>
propriated $100 to the Intermedi-<lb/>
ate Education Club for materials.<lb/>
Elizabeth Dole speaks,<lb/>
cites husband's record<lb/>
SGA President Scott Thomas presented a report on the status of<lb/>
plans for a new recreational facility at Monday's SGA meeting.<lb/>
Legislator s also discussed the fate of the painted street in front of<lb/>
the Student Store. (Photo by Hardy Alligood)<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Saying that her husband is<lb/>
"running on a record, not a res-<lb/>
ume former Secretary of Trans-<lb/>
portation Elizabeth Dole urged a<lb/>
group of area supporters to get<lb/>
the word out about her husband,<lb/>
Sen. Robert Dole.<lb/>
Mrs. Dole, speaking at a $25 a<lb/>
plate breakfast in Greenville Sat-<lb/>
urday, said, "Bob Dole has been in<lb/>
the Congress of the United States<lb/>
for 27 years. He served as the<lb/>
chairman of the Senate Finance<lb/>
Committee It handles over half<lb/>
of the president's budget?medi-<lb/>
care, medicaid, international<lb/>
trade ? just so many key issues.<lb/>
And as chairman of that<lb/>
committee, it was Bob Dole who<lb/>
shepherded through President<lb/>
Reagan's programs. He helped to<lb/>
make it happen. He made an<lb/>
enormous difference there in get-<lb/>
ting our economy turned<lb/>
around<lb/>
Mrs. Dole said three examples<lb/>
of her husband's leadership were<lb/>
in areas of solvency of the Social<lb/>
Security program, the 1985 farm<lb/>
bill and defecit reduction.<lb/>
She said Dole, as majority<lb/>
leader of the Senate in 1985,<lb/>
brought together colleagues and<lb/>
key players in the economy for<lb/>
100 meetings to work on a solu-<lb/>
tion to the nation's economic<lb/>
woes. The group, she said, "ham-<lb/>
mered out a package that would<lb/>
save this country $135 billion over<lb/>
three years. And it would have<lb/>
produced a balanced budget in<lb/>
the 1990s<lb/>
The plan eventually was voted<lb/>
down in the House of Representa-<lb/>
tives, she said.<lb/>
Mrs. Dole said a key to under-<lb/>
standing her husband was in<lb/>
knowing his past. Dole was shot<lb/>
in the neck while trying to rescue<lb/>
a wounded soldier in World War<lb/>
II, resulting in paralysis from the<lb/>
neck down. Dole was told he'd<lb/>
never be able to be a doctor, but<lb/>
that, if he worked at it, he might be<lb/>
able to regain the use of most of<lb/>
his body.<lb/>
Dole did come back, and today<lb/>
can use all of his body with the<lb/>
exception of his right arm.<lb/>
"There's no question in mv<lb/>
mind Mrs. Dole said, "that<lb/>
when you fight your way back<lb/>
from extreme adversity, what-<lb/>
ever it might be that you've expe-<lb/>
rienced, it enhances inner<lb/>
strength. Bob is as tough a person<lb/>
as I've ever known<lb/>
Adversity also enhances sensi-<lb/>
tivity to the problems of others.<lb/>
See DOLE, page 7<lb/>
n<lb/>
1  ?<lb/>
mj??i ii - 1 i" 1 ?mm ?'<lb/>
? ' ii'i ?? mi<lb/>
-? -?<lb/>
??<lb/>
-M.SJd  V   . ?? - a ? N<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER I, 1987<lb/>
Peel endowment funds new Scholars Award<lb/>
ECU Nna Bureau<lb/>
"he I Woolard Peel University<lb/>
Scholars Award endowment<lb/>
fund has been established at ECU<lb/>
in memory oi the late Martin<lb/>
i ounty resident and former<lb/>
mayoi vt Everetts, N.C.<lb/>
i he endowment was funded by<lb/>
Woolard s wile, Helen K. Peel of<lb/>
! ven Its and their son. Dr. Jesse<lb/>
K Peel ol Atlanta.<lb/>
 University Scholars Award<lb/>
pro ides full tuition and fees fora<lb/>
? ipi nt's entire four years at<lb/>
ECU. University Scholars<lb/>
chosen on the basis of<lb/>
academic and leadership "capa<lb/>
bihties through a competitiv<lb/>
lection process<lb/>
The<lb/>
are oping. We just thought we<lb/>
superior wanted to be a part of that devel-<lb/>
opment<lb/>
J. Woolard Peel earned a BS<lb/>
degree in 1935 from North Caro-<lb/>
n,VCrs,ty 1S doming lina State University.<lb/>
more important to our commu<lb/>
nity and to all of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Mrs. Peel said. "My<lb/>
son and I decided to establish the<lb/>
a ward at ECU because it's so close<lb/>
to home. We have seen how the<lb/>
University is growing and dcvel-<lb/>
He was<lb/>
mayor of Everetts from 1947 to<lb/>
1963. He served in Europe in<lb/>
World War II as a U.S. Army cap-<lb/>
tain. He was a lifelong Martin<lb/>
County resident and farmer be-<lb/>
fore his death in 1986.<lb/>
Peel was a member of the Ever-<lb/>
etts Christian Church. He was<lb/>
also a 32nd degree Mason with<lb/>
the Scottish Rites and a Shriner.<lb/>
Mrs. Peel attended Louisburg<lb/>
College and is a 1935 graduate of<lb/>
Hardbarger Junior College of<lb/>
Business in Raleigh. She has been<lb/>
active in the community and in<lb/>
the Everetts Church for 50 years.<lb/>
"The Peels' gift is a reflection of<lb/>
their confidence in the<lb/>
university's ability to enhance the<lb/>
quality of life for the citizens of<lb/>
Nischan receives writing award<lb/>
Kt N1 Bureau <lb/>
Dr. Bodo lsrh.in nrnfiicciii- ,f t-i????u  .<lb/>
. I c? Bureau<lb/>
Bodo Nischan, professor of<lb/>
sixteenth-centurv Lutherans and<lb/>
U EC L, has been awarded Calvinists in Germany ov" the<lb/>
the 1987 ArnosE Simpson Pnze question of exorcism and bao-<lb/>
Dest article on European<lb/>
spring<lb/>
for t<lb/>
history published during the'past<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Nischan's article on exorcism<lb/>
and baptism in the late Reforma-<lb/>
tion, I lie Exorcism Controversy<lb/>
and Baptism in the LateReforma-<lb/>
was published in The Six-<lb/>
teenth Century oumal's<lb/>
198 issue.<lb/>
Charles F. Delzell oi Van-<lb/>
L niversity, chair oi the<lb/>
Simpson Prize Commit-<lb/>
European Section, Southern<lb/>
torical Association, said the<lb/>
committee observed that<lb/>
Nischan's article "is based on<lb/>
painstaking research in German<lb/>
libraries and sources and reflects<lb/>
rommand oi the literature on<lb/>
bap-<lb/>
tism. r<lb/>
Delzell said eight entries were<lb/>
submitted for the prize selection<lb/>
and that several were "especially<lb/>
praiseworthy "The Prize<lb/>
Committee is oi the unanimous<lb/>
opinion that the (Nischan) article<lb/>
is the winner of the 1987 competi-<lb/>
tion he said.<lb/>
The competition was for an ar-<lb/>
ticle on European history pub-<lb/>
lished by a member of the faculty<lb/>
of a Southern collegeor university<lb/>
including the South plus Dela-<lb/>
ware, Kentucky, Maryland, Mis-<lb/>
souri, Oklahoma. West Virginia<lb/>
and the District of Columbia.<lb/>
Nischan, a member of the ECU<lb/>
history faculty since 1969, re-<lb/>
ceived the prize at a luncheon<lb/>
meet.ng of the European section<lb/>
of the Southern Historical Asso-<lb/>
ciation in New Orleans Nov. 13.<lb/>
Nischan has spent several sum-<lb/>
mers in Germany engaged in re-<lb/>
search on aspects of the Protestant<lb/>
Reformation of the 16th Century<lb/>
our region ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Richard R. Eakin said. "Endow-<lb/>
ing scholarships that help ECU<lb/>
attract a number of our state's and<lb/>
nation's most talented young<lb/>
leaders is one of my top priorities.<lb/>
We are indebted to the Peels for<lb/>
their generosity<lb/>
Dr. Peel, an only child, gradu-<lb/>
ated Phi Beta Kappa from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill in 1963andearned his<lb/>
MD at UNC-CH in 1965. He in-<lb/>
terned in MedicinePediatrics at<lb/>
Chapel Hill in 1965-66 and served<lb/>
his residency from 1966-69 in the<lb/>
Department of Psychiatry at the<lb/>
Hospital of the University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania.<lb/>
en<lb/>
Am<lb/>
Hackney named president of<lb/>
Friends of the ECU Library<lb/>
"I grew up just 20 miles from<lb/>
ECU, so I fed like it was in my<lb/>
backyard for as long as I can re-<lb/>
member Dr. Peel said. "My<lb/>
mother and I believe that the<lb/>
University Scholars Award is a<lb/>
quality program and will help to<lb/>
enhance ECU and eastern North<lb/>
Carolina by attracting quality<lb/>
students<lb/>
A Vietnam veteran. Dr. Peel<lb/>
served in the Medical Corps of the<lb/>
U.S. Navy Reserve for two years<lb/>
He then taught as an assistant<lb/>
professor at the Vanderbilt Uni-<lb/>
versity School of Medicine from<lb/>
1971-76. Dr. Peel has been in pri-<lb/>
vate medical practice at Atlanta's<lb/>
Center for Psychiatry since 197h<lb/>
<lb/>
ilC.<lb/>
h<lb/>
author has made a thor-<lb/>
? exploration of one specific<lb/>
?gical controversy and has<lb/>
d it in a lucid, convincing<lb/>
Izell said. "One has<lb/>
the impression that very little<lb/>
more can be said about this par-<lb/>
ilar theological controversy in<lb/>
late sixteenth-century Germany<lb/>
Based on a paper which Dr.<lb/>
Nischan presented to the Ameri-<lb/>
can Society of Church History in<lb/>
New York in December, 1985, the<lb/>
irticle traces and analyzes differ-<lb/>
?S that emerged between late<lb/>
Wheeler joins<lb/>
ECU Medical<lb/>
School faculty<lb/>
as cardiologist<lb/>
Dr. Will<lb/>
ECl Kewn Hurvau<lb/>
iam S. Wheeler, a cardi-<lb/>
ist has joined the faculty at<lb/>
E C I School oi Medicine as<lb/>
ass, mate professor in the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Medicine's Section of<lb/>
Cardiology.<lb/>
In addition to responsibilities in<lb/>
interventional cardiology, he will<lb/>
( ? r ; iv the school's cardiac<lb/>
tation and prevention<lb/>
am.<lb/>
rhe rehabilitation segment of<lb/>
the program is aimed at helping<lb/>
heart attack victims return to a<lb/>
normal lifestyle and avoid further<lb/>
atta ns hile a number of meth-<lb/>
(ids are used to help patients, diet<lb/>
therapy and exercise are empha-<lb/>
-i most in the program.<lb/>
Wheeler said.<lb/>
The prevention program assists<lb/>
people at risk of developing car-<lb/>
diovascular disease, showing<lb/>
them ways to decrease their risks.<lb/>
A native of Los Angeles, Calif<lb/>
Wheeler earned his medical de-<lb/>
gree at the UCLA School of Medi-<lb/>
cine. After an internal medicine<lb/>
residency and fellowship at the<lb/>
University of Southern California<lb/>
M dical Center, he completed a<lb/>
three-year cardiology fellowship<lb/>
at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in<lb/>
Los Angeles, with specialized<lb/>
training in cardiac cathcterization<lb/>
and electrophysiology.<lb/>
Wheeler was involved in the<lb/>
private practice of interventional<lb/>
cardiology in Des Moines, Iowa.<lb/>
He also served as director of car-<lb/>
diac rehabilitation programs at<lb/>
Mercy Hospital and Iowa Lu-<lb/>
theran Hospital in Des Moines,<lb/>
both affiliates of the University of<lb/>
Iowa.<lb/>
Wheeler's research pursuits<lb/>
include studies of angioplasty ?<lb/>
a procedure in which a catheter<lb/>
with a balloon attachment is used<lb/>
to open blocked coronary arteries<lb/>
? exercise physiology and risk<lb/>
factor identification and modifi-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
He is a member r?f ?he American<lb/>
College of Physicians, the Ameri-<lb/>
can College of Cardiology.<lb/>
i v I N'ewi Bureau<lb/>
Margaret (Marty) Hackney of<lb/>
Blount's Creek has assumed the<lb/>
presidency of the Friends of the<lb/>
East Carolina University Library.<lb/>
Her term of office runs until<lb/>
November, 1988.<lb/>
I lackney is president of Sun-<lb/>
shine Video and operates a vide-<lb/>
otape production studio. She also<lb/>
serves on the board of a family<lb/>
enterprise, Hackney Industries,<lb/>
Inc. of Washington. Her other<lb/>
memberships include the Pam-<lb/>
lico-Tar River Association and the<lb/>
Greenville Area Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce.<lb/>
An alumna of UNC-Greens-<lb/>
boro, Hackney received a Master<lb/>
of Business Administration de-<lb/>
gree from ECU in 1981. She has<lb/>
been a teacher and volleyball<lb/>
coach in Colorado and played<lb/>
semi-professional volleyball for<lb/>
the Colorado Traveling Women's<lb/>
Team.<lb/>
Among her goals as president<lb/>
of the Friends of the Library is<lb/>
raising funds to help with decora-<lb/>
tion and furnishing of the pro-<lb/>
posed additions to ECU's Joyner<lb/>
Library, she said.<lb/>
A current Friends project is sale<lb/>
oi the 1988 ECU Historical Calen-<lb/>
der and reproductions of the 1733<lb/>
Moseley Map oi North Carolina.<lb/>
In addition, the Friends sponsor<lb/>
semi-annual book sales of do-<lb/>
nated volumes with proceeds<lb/>
going to library enhancement<lb/>
projects.<lb/>
Before her election as president<lb/>
oi the Friends organization,<lb/>
Hackney had served on the<lb/>
Friends board.<lb/>
President-elect of the Friends is<lb/>
Billie Jo Matthews of Rocky<lb/>
Mount. Other board members are<lb/>
Emily Boyce, JoAnn Eakin,<lb/>
Ronald Speier, Joan Warren,<lb/>
Beatrice Behr, Lawrence<lb/>
Brewster, Charles Cain, Parma<lb/>
Howard, Edgar Loessin, Mac<lb/>
McKee, Katherine Whichard and<lb/>
Frank Wooten, all of Greenville;<lb/>
Dorothy Flicks of Rocky Mount<lb/>
and Kelly Lewis of Farmville.<lb/>
2tyt ?at QwcalMm<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community sinct 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKcc. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo<lb/>
Shari Clemens pete Ferna'd<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
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Students si<lb/>
(CPS) ? College money nun<lb/>
agers say they're still tr ing to dig<lb/>
out from under the debris of the<lb/>
precipitous "Black Monday'<lb/>
stock market crash of Oct 19, hut<lb/>
some students seemed to have<lb/>
done pretty well, at least on paper<lb/>
In an investment game<lb/>
signed to teach students how to<lb/>
manage stcxrk holdings <lb/>
ample, Babson Collegi inM<lb/>
chusetts) students " n r:<lb/>
dropped "only" S 7 pei<lb/>
October while the rt ? .<lb/>
ket plunged neari) X . ?<lb/>
Prof. Bob Kleiman rep<lb/>
Business departm. ? ?<lb/>
their students manage<lb/>
imagined stcx k port-<lb/>
ing to "buy" oi ?<lb/>
maximize "profits<lb/>
Inevitably some of (<lb/>
investment clubs did worse than<lb/>
others in the<lb/>
which The I<lb/>
Averages fell a n<lb/>
in 1 day andint<lb/>
of the market in<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
At the Univei<lb/>
for instance, busine s<lb/>
lost a real $43 OOfi ? ? ?<lb/>
worth $:<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Yale's student inves<lb/>
tost about $1 I DO in the era<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU his on n<lb/>
K t r?. Hurrau<lb/>
Scenes and dates f m<lb/>
Carolina's history ai<lb/>
"1988 I-X'l Historical alendar<lb/>
a recent publication of the Friends<lb/>
Habits change<lb/>
MAniH'V W:<lb/>
dents just aren't purs<lb/>
opposite sex the wa v they used to,<lb/>
University of Wisconsin journal-<lb/>
ism students have found.<lb/>
In response to a journal<lb/>
department surve a maji r<lb/>
Wisconsin-Madison stud<lb/>
said their fear of AIDS (acquired<lb/>
immune deficiency syndrorm<lb/>
had convinced them to change<lb/>
their sexual habits<lb/>
Satefites faughf<lb/>
ECU Sri Bureau<lb/>
The latest developments in us-<lb/>
ing satellites for instructional<lb/>
purposes will be discussed and<lb/>
demonstrated in a video telecon-<lb/>
ference on Thursday, Dec. 3, from<lb/>
1:30 p.m. to4-30 pm. at the Brody<lb/>
(School of Medicine) Building at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The conference t pdate on<lb/>
Interactive Learning, will be<lb/>
televised over satellite from New<lb/>
York, Oklahoma and California.<lb/>
Presentations will be made at<lb/>
each site on what businesses and<lb/>
colleges are doing with satellite<lb/>
delivered learning.<lb/>
The teleconference is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
the Office of Non-Credit Pro-<lb/>
grams in the ECL' Division or<lb/>
Continuing Education at -<lb/>
bl43.<lb/>
Sonett wins<lb/>
LCC Newt Bureau<lb/>
Joshua R. Sonett, a fourth-year<lb/>
medical student at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine has been<lb/>
awarded the Rock Slevster Fel-<lb/>
lowship.<lb/>
The award, sponsored by the<lb/>
American Medical Association is<lb/>
presented annually to up to 25<lb/>
deserving senior medical stu-<lb/>
dents who exhibit excellence in<lb/>
scholarship and an interest in<lb/>
psychiatric medicine<lb/>
Named for a fornu - president<lb/>
of the AMA, the Slevster fellow-<lb/>
ship includes a stipend of $2300<lb/>
Sonett is the first student at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine to re<lb/>
ccive the award, according to Pr<lb/>
James Mathis, chairman of the<lb/>
EX?partment oi Psychiatric Medi<lb/>
cine, who made the nomination<lb/>
Sonett is the son oi Mrs Alan<lb/>
Sonett and the late Dr. Sonett<lb/>
who was a practicing psychiatrist<lb/>
in New Bern from 1981 to 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057932_0003"/><lb/>
rs Award<lb/>
Ch<lb/>
aid "<lb/>
i.u he<lb/>
!or crew up just 20 miles from<lb/>
End a ECl so 1 feel like it was in my<lb/>
Ip ECl backyard for as long as 1 can re-<lb/>
itc'sand member Pr Peel said. "My<lb/>
 oung mother and 1 believe that the<lb/>
?riorities. University Scholars Award is a<lb/>
Is for quality program and will help to<lb/>
enhance ECU and eastern North<lb/>
radu- Carolina by attracting quality<lb/>
the students<lb/>
a at Vietnam veteran, Dr. Peel<lb/>
amed his s rved in the Medical Corps of the<lb/>
H? I S Navy Reserve for two years.<lb/>
Iiatries al He then taught as an assistant<lb/>
j professor at the Vanderbilt Uni-<lb/>
? vcrsity School ol Medicine from<lb/>
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: vate medical practice at Atlanta's<lb/>
v enter for Psychiatry since 1976.<lb/>
taut (tfaroltafaii<lb/>
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it with this ad<lb/>
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Tl If. EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1 1987<lb/>
Students survive crash on<lb/>
(CPS) ? College money man-<lb/>
agers say they're still trying to dig<lb/>
out from under the debris of the<lb/>
precipitous "Black Monday-<lb/>
stock market crash of Oct. 19, but<lb/>
some students seemed to have<lb/>
done pretty well, at least on paper.<lb/>
In an investment game de-<lb/>
signed to teach students how to<lb/>
manage stock holdings, for ex-<lb/>
ample, Babson College (in Massa-<lb/>
chusetts) students' "portfolio"<lb/>
dropped "only" 5.7 percent in<lb/>
October while the real stock mar-<lb/>
ket plunged nearly 30 percent.<lb/>
Prof. Bob Kleiman reports.<lb/>
Business departments often let<lb/>
their students manage real or<lb/>
imagined stock portfolios, learn-<lb/>
ing to "buy" or "sell" stocks to<lb/>
maximize "profits<lb/>
Inevitably, some of the student<lb/>
investment clubs did worse than<lb/>
others in the crash ? during<lb/>
which The Dow Jones Industrial<lb/>
Averages fell a record 508 points<lb/>
in 1 day ? and in the wild swings<lb/>
of the market in subsequent<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
At the University of Nebraska,<lb/>
for instance, business students<lb/>
lost a real $43,000 from a portfolio<lb/>
worth $300,000 before Black<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Yale's student investment club<lb/>
lost about $100,000 in the crash.<lb/>
paper<lb/>
And campus business manag-<lb/>
ers didn't do any better.<lb/>
Many colleges own portfolios<lb/>
that include stock holdings, and<lb/>
use the profits to pay for capital<lb/>
improvements and to provide for<lb/>
student financial aid.<lb/>
Most campus portfolio manag-<lb/>
ers, however, noted colleges typi-<lb/>
cally are conservative investors,<lb/>
and that the crash consequently<lb/>
may not hurt them in the long run:<lb/>
?The University of Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia lost $40-50 million during the<lb/>
crash, a 15 percent drop The loss<lb/>
could have been worse, but the<lb/>
university ? sensing the stock<lb/>
market would go through a "cor-<lb/>
rectional phase" ? had sold a<lb/>
significant percentage of its stock<lb/>
holdings prior to Black Monday.<lb/>
?Perm State lost less than 10<lb/>
percent of its130 million endow-<lb/>
ment, and officials there also say<lb/>
the pinch should not affect daih<lb/>
operations. "We will still be abk<lb/>
to fund all programs said senior<lb/>
Vice President tor Financial<lb/>
Operations Steve Garban.<lb/>
?The University of Southern<lb/>
California's $160 million stock<lb/>
holdings dropped 13 percent, or<lb/>
$20.8 million, on Black Monday.<lb/>
?Duke postponed issuing tax-<lb/>
exempt bonds that would help<lb/>
finance several capital improve-<lb/>
ment programs, figuring the<lb/>
bonds would be hard to sell now.<lb/>
"The volatile stock market could<lb/>
scare bond investors said Mark<lb/>
Reeder, an E.F. Hutton broker in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
?Faculty members nearing re-<lb/>
tirement will bear the brunt of the<lb/>
stock market's volatility, and crit-<lb/>
ics of higher education's largest<lb/>
pension companies said the pen-<lb/>
sion managers are too rigid in<lb/>
their planning. The Teachers In-<lb/>
surance Annuity Association and<lb/>
College Retirement Equities Fund<lb/>
(TIAA-CREF) delayed establish-<lb/>
ing other investments for faculty<lb/>
members, denying them a port in<lb/>
the stock market storm.<lb/>
CREF funds lost 18 percent of<lb/>
their value during October as the<lb/>
company explored new and more<lb/>
flexible investment vehicles.<lb/>
?College fundraisers say the<lb/>
market's violent swings have<lb/>
diminished prospects for year-<lb/>
end giving and capital improve-<lb/>
ment campaigns. The University<lb/>
of Arizona, for example, has de-<lb/>
layed construction of football sta-<lb/>
dium skyboxcs because the shaky<lb/>
market has raised concerns about<lb/>
financing the project.<lb/>
?Students interested in work-<lb/>
ing as brokers will face stiff com-<lb/>
petition for jobs and may have to<lb/>
ECU hisory now on calendar<lb/>
FCU Ncwi Bureju<lb/>
Scenes and dates from East<lb/>
Carolina's history appear on the<lb/>
"1988 ECU Historical Calendar<lb/>
a recent publication of the Friends<lb/>
Habits change<lb/>
MADISON, Wis. (CPS) ? Stu-<lb/>
dents just aren't pursuing the<lb/>
opposite sex the way they used to,<lb/>
University of Wisconsin journal-<lb/>
ism students have found.<lb/>
In response to a journalism<lb/>
department survey, a majority of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Madison students<lb/>
said their fear of AIDS (acquired<lb/>
immune deficiency syndrome)<lb/>
had convinced them to change<lb/>
thejr sexual habits.<lb/>
Satelites taught<lb/>
FCU Nrwi Bureau<lb/>
The latest developments in us-<lb/>
ing satellites for instructional<lb/>
purposes will be discussed and<lb/>
demonstrated in a video telecon-<lb/>
ference on Thursday, Dec. 3, from<lb/>
1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Brody<lb/>
(School of Medicine) Building at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The conference, "Update on<lb/>
Interactive Learning will be<lb/>
televised over satellite from New<lb/>
York, Oklahoma and California.<lb/>
Presentations will be made at<lb/>
each site on what businesses and<lb/>
colleges are doing with satellite<lb/>
delivered learning.<lb/>
The teleconference is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
the Office of Non-Credit Pro-<lb/>
grams in the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education at 757-<lb/>
6143.<lb/>
Sonett wins<lb/>
ICL' Newt Bureau<lb/>
Joshua R. Sonett, a fourth-year<lb/>
medical student at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine, has been<lb/>
awarded the Rock Sleyster Fel-<lb/>
lowship.<lb/>
The award, sponsored by the<lb/>
American Medical Association, is<lb/>
presented annually to up to 25<lb/>
deserving senior medical stu-<lb/>
dents who exhibit excellence in<lb/>
scholarship and an interest in<lb/>
psychiatric medicine.<lb/>
Named for a former president<lb/>
of the AMA, the Sleyster fellow-<lb/>
ship includes a stipend of $2,500.<lb/>
Sonett is the first student at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine to re-<lb/>
ceive the award, according to Dr.<lb/>
James Mathis, chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Psychiatric Medi-<lb/>
cine, who made the nomination.<lb/>
Sonett is the son of Mrs. Alan<lb/>
Sonett and the late Dr. Sonett,<lb/>
who was a practicing psychiatrist<lb/>
in New Bern from 1981 to 1984.<lb/>
of the ECU library.<lb/>
Photographs used to illustrate<lb/>
the calendar s cover and 12 pages<lb/>
depict the two-acre lake formerly<lb/>
located on the southeast part of<lb/>
campus, "Old Austin" Building, a<lb/>
195i Maypole dance, the 1917<lb/>
girl's basketball team, clad in uni-<lb/>
form berets and middv blouses,<lb/>
an interior view of the library<lb/>
when it was housed in what is<lb/>
now Whiehard Building and<lb/>
other scenes.<lb/>
Each month lists significant<lb/>
events in the institution's history.<lb/>
The pages for November and<lb/>
December, for example, com-<lb/>
memorate such historical high-<lb/>
lights as the 1921 name change<lb/>
from East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
Training School to East Carolina<lb/>
Teacters College, First Lady<lb/>
Eleanor Roosevelt's 1941 visit to<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College,<lb/>
the 1918 World War I victory cele-<lb/>
bration on campus, a lecture by<lb/>
Arctic explorer Sir Hubert Wilk-<lb/>
ins in 1930, and the 1965 football<lb/>
team's Tangerine Bowl victory<lb/>
over the University of Maine.<lb/>
"The calendars make suitable<lb/>
Christmas gifts for anyone associ-<lb/>
ated with East Carolina said<lb/>
Morgan Barclay, director of the<lb/>
ECU Archives. "We hope the cal-<lb/>
endar itself will become an ECU<lb/>
tradition which will promote in-<lb/>
terest in our history and pride in<lb/>
our university<lb/>
The calendars are available for<lb/>
purchase for $5 each if bought in<lb/>
personat the Archives and Manu-<lb/>
scripts area, 115 Joyner Library.<lb/>
They a re a I so available by mail for<lb/>
$6 each from Friends of the FCU<lb/>
Library, co Archives and Manu-<lb/>
scripts, Joyner Library, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27858. '<lb/>
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work in related fields until the<lb/>
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firms do will be limited and<lb/>
highly selective Nancy Noth<lb/>
said. "It should make students<lb/>
take a strong look at what they're<lb/>
doing right now<lb/>
Babson students, though, are<lb/>
happy about "The Wall Street<lb/>
Game the investment game<lb/>
they've been playing since Sep-<lb/>
tember.<lb/>
"The product is quite good,<lb/>
particularly for intro courses. It's<lb/>
realistic Kleiman said.<lb/>
The game, marketed and devel-<lb/>
oped by Babson alumnus and<lb/>
former stockbroker Tim 1 VMello,<lb/>
allows students to buy, sell and<lb/>
trade stocks in the American,<lb/>
OTC and New York stock ex-<lb/>
changes. Although no real money<lb/>
changes hands, the students are<lb/>
given mock $100,000 accounts to<lb/>
"invest<lb/>
Students call a toll-free tele-<lb/>
phone number at DeMello's office<lb/>
to arrange deals with "brokers<lb/>
who, through satellite and com-<lb/>
puter hook-ups, have immediate<lb/>
access to the New York-based<lb/>
exchanges. "It's a direct duplica-<lb/>
tion of what brokers do said<lb/>
DeMello.<lb/>
"The students get to manage<lb/>
portfoliosand the universities can<lb/>
provide hands-on education<lb/>
without incurring liabilities<lb/>
DeMello explained.<lb/>
Other schools use closing prus<lb/>
from The Wall Street Journal to<lb/>
detemine how well a student<lb/>
manages a portfolio, but closing<lb/>
prices don't indicate the value of a<lb/>
stock when it is purchased or sold,<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
"They can do anything that's<lb/>
done on Wall Street DeMello<lb/>
said of Babson students.<lb/>
Although Babson is the only-<lb/>
college in the nation currently<lb/>
using "The Wall Street Came<lb/>
DeMello says several other<lb/>
schools have signed up for the<lb/>
spring semester and more will use<lb/>
the game next fall.<lb/>
Would you like to do exciting things in the dark?<lb/>
and get paid for it?<lb/>
The East Carolinian is looking for<lb/>
a reliable and technically inclined student nith<lb/>
experience in photography to operate a (.oodkin vertical<lb/>
Camera and PMT Processor.<lb/>
The Darkroom Technician is responsible for the following:<lb/>
?The operation and maintenance of The East Carolinian Darkroom.<lb/>
?Screening, enlarging, and reducing all photographs,<lb/>
advertisements, and logos.<lb/>
?Minimal advertising paste up.<lb/>
Apply in person at The East Carolinian.<lb/>
We Offer The Most Complete<lb/>
Copying and Graphics Services<lb/>
in Greenville!<lb/>
CHECK US OUT<lb/>
? Sell &amp; Full Service Laser Typesetting<lb/>
? Typeset Resumes on Fine Linen Paper<lb/>
? High Speed Copies Collation &amp; Bindery<lb/>
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? Blueprinting (the only service in town)<lb/>
? Oversized Copies (up to 36" widei<lb/>
? Lamination (great lor posters &amp; important documei ?<lb/>
FAST COPIES FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
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At The Spa. you go to aerobics v<lb/>
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instructors on hand at all times.<lb/>
Plus, there are Greenville's largest<lb/>
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Drop by The Spa in South Park<lb/>
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a<lb/>
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 ? II' I ??Mil<lb/>
?omiMba?i<lb/>
-Afct-A-  . - i n. gf - f<lb/>
 't ?<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Qftlt SaHt (Earnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, - mi, L<lb/>
Clay Deani iardt, m, ilor<lb/>
Andy Lewis, m.c. AMr,FI MrrT.<lb/>
Tim riiAwni ro JAMES I.J. MCKEE, ihmtorofAh<lb/>
11M CHANDLER,Spor?u,IOr MFfMrmiiAu,<lb/>
JOI IN CARTER, ftei Mlw Mlk;F , , <lb/>
SHELTON BRYANT, . J ?S  <lb/>
DEBBIE STEVENS, MAC Q AK ' " "<lb/>
MAC vLARK, BusinasMonger<lb/>
December 1, 198<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Alright<lb/>
Chancellor changes plans<lb/>
The chancellor should be com- move (heir cars from h? ??<lb/>
pi T? S1"8 WS P" lot Mi"8?lotsheforefoL b nimess"<lb/>
a ftbottom ofPCoTle?eeeHnr Th" IT ?P?" ????S?K<lb/>
u couege Hill. The ers can park dose to the ; iHi?m?<lb/>
5St?sas ass ???i-<lb/>
iH   s ?asSS5<lb/>
vi eamil a llt 7 lf?reS?nt a mak? " reP?rt II would bc a shame<lb/>
well-earned au ard for all involved, to find that the money spent on this<lb/>
In keeping with this spirit of coop- plan could have been' better usedin<lb/>
eration and compromise, the chan- another way that wouTd have<lb/>
oeUor now needs to answer a few helped the Stivers ty more in the<lb/>
questions about his proposal: long run<lb/>
1. Will any of the new lots around The chancellor has shown that he<lb/>
Minges Coliseum be set aside for cares about the students of this unf<lb/>
commuter use? SGA President Scott versity by abandoning hS<lb/>
Thomas seems to think so, but Eakin plan to pave the field at the bottom<lb/>
Ift ??aniy thG JSSUe of ColIc8G Hil1 However fhe?e are<lb/>
If not, the net result of the parking still some important cue t on sor<lb/>
planisanincreaseof only 100 lots for rounding the proposa andsevl<lb/>
commuters. Will they still be forced issues need Jbe Sed <lb/>
to pay a$25 increase in parking fees? If the chancellor is truly interested<lb/>
I.would not be fur if they are in meeting the perceived needs of<lb/>
charged that extra money for park- the students, perhaps he staid<lb/>
mg they can't use. For that matter, hold offoiHuoposingPthe plan unfl<lb/>
- wni (ho i i r " . We have waited this lone, another<lb/>
Contra-bashing growing stale<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am sick and tired of Contra-bash-<lb/>
ing propaganda. The Nov. 17 Cam-<lb/>
pus Spectrum by Brown and Light-<lb/>
ncr, "Contras should end misery is<lb/>
an excellent example of such propa-<lb/>
ganda. The article was short on facts<lb/>
and long on emotional rhetoric.<lb/>
Brown, Lightner and any others on<lb/>
this campus who favor abandoning<lb/>
the Contras should read two recent<lb/>
remarkable front-page dispatches in<lb/>
The New York Times and The Wash-<lb/>
ington Post. Keep in mind that these<lb/>
papers are both very influential and<lb/>
very liberal. Times reporter Lindsey<lb/>
Gruson, who traveled with the Con-<lb/>
tras, found great popular support for<lb/>
them. Peasants complained of an in-<lb/>
flation-plagued economy and<lb/>
Sandinista atrocities. Gruson notes<lb/>
that "some said they now viewed the<lb/>
Contras as protecting them from a<lb/>
'brutal' government William Brani-<lb/>
gan, of the Washington Post, discov-<lb/>
ered "solid support for the Contras<lb/>
and deep-seated oposition ot the<lb/>
Sandinista government<lb/>
Justin Strurz's pro-Contra, pro-<lb/>
democracy spectrum atricle ("U.S.<lb/>
must protect interests in Central<lb/>
America") was, in contrast to the<lb/>
BrownLightner article, short on<lb/>
emotional rhetoric and chock full of<lb/>
documented facts. The Gallup poll<lb/>
statistics he cited show that the anti-<lb/>
Contra, pro-Sandinista propaganda<lb/>
the American people have been hear-<lb/>
ing is just that: unadulterated pro-<lb/>
Marxist propaganda which supports<lb/>
Soviet foreign policy, goals in out<lb/>
hemisphere. I for one am sick of it.<lb/>
Let's look at the facts arid not some<lb/>
twisted communist-influnced bed-<lb/>
time story. America stands for free-<lb/>
dom for all people and the protection<lb/>
of the basic human rights of those<lb/>
people. America supports the Con-<lb/>
tras, the USSR supports the Sandinis-<lb/>
tas. It's that simple.<lb/>
Now let's look at the facts:<lb/>
?The average age of a Contra is 18<lb/>
years old; Somoza's national guard<lb/>
numbered 7,000 and the Contras to-<lb/>
day number over 20,000. These two<lb/>
facts prove that most of the Contras<lb/>
are NOT former Somozas.<lb/>
? Eleven of the 17 Contra leaders are<lb/>
former key Sandinistas. They de-<lb/>
fected to the Contras when they fi-<lb/>
nally realized that Ortega is not a<lb/>
"democrat but a communist Dawn.<lb/>
?There were two political prisons<lb/>
under Somoza. There are now eleven<lb/>
under the Sandinistas.<lb/>
?Ortega regularly visits Castro,<lb/>
Qadaffi, Gorbachev and other com-<lb/>
munist leaders. The Sandinistas are<lb/>
admitted Marxist-Leninist revolu-<lb/>
tionaries.<lb/>
?The Sandinistas, not the Contras,<lb/>
are among the biggest drug-runners<lb/>
in this hemisphere.<lb/>
1 should like to know where Brown<lb/>
and Lightner got the idea that the<lb/>
Contras have "murdered 16,000 civil-<lb/>
ians?" It is obvious to me that if this<lb/>
were true, there wouldn't be such<lb/>
widespread civilian support for the<lb/>
Contras. Did Brown and Lightner<lb/>
dream this figure up after their upset-<lb/>
ting Ortega-inspired propaganda<lb/>
bedtime story? I suggest that some<lb/>
Coast soap might help awaken these<lb/>
S.E.D. fellows the the reality of the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Emotionalism and propaganda<lb/>
aside, the fact remains that the Soviets<lb/>
are outspending us five-to-one in our<lb/>
own hemisphere. What do these anti-<lb/>
Contra people think the Soviets are<lb/>
doing, throwing a garden party?<lb/>
O.K so we don't let the Contras fight<lb/>
for us. What do you propose then to<lb/>
do about the situation? Are you for<lb/>
sending our own men down there to<lb/>
combat the communist threat? Or do<lb/>
you propose that we sit back and<lb/>
twiddle our thumbs until the commu-<lb/>
nists are on our very doorstep?<lb/>
I ask all Americans: do we want a<lb/>
communist dictatorship to rule our<lb/>
children?<lb/>
Bobby R. Kali Jr.<lb/>
VP, College Republicans<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Robertson<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am a firm supporter of Pat<lb/>
Robertson, one of the Republican<lb/>
party's leading contenders for the<lb/>
presidency. Many people know vir-<lb/>
tually nothing about Robertson. In-<lb/>
stead of trying to find out about his<lb/>
qualifications, liberals and other<lb/>
uninformed people merely dismiss<lb/>
him as a "radical "right-wing fun-<lb/>
damentalist or an "extremist<lb/>
When they talk about him, they seem<lb/>
interested only in parroting the vitu-<lb/>
perative remarks made against him<lb/>
by the left-wing news media. It's time<lb/>
that the truth about Robertson be told.<lb/>
Robertson's father, A. Willis<lb/>
Robertson, wasa hailed leader of both<lb/>
the U.S. House and the Senate for 34<lb/>
years. Robertson is a descendant of<lb/>
two U.S. Presidents, William Henry<lb/>
Harrison and Benjamin Harrison<lb/>
Robertson's determination and<lb/>
know how built one of the nation's<lb/>
largest communications networks<lb/>
CBN, which also reaches 60 foreier!<lb/>
countries. He started with only $70 in<lb/>
1959; today, the CBN Cable Network<lb/>
reaches 36 million households.<lb/>
His business and administrative<lb/>
expertise enabled him to establish a<lb/>
highly-respected graduate school -<lb/>
CBN University ? as well as a con<lb/>
structionhrm.anadvertisingagenev<lb/>
and ME-TV, the most popular televi-<lb/>
sion station in the Middle East.<lb/>
Robertson has been involved in<lb/>
important negotiations with interna-<lb/>
tional business leaders in the U.S. and<lb/>
15 foreign countries as a result of the<lb/>
above and many other world-wide<lb/>
business endeavors. His recognized<lb/>
expertise in economics and interna-<lb/>
tional affairs has made him a sought-<lb/>
after advisor and news commentate -<lb/>
in West Germany, the Republic c I<lb/>
China, Israel and many other coun-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
During two last years, over 15 mil-<lb/>
on Americans were assisted<lb/>
through several programs started bv<lb/>
Robertson. Operation Blono. I<lb/>
major private sector relief agencv,<lb/>
assisted nearly nine million need,<lb/>
Americans nationwide in 1985 alone<lb/>
The 700 Club Crisis Counseling Cen-<lb/>
ter estimates that it will receive about<lb/>
five million phone calls this vear from<lb/>
distressed and destitute' people<lb/>
126,000 adults and children in urban<lb/>
ghettos were taught to read through<lb/>
the "Sing, Spell. Read and Write<lb/>
program. All of this was accom-<lb/>
plished without the use of a sing<lb/>
penny of government aid.<lb/>
Robertson has lived with the down<lb/>
trodden of the Brooklyn ghettos; he<lb/>
has served as an oficer in the Maine<lb/>
Corps in Korea; he has fed and<lb/>
clothed refugees in Sudan and Cen-<lb/>
tral America. His dedication to hu-<lb/>
manitarian service is UNPARAL-<lb/>
LELED. He has received over 15 state,<lb/>
national and international awards<lb/>
and honors in recognition for his sen -<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
And to think that, not long ago, The<lb/>
East Carolinian dimissed Robertson<lb/>
as a "talk-show host<lb/>
Pat Robertson in 1988. Leadership<lb/>
Integrity. Compassion.<lb/>
I am proud to be a supporter of Pat<lb/>
Robertson for President.<lb/>
Matthew Clarke<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Zyiinwanting harsh Toshiba sanctions<lb/>
when it all haoDoned MQ1-Rm J "J Corp The U.S. government has concurred in these a period of five vears. At rt. on,? ?te  uL <lb/>
Director &amp;<lb/>
LINCOLN, Neb. CPS)<lb/>
dents from farming families an<lb/>
"?? m ore part t,m e jobs than<lb/>
?r to get through college Uni-<lb/>
versity of Nebraska aiddir,<lb/>
W.lham McFarland said las,<lb/>
week despite special efforts to<lb/>
help them affordtostay in school<lb/>
The culprits, McFarland said<lb/>
were new federal rules 1 ? <lb/>
gets student aid<lb/>
McFarland said farm far,<lb/>
students are esp<lb/>
School be<lb/>
re tarj<lb/>
lan.i<lb/>
much tmarj<lb/>
While th<lb/>
dents<lb/>
PORTLAND, Md PS<lb/>
Westbrook College, a private<lb/>
?I with about 800 students.<lb/>
? njoyed a giant payda) No 12<lb/>
The school got a $6,125 mill<lb/>
windfall when a wealth) pa<lb/>
of the school sold Vincent Van<lb/>
Gogh's "Irises" at auction in New<lb/>
York last week for a record<lb/>
million, and, bv prior arrai<lb/>
ment, gave 12 5 percent of the vile<lb/>
price to Westbrook<lb/>
It amounts to the largest single<lb/>
Rift ever to the Maine campus.<lb/>
But Judith Sobel, who runs the<lb/>
Westbrook gallery at which<lb/>
"In -<lb/>
1975, admirjj<lb/>
? describe<lb/>
ible pov<lb/>
Heir,<lb/>
bought the<lb/>
established tl<lb/>
added, hai<lb/>
"Irises" part<lb/>
? ?nt collt<lb/>
"ided he n<lb/>
Poland finds m<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland (AP) ?<lb/>
Authorities Monday expressed<lb/>
satisfaction with Poland's first<lb/>
referendum in 41 years, despite<lb/>
the lowest rate of voter participa-<lb/>
tion since communists came to<lb/>
power after World War II.<lb/>
Results of Sundav's vote on<lb/>
economic and political reforms<lb/>
were expected to be announced in<lb/>
Warsaw late Mondav.<lb/>
A preliminarv estimate bv the<lb/>
Central Referendum Commis-<lb/>
sion said about 68 percent oi<lb/>
Poland's nearly 26.8 million eli-<lb/>
gible voters participated, lower<lb/>
than the previously worst at-<lb/>
tended elections in June, 1984<lb/>
The referendum had been<lb/>
strongly promoted bv Polish<lb/>
leader Gen. Wojciech )aruze!ski<lb/>
?? ?t?pin the "aocimHst r?na"<lb/>
of Poland in the years since the<lb/>
1981 martial-law crackdown on<lb/>
the Solidarity independent trade<lb/>
federation.<lb/>
Demonstrations against the ref-<lb/>
erendum were staged in several<lb/>
cities, including marches that<lb/>
were dispersed by police in<lb/>
Gdansk and Warsaw At least 12<lb/>
people in three cities were de-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
Pierce elected<lb/>
Governme<lb/>
Urban<lb/>
' d the tui<lb/>
l<lb/>
voters and th<lb/>
were di<lb/>
urg-<lb/>
vote a eharad<lb/>
Ore<lb/>
to endoi<lb/>
nomi<lb/>
ernment sai<lb/>
improve<lb/>
would b<lb/>
incn t<lb/>
appr i<lb/>
political 1<lb/>
include elevtu<lb/>
opening rnon<lb/>
non-pmrty i<lb/>
At a hews ci<lb/>
day, Urban do<lb/>
Hv statement<lb/>
regard the retel<lb/>
ganda sig: J<lb/>
voter turn<lb/>
creases and wt<lb/>
difficultie<lb/>
Pola I<lb/>
a greati <lb/>
-<lb/>
Solidarity sj.i<lb/>
Onyszkiew<lb/>
clinedimr<lb/>
referendum.<lb/>
flatly that such was not the case. "Toshiba" did not<lb/>
know that "TMC" (Toshiba Machine Co.) was ille-<lb/>
gally selling to the Soviet Union technology of such<lb/>
huge importance as severely to jeopardize the secu-<lb/>
rity of our submarine fleet.<lb/>
Leomard Garment is, to be sure, serving ascounsel<lb/>
Garment does not lie, not even on behalf of his<lb/>
clients, and he has asserted the guiltlessness of<lb/>
Toshiba most confidently. Moreover, the Japanese<lb/>
conducted a police investigation, asdid the Japanese<lb/>
Ministry of Trade, and Toshiba designated a blue-<lb/>
ribbon panel of truth-seekers who will be guided by<lb/>
independent American counsel. Their joint mission:<lb/>
to ascertain whether, evidence to the contrary not-<lb/>
withstanding, anybody in Toshiba did in fact know<lb/>
what was going on. And to find out how many<lb/>
people in TMC knew what was going on, and who<lb/>
they were.<lb/>
None of these investigations implicated Toshiba<lb/>
, Z??? ???? wr.il lanj, aim as x idie nne were imposed on Toshibanpupr minA ui ?? l" wmui. ineviw-<lb/>
TCSM,u0U.yapanCSC discusions Allowing the thatitwasaninnocenTpartv-theL "ese who are satisfied that Toshiba is,nno<lb/>
Toshiba (TMC) revelation, their penalties against a to $200 rrrillron: the vaZ of meWhsrT T '? ??'? SUSpeCt that We have come UP "??<lb/>
violationoftheExportCodearenowassevereasour nomic transaction was $40 mi II ion Cr?US ?" tomvokePrechon withoutcallmg.ta tarit<lb/>
ak u u , . ? We need to be very careful about excesses on this<lb/>
JSSP g? US t0 ?"? 3ke Gam' a hi8hly re" othereasoioughttoteobvicrrl<lb/>
fFtcd RfPVbhcan lnd.antiommunist. He wants exporters in America who have sold sensitive stuff!<lb/>
for Toshiba in the ruckus now going onTbut Leonard uhrow3ES and ??f ommu?t- ? wants exporters in America who have sold sensitive stuff,<lb/>
Garment does not lie, not even on behl.fThis ifL "7 ?le corporations, to the Soviet Union, f<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
cianHc him ki, t ? a  ?v v ,ac tuI F"???ons, to tne soviet union. I<lb/>
stands him, his position is that a parent company is would gladly vote, if in Congress to string such<lb/>
h'oTdsTaS<lb/>
progeny, and the Export Administration Act sped- :tBm5M. '1? " WllUngly at Work to ?rrate<lb/>
?J?US u T1 aSainse unlike TMC is presumed noigu.1ttals?tote SS2S5?S2?l2SSl 1,S,ation "<lb/>
parent body of a subsidiary, provided it is estab- unjust at the level of disproportionalitv and thS thT!TJ?? A?d T?sh,ba h- for J" l<lb/>
l.shedthatsaidparentbodyisasinnocentasToshiba feStosnTI&amp;erSStioSk wLTZJT.5255 m America and in h'nng US<lb/>
insistsitisand will be proved to be by investigators, ainst blacks (if SSnfSSSS ntefarf"5- We ShOUld n0t PJapa-<lb/>
Even so, Sen. Gam wants to impose a breathtaking him he shouldn't do it; if a black man ra pes the'eir Kn2, Y rruscamage of justice against<lb/>
penalty on Toshiba. He has backed legislation that lynch him). It should not sumrteus"ffiwncsc' fe ,imt; and' inditly, ptmish<lb/>
wouldbanToshibaexportsintotheUnitedStatesfor Smmmmb,y?S3S tSSST  fr?m a yotl ot<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
?.??<lb/>
??"?i mmmimm?<lb/>
MMMtriMM<lb/>
tCt ej Bureau<lb/>
Eldean Rhodes Pierce, assistant<lb/>
professor in the ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing, was elected to a commit-<lb/>
tee of Sigma Theta Tau, Interna-<lb/>
tional Honor Society of Nursing,<lb/>
at the society's biennial conven-<lb/>
tion in San Francisco.<lb/>
She was elected to a two-year<lb/>
term as a member of the nominat-<lb/>
ing committee of Sigma Theta<lb/>
Tau. The committee'sduties will<lb/>
involve selecting candidates for<lb/>
the elected officer positions and<lb/>
standing committees of the soci-<lb/>
ety at the international level.<lb/>
An active member of the local<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau chapter. Pierce<lb/>
has served as president, vice-<lb/>
president, secretary and treas-<lb/>
urer. Since 1983, she has served as<lb/>
Region 7coordinator with duties<lb/>
-involving coordination of activi-<lb/>
 ties among the 21 chapters in the<lb/>
tZarolmas, Georgia. Florida and<lb/>
Puerto Rico. !<lb/>
Pierce is a 1965 graduate of<lb/>
Rosewood High School Her hus-<lb/>
band. Hall Pierce, is also from the ?<lb/>
Rosewood area Pierce received 1<lb/>
her nursing degrees trom ECU j<lb/>
and a diploma from Watts Hospi- j<lb/>
tal in Durham.<lb/>
. Also attending the convention<lb/>
in San Francisco were other offi-<lb/>
?cersand members of the ECU Beta<lb/>
Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
Lou Everett who wasa member ot<lb/>
the 1986-87 international nomi-<lb/>
nating committee; Dr. Bonnie<lb/>
Duldt, Research Committeechair;<lb/>
"Dr. Sylvia Brown who presented a<lb/>
paper at the Scientific Sessions;<lb/>
and Judith Brooks.<lb/>
A first at the convention was the<lb/>
acceptance of three honor socie-<lb/>
ties outside the VS. as chapters.<lb/>
These honor societies are located<lb/>
in Canada, Korea, and the Repub-<lb/>
lic of China. In addition, 39 honor<lb/>
societies within the VS. were<lb/>
accepted as new chapters of the<lb/>
society.<lb/>
S<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
And Don't Forcw<lb/>
Party SubJ<lb/>
6 Foot Party<lb/>
?os aips<lb/>
-lapiiins -<lb/>
PDS oj Tea<lb/>
Spec a, Hoima<lb/>
$38 88<lb/>
m<lb/>
Our New<lb/>
3 Foot Party S<lb/>
5UB STflTlj<lb/>
Try Our N?rw<lb/>
on GrwnvUk Boi<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0005"/><lb/>
wing stale<lb/>
tic<lb/>
: in ?mr<lb/>
 anti-<lb/>
f ts are<lb/>
partv<lb/>
Are you for<lb/>
there to<lb/>
U? Or do<lb/>
I and<lb/>
mmu-<lb/>
Harrison and Benjamin Harrison.<lb/>
ire Robertson's determination and<lb/>
know how built one of the nation's<lb/>
largest communications networks,<lb/>
 which also reaches bO foreign<lb/>
tries. He started with only $70 in<lb/>
?: ? toda) . the CBN Cable Network<lb/>
wn rca hes 36 million households.<lb/>
- business and administrative<lb/>
 rtiso enabled him to establish a<lb/>
U -respected graduate school ?<lb/>
:c Universit) - as well as a con-<lb/>
icrion firm, an advertising agency,<lb/>
and ME-TV, the most popular televi-<lb/>
station in the Middle East.<lb/>
Robertson has been involved in<lb/>
rtant negotiations with interna-<lb/>
al business leaders in the U.S. and<lb/>
15 foreign countries as a result of the<lb/>
above and manv other world-wide<lb/>
business endeavors. His recognized<lb/>
expertise in economics and interna-<lb/>
tional affairs has made him a sought-<lb/>
atter advisor and news commentator<lb/>
in West Germany, the Republic of<lb/>
China, Israel and manv other coun-<lb/>
During two last years, over 15 mil-<lb/>
l-on Americans were assisted<lb/>
through several programs started by<lb/>
Robertson. (oration Blessing, a<lb/>
major private sector relief agency,<lb/>
assisted nearly nine million needy<lb/>
Americans nationwide in 1985 alone.<lb/>
? t a The 700 Club Crisis Counseling Cen-<lb/>
ter estimates that it will receive about<lb/>
five million phone calls this year from<lb/>
ssed and destitute people<lb/>
 adults and children in urban<lb/>
tos were taught to read through<lb/>
Junior the Sing, Spell. Read and Write"<lb/>
program. All oi this was accom-<lb/>
plished without the use of a single<lb/>
penny of government aid.<lb/>
Robertson has lived with the down-<lb/>
trodden of the Brooklyn ghettos; he<lb/>
fat has served as an oficer in the Maine<lb/>
iublican Corps in Korea; he has fed and<lb/>
for the clothed refugees in Sudan and Cen-<lb/>
? know vir- tral America. His dedication to hu-<lb/>
lbertson. In- manitanan service is UNPARAL-<lb/>
lt about his LELED. He has received over 15 state,<lb/>
and other national and international awards<lb/>
relv dismiss and honors in recognition for his serv-<lb/>
fun- ice.<lb/>
And to think that, not long ago, The<lb/>
cm East Carolinian dimissed Robertson<lb/>
he vitu- as a "talk-show host<lb/>
nst him Tat Robertson in 1988. Leadership.<lb/>
It's time Integrity. Compassion,<lb/>
i be told 1 am proud to be a supporter of Pat<lb/>
A. Willis Robertson for President.<lb/>
taderofboth<lb/>
mate for 34<lb/>
jscendant of Matthew Clarke<lb/>
llham Henrv Senior<lb/>
iba sanctions<lb/>
pch resent US. intervention of so draconian a degree,<lb/>
pa But there is more there than xenophobia for the<lb/>
pm- Japanese to suspect. We are talking about a major<lb/>
Kof exporter, and everybody in Japan, as in the U.S.<lb/>
jive Congress, knows that there is resentment in America<lb/>
5u- over the imbalance in our trade with Japan. Inevita-<lb/>
nd bly, Japanese who are satisfied that Toshiba is inno-<lb/>
ie cent are going to suspect that we have come up with<lb/>
a way to invoke protection without calling it a tariff.<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
And we would appear to be doing it to the wrong<lb/>
company. Toshiba is willingly at work to cooperate<lb/>
with the government on model legislation to fine-<lb/>
tune export control. And Toshiba has, for years, led<lb/>
the way in investing in America and in hiring U.S.<lb/>
labor and technicians. We should not punish Japa-<lb/>
nese malefactors by a miscarriage of justice against<lb/>
Japanese who are innocent; and, indirectly, punish<lb/>
c, Americans who would suffer from a boycott of<lb/>
Toshiba.<lb/>
I<lb/>
jive<lb/>
ff,<lb/>
. i<lb/>
ich<lb/>
?a,<lb/>
I be<lb/>
us<lb/>
Jice<lb/>
?ell<lb/>
tit<lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1987 5<lb/>
LINCOLN, Neb. (CPS) - Stu-<lb/>
dents from farming families are<lb/>
working more part-time jobs than<lb/>
ever to get through college, Uni-<lb/>
versity of Nebraska aid director<lb/>
William McFarland said last<lb/>
week, despite special efforts to<lb/>
help them afford to stay in school.<lb/>
The culprits, McFarland said,<lb/>
were new federal rules for who<lb/>
gets student aid.<lb/>
McFarland said farm familv<lb/>
studen ts a re especially hurt bv the<lb/>
fi<lb/>
new rules, which became effec-<lb/>
tive nationwide in January, that<lb/>
require farm assets ? things like<lb/>
land and machinery ? to be con-<lb/>
sidered in determining how<lb/>
much financial aid a student can<lb/>
get.<lb/>
While the rules apply to all stu-<lb/>
dents ? whose parents' homes<lb/>
and property are now counted as<lb/>
wealth that could be turned into<lb/>
cash to help pay for college ?<lb/>
they've proven especially oner-<lb/>
ous to the farm students, whose<lb/>
families, reeling from the four-<lb/>
year depression in agriculture,<lb/>
are less apt to have cash to pay<lb/>
tuitions, McFarland said.<lb/>
He said the changes are forcing<lb/>
farm students into part-time jobs<lb/>
as alternatives to the loans or<lb/>
grants they might have had.<lb/>
For example, Nebraska-Lincoln<lb/>
honors student Leland Wagner, a<lb/>
major in ag education, said his<lb/>
financial aid application came<lb/>
back with the notation that his<lb/>
family should contribute $20,000<lb/>
to the education of its three chil-<lb/>
dren in college.<lb/>
"The only way to do that was to<lb/>
sell all of our stuff Wagner told<lb/>
the Daily Nebraskan, UNL's<lb/>
campus paper. "They don't real-<lb/>
ize that you have to replace equip-<lb/>
ment and put money back into the<lb/>
operation<lb/>
Wagner, whose parents de-<lb/>
clared bankruptcy, was able to<lb/>
remain in school because he ob-<lb/>
tained merit scholarships. Like<lb/>
many farm family students, he<lb/>
goes home to help on the farm on<lb/>
weekends, making a part-time job<lb/>
impossible.<lb/>
Another UNL student, Elaine<lb/>
Hoesing, was declared ineligible<lb/>
for the $2,500 student loan she'd<lb/>
had for two years, and now works<lb/>
30 hours per week, twice the time<lb/>
she worked last year.<lb/>
have increased in spite of risky<lb/>
new programs that some cam-<lb/>
puses have started to help stu-<lb/>
dents from farm families:<lb/>
?Columbia College, a private<lb/>
Missouri campus, offered free<lb/>
tuition to farmers forced off their<lb/>
land. "I can't control prices on the<lb/>
market, 1 can't control parity, I<lb/>
can't control the weather, but lean<lb/>
control how we educate people<lb/>
said Columbia's President Don<lb/>
Ruthenbere.<lb/>
School benefits from art sale<lb/>
McFarland added the burdens<lb/>
m Tt IKYYVPI1 <lb/>
PORTLAND, Md. (CPS) ?<lb/>
Westbrook College, a private<lb/>
school with about 800 students,<lb/>
enjoyed a giant payday Nov. 12.<lb/>
The school got a $6,125 million<lb/>
windfall when a wealthy patron<lb/>
of the school sold Vincent Van<lb/>
Gogh's "Irises" at auction in New<lb/>
York last week for a record $49<lb/>
million, and, by prior arrange-<lb/>
ment, gave 12.5 percent of the sale<lb/>
price to Westbrook.<lb/>
It amounts to the largest single<lb/>
gift ever to the Maine campus.<lb/>
But Judith Sobel, who runs the<lb/>
Westbrook gallery at which<lb/>
"Irises" has been on display since<lb/>
1975, admitted she was a little<lb/>
"sad" to sec the painting ? which<lb/>
she describes as having "incred-<lb/>
ible power" ? leave the campus.<lb/>
Heiress Joan Whitney Payson<lb/>
bought the painting ? done by<lb/>
Van Gogh in 1889 ? in 1947 for<lb/>
$80,000, and her son, John Payson,<lb/>
established the Payson gallery at<lb/>
Westbrook in 1975. Payson, Sobel,<lb/>
added, had intended to make<lb/>
"Irises" part of Wcstbrook's per-<lb/>
manent collection until he de-<lb/>
cided he needed the money<lb/>
selling the painting could bring.<lb/>
To ease Westbrook's disap-<lb/>
pointment, Payson agreed to<lb/>
donate 12.5 percent of the pro-<lb/>
ceeds to the college.<lb/>
Not everyone is so appreciative<lb/>
of campus art collections, how-<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
Officials at the University of<lb/>
Minnesota Art Museum belatedly<lb/>
discovered in August, 1986, that<lb/>
they had hung a Georgia OKeeffe<lb/>
painting the wrong way for more<lb/>
than 30 years.<lb/>
More recently, a University of<lb/>
Portland alumnus donated a<lb/>
Poland finds success<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland (AP) ?<lb/>
Authorities Monday expressed<lb/>
satisfaction with Poland's first<lb/>
referendum in 41 years, despite<lb/>
the lowest rate of voter participa-<lb/>
tion since communists came to<lb/>
power after World War II.<lb/>
Results of Sunday's vote on<lb/>
economic and political reforms<lb/>
were expected to be announced in<lb/>
Warsaw late Monday.<lb/>
A preliminary estimate by the<lb/>
Central Referendum Commis-<lb/>
sion said about 68 percent of<lb/>
Poland's nearly 26.8 million eli-<lb/>
gible voters participated, lower<lb/>
than the previously worst at-<lb/>
tended elections in June, 1984.<lb/>
The referendum had been<lb/>
strongly promoted by Polish<lb/>
leader Gen. Wojciecfi janrzelski<lb/>
as???T.inthe"9ociahs?ret?vat"<lb/>
of Poland in the years since'the<lb/>
1981 martial-law crackdown on<lb/>
the Solidarity independent trade<lb/>
federation.<lb/>
Demonstrations against the ref-<lb/>
erendum were staged in several<lb/>
cities, including marches that<lb/>
were dispersed by police in<lb/>
Gdansk and Warsaw. At least 12<lb/>
people in three cities were de-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
Pierce elected<lb/>
ECU Non Bureau<lb/>
Eldean Rhodes Pierce, assistant<lb/>
professor in the ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing, was elected to a commit-<lb/>
tee of Sigma Theta Tau, Interna-<lb/>
tional Honor Society of Nursing,<lb/>
at the society's biennial conven-<lb/>
tion in San Francisco.<lb/>
She was elected to a two-year<lb/>
term as a member of the nominat-<lb/>
ing committee of Sigma Theta<lb/>
Tau. The committee's duties will<lb/>
involve selecting candidates for<lb/>
the elected officer positions and<lb/>
standing committees of the soci-<lb/>
ety at the international level.<lb/>
An active member of the local<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau chapter, Pierce<lb/>
has served as president, vice-<lb/>
president, secretary and treas-<lb/>
urer. Since 1983, she has served as<lb/>
Region 7 coordinator with duties<lb/>
involving coordination of activi-<lb/>
 ties among the 21 chapters in the<lb/>
Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, and<lb/>
Puerto Rico.<lb/>
Pierce is a 1965 graduate of<lb/>
Rosewood High School. Her hus-<lb/>
band, Hall Pierce, is also from the<lb/>
Rosewood area. Pierce received<lb/>
her nursing degrees from ECU<lb/>
and a diploma from Watts Hospi-<lb/>
tal in Durham.<lb/>
Also attending the convention<lb/>
in San Francisco were other offi-<lb/>
j cers and members of the ECU Beta<lb/>
Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau:<lb/>
Lou Everett who was a member of<lb/>
the 1986-87 international nomi-<lb/>
nating committee; Dr. Bonnie<lb/>
Duldt, Research Committee chair;<lb/>
T)r.Sylvia Brown who presented a<lb/>
paper at the Scientific Sessions;<lb/>
and Judith Brooks.<lb/>
. A first at the convention was the<lb/>
Acceptance of three honor socie-<lb/>
ties outside the VS. as chapters.<lb/>
These honor societies are located<lb/>
in Canada, Korea, and the Repub-<lb/>
lic of China. In addition, 39 honor<lb/>
societies within the US. were<lb/>
accepted as new chapters of the<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Government spokesman Jerzy<lb/>
Urban said authorities consid-<lb/>
ered the turnout good because<lb/>
such votes were new to Polish<lb/>
voters and the questions posed<lb/>
were difficult. But critics had<lb/>
urged a boycott and called the<lb/>
vote a charade.<lb/>
One question asked the public<lb/>
to endorse a package of racial<lb/>
economic reforms which the gov-<lb/>
ernment said would eventually<lb/>
improve living standards but<lb/>
would bring about an average<lb/>
increase in prices of 40 percent in<lb/>
1988.<lb/>
The second question asked for<lb/>
approval of a democratization of<lb/>
political life. The specific changes<lb/>
include election law reforms and<lb/>
opening more high positions to<lb/>
r?.r?-party numbers.<lb/>
At a news conference early to-<lb/>
day. Urban denied that a Solidar-<lb/>
ity statement advising voters to<lb/>
regard the referendum as propa-<lb/>
ganda significantly held down<lb/>
voter turnout. Fear of price in-<lb/>
creases and weariness with the<lb/>
difficulties of everyday life in<lb/>
Poland's moribund economy had<lb/>
a greater effect on discouraging<lb/>
voters, he said.<lb/>
Solidarity spokesman Janusz<lb/>
Onyszkiewicz late Sunday de-<lb/>
clined immediatecommenton the<lb/>
referendum.<lb/>
group ot 12 prints by surrealist<lb/>
Salvador Dali that, campus devel-<lb/>
opent officer Jean Gorman told<lb/>
the school paper in October, may<lb/>
include some forgeries.<lb/>
And on Nov. 6, three Harvard<lb/>
art students formally objected to<lb/>
Prof. Ritsuko Taho's assignment<lb/>
for students to adopt a chicken,<lb/>
watch it be slaughtered and then<lb/>
build a sculpture from its bones.<lb/>
"This experience Taho ex-<lb/>
plained, "will reduce the distance<lb/>
between art and object. It will<lb/>
expand (the students') imagina-<lb/>
tion and understanding<lb/>
<lb/>
UMtldWtw<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312<lb/>
E. lOth St: or call 758-HELP. For Free Confidential Counsel-<lb/>
ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and SUIT are on duty 24 hrs. a day. year<lb/>
around, in order to assist you In virtually any problem area<lb/>
you might have. Our longstanding goal has always been to<lb/>
preserve and enhance the quality of life for you and our com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
SPEND<lb/>
SPRING BREAK ON A CRUISE!<lb/>
The Travel Committee Presents:<lb/>
a 6-day cruise on the Funship Carnivale.<lb/>
Depart: 6 p.m. March 6<lb/>
Return: 4 a.m. March 12.<lb/>
Via: Round trip to Miami on Seashore Trailways Bus.<lb/>
Cruise aboard the Funship Carnivale.<lb/>
Price: $475 (ECU Students) $520 (Non-students).<lb/>
Call: Mendenhall's Central Ticket Office<lb/>
 for more details 757-6611.<lb/>
7568310<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
SUBSTRTBIJ<lb/>
215 K. 4lh Street<lb/>
Downtown (irrentille<lb/>
For All Your Holiday Parties<lb/>
Try Our<lb/>
Party Platter<lb/>
? to' ' C oeoote or rnore)<lb/>
? Ww Wm WF W0 W mWm PB? flr, W, . fl W B ?? i<lb/>
UNFAIR JOB<lb/>
ADVANTAGE:<lb/>
A KINKO'S<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
You'll stand apart from the crowd with a sharp-looking<lb/>
professional resume from Kinko's. Choose from a variety<lb/>
of paper stocks and let our friendly staff assist you in<lb/>
creating an attention-getting statement about yourself.<lb/>
kinko's<lb/>
Great copies. Great people.<lb/>
321 e iom street<lb/>
(919)752-0875<lb/>
f-Fmr 7?J?m - lOttfem Murtay Man - eiix<lb/>
PERFORMANCE ENGINEERED!<lb/>
That's Russell Athletic.<lb/>
Includes: Roast Beef, Ham. Turkey,<lb/>
Salami. Bread. Rolls Potato Salad.<lb/>
Macaroni Salad. Coleslaw, plates,<lb/>
cups, napkins, knives and forks and<lb/>
enough Pepsi lor all<lb/>
only S2 75 per person<lb/>
Hours 11 am til 11 pm - 7 Days a Week<lb/>
752-2183 or 752-2808<lb/>
PHONE AHEAD FOR FASTER SERVICE<lb/>
And Don't Forget Our<lb/>
Party Subs<lb/>
6 Foot Party Sub<lb/>
Feeds 20 JSpeop<lb/>
Includes Plates. Cups.<lb/>
napkins, chips<lb/>
Pepsi or Tea<lb/>
Special Holiday Price<lb/>
$38.88<lb/>
or<lb/>
Our New<lb/>
3 Fool Party Sub<lb/>
Come get your hands on the best<lb/>
sweats Russell Athletic's ever built-<lb/>
deluxe, premium-weight sweat-<lb/>
shirts and pants. With their thicker,<lb/>
softer fleece fabric, top quality<lb/>
construction, and roomy, made-<lb/>
for-action cut, Russell Athletic<lb/>
sweats are the new American stan-<lb/>
dard in active and performance<lb/>
wear. Come choose your deluxe<lb/>
Russell Athletic sweats in a wide<lb/>
range of athletic colors and in sizes<lb/>
S to XL.<lb/>
RUSSELL.<lb/>
ATHLETIC<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
fab<lb/>
111 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
355-5783<lb/>
Holiday Hours: Monday - Friday 8 a.m.<lb/>
1331 Buck Jones Rd.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27606<lb/>
8 p.m Saturday 8 a.m. - 7 p.m.<lb/>
- i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1087<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
NOW HIRING: stage crew for Nut-<lb/>
cracker ballet Min wage up to 40 hrs<lb/>
Work evenings 9th, 10th, and 11th and<lb/>
days 12th, and 13th Call 752 1256<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: are vou tired of<lb/>
no money for rent, clothes, food, or iist<lb/>
plain fun For the things vou want in life,<lb/>
Misty Blue is now accepting applications<lb/>
for possible employment $250.00 per<lb/>
week guaranteed to the right ladv Call<lb/>
7469907for apointment M-F, 10a m -6<lb/>
p m<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR: Primarily<lb/>
interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gam valuable<lb/>
experience in the field No Btonetar)<lb/>
compensation, however, room, utilities<lb/>
and phone provided Call Marv Smith at<lb/>
the REAL Crisis Center 758-1IELP.<lb/>
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight At<lb/>
tendants. Travel Agents, Mechanics,<lb/>
Customer Service. Li-hngs salaries to<lb/>
S50K Entrv level positions Call 805 ks7<lb/>
6000<lb/>
IS IT TRUE YOU CAN BUY JEEPS FOR<lb/>
$44 through the U.S. Government' Gel<lb/>
the facts today! Call 1-312-1142 Evt 5271-<lb/>
A.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: ECU - Don't be wh.te th.s<lb/>
Christmas' Great special, and 15 off on<lb/>
gift certificates tor students' Call or come<lb/>
by today California Tanning Salon - 355<lb/>
7858<lb/>
FOR SALE Scuba gear, "Oceanic' Black<lb/>
Max console. Includes depth gauge, pros<lb/>
sure gauge, bottom timer, max depth<lb/>
indicator Call 830-1166. after 5 00<lb/>
FOR SALE: DM bed, less than vr old<lb/>
$73.00; chest of drawers sot S35.00 Or<lb/>
otters. Call Dallas 757-0024<lb/>
FOR SALE -TWO BLACK CAR SE ATS<lb/>
THESE CHAIRS ARE MOUNTED FOR<lb/>
USE IN YOUR APARTMENT OR<lb/>
DORM ROOM. MAKES A GRFA1<lb/>
CONVERSATION PIECE. ONL 525<lb/>
EACH. CALL DAN 758-4779<lb/>
FOR TYPING SERVICES: Call kirn be-<lb/>
for 3:00pm 758-2119.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed tvping on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
5th Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville<lb/>
NC 752-3694.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSINGLETTER<lb/>
QUALITY OR LASER PRINTING.<lb/>
Rush jobs accepted. 752 1933<lb/>
FOR SALE: ECU Great Christmas special<lb/>
and 15 off on gift certificates for students<lb/>
- the best tan in town, California Tanmne<lb/>
Salon - 355-7858<lb/>
APPLIANCE SALE: washers dryers,<lb/>
ranges, refrigerators &amp; freezers Good<lb/>
cond &amp; gauranteod, call B.J. Mills 746-<lb/>
2446<lb/>
CARTOOON CARICATURES FOR<lb/>
CHRISTMAS! Call Barbour, 752-5010<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL BUT NOT EXPEN-<lb/>
SIVE! Progressive Solutions, Inc . offers<lb/>
professional word processing to students<lb/>
and professionals. Term papers, disscrta<lb/>
tions, themes, reports and much more as<lb/>
low as SI 75 per page. (Please call for quote<lb/>
on your pro)ect). Price includes printing on<lb/>
high quality bond paper and spelling veri-<lb/>
fication against a 50,000 word electronic<lb/>
dictionary. Ask about out special offers<lb/>
Laser Printing now available. Call Mark at<lb/>
757-3440 after 700 p.m. for free informa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
TERM PAPERS ? THESIS: Tvped on<lb/>
IBM wordprocessor, letter quality print.<lb/>
Professional editing. Years of experience.<lb/>
Call anytime ii leave message or call after<lb/>
3:00 p.m. Nanette StiUwell 1-524-5241.<lb/>
Cheap call - Best service! Pick up and deliv-<lb/>
ery.<lb/>
tyu 'Deadlines for<lb/>
CCassificds and<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
For Tuesdays paper: Friday at<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
For Thursdays paper: Monday<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wo Txctviions F(tcur.<lb/>
jToday is the last day to take<lb/>
entries for the<lb/>
REBEL Magazine's<lb/>
Prose. Poetry and<lb/>
Essay Contest.<lb/>
Entries to be submitted to<lb/>
Rebel Office. Pulbications<lb/>
Center by 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
KA-Rafters<lb/>
AirBand '87<lb/>
Wed. Dec. 2nd.<lb/>
$100.00 1st Prize<lb/>
.25 Draft<lb/>
Sign up at RAFTERS<lb/>
752-4668<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ATTENTION PHI TAUS: Hope you<lb/>
Suffering<lb/>
From Total<lb/>
Mental Melt<lb/>
Down? Need A<lb/>
Mid-Week Break?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom East Fifth $425<lb/>
Call 758 5742<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED: To<lb/>
share 2 br apt at Carriage 1 louse Rent is<lb/>
S28.i; security deposit of SI50 required<lb/>
Available spring semester. Call Shannon<lb/>
at 337235.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE: 3 bedroom house2<lb/>
blocks from ECU Private upstairs room<lb/>
Smoker prefered Call 830-1524 after 12 -<lb/>
leave message<lb/>
2 FEMALE ROOMATFS NEEDED. Tar<lb/>
River Estates Crad. or upperelassman,<lb/>
non-smoker 113.75month, 75.00 deposit,<lb/>
own room, 14 utilities. Available Dec 15'<lb/>
"S (14<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED for next<lb/>
semester Large private room in 2-br<lb/>
townhouse. S175.50mo. and 12 utilities<lb/>
(usu. S25mo) Free heat Close to cam-<lb/>
pus, bus service available Call 758 6265.<lb/>
1 OR 2 ROOMATES WANTED Ceder<lb/>
Court Apartments. All appliances, rent<lb/>
based on single and double occupancy. 1<lb/>
12 from campus. Bus service, call 757-<lb/>
0784<lb/>
RINCOLD TOWERS Apts tor rent<lb/>
furnished. Contact 1 lolhe Simonowich<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT. In Tar<lb/>
River. Two bedrooms, ; baths<lb/>
ample parking and great neighbors!<lb/>
S360mo Interested1 Call 757 116<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT (sublettc)<lb/>
Single bedroom, 220.00 per month.<lb/>
Available January Month to month<lb/>
contract available in May. Cable hook<lb/>
up, laundry, ECU bus service Rive<lb/>
Hufl Apts Call 752 0092<lb/>
TWO ROOMATES: Needed to share<lb/>
townhouse in VVildwood Vilas $135<lb/>
mo 752-4781 Call Julie<lb/>
FOR RFNT 3 br house, l2block from<lb/>
campus, call 830 177<lb/>
FOR RENT: Two bedroom apt in Rin<lb/>
gold Towers Fully Furnished located<lb/>
on 2nd floor with the laundry room<lb/>
Available 1st of January through luiv<lb/>
31svt Conact kirn or Wend) al 758<lb/>
0440. After 2.00 p.m or 1 lolhe Si<lb/>
monowich at 758 2865<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED - To share a large<lb/>
2 bedroom apt excellent location<lb/>
S175.00 per month, 12 utilities &amp; 12<lb/>
deposit Call 752-1703.<lb/>
ROOMATF WANTFD: Female non-<lb/>
smoker to share 3 bedroom apt at<lb/>
Wilson Acres Tennins court, pool,<lb/>
sauna, laundrv, water, and cable in<lb/>
eluded S107.50mo Call 752 5886<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED to share 2 bed<lb/>
room apt. with 2 girls at Tar River Call<lb/>
between 5 p.m. and 9 pan. 758-6507.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt 2 blocks form<lb/>
campus 1 leather 757-0258!<lb/>
.?ad an awesome break Good hkk on<lb/>
Finals. See va at BEAUS Wednesday<lb/>
Love - your hi' sisters<lb/>
FREE BAHAMAS TRIP Come down<lb/>
to the Elbo and register lor a trip lor two<lb/>
to the Bahamas spring break SI tickets"<lb/>
Buy yours today<lb/>
ATTENTION: Don'l forget Alpha i<lb/>
Delta's happy hour every Wednesday<lb/>
night at I'antana's.<lb/>
LETTER FOUND behind Art building<lb/>
To: Tina, From Philip Picture enclosed<lb/>
Call Jennifer 758 8090 or Susan 752<lb/>
9069.<lb/>
SIC EPS Don't forget elections tor new<lb/>
officers will beheld Tuesday night. I i<lb/>
lowed bv the party with the A( M'isat the<lb/>
Elbo<lb/>
SARAH MILLER (aka Derrick's main<lb/>
squeeze Nancy M he Ivs, roomie') Hope<lb/>
vou had a great Thanksgiving and keep<lb/>
my underwear off ot the television' Love<lb/>
Marv<lb/>
SIC El's Congratulations to the Fall '87<lb/>
Pledge class (or a job well done'<lb/>
K.MBIRLYEASON rhanks for being<lb/>
ebos RgSs-aZetacouldhave-AJso.<lb/>
thanks tor cooking dinner for me. ZLAM<lb/>
Angela (YLS).<lb/>
BUCKLEY, parting with vou and the<lb/>
Helta Stgs was a blast Thanks tor the<lb/>
pizza and the shirt. Let's get together<lb/>
agam soon Fran PS Beware of red<lb/>
wooiy mammoths!<lb/>
TO ALL CROUPS AND ORCANIZA-<lb/>
IIONS who would like to have their<lb/>
photo included in the yearbook, please<lb/>
contact the Buccaneer office at 757-6501.<lb/>
Please give at least 1 weeks notice and<lb/>
leave the following info: date, time,<lb/>
place, group name, and contact wphone<lb/>
number! Thanks!<lb/>
'YOU'RE THE APPLE OF MY EYE<lb/>
Send and apple crush today! In front of<lb/>
the Student Store, SI Sponsored by Delta<lb/>
Zeta<lb/>
HEY DELTA SICS: We want ya'll to<lb/>
know that we had a blast partying with<lb/>
va' I et's do it again sxn. Love, Delta<lb/>
Zeta. PS Did a red hairy buffalo every<lb/>
crawl through?<lb/>
Dl I.TA ETA: "I've got a crush on you<lb/>
Orange (rush sale for a very, very spe-<lb/>
cial friend 1130 though 123 in front of<lb/>
the Student Store. Only SI!<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: We would wish to thak all<lb/>
of those that participated in the Organ<lb/>
Donor Drive It was a great success.<lb/>
DO NOT MISS WEDNESDAY'S<lb/>
I iesta Grande' at OFF T! IE CUFF Come<lb/>
see Roberto, Miguel, Jcs'us, Pablo, and<lb/>
Senior Cuerro behind the bar.<lb/>
SICM AS Get those pj's ready for Thurs-<lb/>
day night's pj - p party at the Sig Ep<lb/>
house Anyone wearing wearing "see-<lb/>
though" pj's will not be admitted under<lb/>
any circumstances.<lb/>
Season's Greetings<lb/>
Spice up the holiday season this year with<lb/>
the good food and good<lb/>
cheer of Annabelle's<lb/>
Restaurant. For holiday<lb/>
office parties,banquets<lb/>
family get- togethers, or an<lb/>
intimate evening for two,<lb/>
, there's simply no tastier<lb/>
? k way to celebrate.<lb/>
Come enjoy our weekly<lb/>
special: Sundays-Two complete<lb/>
Sirlom Steak Dinners only $9 95<lb/>
" " RFsTAI<lb/>
8<lb/>
RESTAURANTS PUB<lb/>
The Plaza ? Greenville Blvd. ? 756-0315<lb/>
TODD &amp; CARLOS - We couldn't be any<lb/>
luckier than to have tow big brothers as<lb/>
great as you guys We're looking forward<lb/>
to the great bmes ahead in KA and with<lb/>
you. Love Ya! Your new little sisters - Lisa<lb/>
it Chnsta.<lb/>
U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2 U2<lb/>
U2 U2 U2 TICKETS FOR SALE 752-6922<lb/>
PIKE BROTHERS &amp; their cocktail dates<lb/>
hope everyone had a blast, thanks to<lb/>
Kevin T. for a night to remember.<lb/>
SANDY WHITE: Congratulations on<lb/>
becoming our 1987 Dreamgirl, the broth-<lb/>
ers of Pt Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
CREEKS, CREEKS, CREEKS: Best<lb/>
happy hour besides Fridays are Wednes-<lb/>
days at " Fiesta Grande' " at OFF Tl IE<lb/>
CUFF Food is fantastic and the barten<lb/>
dcrs aren't bad either.<lb/>
ANYBODY WHO'S ANYBODY<lb/>
KNOWS THAT THE NEW DELI IS<lb/>
WHERE IT JAMS! Catch Mike Edwards<lb/>
Thursday, Flip Side Friday, and don't<lb/>
dare miss the Connells on Saturday<lb/>
THE RESPONSE FOR THE ECU ICE<lb/>
TEA PARTY has been soooo good that<lb/>
we've decided to make you wait half the<lb/>
time Introducing Fiesta Grande "<lb/>
every Wednesday from 5 'til closing<lb/>
Mexican imports $1 00. Currevo Shots<lb/>
SI 50, Prarie Fires SI 00, and FREE tacos<lb/>
n-nachos From 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
SIG EPS - Dig up that dirt and get ready<lb/>
for the annual Christmas "gag gift'<lb/>
party, Thurday night before pj p with<lb/>
the Sigmas<lb/>
ATTENTION AOPI VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
PLAYERS - Good luck in the big champi<lb/>
onship game tonight You guys are awe<lb/>
some.<lb/>
(pakmont<lb/>
Square Apte,<lb/>
? 2 BDR TOWNHOUSE APTS.<lb/>
? APPLIANCES FURNISHED. CARPETED<lb/>
? FREE CABLE<lb/>
? CENTRAL HEAT &amp; AIR<lb/>
? CONVENIENT TO ECU. &amp; SHOPPING<lb/>
? POOL. COMMUNITY ROOM &amp; LAUNDRY ROOM<lb/>
? 24 HR EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE<lb/>
We Welcome All Students!<lb/>
756-4151<lb/>
1212 Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
Office Hrs. 9:30 5:30 M-F<lb/>
DAY STUDENTS<lb/>
Do You Want To Make<lb/>
A Difference?<lb/>
Apply now for the position of Day Student<lb/>
Representative on the ECU Media Board.<lb/>
Help set policies for operations of WZMB<lb/>
THE REBEL HE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
BUCCANE EXPRESSIONS, &amp; THE<lb/>
. HOTO LAB.<lb/>
Apply in Media Board Office<lb/>
2nd Floor, Publications Building<lb/>
757-6009<lb/>
Filing Dates: Dec. 1 - Dec. 7<lb/>
12 p.m.<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
IKE<lb/>
UFF<lb/>
K4MI<lb/>
O<lb/>
Fiesta<lb/>
Grande"<lb/>
?FREETacos-n-Nachos 5-9<lb/>
?All Mexican Imports $1.00<lb/>
?Cuervo Gold Shots $1.50<lb/>
?Prarie Fires $1.00<lb/>
Come Early and Beat the Cover<lb/>
Live entertainment 9-1.<lb/>
x Must Be 21 To Enter<lb/>
 Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
The Sheraton Greenville ? 203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
 DONT GO<lb/>
HOME<lb/>
WITHOUT<lb/>
YOUR NEW<lb/>
LOOK FOR<lb/>
THE<lb/>
HOLIDAYS!<lb/>
?georges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
-?$?<lb/>
 <lb/>
7<lb/>
CONTEMPORARY HAIRSTYUNG<lb/>
WOLFF TANNING SYSTEM<lb/>
FREE CONSULTATION<lb/>
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
Open til 9 p.m.<lb/>
U.ofA.e<lb/>
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (CPS) <lb/>
Hie on-again, off-again task of<lb/>
gripping cancer-causing asbestos<lb/>
from campus buildings has led<lb/>
University of Alabama employ-<lb/>
ees t consider suing me univer<lb/>
sity<lb/>
twelve English department<lb/>
employees have filed a formal<lb/>
complaint that LA worki r<lb/>
posed them to hazard,<lb/>
tos fibers when they wi n d<lb/>
repair work in<lb/>
Dole says campaign<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
she said<lb/>
Mrs. Dole said her hu<lb/>
campaign is going well The cam-<lb/>
paign raised $13 million from<lb/>
March to November, uhen Dole<lb/>
announced his candidicv,<lb/>
said<lb/>
'The polls seem to indicate<lb/>
constantly that we are down<lb/>
two man race (for the Republican<lb/>
nomination) she said, while<lb/>
admitting that Vice President<lb/>
George Bush was still dJuvt<lb/>
Dole in most areas.<lb/>
Asbesh<lb/>
aneftectn<lb/>
tally<lb/>
nite<lb/>
re l <lb/>
a fatal til<lb/>
. e w<lb/>
At a hot<lb/>
hia r<lb/>
 a n w<lb/>
? 1 '<lb/>
what<lb/>
said J<lb/>
tosh J<lb/>
It's :<lb/>
Dc<lb/>
;n thj<lb/>
i Dol<lb/>
emo<lb/>
Announcer<lb/>
BJ A LEADER<lb/>
a<lb/>
to a;<lb/>
tor d n<lb/>
MUSIC US1 M(, (.1 Ml R<lb/>
gram off ice, Menda 757 6611.1<lb/>
NCS1 Nort turo meets every M in Met : : . lenlj<lb/>
' . '?<lb/>
AMNESTY INTERN ATL.<lb/>
their a ting on V December 2nd si ? p at<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEV. The 1  rseas 1V . . ?Mdl n H  Decen aiscussioti tveryon inl resTeei'is ifhj ALEl<lb/>
SAM Attention SAM members ' a ? If ? d ighnuts ? ' ?<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI.<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi lior. I<lb/>
- -<lb/>
?err.eter December I at 7 p.m<lb/>
PRODUCTIONS COMM.<lb/>
? i  staff and studei - ;rc in-<lb/>
vited to tTM I ?v-<lb/>
dav, December 1, Wpm in the k :<lb/>
Mendenhall Free tood. cash prizes to the<lb/>
top three ornaments, and Santa Qaus Gel<lb/>
in the ChnTr.j spirit<lb/>
SLBIECTS NEEDED<lb/>
The ECU clinical ps i program<lb/>
needs children, aces 6 1" to voJunte - ? -<lb/>
intelligence test si assist  rj i<lb/>
training ot V A level Students Interested<lb/>
peopii contact Dr Larrv Mines at<lb/>
the Depart: ? Psj . - 757<lb/>
FITNESS TEST<lb/>
The Physical Education Stor and<lb/>
Physical fitness Competency Test i<lb/>
scheduled to take place at V.trges Coli-<lb/>
seum at 1 p.m. Tuesdav, EX?cember <lb/>
1987 A pasri; score on th;s test is re-<lb/>
quired of all students pnor to declaring<lb/>
physical education as a major Anv ques<lb/>
borts should be rettored to Israel or<lb/>
Mike McCammon at 757-6497<lb/>
MODLELNG 1QBS<lb/>
The Sehovii of Art has pv)s;tions apt<lb/>
models during the spring semester at ;<lb/>
per hr Applv now to rx-g work m the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Compel Chior is sponsoring a<lb/>
S50 Qnsmas giveawa Tickets are fifty<lb/>
cents and can be purchasi at the Student<lb/>
Store from November v through Decem-<lb/>
ber 4 The drawing will be held on Friday<lb/>
December 4<lb/>
SAILING CLUB<lb/>
Anyone interested in loining the ECU<lb/>
Sailing Club please attend an organiza<lb/>
honal meeting Wcdenesday, December 2<lb/>
at 5 p.m in Rm. 145 Minges<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
The Accountmg Sooety's December<lb/>
Dinnermeetmg will be held December<lb/>
7th at 6 p.m. at the Sheraton Inn Cost is<lb/>
$15 per person Turn in money and name<lb/>
to Jill in the Accounting Department <lb/>
bv Thursday, December 3rd Guests are<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
SFNTOR COUNCIL<lb/>
Photo sesion for December Graduates<lb/>
Look for tame and place on flyers posted<lb/>
around campus<lb/>
FTUFORENSICS<lb/>
Anyone intersted in enhancing their<lb/>
communication skills come to Rm 211<lb/>
Theatre Arts on Wednesday, December 2,<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Audi) - <lb/>
tel<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
? '? m-<lb/>
? !???I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0007"/><lb/>
I'tbean) ANBOm WHO'S ANYBODY<lb/>
jthcrsas KNOWS THAI THI NFW OELI IS<lb/>
;forward WHERE IT AMS! Cakh Mike Edwards<lb/>
jnd with Thursday Flip Side Friday and don't<lb/>
ters 1 it dare miss tho v onrteils on Saturday.<lb/>
UU RESPONSE FOR THE ECU ICE<lb/>
U PARTY has been soooo ixi that<lb/>
iu' v e decided t.i make ou wait halt the<lb/>
time rig Fie -ta Grande'<lb/>
ev? Wednesday trom 5 til cksing<lb/>
Mexican im ts $1.00,urrevo Shots<lb/>
s s Prarie Fires $1 01 and FREE taco&amp;<lb/>
i. Kos From -9 p.m<lb/>
SIC 1 PS Pig up that dirt and get ready<lb/>
for the annual Christmas 'gag-gift"<lb/>
party Thurd.n night before pi pi with<lb/>
ATTENTION AOI'I OUrYBALL<lb/>
PI MKs d ? n the big champi<lb/>
night You guys are aw-<lb/>
ikmont<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE APTS.<lb/>
VNCES FURNISHED. CARPETED<lb/>
CABLE<lb/>
vAL HEAT &amp; AIR<lb/>
2NIENTTO E.C.U. &amp; SHOPPING<lb/>
COMMUNITY ROOM &amp; LAUNDRY ROOM<lb/>
EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE<lb/>
Welcome All Students!<lb/>
756-4151<lb/>
1212 Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
Office Hrs. 9:30-5:30 M-F<lb/>
Y STUDENTS<lb/>
You Want To Make<lb/>
A Difference?<lb/>
for the position of Day Student<lb/>
alive on the ECU Media Board.<lb/>
olicies for operations of WZMB,<lb/>
EL, THE EAST CAROLINIAN,<lb/>
1EER, EXPRESSIONS, &amp; THE<lb/>
PI IOTO LAB.<lb/>
in Media Board Office<lb/>
loor, Publications Building<lb/>
757-6009<lb/>
Dates: Dec. 1 - Dec. 7<lb/>
12 p.m.<lb/>
georges<lb/>
heir designers<lb/>
The Plaza p<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 1.1987 7<lb/>
U. of A. employees might sue<lb/>
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (CPS) -<lb/>
I he orvagain, off-again task of<lb/>
stripping cancer-causing asbestos<lb/>
from campus buildings has led<lb/>
University of Alabama employ-<lb/>
ees to consider suing the univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
twelve English department<lb/>
employees have filed a formal<lb/>
complaint that UA workers ex-<lb/>
posed them to hazardous asbes-<lb/>
tos fibers when they were doing<lb/>
repair work in a campus offic<lb/>
building Oct. 6.<lb/>
Asbestos ? regularly used as<lb/>
an effective insulation material in<lb/>
virtually all buldings erected in<lb/>
the United States for the 30 years<lb/>
before 1970 ? is thought to cause ?<lb/>
a fatal form of lung cancer in<lb/>
people who breathe in its fibers.<lb/>
At about the same time, a Phila-<lb/>
delphia public library often fre-<lb/>
quented by University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania students was closed<lb/>
down when workers discovered<lb/>
they couldn't install a new fur-<lb/>
nace without disturbing old as-<lb/>
bestos in the piping.<lb/>
Students at Villanova, r.Jso lo-<lb/>
cated in Philadelphia, say the<lb/>
school is "covering up" the extent<lb/>
of the asbestos problem in St.<lb/>
Mary's Hall, a dormitory. Villa-<lb/>
nova r'hVu.s have met with St.<lb/>
Mary's residents to calm fears.<lb/>
The school has no concrete plans<lb/>
to remove the asbestos from the<lb/>
dorm, and other Villanova build-<lb/>
Dole says campaign is going well for husband<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Mrs. Dole said her husband's<lb/>
campaign is going well. The cam-<lb/>
paign raised $13 million from<lb/>
March to November, when Dole<lb/>
announced his candidicy, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The polls seem to indicate<lb/>
constantly that we are down to a<lb/>
two man race (for the Republican<lb/>
nomination) she said, while<lb/>
admitting that Vice President<lb/>
George Bush was still ahead of<lb/>
Dole in most areas.<lb/>
" think that the momentum is<lb/>
what is important to look at she<lb/>
said. "Because the polls continue<lb/>
to show Dole coming steadily up.<lb/>
It's not erratic. It's not up and<lb/>
down. It's just a steady increase,<lb/>
and that's a nice trend<lb/>
Mrs. Dole said another high<lb/>
point in the campaign is that her<lb/>
husband is continually shown by<lb/>
polls to be the most electable<lb/>
Republican. She produced an<lb/>
independent survey which com-<lb/>
pared Dole and Bush with each of<lb/>
the Democratic candidates, and it<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BE A LEADER<lb/>
Applications jro now being accepted<lb/>
for the position of Student i lomecoming<lb/>
Committee, Cairperson You must be<lb/>
enrolled in school lull time with a 2 2GPA<lb/>
to apply Call Leslie Council at 752 8070<lb/>
for more nitorm.it;<lb/>
m.<lb/>
MUSIC LISENING CFTVTFR<lb/>
job vacancies available tor spi<lb/>
semester Morning hours available as well<lb/>
js other slut: Contact Lvnn in the pro<lb/>
gram office<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
Mendenhal! Student Center<lb/>
Nc<lb/>
The<lb/>
ture meet<lb/>
in Mende<lb/>
XC5L<lb/>
th Carolina Student Li<lb/>
?erv Monday night at<lb/>
all student Center, Room 2i2<lb/>
gisla<lb/>
pm<lb/>
starting next semester Members ck not<lb/>
forget December 12th, Mid-Exam am<lb/>
A MM STY INTERNATL.<lb/>
 ?? nest) International will be having<lb/>
thly meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
er2nd atspm at St Paul's Epis-<lb/>
: irch 101 E 4th St<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEV.<lb/>
The Overseas Development Network<lb/>
IT1 irsda) December 3, at 4 p.m<lb/>
? aiding R 151 Topic 1 londu-<lb/>
AscussioVt Everyone interested is invited<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
Attention SAM members All members<lb/>
must pick up doughnuts on Fri , Decem-<lb/>
ber 4th from 3:00 pm. until 7(X1 p.m. in<lb/>
Raw! i 5<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The Camm3 Ik?ta Phi Honor Society<lb/>
will be having their last meeting of the<lb/>
semester December 1 at 7 pm. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. Point cards will be collected.<lb/>
PRQDUCTIOXS COMM.<lb/>
All faculty, staff and students are in-<lb/>
vited to the tree-trimming party on Tues-<lb/>
dav. December 1. 4:30 p.m. in the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Free food, cash prizes to the<lb/>
top three ornaments, and Santa Claus! Get<lb/>
in the Christmas spirit<lb/>
SUBJECTS NEEDED<lb/>
The ECU clinical psychology program<lb/>
needs children, ages 6-15 to volunteer for<lb/>
intelligence testing This is to assist in the<lb/>
training ot MA level students. Interested<lb/>
people should contact Dr. Larry Mines at<lb/>
the Department of Psychology, 757-6800<lb/>
FITNESS TEST<lb/>
The Physical Education Motor and<lb/>
Physical Fitness Competency Test is<lb/>
scheduled to take place at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum at 1 p.m Tuesday, December 8,<lb/>
I 87 A passing score on this test is re-<lb/>
quired of all students prior to declaring<lb/>
physical education as a major. Any ques-<lb/>
tions should be reffered to Dr. Israel or<lb/>
Mike McCammon at 757-6497.<lb/>
MODLELNG JOBS<lb/>
The School of Art has positions open for<lb/>
models during the spring semester at S5<lb/>
per hr. Apply now to begin work in the<lb/>
spring<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Chior is sponsoring a<lb/>
S50 Chnsmas giveaway Tickets are fifty<lb/>
cents and can be purchased at the Student<lb/>
Store from November 30 through Decem-<lb/>
ber 4. The drawing will be held on Friday,<lb/>
December 4.<lb/>
SAILING club<lb/>
Anyone interested in joining the ECU<lb/>
Sailing Club please attend an organiza-<lb/>
tional meeting Wedenesday, December 2,<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in Rm. 145 Minges.<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
The Accounting Society's December<lb/>
Dinnermeeting will be held December<lb/>
7th at 6 p.m. at the Sheraton Inn. Cost is<lb/>
SI5 per person. Turn in money and name<lb/>
to Jill in the Accounting Department office<lb/>
by Thursday, December 3rd. Guests are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
SFNIOR COUNCIL<lb/>
Photo sesion for December Graduates.<lb/>
Look for hme and place on flyers posted<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
Anyone intersted in enhancing their<lb/>
communication skills come to Rm. 211<lb/>
Theatre Arts on Wednesday, December 2,<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma members please remem-<lb/>
ber the dinner meetinat Qmncy's Wed-<lb/>
nesday, December 2, at 6 pm. Monev<lb/>
from the doughnut sale will be collected at<lb/>
that time.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi would like to congratulate<lb/>
the following members of the Alpha<lb/>
Gamma pledge class Vicky llraswell,<lb/>
Jenny Campbell, Billy Daniel, Donna<lb/>
Farler, Toiriste Cneal, Cindy Pittman,<lb/>
Robin Sanford, Jeff Taft, Margaret VVirt,<lb/>
and Lvnn Williams Welcome new broth-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
There will be a business meeting for all<lb/>
brothers on Wednesday, December 2, in<lb/>
Austin 132<lb/>
COMMISSION<lb/>
Worship God in a beautiful candlelight<lb/>
communion service, then enjoy a Christ-<lb/>
mas dinner with turkey and all the trim-<lb/>
mings, this Wednesday at 5 p.m. at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center The meal is<lb/>
tree, an offering will be collected for the<lb/>
poor ol Greenville. Call 758-2030 for reser-<lb/>
vations.<lb/>
ALPHA EPfilLON DEl.TA<lb/>
Tonight at 7 p.m in F-307 Dr. Lou Ann<lb/>
Baldree, a resident in pediatrics at Pitt<lb/>
County Memronal 1 lospital will share her<lb/>
experiences as a medical student and resi-<lb/>
dent Pledge meeting at 6:30 with re-<lb/>
freshements and officer's meeting at 6<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
ECJiC<lb/>
Thursday, E)ecember 3, there will be an<lb/>
ECI lO Business Meeting - wrap up party<lb/>
- extravaganza at 5 pm. in the Honors<lb/>
Lounge m Ragsdale. All members - pres-<lb/>
ent and future - should be there<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society<lb/>
extends and inivations to anyone who has<lb/>
a 3.0 or better GPA to join our organiza-<lb/>
tion. National and local dues are S26. If<lb/>
interested you can join at out last meeting<lb/>
which is December 1 at 7 p.m. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. If you have any questions<lb/>
contact John Thrift at 757-0660.<lb/>
showed Dole beating each by a<lb/>
larger margin than Bush.<lb/>
Mrs. Dole resigned in March<lb/>
from her position as secretary of<lb/>
transportation in order to focus<lb/>
on her husband's campaign.<lb/>
The sale of Conrail, saving $2<lb/>
billion for the government, was<lb/>
the most rewarding action of her<lb/>
tenure, Mrs. Dole said.<lb/>
She also said that, as first lady,<lb/>
she would continue to work on<lb/>
many of the programs she en-<lb/>
dorsed in her cabinet position,<lb/>
including transportation safety<lb/>
and random drug testing for some<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Mrs. Dole, a native of Salisbury,<lb/>
spoke at ECU's commencement<lb/>
ceremonies in 1986 at the request<lb/>
of Sen. John East, a former profes-<lb/>
sor here.<lb/>
ings insulated with asbestos.<lb/>
U A workers did not know there<lb/>
was asbestos in he ceiling of Mor-<lb/>
gan Hall when they began to fix it.<lb/>
UA Prsidcnt Joab Thomas for-<lb/>
warded the English Dcpt. com-<lb/>
plaint to UA's attorney for re-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
Nationwide, a lack of money to<lb/>
remove asbestos from campus<lb/>
buildings has forced the effort to<lb/>
progress fitfully.<lb/>
On Oct. 21, the U.S. Environ-<lb/>
mental Protection Agency an-<lb/>
nounced new rules and appropri-<lb/>
ated $3.1 billion to help primary<lb/>
and secondary schools rid them-<lb/>
selves of the material. No other<lb/>
plans are afoot for college cam-<lb/>
puses, however, EPA officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
'??? uau<lb/>
ATTENTION BSN<lb/>
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The Air Force has a spec aI pro<lb/>
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you can enter active duty soon<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057932_0008"/><lb/>
3 SgjASTCAKOUNlAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1987<lb/>
Inmates free hostages after La. prison riots<lb/>
OAKl)ALE,U.(AP)-Cuban well before the a,kl? B? ? . . <lb/>
OAKDALE, La. (AP) ? Cuban<lb/>
inmates ended their uprising by<lb/>
treeing all 26 hostages ? dirty<lb/>
hungry but healthy ? after agrec-<lb/>
'ng to reviews of their eases and<lb/>
receuingblessings froma Cuban-<lb/>
born bishop riding among them<lb/>
in an open van.<lb/>
Cuban prisoners holding 90<lb/>
hostages at the U.S. Penitentiary<lb/>
m Atlanta were briefed Sunday<lb/>
on the agreement that ended the<lb/>
eight-day standoff at the Federal<lb/>
Detention Center here But fed-<lb/>
eral officials would not say if the<lb/>
Atlanta siege was any closer to an<lb/>
end<lb/>
Four Atlanta hostages were re-<lb/>
leased Sunday morning by the<lb/>
1.139 inmates holding that prison,<lb/>
well before the Oakdale settle-<lb/>
ment, officials said.<lb/>
"There has been no reaction, no<lb/>
celebrating, nothing discernible"<lb/>
from the Atlanta inmates to devel-<lb/>
opments at Oakdale, U.S. Justice<lb/>
Department spokesman Thomas<lb/>
Stewart said.<lb/>
In Oakdale, the reaction was<lb/>
one of joyous relief Freed hos-<lb/>
tages beamed, and hostage rela-<lb/>
tives and inmates alike wept and<lb/>
cheered<lb/>
"For the hostages and the rob<lb/>
lives, tins is a day of jubilation<lb/>
said Auxiliary Bishop Agustin<lb/>
Roman oi Miami, who persuaded<lb/>
the 950 Cubans to accept the<lb/>
agreement and lay down their<lb/>
makeshift weapons.<lb/>
"For the Marielitos, ,t is a day of expressed willingness to work to<lb/>
hope lor the community, a day of end the Atlanta prison takeover if<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
The agreement also promised<lb/>
no reprisals for damage to the<lb/>
year-old $17 million prison,<lb/>
which was seized and torched<lb/>
Nov. 21. Officials said it would be<lb/>
rebuilt.<lb/>
The riot followed a government<lb/>
announcement of the deporta-<lb/>
tions to Cuba of 2,500 undesire-<lb/>
ables criminals or mentally ill<lb/>
- who were among the 125,000 to<lb/>
arrive during the 1980 Mariel<lb/>
boatlift. The Atlanta prison was<lb/>
seized a week ago Monday.<lb/>
Roman, the highest-ranking<lb/>
C uban-born priest in Miami's<lb/>
Roman Catholic<lb/>
officials asked him.<lb/>
However, Patrick Korten, the<lb/>
Justice Department's deputy di-<lb/>
rector of public affairs, ruled out<lb/>
an immediate invitation to the<lb/>
bishop.<lb/>
After their release, the Oakdale<lb/>
hostages were taken by bus to<lb/>
Humana Hospital.<lb/>
"They're dirty. They're in good<lb/>
spirits. They're hungry. They all<lb/>
appear to be stressed somewhat<lb/>
said Dr. Roy Harding. "All have<lb/>
been checked and appear to be<lb/>
doing very well<lb/>
Guard Leon Smith said he and<lb/>
the other hostages had been<lb/>
?11 f ? , . Roman Catholic Archdiocese, treated fairly and with re<lb/>
Illegal wiretap may have helped Ginsbure fall<lb/>
CAMBWDCE. Mass. (CPS) - .orsoRamsUhcRolvrUtorkn?.  ? J <lb/>
"But we were all scared because<lb/>
it was the first time we had to deal<lb/>
with a situation like this he said.<lb/>
He said he believed the hostages<lb/>
were treated well because guards<lb/>
had treated inmates fairly.<lb/>
The agreement, typed on sta-<lb/>
tionery from Attorney General<lb/>
Edwin Meese Ill's office, included<lb/>
guarantees of individual reviews<lb/>
o. inmates' status and medical<lb/>
w-?Mnent for those needing it.<lb/>
"We did not give away the<lb/>
sore said j.D. Williams, a re-<lb/>
gional director of the U.S. Bureau<lb/>
of Prisons. "I think it's a good<lb/>
agreement<lb/>
In a videotape olaycd for the<lb/>
inmates earir.v Sunday, Roman<lb/>
said he had discussed the accord<lb/>
 AMBRIDGE, Mass. (CPS) - torsagamst the Robert Borknomi-<lb/>
An illegal wiretap on a Harvard nation in October, said he made<lb/>
law professors phone may have confidential statements on his<lb/>
Helped derail the nomination of<lb/>
Douglas C.insburg to the U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court.<lb/>
Law Prof. Laurence H. Tribe, an<lb/>
influential legal scholar whose<lb/>
opinion turned some U.S. sena-<lb/>
office phone questioning<lb/>
Ginsburg's lack of experience,<lb/>
and that rumors that Tribe would<lb/>
try to block the nomination began<lb/>
circulating the next day.<lb/>
On Oct. 31, three days after the<lb/>
conversation police discovered late who might have tapped his<lb/>
someone had put an illegal wire- phone P<lb/>
tap on Tribe's phone.<lb/>
Tolt'thynWyUpSCntingTribCSaid- Ginsbur8 withd? his candi-<lb/>
"To think my private eonversa- dacy for the Supreme Court Nov.<lb/>
tons were bang shared with a Safter public revelations that he'd<lb/>
person w.th no scruples ,s defi- smoked marijuana as a s'udenl<lb/>
n.telv not a good feeling and, m 1979 J??  ttroS<lb/>
Tribe added he couldn't specu- sor. prores-<lb/>
personally with Meese in Wash-<lb/>
ington and urged them to accept<lb/>
Roman celebrated Mass for the<lb/>
Cubans, gave them communion,<lb/>
then rode among cheering, weep-<lb/>
ing inmates in an open van and<lb/>
gave them his blessing, said the<lb/>
bishop's legal adviser, Rafcl Pe-<lb/>
nalver.<lb/>
Williams said 200 of the least<lb/>
dangerous prisoners would be<lb/>
moved immediately to the<lb/>
Army's Fort Polk about 50 miles<lb/>
northwest of Oakdale. The re-<lb/>
maining prisoners, including 38<lb/>
Americans, will be kept at<lb/>
Oakdale whileofficialsdeterminc<lb/>
which of 45 federal prisons have<lb/>
room for them.<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
School suspends frat. students<lb/>
rEANECK, N.J. (CrS) ? Far-<lb/>
?eigh Dickinson University sus-<lb/>
pcndedanall white fraternity last<lb/>
week : ?r engaging in a slick-<lb/>
wielding brawl between white<lb/>
and black students in front of its<lb/>
house Oct. 17.<lb/>
On Nov. 11, FDU spokes-<lb/>
woman Alice Olick said Sigma<lb/>
OmicronBcta which isn't affili-<lb/>
ated with any national fraternity<lb/>
would be banned from campus<lb/>
until 1991 for engaging in the<lb/>
brawl, and to punish it for recent<lb/>
violations oi other campus rules.<lb/>
The October Farleigh Dickin-<lb/>
s n brawl,moreover, wasoneofa<lb/>
Si riesol racial confrontations that<lb/>
have plagued the universities of<lb/>
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois<lb/>
and Indiana, as well asTompkins-<lb/>
Cortiand Community College in<lb/>
New York, this fall.<lb/>
And at tin- University of Mar<lb/>
land last week, Middle Eastern<lb/>
students submitted a petition<lb/>
complaining about a "racist flyer"<lb/>
circulating around the campus.<lb/>
The Organization of Arab Stu-<lb/>
dents displayed the flyer ad<lb/>
vertising a take product called<lb/>
"Arab Extra Dry" that said "You<lb/>
don't have to be an Arab to smell<lb/>
like one" and asked adminis-<lb/>
trators tii "condemn any form of<lb/>
racist humor aimed at any ethnic<lb/>
group on campus<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Campus<lb/>
Friends of Israel at the University<lb/>
of Texas at Austin charged Oct. 30<lb/>
that a campus anti-apartheid<lb/>
group ? The Steve Biko Commit-<lb/>
tee helped spread anti-Semi-<lb/>
tism by inviting speaker Kwamc<lb/>
Hire to campus.<lb/>
In his speech at Texas as well<lb/>
as at various other campuses ?<lb/>
lure sid, "I'll say it again: the<lb/>
only good Zionist is a dead Zion-<lb/>
ist<lb/>
The Biko Committee responded<lb/>
by inviting Jewish students to a<lb/>
meeting, at which member Trina<lb/>
Reed asserted their reading of<lb/>
what constituted anti-Semitism<lb/>
was wrong.<lb/>
WE REPAIR TOYOTA, HONDA. VW FIAT<lb/>
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Students face culture lag<lb/>
SAL1 LAKE CITY, Utah (CIS)<lb/>
Male collegians intent on<lb/>
minding their manners among<lb/>
female collegians are extending a<lb/>
"cultural lag" that signals that<lb/>
"women arc not as capable as<lb/>
men. and should be treated differ-<lb/>
ently a University ot Utah re-<lb/>
searcher has concluded.<lb/>
In a study of 190 college stu-<lb/>
dents' attitudes, anthropologist<lb/>
Seymour Parker found that the<lb/>
people who valued such manners<lb/>
most also tended to believe<lb/>
women were "a little irrational"<lb/>
and in need of "extra care<lb/>
People with low regard for<lb/>
manners thought the customs<lb/>
conveyed the idea that women are<lb/>
nforinr "<lb/>
Undergrad<lb/>
numbers<lb/>
increase again<lb/>
NEW YORK, N.Y. (CPS) ?<lb/>
Duri ng a decade in which demog-<lb/>
raphers have been predicting<lb/>
drastic enrollment decreases at<lb/>
US. campuses, undergraduate<lb/>
enrollment actually rose between<lb/>
1985 and 1986, the'Collcge Board<lb/>
reported last week.<lb/>
The report counted almost 1<lb/>
percent more undergrads en-<lb/>
rolled in fall, 1986, than in fall,<lb/>
1985, the board said.<lb/>
In all, almost 10.9 million un-<lb/>
dergrads registered for classes<lb/>
last fall.<lb/>
The U.S. Dept. of Education<lb/>
counted a total of more than 12<lb/>
million students, including grad<lb/>
students, on campus last year.<lb/>
Official numbers for the 1987-88<lb/>
academic year won't be forthcom-<lb/>
ing until next January.<lb/>
Initial unofficial reports from a<lb/>
wide range of campuses, how-<lb/>
ever, indicate surprising in-<lb/>
creases in the numbersof students<lb/>
this fall, fueled particularly by<lb/>
increases in the size of the schools'<lb/>
freshman classes.<lb/>
That was not the case in 1986,<lb/>
the College Board's survey found'<lb/>
First-time freshman enrollment<lb/>
dropped by 3.1 percent from 1985<lb/>
to 1986. The steepest drop was at<lb/>
2-year public campuses, where<lb/>
the number of fifst-time students<lb/>
fell by 5.3 percent.<lb/>
The overall increase in enroll-<lb/>
ment, the board's Fred Moreno<lb/>
noted, came mostly from older<lb/>
students returning to school.<lb/>
Tarker asked men to rate the<lb/>
importance of opening a door for<lb/>
a woman, opening a car door and<lb/>
helping a woman out, paving the<lb/>
lunch tab, giving up a seat on the<lb/>
bus to an unimpaired woman of<lb/>
the same age and stand i ng when a<lb/>
woman enters the room.<lb/>
He asked women to rank how<lb/>
much they expected a man to<lb/>
observe these practices.<lb/>
To Park?r, such manners are<lb/>
"out of tune. Thev no longer cor-<lb/>
respond to the emerging position<lb/>
of women<lb/>
2204 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
BUSCH GARDENS<lb/>
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1988 auditions<lb/>
Audition Date:<lb/>
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Wednesday, December 2nd<lb/>
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University of North Carolina<lb/>
Elliott University Center<lb/>
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Come see the many forms of art<lb/>
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OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS TIL 9PM<lb/>
SALE ENDS NOVEMBER 22. 1987<lb/>
Mb Arlington Blvd In The Shops of Arlington Village<lb/>
rCI.ARK<lb/>
THE PERFECT CHRISTMAS<lb/>
GIFT: ECU'S Official history,<lb/>
written by<lb/>
Dr. Mary Jo Bratton,<lb/>
professor and director of<lb/>
graduate studies for ECU's<lb/>
Department of History<lb/>
This 550-page book includes more than 200<lb/>
photographs as well as an extensive index and<lb/>
appendix. With its rich purple hard cover and<lb/>
gold lettering, this stately volume will make a<lb/>
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I to??22 and handUng lncluded)- North c??? ts ? Set I<lb/>
I "My check for $<lb/>
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? Signature<lb/>
Mail to:<lb/>
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City. State. Zip<lb/>
Return order form to:ECUThe Fornuu.e Years. TaylorSlaughter AluTc7n:<lb/>
gOjE. Fifth Street. Greenville. NC 27834.<lb/>
.J<lb/>
THh EASIAK<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?.<lb/>
V<lb/>
J<lb/>
t<lb/>
Special education faculty members (left to r<lb/>
Dr. Cindi Nixon and Vai Carmine demonstr<lb/>
agressive clients during the Protective Intel<lb/>
by Tony Rumple)<lb/>
Music prof<lb/>
By LAURASALAZAR<lb/>
Stafl Wfim<lb/>
harlesto<lb/>
reaaber<lb/>
"It was rather m.<lb/>
oneof the onlv things ! .<lb/>
pated in where polil s <lb/>
side. There were no p<lb/>
tones. It was a beautiful be<lb/>
celebration said Paul<lb/>
about his participation <lb/>
orchestra for the re-ded<lb/>
ceremonies of the Statu<lb/>
erty in 1986.<lb/>
Besides performing al I<lb/>
dedication ceremonies <lb/>
b cJlin SchoofcwtM Music<lb/>
classical arra jazz pianm c v ten d'<lb/>
a two-hour special, "Wolftrac<lb/>
Salutes ASCAP Taped last<lb/>
merat Washington DCs far<lb/>
Wolftrap Center for the Perform-<lb/>
ing Arts, the special was a tribute<lb/>
to the talents of members of the<lb/>
American Society of Composers,<lb/>
Authors, and Publishers<lb/>
With only three davs notice<lb/>
Tardif was told to learn the firs!<lb/>
movement of Gershwin's "Piano<lb/>
Concerto in F for a ballet -<lb/>
quence featuring members oi the<lb/>
New York Ballet. Tardif said, "It<lb/>
wasn't difficult to learn the piea<lb/>
because it didn't have to be<lb/>
memorized Tardif performed<lb/>
with the orchestra; the production<lb/>
was directed bv foe Lavton, ter-<lb/>
mer director of North Carolina's<lb/>
outdoor drama "The Lost Col-<lb/>
ony<lb/>
Tardif joined the ECU School ot<lb/>
Music faculty in 1971. He has re-<lb/>
leased recordings on the Dii<lb/>
Arts Classical label and has<lb/>
Rai<lb/>
piano at th<lb/>
father was<lb/>
band and hi<lb/>
S per-<lb/>
formed as a classical artist on a<lb/>
regular basis at The National Gal-<lb/>
lery of Art in Washington, D C<lb/>
Dieting, exercise is u.<lb/>
He<lb/>
mu:<lb/>
imc<lb/>
By PATTI HOWARD<lb/>
Su(f Writer<lb/>
There's an exercise bike in one<lb/>
comer of my living room and a 20-<lb/>
pound pair of dumbells in an-<lb/>
other. I have a mini trampoline<lb/>
against one wall, and a Gut-<lb/>
Buster place strategically in the<lb/>
center of the room. So vou think<lb/>
I'm a fitness nut, righC Well, look<lb/>
closer.<lb/>
Anyone with even a hint of in-<lb/>
telligence could discover that I'm<lb/>
actually a lazv slob This is be-<lb/>
cause each piece of equipment has<lb/>
a layer of dust nine inches thick on<lb/>
it. My Gut-Buster is rusted, and<lb/>
my exercise bike has become a<lb/>
permanent harbor for mv ironing<lb/>
pile.<lb/>
I quit working-out because I am<lb/>
convinced that dieting and exer-<lb/>
cise are unhealthy. Certainlv,<lb/>
aerobic exercieses stimulate and<lb/>
speed up the heart, but so do heart<lb/>
attacks. Besides, only a select few<lb/>
can have flawless figures, and I'm<lb/>
not one of them. I could leap<lb/>
around in an outfit the size of a<lb/>
gum wrapper until my brain<lb/>
turns to coleslaw, and I'd stll have<lb/>
the body of a waiter buffalo.<lb/>
If you think sweating like swine<lb/>
isexhilirating, I think you've got a<lb/>
screw loose.<lb/>
 .<lb/>
scribed .s<lb/>
low-cal<lb/>
sential aspe.<lb/>
That's accept!<lb/>
occastor f<lb/>
how can v.<lb/>
with a nanl<lb/>
mango, or v<lb/>
body runnin!<lb/>
machine.<lb/>
If you readI<lb/>
self-proclaim)<lb/>
you should, vf<lb/>
gain another i<lb/>
taglucomonoi<lb/>
pass. And I rq<lb/>
ent listing <lb/>
like "may al<lb/>
lous.That me,<lb/>
be whale bli<lb/>
Knspies, ane<lb/>
about it!<lb/>
Don't belie<lb/>
can take the pll<lb/>
the related mj<lb/>
acceptable siq<lb/>
late. For that<lb/>
an acceptablel<lb/>
thing except<lb/>
shoe polish,<lb/>
fruit is not desl<lb/>
Let's stop ti<lb/>
and self-denu<lb/>
voursclf to tha<lb/>
??"iii mmm<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0009"/><lb/>
rison riots<lb/>
?all scared because<lb/>
irst time we had to deal<lb/>
ition like this he said<lb/>
elieved the hostages<lb/>
well because guards<lb/>
runates fairly,<lb/>
ment, tvped on sta-<lb/>
i ttomej General<lb/>
2 IH'soffice, included<lb/>
t individual reviews<lb/>
- ind medical<lb/>
m I ngit<lb/>
e awa) the<lb/>
liams a re-<lb/>
ar of  L S Bureau<lb/>
nk t's a good<lb/>
iyed for the<lb/>
- inday, Roman<lb/>
e accord<lb/>
personally with Meese in Wash-<lb/>
ington and urged them to accept<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Roman celebrated Mass for the<lb/>
C ubans. gave them communion,<lb/>
then rode among cheering, weep-<lb/>
ing inmates in an open van and<lb/>
gave them his blessing, said the<lb/>
bishop's legal adviser, Rafel Pe-<lb/>
nal ver.<lb/>
Williams said 200 of the least<lb/>
dangerous prisoners would be<lb/>
moved immediately to the<lb/>
Army's Fort Polk about 50 miles<lb/>
northwest of Oakdale. The re-<lb/>
maining prisoners, including 38<lb/>
Americans, will be kept at<lb/>
Oakdale while of finals determine<lb/>
which of 41- federal prisons have<lb/>
room for them.<lb/>
MPORT SERVICE<lb/>
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a University:<lb/>
ative Years<lb/>
-1982<lb/>
University: The Formative Years, 1907 1982 atl<lb/>
led). North Carolina residents include 5 sales<lb/>
Mail to:<lb/>
Name <lb/>
Address <lb/>
City. State. Zip<lb/>
ive Years. TaylorSlaughter Alumni Center.<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834.<lb/>
J<lb/>
THt EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
DECEMBER I, 1987 Page 9<lb/>
Course teaches protection<lb/>
By MARY HECKROTTE<lb/>
Sufi Writer<lb/>
You might not believe your eyes<lb/>
if you peep into Speight 313 on<lb/>
certain Fridays this semester.<lb/>
People in there are swinging<lb/>
punches, kicking, biting, pulling work-in 'agencies such'as group<lb/>
hair and engaging in all sorts of homes, sheltered workshops,<lb/>
or staff in charge, to help the client<lb/>
get back in control. PIC is the only<lb/>
sanctoned method to use in North<lb/>
Carolina schools and other hu-<lb/>
man services agencies said Car-<lb/>
mine.<lb/>
ECU students who are hired to<lb/>
unacademic carrying-on.<lb/>
Yey, they are ECU students ?<lb/>
and faculty. It's even university<lb/>
sanctioned. It's called PIC ? Pro-<lb/>
tective Intervention Course.<lb/>
"PIC is a non-offensive<lb/>
method of self-defense used to<lb/>
deal with aggressive clients in a<lb/>
human services setting ex-<lb/>
plained Val Carmine, a PIC in-<lb/>
structor from Kinston who super-<lb/>
vises PIC classes throughout east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina. She said that,<lb/>
like everyone, people who have<lb/>
emotional problems or are men-<lb/>
tally retarded sometimes get up<lb/>
public schools, and mental health<lb/>
centers, will need to know PIC,<lb/>
Carmine said. Graduates from<lb/>
psychology, social work, special<lb/>
education, therapeutic recreation,<lb/>
nursing, and many other disci-<lb/>
plines may find that having PIC<lb/>
listed on their resume will help<lb/>
with getting a job in these agen-<lb/>
cies.<lb/>
"These ECU students are taking<lb/>
the course voluntarily. On the job,<lb/>
it won't be voluntary. A lot of<lb/>
agencies require it stated Rita<lb/>
Wooten, a PIC instuctor from<lb/>
Kinston who, along with Greg<lb/>
are called by professionals who<lb/>
provide services for them, may<lb/>
Special education faculty members (left to right) Dr. Mary Schmidt feS the abiUtYt0 exPress 'rustra-<lb/>
Dr. Cindi Nixon and Val Carmine demonstrate theraputk holds for Tev mav'hTt 'St "<lb/>
????"theProfectiveInterventioncoursePhoto SSCCSS&amp;??<lb/>
v "It's our job, if we're the teacher<lb/>
??wrkThcseicnts'fsthf y Scott of Wilmington, is teaching<lb/>
the ECU class. Wooten is em-<lb/>
ployed in a community college<lb/>
which provides classes for indi-<lb/>
viduals who are mentally re-<lb/>
tarded. Scott works in a group<lb/>
home for children who are emo-<lb/>
tionally disturbed. Both agencies<lb/>
Music prof performs with celebrities<lb/>
Bv LAURA SALAZAR<lb/>
Staff Wnfcr<lb/>
"It was rather moving; it was<lb/>
one of the only things I've partici-<lb/>
pated in where politics took a<lb/>
side. There were no political over-<lb/>
tones. It wasa beautiful, beautiful<lb/>
celebration said Paul Tardif<lb/>
about his participation with the<lb/>
orchestra for the re-dedication<lb/>
ceremonies of the Statue of Lib-<lb/>
erty in 1986<lb/>
Besides performing at the re-<lb/>
dedication ceremonies, the East<lb/>
CaroirrcV Schooof Music<lb/>
processor's,chi?aBHpppts a$ a<lb/>
elassic.il and jazz pianfctextend to<lb/>
a two-hour special, "Wolftrap<lb/>
Salutes ASCAP Taped last sum-<lb/>
mer at Washington D.Cs famous<lb/>
Wolftrap Center for the Perform-<lb/>
ing Arts, the special was a tribute<lb/>
to the talents of members of the<lb/>
American Society of Composers,<lb/>
Authors, and Publishers.<lb/>
With only three days notice,<lb/>
Tardif was told to learn the first<lb/>
movement of Gershwin's "Piano<lb/>
Concerto in F for a ballet se-<lb/>
quence featuring members oi the<lb/>
New York Ballet. Tardif said, "It<lb/>
wasn't difficult to learn the piece<lb/>
because it didn't have to be<lb/>
memorized Tardif performed<lb/>
with the orchestra; the production<lb/>
was directed by Joe Lay ton, for-<lb/>
mer director of North Carolina's<lb/>
outdoor drama "The Lost Col-<lb/>
ony<lb/>
the Phillips Collection,<lb/>
Charleston's Spoleto Festival and<lb/>
the North Carolina Museum of<lb/>
Art in Raleigh.<lb/>
Tardif was the first to receive a<lb/>
$5,000 grant in music composi-<lb/>
tion awarded by the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Arts Council to support jazz<lb/>
composers and performers in ac-<lb/>
tivities such as composing, per-<lb/>
forming and recording.<lb/>
As a featured event of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty recital<lb/>
series, Tardif performed on No-<lb/>
vember 18, imt-the-A. j. Fletcher<lb/>
, K,optal .Hat ojhtj Schopt of Mi-<lb/>
sic. The 'concert included classical<lb/>
music from all major periods.<lb/>
Works performed were Mozart's<lb/>
"Adagio in B Minor K.540;<lb/>
Schubert's "Sonata in A Major<lb/>
D.664; Prokofieff's "Sonata No. 3<lb/>
in A Minor Opus 28; "Valses<lb/>
nobles et scntimentales by<lb/>
Ravel and three preludes by Ra-<lb/>
chamninoff.<lb/>
Asked if he still got nervous<lb/>
during a performance, Tardif<lb/>
said, "I still experience some nerv-<lb/>
ousness, but I get especially nerv-<lb/>
ous when I am performing a solo.<lb/>
When I perform, the overall im-<lb/>
pression of my performance is<lb/>
what I'm after<lb/>
Originally from Buffalo, New<lb/>
York, Tardif began playing the<lb/>
piano at the early age of six. His<lb/>
father was a musician in a dance<lb/>
Tardif believes, "The younger<lb/>
you get the aspiring piano stu-<lb/>
dent, the better. Starting at age six<lb/>
and progressing through the<lb/>
ages, the student should have a<lb/>
fully developed technique by age<lb/>
18.<lb/>
A former student of Cecile<lb/>
Gcnhart and Leon Fleisher, Tardif<lb/>
received his formal training at the<lb/>
Eastman School of Music, the<lb/>
United States. Practicing and per-<lb/>
forming is much more up to the<lb/>
individual. Pressure in Austria is<lb/>
not as much as it is in the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
In performing for various funci-<lb/>
tons, Tardif has accompanied<lb/>
performers such as Bernadette<lb/>
Peters, Glenn Close and Jeffrey<lb/>
Osborne. In addition, he has per-<lb/>
formed with orchestras for works<lb/>
Peabody Conservatory, and the sung by Judy Collins, and Tony<lb/>
Salzburg Mozarteum in Austria. Bennett, and composers Henry<lb/>
In Austria, Tardif studied under<lb/>
one teacher and received his artist<lb/>
diploma.<lb/>
Tardif said, "In Austria, the<lb/>
piano students are mature at a<lb/>
younger age as compared to the<lb/>
Mancini, Marvin Hamlisch, Char-<lb/>
les Strauss and Sammy Kahn.<lb/>
Tardif, 59, resides in Greenville.<lb/>
He is married and has a 26-year-<lb/>
old son who is a medical student<lb/>
at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
require staff to be trained in PIC.<lb/>
PlC techniques are demon-<lb/>
strated by instuctors, and them<lb/>
course participants practice with<lb/>
one another, taking turns playing<lb/>
the role of an aggressive client.<lb/>
Participants learn how to block<lb/>
punches and kicks, how to gain<lb/>
release from chokes, hair pulls,<lb/>
arm grabs, and other holds, and<lb/>
how to gain control over an ag-<lb/>
gressive client.<lb/>
The key technique used to con-<lb/>
trol an aggressive client is a thera-<lb/>
peutic hold. With this hold, the<lb/>
client's arms arc crossed in front<lb/>
of the chest and the staff member,<lb/>
standing behind the client, holds<lb/>
the client's wrists. The client can<lb/>
be held in a standing position,<lb/>
placed in a chair or on the floor, or<lb/>
can be lifted and carried to a safer<lb/>
location by two or more staff<lb/>
memebers.<lb/>
Carmine explained the PIC<lb/>
techniques "should only be used<lb/>
as a last resort and only in situ-<lb/>
ations where the client is about to<lb/>
hurt himself or others She said<lb/>
that these techniques are used to<lb/>
control , but never to hurt, the<lb/>
client, and that the clients can of-<lb/>
ten be "talked down" so that they<lb/>
stop behaving agressivelv with-<lb/>
out staff having to use physical<lb/>
measures. She stressed that ag-<lb/>
gressive behavior can be pre-<lb/>
vented by having good behav-<lb/>
ioral programs, an interesting and<lb/>
well-structured environment,<lb/>
and positive relationships be-<lb/>
tween staff and clients.<lb/>
Convincing participants to be-<lb/>
lieve in not hurting theclient is the<lb/>
hardest part of teaching PIC, ac-<lb/>
cording to Carmine. "It's just hard<lb/>
to be kind to someone who has<lb/>
just kicked you or choked you.<lb/>
But these are clients we're talking<lb/>
about. This isn't like being on the<lb/>
street where you're maybe deal-<lb/>
ing with a criminal. Clients are<lb/>
people who need our help. We're<lb/>
hired to be carcgivers she said.<lb/>
The course is tough, according<lb/>
written test and a physical profi-<lb/>
ciency test. Students are required<lb/>
not only to know each technique<lb/>
perfectly, but also to be fast.<lb/>
"If someone is choking you,<lb/>
being slow could get you hurt or<lb/>
worse. Doing the technique<lb/>
wrong could hurt the client,<lb/>
maybe even get you sued ex-<lb/>
plained Carmine.<lb/>
Dr. Cindi Nixon, a special edu-<lb/>
cation faculty member, said that<lb/>
of the 16 students enrolled in<lb/>
ECU's first class, only five passed<lb/>
the course.<lb/>
"A lot of the students were not<lb/>
read) for the physical part of the<lb/>
class said Ethel Fordam, one of<lb/>
the five passing students. "They<lb/>
were surprised by the amount of<lb/>
physical activity you have to do<lb/>
the procedures correctly<lb/>
Suzanne LaCroix, a special<lb/>
education student currently com-<lb/>
pleting her student teaching, feels<lb/>
more confident as a result of the<lb/>
course. "If I have a kid attack me<lb/>
now, I won't freak out she said.<lb/>
"What PIC docs, it helps you to<lb/>
stop the behavior in a sensitive<lb/>
kind of way, not to degrade them<lb/>
(the clients) and not to put them<lb/>
down said Fordam.<lb/>
ion said that because special<lb/>
education students are likely to<lb/>
need PIC when they are em-<lb/>
ployed, she wanted the class<lb/>
available at ECU. She wrote a<lb/>
grant which brought almost<lb/>
$1,500 from the Office of Aca-<lb/>
demic Affairs to support three<lb/>
classes dunng 1987-1988. Stu-<lb/>
dents who participated in the first<lb/>
course were special education<lb/>
seniors. A group of therapeutic<lb/>
recreation majors will take the<lb/>
course beginning November 6,<lb/>
and the third class will be offered<lb/>
to special education students in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
Now if you look into Speight<lb/>
313, you'll know you aren't hav-<lb/>
ing hallucinations too early for a<lb/>
Friday afternoon, there really are<lb/>
people in there engaged in<lb/>
toCarrrune. It includes 15 hourso uniiauaiactivitics-B??tti?otiPICis<lb/>
classroom instruction and many unusual, it teaches that aggres-<lb/>
more hours of practice before stu- sivc clients can be dealt with in a<lb/>
dents can expect to pass both a "sensitive kind of way<lb/>
Art Enthusiasts hold auction to<lb/>
begin raising funds for projects<lb/>
School of Art Piw Relauc<lb/>
The Art Enthusiasts of East<lb/>
Carolina University, a newly<lb/>
formed community organization<lb/>
to develop art programming in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina, will hold<lb/>
an art auction December 5 in the<lb/>
Gray Art Gal lery on the campu s of<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
Work to be auctioned we be on<lb/>
contrmporary art at the Mint in their studios. The Art Enthusi-<lb/>
Museum in Charlotte. asts are also developing a seminar<lb/>
Art work will be introduced series on art collection and conser-<lb/>
and discussed by Patricia Fuller, vation. This programming effort<lb/>
an independent art consultant is slated to start in the Spring 1988<lb/>
Tardif joined the ECU School of<lb/>
Music faculty in 1971. He has re- music in my family said Tardif.<lb/>
leased recordings on the Digital Besides playing the piano,<lb/>
Arts Classical label and has per- Tardif also plays the synthesizer,<lb/>
formed as a classical artist on a<lb/>
regular basis at The National Gal-<lb/>
lery of Art in Washington, D.C<lb/>
band and he also played theorgan display in the gallery Thursday<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m and Friday<lb/>
He teaches classes in chamber<lb/>
music, applied piano and jazz<lb/>
improvisation.<lb/>
Dieting, exercise is unhealthy<lb/>
By PATTI HOWARD<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Now let us consider the pre-<lb/>
scribed "wonder diets Eating<lb/>
There's an exercise bike in one low-calorie fresh foods is an es-<lb/>
comer of my living room and a 20- sential aspect of weight loss,<lb/>
pound pair of dumbells in an- That's acceptable; I can handle an<lb/>
other. I have a mini trampoline occasional salad orgrapefruit. But<lb/>
against one wall, and a Gut-<lb/>
Buster place strategically in the<lb/>
center of the room. So you think<lb/>
I'm a fitness nut, right? Well, look<lb/>
closer.<lb/>
Anyone with even a hint of in-<lb/>
telligence could discover that I'm<lb/>
actually a lazy slob. This is be-<lb/>
cause each piece of equ i pment has<lb/>
how can you rely on anything<lb/>
with a name like okra, tofu,<lb/>
mango, or yogurt to keep your<lb/>
body running like a fine-tuned<lb/>
machine.<lb/>
If you read food labels like the<lb/>
self-proclaimed diet expers say<lb/>
you should, you'd probably never<lb/>
gain another ounce. Dimethopen-<lb/>
?-? mmmmm -?v.?? y ? v v. v? v-nu'iui it i i v . ? y?? -??.? ?????? am hv ? ? ? ??- ?" sj lvii<lb/>
a layer of dust nine inches thick on taglucomonosodiol? Thanks, I'll<lb/>
it. My Gut-Buster is rusted, and pass. And I really balk at ingredi<lb/>
and Satruday, from 10 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. The evening of the auction,<lb/>
December 5, the doors to the gal-<lb/>
lery will open at 7 p.m. for a final<lb/>
viewing of the work.<lb/>
The reception catered by<lb/>
Noura's Restaruant of Greenville<lb/>
will preceed the art auction which<lb/>
will begin at 8 p.m. The receptin is<lb/>
sponsored by the Office of the<lb/>
Chancellor and thr Office of the<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Institutional<lb/>
Advancement of East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The art auction is the Art Enthu-<lb/>
siasts' kick-off fundraiser and fea-<lb/>
tures donated art works form East<lb/>
Carolina University's School of<lb/>
Art faculty, students and alumni<lb/>
as well as artiusts who have been<lb/>
visitors to the faculty at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University. The list of con-<lb/>
tributors includes such artist as<lb/>
Michael Ehlbeck, whose print<lb/>
"Line Man (Art Kit)" is featured<lb/>
most noted for her works with<lb/>
public art projects and the wife of<lb/>
Edward Levine, Dean of the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
Some of the activities the auc-<lb/>
tion procees are expected to fund<lb/>
include a film series, a lecture<lb/>
series, student scholarships, tours<lb/>
of East Coast muesems and galler-<lb/>
ies, meetings with curators, and<lb/>
visits with contemporary artists<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
According to Stacy Brody, chiar<lb/>
of the Art Enthusiasts Art Auction<lb/>
people planning to attend and we<lb/>
hop everyone interested in art<lb/>
will join us<lb/>
The Art Auction Committee<lb/>
also consists of Carmen Albea,<lb/>
Adele Callaway, Mary Francis<lb/>
Garret, Marilyn Lancet, and Gail<lb/>
Jeffries. For further information,<lb/>
contact a committee member or<lb/>
Committee, "A great deal of plan- Perry Nesbitt, Grav Art Gallery<lb/>
ning and community cooperation Director at 757-6336<lb/>
has gone into making this a gala<lb/>
cultrual event. We know its going<lb/>
to be an evening to enjoy as well as<lb/>
an opportune one for art buyers.<lb/>
We have had a very enthusistic<lb/>
response from art donors and<lb/>
Gray Art Gallery is located in<lb/>
the Jenkins Fine Arts Center on<lb/>
the campus of East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity in Greenville, NC. All<lb/>
events are free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
my exercise bike has become a<lb/>
permanent harbor for my ironing<lb/>
pile.<lb/>
I quit working-out because I am<lb/>
convinced that dieting and exer-<lb/>
ci' are unhealthy. Certainly,<lb/>
ae bic exercieses stimulate and<lb/>
speed up the heart, but so do heart<lb/>
attacks. Besides, only a select few<lb/>
can have flawless figures, and I'm acceptable substitute for choco-<lb/>
on the invitation; Paul Hartley,<lb/>
ent listing that'include phrases Norman Keller, Marilyn and Tran<lb/>
like "may also contain Fabu- Gordley, Chick Chamberlain and<lb/>
many others from the East Car-<lb/>
lolina University faculty as well<lb/>
as Cynthia Careson a prominent<lb/>
artist from New York City. Dona-<lb/>
tions of art have also been made<lb/>
from private collection in the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
may<lb/>
lous. That means there "may also"<lb/>
be whale blubber in my Rice<lb/>
Krispies, and I'll never know<lb/>
about it!<lb/>
Don't believe that plain yogurt<lb/>
can take the place of sour cream or<lb/>
the related myth that carob is an<lb/>
not one of them. I could leap<lb/>
around in an outfit the size of a<lb/>
gum wrapper until my brain<lb/>
turns to coleslaw, and I'd stll have<lb/>
the body of a watter buffalo.<lb/>
If you think sweating like swine<lb/>
is exhilirating, I think you've got a<lb/>
screw loose.<lb/>
late. For that matter, carob is not<lb/>
an acceptable substitute for any-<lb/>
thing except, perhaps, brown<lb/>
shoe polish. And finally, fresh<lb/>
fruit is not dessert; cake is dessert.<lb/>
Fred Kessler of Charlotte, a<lb/>
professional auctioneer well<lb/>
known to the art community in<lb/>
the state will be the auctioneer for<lb/>
the evening. Kessler and his wife,<lb/>
uiiisnoiaes5en,caKeisaessert. - - o? ??????.? ????<lb/>
Let's stop this foolish suffering 'ane' ?"? had a ,ong association<lb/>
id self-denial. Relax. And help WIth ? V "?m which egradu-<lb/>
and self-denial. Relax. And help ?J E?U fromwhich she gradu- Michael Ehlbeck's print, 'The Line Man" graces the cover of invitations to the Art Enthusiasts auction on<lb/>
yourself to that last fudgesicle. ated before becoming curator of Saturday night Pieces to be sold will be on display in Gray Gallery from Thursday to Saturday.<lb/>
<lb/>
iWWWi ?Pi" i m ?i ??<lb/>
lMliWH?1, ??i ???<lb/>
? m <lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THEEASTCA ROL INI A N<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1987<lb/>
Schwartznegger runs for film<lb/>
LOS ANGELES rApx.w,b;? ?j?<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP)-YVorking based on a Stephen K.nC novel<lb/>
it is something Arnold Srh ,h?,t t ?,t 8. n .<lb/>
out is something Arnold Sch"<lb/>
vvarznegger looks forward to<lb/>
every day.<lb/>
"I've been doing it for 25 years,<lb/>
and I've gotten such tremendous<lb/>
joy out of working out, going to<lb/>
the gym, lifting weights, pump-<lb/>
ing iron the actor-body builder<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Not just joy, but millions of<lb/>
dollars from his slam-bang mov-<lb/>
ies. After an uncertain start with<lb/>
"Conan the Barbarian Sch-<lb/>
warzenegger found his audience<lb/>
with 'The Terminator" and con-<lb/>
tinued with "Commando "Raw<lb/>
Deal" and "Predator<lb/>
His latest is "Die Running<lb/>
Man The Tn-Star release ?<lb/>
about a TV game show' in Los<lb/>
Angeles circa 2019. Sch-<lb/>
warzenegger plays an enemy of<lb/>
the state who is stalked by a scries<lb/>
of fierce behemoths armed with<lb/>
chain saws, flame throwers and<lb/>
razor-sharp hockey sticks. All live<lb/>
on TV.<lb/>
To help launch "The Running<lb/>
Man Schwarncnegger flew in<lb/>
trom Chicago, where he is filming<lb/>
"Red Heat in which he plays a<lb/>
Soviet cop in the Windy City.<lb/>
"All 1 have to do is find out from<lb/>
the director on each particular<lb/>
film what kind of shape does he<lb/>
see me in for this film the 40-<lb/>
year-old performer said. "For<lb/>
Running Man Paul Michael<lb/>
Glaser wanted me to be around<lb/>
225, very muscular, but at the<lb/>
same time very agile and quick,<lb/>
because I was running a lot in the<lb/>
film. So 1 took a lot of aerobic<lb/>
classes, bicycling and running, as<lb/>
well as some weight training.<lb/>
"For 'Red Heat Walter Hill<lb/>
wanted me to lose 15 pounds. He<lb/>
wanted me to look very Russian<lb/>
and bony and to get a straight<lb/>
haircut said the Austrian-born<lb/>
Schwarznegger, who has<lb/>
launched a lucrative film career<lb/>
from his Mr. Universecredentials.<lb/>
"1 understand when people<lb/>
said there's too much action and<lb/>
violence in the films, because<lb/>
they're not everyone's cup of tea.<lb/>
That's why there are different<lb/>
n f . ?   ???wei mats why there are different<lb/>
Bakkers, Rather recieve the 1987 Bozo awards<lb/>
1 lart and Ms. Rice were joined<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) loan<lb/>
Collins and Arizona Gov. Evan<lb/>
Mceham each won Bozo Awards<lb/>
trom television's original Bozo<lb/>
the Clown, Lam- Harmon, who<lb/>
also cited Jim and Tammy Bakker<lb/>
tor preaching the gospel "accord-<lb/>
ing to Gucci<lb/>
Others cited Fridav were Gary<lb/>
Hart, Donna Rice, Oliver North<lb/>
and ousted Philippine president<lb/>
Ferdinand Marcos and his wife,<lb/>
Imelda, who received a Special<lb/>
Life Achievement Bozo Award<lb/>
because, 1 larmon quipped, "Two<lb/>
hands in the till are better than<lb/>
one<lb/>
This is the fifth year the tongue-<lb/>
in-cheek awards have been<lb/>
handed out by Harmon, who cre-<lb/>
ated Bozo the Clown in 1949 and<lb/>
made his TV debut the following<lb/>
year.<lb/>
in Harmon's "funster" category<lb/>
by Jessica Hahn, whose sexual<lb/>
liaison with Bakker toppled the<lb/>
minister from his TV pulpit.<lb/>
The Bakkers topped the news-<lb/>
makers category. "With all their<lb/>
money, clothes, mansions and<lb/>
cars, what else can we think when<lb/>
they were supposedly preaching<lb/>
the gospel, than it was really all<lb/>
according to Gucci Harmon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Miss Collins won in the show<lb/>
business category for her recent<lb/>
stormy divorce from Peter Holm.<lb/>
"She created bigger entertain-<lb/>
ment out of her own lite than<lb/>
viewers got in the entire season of<lb/>
Dynasty Harmon said.<lb/>
North, the star witness of the<lb/>
televised Iran-Contra congres-<lb/>
sioanl hearings, was Harmon's<lb/>
choice in government. "The Iran<lb/>
scandal showed the American<lb/>
public that the best soap operas<lb/>
are still produced in Washington,<lb/>
unfortunately at the taxpayers'<lb/>
expense Harmon said.<lb/>
Mecham, the target of a recall<lb/>
drive, topped the politics cate-<lb/>
gory, while Calvin Klein won<lb/>
plaudits for ads Harmon said my<lb/>
be the start oi "designer nudity<lb/>
CBS anchorman Dan Rather<lb/>
was noted for storming off the set<lb/>
when coverage of the U.S. Open<lb/>
tennis tournament ran into his<lb/>
appointed news slot.<lb/>
Sports winners George Stein-<lb/>
brenner and Bill)- Martin were<lb/>
picked tor their on-again, off-<lb/>
again relationship as owner and<lb/>
manager oi baseball's New York<lb/>
Yankees.<lb/>
kinds of films: love stories, action-<lb/>
adventures, comidies Sch-<lb/>
warzenegger said.<lb/>
'The Running Man" may well<lb/>
be the most action-filled Sch-<lb/>
warzenegger film yet, and you<lb/>
wonder how he can keep topping<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
"When 1 pick a movie, I don't<lb/>
think in terms of 'topping myself<lb/>
 I'm trying to do one movie at a<lb/>
time, and each time I think of the<lb/>
public out there: What will the<lb/>
public enjoy? What are the<lb/>
elements?"<lb/>
In May 1986, Schwarzenegger<lb/>
married newscaster Maria<lb/>
Shriver. He said the two have<lb/>
managed to balance bicoastal ca-<lb/>
reers.<lb/>
"Maria and 1 live here in Los<lb/>
Angeles he said. "On weekends<lb/>
when she hosts the Today' show<lb/>
on NBC, she flies to New York on<lb/>
Friday morning, and she comes<lb/>
back on Sunday afternoon<lb/>
Their political backgrounds are<lb/>
also divergent. "Maria comes<lb/>
from a Democratic family: she<lb/>
cannot change that. I come from a<lb/>
kind of conservative background,<lb/>
not as much socially as economi-<lb/>
cally. I understand her point of<lb/>
view and she understands mine<lb/>
"We have interesting discus-<lb/>
sions and interesting people at<lb/>
our house, but there really isn't<lb/>
any argument. Whether you're<lb/>
liberal or conservative, both par-<lb/>
ties work toward the same goal,<lb/>
which is to make the country bet-<lb/>
ter J<lb/>
0, ?? xaiiiwug lankees.<lb/>
Wind Ensemble plays Thurs.<lb/>
  . Of Music's Select Inuring nm.ini. ?<lb/>
School of VIujic PrMs K. r.i.i-<lb/>
A special holiday concert is<lb/>
being presented by the East Caro-<lb/>
lina University Symphonic Wind<lb/>
Ensemble. The concert, spon-<lb/>
sored by the Friends of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will be presented<lb/>
in ECU's Wright Auditorium. The<lb/>
concert is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
According to Harold A. Jones,<lb/>
Director of the Ensemble, "The<lb/>
conccrt will begin ar 7.30 p.rrr. and<lb/>
will be under an hour in length so<lb/>
families can have their children<lb/>
home at a reasonable hour Jones<lb/>
said that "the concert will feature<lb/>
audience participation in the<lb/>
singing oi several familiar carols<lb/>
as well as the traditional visit from<lb/>
St. Nicholas<lb/>
Rick Bailey, Minister of Youth<lb/>
and Education at The Memorial<lb/>
Baptist Church in Greenville, is<lb/>
guest soloist. He will sing three<lb/>
traditional songs: "Grcensleeves,<lb/>
"Gentle Mary Laid Her Child<lb/>
and "Sweet Little Jesus Boy<lb/>
The Ensemble, one of the School<lb/>
Jazz ensemble<lb/>
gives show in<lb/>
Fletcher Hall<lb/>
By CHRIS BRINCEFIELD<lb/>
Sijff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina School of<lb/>
Music's Jazz Ensemble One gave<lb/>
an exhibition of the versatility and<lb/>
musical potential of percussive<lb/>
instruments in their performance<lb/>
last Monday night in A. J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
The group is directed by<lb/>
Mark Ford, ECU School of<lb/>
Music's new percussion instruc-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
The ensemble is made of stu-<lb/>
dent percussionists Scott Allen,<lb/>
Dan Davis, Dean Gottschalk,<lb/>
Clark Harrell, Chris Holiday<lb/>
Nick Holland, Glen Lilly, Chris<lb/>
Moore, Hal Sargent, Scotty Sells,<lb/>
Russell Sledge, Doug Walker, and<lb/>
Gary Westbrook.<lb/>
The first two works per-<lb/>
formed by the group, "Uhuru" by<lb/>
Thodore C. Frazeur, and "Pulse"<lb/>
by Henry Cowell were composi-<lb/>
tions of complex rhythmic mo-<lb/>
tives which utilized a great vari-<lb/>
ety of percussive instruments.<lb/>
The ensemble performed an<lb/>
a rra ngement of George H Green's<lb/>
"Ragtime Robin a tonal work, in<lb/>
which part of the group did a<lb/>
short comedy routine that in-<lb/>
cluded Sargent's "tripping" and<lb/>
throwing a drum off the stage.<lb/>
The group performed a piece<lb/>
by director Ford called "Head<lb/>
Talk" in which several members<lb/>
of the ensemble sat on the floor<lb/>
and engaged in rhythmic "talk"<lb/>
using drum heads, parts of their<lb/>
bodies, and the stage floor as their<lb/>
instruments.<lb/>
of Music's select tounng organi-<lb/>
zations, is comprised of 53 music<lb/>
majors and has performed tor<lb/>
regional and national conven-<lb/>
tions. In 1984 they premiered a<lb/>
new composition by Vincent Per-<lb/>
sichctti, commissioned ioi ECU<lb/>
by the N.C. Bandmasters Eastern<lb/>
Division.<lb/>
Other familiar holidav pieces to<lb/>
be performed Thursday will be<lb/>
"Sleigh Ride by Leroy Ander-<lb/>
son, Torme's "Christmas Song<lb/>
and Victor Herbert's "March of<lb/>
the Toys among others. ECU<lb/>
music student Davis Clark will<lb/>
conduct "Christams Fugue" by<lb/>
Robert B. Brown.<lb/>
<lb/>
w Corn? sfl on Our<lb/>
to-ousrte patio ana e-Oy the best charbro.ied looa in town. Menu includes: burgers<lb/>
HOEisl Fourth St Creenvfflr. c ?v.4croissants, and Met can entrees ?19)7S2-W5<lb/>
<lb/>
HE VAMPIRE<lb/>
The<lb/>
Applications Now<lb/>
Accepted Fo<lb/>
Positions of<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Pick Applications up From The<lb/>
Media Board Office During<lb/>
December 1st - 4th<lb/>
Express Yourself at<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
einS I Need Money $<lb/>
We pay Cash For Anything<lb/>
Cold or Silver<lb/>
And. We also buy Stcnos. T.Vs.<lb/>
V.C.Rs. Furniture, Hikes, etc.<lb/>
Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
10 00 SOO(M F!<lb/>
0 00 3 00 Sj:<lb/>
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from 8:00 to 11:00<lb/>
$1.50 with college I.D,<lb/>
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THE WASH PUB -<lb/>
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We offer our specials to both sexes no matter<lb/>
what age, race or religious<lb/>
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Monday - DRAFT &amp; DRYER DAY 250 Draft &amp; 25 for 16<lb/>
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Tuesday - TWO FOR ONE DA Y Wash one load of clothes, the<lb/>
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Wednesday - SOAP &amp; SUDS DAY75 Long Neck Bottle Beer<lb/>
and Free Soap<lb/>
FLUFF &amp; FOLD SPECIAL 8 a.m10 a.m. drop<lb/>
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For The<lb/>
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Pen &amp; Pencil Sets By:<lb/>
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Brief Cases ? Portfolios<lb/>
Electronic Typewriters ?<lb/>
? Globes ?<lb/>
Calculators<lb/>
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COUPON<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 9:30-6:00 - gat 9:30 - 5:00<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 1.1987 11<lb/>
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e 'East Carolinian<lb/>
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CLIFF'S -4J'<lb/>
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n. thru Thurs. Night<lb/>
opcorn<lb/>
Shrimp vO.OO<lb/>
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very Tuesday<lb/>
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O with college I.D<lb/>
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riters ? Calculators<lb/>
- Sat. 9:30 - 5:00<lb/>
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?Laundry Facilities<lb/>
?Free Maid Service.<lb/>
?Now offering semester<lb/>
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managed by:<lb/>
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Cllp-N-Save<lb/>
3 Bank's Homemade let cms i<lb/>
and frozen ybgurt!<lb/>
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One coupon per order please, coupon good thru Dec. 12. 1987.<lb/>
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Balloons For<lb/>
All Occassions<lb/>
Central Book &amp; News<lb/>
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 Open til 9:30 p.m. ? 7 Days A Week<lb/>
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HILTON INN<lb/>
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only $3.95. Choose from our chel s<lb/>
culinary coups of hoi chicken and<lb/>
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fresh baked oreads Of course In<lb/>
any one of our dessert favorites.<lb/>
cwmc<lb/>
207 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
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ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057932_0012"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
i2JHEEASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1987<lb/>
'Southern' is a proud dialect<lb/>
NASHVIl LE, Tenn. (AP) is dropped are believed to be wouldn't be surprised 11 'y'all'<lb/>
Southerners should be proud of similar to accents from ancient was used touTm.J! Y t ther'onal sounds are chang.ng,<lb/>
the way they talk, and res.st pres- England, he said. ' Tnd rettnig eWaHy for young Southerner<lb/>
surestoalterthe.raccentr.ter- "se MsfS we m Z" S S ?W ?' ?"<lb/>
have known ahni ("? -  fes,dcnce at thc University of<lb/>
Line<lb/>
Only in the East Carolinian<lb/>
sures to alter their accents, a liter<lb/>
ary critic says<lb/>
"1 wish my Southern country-<lb/>
men could live in the East for<lb/>
awhile If they listened to the ac-<lb/>
cents there, they might be a little<lb/>
slower to change. It's a rasping,<lb/>
unpleasant sound said Cleanth<lb/>
Brooks, a professor emeritus of<lb/>
Yale University.<lb/>
"If the Southern accent dies, it<lb/>
will be out of pure ignorance he<lb/>
said at the Tennessee Literary<lb/>
Festival, a writers conference held<lb/>
during the weekend in Nashville.<lb/>
Brooks, who has written several<lb/>
books on literary technique and<lb/>
rhetoric, said many of the sounds<lb/>
of typical Southern accentsdate to<lb/>
17th and 18th century England.<lb/>
Southern accents, for example,<lb/>
in which the sound of the letter "r"<lb/>
Scholars agree that the moth-<lb/>
erland changed the pronuncia-<lb/>
tion while the colonists held onto<lb/>
it he said. "In Britain, it became<lb/>
cockney In the United States it<lb/>
became plantation Southern<lb/>
While Southern accents have<lb/>
often been portrayed as synony-<lb/>
mous with ignorance, attempts to<lb/>
wipe out the distinctive sounds of<lb/>
the South have been unsuccessful,<lb/>
conference participants were<lb/>
told.<lb/>
And some traditionally South-<lb/>
ern words, such as "y'all" for you-<lb/>
all, arc spreading to other parts of<lb/>
the country, said Michael<lb/>
Montgomery, an associate profes-<lb/>
sor of linguisticsat the University<lb/>
of South Carolina.<lb/>
"Within 20 to 30 years, I<lb/>
known about for a lone Y;l ? ?c .Y?t,c7 ?T<lb/>
time Montgomery said ? S,SSIPP' wh? will assume the<lb/>
'TheSoutferTJrawhsspread- CoUoTe 2 P 2 "<lb/>
ing into the Midwest, and phrases 22f ' '<lb/>
can'are SSt' !?J2 A ? ?? ster than<lb/>
can are turning up in the North we used t0 . she id ?A? this<lb/>
Atlantic states he said ?? ? ' .<lb/>
But though Southern accents hTrSlT JT? ?' <lb/>
c likely to remain JSS harunderstand young people<lb/>
New Location<lb/>
1 Day Service<lb/>
On Most BiForal Prescriptions<lb/>
"<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
are likely to remain distinctive, nowaday<lb/>
Diabetes victim makes music<lb/>
from syringe, other implements<lb/>
SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - It's not<lb/>
enough that Tony Blanton has<lb/>
taken insulin for his diabetes for<lb/>
27 years - he got to play music on<lb/>
the syringe from which it's in-<lb/>
jected.<lb/>
When you meet this overgrown<lb/>
kid in overalls who bears a strik-<lb/>
ing resemblance to Hank Wil-<lb/>
liams, Jr it's easy to figure out<lb/>
why he turned his serious condi-<lb/>
tion into a laughing matter.<lb/>
A native of Shelby, he'll trans-<lb/>
form anything he gets his hands<lb/>
on into a bona fide musical instru-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
He started out blowing old fa-<lb/>
vorites into his fist, then moved<lb/>
on to more accessible tools of his<lb/>
bizarre trade - a plastic container<lb/>
of Head &amp; Shoulders, Diet Moun-<lb/>
tain Dew bottleand Stanley hand-<lb/>
saw. He has even gone the con-<lb/>
ventional route, strumming ban-<lb/>
jos and plucking fiddles.<lb/>
Blanton, 36, calls himself the<lb/>
Lazy Acres Racket Maker after a<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
"I like them old-time corney<lb/>
jokes and old-time music he<lb/>
said. "If I'd been born about 50<lb/>
years ago, I'd probably have got-<lb/>
ten famous as a hillbilly musi-<lb/>
cian<lb/>
Blanton, a passionate bargain<lb/>
hunter, transformed many of his<lb/>
instruments from basic, house-<lb/>
hold items found at yard salesand<lb/>
pawn shops. That's how he came<lb/>
up with the idea of squeezing<lb/>
melodies from simple drinking<lb/>
glasses with his fingers.<lb/>
He said Benjamin Franklin in-<lb/>
vented this off-the-wall musical<lb/>
feat by strapping a foot pedal and<lb/>
pullv to a set of crystal filled with<lb/>
different levels of water. The<lb/>
more water in a glass, the lower<lb/>
the musical note.<lb/>
Blanton's updated version of<lb/>
Franklin's "glass harmonica" in-<lb/>
cludes pieces of tin and plastic to<lb/>
strap in the glasses, which sit on a<lb/>
wooden board placed in a galva-<lb/>
3RJTZ LAMERA CENTERS<lb/>
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Offer expires<lb/>
12-31-87<lb/>
r STUDENT'S DAY<lb/>
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PERFI Ml ()! Till: W'ORI I)<lb/>
Monday - Tuesday - Saturday 10 6<lb/>
Wednesday Friday 10 8<lb/>
638East Arlington Hlvd<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858 355 7473<lb/>
calf on the family farm. His hobby nized metal tray. He alternately<lb/>
lu?. .1.33V1H3 iur d Dn<lb/>
I Blanton plays music by<lb/>
I takes his act out on the roa<lb/>
is noisy - and unusual.<lb/>
He loves giving impromptu<lb/>
performances of Beethoven's<lb/>
Fifth Symphony on the back of a<lb/>
crumpled plastic bag, or the Star<lb/>
Spangled Banner on 14 partially-<lb/>
empty drinking glasses anchored<lb/>
to a galvanized metal tray.<lb/>
"There are two secrets he said<lb/>
of the latter method. "You need a<lb/>
wet finger and a clean finger  1<lb/>
started with four glasses. I had no<lb/>
idea it'd work<lb/>
Blanton owns more than 100<lb/>
musical instruments, about 25 of<lb/>
which he molded with his bare<lb/>
hands, a pocket knife, a few pen-<lb/>
nies and plenty of imagination.<lb/>
"Once you learn 15-20 instru-<lb/>
ments, the rest come easy he<lb/>
said. "It's just like learning to hum<lb/>
or whistle<lb/>
Blanton has so much trouble<lb/>
remembering all his instruments<lb/>
that he introduces them in<lb/>
alphabetical order when he per-<lb/>
1 forms. His renditions are strictly<lb/>
 instrumental. He never sings.<lb/>
2 Although he took guitar and<lb/>
; banjo lessons for a brief time,<lb/>
ear. He<lb/>
? road about<lb/>
: twice a week, pulling up to out-<lb/>
edoor festivals in his rusted, blue<lb/>
; station wagon, which carries most<lb/>
1 of his homemade instruments.<lb/>
Wedged between the dash-<lb/>
2 board and windshield is a sign<lb/>
tthat reads: "I'm Fiddlin' Around<lb/>
I With Bluegrass It's a fitting<lb/>
claim for Blanton, who traced his<lb/>
ffamily's preoccupation with the<lb/>
i fiddle back seven generations. It<lb/>
? was on his grandfather's fiddle,<lb/>
purchased in 1918 for $5, that he<lb/>
ffirst fiddled around.<lb/>
"What really got me started was<lb/>
I was laid off from work about a<lb/>
 year, and I came across my<lb/>
? grandfather's fiddle he said. "I<lb/>
used to go down to cow pastures<lb/>
and serenade the cows. They<lb/>
didn't seem to mind too much<lb/>
When he was younger,<lb/>
Blanton's father discouraged him<lb/>
from blowing melodies into his<lb/>
fist. Things were different with<lb/>
his mother. He'd leam about 90<lb/>
percent of his act from songs she<lb/>
used to hum around the house.<lb/>
Others were picked up from epi-<lb/>
fsodes of the television show<lb/>
f"Hee-Haw<lb/>
 Blanton's repertoire, which in-<lb/>
cludes mostly bluegrass, country<lb/>
and hillbilly songs, is as cluttered<lb/>
as his collection. A great many of<lb/>
those songs were written before<lb/>
- he was bom. He doesn't go for<lb/>
?J rock 'n' roll. Ifs too monotonous,<lb/>
too modern. Blanton didn't even<lb/>
own a record player until five<lb/>
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Freshman Marc Lao fires a jumper in the Pir<lb/>
courtesy Thomas Forrest ? I he Daih Ri<lb/>
Orange Bow<lb/>
By the Associated Press<lb/>
The Orange Bowl o<lb/>
smiling, but keeping its fii . i<lb/>
crossed.<lb/>
When it selected top-ran)<lb/>
Oklahoma and No. 2 Miami to<lb/>
meet on on New Year's Day, it<lb/>
hoped the game would decide the<lb/>
national champion.<lb/>
There were two small hitches<lb/>
however. Miami still had tw<lb/>
-regular-season games remaining<lb/>
against No. 10 Notre Dame aikf<lb/>
No. 8 South Carolina.<lb/>
On satrudav. the Hun<lb/>
crushed Notre Dam. 24<lb/>
their record to 10<lb/>
receiver Michael Irvm said<lb/>
despite the big vict i<lb/>
canes are stiil not 1<lb/>
Football s<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
Aui.Unt Spore fditor<lb/>
East Carolina officials an-<lb/>
nounced last week that Ten;<lb/>
Tech would he added to the<lb/>
football schedule in pLao<lb/>
North Carolina State. The swap<lb/>
will give East Carolina a rare sixth<lb/>
home game, and leave the Pirates<lb/>
with only five contests on the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
Tennessee Tech was added to<lb/>
fill a one-game void in the Pirate s<lb/>
schedule because of a one-year<lb/>
suspension placed on the annual<lb/>
ECUNCSU rivalry.<lb/>
The contract tor the game with<lb/>
Tennessee Tech, a Division I-AA<lb/>
member of the Ohio Valley Con-<lb/>
ference, was signed bv former<lb/>
athletic director Ken Ran- late last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Over a decade has passed sai<lb/>
East Carolina played more than<lb/>
five contests at Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
and the extra game should be a<lb/>
welcomed one<lb/>
"Opening the season at home<lb/>
should represent a welcomed<lb/>
change for our fans, said interim<lb/>
athletic director Dave 1 tart Our<lb/>
1988 schedule otters East Carolina<lb/>
supporters the opportunity to see<lb/>
our first siv games without anv<lb/>
extensive travel involved. It s I<lb/>
great schedule in every respect<lb/>
The 1988 Pirate football sched-<lb/>
ule was also released last week<lb/>
Times have been set for the home<lb/>
games, but the road contests are to<lb/>
be announced at a later date<lb/>
On Sept. 3 the Pirates open their<lb/>
campaign at home for the first<lb/>
time in recent memory against<lb/>
the Golden Eagles of Tennesse<lb/>
Tech. Kickof f is slated for 7 p.m. at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The first of the five road games<lb/>
for the Pirates will be held Sept.10<lb/>
against the Hokies of Virginia<lb/>
Tech. The Hokies were beaten this<lb/>
year by a fired-up Pirate squad 32-<lb/>
21. The win ties the record be-<lb/>
. ? tapering i<lb/>
:m V  -si<lb/>
rn to<lb/>
Oci : to I<lb/>
two teams<lb/>
v game.<lb/>
Remair<lb/>
? rs oi <lb/>
and g<lb/>
a 19-0 los<lb/>
who -<lb/>
last seasoi<lb/>
game w<lb/>
Can Unas<lb/>
ties, and kickj<lb/>
On Oct<lb/>
will invade T<lb/>
off against<lb/>
Bowden n<lb/>
every con<lb/>
thus far. Th?j<lb/>
have come<lb/>
1983, when t<lb/>
Tallahassee.<lb/>
Syracuse vJ<lb/>
dium for the t<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1987 Page 13<lb/>
Pirate hoopsters open season<lb/>
by splitting first two contests<lb/>
Freshman Marc Lacy Tires a jumper in the Pirates 65-57 win over Longwood College last Saturday. (Photo<lb/>
courtesy Thomas Forrest ? The Daily Reflector)<lb/>
Orange Bowl seemingly set<lb/>
By the Associated Press<lb/>
The Orange Bowl committee is<lb/>
smiling, but keeping its fingers<lb/>
crossed.<lb/>
When it selected top-ranked<lb/>
Oklahoma and No. 2 Miami to<lb/>
meet on on New Year's Day, it<lb/>
hoped the game would decide the<lb/>
national champion.<lb/>
There were two small hitches,<lb/>
however. Miami still had two<lb/>
-regular-season games remaining,<lb/>
against No. 10 Notre Dame and<lb/>
No. 8 South Carolina.<lb/>
On satrudav, the Hurricanes<lb/>
crushed Notre' Dame 24-0 to run<lb/>
their record to 10-0. But Miami<lb/>
receiver Michael Irvin said thai<lb/>
despite the big victory, the Hurri-<lb/>
canes are still not looking at the<lb/>
Jan. 1 date against Oklahoma.<lb/>
"I think South Carolina will be<lb/>
better than Notre Dame Irvin<lb/>
said. "And since they're not na-<lb/>
tional champions, they want to<lb/>
stop somebody else from being<lb/>
champions. It's just the American<lb/>
way, I guess<lb/>
In other games Satrudav in-<lb/>
volving ranked teams, No. 3Flor-<lb/>
dida State defeated Floride 28-14,<lb/>
No. 5 Nebraska downed Colo-<lb/>
rado 24-7, No. 14 Georgia stopped<lb/>
Georgia Tech 30-16 and No. 16<lb/>
Tennessee nipped Vanderbilt 38-<lb/>
36.<lb/>
Augustana College had its 60-<lb/>
game unbeaten streak and a bid<lb/>
for a fifth straight national title<lb/>
ended when they lost to Dayton<lb/>
38-36 in a Division III playoff<lb/>
quarterfinal game. The Rock Is-<lb/>
land, 111 school had gone 59-0-1<lb/>
since losing to West Georgia in the<lb/>
1982 Division III title game.<lb/>
Miami held the Fighting Irish to<lb/>
82 yards rushing, 187 below their<lb/>
average. The Hurricanes also had<lb/>
nine tackles behind the line.<lb/>
"To do that to Notre Dame is<lb/>
something I'll remember the rest<lb/>
of my life said linebacker<lb/>
George Mira Jr who made 17<lb/>
tackles.<lb/>
Fullback Melvin Bratton scored<lb/>
on two short runs for Miami,<lb/>
which gained 417 yards. Halfback<lb/>
Leonard Conley scored the other<lb/>
touchdown on a 6-yard run and<lb/>
Greg Cox added a 30-yard field<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sporu Editor<lb/>
DURHAM ? After winning its<lb/>
season opener, the East Carolina<lb/>
basketball team was brought back<lb/>
down to earth Monday night as<lb/>
Duke trounced the Pirates 94-45.<lb/>
"What do you want me to say?"<lb/>
Pirate head coach MikeSteelesaid<lb/>
following the loss. "No one got<lb/>
killed out there isall I know to say.<lb/>
I just checked in the lockerroom<lb/>
and everyone is still alive<lb/>
Everyone might have been alive<lb/>
but the Pirates seemed to be al-<lb/>
most non-existent offensive-wise<lb/>
for the entire game. For the con-<lb/>
test, the Pirates only connected on<lb/>
a meager 30.4 percent of their<lb/>
shots (17-of-56).<lb/>
A good indication of how the<lb/>
game would end up came right at<lb/>
the beginning of the contest as<lb/>
Duke moved out to a 12-0 lead<lb/>
with 14:53 to play in the first half.<lb/>
The Pirates played good defense<lb/>
during the span but atrocious<lb/>
shooting kept them from getting<lb/>
on the scoreboard.<lb/>
Freshman point guard Jimmy<lb/>
Hinton finally got the Pirates un-<lb/>
packed when he threw up a<lb/>
prayer, which was answered at<lb/>
the 14:12 mark of the half trim-<lb/>
ming the Blue Devils lead to 12-2.<lb/>
The Blue Devils then stretched<lb/>
the lead to 14, 16-2, before the<lb/>
Pirates mounted their only seri-<lb/>
ous threat of the game.<lb/>
Freshmen Marc Lacy and Ter-<lb/>
hern Harvey along with sopho-<lb/>
more Gus Hill all scored in suces-<lb/>
sion for ECU to trim Duke's lead<lb/>
? ?????? ?-??-? <lb/>
Gus Hill, in his first collegiate<lb/>
game, scored 19 points and pulled<lb/>
down six rebounds to lead East<lb/>
Carolina to a 65-57 victory over<lb/>
Longwood College Saturday<lb/>
night in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Saturday's victory was the first<lb/>
for the young Pirate team and the<lb/>
first for first-year head coach<lb/>
Mike Steele.<lb/>
"It sure wasn't pretty but it was<lb/>
a win Steele said. "Some folks<lb/>
have told us that we wouldn't win<lb/>
a game this year, so at least that's<lb/>
behind us<lb/>
Longwood center Darryl Rut-<lb/>
ley hit a five-foot jumper with 13<lb/>
minutes left in the first half to put<lb/>
the Lancers up by three but ECU<lb/>
to 16-8 with 10:47 left in the half.<lb/>
The Blue Devils however an-<lb/>
swered back with a 3-pointer<lb/>
from freshman Greg Koubek and<lb/>
a score from senior Billy King to<lb/>
move back out 21-8 and end the<lb/>
Pirates run.<lb/>
The Duke lead reached its<lb/>
height in the first half following<lb/>
layups by Robert Brickey and Phil<lb/>
Henderson, which boosted the<lb/>
score to 36-15 with 2:55 to play.<lb/>
A score by sophomore Reed<lb/>
Lose and a free throw by Harvey<lb/>
closed the Pirates to within 36-18<lb/>
before John Smith sank a jumper<lb/>
with three seconds left in the half<lb/>
to send the Blue Devils in at inter-<lb/>
mission with a 38-18 lead.<lb/>
"I wasn't pleased with our play<lb/>
offensively in the first half Duke<lb/>
coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "I<lb/>
think our performance might<lb/>
have had a lot to do with East<lb/>
Carolina's defensive pressure<lb/>
The Pirates had a chance to pull<lb/>
closer at the start of the second<lb/>
half when Duke went scoreless<lb/>
for the first three minutes of the<lb/>
half. However, the Pirates also<lb/>
went blank during that time span.<lb/>
Smith got the second half scor-<lb/>
ing untracked for Duke when he<lb/>
nailed in a layup with 17:00 left in<lb/>
the half. A slam dunk by Kevin<lb/>
Strickland at the 16:30 mark<lb/>
boosted the Blue Devils up 42-18<lb/>
and forced Steele to call a timeout.<lb/>
After a pair of free throws by<lb/>
Lose, the Blue Devils reeled off<lb/>
five more points before Hinton's<lb/>
second prayer of the game was<lb/>
answered at the 13:50 mark.<lb/>
The Blue Devils payed little at-<lb/>
tention however as they ran off<lb/>
seven more unanswered points to<lb/>
put the final nails in the Pirates'<lb/>
coffin.<lb/>
The Blue Devils' Koubek led all<lb/>
scorers with 19 points, while<lb/>
Strickland added 14 and Joe Cook<lb/>
13. The Pirates were led by Lose<lb/>
with 11 points and Hinton with<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
"They (ECU) are just under-<lb/>
manned now Krzyzewski said<lb/>
"Mike (Steele) has a big rebuild-<lb/>
ing job to do but they'll be fine.<lb/>
"The experience that they are<lb/>
getting now will really help. I<lb/>
think he (Steele) is doing the right<lb/>
thing by playing the young kids<lb/>
now. They will get there<lb/>
"Its not the end of the world<lb/>
Steele said of the loss. "I'm defi-<lb/>
nitely glad its over with now. I<lb/>
went into the lockerroom after the<lb/>
game and told the players that<lb/>
this was the worst loss that I had<lb/>
ever been associated with as far as<lb/>
points. But now we have to move<lb/>
on and concentrate on our next<lb/>
game<lb/>
For this game was one that was<lb/>
just not meant for the Pirates.<lb/>
Perhaps Krzyzewski had the best<lb/>
explanation.<lb/>
"When we play just as hard or<lb/>
harder, we're the better team<lb/>
Krzyzewski said. "They are just<lb/>
too small now and they aren't as<lb/>
good as we are right'now. But<lb/>
they'll get there<lb/>
guard Jimmy Hinton, taking full<lb/>
advantage of Longwood's 21<lb/>
first-half turnovers, turned three<lb/>
steals into six points as the Pirates<lb/>
rallied to a 32-25 half time lead.<lb/>
Longwood dominated the<lb/>
boards grabbing 17 rebounds to<lb/>
ECU'S six in the first half.<lb/>
In the seond half, Longwood<lb/>
came back scoring nine<lb/>
unanswered points to tie the score<lb/>
at 34. Reed Lose's three pointer<lb/>
put the Pirates back up with 15<lb/>
minutes left.<lb/>
The lead then traded hand sev-<lb/>
eral times, but ECU regained<lb/>
control when Gus Hill hit from 15<lb/>
feet out to give the Pirates a 50-47<lb/>
advantage with six minutes left.<lb/>
Freshman Stanley Love sealed it<lb/>
for the Pirates on a breakaway<lb/>
slam with two minutes left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"Gus Hill really had a nice<lb/>
game Steele said "He was one<lb/>
of nine players playing in their<lb/>
first college game tonight, and he<lb/>
really made the difference for us<lb/>
Jimmy Hinton, with 16 points<lb/>
was ECU'S second leading scorer.<lb/>
The freahman guard also led the<lb/>
team in assists and steals with<lb/>
four.<lb/>
Kevin Jefferson led Longwood<lb/>
with 21 points and six rebounds<lb/>
but it was the Lancer's 32 turn-<lb/>
overs that put Longwood out of<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
Assistant Sports Fditor<lb/>
East Carolina officials an-<lb/>
nounced last week that Tennessee<lb/>
Tech would be added to the 198,8<lb/>
football schedule in place of<lb/>
North Carolina State. The swap<lb/>
will give East Carolina a rare sixth<lb/>
home game, and leave the Pirates<lb/>
with only five contests on the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
Tennessee Tech was added to<lb/>
fill a one-game void in the Pirate's<lb/>
schedule because of a one-year<lb/>
suspension placed on the annual<lb/>
ECUNCSU rivalry.<lb/>
The contract for the game with<lb/>
Tennessee Tech, a Division I-AA<lb/>
member of the Ohio Valley Con-<lb/>
ference, was signed by former<lb/>
athletic director Ken Karr late last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Over a decade has passed since<lb/>
East Carolina played more than<lb/>
five contests at Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
and the extra game should be a'<lb/>
welcomed one.<lb/>
"Opening the season at home<lb/>
should represent a welcomed<lb/>
change for our fans said interim<lb/>
athletic director Dave Hart; "Our<lb/>
1988 schedule offers East Carolina<lb/>
supporters the opportunity to see<lb/>
our first six games without any<lb/>
extensive travel involved. It's a<lb/>
great schedule in every respect<lb/>
The 1988 Pirate football sched-<lb/>
ule was also released last week.<lb/>
Times have been set for the home<lb/>
games, but the road contests are to<lb/>
be announced at a later date.<lb/>
On Sept. 3 the Pirates open their<lb/>
campaign at home for the first<lb/>
time in recent memory against<lb/>
the Golden Eagles of Tenncsse<lb/>
Tech. Kickoff is slated for 7 p.m. at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The first of the five road games<lb/>
for the Pirates will be held Sept.10<lb/>
against the Hokies of Virginia<lb/>
Tech. The Hokies were beaten this<lb/>
year by a fired-up Pirate squad 32-<lb/>
21. The win ties the record be-<lb/>
schedule fi<lb/>
tween the two schools at 1-1. The<lb/>
Hokies trounced East Carolina<lb/>
37-2 when they met back in 1956.<lb/>
After Virginia Tech, ECU will<lb/>
roll into Columbia to meet the<lb/>
Gamecocks of South Carolina.<lb/>
The 'cocks lead the scries 5-0,<lb/>
defeating the Pirates 33-12 last<lb/>
season; and Todd Ellis (only a<lb/>
sophomore) is showing no signs<lb/>
of tapering off in his quest for the<lb/>
Hcisman. Gameday is Sept.17.<lb/>
Back at home on the 24th, The<lb/>
Pirates will once again face South-<lb/>
ern Mississippi. The past two<lb/>
games for these two teams have<lb/>
been decided by four points or<lb/>
less, with Southern Miss, taking<lb/>
both victories. The game will be<lb/>
played on Parent's Day, and kick-<lb/>
off is at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana will<lb/>
return to Ficklen Stadium on<lb/>
Oct.l to battle East Carolina. The<lb/>
two teams traditionally play a<lb/>
close game. Kickoff is at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Remaining at home on Oct.8,<lb/>
ECU will take on the Mountain-<lb/>
eers of West Virginia. The purple<lb/>
and gold will be seeking to avenge<lb/>
a 49-0 loss to the Mountaineers<lb/>
who suffocated the Pirate offense<lb/>
last season in Morgantown. The<lb/>
game will highlight East<lb/>
Carolina's homecoming activi-<lb/>
ties, and kickoff is slated for 2 p.m.<lb/>
On Oct. 15, Art Baker's troops<lb/>
will invade Tallahassee to square<lb/>
off against Florida State. Bobby<lb/>
Bowden's Seminoles have won<lb/>
every contest against the Bucs<lb/>
thus far. The closest the Pirates<lb/>
have me to winning was in<lb/>
1983, when they slipped 47-46 in<lb/>
Tallahassee.<lb/>
Syracuse will visit Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium for the first time Oct. 22. The<lb/>
Orangemen, led by quarterback<lb/>
Don McPherson, are expected to<lb/>
place in the pre-season top 10 next<lb/>
year. Kickoff is 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
The Owls of Temple University<lb/>
will host the Pirates on Nov. 5.<lb/>
been released<lb/>
The series is led by ECU 4-3;<lb/>
however, the Owls are expected<lb/>
to improve between now and<lb/>
then.<lb/>
On Nov. 12, ECU will play their<lb/>
final home game against the Hur-<lb/>
ricanes of Miami. Miami leads the<lb/>
series against the Pirates 6-0, and<lb/>
East Carolina will seek to even<lb/>
that record. Kickoff is at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
East Carolina will end their<lb/>
1988 campaign with an away<lb/>
game at Cincinnati. The Pirates<lb/>
lead in the series against the Bear-<lb/>
cats 3-0; however, Heisman-<lb/>
hopeful Danny McCoin returns as<lb/>
the Bearcats' signal caller, and<lb/>
could lead Cincnnati to an upset<lb/>
over the Pirates.<lb/>
In this years' game, the Pirates<lb/>
mauled the Bearcats 56-28, and<lb/>
tailback Reggie McKinnev<lb/>
cruised to a 212-yard finish ? the<lb/>
second-best rushing effort in a<lb/>
game by a Pirate since official<lb/>
records have been kept.<lb/>
Lady Pirates return<lb/>
home with 1-1 mark<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
Sportt Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirate<lb/>
basketball team brought home a<lb/>
1-1 record after losing to Ken-<lb/>
tucky 93-75 in the championship<lb/>
game of the Lady Kat Classic in<lb/>
Lexigton, KY.<lb/>
ECU edged Central Michigan<lb/>
78-77 in the opening round Fri-<lb/>
day. The tournament served as<lb/>
the season opener for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates and gave head coach Pat<lb/>
Pierson her first victory as ECU<lb/>
women's basketball coach.<lb/>
Friday against CMU, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates jumped out front early<lb/>
scoring ten unanswered points<lb/>
before Central Michigan's Sherry<lb/>
Kelly hit from six feet out to give<lb/>
the Cippewas their first bucket.<lb/>
ECU saw its lead dwindle half-<lb/>
way through the first period and<lb/>
CMU tied the score at 34 with five<lb/>
minutes remaining.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates rallied with<lb/>
under four minutes left as Mo-<lb/>
nique Pompili hit three in a row<lb/>
and guard Pam Wiliams sunk one<lb/>
from 16 feet out to give ECU a 45-<lb/>
42 halftime advantage.<lb/>
ECU led throughout most of the<lb/>
second half but had to fend off a<lb/>
last minute surge by Central<lb/>
Michigan. CMU's Molly Piche<lb/>
laid it in with one minute left to<lb/>
put the Cippewas up 77-76. Pam<lb/>
Williams put out the fire with a 15<lb/>
foot jumper with four seconds left<lb/>
to give the Lady Pirates their first<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Monique Pompili led ECU with<lb/>
20 points and Gretta Savage<lb/>
grabbed nine rebounds.<lb/>
In the championship game,<lb/>
Alma Bethea had 24 points and 12<lb/>
rebounds but the Lady Pirates<lb/>
were a victim of poor shooting<lb/>
hitting only 42 of their shots.<lb/>
Chris O'Connor's downtown<lb/>
shot from 18 feet tied the score at<lb/>
20 with under nine minutes left in<lb/>
the first half. A minute later ECU<lb/>
and Kentucky exchanged baskets<lb/>
to make it 22-22 but UK pulled<lb/>
away and took a 43-30 lead at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
It was all Kentucky in the sec-<lb/>
ond half ad the Kats put ECU<lb/>
away 93-75 to take the tourna-<lb/>
ment crown.<lb/>
Alma Bethea and Monique<lb/>
Pompili's 20 point efforts in the<lb/>
tournament earned them a spot<lb/>
on the all-tournament team.<lb/>
ECU will play in its second<lb/>
tournament, its own Lady Pirate<lb/>
Classic, this weekend. ECU will<lb/>
meet Georgia Southwestern and<lb/>
Vanderbilt will take on NC Cen-<lb/>
tral Friday in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Monique Pompili, shown in earIier action, helped lead the Lady Pirates to<lb/>
?second-place finish in the Lady Kat Classic. (Photocourtesy ECU Sports<lb/>
Information) <lb/>
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JiJiiEEASrCAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1987<lb/>
buggers finish up Cinderella season<lb/>
By EARL HAMPTON Not wanHno ?L , <lb/>
By EARL HAMPTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It was a Cinderella season for the<lb/>
ECU Rugby team, but they lost a<lb/>
heartbreaker, 8-6, to UNC-Greens-<lb/>
boro in the State Rugby Champion-<lb/>
ship in Greensboro Saturday.<lb/>
The championship game pitted<lb/>
the two undefeated clubs, both 6-0,<lb/>
for the battle of the title. In the end,<lb/>
the ECU ruggers shook the victors'<lb/>
hands and walked off the field in<lb/>
anticipation of the spring season.<lb/>
The game, played in cold, windy<lb/>
weather at Grimsley High School,<lb/>
proved to be a grudge match be-<lb/>
tween defenders. Although UNCG<lb/>
nowclaimsbraggingrightsafterthe<lb/>
win, the game was played in an air<lb/>
of controversy.<lb/>
The controversy stemmed from<lb/>
the bias of the referee who blew his<lb/>
whistle 12 times on ECU while<lb/>
penalizing UNCG only twice. The<lb/>
referee was moonlighting from his<lb/>
job as head coach of UNCG.<lb/>
Not wanting to comment on the<lb/>
referee situation, Ralph Campano,<lb/>
ECU head coach praised the play of<lb/>
his team. "This was ECU Rugby's<lb/>
best season in six years, and the<lb/>
boys should be proud Campano<lb/>
said.<lb/>
ECU entered the title game after<lb/>
shutting out N.C State. 10-0. in the<lb/>
regular season finale. That Pirate<lb/>
victory was the first against the<lb/>
Pack ruggers in eight years.<lb/>
Midfieldsmen, Mussler and<lb/>
Hahn scored in the early going<lb/>
against State in what was to be the<lb/>
only offensive output of the game.<lb/>
Mollifying the Pack in the second<lb/>
half, the Pirate's strong defensive<lb/>
effort was prevalent in securing the<lb/>
high energy win. The shutout was<lb/>
the third game in the season in<lb/>
which ECU did not allow their<lb/>
opponents to score.<lb/>
In the ruggers first win, Davidson<lb/>
College was routed by a well-bal-<lb/>
anced Pirate attack, as ECU<lb/>
stomped its way to a 28-0 trashing<lb/>
of the Wildcats. Senior stars Phillip<lb/>
Ritchie, with his power-surging<lb/>
scoring, and Mike Brown, with<lb/>
precise kicking and timely assists,<lb/>
led the team in the season opener<lb/>
With Head Coach Campano, both<lb/>
Rithchie and Brown returned to<lb/>
their high school alma mater of<lb/>
Grimsley to play the state champi-<lb/>
onship.<lb/>
troversial 11 minute injury timeout.<lb/>
With eight minutes left in the first<lb/>
half, Spartan Pete Zealman heaved<lb/>
a ten-meter run to score. While it<lb/>
was questionable whether Zealman<lb/>
had possession of the ball when<lb/>
crossing the goal line, the officials<lb/>
vision was blocked on the play.<lb/>
From the onset of the title game<lb/>
bodies flew in the trenches. Trading<lb/>
the rock back and forth, the two<lb/>
teams failed to penetrate deep into<lb/>
enemy territory, driving most of the<lb/>
nrst half. Many kicks were side<lb/>
outs.<lb/>
Eason, who scored three times<lb/>
against Appalachain, enroute to a<lb/>
36-3 devastation of the Mountain-<lb/>
eers, is one of the team's offensive<lb/>
catalysts with his bloodthirsty style<lb/>
of play. Eason is also credited with<lb/>
the first goal in the down trudging<lb/>
of Wake Forest, 30-12<lb/>
Greensboro's first-score attempt<lb/>
faultered as a penalty kick hooked<lb/>
to the left. Shortly afterwards, Pi-<lb/>
rate Mike 'Top Gun " Birrell stuck a<lb/>
Spartan bull carrier, sending the<lb/>
carrier to the sidelines after a con-<lb/>
IRS Informal Recreation<lb/>
Memorial Gyninasiurn<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sac .<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
MonThurs<lb/>
Fri -<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
MonThurs<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Mon. -Fri .<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed.<lb/>
Tues &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Fri .<lb/>
Sac.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
MonWedFri<lb/>
Sun .<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
Weight: Rooms<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mingcs<lb/>
10:00 a.m.<lb/>
10:00 a.m.<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
1:30 p.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
u ?r tes into the second<lb/>
half ECU blocked a Spartan pen-<lb/>
alty kick which fired up the club In<lb/>
second half action. Pirate Parrish<lb/>
Er'StSP8 a S?ting run to<lb/>
the UNCG 20. Long-play man<lb/>
Ritchie scooted 40 meters down the<lb/>
sidelines as both teams continued to<lb/>
exchange possession.<lb/>
Greensboro scored again in the<lb/>
mid-tpoint of the second half. After<lb/>
the kick failed, UNCG lead 8-0.<lb/>
ECU got on the board with 12<lb/>
minutes left in the game as the Pi-<lb/>
rates ran for the score. Kicker<lb/>
Brown nailed the points-after with a<lb/>
boot into the wind. With timedwin-<lb/>
dling, UNCG lead 8-6.<lb/>
The crowd of 75 saw an intense<lb/>
match between the two best rugby<lb/>
teams in North Carolina. Campano<lb/>
and team are looking for revenge on<lb/>
UNCG next season.<lb/>
The ruggers now focus on the<lb/>
spring season as they will play in<lb/>
the South East Tournament during<lb/>
Easter of 1988 in Atlanta<lb/>
Hng applications forth?<lb/>
9 llfustrator. The fob<lb/>
?na the comics page<lb/>
' ms as needed.<lb/>
Apply in person at The East Carolinian,<lb/>
second floor of the publications building.<lb/>
PARA p S E<lb/>
ec Ma ss-sj it<lb/>
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3:00 p.m.<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
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MAKEUP-MANICURES<lb/>
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Good Through 12-31-87<lb/>
in<lb/>
Happy Holidays<lb/>
PETEY HATHAWAY, Owner<lb/>
Cj<lb/>
Equipment Check-out<lb/>
Memorj ,il Cym 1 1 5<lb/>
10:00 a.in<lb/>
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The Outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
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The cost of $405 includes trans-<lb/>
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To register and get more infor-<lb/>
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TEL: 919-756-9175<lb/>
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$10.00 off student<lb/>
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Wednesday is Our<lb/>
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with the Elbo Male Dancers<lb/>
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Guest Ladies $1.00 til 11 p.m.<lb/>
Guys in at 11p.m.<lb/>
Prizes for everyone plus a<lb/>
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Dollar drink Specials all night plus other specials too!<lb/>
Thursday Members Free - $1 Drink Specials<lb/>
Howard s<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)-A fed-<lb/>
eral judge allowed play to begin<lb/>
Saturday in the first round of the<lb/>
NCAA Division I-AA playoffs<lb/>
but Howard University says it<lb/>
rffJT?8 ,ts lawsiht &amp; ?<lb/>
NCAA by asking for an injunction<lb/>
to halt next weekend's second<lb/>
round.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge John Garret!<lb/>
Penn rejected a request tor a tem-<lb/>
porary restraining order even<lb/>
though he said Howards suit<lb/>
charging its football team was ille-<lb/>
gally denied a post-season bid<lb/>
raises "substantial and severe<lb/>
questions<lb/>
"Any delay of these games at<lb/>
this point will be disruptive<lb/>
cause severe hardships to th.<lb/>
Bruce, OSU<lb/>
teams<lb/>
sup<lb/>
1 ridaj s ri<lb/>
"It<lb/>
will 1, b<lb/>
. i mc<lb/>
fter fu<lb/>
gu merits<lb/>
ranking<lb/>
i Hoi<lb/>
V A A bd<lb/>
- b<lb/>
vou, i<lb/>
An<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AT<lb/>
out-of-court settlement un<lb/>
which Ohio State Universit) <lb/>
pay fired football coach<lb/>
Bruce $471,000 todropalawsuiti!<lb/>
totally in the university's inter<lb/>
ests, its attorney says.<lb/>
"It was in the interest of all par<lb/>
ties to get this resolved' ohn (<lb/>
Elam said at a news conference<lb/>
Friday where the settlement ol<lb/>
Bruce's $7.4 million suit was<lb/>
closed.<lb/>
Bruce, 56, was tired Nov. lt by<lb/>
university president Howard<lb/>
nings, who has never disc:<lb/>
the reasons for his action. Atl<lb/>
Director Rick Bay resigned in<lb/>
protest the same day.<lb/>
Bruce's dismissal took effect<lb/>
following the Buckeyes season-<lb/>
ending victory over Michigan<lb/>
The coach filed suit Nov. 20 in<lb/>
Franklin Countv Common Pleas<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
In the suit, Bruce's attorney,<lb/>
John Zonak, accused Jennir.<lb/>
firing Bruce because Jennings<lb/>
knew the coach disproved of<lb/>
Jenning's lifestyles. At a news<lb/>
tended<lb/>
ment r- I<lb/>
latesthat tl<lb/>
Lebo paces Ta<lb/>
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - eff<lb/>
Lebo has a message tor those in<lb/>
the NCAA responsible (or setting<lb/>
the distance of the S-pom line.<lb/>
"I think its about the right range<lb/>
where it is now Lebo said Satur-<lb/>
day night after going 7-of-10 from<lb/>
beyond the 19-foot-9-inch stripe<lb/>
to lead the third-ranked Tar Heels<lb/>
to a 87-76 victory over Richmond<lb/>
in the championship game of the<lb/>
Central fidelity Holiday Classic<lb/>
Basketball Tournament.<lb/>
Lebo, a 6-foot-3 junior guard<lb/>
finished with a career-high 28<lb/>
points and added five assists and<lb/>
la steal in being named the<lb/>
tournament's most valuable<lb/>
player.<lb/>
North Carolina, which had to<lb/>
? struggle in a Friday night victory<lb/>
Over Southern California, moved<lb/>
Ito 3-0 with the tournament title<lb/>
r game, in which the Tar Heels held<lb/>
ia 43-22 rebounding edge.<lb/>
I "We got offensive rebounding<lb/>
ithrough our size and effort<lb/>
gkoach Dean Smith said Our de-<lb/>
fense was effective, and of course<lb/>
?bo made some 3-poinl shots If<lb/>
xve keep improving, I'll tod a lot<lb/>
otter about tHs team<lb/>
North Carolina freshman for-<lb/>
ward Rick Fox ignited an 18-n Tar<lb/>
ieels' surge when he slammed<lb/>
home a missed jumper by team-<lb/>
?nate Pete Chilcutt to give the Tar<lb/>
frlec-lsa 27-24 advantage with tv04<lb/>
?eft in the first half.<lb/>
Lebo added a pair oi 3-potnters<lb/>
fend Ranzino Smith had two fast-<lb/>
?reak layups as the Tar Heels, 3-0,<lb/>
xiilt a 43-30 intermission lead<lb/>
Richmond cut the lead to six<lb/>
?ints twice in the second halt, the<lb/>
ast time at 56-50 on a short bank<lb/>
lot by Peter Woolfolk with 12 55<lb/>
emaining, but North Carolina<lb/>
cored the next five points and<lb/>
jchmond was unable to get<lb/>
Closer than 10 points in the final<lb/>
Eight minutes.<lb/>
The Tar Heels' Scott Williams<lb/>
id Kevin Madden were assessed<lb/>
chnical fouls in seperate inci-<lb/>
dents in the second half. Williams<lb/>
'as charged with shoving<lb/>
tichmond's Ken Atkinson and<lb/>
Madden was cited for throwing<lb/>
n elbow.<lb/>
North Carolina's JR. Reid fin-<lb/>
ked with 15 points and the Tar<lb/>
leels also got 11 from Williams<lb/>
knd 10 each from Madden and<lb/>
?mith.<lb/>
Guard Rodney Rice led<lb/>
u'chmond, 1-1, with 27 points, 18<lb/>
n 3-pointers. Woolfolk added 17<lb/>
ints and center Steve Kratzer<lb/>
ntributed 12 before fouling out<lb/>
ith 7:22 to play.<lb/>
were<lb/>
bo<lb/>
rxckr i,<lb/>
but wej<lb/>
t<lb/>
eaten<lb/>
sibtiitvl<lb/>
wherv<lb/>
suco<lb/>
CH<lb/>
? Yoi<lb/>
GIFT<lb/>
THE Bl SI<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
IJL xK<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057932_0015"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 1, 1987 15<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
w accepting applica,tons for the<lb/>
lion of Staff Illustrator, The job<lb/>
ides designing the comics page<lb/>
providing illustrations as needed,<lb/>
ly in person at The East Carolinian,<lb/>
nd floor of the publications building.<lb/>
 A O S E<lb/>
329 Arlington<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
756-1579<lb/>
ALL HAIR SERVICES<lb/>
1AKEUPMANICURES<lb/>
TANNING BEDS<lb/>
Discount Off Any Service,<lb/>
od Through 12-31-87<lb/>
 <lb/>
Happy Holidaxjs<lb/>
TEY HATHAWAY, Owner<lb/>
Athletic Club<lb/>
' ?v,?? ???'?'???' .?????- ??????<lb/>
ULLE, N.C.<lb/>
aturing<lb/>
TEL: 919-756-9175<lb/>
? Gymnasium<lb/>
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? Nursery<lb/>
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WASHINGTON (AP) - A fed-<lb/>
oral judge allowed play to begin<lb/>
Saturday in the first round of the<lb/>
NCAA Division I-AA playoffs,<lb/>
but Howard University says it<lb/>
will press its lawsuit against the<lb/>
NCAA by asking for an injunction<lb/>
to halt next weekend's second<lb/>
round.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge John Garrett<lb/>
Penn rejected a request for a tem-<lb/>
porary restraining order even<lb/>
though he said Howard's suit<lb/>
charging its football team was ille-<lb/>
gally denied a post-season bid<lb/>
raises "substantial and severe<lb/>
questions<lb/>
"Any delay of these games at<lb/>
this point will be disruptive and<lb/>
cause severe hardships to the<lb/>
llfighti<lb/>
teams, the schools and their<lb/>
suporters Penn said after<lb/>
Friday's ruling.<lb/>
"It appearsthe public interest<lb/>
will be best served by allowing<lb/>
the games to go forward<lb/>
After hearing two hours of ar-<lb/>
guments concerning the NCAA<lb/>
ranking system, Penn also re-<lb/>
jected Howard's request that the<lb/>
NCAA be ordered to add four<lb/>
teams to the 16-team field.<lb/>
Howard officials said they<lb/>
would seek a last-minutecompro-<lb/>
mise to get Howard into the play-<lb/>
offs, but were not optimistic about<lb/>
the possibility.<lb/>
"We will go ahead with the<lb/>
preliminary injunction request<lb/>
next week Francis Smith<lb/>
Howard's deputy general coun-<lb/>
sel, said.<lb/>
The eight winners of Saturday's<lb/>
games are scheduled to play in the<lb/>
second round on Dec. 5.<lb/>
"On the basis of what the judge<lb/>
said, while the suit is in its early<lb/>
stages, it is of sufficient merit to<lb/>
pursue it to its ultimate conclu-<lb/>
sion Howard president James<lb/>
Check said.<lb/>
Howard filed a $9 million suit<lb/>
Wednesday charging the NCAA<lb/>
violated anti-trust regulations<lb/>
and contract provisions and was<lb/>
racially discriminating against<lb/>
the historically black school by<lb/>
not extending them a playoff bid.<lb/>
Howard finished with a 9-1<lb/>
record this season, better than any<lb/>
other school in the Division 1-AA<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
1 he Bison, ranked 20th for most<lb/>
of the season, finished 18th in the<lb/>
final poll. NCAA lawyers said<lb/>
Howard was rated so low because<lb/>
of a weak schedule that included<lb/>
four teams below the Division I-<lb/>
AA level.<lb/>
Before ruling against Howard,<lb/>
Penn said he was most interested<lb/>
in how they ended up behind<lb/>
North Texas State, a 7-4 team that<lb/>
had been tied with the Bison<lb/>
going into the final week. North<lb/>
Texas State jumped ahead of<lb/>
Howard in the rankings by beat-<lb/>
ing a 3-8 team while Howard beat<lb/>
then-No. 14 Delaware State.<lb/>
'if this is their idea of fairness,<lb/>
then they must think we should<lb/>
still be pickin' cotten and strippin'<lb/>
tobacco Smith told Penn.<lb/>
"I still can't understand how the<lb/>
ratings at the end of the season,<lb/>
with the ratings of the previous<lb/>
week, turned out as they did<lb/>
Penn said. "It does seem Howard<lb/>
would have ended up with a<lb/>
higher ranking<lb/>
Near Dark - R<lb/>
The Princess Bride<lb/>
PG 13<lb/>
Date With An Armel<lb/>
PG 13<lb/>
Bruce, OSU reach agreement<lb/>
fill ItMRllC mAm t . ??'<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ? An<lb/>
uit-ot-court settlement under<lb/>
winch Ohio State University will<lb/>
pay tired football coach Farle<lb/>
Bruce $471,000 to drop a lawsuit is<lb/>
totally in the university's inter-<lb/>
ests, its attorney says.<lb/>
It was in the interest of all par-<lb/>
ties to get this resolved John C<lb/>
Ham said at a news conference<lb/>
I riday where the settlement of<lb/>
Bruce's $7.4 million suit was dis-<lb/>
closed.<lb/>
Bruce, 56, was fired Nov. lb bv<lb/>
university president Howard Jen-<lb/>
nings, who has never disclosed<lb/>
the reasons for his action. Athletic<lb/>
Director Rick Bay resigned in<lb/>
protest the same day.<lb/>
Bruce's dismissal took effect<lb/>
following the Buckeyes' season-<lb/>
ending victory over Michigan.<lb/>
The coach filed suit Nov. 20 in<lb/>
Franklin County Common Pleas<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
In the suit, Bruce's attorney,<lb/>
fohn Zonak, accused Jennings of<lb/>
tiring Bruce because Jennings<lb/>
knew the coach disproved of<lb/>
enning's lifestyles. At a news<lb/>
conference announcing the law-<lb/>
suit, Zonak accused Jennings of<lb/>
excessive drinking.<lb/>
Flam said Jennings had im-<lb/>
properly been brought into the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
"I believe that this was, and this<lb/>
is the basis of the settlement, a<lb/>
contract dispute between Coach<lb/>
Bruce and the university. Any-<lb/>
thing else, in my viewpoint, was<lb/>
improper Flam said.<lb/>
He said the incident had placed<lb/>
a "tremendous strain" on all those<lb/>
involved.<lb/>
"That is one of the reasons why,<lb/>
in the statements that have been<lb/>
issued both by President Jennings<lb/>
and Earle Bruce, you will see the<lb/>
expressions of regret Elam said.<lb/>
Neither Bruce nor Jennings at-<lb/>
tended the hastily-called news<lb/>
conference. Except for prepared<lb/>
statements they issued, the agree-<lb/>
ment provided for both not to<lb/>
comment on the incident.<lb/>
The two-page agreement stipu-<lb/>
lates that the university pay Bruce<lb/>
$471,000 within three business<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Overall, the university's poten-<lb/>
tial financial obligations to Bruce<lb/>
had he remained on the job and<lb/>
taken early retirement would<lb/>
have totaled $351,680, Elam said.<lb/>
If Bruce finds a new job before<lb/>
July 1, 1989, he will have to pay<lb/>
back whatever he earns as part of<lb/>
the settlement.<lb/>
Elam said the settlement was<lb/>
fair to both parties and that uni-<lb/>
versity trustees support the<lb/>
agreement. Edmund C. Redman,<lb/>
chairman of the Board of Trustees<lb/>
said formal approval of the settle-<lb/>
ment was expected at the board's<lb/>
meeting this Friday.<lb/>
Elam said the settlement grew<lb/>
out of his talks with Zonak.<lb/>
They were certainly aware<lb/>
that through the rumors and the<lb/>
other things that this was adverse<lb/>
to the university, and some might<lb/>
contend also adverse to Coach<lb/>
Bruce Elam said.<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
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Lebo paces Tar Heels<lb/>
RICHMOND, Va. (AP)  Jeff<lb/>
1 ebo has a message for those in<lb/>
the NCAA responsible for setting<lb/>
i'ne distance or the S-potrrt lino.<lb/>
"I think its about theright range<lb/>
where it is now Lebo said Satur-<lb/>
day night after going 7-of-10 from<lb/>
beyond the 19-foot-9-inch stripe<lb/>
to lead the third-ranked Tar Heels<lb/>
to a 87-76 victory over Richmond<lb/>
in the championship game of the<lb/>
Central Fidelity Holiday Classic<lb/>
Basketball Tournament.<lb/>
Lebo, a rVfoot-3 junior guard,<lb/>
finished with a career-high 28<lb/>
points and added five assists and<lb/>
i steal in being named the<lb/>
tournament's most valuable<lb/>
player.<lb/>
North Carolina, which had to<lb/>
struggle in a Friday night victory<lb/>
over Southern California, moved<lb/>
to 3-0 with the tournament title<lb/>
game, in which the Tar Heels held<lb/>
i 43-22 rebounding edge.<lb/>
"We got offensive rebounding<lb/>
through our size and effort<lb/>
coach Dean Smith said. "Our de-<lb/>
fense was effective, and of course,<lb/>
Lebo made some 3-point shots. If<lb/>
we keep improving, I'll feel a lot<lb/>
better about this team<lb/>
North Carolina freshman for-<lb/>
ward Rick Fox ignited an 18-6 Tar<lb/>
1 feels' surge when he slammed<lb/>
home a missed jumper by team-<lb/>
mate Pete Chilcutt to give'the Tar<lb/>
1 ieels a 27-24 advantage with 6:04<lb/>
eft in the first half.<lb/>
Lebo added a pair of 3-pointers<lb/>
and Ranzino Smith had two fast-<lb/>
break layups as the Tar Heels, 3-0,<lb/>
built a 43-30 intermission lead.<lb/>
Richmond cut the lead to six<lb/>
points twice in the second half, the<lb/>
last time at 56-50 on a short bank<lb/>
shot by Peter Woolfolk with 12:55<lb/>
remaining, but North Carolina<lb/>
scored the next five points and<lb/>
Richmond was unable to get<lb/>
closer than 10 points in the final<lb/>
eight minutes.<lb/>
The Tar Heels' Scott Williams<lb/>
I and Kevin Madden were assessed<lb/>
technical fouls in scperate inci-<lb/>
dents in the second half. Williams<lb/>
was charged with shoving<lb/>
Richmond's Ken Atkinson and<lb/>
j.Madden was cited for throwing<lb/>
an elbow.<lb/>
North Carolina's J.R. Reid fin-<lb/>
ished with 15 points and the Tar<lb/>
Heels also got 11 from Williams<lb/>
land 10 each from Madden and<lb/>
(Smith.<lb/>
Guard Rodney Rice led<lb/>
(Richmond, 1-1, with 27 points, 18<lb/>
Ion 3-pointers. Woolfolk added 17<lb/>
points and center Steve Kratzer<lb/>
Icontributed 12 before fouling out<lb/>
with 7:22 to play.<lb/>
"It's pretty obvious that we<lb/>
were overwhelmed on the<lb/>
boards said Richmond coach<lb/>
pic Tafrtmt. "We prayed harcf<lb/>
but we just couldn't rebound with<lb/>
these people<lb/>
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?1 Regular $8.95<lb/>
ffl<lb/>
ll<lb/>
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??<lb/>
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M Plain heavyweight crewnecks<lb/>
?J Regular $11.95 and $13.95<lb/>
i<lb/>
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I $5.00 off<lb/>
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Prices start at $28.95<lb/>
limit one coupon per item - good thru 12-5-87<lb/>
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!? limit one coupon per item-good thru 12-5-87<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
is<lb/>
S The Spuds McKenzie T-Shirt<lb/>
Regular $7.95<lb/>
limit one coupon per item - good thru 12-5-87<lb/>
$3.00 off I $4.00<lb/>
Plain hooded sweatshirts<lb/>
Regular $11.95<lb/>
Plain hooded Zipfronts<lb/>
Regular $13.95<lb/>
limit one coupon per item-good thru 12-5-87 "i ?.<lb/>
limit one coupon per ite:n- good thru 12-5-87-<lb/>
Selected Hoods Wild Coupon if<lb/>
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ii, r , SS 51.00 off<lb/>
Big selection of mostly medium i I<lb/>
&amp; small hoods in assorted " llem m 0ur sPortwear store <lb/>
colors. Regular11.95 hmit one c?upon per person<lb/>
Jansport Circle Sweatshirt<lb/>
in grey, gold &amp; white<lb/>
Prices start at $14.95<lb/>
P.D. all over Sweatshirt<lb/>
Regular $24.95<lb/>
?9<lb/>
jMrnU oncoupon per item - good thru 1 2-5-8tJlimit one coupon per item- good thru 12-5-87IR<lb/>
u<lb/>
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Tailgating Sweatshirts<lb/>
Great Gift for Mom &amp; Dad<lb/>
Regular $17.95<lb/>
ECU Sweater in<lb/>
purple &amp; gold<lb/>
Regular $29.95<lb/>
? Hmit one coupon per item- good thru 12-5-81limit one coupon per item - good thru 12-5-8J<lb/>
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Big selection of small<lb/>
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Any T-Shirt in our store<lb/>
Prices start at $4.95<lb/>
limit one coupon per item - good thru 12-5-87<lb/>
Pirates Chenille Sweatshirt<lb/>
Regular $24.95<lb/>
limit one coupon per item- good thru 12-5-8l1lmlf nnM m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057932_0017"/>
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