<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058116_0001"/>
J<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS6<lb/>
FEATURES 8<lb/>
SPORTSH<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Campus Ministries offer help.<lb/>
See page 8.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Coach Kobe becomes the winningest swim coach<lb/>
ever, Blue Edwards looks to future with<lb/>
the Pirates and the pros.<lb/>
See page 11.<lb/>
?hc lEaat (Earoltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 42<lb/>
Tuesday January 17,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Leo Jenkins passes away<lb/>
Former Chancellor Leo Jenkins, the man who envisioned<lb/>
this univeristy, died Saturday night (AP Photo)<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Former Chancellor Leo War-<lb/>
ren Jenkins, the leader in the de-<lb/>
velopment of ECU and the region<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina, died<lb/>
Saturday night at Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital of cancer.<lb/>
Jenkins came to ECU in 1947<lb/>
as Dean of East Carolina College<lb/>
and retired as chancellor in 1978<lb/>
after many major accomplish-<lb/>
ments, including the establish-<lb/>
ment of a fully accredited four-<lb/>
year medical school, the attaining<lb/>
of university status in 1967, and<lb/>
the consolidation into the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina system in<lb/>
1972.<lb/>
In his final commencement<lb/>
speech in 1978, to a class 16 times<lb/>
larger than the class he first deliv-<lb/>
ered a commencement speech to<lb/>
in 1947, Jenkins said, "The spirit in<lb/>
which this university has<lb/>
operated is based on a two-way<lb/>
street of communication with the<lb/>
people this has paid great divi-<lb/>
dends. We are knowm as a univer-<lb/>
sity which faces the future, and<lb/>
we can be assured that the tasks<lb/>
ahead will equal those that now<lb/>
are history<lb/>
Those tasks achieved at ECU<lb/>
during Jenkins' involvement are<lb/>
numerous. They include the es-<lb/>
tablishment of these professional<lb/>
schools: Art, Allied Health Sci-<lb/>
ences, Business, Education, Mu-<lb/>
sic, Nursing, Home Economics,<lb/>
Technology, and Social Work.<lb/>
Jenkins' fight for a medical<lb/>
school granting a four-year de-<lb/>
gree began more than ten years<lb/>
before it was granted in 1975.<lb/>
Jenkins faced Piedmont politi-<lb/>
cians and higher education offi-<lb/>
cials who thought it too costly and<lb/>
unnecessary for ECU to have a<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
In a 1986 interview reported<lb/>
by the Associated Press, Jenkins<lb/>
was asked about his greatest<lb/>
achievement. He said: "Some<lb/>
folks say it was the medical<lb/>
school, and others say it was ob-<lb/>
taining university status, but I feel<lb/>
it was instilling a sense of pride in<lb/>
the people here in the East. People<lb/>
walk a little taller because of ECU,<lb/>
and they take a greater pride in<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
During his tenure, enroll-<lb/>
ment grew from 1,605 to more<lb/>
than 12,000, faculty members in-<lb/>
creased to more than 1,200, and<lb/>
the number of academic pro-<lb/>
grams increased from 24 to 174.<lb/>
The operating budget rose from<lb/>
$1.9 million to more than $85 mil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Jenkins' many honors in the<lb/>
years he lived in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina include the dedication of<lb/>
ECU's Fine Arts Center, the North<lb/>
Carolina Public Service Award in<lb/>
1977, and the Pitt County Board of<lb/>
Commisioners dedication of June<lb/>
27,1978 as Leo Jenkins Day.<lb/>
Former chancellor John<lb/>
Howell said Monday that from<lb/>
the point of view of the students<lb/>
ECU is a "much better university,<lb/>
a broader university, and a better<lb/>
known university" than before<lb/>
Leo Jenkins came here.<lb/>
Present chancellor Richard<lb/>
Eakin said, "ECU has lost an es-<lb/>
teemed leader. A man whose<lb/>
contributions will live on for<lb/>
years to come. Equally important,<lb/>
eastern North Carolina has lost a<lb/>
good friend.<lb/>
"Under Dr. Jenkins' leader-<lb/>
ship, eastern North Carolina<lb/>
gained the benefits of a medical<lb/>
school and quality healthcare that<lb/>
it so desperately needed. We will<lb/>
miss him dearly<lb/>
The Associated Press and<lb/>
Stuart Savage of The Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor contributed to this article.<lb/>
ECU campus honors, remembers Dr. King<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Su Vnte:<lb/>
ECU's Minoritv Students<lb/>
Organization (M.S.O.) and Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha fraternity were joint<lb/>
sponsors of activities held in<lb/>
honor of the Rev. Dr. Martin Lu-<lb/>
ther King Jr. on Monday.<lb/>
The activities began with a<lb/>
march at 7:30 p.m. led bv M.S.O.<lb/>
president. Sheila Gardner. The<lb/>
group of about 50 students<lb/>
marched from Memorial Gvmna-<lb/>
sium to the mall in central cam<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
The Rev. Steven Pierce, the<lb/>
keynote speaker in the mall, said<lb/>
although the dreamer is dead, his<lb/>
dream still exists. "Regardless of<lb/>
whether vou skin is light or dark<lb/>
or somewhere in between, you are<lb/>
somebodv Pierce said.<lb/>
Pierce's advice to the stu-<lb/>
dents was to become active mem-<lb/>
bers in whatever facet of life they<lb/>
are currently involved. Pierce<lb/>
said that if a student is a part of an<lb/>
organization 100 percent of his<lb/>
efforts.<lb/>
"Though the dreamer is<lb/>
gone, all the things he fought for<lb/>
are still alive because we are still<lb/>
here Pierce said.<lb/>
Gardner introduced the<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity presi-<lb/>
dent, Anthony Rook. "Be proud<lb/>
of yourself, do the best you can,<lb/>
and keep the dream alive Rook<lb/>
said in his address to the partici-<lb/>
pants of the march.<lb/>
From the mall the marchers<lb/>
organization, he should give that were escorted by campus police<lb/>
through west campus and then to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Upon reaching Mendenhall, the<lb/>
crowd was 250 strong.<lb/>
The Fifth Annual Martin Lu-<lb/>
ther King Jr. Leadership Awards<lb/>
Ceremony and Reception, spon-<lb/>
sored by the Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity began at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater before an audi-<lb/>
ence of 350. The master of ceremo-<lb/>
nies was Rook.<lb/>
The purpose of the ceremony<lb/>
was to pay tribute to King and to<lb/>
recognize those minority indi-<lb/>
viduals who have excelled in aca-<lb/>
demics and in community serv-<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
Minoritv members of each<lb/>
J<lb/>
class were recognized as having<lb/>
the highest G.P.A. The students<lb/>
awarded were freshman Derrick<lb/>
1 lyman, sophomore Sylvia Isler,<lb/>
junior Robert Beeman and senior<lb/>
Chandra Floyd.<lb/>
Recipient of the Martin Lu-<lb/>
ther King Jr. Student Leadership<lb/>
Award was Sheila Gardner. D.D.<lb/>
Garrett was given the Commu-<lb/>
nitv Service Award.<lb/>
Goodbye to paper library cards<lb/>
The keynote speaker was the<lb/>
Rev. Dr. Clarence Gray. Other<lb/>
speakers were Dr. Dennis Chest-<lb/>
nut, Tyrone Cox, Dr. Andrew Best<lb/>
and Mayor Ed Carter.<lb/>
'The message that Martin<lb/>
Luther King was trying to make<lb/>
us realize is not so much about<lb/>
black pride or white ignorance<lb/>
but that we are all God's chil-<lb/>
dren Kappa Alpha Psi president<lb/>
James Clinkscalc said. "He was<lb/>
trying to make us all love each<lb/>
other and all live together?that's<lb/>
what the dream is all about<lb/>
New computers come to Joyner<lb/>
By TAMMY AYCOCK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For the ECU community,<lb/>
paper library cards are a thing of<lb/>
the past. Students and faculty can<lb/>
now use their ECU identification<lb/>
cards to check out materials from<lb/>
ECU libraries: Jovner, Music, and<lb/>
Health Sciences.<lb/>
Although the Health Library-<lb/>
has been circulating materials on<lb/>
this system for two years, Jovner<lb/>
and the Music Librarv did not<lb/>
begin using this system until<lb/>
Tuesdav, January 3.<lb/>
With the new system, called<lb/>
LS 2000, library patrons no longer<lb/>
have to manually fill out charge<lb/>
cards for each item they wish to<lb/>
check out. This task is eliminated<lb/>
because library materials (except<lb/>
Dewey Decimal boo1and ECU<lb/>
identification card have bar-<lb/>
codesfattached to them for identi-<lb/>
fication purposes.<lb/>
Also, patrons will be consult-<lb/>
ing the LS 2000 online catalog,<lb/>
instead of the card catalog, as their<lb/>
primary source of information.<lb/>
The major portion of our<lb/>
book collection (all Library of<lb/>
Congress) is online; Dewey books<lb/>
are not. We will still have some<lb/>
card catalog cabinets out there for<lb/>
a while said Marilyn Miller,<lb/>
Assistant Director of Academic<lb/>
Library Services.<lb/>
A new feature of the system<lb/>
online catalog is the item status<lb/>
report. This report provides infor-<lb/>
mation such as item location and<lb/>
availability. Previously, before LS<lb/>
2000 was fully implemented, all<lb/>
items (in Joyner and Music librar-<lb/>
ies) were listed as available, even<lb/>
if they were checked out. Now,<lb/>
unless materials were checked<lb/>
out prior to January 3, the online<lb/>
catalog will indicate whether or<lb/>
not they are available. If materials<lb/>
are not available, their due dates<lb/>
will be given.<lb/>
A patron's status report is<lb/>
also available. At the circulation<lb/>
desk, "patrons can give their<lb/>
names and find out if they have<lb/>
any overdue materials. Under the<lb/>
manual system (in which checked<lb/>
out books were filed by call num-<lb/>
bers), it was impossible to get this<lb/>
information until books were two<lb/>
weeks overdue Miller said.<lb/>
"People need to pay special<lb/>
attention to due dates. In the past,<lb/>
due dates were stamped on cards<lb/>
which were then placed in the<lb/>
back pockets of books. In the fu-<lb/>
ture, some books will not have<lb/>
back pockets. We are now using<lb/>
date due slips which can also<lb/>
serve as bookmarks Miller said.<lb/>
"For patrons who have over-<lb/>
due materials, the system has<lb/>
automatic blocks which prevent<lb/>
any further check outs. This ap-<lb/>
plies both to students and fac-<lb/>
ulty Miller said.<lb/>
Beginning in May, "We will<lb/>
be dealing more stringently with<lb/>
faculty overdues Miller said.<lb/>
Because faculty are immune to<lb/>
overdue fines, many faculty have<lb/>
items which are several years<lb/>
overdue. In the past, these faculty<lb/>
could still continue to check out<lb/>
materials. With the LS 2000 sys-<lb/>
tem, this will no longer be pos-<lb/>
sible.<lb/>
Remote access is now avail-<lb/>
able to the LS 2000 online public<lb/>
catalog for anyone who has a<lb/>
hardwire terminal into the cam-<lb/>
pus network called PGNET.<lb/>
"Instructions for accessing LS<lb/>
2000 are available at the reference<lb/>
desk in Joyner Library said<lb/>
Elizabeth Smith, LS 2000 coordi-<lb/>
nator at Joyner Library.<lb/>
Soon, anyone who has a per-<lb/>
sonal computer with a modem<lb/>
will be able to dial into the LS 2000<lb/>
online public catalog. "We have<lb/>
the mechanisms set up for it and<lb/>
it's in the process of being made<lb/>
available. Information will be<lb/>
forthcoming on that Smith said.<lb/>
Although individual and<lb/>
yearly figures are available, li-<lb/>
brary administrators were unable<lb/>
to give an estimate for the total<lb/>
cost of automating all three librar-<lb/>
ies.<lb/>
Dr. JoAnn Bell, Acting Direc-<lb/>
tor of Academic Library Services<lb/>
explained, "The university very<lb/>
seldom buys things as a whole<lb/>
package. The costs have been<lb/>
spread over a five year period. We<lb/>
paid for a license to use this soft-<lb/>
ware system; then we paid a fee to<lb/>
OCLC (a library system com-<lb/>
pany) to customize it (LS 2000);<lb/>
then we paid fees for Out tapes<lb/>
which arc the bibliograpic rec-<lb/>
ords. So, there are many different<lb/>
costs associated with it and we<lb/>
haven't even mentioned the<lb/>
equipment costs<lb/>
Last summer, the S 280 sys-<lb/>
tem was upgraded to a larger<lb/>
svstem. The cost for this was<lb/>
$449,000.<lb/>
"The reason we had to pur-<lb/>
chase the CPU (the larger system)<lb/>
is that the computer we initially<lb/>
started wHth (the S 280) was<lb/>
smaller. The disk drive did not<lb/>
have the capacity we needed and<lb/>
the computer itself did not have<lb/>
the capacity for the number of<lb/>
terminals we need to have abat-<lb/>
able for the faculty, staff, and stu-<lb/>
dents ? more memory and more<lb/>
terminal ports are the reasons for<lb/>
having to upgrade Bell said.<lb/>
All LS 2000 purchases were<lb/>
made from the libraries' regular<lb/>
operating budget. "We haven't<lb/>
received special funding to pur-<lb/>
chase equipment Bell said.<lb/>
Rip up those old paper library cards, a new computer system has come to Joyner. The online<lb/>
computer will also eventually replace the card catalogue. (File photo)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
rm : - vroi iNi <lb/>
l VI<lb/>
-<lb/>
Students gain by volunteering<lb/>
In toda) s world ol bal-<lb/>
anced budgets, balanced diets<lb/>
and balanced checkbooks stu-<lb/>
dents in Health UV are being<lb/>
challenged with the idea ot bal-<lb/>
ng their college lite Center-<lb/>
ing each day totally around your-<lb/>
self can lead to a bleak existence<lb/>
Yel each day thousands ot<lb/>
college students cet up when they<lb/>
reel like it go toclasses which the<lb/>
chose studv when they find time,<lb/>
anvi entertain themselves when<lb/>
 want to<lb/>
Many tmd the key to ha<lb/>
ing a full c a:xi successful<lb/>
- ?? si r Sic tar beyond concen-<lb/>
trating all their energy in the intel-<lb/>
nd s i Id mensions ot<lb/>
I ast semester st - in<lb/>
?  ere given an o;<lb/>
? ' -<lb/>
luntee<lb/>
organizations around Green<lb/>
' ' v realized the vast amount ol<lb/>
ch exist outside the<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
By<lb/>
Judy Ausherman<lb/>
walls ot ECU r r the first time<lb/>
student discovered the could<lb/>
acquire experience b helping<lb/>
those around them.<lb/>
Students spent a total ol 525<lb/>
hvuirs serving food at the<lb/>
Greenville soup kitchen estab-<lb/>
?  friendships with eld<lb/>
men and women at the Creative<lb/>
1 nine, Center and the Greenville<lb/>
Villa Nursing Home, assistii<lb/>
?usactivities at the shelter for<lb/>
? 'red omen, work-<lb/>
children at d entures in 1 lealth<lb/>
I helping 1 lealth professi<lb/>
run the i ? Bloodmobile.<lb/>
vvl,r students designed their<lb/>
 p. comminute sen<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Students who participated<lb/>
telt the experiences helped them<lb/>
supply what they were learning<lb/>
in their chosen majors and the<lb/>
opportunity made them feel<lb/>
useful. One student commented<lb/>
that she had always wanted to do<lb/>
something in the community, but<lb/>
never knew who to contact. Hie<lb/>
majority ot the students who vol-<lb/>
unteered in this program found it<lb/>
to be worthwhile and rewarding.<lb/>
In fact, a number of students want<lb/>
to continue volunteering their<lb/>
time this semester even though<lb/>
they will not receive credit.<lb/>
Many of the agencies which<lb/>
need volunteers are not tar from<lb/>
campus. It rides were needed.<lb/>
usually students could arrange<lb/>
transportation or ride the bus.<lb/>
Any student who is cur-<lb/>
rently enrolled in 1 lealth 1000 will<lb/>
have an opportunity to volunteer<lb/>
tor community service. It you are<lb/>
not enrolled in this course and<lb/>
would still like to volunteer in any<lb/>
of the agencies above, you can<lb/>
contact Dr. Kathleen Dunn at the<lb/>
Center for Health Services Re-<lb/>
search, ECU School of Medicine.<lb/>
at 551-2785.<lb/>
ohn Rhoadem once said<lb/>
people should, "Do more than<lb/>
exist - live! Do more than tou h<lb/>
feel. Do more than look -observe.<lb/>
Do more than hear - listen I o<lb/>
more than think - ponder<lb/>
Do more than talk say<lb/>
something Wouldn't it be great<lb/>
to put more than summer em-<lb/>
ployment opportunites on your<lb/>
resume when you graduate? rhe<lb/>
chance tor ECU students to make<lb/>
a positive impression on the<lb/>
people of Greenville is by offering<lb/>
their unique talents to those who<lb/>
will definitely appreciate it Mark<lb/>
Twain was right on target when<lb/>
he said "the best way to cheer<lb/>
yourscH up is to cheer someone<lb/>
else up<lb/>
Express yourself;<lb/>
Write a lettei<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
fames ! I ' ' r ? ? ? '<lb/>
Vdvertising Representatives<lb/>
xott Mak )<lb/>
tii  ird Alan Cool  :<lb/>
Ashl. v i I i ?<lb/>
DISP1 A ADV1 K I SING<lb/>
; l oca! (pen Rate<lb/>
Open Rate<lb/>
Hulk Rate ? ontracts)<lb/>
?9 col in hes<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? in h s<lb/>
; : i<lb/>
oi ifl and above<lb/>
( lassified 1 )isplay<lb/>
? . it?<lb/>
( oloi dvertising<lb/>
( )neolor and I<lb/>
I wi : and bl -<lb/>
uencyontra<lb/>
I<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
RACK ROOM.<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES wtll. ttoV<lb/>
Creenville Buver's Market WeiCOI M.C DaClk<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
mnm<lb/>
V<lb/>
TAKE AN EXTRA<lb/>
It you are graduating in May, ou should cot familiar w ith th<lb/>
career placement center, tl ile photo)<lb/>
World remembers king<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sundav 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Aigner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
I i iL i i<lb/>
Y NT1CiAF1 -Worsmp<lb/>
? -<lb/>
N ? - irch vvt re admon-<lb/>
?   ? the<lb/>
? iday<lb/>
rl<lb/>
peand ird<lb/>
11 realiz t is an un-<lb/>
icst said tl<lb/>
pastoi ? ? nezer<lb/>
irch, where King and<lb/>
5 tatr r pi ached.<lb/>
I ned the annual<lb/>
? ice that attracted<lb/>
: federal officials l<lb/>
? tional holiday honor<lb/>
. . thered<lb/>
im were memh rs I<lb/>
family, the Rev. Jesse<lb/>
L S Attornev General<lb/>
rnburgh, actress lane<lb/>
rgia Gov. !oe Frank<lb/>
Han - o ' ' sta s ser it rs<lb/>
and congressmen.<lb/>
r '?'? ishington, President-<lb/>
ree Hush eommemo-<lb/>
ra. ithel la ?? :tha glowing<lb/>
tribute to King in a speech to<lb/>
prominent blacks,<lb/>
lived a hero's life. He<lb/>
dr n la hero's dreams. 1 le left<lb/>
a hero's ii delible mark on the<lb/>
mind and imagination of a great<lb/>
nation ' I ?ld members of the<lb/>
Ina  iral Afro-American<lb/>
Comn ?? e<lb/>
ith Africa. U.S. Ambas-<lb/>
 ird Perkins unveiled a<lb/>
bust of King on a bushy<lb/>
I in Pretoria where the<lb/>
issvistosl md.<lb/>
rotonj nn , 71 demon<lb/>
were arrested on tres<lb/>
e charges at the Electric<lb/>
p  hipard as they protested<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
r submarines<lb/>
. s belief in i<lb/>
j said the d<lb/>
nsti ' ervai<lb/>
l his I<lb/>
?. .? day included the<lb/>
first blacks on<lb/>
.?????<lb/>
sion in m i I m a century. :<lb/>
is s heduled for<lb/>
Kingbej in the 19<lb/>
5 h . ? Mont<lb/>
that ? ted in <lb/>
. ? ' '<lb/>
? .<lb/>
taj<lb/>
scl cere rui<lb/>
fers vv re to l<lb/>
i<lb/>
ment ber<lb/>
v Christian Leadershi ? rtfei<lb/>
obsen u<lb/>
Ba ' ' hurch -  : I i koi<lb/>
remebrance in Kii<lb/>
A ?' , hurch Sin<lb/>
wid ? "<lb/>
his for i kind<lb/>
tioi M<lb/>
 ? :<lb/>
? ? , ?. : ib'e toi ? ? e3ci ? er store<lb/>
. ? ? ? illy r ted ' ? id f we d<lb/>
? ? . idvertised iten e ??? '?" . i<lb/>
. ii ? ? ? ? irable it(<lb/>
? . ? : ?? iving i rain<lb/>
heck wl ?? entitle ' ? ?? "<lb/>
? ?? ? idved ed pi e within 30<lb/>
e vendoi ??? Ipted<lb/>
tern pu ' ised<lb/>
? ?? ??? ' ?9 THE KROGER CO '? M<lb/>
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY JAN 15<lb/>
SATURDAY JAN 21. 19&amp;) N<lb/>
? ? . .E RESERVE THE RIGHT TO<lb/>
v ? ENTITIES MONE SOLD TO<lb/>
sador<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Join Kristen<lb/>
Halberg and<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports team<lb/>
Learn About a Great Career<lb/>
WHAT IS A STOCKBROKER?<lb/>
A recruting session will be held at East<lb/>
Carolina University to discuss the career<lb/>
potential of becoming a stockbroker.<lb/>
Excellent Income potential. Learn how to<lb/>
plan for this exceptional career and what a<lb/>
stockbroker actually does. It is important<lb/>
to reserve a space if you wish to attend.<lb/>
Stuart James -Where hard work can<lb/>
translate directly into earnings.<lb/>
the Superboivl with<lb/>
Low Prices.<lb/>
And More.<lb/>
113 SIZE<lb/>
California<lb/>
Navel Oranges Each<lb/>
40C OFF LALBEL<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
Laundry Detergent 42 oz<lb/>
10<lb/>
$1<lb/>
Doritos Brand<lb/>
Tortilla Chips<lb/>
? ' z<lb/>
59<lb/>
ORIGINAL OR<lb/>
Custard Style<lb/>
Yoplait Yogurt<lb/>
w X<lb/>
Time:<lb/>
Date:<lb/>
Place:<lb/>
Speaker:<lb/>
9:00am - 3:30pm<lb/>
January 18. 1989<lb/>
Bloxton House<lb/>
Steve Pizzuti<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989<lb/>
Students gain by volunteering<lb/>
In today's world of bal-<lb/>
anced budgets, balanced diets,<lb/>
and balanced checkbooks, stu-<lb/>
dents in Health 1000 are being<lb/>
challenged with the idea of bal-<lb/>
ancing their college life. Center-<lb/>
ing each day totally around your-<lb/>
self can lead to a bleak existence.<lb/>
Yet each day thousands of<lb/>
college students get up when they<lb/>
feel like it, go to classes which they<lb/>
chose, study when they find time,<lb/>
and entertain themselves when<lb/>
they want to.<lb/>
Many find the key to hav-<lb/>
ing a fulfilling and successful<lb/>
semester lie far beyond concen-<lb/>
trating all their energy in the intel-<lb/>
lectual and social dimensions of<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Last semester students in<lb/>
Health 1000 were given an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to volunteer in various<lb/>
organizations around Greenville.<lb/>
Many realized the vast amount of<lb/>
needs which exist outside the<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
By<lb/>
Tudy Ausherman<lb/>
walls of ECU. For the first time<lb/>
students discovered they could<lb/>
acquire experience by helping<lb/>
those around them.<lb/>
Students spent a total of 525<lb/>
hours serving food at the<lb/>
Greenville soup Kitchen, estab-<lb/>
lishing friendships with elderly<lb/>
men and women at the Creative<lb/>
Living Center and the Greenville<lb/>
Villa Nursing Home, assisting in<lb/>
various activities at the shelter for<lb/>
Battered Women, working with<lb/>
children at Adventures in Health,<lb/>
and helping Health professionals<lb/>
run the campus Bloodmobile.<lb/>
Several students designed their<lb/>
own community service projects<lb/>
which were accepted for course<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Students who participated<lb/>
felt the experiences helped them<lb/>
supply what they were learning<lb/>
in their chosen majors and the<lb/>
opportunity made them feel<lb/>
useful. One student commenteu<lb/>
that she had always wanted to do<lb/>
something in the community, but<lb/>
never knew who to contact. The<lb/>
? majority of the students who vol-<lb/>
unteered in this program found it<lb/>
to be worthwhile and rewarding.<lb/>
In fact, a number of students want,<lb/>
to continue volunteering their<lb/>
time this semester even though<lb/>
they will not receive credit.<lb/>
Many of the agencies which<lb/>
need volunteers are not far from<lb/>
campus. If rides were needed,<lb/>
usually students could arrange<lb/>
transportation or ride the bus.<lb/>
Any student who is cur-<lb/>
rently enrolled in Health 1000 will<lb/>
have an opportunity to volunteer<lb/>
for community service. If you are<lb/>
not enrolled in this course and<lb/>
would still like to volunteer in any<lb/>
of the agencies above, you can<lb/>
contact Dr. Kathleen Dunn at the<lb/>
Center for Health Services Re-<lb/>
search, ECU School of Medicine,<lb/>
at 551-2785.<lb/>
John Rhoadem once said<lb/>
people should, "Do more than<lb/>
exist - live! Da more than touch -<lb/>
feel. Do more than look-observe.<lb/>
Do more than hear - listen. Do<lb/>
more than think - ponder.<lb/>
Do more than talk - say<lb/>
something Wouldn't it be great<lb/>
to put more than summer em-<lb/>
ployment opportunites on your<lb/>
resume when you graduate? The<lb/>
chance for ECU students to make<lb/>
a positive impression on the<lb/>
people of Greenville is by offering<lb/>
their unique talents to those who<lb/>
will definitely appreciate it. Mark<lb/>
Twain was right on target when<lb/>
he said "the best way to cheer<lb/>
yourself up is to cheer someone<lb/>
else up<lb/>
Express yourself;<lb/>
Write a letter<lb/>
to the<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Scott Makey<lb/>
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J. Keith Pearce<lb/>
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World remembers King<lb/>
? ers filling the Rev. Martin Luther<lb/>
King Jrs church were admon-<lb/>
ished Monday to remember the<lb/>
slain civil rights leader's birthday<lb/>
by rededicating themselves to his<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"It is our hope and our desire<lb/>
 that we will realize it is an un-<lb/>
ending quest said the Rev. Jo-<lb/>
seph Roberts, pastor of Ebenezer<lb/>
Baptist Church, where King and<lb/>
his father preached.<lb/>
Roberts opened the annual<lb/>
ecumenical service that attracted<lb/>
local, state and federal officials to<lb/>
mark the national holiday honor-<lb/>
ing King. Among those gathered<lb/>
on the podium were members of<lb/>
King's family, the Rev. Jesse<lb/>
Jackson, U.S. Attorney General<lb/>
Dick Thomburgh, actress Jane<lb/>
Fonda, Georgia Gov. Joe Frank<lb/>
Harris and the state's senators<lb/>
and congressmen.<lb/>
In Washington, President-<lb/>
elect George Bush commemo-<lb/>
rated the holiday with a glowing<lb/>
tribute to King in a speech to<lb/>
about 300 prominent blacks.<lb/>
"He lived a hero's life. He<lb/>
dreamed a hero's dreams. He left<lb/>
a hero's indelible mark on the<lb/>
mind and imagination of a great<lb/>
nation Bush told membersof the<lb/>
Inaugural Afro-American<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
In South Africa, US. Ambas-<lb/>
sador Edward Perkins unveiled a<lb/>
bronze bust of King on a bushy<lb/>
plot of land in Pretoria where the<lb/>
new U.S. embassy is to stand.<lb/>
In Groton, Conn 72 demon-<lb/>
strators were arrested on tres-<lb/>
passing charges at the Electric<lb/>
the construction of Trident nu<lb/>
clear submarines. The demon-<lb/>
strators cited King's belief in non-<lb/>
violent protest and said the dem-<lb/>
onstration was held in observance<lb/>
of his birthday.<lb/>
Elsewhere, planned obser-<lb/>
vances of the holiday included the<lb/>
swearing-in of the first blacks on<lb/>
the Dallas County (Ala.) Commis-<lb/>
sion in more than a century. The<lb/>
ceremony was scheduled for<lb/>
Selma, where King began the 1965<lb/>
Selma-to-Montgomery march<lb/>
that resulted in passage of the<lb/>
Voting Rights Act.<lb/>
The Libertv Bell in Philadel-<lb/>
phia was to be symbolically<lb/>
tapped today and church and<lb/>
school bells were rung in Michi-<lb/>
gan. Golfers were to tee off in a<lb/>
suburban Los Angeles tourna-<lb/>
ment benefiting King's Southern<lb/>
Chri stian Leadershi p Conference.<lb/>
The observance at Ebenezer<lb/>
Baptist Church capped a week of<lb/>
remebrance in King's hometown.<lb/>
At the church Sunday, King's<lb/>
widow urged Bush to hold true to<lb/>
his call for "a kinder, gentler na-<lb/>
tion" and to impose strict sanc-<lb/>
tions against South Africa.<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be<lb/>
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except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do<lb/>
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COPYRIGHT 1989 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS<lb/>
AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 15,<lb/>
THROUGH SATURDAY, JAN. 21, 1989, IN<lb/>
GREENVILLE. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO<lb/>
LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO<lb/>
DEALERS.<lb/>
Join Kristen<lb/>
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The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports team<lb/>
Learn About a Great Career<lb/>
WHAT IS A STOCKBROKER?<lb/>
A recruting session will be held at East<lb/>
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Stuart James?Where hard work can<lb/>
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Time:<lb/>
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9:00am - 3:30pm<lb/>
January 18, 1989<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058116_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989 3<lb/>
Reagan's drug laws backfire<lb/>
CAROLINA MINI <lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
mrt.<lb/>
AURORA, N.C. (AP) ? Eight<lb/>
months ago, a few marijuana<lb/>
seeds and part of a marijuana<lb/>
cigarette almost put commercial<lb/>
fisherman Michael "Jimbo" Ire-<lb/>
land out of business.<lb/>
drugs. At the heart of its new anti-<lb/>
drug effort was a controversial<lb/>
policy called "zero tolerance a<lb/>
hardline attack on even small<lb/>
amounts of drugs found on ves-<lb/>
sels, vehicles and aircraft crossing<lb/>
Even now, the Aurora fishing U.S.borders. Under the program,<lb/>
captain cringes at the approach of<lb/>
a Coast Guard patrol boat. And<lb/>
the bitterness lingers. "You don't<lb/>
forget something like this Ire-<lb/>
land, 30, said recentlv.<lb/>
On May 3, Ireland's $500,000<lb/>
boat, the 90-foot Lorraine Carol,<lb/>
was seized at Ocracoke Inlet by<lb/>
shotgun-wielding Coast Guard-<lb/>
men who found the marijuana<lb/>
remnants in the vessel's crew-<lb/>
quarters. The vessel and its catch<lb/>
federal authorities seized 5,073<lb/>
cars, 229 trucks, 133 vessels and 9<lb/>
aircraft between March 21 and<lb/>
Dec. 6, said Richard R. Weart, a<lb/>
Customs special agent in Wash-<lb/>
ington, DC.<lb/>
The whole point of zero tol<lb/>
been seized, including 11 com-<lb/>
mercial fishing boats. The rest<lb/>
involved recreational boaters,<lb/>
said Michael Ragsdale, chief of<lb/>
the district's law enforcement<lb/>
branch. All the seized vessels<lb/>
have been returned.<lb/>
"We didn't know this was<lb/>
going on, and then boom re-<lb/>
in exchange, these fishermen<lb/>
will get "much more favorable<lb/>
treatment" from Customs agents<lb/>
investigating user amounts of<lb/>
drugs, Murphy said.<lb/>
"I'm not holding anybody's<lb/>
feet to the fire to sign an agree-<lb/>
ment Murphy said. "It certainly<lb/>
would help (fishermen). These<lb/>
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called Bradley Brauer, president agreements frame what the Cus-<lb/>
Moving No Placelb Store<lb/>
Your Belongings? $15.00 &amp;up<lb/>
of the East Coast Fisheries Asso-<lb/>
ciation and owner of East Coast<lb/>
Fishing and Scallop Co. in New-<lb/>
port News. "It's real tough when<lb/>
22,000 pounds of scallops and tor in Virginia, said recently. "Our<lb/>
fish ? were confiscated by the countrv right now is being devas-<lb/>
L.S. Customs Service. Ireland, tated bv drug abuse. What we're<lb/>
crance is that drug use of any you're sitting here faced with los-<lb/>
amount, as well as trafficking, is<lb/>
wrong and the government is not<lb/>
going to allow it Dennis<lb/>
Murphy, Customs district direc-<lb/>
mg a vessel because a crewman<lb/>
slips a joint on the boat. We were<lb/>
at that point, and that's scary<lb/>
"It was insane said Jerry<lb/>
Schill, executive director of the<lb/>
North Carolina Fisheries Associa-<lb/>
tion in Bayboro. "Some boats<lb/>
toms Service believes are prudent<lb/>
steps boat owners should take<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
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who said he was unaware of drag trying to do is to get a growing stayed in port because they were<lb/>
use among his 12-member crew<lb/>
and later voluntarily took drug<lb/>
tests to bolster his defense, faced<lb/>
felony charges of transporting il-<lb/>
legal drugs and misdemeanor<lb/>
charges for possession of drugs.<lb/>
Even worse, he said, Customs<lb/>
intolerance (of drug use) in soci-<lb/>
ety. This is a good place to start,<lb/>
because everybody knows that<lb/>
drug abuse takes place or. some of<lb/>
these boats.<lb/>
"It's the seizure of assets that<lb/>
gets the headlines, but it's a<lb/>
agents threatened to sell his boat change in attitude that we're<lb/>
at public auction. "When they trving to get as much as any-<lb/>
read me mv rights and told me the thing<lb/>
charges were punishable by a The confiscation of Ireland's<lb/>
5250,000 fine, 10 vears in prison or vessel, however, sent chills<lb/>
both, 1 can't imagine any night- through commercial fishermen in<lb/>
mare compared to that he said. North Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
The charges against him were Suddenly, thev realized that their<lb/>
later dropped, and his boat was<lb/>
returned. But scars remain. The<lb/>
ordeal cost Ireland 520,000 in le-<lb/>
gal fees and $80,000 in lost income<lb/>
during the two weeks Customs<lb/>
held his boat. And he had to pay a<lb/>
$230 fine. The crew members<lb/>
charged with possessing the<lb/>
marijuana were fined $7?.<lb/>
Unwittingly, Ireland had be-<lb/>
come one of the nation's first<lb/>
commercial fishermen to fall vic-<lb/>
tim to the Reagan<lb/>
administration's touch war on<lb/>
industry was under siege.<lb/>
In the Coast Guard's 5th Dis-<lb/>
trict, which is based in<lb/>
Portsmouth and stretches from<lb/>
New Jersey to North Carolina, a<lb/>
half-dozen fishing boats with<lb/>
afraid. They were so confused and<lb/>
fearful of having their boats<lb/>
siezed that thev staved in port<lb/>
until thev found out what was<lb/>
expected of them<lb/>
Ireland's ordeal became a ral-<lb/>
lying crv, and the zero tolerance<lb/>
program came under criticism.<lb/>
The debate even reached the halls<lb/>
of Congress. In November, a law<lb/>
to provide legal safeguards for<lb/>
innocent boat ownerswent into<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
As a result of the outcry, Schill<lb/>
said, fishermen have reason to<lb/>
hope that cases of "overzealous"<lb/>
enforcement of the policy are<lb/>
behind them.<lb/>
On Dec. 5, the two fisheries<lb/>
organizations, after months of<lb/>
negotiations with Customs offi-<lb/>
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"personal use" amounts of drugs cials, signed agreements with the<lb/>
on board were seized in three<lb/>
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forcing the policy in 5th District,<lb/>
which is based in Portsmouth and<lb/>
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Americans are impressed by Reagan Era<lb/>
NEW YORK (AD  Ameri-<lb/>
cans believe they are better off<lb/>
after President Reagan's eight<lb/>
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than two to one, but more are<lb/>
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vears than optimistic, a survey<lb/>
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A Time-CNN poll also found<lb/>
that Americans believe reducing<lb/>
the budget deficit should be Presi-<lb/>
dent-elect Bush's first priority,<lb/>
and thev believe Bush will do a<lb/>
better job handling the deficit and<lb/>
several other major issues than his<lb/>
popular predecessor. Poll results<lb/>
were released in this week's issue<lb/>
of Time magazine.<lb/>
percent predicted no change.<lb/>
The survey had a margin of<lb/>
error of plus or minus 3 percent-<lb/>
age points.<lb/>
The budget deficit was cited<lb/>
as the nation's most pressing<lb/>
problem, with 33 percent saying it<lb/>
should be Bush's priority.<lb/>
Fwentv-two percent said dealing<lb/>
with terrorism should be Bush's<lb/>
number one job.<lb/>
Twenty percent cited the<lb/>
fight against drugs and 11 percent<lb/>
mentioned the trade deficit.<lb/>
Fifty-seven percent said they<lb/>
thought Bush would handle the<lb/>
budget deficit better than Reagan,<lb/>
Ihe survey of 1,012 adults<lb/>
was conducted Jan. 9-10 by<lb/>
Yankelovich Clancy Shulman.<lb/>
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while 17 percent said he would do<lb/>
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in the survey said the country is said Bush would do a better job<lb/>
better off as" a result of Reagan's than Reagan in maintaining ethi-<lb/>
nresidencv, compared with 27 cal standards in government,<lb/>
percent who said it is worse off. while just 13 percent said he<lb/>
Respondents were more pes- would fare worse,<lb/>
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ATTENTION BSN<lb/>
CLASS OF 1989.<lb/>
The Air Force has a special pro-<lb/>
gram for 1989 BSNs It selected,<lb/>
you can enter octive duty soon<lb/>
after graduation?without waiting<lb/>
for the results of your State Boards<lb/>
lb qualify, you must have an overall<lb/>
2.75 GRA After commissioning,<lb/>
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ences you'll have serving your<lb/>
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919-850-9549<lb/>
STATION-TO-STATION COLLECT<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 17 - Friday, Jan. 20<lb/>
From 9 am - 4 pm<lb/>
at<lb/>
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$20 deposit required<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Qz iEast (Earnlmtan<lb/>
Pete Fernald, o??jM?g<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, MPng uaor<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, D,rtcto,afUvtrUs,ni<lb/>
Tim Hampton, nntm<lb/>
Kristen Hal berg, sports t-ior<lb/>
Ci up Carter, mm i??<lb/>
Dean Waters, om<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, u<lb/>
Brad Bannister, g e<lb/>
Jeff Parker, s ??????<lb/>
TOM FURR, Cirnkh.3H Alcmjrr<lb/>
SUSAN HOWELL, Production Mn?frr<lb/>
STEPIIAN1F EMORY,U t? s.<lb/>
MAC LLARK, Busintss Mmtger<lb/>
January 17,1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Athletes<lb/>
Pay them over or under the table?<lb/>
The world of college athletics has<lb/>
been plagued recently by the ongo-<lb/>
ings of corruption and scandals in<lb/>
the universities around the nation.<lb/>
Many big-named colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities have been charged with<lb/>
everything and anything from forg-<lb/>
ing grades to a recruiting pavoff to<lb/>
the ultimate abuse, the abuse of the<lb/>
athletic scholarship.<lb/>
And with all oi this chaos the<lb/>
question has risen. In order to avoid<lb/>
further corruption with the athletic<lb/>
departments over the countless<lb/>
scandals of under-the-table money<lb/>
or big payoffs to college athletes,<lb/>
should the college athlete get paid<lb/>
for his services on the field or court?<lb/>
On the surface, this idea might<lb/>
seem to be the logical solution to a<lb/>
long NCAA headache. First off, the<lb/>
worries of the NCAA would be over.<lb/>
No longer would they have to inves-<lb/>
tigate the corruption behind the<lb/>
university's athletic departments<lb/>
regarding the constant flow of<lb/>
money and merchandise to their<lb/>
athletes. Nor would the universities<lb/>
have to monitor their alumni who<lb/>
seem just as eager to make the big<lb/>
payoff to their star athlete as the<lb/>
athletic department itself does.<lb/>
Why nol give the athlete a little<lb/>
spending money to buy that new<lb/>
Corvette or that plush condomin-<lb/>
ium in exchange for bringing the<lb/>
school revune and recognition?<lb/>
Why not let the athlete share in<lb/>
the money the schools are getting<lb/>
back from their successful athletic<lb/>
programs?<lb/>
Sure, up close this might seem<lb/>
like the simple solution to all of the<lb/>
problems in the college athletic<lb/>
world. However, this not the case.<lb/>
To pay an athlete would mean to<lb/>
take his amateur status away from<lb/>
him. College athletes are not profes-<lb/>
sionals. They are students who are<lb/>
participating in an extracurricular<lb/>
activity in a sport they happen to be<lb/>
good at. In fact, the first objective of<lb/>
the NCAA according to Time maga-<lb/>
zine is to "retain a clear line of de-<lb/>
marcation between college athletics<lb/>
and professional sports<lb/>
Paying college athletes would<lb/>
not only take away their amateur<lb/>
status, but would also deter their<lb/>
incentive to be a student first and<lb/>
then an athlete. With big money and<lb/>
fancy merchandise handed over to<lb/>
19-21 year olds, the young athlete<lb/>
would no doubt get caught up in the<lb/>
glory and glamour of his athletic<lb/>
status. School would be secandory,<lb/>
something he would have to partici-<lb/>
pate in only because in order to<lb/>
particpate in a collegiate sport, one<lb/>
must be enrolled in a college or uni-<lb/>
versity. To a young athlete, the<lb/>
monetary sums would seem over-<lb/>
whelming.<lb/>
Finally, many athletes are al-<lb/>
ready on full scholarships. At the<lb/>
East Carolina University football<lb/>
program, 95 full scholarships are<lb/>
availab10 to student athletes. These<lb/>
scholarships not only pay for tuition<lb/>
and fees, but also room and board.<lb/>
To many students who are put-<lb/>
ting their own way through college,<lb/>
free schooling as well as living ex-<lb/>
penses and food all paid for by the<lb/>
university, this might seem like a<lb/>
gift or a payment in itself.<lb/>
If thought of in this fashion, stu-<lb/>
dent athletes are already getting<lb/>
paid - in the form of edcuation.<lb/>
r<lb/>
(THCOGH WORK AT fe<lb/>
PtwrnrsBAB<lb/>
RAWATfOM<lb/>
pror,bms??<lb/>
mrme-3fiu<lb/>
VO YOU THINK COLLEGE AtHLZTES SHOULV QtT PAJ<lb/>
VJCCLV You LIKE" To SAY NO TO THIS FAC-E ?<lb/>
Processional not a supremacist activity<lb/>
Dear editor:<lb/>
On Thursday, January 19 begin-<lb/>
ning at 7:30 pm, the brothers of Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi Fraternity will be holding<lb/>
a ritual ceremony on campus. This<lb/>
ceremony, called the Black Lantern<lb/>
Processional, is enacted in memory<lb/>
of deceased brothers who have<lb/>
passed into the Omega chapter, sig-<lb/>
nifying that, although they are no<lb/>
longer present, their spirit remains<lb/>
forever in the minds of the brothers.<lb/>
This solemn march across the<lb/>
ECU campus will orginate from the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
Processional calls for the brothers of<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi to be dressed in<lb/>
black robes with the leader of the<lb/>
march wearing a white robe. The<lb/>
members will also be carrying lan-<lb/>
terns. It is one of the oldest traditions<lb/>
of our fraternity dating back to the<lb/>
mid-1800's and born at Yale Univer-<lb/>
sitv. The brotherhood wishes to<lb/>
stress to the student bodv that this<lb/>
fraternity ritual has no racial over<lb/>
tones. It should not be interpreted as<lb/>
any type of supremacist act. Those<lb/>
observing are asked to respect the so-<lb/>
lemnity of this ceremonv.<lb/>
The Brothers ol<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop themby our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance to joyner library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all<lb/>
letters must include the name, major,<lb/>
classification, address,phone number<lb/>
and the signature of the author(s).<lb/>
Letters are limited to 300 words<lb/>
or less, double -spaced, typed or<lb/>
neatly printed. All letters are sub-<lb/>
ject to editing for brevity, obscenity<lb/>
and libel, and no personal attacks will<lb/>
be permitted. Students, faculty and<lb/>
staff writing letters for this page are<lb/>
reminded that they are limited to one<lb/>
every two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for<lb/>
Tuesday papers and 5 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
for Thursday editions.<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus<lb/>
Forum" section of the paper, The<lb/>
East Carolinian features The<lb/>
Campus Spectrum This is an<lb/>
opinion column bv guest writers<lb/>
from the student body and fac-<lb/>
ulty. The columns printed in "The<lb/>
Campus Spectrum will contain<lb/>
current topics of concern to the<lb/>
campus, community or nation.<lb/>
Thecolumnsare restricted onlv<lb/>
with regard to rules, ot gramrrwr<lb/>
and decency.Person submitting<lb/>
columns must be willing to accept<lb/>
bylinecredit for their efforts as no<lb/>
entries from ghost writers will be<lb/>
published.<lb/>
Cold War is warm, but the rivalry is not over<lb/>
By LEON WIESELTIER<lb/>
New Repubhc<lb/>
The enlightened despoism of Mikhail Gor-<lb/>
bachev is deemed to have ended a period in history.<lb/>
There isan air of parturition in the capital; theold has<lb/>
gone, the new has almost come. American policy-<lb/>
makers seem suddenly unburdened of the most<lb/>
oppressive anxiety that they ever had to feel.<lb/>
The eschatological speculations that Gorbachev<lb/>
has engendered in these dour and disabused men<lb/>
and women is a measure of the pressure that the<lb/>
rivalry between the United States and the Soviet<lb/>
Union since the splitting of the atom has, quite prop-<lb/>
erly, put on their minds. Now they dare to wonder if<lb/>
they will always have to live by their nerves.<lb/>
Is the Cold War over? The question is thor-<lb/>
oughly confused. If the standard is philosophical,<lb/>
the Cold War ended a long time ago. If the standard<lb/>
is strategic, the Cold War will not end for a long time.<lb/>
If you believe that the Cold War is a contest between<lb/>
ideas, between democracy and totalitarianism,<lb/>
which will end with the collapse of one of the ideas,<lb/>
then you must agree that it ended decades ago, when<lb/>
communism as a system of belief collapsed in the<lb/>
Soviet-controlled world.<lb/>
If you believe that the Cold War is a contest<lb/>
between great powers, then you must agree that it<lb/>
will survive the collapse of communism, because the<lb/>
collapse of communism is not the same thing as the<lb/>
collapse of the Soviet Union.<lb/>
Indeed, Mikhail Gorbachev's thesis appears to<lb/>
be: Either communism collapses or the Soviet Union<lb/>
collapses. If glasnost is proceeding more swiftly than<lb/>
perestroika, that is not only because political reform<lb/>
is more immediate in its consequences than eco-<lb/>
nomic reform, but also because Gorbachev has<lb/>
grasped that the crisis of communism is the solution<lb/>
to the crisis of the Soviet Union.<lb/>
This thrilling man has understood the extent to<lb/>
which his country's turgid, immobile institutions of<lb/>
politics and economics were inscribed with certain<lb/>
theories about the individual and society, about<lb/>
power and the blandishments of control. It did not<lb/>
take long for the new Soviet liberalizers to see that<lb/>
they are fighting a force more profound and more<lb/>
prestigious than Brezhnevism and its corruptions.<lb/>
Gorbachev is presiding over the emergence of<lb/>
civil society, over Hegel's revenge. He is substitut-<lb/>
ing $c authoritarianism of a government for the<lb/>
authoritarianism of a party, for the sake of efficiency.<lb/>
All of this, in the name of communism, and for a<lb/>
restoration of Soviet strength in the future.<lb/>
Still, the citizens of this communist state are<lb/>
being urged to act like citizens, not like communists.<lb/>
Gorbachev's communism has a certain Unitarian<lb/>
quality. It is theologically too paltry to support a<lb/>
religious war.<lb/>
The Cold War, of course, was about philosophy<lb/>
and strategy. Philosophically, we won. The god that<lb/>
failed failed. Strategically, the situation is rather<lb/>
more complicated.<lb/>
There is a sense in which, for the Soviets, phi-<lb/>
losophy still casts a shadow over strategy. The col-<lb/>
lapse of communism is partly responsible for, say,<lb/>
the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, or the<lb/>
unilateral Soviet reduction in its European forces,<lb/>
because it was the theory and practice of commu-<lb/>
nism that threw the Soviet economy into the condi-<lb/>
tion that made those commitments too costly.<lb/>
The Soviet militarv finds itself threatened by the<lb/>
social and economic consequences of precisely the<lb/>
ideology it is dedicated to defend. A nice joke, for<lb/>
Americans. Yet it is essential that we remember that<lb/>
the rivalry is not over. The Soviet Union retains the<lb/>
power to destroy the United States; and American<lb/>
power retains its association with freedom. Inside<lb/>
the Soviet Union, Gorbachev represents a revolu-<lb/>
tion. Outside the Soviet Union, he represents a time<lb/>
out.<lb/>
For American foreign policy, this is the most<lb/>
plastic hour since the end of the Second World War.<lb/>
I believe that there still is sense in thinking about<lb/>
American advantage. The Soviet Union will turn a<lb/>
little away from the world to get itself in shape. It is<lb/>
more vexed by its weakness at home than by its<lb/>
weakness abroad. It will allow itself to be pushed a<lb/>
bit here and probed a bit there.<lb/>
;<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
Those bits add up. The truth about Gorbachev -<lb/>
foreign policy initiatives is that they are designed to<lb/>
make order out of a temporary retreat. Gorbachev is<lb/>
the least paranoid man who ever ruki Russia. Ho<lb/>
has his eye on the next century.<lb/>
So should we: The economic abjection of the<lb/>
Soviet Union leaves the United States with an oppor<lb/>
tunity to improve its position around the world for<lb/>
the next 50 years, to prepare itself against the da)<lb/>
which will certainly come, when the Soviet Union<lb/>
"catches up I am afraid that American diplomacy<lb/>
has become too passive, too reactive, too unreflec<lb/>
tive about the notion that its task is to "help Gor-<lb/>
bachev<lb/>
I have very little evidence of the hi storical imagi -<lb/>
nation of George Bush or James Baker. Do thev see<lb/>
in Europe, in the Middle East, in Angola, in Central<lb/>
America, that this is a time for American activism, a<lb/>
time for Washington to rain proposals on Moscow<lb/>
Soviet pressure on the PLO, Soviet pressure on<lb/>
the Sandinistas, Soviet pressure on the Cubans, is<lb/>
possible. A larger Soviet reduction in conventional<lb/>
forces in Europe is possible. A Soviet reduction in<lb/>
strategic nuclear weapons is possible. A treatv ban-<lb/>
ning weapons from space is possible. But not unless<lb/>
the Americans rouse themselves from the fantasy<lb/>
and the torpor of the last Reagan years. Not unless<lb/>
we see the continuities along with the discontinui-<lb/>
ties. Faiths die; interests live. The world is never too<lb/>
good for realism.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0006"/><lb/>
Congress to drill Bush's<lb/>
cabinet on no-taxes pledge<lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989 5<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- e Senate to work wel1 with<lb/>
dent-elect Bush's choice of a em,<lb/>
moderate, pragmatic cabinet he? are generally expen-<lb/>
means the confirmation process ence?' hopefully pragmatic<lb/>
that begins this week will lack the P5 ?d WC(??V lhe oeace in Central America ?nd<lb/>
idpnlW:?i w? ? ? R. n8ld ideology of the first Reagan P0? ?n central America ana in<lb/>
ideological overtone of the Re- Mitcg? Mid ?, am particular how to treat<lb/>
From Baker, members ot the<lb/>
Senate Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee will likely want to<lb/>
know what the new administra-<lb/>
tion will do about helping to find<lb/>
trying<lb/>
very hard to establish from our<lb/>
side an atmosphere of coopera-<lb/>
tion and bipartisanship<lb/>
Mitchell said he will seek<lb/>
speedy confirmation for the ap-<lb/>
pointees following committee<lb/>
scrutiny, with the first batch<lb/>
going to the Senate floor for votes<lb/>
on Jan. 25.<lb/>
The Constitution does not<lb/>
establish a formal cabinet for the<lb/>
president, but it has developed<lb/>
oing to be needed said Charles throuSh custom datin&amp; back to<lb/>
Cook, a Washington political George Washington. Also by cus-<lb/>
analyst. "The Democrats are torn, the Senate largely defers to<lb/>
going to let the nominees build the president in the choice of his<lb/>
their case for them official family. Rejections of ap-<lb/>
Initial reactions on Capitol pointees have generally come not<lb/>
Hill to Bush's cabinet selections over policy differences, but amid<lb/>
have been generally positive. The political tiffs between the White<lb/>
majority of those named are veter- House and Congress<lb/>
agan years and instead offer de-<lb/>
bate on substantive issues.<lb/>
The Democrats who control<lb/>
Congress are likely to use the ses-<lb/>
sions to force Bush's nominees to<lb/>
say how they will carry out their<lb/>
boss' campaign promises to tend<lb/>
to neglected social programs in a<lb/>
time of extreme fiscal austerity,<lb/>
and to test the strength of Bush's<lb/>
no-new-taxes pledge.<lb/>
'They will want to build a<lb/>
record for why new revenues are<lb/>
ans of federal government serv<lb/>
ice. Three are holdovers from the<lb/>
Reagan administration, five oth-<lb/>
ers have been previously con-<lb/>
firmed by the Senate for other<lb/>
jobs, and four are former mem-<lb/>
bers of Congress.<lb/>
Senate Majority Leader<lb/>
George Mitchell, D-Maine, has<lb/>
said he is impressed with the<lb/>
appointees as a group and expects<lb/>
Beginning this week with<lb/>
secretary of state-designate James<lb/>
A. Baker III, Elizabeth Dole,<lb/>
Bush's choice to head the Labor<lb/>
Department, and Richard G. Dar-<lb/>
man, the new budget director,<lb/>
Congress will quiz the appointees<lb/>
in an effort to discern where Bush<lb/>
will depart from the policies of<lb/>
Reagan, whose relations with the J" <lb/>
Hill often were rockv<lb/>
Nicaragua's moribund Contra<lb/>
rebels; what will be done to ease<lb/>
Third World debt; how to pursue<lb/>
further arms reductions with the<lb/>
Soviet Union; and how to breathe<lb/>
life into Middle East peace efforts.<lb/>
Dole will have jurisdiction<lb/>
over issues that Bush make keys<lb/>
to his "kinder, gentler nation"<lb/>
pledge, including parentsal leave<lb/>
and adjustments in the minimum<lb/>
wage.<lb/>
Darman's appearance before<lb/>
the Governmental Affairs<lb/>
Committee will be Congress' first<lb/>
shot at finding out what might be<lb/>
in the budget plan Bush is ex-<lb/>
pected to submit in February.<lb/>
In the next few weeks, atten-<lb/>
tion will focus on hearings for<lb/>
former Sen. John Tower, Bush's<lb/>
choice for secretary of defense;<lb/>
Robert Mosbacher, to be com-<lb/>
merce secretary; former Rep. Jack<lb/>
Kemp, to head Housing and Ur-<lb/>
ban development ; Samuel Skin-<lb/>
ner, '1 ransportation; Louis W. Sul-<lb/>
livan, Health and Human Serv-<lb/>
ices; Clayton Yeutter, Agricul-<lb/>
ture; former Rep. Edward J. Der-<lb/>
winski, Veterans Affairs; former<lb/>
Jr Interior.<lb/>
Shultz asks to tear down Berlin<lb/>
Wall, praises Soviet progress<lb/>
VIENNA, Austria (AP)<lb/>
Praising the Soviet Union for its<lb/>
progress on human rights, Secre-<lb/>
tary of State George P. Shultz ar-<lb/>
rived today for the end of a 35-<lb/>
nation review of Moscow'srecord<lb/>
and called for the dismantling of<lb/>
its radio jamming transmitters.<lb/>
Shultz also renewed his de-<lb/>
mand that the Soviets tear down<lb/>
the Berlin Wall. He called it "one<lb/>
of the acid tests" of K ilin inten-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The secretary and other for-<lb/>
eign ministers are in Vienna to<lb/>
sign !6ff yt the fnost ambitious<lb/>
tional arms control that are due to "Jamming has stopped<lb/>
open in Vienna in March. Shultz said, "and we don't want<lb/>
Shultz flew to Vienna from to see it reinstiruted<lb/>
Washington on his final diplo- The Helsinki accords, signed<lb/>
matic mission after 6 and half by the United States, the Soviet<lb/>
years as State Department chief. Union, Canada and 32 European<lb/>
He is to speak Tuesday to foreign nations, tacitly accepted the post-<lb/>
ministers reviewing the Vienna World War II borders of Eastern<lb/>
Students, your assignment today is<lb/>
to learn how to use the Smith Corona<lb/>
XL 2500 typewriter.<lb/>
Ooops. don't get too settled in your<lb/>
seats. The XL 2500 isn't a very difficult<lb/>
study.<lb/>
In fact, unlike most electronic type-<lb/>
writers, it's a downright snap to pick up.<lb/>
The Spell-Right" 50.000 word elec-<lb/>
tronic dictionary adds new meaning to<lb/>
the word "simple<lb/>
Word Phraser erases entire words at<lb/>
a single touch.<lb/>
WordFind' finds your mistakes before<lb/>
anyone else can.<lb/>
The XL 2500 even makes correcting<lb/>
mistakes as easy as making them.<lb/>
With the Smith Corona Correcting<lb/>
Cassette, you simply pop<lb/>
in your correction tape.<lb/>
There are no spools<lb/>
to unwind no com-<lb/>
plicated threading<lb/>
 no tangles.<lb/>
Of course, we've also added lots<lb/>
of other fine features to the XL 25(H).<lb/>
There's full line correction. Auto<lb/>
Half-Space, Auto Center, even our Right<lb/>
Ribbon System which automatically<lb/>
prevents vou from using the wrong<lb/>
combination of ribbon and correcting<lb/>
cassette.<lb/>
Oh. one more feature we forgot to<lb/>
mention ? the price. You'll be happy to<lb/>
hear that the XL 2500 is surprisingly<lb/>
affordable.<lb/>
So you see. the XL 2500<lb/>
won't just make your writing<lb/>
easier.<lb/>
It'll also help you with<lb/>
your economics.<lb/>
fill SMITH<lb/>
TOMORROWS TECHNOLOGY<lb/>
AT YOUR TOUCH '<lb/>
<lb/>
?'?<lb/>
accord.<lb/>
Listing human rights im-<lb/>
provements as his proudest<lb/>
achievement, Shultz credited the<lb/>
Soviets and their East European<lb/>
allies with adopting "much more<lb/>
open" sQCjptjes ihari Ihey had in<lb/>
1975, wrien tit JgTtejr?e?t to fos-<lb/>
Europe. In exchange for this con-<lb/>
cession, the Soviets pledged to<lb/>
permit more contacts with the<lb/>
West and freer movement of<lb/>
people and ideas.<lb/>
F r wre inJotmathT. 'n ihi pr.tdu rr  Smth Corona CurporaUon 65 Locus) tonut NewCanaan i. T "rM<lb/>
Smith Corona IC anada ld WOTapsc on Road. Scartof ugh. I tauri Canada MB 1Y4<lb/>
East-West human rights and se- ter East-West understanding was<lb/>
curity accord of the 1980s, a re-<lb/>
view of the 1975 Helsinki agree-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
The 50-page document took<lb/>
more than two years to negotiate<lb/>
and was formally adopted Sun-<lb/>
day. It contains landmark<lb/>
signed<lb/>
However, he called on the<lb/>
Soviets to dismarde the giant<lb/>
transmitters that had jammed<lb/>
Western radio broadcasts for<lb/>
years. Late last year, the Soviets ?<lb/>
and their East European allies Y<lb/>
STEP UP TO THE BEST<lb/>
commitments on human rights stopped interfering with Radio<lb/>
and sets the seal on new NATO- Liberty and Radio Free Europe<lb/>
Warsaw Pact talks on corv broadcasts.<lb/>
Drop in heart disease rate,<lb/>
still number one killer<lb/>
MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) -<lb/>
Heart disease remains the<lb/>
nation's biggest killer, takinga life<lb/>
every 32 seconds, but researchers<lb/>
have made "unbelievable" prog-<lb/>
ress in taming the disease, accord-<lb/>
ing to the American Heart Asso-<lb/>
ciation.<lb/>
Figures released Sunday<lb/>
show that deaths from heart and<lb/>
blood vessel disease have<lb/>
dropped 24 percent during the<lb/>
past decade. Researchers attrib-<lb/>
ute the improvement to healthier<lb/>
living habits and better treatment.<lb/>
"The public ought to appreci-<lb/>
ate the progress that has been<lb/>
made in heart disease over the<lb/>
past 20 yearssaid Dr. Myron L.<lb/>
Weisfeldt, the association's presi-<lb/>
dent-elect.<lb/>
"It's almost unbelievable.<lb/>
There is almost no form of heart<lb/>
disease that we can't approach<lb/>
without meaningful treatment<lb/>
However, Weisfeldt, a heart<lb/>
specialist at Johns Hopkins Uni-<lb/>
versity, cautioned that much<lb/>
work remains in improving care<lb/>
and encouraging people to take<lb/>
better care of themselves.<lb/>
"I believe we can prevent at<lb/>
least 50 percent of the jschemic<lb/>
heart disease in the United States<lb/>
by the year 2000 if we stop smok-<lb/>
ing, get cholesterol treated if ifs<lb/>
above 220 and identify and treat<lb/>
hypertension he said.<lb/>
Ischemic heart disease is the<lb/>
clogging of blood vessels that feed<lb/>
the heart. It underlies most heart<lb/>
attacks, the single most lethal<lb/>
heart ailment.<lb/>
The association said that in<lb/>
1986, the most recent year for<lb/>
which there are statistics, an esti-<lb/>
mated 978,500 Americans died<lb/>
from heart attacks, strokes and<lb/>
other diseases of the heart and<lb/>
blood vessels. Cancer, the No. 2<lb/>
killer, took 466,000 lives.<lb/>
The association's latest fig-<lb/>
ures show that more than one in<lb/>
four Americans suffers some<lb/>
form of cardiovascular disease,<lb/>
and almost half eventually die<lb/>
from it.<lb/>
However, the figures also<lb/>
bear out the brightening outlook:<lb/>
Between 1976 and 1986, the death<lb/>
rate from all forms of cardiovas-<lb/>
cular disease fell 24 percent, in-<lb/>
cluding 28 percent for heart at-<lb/>
tacks and 40 percent for strokes.<lb/>
'The good news is that we<lb/>
continue to see an improvement<lb/>
in the death rate from the biggest<lb/>
killer of our population said Dr.<lb/>
Bemadine Heal v of the Cleveland<lb/>
Clinic Foundation, the<lb/>
association's current president.<lb/>
'Those trends are dramatic<lb/>
and don't seem to be reversing<lb/>
she said. "The bad news is that<lb/>
heart disease is still killing almost<lb/>
1 million Americans a year, and<lb/>
we've got a long way to go<lb/>
About 60 percent of the heart-<lb/>
attack deaths occur before the<lb/>
victim reaches the hospital. Stud-<lb/>
ies show that about half of all<lb/>
heart attack victims wait more<lb/>
than two hours before getting to<lb/>
an emergency room.<lb/>
Weisfeldt said a major goal is<lb/>
getting people to go to the hospi-<lb/>
tal within three or four hours of<lb/>
the first sign of heart attacks.<lb/>
During this period, there is still<lb/>
time to give them drugs to dis-<lb/>
solve the blood clots that are caus-<lb/>
ing, their heart attacks. This treat-<lb/>
ment can save lives and reduce<lb/>
the disability of heart attacks.<lb/>
Other major goals, he said,<lb/>
including finding ways to im-<lb/>
prove the effectiveness of<lb/>
angioplasty, which uses balloons<lb/>
to reopen clogged heart arteries,<lb/>
and finding surgical and medical<lb/>
techniques to identify and protect<lb/>
people at risk of cardiac arrest.<lb/>
The association estimates that<lb/>
cardiovascular disease will cost<lb/>
$88.2 billion this year in medical<lb/>
expenses and lost wages. In 1986,<lb/>
it estimated the cost at $78.6 bil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
SZ2<lb/>
53Z<lb/>
.77-?<lb/>
sz<lb/>
512<lb/>
5ZZ<lb/>
JXtiE-<lb/>
13<lb/>
LA<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
SIGMA TAU GAMMA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1989<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
Immediately. Non-smoker. To share 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Will have own bed-<lb/>
room. 175.00 per month plus 1 3 utili-<lb/>
ties 5 minutes from school Call<lb/>
Pamela at 758-7142.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Access to kitchen<lb/>
and bath. Between 5th &amp; 4th on Jarvis.<lb/>
Utilities included. $175.00 Call before<lb/>
11:00. 830-1808 or work 758-1112.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Female<lb/>
non-smoker to share 2 Bdrm duplex.<lb/>
Will have own room. $110 13 utili-<lb/>
ties. 34 mile from campus. Call 758-<lb/>
2096.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Male or<lb/>
Female. Private room, $90 a month.<lb/>
Close to campus, 15 on the utilities.<lb/>
Call 758-0312. Two rooms available<lb/>
HOUSEMATE: Quite MF, wanted by<lb/>
faculty member 3 bedroom house,<lb/>
newly remodeled, walking distance to<lb/>
campus. Rent and lease negotiable<lb/>
Call 752-3677.<lb/>
2 BDRM. APT: For rent at Eastbrook.<lb/>
Take over lease until August. $310 per<lb/>
month call 752-3860.<lb/>
NEED ONE NON-SMOKING FE-<lb/>
MALE: To share trailer in nice trailer<lb/>
park. $150.00month 12 utilities.<lb/>
Call 756-9758 or 830-1497.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Black sofa with bed,<lb/>
average condition ? 30.00. Two twin<lb/>
beds 50.00 each. 752-6554.<lb/>
I HAVE SEVERAL DEPENDABLE<lb/>
CARS FOR SALE: From 300.00 to<lb/>
1,000. Require 12 down and am will-<lb/>
ing to finance the rest. 752-6554.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D.J. for the best music available<lb/>
for parties: Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach.<lb/>
Call 355-2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHO-<lb/>
TOCOPYING SERVICES: We offer<lb/>
typing and photocopving services We<lb/>
also sell software and computer disk-<lb/>
ettes. 24 hours in and out. Guaranteed<lb/>
typing on paper up to 20 hand written<lb/>
pages. We repair computers and print-<lb/>
ers also. Lowest hourly rate in town.<lb/>
SDF Professional Computer Services,<lb/>
106 East 5th Street (beside Cubbies)<lb/>
Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ATTENTION ? HIRING! Govern<lb/>
ment jobs ? your area. Many em medi-<lb/>
ate openings without waiting list or<lb/>
test. $17,840 ? $69,485. Call 1-602-838-<lb/>
8885. EXT B5285.<lb/>
WILLING TO TRADE: Horseback<lb/>
riding in exchange for occasional stable<lb/>
help, grooming, etc. English and west-<lb/>
ern tack available. Experienced riders<lb/>
only. Call 756-6635 after 7 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Bartenders Male or Fe-<lb/>
male. For more information call 746-<lb/>
2319.<lb/>
SOCCER COACH: Assistant coach for<lb/>
'77 Greenville Stars Select Soccer Team.<lb/>
Must possess good soccer skills, ability<lb/>
to work with youth players February<lb/>
through March. Salary is $7.00 per ses-<lb/>
sion, Contact Willie Nelms 756-3879<lb/>
after 6 p.m.<lb/>
INTERESTED IN A CAREER IN<lb/>
MARKETING, ADVERTISING,<lb/>
JOURNALISM, GRAPHIC DESIGN,<lb/>
OR PUBLIC RELATIONS?? Local<lb/>
downtown development firm will<lb/>
place one person in each specialty in a<lb/>
4-monih internship program with<lb/>
company beginning in January 1989<lb/>
Volunteer program is designed to in<lb/>
troduce students to careers in commu-<lb/>
nications and provide hands-on expe-<lb/>
rience with trained professionals. 10-15<lb/>
hours per week are required. Expenses<lb/>
and mileage are paid. Juniors or seniors<lb/>
preferred, with mapr as appropriate<lb/>
Interviews will be held January 24-27,<lb/>
with selection of final candidates on<lb/>
January 30. Send resume and cover<lb/>
letter by January 23 to Deborah<lb/>
1 highes, Director of Marketing, Phil<lb/>
Flowers &amp; Associates, Inc 101 West<lb/>
14th St Suite 105, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
INTERESTED IN PAYING OFF<lb/>
THOSE CHX'MAS BILLS: Or Begin<lb/>
ning to plan for a new Spring ward-<lb/>
robe1 Brodv's and Brodv's for Men<lb/>
have part time sales associate positions<lb/>
available for Individual who can work<lb/>
flexible hours Apply at Brodv's, Caro-<lb/>
lina East Mall Monday Wednesday 2-<lb/>
4<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED:<lb/>
Interested in making money part-time<lb/>
photographing campus activities? No<lb/>
experience necessary, we train. If you<lb/>
are highly sociable, have a 35 mm<lb/>
camera, and transportation, please call<lb/>
between noon and 5 p.m , M-F, at 1-<lb/>
800-722-7033.<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR:<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field. No monetary<lb/>
compensation, however room, utili-<lb/>
tites and rhone provided. Mary Smith<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center 758 1IELP.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED: On<lb/>
Monday's &amp; Wednesday's from 12<lb/>
until 5 p.m. Will need own transporta-<lb/>
tion. Will also need someone occasion<lb/>
ally to sit on Tuesday's If can work<lb/>
either of these days, please call 756<lb/>
6319.<lb/>
$10-$15HOUR: Processing mail at<lb/>
home. Weekly check guaranteed. For<lb/>
details write V &amp; F. Enterprises 14263<lb/>
San Pablo Ave, Suite 111, San Pablo,<lb/>
CA 94806.<lb/>
CJ'S WANTS YOU: Every position<lb/>
open. We are putting together the best<lb/>
wait staff, cooks and prep personnel to<lb/>
make CJ's the best restaurant team in<lb/>
East Carolina. Call between 2 5 p.m. for<lb/>
appointment M-F. Ask for Casey. 355-<lb/>
3543<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
AKC REGISTERED GOLDEN RE<lb/>
TRIEVER PUPPIES: 3 males priced at<lb/>
$150 to $225. Call 746 2517.<lb/>
HEY PI K APPS: The house looks awe<lb/>
some ? Let's "hope Bish" gets over the<lb/>
"Mr. Clean Syndrome" Those upstairs<lb/>
G.P.As should be "high" (but remem-<lb/>
ber, not in the house).<lb/>
WELCOME BACK PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
BROTHERS: I lope you all had a great<lb/>
break, and get ready for a great<lb/>
semester. Love, the Little Sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To all the<lb/>
new Phi Tau brothers. We're glad that<lb/>
you made it. Love the little sisters.<lb/>
TO ALL PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS:<lb/>
Thanks for the great turn out to the first<lb/>
meeting of 89. Keep up the good work<lb/>
PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS: Want to<lb/>
help you get in shape! Win a years free<lb/>
membership to the Spa Buv a chance to<lb/>
win from a little sister.<lb/>
TO PHI KAPPA LAU BROTHERS:<lb/>
We're looking forward to great parties<lb/>
and a great semester with you. love<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau little sisters.<lb/>
FROM ROOM TO ROOM V1 DID<lb/>
GO: It wasa surprise social of rainbows<lb/>
and snow! The sisters arrived with<lb/>
blindfolds in tact, the soda was fun, it<lb/>
was GREAT, in fact! Thanks to Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta pledges and the Sig Eps, too'<lb/>
We liked the surprise and we love you!<lb/>
The sisters of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
NOW HIRING: Part-time "tewing<lb/>
operators at Prep-shirt Manutactur<lb/>
ing. 1800 N. Greene Street Greenville,<lb/>
N C 27834 758-3167<lb/>
KA LITTLE SISTERS: Welcome back<lb/>
girls. Our first meeting is Wednesday<lb/>
Jan. 18th at 9:30 p.m. If you are plan<lb/>
ning to be active this semester please<lb/>
attend<lb/>
IHE S1STFRS AND PLEDGES OF<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA: Would like<lb/>
to welcome everyone back to school!<lb/>
Good luck this semester!<lb/>
MEADE, MISHA, EMILY,<lb/>
DANIELLE, AMY, LISA AND<lb/>
MARTHA: Hang in there! We are<lb/>
behind you' 1 ove the Sisters of Sigm?<lb/>
Sigma Sigma<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To the new<lb/>
sisters of Gamma Beta chapter of Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Christine Allabach, Gin<lb/>
get Beatty, Robin Black, 1 folly Bratton,<lb/>
Stephanie Boykin, Kelly Carpenter,<lb/>
Luanne Collins, Suzanne Desrochers,<lb/>
Paige Dusenberry, Carla Fairbanks,<lb/>
Lois Gilbert, Abbie Core, Julie<lb/>
Hamrick, Christi Harris, Amber<lb/>
Hodge, Cyndi Holzhauser, Michelle<lb/>
Klun, Cassk lane, Jill Mau, Coleen<lb/>
McDonald, Elizabeth Moore, Kati<lb/>
Mulligan, Amy Neal, Kim Schechter,<lb/>
Mihele Streib<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To the new<lb/>
officers of Gamma Beta chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma. President ?<lb/>
Sharyl Butts, Vice President ? Melissa<lb/>
Terranova, Treasurer Bottv Pivec,<lb/>
Secretary ? Blair mathews, Rush<lb/>
Membership ? Carrie O'Brien, Educa-<lb/>
tion ? Mia McCoy, good luck in '89!<lb/>
Love the sisters of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
AOPI'S: 1 lope everybody's break was<lb/>
great. Roscball is coming so be looking<lb/>
for that special date It is only 19 days<lb/>
away, get prepared for an outrageous<lb/>
day<lb/>
AOPI'S: Beta Lambdas, Be ready for a<lb/>
wild semester We can't wait to call you<lb/>
sisters! Love the sisters of AOPi.<lb/>
COLLATION<lb/>
IS NOT A DIRTY WORD<lb/>
IT s OUR BUSINESS<lb/>
ACCU ?;?<lb/>
ESCOPY<lb/>
v A ?  p ,<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
I HE PIKES: Would like to congratu-<lb/>
late the new 1FC executive council.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: 14 schools head to<lb/>
Greenville Jan. 27. Watch out ECU here<lb/>
come the Pikes.<lb/>
CONGRATS: Cabell Lawton<lb/>
secretary ? Go Pikes!<lb/>
IFC<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF PHI KAPPA<lb/>
LAU: Would like to congratulate the<lb/>
newly initiated brothers: Bob Durda<lb/>
Greg Lee, Phil Singleton, Andy Elgin,<lb/>
Mike Andrews, Jerry Bland, Ty Blan<lb/>
ton, Kevin Breeden, Corey Bryant,<lb/>
lerry Garner, John Hernly, Harrison<lb/>
1 iubard, Gary Madey, Brian Marion,<lb/>
lohn Richardson, Greg Smith, Dallas<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru Sat Low<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 wrek? of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
WAKE 'N' BAKE<lb/>
IN BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
NEGRIL, JAMAICA<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
89!<lb/>
VERY<lb/>
AFFORDABLE<lb/>
PACKAGES.<lb/>
BOOK EARLY AND<lb/>
SAVE!<lb/>
CALL:<lb/>
1-800-426-77<lb/>
SpruilJ Great job!<lb/>
PHI TAU'S: Get pumped for the for<lb/>
mal at Topsail Beach It's only a month<lb/>
away!<lb/>
TO ALL E.C.U. MEN: We want you to<lb/>
be a Phi Tau! Come rush Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Jan. 23 26 For more information call<lb/>
757-1319<lb/>
BROTHERS OF PI KAPPA PHI: Wei<lb/>
come back all Fraternities and soron<lb/>
ties. Pi Kappa Phi Rush will be held Ian<lb/>
23rd through the 25th.<lb/>
GRE PREPARATION! The best 510<lb/>
you'll ever spend Baron's, Arco<lb/>
Cliff's notes. Retail S21 00, yours for ten<lb/>
bucks Call Mike @ 752-5683<lb/>
SPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL<lb/>
Bonus Diskettes<lb/>
5 14" DSDD<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
per box of 10<lb/>
Verbatim Diskettes<lb/>
5 14" DSDD<lb/>
$7.95<lb/>
per box of 10<lb/>
SDF Professional<lb/>
Computers, Inc.<lb/>
106 East 5th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
752-3694<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
TRI COUNTY HOMES, INC. IS<lb/>
EXPANDING ITS SALES FORCE OVER<lb/>
ALL OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
IF YOU ARE ENERGETIC, ENTHUSIAS<lb/>
TIC. HONEST AND NEED AN INCOME<lb/>
OF MORE THAN $25,000.00 A YEAR<lb/>
"HERE IS YOUR CHANCE"<lb/>
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A<lb/>
COMPANY THAT OFFERS BENEFITS<lb/>
LIKE LIFE INSURANCE, HEALTH ANC<lb/>
DENTAL INSURANCE. DlSABILI<lb/>
INSURANCE. AS WELL AS A<lb/>
RETIREMENT PROGRAM<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
1-800-672-4503<lb/>
AND ASK FOR KAREN LAMBERT<lb/>
A SCHEDULED CONFIDENT<lb/>
INTERVIEW WILL BE ARRANGED<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
f i<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered by the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before you graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
General Classroom Building. Thur Jan.<lb/>
12 4 p .m. rm. 2016. Thur Jan. 191 p.m.rm.<lb/>
1014. Mon Jan. 23 1 p.m. rm. 1014. Thur<lb/>
Jan 264pm.rm.2016.MonJan.304p.m.<lb/>
rm. 2016. Thur Feb. 2 1 p.m. rm. 1014.<lb/>
Mon 6 1 p.m. rm. 1014. Thur Feb. 9 4<lb/>
p.m. rm. 2016. Mon Feb. 13 4 p.m. rm.<lb/>
2016. Thur Feb. 16 1 p.m. rm. 1014. Mon<lb/>
Feb. 20 1 p.m. rm. 1014. Thur Feb. 23 4<lb/>
p.m. rm. 2016. Mon Feb 27 4 p.m. rm.<lb/>
2016.<lb/>
CHINESE ACROBATS<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee proudly presents The Chinese<lb/>
Golden ragon Acrobats and Magicians of<lb/>
Taipei in performance on Thursday, Feb. 2<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wnght Auditorium. This<lb/>
Company consists of 23 dancers, magi-<lb/>
cians, and acrobats in colorful costumes<lb/>
? half of whom are members of the<lb/>
Danny Chang (Troupe Director) family.<lb/>
This group has performed extensively<lb/>
world wide. Tickets for this event are now<lb/>
on sale in the Central Ticket Office of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, (phone 757-<lb/>
6611, ext. 266). Office hours are 11 a.m. to<lb/>
6 p.m. M-F.<lb/>
PIRATES OF FENZANCE<lb/>
The Performing Arts Series presents "Pi-<lb/>
rates of Penzance" a Gilbert &amp; Sullivan<lb/>
Operetta on Mon, Jan. 30 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. This production is<lb/>
staged by the New York Gilbert &amp; Sulli-<lb/>
van Players They remain the premiere<lb/>
production company of Gilberi &amp;<lb/>
Sullivan's work. This production includes<lb/>
such memorable tunes as, 'Toor Wander-<lb/>
ing One "A Rollickling Band Of Pirates<lb/>
We and "I Am the Very Model of A<lb/>
Modern Major-General Tickets for "Pi-<lb/>
rates of Penzance" are now on sale in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center (phone 757-6611, ext. 266).<lb/>
Office hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. M-F.<lb/>
PHILAPANCQ<lb/>
The Philadelphia Dance Company (Phila-<lb/>
danco) will perform in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium on Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 8 p.m. This<lb/>
performance is part of the Performing<lb/>
Arts Series. Led by John Myers Brown,<lb/>
this Black Dance Troupe creates excite-<lb/>
ment and makes headlines everywhere<lb/>
they perform. Tickets for this dynamic<lb/>
performance are available from the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center phone 757-6611, ext. 266 Office<lb/>
hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. This perform-<lb/>
ance is sponsored in part by a grant from<lb/>
the North Carolina Arts Council and the<lb/>
National Endowment for the Arts in<lb/>
Washington, DC, a federal agency<lb/>
AHMAD JAMAL<lb/>
The Student Union Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee presents Jazz Recording Great<lb/>
Ahmad Jamal in concert on Wed Jan 25 at<lb/>
8 p.m. in HendrixThreatre. A subtle, com-<lb/>
plex, and veratile interpreter and com-<lb/>
poser Jamal is regarded as a magician's<lb/>
magician. Tickets are now on sale for this<lb/>
outstanding evening of jazz. For further<lb/>
details contact The Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, phone 757-<lb/>
6611, ext 266 Office hours are 11 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m M-F.<lb/>
MODELS NEEDED<lb/>
Models needed by the School of Art. The<lb/>
School of Art is offering positions as<lb/>
models for figure drawing classes spring<lb/>
semester at $5 per hour. Contact Connie<lb/>
Folmer in the School of Art Administra<lb/>
tion office, Jenkins 2000 or call 757-6563.<lb/>
PRE SEASON BASKETBALL<lb/>
A registration meeting for the annual in-<lb/>
tramural pre season basketball tourna-<lb/>
ment will be held Jan. 17 at 5 p.m. in Bio<lb/>
103. All mens and womens squads are<lb/>
encouraged to attend!<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Mangers needed for varsity football. Pick<lb/>
up application at office in Minges. 757-<lb/>
6029.<lb/>
SCIENTIFIC TALK<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of Sigma Xi, the Scien-<lb/>
tific Research Society, will present a talk<lb/>
by Prof Wenda Trevathan on Jan. 19 at<lb/>
7.00 p.m. in room 1028 GCB. Prof. Tre-<lb/>
vathan will speak about different aspects<lb/>
of her new book, I luman Birth: An Evolu-<lb/>
tionary Perspective.<lb/>
CLASS PICTURES<lb/>
Any student wishing to have a class pic-<lb/>
ture taken for the yearbook now has that<lb/>
chance Class photographs will be taken<lb/>
Jan. 23 ? Jan. 27 in the student store from<lb/>
9 a.m. til 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. til 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
each day<lb/>
FACULTY AND STAFF<lb/>
Faculty and staff yearbook pictures will<lb/>
be taken Jan. 23 ? Jan. 27 in the student<lb/>
store from 9 a.m. tile 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. til<lb/>
4:30 p.m. each day.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Wanted: Sport care attendant. The De-<lb/>
partment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services is looking for individuals experi-<lb/>
enced in spttrts care (athletic training) to<lb/>
work within the sports care program.<lb/>
Experience in high school, collegiate ath-<lb/>
letic training desirable. Contact Todd<lb/>
McCollum in 204 Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
757-6387 for more information.<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Interested in a summer job with a resort,<lb/>
camp, or recreational facility? Feb. 9th,<lb/>
ECU will host over 50 agencies looking for<lb/>
summer employees Come bv or call Co-<lb/>
op Ed. for more info, on your career op-<lb/>
portunities, 757-6979, GCB 2028.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS<lb/>
It's not too late to submit your application<lb/>
for the workstudy trip to Pueblo, Mexico<lb/>
for Spring Break (March 4-12). If you're<lb/>
concerned about the expense - don't be.<lb/>
Fund raising efforts will be a group en-<lb/>
deavor. What a great opportunity to<lb/>
travel while sharing your talents and<lb/>
skills in a local school. Applications are<lb/>
availablein R-154, Speight. For more info<lb/>
contact Marianne Exum at (w) 757-6271 or<lb/>
(h) 830-9450. Hurry! Time is running out.<lb/>
HONORS SEMINARS<lb/>
All faculty members and I lonors students<lb/>
are reminded of their opportunity to de-<lb/>
sign or request an 1 lonors Seminar of their<lb/>
choice. The Honors Committee makes the<lb/>
final selection. Please submit proposals<lb/>
(with syllabus) to David Sanders (757-<lb/>
6373) at the Honors Office, Room 1002<lb/>
GCB by Jan. 17. See Dr. Sanders in the<lb/>
1 lonors Office for more info.<lb/>
MODELS<lb/>
Models for figure drawing class are<lb/>
needed for spring semester; if interested<lb/>
contact Commie Folmer, School of Art.<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center. 757-6563 or Tran<lb/>
Gordley 757-6259.<lb/>
MEN'S FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
It's time for one of those organizational<lb/>
meetings. Tonight in Mendenhall rm. 212<lb/>
at 9:30 p.m. Anyone wishing to join is<lb/>
welcomed. Present members have no<lb/>
choice. For more info, call Gary at 752-<lb/>
7538.<lb/>
MSf<lb/>
The Episcopal Student Fellowship meets<lb/>
at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
4th St. All are welcome. Call Allen Man-<lb/>
ning at 758-1440.<lb/>
ECU COLLEGE REPUBLI-<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
The Executive officers of the ECU Federa-<lb/>
tion of College Republicans would like to<lb/>
invite everyone to our first meeting of the<lb/>
semester on Jan. 18 at 7 p.m. in 212 Men-<lb/>
denhall. Meetings will be held every Wed.<lb/>
same time, same place.<lb/>
IAGNE<lb/>
Wes2fel Christine Fellowship invites you<lb/>
to enjoy a free lasagne supper while you<lb/>
meet new people and learn about our<lb/>
Spring fellowship opportunitities, plus<lb/>
tour the Methodiest Student Center, 501<lb/>
East Fifth St. (across from Carrett Dorm).<lb/>
Sponsored by Presbyterian and Method-<lb/>
ist Campus Ministries, 758-2030.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted for<lb/>
the position of 1989-90 Student Union<lb/>
President. Deadline to apply is Jan. 20,<lb/>
1989. Applications can be picked up at the<lb/>
Information Desk or the Student Union<lb/>
Office ?rm 236.<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
The Overseas Development Network will<lb/>
be meeting on Jan. 19th at 4 p.m. in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center. We will be dis<lb/>
cussing our adopted project and possible<lb/>
fundraisers. New members welcome! Call<lb/>
Tonya Batity for more info, (hm 830 8888;<lb/>
wk 757-6611 ext. 221).<lb/>
HUMAN BIRTH<lb/>
Professor Wenda Trevathan of New<lb/>
Mexico State Univ. will lecture about dif<lb/>
ferent aspects of her new and highly ac<lb/>
claimed book, Human Birth: An Evolu-<lb/>
tionary Perspective. Prof. Trevathan will<lb/>
speak at 7 p.m Jan. 19 in rm 1028 GCB.<lb/>
PE MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
Wanted All P.E. Majors and intended<lb/>
majors to help support our club. No DUES<lb/>
? Just FUN First meeting to be held Jan<lb/>
19 at 8 p.m. in Minges, rm. 142<lb/>
BULLS?Y?J)ARTS<lb/>
We're still waiting for our equipment It<lb/>
won't be in for another 2-3 weeks. There<lb/>
will be another announcement stating<lb/>
when we will have our next meeting It<lb/>
should be in the next week or so. This<lb/>
meeting will organize what we already<lb/>
have accomplished and hopefully we will<lb/>
be ready to play as soon as our darts get<lb/>
here.<lb/>
THI PETA.LAMPDA<lb/>
Welcome back members There will be a<lb/>
general meeting on Jan. 17 at 4 p m in rm<lb/>
1013. Pictures will be taken for the year-<lb/>
book also.<lb/>
MEIHQPIST STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Title: "Let Your Bones Dance There will<lb/>
be a dance at the Methodist Student Cen-<lb/>
ter on Jan. 20, at 8:30 p.m. Free admission,<lb/>
free refreshments. The MSC is located at<lb/>
501 E. 5th St. across from Garrett Dorm<lb/>
Call 758-2030 or 752-7240 for details.<lb/>
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT<lb/>
ASSQC<lb/>
The Student Financial Management Asso-<lb/>
ciation will hold its first meeting for the<lb/>
spring semester on Jan. 18 at 4:30 p.m. in<lb/>
rm. 3009 GCB everyone is welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
Welcome to a new semester! Make it<lb/>
worthwhile by getting involved! (E02<lb/>
invites all Early Childhood Majors to at<lb/>
tend the first meeting of the semester. It<lb/>
will be held on Jan. 18 at 4 p.m. in Speight<lb/>
308. All new and current members are<lb/>
welcome to attend and get some great<lb/>
flannel board activitities.<lb/>
S.A.M.<lb/>
There will be an important meeting of the<lb/>
Society for the Advancement of Manage-<lb/>
ment on Jan. 18 at 3 p m. in GCB 1028 all<lb/>
members must attend<lb/>
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will host American Uni-<lb/>
versity Jan. 21 in Minges at 7 p.m. At<lb/>
halftime there will be a dinner giveaway<lb/>
as well as a Pure Gold Dancer Perform<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
MF SWIMMING<lb/>
ECU. Men's and Women's swimming<lb/>
teams will face Duke Jan. 21 The meet<lb/>
starts at 2 p.m. in Minges Aquatic Center<lb/>
Both squads enjoy fine records this sea-<lb/>
son, but still need your support. This is the<lb/>
last home meet of the year.<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir is now accepting<lb/>
new members for the Spring Semester. If<lb/>
you enjoy singing, we invite you to stop<lb/>
by the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center on<lb/>
Wed. afternoons at 5 p.m. during rehears-<lb/>
als. Deadline Jan. 25.<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next mtg. will be at 6 p.m. in GC 1014<lb/>
on Jan. 19. All members and other inter-<lb/>
ested students, please attend.<lb/>
SIUPY SKILLS<lb/>
Improving your study skills. Learning<lb/>
how to improve your study skills for<lb/>
greater success in college. The following<lb/>
mini course and workshops can help you<lb/>
prepare for the added workload of college<lb/>
or help to increase your grade point<lb/>
average. All sessions will be held in 313<lb/>
Wright Building. Jan. 17 Making and Us-<lb/>
ing Notes 3-430 p.m Jan. 18 Efficient<lb/>
Reading 3-4:30 p.m Jan. 19 Test Taking 3-<lb/>
4:30 p.m. You may attend ail the topic<lb/>
sessions or choose the ones where you<lb/>
need the most improvement.<lb/>
DECISION SCIENCE<lb/>
The first meeting of the Decision Scion.<lb/>
Society for the Spring semester will be a i<lb/>
18 at 3 p m in GCBrm 3004 The meetii<lb/>
will concern the honor policy under cur<lb/>
rent consideration governing compute:<lb/>
related projects and the use of the a a<lb/>
puter lab in the School of Business. Up<lb/>
coming meetings, speakers, and event<lb/>
will also be discussed Ideas and input be<lb/>
ALL concerned Business students a:<lb/>
welcome. A special invitation is extended<lb/>
to all prospective new members.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
Normal and allergic volunteers needed<lb/>
for Asthma research at the ECU Dept of<lb/>
Medicine. Study purchase a patier<lb/>
ranges from blood donation to allergen<lb/>
challenge. All volunteers will be com per<lb/>
sated. If interested, call 551 3159.<lb/>
WOMEN'S TENNIS TRYOUTS<lb/>
117 to 120 2:30 to 4 pm. Minge<lb/>
Coliseuim Tennis Courts Any question-<lb/>
call: Lynn Gorski ? Asst Tennis ooadi<lb/>
757-6161.<lb/>
WATERSKI CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Waterski Club will have its first<lb/>
meeting ot the semester Jan. 19at6pm it<lb/>
the Library. All are invited to attend for<lb/>
more info call Tommy Lewis at 830-0137<lb/>
A social hour will follow the meeting<lb/>
NEW STUDENT RFVIFWS<lb/>
Any student that ordered a new Student<lb/>
Review should come be the Buccaneei<lb/>
office and pick one up We are located in<lb/>
front of Joyner Library on the second floor<lb/>
of the publications building.<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi members One point<lb/>
may be earned by working at the Blood<lb/>
mobile Jan 18 &amp; 19 for one hour If inter<lb/>
ested come by the Biology building and<lb/>
sign up for times located across from the<lb/>
nirth wing elevator.<lb/>
BLOODMOBILE<lb/>
The Bloodmobile will be at 244 Mende<lb/>
nhall Jan. 18 &amp; 19 from 12 p m. to 6 p.m. A<lb/>
sign up sheet for times is located in the Bio<lb/>
building across from the elevator in the<lb/>
north wing. Please give. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Biology Club.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUPY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028.<lb/>
w V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1989 7<lb/>
Democrats elect chairman<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Raleigh<lb/>
attorney Lawrence Davis was<lb/>
elected North Carolina Demo-<lb/>
cratic chairman Saturday and<lb/>
said the party and its nominees<lb/>
should broaden their appeal to<lb/>
the "ordinary citizen<lb/>
How many Democrats have<lb/>
we heard say that the party left<lb/>
Ihem?" Davis said in an accep-<lb/>
tance speech to the Democratic<lb/>
Executive Committee. "Well,<lb/>
now is the time to find all of our<lb/>
friends that have ever told us that<lb/>
and tell them the Democratic<lb/>
Party is home<lb/>
In an interview, Davis said the<lb/>
party and its candidates should<lb/>
teflev t the general interests of the<lb/>
people as a whole<lb/>
The W-member committee<lb/>
i: nanimousi v elected Davis on the<lb/>
recommendation of a nominating<lb/>
panel appointed by the outgoing<lb/>
chairman, Jim V? Hecke, who<lb/>
derided against eking re-elec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Parks Helms, a former state<lb/>
legislator from Charlotte who had<lb/>
planned to challenge Davis, with-<lb/>
d re w a fter hi s name was placed i n<lb/>
nomination in what he called a<lb/>
move for unity. He told reporters<lb/>
the vote would have been close<lb/>
and that he believed the next<lb/>
oh airman should take office with<lb/>
broad support.<lb/>
some Democrats privately ac-<lb/>
cused Sen. Terrv Sanford, the<lb/>
state's highest-ranking Demo-<lb/>
cratic officeholder, and his allies<lb/>
of orchestrating Davis' election<lb/>
and using the nominating<lb/>
committee to give the appearance<lb/>
of an open process. Sanford was<lb/>
out of the country Saturday.<lb/>
Helms told reporters Sam<lb/>
Poole, a Sanford political aide,<lb/>
had telephoned him to ask if he<lb/>
would accept the post of party<lb/>
secretary, an offer Helms de-<lb/>
clined.<lb/>
"There is some resentment "<lb/>
among Democratic activists,<lb/>
Helms said. "We have always<lb/>
been a party of very diverse<lb/>
views, and I think what this proc-<lb/>
ess failed to recognize was that<lb/>
those views are strongly held and<lb/>
that we have an obligation now to<lb/>
open up the process, to make it<lb/>
inclusive, and to give this grass-<lb/>
roots Democratic organization an<lb/>
opportunity to work<lb/>
Asked whether he believed the<lb/>
election was rigged, Helms said it<lb/>
was "undulv restrictive<lb/>
Davis, 51, represented the Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem area in the General<lb/>
Assembly and now lobbies the<lb/>
Legislature for corporate inter-<lb/>
ests.<lb/>
Supporters say he is indicative<lb/>
of the conservative, pro-business<lb/>
Democrats whom the party must<lb/>
recapture to reverse its string of<lb/>
losses in the state.<lb/>
"The party needs to reflect the<lb/>
interests of the ordinary citizen ?<lb/>
mainstream economic and politi-<lb/>
cal life he said. The Democratic<lb/>
Party does not need to "change<lb/>
stripes like a chameleon" but<lb/>
should encourage candidates<lb/>
who "are more disposed toward<lb/>
Jeffersonian principles" to seek<lb/>
office, he said.<lb/>
Critics say Davis has not been<lb/>
politically active enough in recent<lb/>
elections to quality as chairman,<lb/>
and they say his choice of clients<lb/>
? such as the soap and detergent<lb/>
industry, which fought a phos<lb/>
phate detergent ban at the Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly suggests he is too<lb/>
conservative.<lb/>
The Democrats have suffered<lb/>
major defeats in the two most<lb/>
recent presidential election years.<lb/>
Last November, George Bueh<lb/>
carried the state with 58 percent of<lb/>
the vote, Gov. Jim Martin was re-<lb/>
elected andjim Gardner became<lb/>
the state's first GOP lieutenant<lb/>
governor sincel901.<lb/>
While some Democrats have<lb/>
said the party is suffering because<lb/>
it is perceived as the captive ot<lb/>
liberal special interests, Helms<lb/>
said in his withdrawal speech thai<lb/>
it would be a mistake to abandor<lb/>
working people, minorities and<lb/>
women "who have traditionally<lb/>
provided that grass-roots support<lb/>
that has made our party what it<lb/>
is<lb/>
Helms said the next chairmar<lb/>
must foster the creation of "a new<lb/>
image for Democrats in North<lb/>
Carolina that reflects our historic<lb/>
support for a progressive<lb/>
agenda<lb/>
The Executive Committee alsc<lb/>
elected three omcrofficers recom<lb/>
mended by the nominating panel,<lb/>
which was chaired by former<lb/>
Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt:<lb/>
Jeanette Council, a Cumberland<lb/>
County educator, as first vice<lb/>
chair; Clarence Lighmer, former<lb/>
Raleigh mayor, as second vice<lb/>
chair; and Debbie Nelson of Cra-<lb/>
ven County as third vice chair.<lb/>
The nominating committee's<lb/>
recommendation of Ray Farris, a<lb/>
Mecklenburg county attorney, for<lb/>
party secretary was rejected. The<lb/>
incumbent, Betty Wallace, was re-<lb/>
elected.<lb/>
In elections to four seats on the<lb/>
Democratic National Committee,<lb/>
Betty Spier at Pitt County and<lb/>
Muriel Offerman of Duplin<lb/>
county defeated Johnsie Setzer of<lb/>
Catawba county while state Sen.<lb/>
Russell Walker of Randolph<lb/>
County and Gantt defeated Van<lb/>
Hecke.<lb/>
77te 9ezu Image<lb/>
Tanning Special!<lb/>
15 Visits For $30<lb/>
Month of Jan.<lb/>
Silver Solarium<lb/>
Large 28 Bulb<lb/>
Tanning Bed<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
756-4144<lb/>
Appts. From<lb/>
8 am - 7:30 pm<lb/>
313 Plaza Drive<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Behind Peppi's<lb/>
GO<lb/>
Man reverses marijuana plea<lb/>
ASHEVILLE (AP) ? Charles<lb/>
McHan of Murphy has hired<lb/>
more attorneys and now wants to<lb/>
withdraw his guilty plea to a<lb/>
charge of possessing 200 pounds<lb/>
o marijuana, court records show.<lb/>
Mc I Ian pleaded guilty in U.S.<lb/>
 district Court on Sept. 20 to pos-<lb/>
s ssing the marijuana with intent<lb/>
to deliver. Sentencing is sched-<lb/>
uled for Tuesday in Bryson City,<lb/>
but last week McHan filed a mo-<lb/>
tion thai he be allowed to take<lb/>
Uack ki$ plea. i?<lb/>
When he pleaded, he did not<lb/>
knew he was being investigated<lb/>
? r operating a continuing crimi-<lb/>
nal enterprise, he said in the mo-<lb/>
tion, filed by his new attorneys.<lb/>
McHan, 44, claims the gov-<lb/>
ernment did not let him know<lb/>
about the investigation. Former<lb/>
Assistant U.S. Attomev Kenneth<lb/>
Bell, now in private practice in<lb/>
Winston-Salem, said Friday he<lb/>
believes he mentioned the ongo-<lb/>
ing probe several times during<lb/>
McHan's court hearings.<lb/>
A ruling by U.S. District<lb/>
Court Judge Richard Voorhees<lb/>
that McHan may withdraw his<lb/>
plea and have a jury trial would<lb/>
void anv reason to have the sen-<lb/>
tencing hearing Tuesday. The<lb/>
motion will be argued Tuesday<lb/>
morning, the federal clerk's office<lb/>
told The Asheville Citizen.<lb/>
If McHan's motion is al-<lb/>
lowed, he will be tried on the<lb/>
original charge ? possession of<lb/>
more than 2,200 pounds of mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
McHan was arrested May 4 as<lb/>
he negotiated to buy 200 pounds<lb/>
of marijuana from an undercover<lb/>
Drug Enforcement Administra-<lb/>
tion agent in El Paso, Texas.<lb/>
McHan was chainnan of the<lb/>
board of Citizens Bank in Murphy<lb/>
until March 30, when a group of<lb/>
stockholders unhappy with the<lb/>
b?nk's management ousted him.<lb/>
9!<lb/>
RDON'S<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
WOOLRICH<lb/>
30?c<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
20OFF<lb/>
NIGHTGOWNS<lb/>
200 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
Women like Barbara's style<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?Bar-<lb/>
bara Bush says she's findingthat<lb/>
many older women are "tickled<lb/>
pink" at her personal style of<lb/>
avoiding makeup, hair color and<lb/>
dieting.<lb/>
Mrs. Bush, who describes<lb/>
herself as a "full-figured<lb/>
woman said she hasn't been<lb/>
trying to lose weight lately and<lb/>
doesn't plan to accept borrowed<lb/>
gowns from high-fashion design-<lb/>
ers as Nancy Reaga n did.<lb/>
In an interview with several<lb/>
newsorganizations, she said she's<lb/>
getting a good response from the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
My mail tells me a lot of fat,<lb/>
v hite-haired, wrinkled ladies are<lb/>
tickled pink Mrs. Bush said.<lb/>
"They're very sweet. I think it<lb/>
makes them feel better about<lb/>
themselves I mean, look at me - if<lb/>
I an be a success, so can they<lb/>
Mrs. Bush said she feels no<lb/>
,uilt about the $25 million being<lb/>
pont on this week's inaugural<lb/>
activities because the money is<lb/>
being privately raised, except for<lb/>
funds appropriated by Congress<lb/>
- r the ceremonial portion.<lb/>
These people are raising it<lb/>
money for the inaugural) be-<lb/>
cause they worked for years and<lb/>
vears to elect a president she<lb/>
said. "I don't feel badly about it at<lb/>
all. It's putting a lot of people to<lb/>
work, giving a lot of people jobs<lb/>
Win a pizza party for your entire<lb/>
residence hall! Between January 9 and<lb/>
January 29, if the students in your dorm<lb/>
order the most pizza from Domino's<lb/>
Pizza, the entire dorm will win a pizza<lb/>
party So, order from Domino's Pizza<lb/>
You'll get the pizza that ECU students<lb/>
chose as best in a taste test. And you<lb/>
might win a big pizza party.<lb/>
Winner will be figured on a pizza-<lb/>
per-student basis so every dorm has<lb/>
a chance. Maximum of 100 pizzas may<lb/>
be won.<lb/>
Serving ECU Campus<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
11:00 am-1am SunThurs<lb/>
11 00 am-2am Fri &amp; Sat<lb/>
Hours vary from store to store<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
"O.?0<lb/>
(Of fOH(?ltnnt)icm PB<lb/>
Interested In<lb/>
Studying Abroad?<lb/>
Information on academic exchange oppor-<lb/>
tunities throughout the world through the<lb/>
International Student Exchange Program<lb/>
(ISEP), at ECU. Information available from:<lb/>
Dr. R. Hursey, Jr.<lb/>
ISEP Coordinator<lb/>
Austin 222<lb/>
Phone 757-6418 (work)<lb/>
756-0682 (home)<lb/>
k<lb/>
Wednesday, January 18<lb/>
8:00 pm Hendrix<lb/>
TRUE STORIES<lb/>
Thursday, January 19<lb/>
8:00pm Hendrix<lb/>
Travel Adventure Film<lb/>
"SAFARI<lb/>
Friday, January 20-Sunday, January 22<lb/>
8:00pm Hendrix<lb/>
YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
Upcoming Events:<lb/>
Special Concert-AHMAD JAMAL Jan. 25<lb/>
CHINESE ACROBATS &amp; MAGICIANS -Feb. 2<lb/>
Illumina Art Competition-Feb. 15-17-<lb/>
Entries will be Received<lb/>
Spring Break Trips-Bahamas Cruise &amp; Cancun<lb/>
JANUARY CLEARANCE<lb/>
Trench Coats<lb/>
Over Coat<lb/>
All Leather Coats<lb/>
Faded Levi Jackets<lb/>
Faded Levis<lb/>
All Ladies Sweaters<lb/>
9.95-19.95<lb/>
29.95-59.95<lb/>
$10 off<lb/>
$5$ 10 off<lb/>
2.95-5.95<lb/>
2 for $5<lb/>
Layaway Plan Available<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
(Closed for Lunch<lb/>
12:30-1:30)<lb/>
400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
On the corner below 'Fizz"<lb/>
?Recycled Clotheng (New 8i Used)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
WHAT DO YOU THINK?<lb/>
The Student Union Special Concerts Committee wants<lb/>
to know what concerts you would like to have at ECU.<lb/>
An opinion box is located next to the information<lb/>
desk in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Stop by and help us to bring you<lb/>
the concerts of your choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1989 Pa?,e 8<lb/>
Ministries offer help<lb/>
The Methodist Student Center on Fifth Street is just one of the many Campus Ministries that are<lb/>
set up to provide fellowship for students of all denominations (Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU<lb/>
Photolab).<lb/>
Was (Not Was) break through<lb/>
on third Lp and thank many<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)  Don and<lb/>
David Was, authors of the hit<lb/>
single "Spy in the House of Love<lb/>
would like to thank manv people<lb/>
for the success of Was (Not Was):<lb/>
Moonie Krupka, jazz critic David<lb/>
Weiss, king George Clinton, mu-<lb/>
sic executive Michael Zilkha, and,<lb/>
of course, Don's 2-year-old son.<lb/>
Get the picture? Well, there's<lb/>
more.<lb/>
The Was would also like to<lb/>
extend their appreciation to sing-<lb/>
ers Sweet Pea Atkinson and Harrv<lb/>
J<lb/>
Bowen, rocker Elvis Costello and<lb/>
Frank Sinatra jr all contributors<lb/>
to the group's third album, "What<lb/>
Lp, Dog?"<lb/>
Still confused? Then go back<lb/>
about 20 years when two young<lb/>
smart alecks named Donald<lb/>
Fagenson and David Weiss were<lb/>
growing up in the suburbs of<lb/>
Detroit. The story begins in eighth<lb/>
grade gym class.<lb/>
"Some of the students were<lb/>
using tumbling equipment with-<lb/>
out supervision Weiss recalled<lb/>
in an interview at the Manhattan<lb/>
offices of Chrysalis Records.<lb/>
"When the teacher found out he<lb/>
asked who had done it. Don and I<lb/>
decided to withhold information,<lb/>
but a guy named Moonie Krupka<lb/>
ratted on us. We met outside the<lb/>
teacher's office<lb/>
And so the friendship was<lb/>
born ? Weiss, the poet, and<lb/>
Fagenson, the natural musician.<lb/>
They each attended the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Michigan at Ann Arbor,<lb/>
but eventually went separate<lb/>
ways.<lb/>
Weiss headed west and be-<lb/>
came a jazz critic for the Los<lb/>
Angeles Herald Examiner. Fagen-<lb/>
son did studio work in Detroit<lb/>
and performed Gilbert O'Sullivan<lb/>
songs in local bars.<lb/>
"I was at wits endFagenson<lb/>
recalled. "You can only do so<lb/>
much hack work. I called David<lb/>
and said, 'Let's go down in<lb/>
glory<lb/>
So in 1980, Was (Not Was)<lb/>
was formed. The name being in-<lb/>
spired by none other than Don's<lb/>
little boy, who had invented<lb/>
phrases such as "Blue (Not Blue)<lb/>
See WAS, page 9<lb/>
By SYLVIA BILLINGSLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
You are at ECU and find your-<lb/>
self a little homesick. The many<lb/>
Christian fellowship programs at<lb/>
the University are the perfect cure<lb/>
for loneliness.<lb/>
The ministries' wide variety of<lb/>
programs welcome all students.<lb/>
They are located in convenient<lb/>
locations and have helpful con-<lb/>
tact people to answer your ques-<lb/>
tions. The following are Univer-<lb/>
sity recognized ministries.<lb/>
1) Baptist Campus Ministry ?<lb/>
Group singing and story telling<lb/>
begin the week for the Baptist<lb/>
ministry at 8 p.m. on Sundays. At<lb/>
5:30 Monday nights, the group<lb/>
meets at the 10th Street center for<lb/>
dinner followed by Bible study at<lb/>
7 p.m. The study is called "Dis-<lb/>
covering Depths" and gives stu-<lb/>
dents a chance to get to know<lb/>
themselves through scriptures.<lb/>
Wednesday, thev meet for a<lb/>
bring-your-own-lunch Bible<lb/>
study and Thursday they have<lb/>
Pause at 7 p.m. The ministry also<lb/>
sponsor intramural bowling and<lb/>
volleyball. Contact Bob Clyde,<lb/>
511 E. 10th St at 758-4593.<lb/>
2) Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
? This group meets weekly in<lb/>
Brewster building room C103 for<lb/>
fellowship and teaching. They<lb/>
also hold Bible studies on campus<lb/>
thoughout the week at various<lb/>
times. There are three conferences<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
The first conference is held in<lb/>
different places in North Carolina<lb/>
each fall. The Christmas confer-<lb/>
ence is a Southeastern regional<lb/>
conference in Atlanta, Georgia<lb/>
and the last conference each year<lb/>
is in Daytona Beach, Florida dur-<lb/>
ing spring break. Contact Jones<lb/>
Doughton at 757-1273.<lb/>
3) Catholic Newman Center ?<lb/>
The Catholic center holds their<lb/>
Sunday services, or Mass, at 11:30<lb/>
a.m. in room 103 of the Biology<lb/>
building and 8:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
Newman Center on 10th street.<lb/>
On Wednesdays, the group holds<lb/>
a fellowship dinner followed by<lb/>
Mass at 5:30 p.m. Reflective serv-<lb/>
ices, a discussion on Catholic<lb/>
church beliefs, is held at 7:30<lb/>
Thursday nights for both Catho-<lb/>
lics and non-Catholics.<lb/>
Teresa Lee, outreach and pub-<lb/>
licity chairperson, said: "This<lb/>
place is beautiful. Christ is so alive<lb/>
here Contact Rev. Paul Vaeth,<lb/>
953 E. 10th St at 757-3760.<lb/>
4) Church of Christ ? They<lb/>
welcome all students to their<lb/>
church services. Contact Mike<lb/>
Ellis, 1706 Greenville Blvd at<lb/>
752-6376.<lb/>
5) Episcopal Campus Ministry<lb/>
? This ministry offers suppers<lb/>
with communion services and<lb/>
various programs on Wednesday<lb/>
nights at 5:30. They begin each<lb/>
year getting to know one another<lb/>
and meeting the faculty.<lb/>
"We have a lot of adult interac-<lb/>
tion with the students Marty<lb/>
Gartman said. The group also<lb/>
participates in a Palm Sunday<lb/>
retreat each spring and a river<lb/>
weekend each fall. For more de-<lb/>
tails contact Mrs. Gartman, 401 E.<lb/>
4th St at 752-3482.<lb/>
6) Intervarsity Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship ? The group holds Bible<lb/>
studies from 8-10 p.m. every night<lb/>
in different dormitories. On Wed-<lb/>
nesdays, however, the meetings<lb/>
are held in room 129 Speight<lb/>
building. This meeting includes<lb/>
singing, skits, and lectures on<lb/>
spiritual and, sometimes, social<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
They also offer Bible studies for<lb/>
co-ed, freshmen, and graduate<lb/>
students to help with their transi-<lb/>
tions. Each year an event called<lb/>
Habbakkuk is held in March that<lb/>
attempts to answer questions on<lb/>
God and why certain things hap<lb/>
pen in the world. Contact Kim<lb/>
Summers, Medical Oaks Apt A -3,<lb/>
at 8300654.<lb/>
7) Lutheran Campus Ministry<lb/>
? The group meets on Wednes-<lb/>
days and Rev. Graham Nahouse<lb/>
said, 'The students participate in<lb/>
the life of the congregation'<lb/>
Contact Rev. Nahouse, 1801 S.<lb/>
Elm St at 756-2058.<lb/>
8) Methodist and Presbyterian<lb/>
Campus Ministries ? These two<lb/>
ministries combine their activities<lb/>
and sponsor a 5 p.m. dinner on<lb/>
Wednesdays at the Methodist<lb/>
center. The dinner is followed bv<lb/>
prayer and worship.<lb/>
The groups also have dances,<lb/>
retreats and campfires at different<lb/>
times throughout the war. The<lb/>
ministries send 20 students to<lb/>
Mexico each May as a work team.<lb/>
Contact Michelle 'Mike")<lb/>
Burcher or Dan Earnhardt, 501 F.<lb/>
Fifth St at 752-7240 or 758-2030.<lb/>
9) Navigators - On Monday<lb/>
nights, prayer is held in Avcock<lb/>
dormitory basement and a girls'<lb/>
Bible study is at 6:30 on Tuesday<lb/>
nights at 104-A Maple Wood<lb/>
Court. A program called "Flight<lb/>
7:30" is held on Thursday nights<lb/>
in the biology building room 103.<lb/>
This session includes singing,<lb/>
sharing, and the giving of a mes-<lb/>
sage. The group otters fellowship<lb/>
activities and volleyball games on<lb/>
alternating Fridays from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
The non-denominational group<lb/>
also tailgates at ECU'S home foot-<lb/>
ball games. Contact Kenneth Jen-<lb/>
kins at 757-6052.<lb/>
'Safari' stars some<lb/>
zebras and a rhino<lb/>
r<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
Ahmad Jamal to<lb/>
play at Hendrix<lb/>
ECU Newt Bu re?u<lb/>
Jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal,<lb/>
the first musician to have an Lp in<lb/>
the top 10 of national charts for<lb/>
108 consecutive weeks, will per-<lb/>
form at ECU's Hendrix Theater<lb/>
January 25.<lb/>
Scheduled to begin at 8 p.m<lb/>
the concert is part of the Student<lb/>
Union Special Concerts series and<lb/>
i 3 partially funded by a grant from<lb/>
the National Endowment for the<lb/>
Arts through the Southern Arts<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
Beginning with his early per-<lb/>
formanaccs as a child prodigy in<lb/>
Pittsburgh Jamal's career spans<lb/>
more than 50 years of live club<lb/>
and concert hall appearances and<lb/>
numerous recordings on more<lb/>
than 35 albums.<lb/>
Tickets to Jamal's perform-<lb/>
ance are $8 each for the general<lb/>
public, $4 for ECU students and<lb/>
youth. Tickets are available from<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
"Safari a new travel docu-<lb/>
mentary film, will take ECU audi-<lb/>
ences on a screen journey to the<lb/>
heart of deepest Africa on Thurs-<lb/>
day in Hendrix Theatre, begin-<lb/>
ning at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Narrating the film is its<lb/>
maker, Academy Award winner<lb/>
Kenneth Richter.<lb/>
"Safari" (the word means<lb/>
"journey" in Swahili) chronicles a<lb/>
trip into the southern half of Af-<lb/>
rica, with an emphasis on the<lb/>
natural wonders of the dark conti-<lb/>
nent ? its geography, its spec-<lb/>
tacular scenery and especially its<lb/>
wild animals and the indigenous<lb/>
people who share the land with<lb/>
the wildlife. An underlying<lb/>
theme is the major effort many<lb/>
African nations are making to<lb/>
save their heritage of wild ani-<lb/>
mals, plants and landscape.<lb/>
Featured in the film is a visit<lb/>
to Kruger Park, roughly the size of<lb/>
Massachussets, which is home to<lb/>
130 species of mammals and 468<lb/>
different birds. Also seen are pro-<lb/>
vincial and national parks and<lb/>
nature reserves which offer safety<lb/>
zones to several threatened spe-<lb/>
cies.<lb/>
The animal "stars" of chis film<lb/>
include the rare white rhino, the<lb/>
giraffe, the zebra, herds of<lb/>
elephants, and antelopes of many<lb/>
kinds.<lb/>
Public tickets to the screening<lb/>
of "Safari" are $4 each. Tickets<lb/>
may be purchased in advance at<lb/>
the Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
 T t ' <lb/>
Malkovich doesn't<lb/>
study for his parts<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ahmad Jam al, the first artist to keep an Lp in the top ten charts for<lb/>
108 consecutive weeks, will perform at Hendrix Theater on Janu-<lb/>
ary 25. Jamal has played on over 35 albums and has recorded such<lb/>
songs as "Afternoon in Paris "Yellow Fellow and "Misty<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? You<lb/>
might expect an intensely serious<lb/>
actor such as John Malkovich to<lb/>
delve into 18th century French<lb/>
history in order to play a decadent<lb/>
aristocrat in "Dangerous Liai-<lb/>
sons Wrong.<lb/>
"Mostly you just play the part<lb/>
as written'he admits. "People's<lb/>
behavior and the way they view<lb/>
the world and their very actions<lb/>
are just in the writing. Study the<lb/>
character's motivations and his-<lb/>
tory?<lb/>
Not for me. Afraid not<lb/>
"Dangerous Liaisons" is<lb/>
based on Chonderlos De Laclos'<lb/>
scandalous 1782 novel and Chris-<lb/>
topher Hampton's modern play<lb/>
"Les Liaisons Dangereuses<lb/>
Malkovich as the unscrupulous<lb/>
Valmont connives with Glenn<lb/>
dose, another sex-obsessed aris-<lb/>
tocrat, in bedroom games that<lb/>
ruin the lives of several people.<lb/>
"I wouldn't really describe<lb/>
Valmont as evil the actor<lb/>
mused. "He has a lot of suspi-<lb/>
ciousness to him, and he does a lot<lb/>
of things that are really mean. But<lb/>
I don't think in the end that he is<lb/>
really evil<lb/>
"One of the things the picture<lb/>
:s about is that he is unaware that<lb/>
lie is capable of love, unaware that<lb/>
he is capable of feeling, unaware<lb/>
that he is capable of provoking<lb/>
that emotion in someone else.<lb/>
Once he discovers that he can do<lb/>
that, it goes against everything he<lb/>
has ever believed about himself.<lb/>
Finally it destroys him<lb/>
Malkovich seemed a reluc-<lb/>
tant recruit to Warner Bros<lb/>
hoopla for "Dangerous Liaisons<lb/>
Although highly visible on the<lb/>
screen since his 1984 debut as the<lb/>
combat photographer in "The<lb/>
Killing FieldsThe has maintained<lb/>
a low profile in the media. But he<lb/>
considered the selling of "Dan-<lb/>
gerous Liasions" to be part of his<lb/>
job.<lb/>
A soft-spoken man, he care-<lb/>
fully chooses his words, as if wary<lb/>
of being misinterpreted. He<lb/>
bristled somewhat at the intima-<lb/>
tion that he was not exactly type-<lb/>
cast as the dashing, amorous Val-<lb/>
mont.<lb/>
"If you're intimating that I'm<lb/>
not sex-charged or romantic, you<lb/>
may be completely correct. I'm<lb/>
also not a psychopath or a robot or<lb/>
blind or anything else I play<lb/>
The stars of "Dangerous Liai-<lb/>
sons" ? Malkovich, Close, Mich-<lb/>
elle Pfeiffer ? are American, and<lb/>
their speech is Americanized.<lb/>
This is part of the plan by the<lb/>
original producer, Lorimar Tel-<lb/>
epictures.<lb/>
Malkovich was born in the<lb/>
small town of Benton, 111. His life<lb/>
changed in 1973, when he was<lb/>
introduced to acting through a<lb/>
drama class at Eastern Illinois<lb/>
See MALKOVICH, page 9<lb/>
The Philadelphia Dance Company, commonly called "Phila-<lb/>
danco will dance tonight in Wright Auditorium. The troupe<lb/>
boasts alumni who have gone on to dance with Alvin Ailey.<lb/>
Philadanco dances<lb/>
at Wright tonight<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
"Philadanco the Philadel-<lb/>
phia Dance Company, an ac-<lb/>
claimed ensemble of black danc-<lb/>
ers, will perform at ECU tonight<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Partially funded by a grant<lb/>
from the N. C. Arts Council, the<lb/>
event is part of ECU's 1988-89<lb/>
Performing Arts Series.<lb/>
Founded in 1970 by Joan<lb/>
Myers Brown out of a need for a<lb/>
performing company for minor-<lb/>
ity students in the Philadelphia<lb/>
area, Philadanco was intended to<lb/>
foster the discovery and training<lb/>
of a corps of local black dancers<lb/>
from which to build a strong<lb/>
dance company. The first 17 danc-<lb/>
ers selected were trained by lead-<lb/>
ing teachers from New York,<lb/>
Boston and Philadelphia.<lb/>
Since its initial performances<lb/>
at schools recreation centers and<lb/>
small social events, the company<lb/>
has developed its performing<lb/>
program with sponsorship from<lb/>
the National Endowment for the<lb/>
Arts and the William Penn foun-<lb/>
dation. Philadanco has per-<lb/>
formed in many cities on the east<lb/>
coast and at such major centers as<lb/>
the Brooklyn Academy of Music,<lb/>
Lincoln Center, Wolftrap and the<lb/>
Annenberg Center.<lb/>
Several principal Philadanco<lb/>
alumni, among them Kevin<lb/>
Brown, Debora Chase, Deborah<lb/>
Mannin and David St. Charles,<lb/>
have joined the renowned Alvin<lb/>
Ailey Dance Troupe. The en-<lb/>
semble is now regarded as<lb/>
Philadelphia's second major<lb/>
dance company, and such noted<lb/>
choreographers as Talley Beatty<lb/>
("Arms Too Short To Box with<lb/>
God") and Billy Wilson ("Bub-<lb/>
blin' Brown Sugar") have<lb/>
mounted works on Philadanco.<lb/>
Tickets to the concert, priced<lb/>
at $14 each for the general public<lb/>
and $7 for youth, are available it<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17. 19 9<lb/>
Home can't stop the operas<lb/>
NEW YORK (AT) ? The fa-<lb/>
mous mezzo-soprano Marilyn<lb/>
I lome pauses in detailing her<lb/>
busy life to ruminate about one<lb/>
difference between actors and<lb/>
singers.<lb/>
Actors, she said, don't always<lb/>
gel to do the works of the greatest<lb/>
writers and playwrights. But in<lb/>
classical music, "we're dealing<lb/>
with the masters all the time<lb/>
The good things she's singing<lb/>
inge from the most obscure,<lb/>
hich she relishes introducing, to<lb/>
very familiar, such as Bizet's<lb/>
Carmen<lb/>
"1 keeping saying I'm going<lb/>
to pull up a bit on opera and do<lb/>
SS she said. "1 keep doing<lb/>
More. It seems like there are so<lb/>
nany offers coming up all the<lb/>
? me<lb/>
In September and October,<lb/>
Miss Home sang seven perform-<lb/>
ances oP'Maomotto II" -an 1820<lb/>
Rossini opera having its Ameri-<lb/>
can premiere at the San Francisco<lb/>
Opera. In November, she sang<lb/>
Dame Quickly eight times in<lb/>
"Falstaff a Verdi masterpiece, at<lb/>
the Lyric Opera of Chicago. In<lb/>
December she was at the Metro-<lb/>
politan Opera six times as<lb/>
Carmen. In January and Febru-<lb/>
ary, the concentration is on<lb/>
Rossini's 'Tancredi first in Chi-<lb/>
cago, then Los Angeles.<lb/>
Miss Home, who has a col-<lb/>
oratura facility rare in voices<lb/>
lower than soprano, is especially<lb/>
acclaimed for singing Rossini,<lb/>
who expected coloratura singing<lb/>
even from men.<lb/>
"Maometto II' is a really<lb/>
fabulous Rossini work that he<lb/>
rewrote she said. "He wrote it in<lb/>
his Naples period, and when he<lb/>
went to Paris he rewrote it as The<lb/>
Siege of Corinth' ? that I sang at<lb/>
La Scala in 1969. The versions are<lb/>
quite different<lb/>
The San Francisco Opera and<lb/>
Miss Home decided on "Maom-<lb/>
etto" instead of "Siege" because<lb/>
"Maometto" had never been pre-<lb/>
sented in the United States.<lb/>
"It was an enormous success<lb/>
? much beyond our expecta-<lb/>
tions she said. 'The Rossini<lb/>
seria operas are still something<lb/>
that people are not too familiar<lb/>
with<lb/>
In opera seria, which came<lb/>
before grand opera, each scene<lb/>
had a recitative to relate a plot<lb/>
event, followed by an aria that<lb/>
commented on the event. The<lb/>
arias often were written to show<lb/>
off particular singers.<lb/>
Next season Miss Home will<lb/>
sing in "Falstaff" and Vivaldi's<lb/>
"Orlando furioso" in San Fran-<lb/>
cisco.<lb/>
"It's a staggeringly beautiful<lb/>
opera which, whenever we've<lb/>
done it, has never been less than a<lb/>
screaming, stomping success<lb/>
she said. "My dream is to talk the<lb/>
Met into it. So far they're not inter-<lb/>
ested<lb/>
In May, she'll sing concerts<lb/>
with the Detroit and Indiana<lb/>
symphonies.<lb/>
Miss Home has been singing<lb/>
in public since 1954, when she<lb/>
dubbed the voice of Dorothy<lb/>
Dandridge in the movie "Carmen<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Miss Home's former hus-<lb/>
band, Henry Lewis, will conduct<lb/>
"Tancredi" in Los Angeles and<lb/>
Barcelona. "We occasionally do<lb/>
concerts together, too. We've<lb/>
always remained really close<lb/>
friends 'she said.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
New and Returning<lb/>
Students<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Iarge Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles: from campus<lb/>
?Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
Hacker called 'a big, fat slob'<lb/>
??? i<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP)  To the<lb/>
sociate who turned him in,<lb/>
Kevin David Mitnick is the ulti-<lb/>
mate computer nerd, a "big, fat<lb/>
slob" obsessed with fast food and<lb/>
breaking into computer systems.<lb/>
To the authorities holding<lb/>
him without bail, the 25-vear-old<lb/>
os Angeles man is an expert<lb/>
acker who calls himself Condor<lb/>
and is so dangerous he must<lb/>
never be allowed to use even a<lb/>
telephone without supervision.<lb/>
He is truly a threat to society,<lb/>
someone who uses computers to<lb/>
act out personal vendettasagainst<lb/>
people said Jim Black, a com-<lb/>
puter crime specialist with the<lb/>
Police Department.<lb/>
"The bottom line with Kevin<lb/>
i- that if you have a job, pav a gas<lb/>
bill, use a phone or drive a car he<lb/>
can find you and ruin vou elec-<lb/>
tronically' Black said in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview. "If he wasn't in<lb/>
jail, he could be listening to us<lb/>
right this minute Mitnick was<lb/>
being held today in a maximum-<lb/>
security cell at the federal Metro-<lb/>
politan Detention Center.<lb/>
A federal grand jury indicted<lb/>
him Dec. 20 on charges that he<lb/>
used unauthorized MCI long-dis-<lb/>
tance codes to tap into computers<lb/>
at Leeds University in England<lb/>
and the University of Southern<lb/>
California and that he caused $4<lb/>
million damage to a Digital<lb/>
Equipment Corp. (DEC) com-<lb/>
puter system.<lb/>
Mitnick will plead innocent,<lb/>
said his attorney, Alan Rubin.<lb/>
"We will also try to get bail<lb/>
set Rubin said. "I am shocked<lb/>
and astonished that my client is<lb/>
being held without bail and in<lb/>
Was (Not Was) go<lb/>
for new label deal<lb/>
solitary confinement. This thing<lb/>
has been blown completely out of<lb/>
proportion<lb/>
Longtime associate Leonard<lb/>
DiCicco, 23, of Calabasas, said he<lb/>
reported Mitnick's activities to<lb/>
authorities because Mitnick had<lb/>
been threatening him.<lb/>
"He was using DEC comput-<lb/>
ers where I work and threatening<lb/>
that we would both go down if I<lb/>
said anything said DiCicco, who<lb/>
faces no charges in the inquiry.<lb/>
"He has no sense of right or<lb/>
wrong and no respect for anyone<lb/>
else's privacy DiCicco said. "I<lb/>
was beside him through all this<lb/>
hacking and it's scary to think of<lb/>
the things he is capable of<lb/>
"He could pick apart almost<lb/>
any compeer system in the<lb/>
United States Black said. "There<lb/>
are probably only a handful of<lb/>
computer specialists with his<lb/>
capabilities<lb/>
In his electronic activities, the<lb/>
5-11, 240-pound Mitnick referred<lb/>
to himself as Cfld?rA Blf ck sajc.<lb/>
DiCicco said Mitnick named him-<lb/>
self for Robert Redford's<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
"he Was write most of the group's<lb/>
iterial and also play a number<lb/>
t instruments. For singers, they<lb/>
recruited Atkinson and Bowen,<lb/>
. ho had been performing back-<lb/>
; vocals at the Sound Suite.<lb/>
Clinton, mastermind of Par-<lb/>
:ament-Funkadclic, enters the<lb/>
story because his music and satiri-<lb/>
cal style of writing arc powerful<lb/>
Influences on WasCNot Was).<lb/>
"George Clinton played at<lb/>
ur high school dance when his<lb/>
aroup was still called the Parlia-<lb/>
ments Weiss said.<lb/>
With the help of a friendly<lb/>
iazz critic, Was (Not Was) signed<lb/>
with Ze Records, an independent<lb/>
label, in 1980.<lb/>
"I violated journalistic ethics<lb/>
by sending the demo to Ze Rec-<lb/>
ords with a cover letter from<lb/>
myself as a critic saying you must<lb/>
listen to these guys Weiss con-<lb/>
fessed.<lb/>
The ploy worked. Zilkha, the<lb/>
president of Ze, liked Was (Not<lb/>
Was) and the group's self-titled<lb/>
debut album came out in 1981.<lb/>
The record sold poorly, how-<lb/>
ever, and Was (Not Was) tried its<lb/>
luck the following year with Gef-<lb/>
fen Records.<lb/>
The group's sole album for<lb/>
Geffen, "Born to Laugh at Torna-<lb/>
does was released in 1983. But<lb/>
the record bombed.<lb/>
Was (Not Was) did manage to<lb/>
have a couple of hits in Europe<lb/>
and is now happily signed with<lb/>
Chrysalis records. "What Up,<lb/>
Dog?" is a mi x of funky tracks and<lb/>
the heartfelt "Love Can be Bad<lb/>
Luck<lb/>
character's code name in the spy<lb/>
movie "Three Days of the Con-<lb/>
dor<lb/>
"All he did was eat Fat Bur-<lb/>
gers, drink Slurpees and work on<lb/>
computers DiCicco said. "He<lb/>
was a big, fat slob of a guy who<lb/>
couldn't get through a day with-<lb/>
out breaking into a computer<lb/>
somewhere<lb/>
Mitnick began his hacking<lb/>
career using telephones, authori-<lb/>
ties said. By age 13, he was under<lb/>
investigation by the police de-<lb/>
partment, Pacific Bell telephone<lb/>
company and the Federal Com-<lb/>
munications Commission, the<lb/>
Los Angeles Daily News said<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
"Mitnick was a legend to the<lb/>
computer world by 1981 said<lb/>
John Christ, his high school com-<lb/>
puter teacher.<lb/>
In 1982, DiCicco said, he and<lb/>
Mitnick used USC's 24-hour stu-<lb/>
dent compute lafc tc get, jnto<lb/>
many computers, including clas-<lb/>
sified systems.<lb/>
Malkovich attracts rave reviews<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"I kept doing it the last two<lb/>
years in school, then I met the<lb/>
people who started the Steppen-<lb/>
wolf theater in Chicago. In '76<lb/>
when we all left school, I went<lb/>
with them<lb/>
Malkovich became one of the<lb/>
pillars of Steppenwolf, with<lb/>
which he is still associated. He<lb/>
attracted rave reviews when the<lb/>
company played in New York,<lb/>
and he won an Obie in Sam<lb/>
Shepard's 'True West His sec-<lb/>
ond film, "Places in the Heart<lb/>
won him an Academy Award<lb/>
nomination as supporting actor,<lb/>
and he has followed with "Eleni<lb/>
"Making Mr. Right "The Glass<lb/>
Menagerie" and "Empire of the<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
He played Biff to Dustin<lb/>
Hoffman's Willy Loman in<lb/>
"Death of a Salesman"<lb/>
A BEAUTIFUL PLACE<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
(Ask us about our special rates to change leases, and<lb/>
discounts for January rentals)<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?Near major Shopping Centers<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
?Onsite laundry<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 758-7436<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
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apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $215 a month. 6 month<lb/>
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Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile<lb/>
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11 AM - 3 PM<lb/>
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Daily Specials<lb/>
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an additional $1.99 with a meal<lb/>
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Its IIBE for quality Russell Athletic sports-<lb/>
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But you better hum. (lassie Russell Athletic<lb/>
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'Exclusive of team or organized sports participation.<lb/>
?an student Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1989<lb/>
State Department lacks linguists<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
When it comes to foreign lan-<lb/>
guages, says the State<lb/>
Department's top linguist,<lb/>
"Americans are somewhere at the<lb/>
bottom of the civilized world<lb/>
And that sure makes Harry<lb/>
Obst's job more difficult. Obst is<lb/>
director of languages services, the<lb/>
person in charge of providing<lb/>
interpreters and translators to the<lb/>
White House and 30 government<lb/>
agencies. He spends much of his<lb/>
time scrambling for linguists to<lb/>
meet the growing demand.<lb/>
Sometimes Obst comes up<lb/>
empty-handed and has the un-<lb/>
pleasant duty of informing cabi-<lb/>
net officers or other high-ranking<lb/>
officials that his bureau is unable<lb/>
to provide an interpreter.<lb/>
"It's very uncomfortable for<lb/>
me as director of this office to deal<lb/>
with that says Obst, who has<lb/>
about 25 slots each allotted for<lb/>
interpreters and translators. Also<lb/>
on his calling list are 1,900 private<lb/>
contractors, mostly individuals.<lb/>
Obst himself was born in<lb/>
Germany and interprets for visit-<lb/>
ing officials from his native land.<lb/>
A few years ago, there was<lb/>
jubilation at the State Department<lb/>
when, after a painstaking search,<lb/>
a Chinese language specialist was<lb/>
found for a long-standing va-<lb/>
cancy. More than 200 applicants<lb/>
had failed the test.<lb/>
But within hours, the linguist<lb/>
was lured away by Occidental<lb/>
Petroleum Corp. for a salary far in<lb/>
excess of the $40,000 State Depart-<lb/>
ment offer.<lb/>
"We never saw the gentleman<lb/>
report for duty here Obst says.<lb/>
The United States, Obst says, pays<lb/>
relatively little attention to lin-<lb/>
guistic matters as compared with<lb/>
the Soviet Union, China, Japan<lb/>
and even some smaller countries,<lb/>
such as Cuba.<lb/>
The Soviets reward some lin-<lb/>
guistic virtuosos with prestige<lb/>
ambassadorships and other key<lb/>
government posts. The outgoing<lb/>
U.S. ambassador to the United<lb/>
Nations, Vemon Walters, himself<lb/>
a master of eight languages, says<lb/>
the American government should<lb/>
adopt a similar practice.<lb/>
Thomas Pickering, the career<lb/>
diplomat George Bush picked as<lb/>
his ambassador to the United<lb/>
Nations, is fluent in French, Span-<lb/>
ish, Arabic and Swahili.<lb/>
There are many reasons for<lb/>
the lack of interest in foreign lan-<lb/>
guages among Americans. In<lb/>
some parts of the country, an<lb/>
American can go a lifetime and<lb/>
not hear any language but his<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Europeans have exposure to a<lb/>
multiplicity of languages within a<lb/>
relatively small area and empha-<lb/>
size language training through-<lb/>
out secondarv school.<lb/>
Beyond that, learning a for-<lb/>
eign language can be a lonely,<lb/>
arduous task. The payoff for dedi-<lb/>
cated study often is long in com-<lb/>
ing. There is little appeal for<lb/>
today's American youth to spend<lb/>
hours on end poring over flash-<lb/>
cards in Pushtu.<lb/>
Pushtu? That is a language<lb/>
spoken in Afghanistan. When an<lb/>
Afghan rebel leader visited<lb/>
Washington in 1987, he asked that<lb/>
a native-born American be his<lb/>
interpreter rather than a natural-<lb/>
ized American of Afghan origin.<lb/>
Not surprisinglv, none was avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
A decade ago a presidential<lb/>
commission described American<lb/>
incompetence in foreign lan-<lb/>
guagesas "scandalous It argued<lb/>
that one reason for the U.S. trade<lb/>
deficit, only a fraction then of<lb/>
what it is now, is that Americans<lb/>
don't speak other languages well<lb/>
enough to persuade foreigners to<lb/>
buy their products.<lb/>
J. William Fulbright, when he<lb/>
was chairman of the Senate For-<lb/>
eign Relations Committee, de-<lb/>
scribed the problem as "cultural<lb/>
and linguistic myopia<lb/>
Sen. Paul Simon, Dill was so<lb/>
concerned that he wrote a book<lb/>
about the subject eight years ago -<lb/>
'The Tongue-Tied American<lb/>
The concern is shared by Dr.<lb/>
Robert Gard, president of the<lb/>
Monterey Institute of Interna-<lb/>
tional Studies in California, one of<lb/>
the few campuses in the country<lb/>
which turns out accomplished<lb/>
linguists.<lb/>
Gard says the attitude of cor-<lb/>
porate executives seems to be that<lb/>
the rest of the world ought to learn<lb/>
how to speak English.<lb/>
That certainly was not the<lb/>
attitude of the legendary Emil<lb/>
Fossan, the linguistic equivalent<lb/>
of Babe Ruth. By 1984, when his<lb/>
40-year government ended, Fos-<lb/>
san was helping out the State<lb/>
Department in 34 languages.<lb/>
"He was the most remarkable<lb/>
translator we ever had Obst<lb/>
says. Several years ago, the pau-<lb/>
city of bright, bilingual Ameri-<lb/>
cans forced the State Department<lb/>
to drop a requirement that candi-<lb/>
dates for the foreign service be<lb/>
fluent in a second language. The<lb/>
reason was that too many talented<lb/>
people had to be passed over be-<lb/>
cause of the requirement.<lb/>
In other countries, language<lb/>
training "is mandatory in high<lb/>
school, mandatory in college and<lb/>
as a result you have a good base<lb/>
from which you can work Obst<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Stephen Bosworth, president<lb/>
of the United States-Japan Foun-<lb/>
dation, a private group based in<lb/>
New York, says increasing num-<lb/>
bers of U.S. public schools want to<lb/>
add Japanese to their curriculum<lb/>
but many can't find qualified<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
He adds that American busi-<lb/>
nesses give low priority to exper-<lb/>
tise in Japanese. Given a choice<lb/>
between giving a job to someone<lb/>
trained in Japanese and another<lb/>
who has a master's in business<lb/>
administration, "they'll always<lb/>
pick the one with the MBA he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
At the State Department, a<lb/>
linguist must be able to interpret<lb/>
simultaneously and consecu-<lb/>
tively into both his native and<lb/>
acquired languages, demands<lb/>
that are "unheard of" elsewhere,<lb/>
Obst says. He must be able to toss<lb/>
off colloquialisms on issues rang-<lb/>
ing from Rio Grande salinity<lb/>
problems to high energy physics<lb/>
to the nuclear fuel cycle.<lb/>
Linguists say a nimble mind<lb/>
must be supplemented by a num-<lb/>
ber of other traits as well: motiva-<lb/>
tion, a spirit of adventure, curios-<lb/>
ity, self-confidence, a wish to<lb/>
communicate and "an omniver-<lb/>
ous appetite for the myriad fla-<lb/>
vors that foreign cultures come<lb/>
in as the current issue of The<lb/>
Foreign Service Journal puts it.<lb/>
Making life more difficult still<lb/>
for State Department language<lb/>
recruiters is that the agency's sala-<lb/>
ries are generally smaller than<lb/>
those of international organiza-<lb/>
tions, which compete for the same<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
At the State Department, an<lb/>
interpreter without supervisory<lb/>
responsibilities can earn up to<lb/>
$71,000. For a translator, who<lb/>
deals exclusively with printed<lb/>
material, the peak salary is<lb/>
$65,000.<lb/>
He says salaries at the United<lb/>
Nations are 10 percent to 15 per-<lb/>
cent higher, but others maintain<lb/>
the gap is even wider.<lb/>
Besides the United Nations,<lb/>
the State Department also com-<lb/>
petes for linguists with such inter-<lb/>
national organizations as the<lb/>
World Bank, the International<lb/>
Monetary Fund and the Organi-<lb/>
zation of American States. Unlike<lb/>
the State Department, these insti-<lb/>
tutions can hire non-Americans<lb/>
and don't have to worry about<lb/>
security clearances.<lb/>
According to Obst, experts in<lb/>
Japanese, Russian, Chinese and<lb/>
Portuguese are the most difficult<lb/>
to find.<lb/>
One New York-based firm<lb/>
provides Japanese-language in-<lb/>
terpreters for $450 per day. When<lb/>
it hires a Japanese language free-<lb/>
lancer, the State Department pays<lb/>
$325 a day, $300 Tor other lan-<lb/>
guages.<lb/>
Still, rubbing elbows with the<lb/>
president during a meeting with a<lb/>
foreign luminary is one of the at-<lb/>
tractions of interpreting for the<lb/>
State Department.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost. Preg-<lb/>
nancy Test. Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy<lb/>
Counseling. For further information, call 832-0535 (toll<lb/>
free number : 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS UP TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Wednesday:<lb/>
All Campus Male Strip Off!<lb/>
$ 100.00 1st Place<lb/>
$50.00 2nd Place<lb/>
$25.00 3rd Place<lb/>
Ladies Only till 10:30<lb/>
Admission for ladies $1.00<lb/>
Guvs Admission<lb/>
$1.00 Members<lb/>
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JOIN IN!<lb/>
At Alpha Sigma Phi there is always<lb/>
something going on. And we believe that<lb/>
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A fraternal experience where a group of<lb/>
men from different backgrounds come<lb/>
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RUSH WEEK: JAN. 24, 25, &amp; 26<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0012"/><lb/>
1 Ml I S1 ?. ROl ININ<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
IANUARY 17 1989 Page 11<lb/>
East Carolina drops to 2-2 in the CAA's<lb/>
Patriots dominate to beat Pirates at home<lb/>
B KRIST1 N II 1 HI RG<lb/>
and<lb/>
 HRIS sn Gl I<lb/>
!<lb/>
was in rebounding. The Patriots<lb/>
dominated the boards grabbing<lb/>
36 rebounds while ECU could<lb/>
only manage 25 We can't win<lb/>
ball games if we don't rebound,<lb/>
Steole aid<lb/>
In addition, another edge for<lb/>
Patriot came in shooting.<lb/>
I in s oring the tirst halt<lb/>
' - percent from the field<lb/>
l AH sh,t a respectable 5 x<lb/>
nl But the second half made<lb/>
ferencc as c leorge Ma-<lb/>
t 59 percent from the field<lb/>
d East Carolina could only<lb/>
u igi i meager 3 percent.<lb/>
kenm samavrs. who is<lb/>
? - leading scorer and who<lb/>
? I "s Blue i dwards<lb/>
 plaver of the-year,<lb/>
? d 23 points tor the Patriots<lb/>
unds.<lb/>
1 dw ards  ho is the sixth<lb/>
le iding scorei in the nation, had<lb/>
27 points tor the night but shot<lb/>
poorly from the field, hitting 10<lb/>
lor 23 In addition, Edwards<lb/>
grabbed six reb ?unds<lb/>
Mike I largi tt a freshman<lb/>
guard for th Patriots, was a sur<lb/>
prise in the game 1 la; getl s rod<lb/>
1? points toi the night and the<lb/>
S 10" guard had six rebounds<lb/>
;ainst the Piral He was also<lb/>
four for ; from the three point<lb/>
line<lb/>
GMU sRobertDyk  .sisted<lb/>
in icing the victory for th Patri its<lb/>
as he had i 7 p.?ints and pulled in<lb/>
K ? ? Mm phv had a g ;<lb/>
nighl ? ? rates as hecontrib-<lb/>
uted 17 points to E 1 's losing<lb/>
ffort a I five rebounds. I le<lb/>
shot well from tin1 perimeter, also<lb/>
shooting tour tor six from the<lb/>
three-p inl line.<lb/>
(?us Hill tonic i out with 1:51<lb/>
remaining in the game but not<lb/>
b'tore he S( ored 1i points for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
1 he ?'? in puts (leorge Mason<lb/>
at 6-9 for the season and 2-2 in<lb/>
conferent e play.<lb/>
East arolina dropped its<lb/>
:? ord t -7 and is now tied with<lb/>
i AH in the conference at 2-2.<lb/>
The Pirates get ready for a<lb/>
three game stretch that will take<lb/>
them on the road to American<lb/>
avvand I "C-Wilmington. The<lb/>
action begins in Washington D.C.<lb/>
when the Pirates travel to Render<lb/>
Arena to ace the Eagles of Ameri-<lb/>
can ' 'niversitv.<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose to<lb/>
the Lady Dukes 72-46<lb/>
k t<lb/>
:<lb/>
with Richmond and (. leorge<lb/>
lason.<lb/>
funior forward Sarah Gray<lb/>
i the 1 adv Pirates in the IMP<lb/>
ame scoring 1H points and pull-<lb/>
ig down nine rebounds. Gra<lb/>
? o has scored in double figures<lb/>
games this season, is cur-<lb/>
. tied tor fifth place among<lb/>
A leading scorers with a 16.2<lb/>
in all games and a 17-<lb/>
? ' ? . rage against CAA opp. i<lb/>
.ra who leads ECU in total<lb/>
inds has a solid hold on<lb/>
nd place among the leagues<lb/>
? prel ounds with 98 rebounds so<lb/>
tar this season.<lb/>
unst Au . senior forward<lb/>
? tta Savage added 15 points to<lb/>
a  Pirate s effort. Savage,<lb/>
: eked five shots against the<lb/>
- s is currently in sixth<lb/>
EC career blocks and contin-<lb/>
limb.<lb/>
! ady Pirates will con<lb/>
? I rence play on the road<lb/>
the travel to Fairfax, Va. to<lb/>
? ? Mason woh is 9 3<lb/>
?vcrall and 2-0 in CAA play.<lb/>
Against Richmond earlier this season, Sarah Grav attempts a<lb/>
long pass on the breakaway. The 1 ady Pirates fared no hotter<lb/>
againstieorge Mason Monday night than they did against the<lb/>
Dukes on Saturday as thev hist to the Patriots bh<lb/>
Blue Edwards goes up for the jumper against George Mason<lb/>
Monday night. The loss against the Patriots puts IT 9-h<lb/>
overall nd 2-2 in the conference (Photo by Angela Pridgen<lb/>
ECU Photo I ah i.<lb/>
ECU defeats JMU in front<lb/>
of a sellout home crowd<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
As James Madison coach<lb/>
ft 1 ri( s,  entered Mi: .<lb/>
( oliscum Saturday night, he de-<lb/>
lighted the 1(1 fans by taking a<lb/>
bow. But it wa; th Pirate ti<lb/>
that would take the bow s alter the<lb/>
game as thev defeated I ikeof<lb/>
MU,62 57.<lb/>
With the  in E L m . - I<lb/>
n I one in A A play the first<lb/>
? ? th<lb/>
ov<lb/>
h<lb/>
?nfer-<lb/>
- s; i; , rates are<lb/>
ilread <lb/>
as man i les as last - .<lb/>
when the v ent fi<lb/>
Minges Co ??? is<lb/>
- ed as the Pirates pla t d be-<lb/>
fore their first sellout si nee Feb<lb/>
' 'v and the 6,500 tans v en n I<lb/>
di ap- oinl ;<lb/>
"It v as i ? at crowd an 1 3<lb/>
great atmosphere to play in, IV<lb/>
i ite coach Mike Steele said ' Hie<lb/>
enthusiasm th v showed '???as a<lb/>
a t 1 i f t I r 0 I: r ' i . I: I -<lb/>
? rir the second half With<lb/>
i tii . ime to start the second pe-<lb/>
 rates<lb/>
  ing an ea sv lames<lb/>
 i hson basket to start the half.<lb/>
Pirates started to take control.<lb/>
At 18:48 in the period, Stanley<lb/>
? II tved a Blue Edwards<lb/>
miss to put the Pirates up 32 :<lb/>
i i be the lead ECU<lb/>
ild never give ij<lb/>
'????. r a William Davis three-<lb/>
nter pulled the Dukes to<lb/>
in one. East n na ' sk<lb/>
I CU vn 1 foi e a tive<lb/>
nd ? ? ind pass<lb/>
md Ed wards v ' : ' i ' v I<lb/>
: - ?????. own the<lb/>
- rhis would start a 14-6 run<lb/>
Pirates which would put<lb/>
them up 54 43 with 5:2 ft nthe<lb/>
game.<lb/>
But down 11, the Pukes<lb/>
, mid not quit. Thev v, ildpulla<lb/>
run of tl ir own Over the next<lb/>
- and a half minutes lames<lb/>
Madisi n ??? uld outscorc the Pi-<lb/>
?5 And f( !iov ing a<lb/>
rates<lb/>
h<lb/>
me a<lb/>
See I 1 1 TV page 11<lb/>
Team leader "Blue" Edwards looks toward future for Pirates<lb/>
IU<lb/>
,1 1<lb/>
I ' ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?? pas<lb/>
l<lb/>
insiders<lb/>
but that<lb/>
-<lb/>
is in<lb/>
aid<lb/>
na-<lb/>
lot nly E( I 's leading<lb/>
til player, he also has a<lb/>
lorful" nickname. "When<lb/>
?1 ?v<lb/>
rheodore "Blue" Edwards<lb/>
was little, ! was in nn crib with<lb/>
ny bottle when I started to<lb/>
hoki . Edwards said. "My little<lb/>
? ran and told my mother that<lb/>
m ithi ? " tii d the blueish tint ol<lb/>
Ins skin when she entered the<lb/>
room and the nickname "Blue"<lb/>
-tuck w ith him since then.<lb/>
Blue began plaving basket-<lb/>
ball when he was very voung. "1<lb/>
had two older brothers and we<lb/>
used to plav pick up games in the<lb/>
backyard when I was little<lb/>
Edwards sail I.<lb/>
!o<lb/>
tho<lb/>
talent to plav three vears ol high<lb/>
school basketball at (ireene Cen-<lb/>
tral High School. In those three<lb/>
vears, Blue was named t am MVP<lb/>
twice and set a school single-sea<lb/>
si n st (irir n ord<lb/>
After graduation, 1 dwards<lb/>
? U ok w hat he learned m<lb/>
e pick -up games and used hi:<lb/>
wenttoLoui . urg Junior College.<lb/>
In le- second year at Louisburg,<lb/>
Edwards averaged 22.3 points per<lb/>
game and grabbed an average of<lb/>
six rebounds per contest. Among<lb/>
his many honors while at junior<lb/>
college, Edwards was named see<lb/>
ond team National lunior College<lb/>
-Ml-American.<lb/>
With a high school career like<lb/>
Edward's and great statistics like<lb/>
he showed at I ouisburg. many<lb/>
people wonder why he did not go<lb/>
to a 1 Mvision I school right out of<lb/>
high school. "1 didn't get any ot-<lb/>
ters from any real big schools,<lb/>
Edwards explained. "My coach<lb/>
thought I could be a good player<lb/>
and knew that the coach .it I ouis-<lb/>
burg was a good fundamental<lb/>
coach w ho could help me.<lb/>
Atter tw o years at 1 ouisburg<lb/>
it was then time tor Blue to decide<lb/>
where to go next. It was not an<lb/>
easy decision. Many schools had<lb/>
ottered him a chance to plav But<lb/>
Edwards said that there were a<lb/>
few things that made him choose<lb/>
EC U. "One reason 1 came here<lb/>
was that mv girlfriend and I had<lb/>
decided at junior college to go to<lb/>
the same school when we left,<lb/>
Edwards said.<lb/>
But probably more important<lb/>
was the fact that Edwards was<lb/>
impressed with the recruiting of<lb/>
coach Mike I Vmenthe. Dementhe<lb/>
let Blue know that he would be<lb/>
able to step right in and play for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
In his first season at ECl<lb/>
Edwards made an automatic<lb/>
impact. He averaged over 14<lb/>
points and five rebounds per<lb/>
game. He shot 56.1 percent trom<lb/>
the field and 73.9 percent from the<lb/>
tree throw line. He dazzled the<lb/>
tans w ith his lumping ability and<lb/>
a wide array o( spectacular dunks<lb/>
Hi en Edwards ran into a<lb/>
buzz m He had to sit out the<lb/>
1987-88 season for disciplinary<lb/>
reasons. It was a big disappoint-<lb/>
ment not only to blue but also to<lb/>
the fans vvho had fallen in love<lb/>
w o.h him.<lb/>
. this season began,<lb/>
 dw ? ; put his past behind him<lb/>
see Bl IE, page 14<lb/>
h k<lb/>
1 V S<lb/>
I.( i winningest swim coach<lb/>
ECU Swim and Dive team continues to dominate<lb/>
Bj KRIS 1 I MAI 151 RG<lb/>
?<lb/>
: ' rl <lb/>
easoi iturda vhei<lb/>
P i r a t tool i N <lb/>
? ? ? ? Ming quati<lb/>
? ' : thi women<lb/>
ictori in what w as<lb/>
f cad ' oa h Ri k<lb/>
? ? a more o mp titivc<lb/>
? ? ?? . Pirat We rolled<lb/>
? tl m Kobe said "We<lb/>
mi ited from start to finish<lb/>
two wins on Saturday<lb/>
- b the winningest<lb/>
in I? I swimming history<lb/>
i k , umulated 111 winsand<lb/>
jno hmg at last<lb/>
na<lb/>
I he men won the moot bv a<lb/>
? of 1 ;s s while the Ladv<lb/>
ihaw ks suffered at the mercy o( Athletii Asso iation Meet on lob.<lb/>
?ECl women, 112-72.<lb/>
'Most of our swimmers<lb/>
warn their best rimes of the sea-<lb/>
on ki be said<lb/>
I he men now stand at 8 Oon<lb/>
season before having to tace<lb/>
the 1 arheels of UNC on Wednes-<lb/>
day I his is the best start ever bv<lb/>
in 1 I swim team as thev eon<lb/>
ue to remain undefeated They<lb/>
ha e also tied the record for most<lb/>
11 msei utive wins in a season.<lb/>
1 he victory over UN W put<lb/>
the ladv Pirates' record at 7-1.<lb/>
with their only loss coming from<lb/>
the Tribe of William and Mary.<lb/>
In addition to facing the al-<lb/>
ways tough Tarheels of North<lb/>
( arolina, the Pirates have to look<lb/>
torward to another hard team to<lb/>
boat, Duke University, before<lb/>
road tripping to the Colonial<lb/>
1 he two M A A qualifiers,<lb/>
Vi redith Bridgers and Sherry<lb/>
( ampbell, had good days against<lb/>
the Seahawks. bridgers claimed<lb/>
Mrst in the .1 " yard breaststroke<lb/>
with her time ol 2:26 78 She w ill<lb/>
be swimming the 200 yard<lb/>
breaststroke as well as the 100-<lb/>
yard breaststroke in the NCAA<lb/>
Championships in March.<lb/>
Sherryampbell easily<lb/>
nabbed first in the event that she<lb/>
qualified tor in the NCAA's, the<lb/>
three-meter diving event.<lb/>
Campbell r.n ked up 242 points<lb/>
for her first place victory, 11<lb/>
points ahead ol M. Mills of I IN(<lb/>
W<lb/>
Sweep was the word for the<lb/>
day for the men as they had five<lb/>
sweeps on the day against the<lb/>
Seahawks<lb/>
The East Carolina men battle their way to victory in the 200-yard freestyle event. The Pirates<lb/>
easily dominated against the UNC-Wilmington team as both the men and women rolled<lb/>
their way to the victory stand (Photo bv Tom Doyle).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989 Page 11<lb/>
East Carolina drops to 2-2 in the CAA's<lb/>
Patriots dominate to beat Pirates at home<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
and<lb/>
CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Sports Editor and Assistant<lb/>
The "fired up" Pirates were<lb/>
quickly put to shame Monday<lb/>
night at Minges Coliseum. In<lb/>
front of a home crowd of 5,200<lb/>
tans, the 8-7 Conference foe,<lb/>
George Mason University, who<lb/>
dominated in rebounds for the<lb/>
night, had the edge it needed to<lb/>
rout the Pirates 86-74.<lb/>
George Mason took the lead<lb/>
with 15:11 in the second half. They<lb/>
then built the lead to as much as 14<lb/>
over the course of the half. ECU<lb/>
managed to close the gap at seven<lb/>
but could inch no closer as the<lb/>
Patriots went on to win.<lb/>
The key element in the game<lb/>
was in rebounding. The Patriots<lb/>
dominated the boards grabbing<lb/>
86 rebounds while ECU could<lb/>
only manage 25. "We can't win<lb/>
ball games if we don't rebound<lb/>
Steele said.<lb/>
In addition, another edge for<lb/>
the Patriots came in shooting.<lb/>
ECU led in scoring the first half<lb/>
shooting 64 percent from the field<lb/>
while GMU shot a respectable 53<lb/>
percent. But the second half made<lb/>
all the difference as George Ma-<lb/>
son shot 59 percent frorh the field<lb/>
and East Carolina could only<lb/>
manage a meager 33 percent.<lb/>
Kenny Sanders, who is<lb/>
Mason's leading scorer and who<lb/>
challenges ECU'S Blue Edwards<lb/>
for the CAA player-of-the-year,<lb/>
scored 23 points for the Patriots<lb/>
and had six rebounds.<lb/>
Edwards, who is the sixth<lb/>
leading scorer in the nation, had<lb/>
27 points for the night but shot<lb/>
poorly from the field, hitting 10<lb/>
for 23. In addition, Edwards<lb/>
grabbed six rebounds.<lb/>
Mike Hargett, a freshman<lb/>
guard for the Patriots, was a sur-<lb/>
prise in the game. Hargett scored<lb/>
19 points for the night and the<lb/>
5'10" guard had six rebounds<lb/>
against the Pirates. He was also<lb/>
four for six from the three-point<lb/>
line.<lb/>
GMU's Robert Dykes assisted<lb/>
in icing the victory for the Patriots<lb/>
as he had 17 points and pulled in<lb/>
eight boards.<lb/>
Kenny Murphy had a good<lb/>
night for the Pirates as he contrib-<lb/>
uted 17 points to ECU'S losing<lb/>
effort and had five rebounds. He<lb/>
shot well from the perimeter, also<lb/>
shooting four for six from the<lb/>
three-point line.<lb/>
Gus Hill fouled out with 1:51<lb/>
remaining in the game but not<lb/>
before he scored 15 points for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The win puts George Mason<lb/>
at 6-9 for the season and 2-2 in<lb/>
conference play.<lb/>
East Carolina dropped its<lb/>
record to 8-7 and is now tied with<lb/>
GMU in the conference at 2-2.<lb/>
The Pirates get ready for a<lb/>
threw game stretch that will take<lb/>
them on the road to American,<lb/>
Navy and UNC-Wilmington. The<lb/>
action begins in Washington D.C.<lb/>
when the Pirates travel to Bender<lb/>
Arena to face the Eagles of Ameri-<lb/>
can University.<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose to<lb/>
the Lady Dukes 72-46<lb/>
r<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina women's<lb/>
basketball team suffered its sec-<lb/>
ond consecutive loss to Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association opponents<lb/>
on Saturday night as the Lady<lb/>
Dukes of James Madison handed<lb/>
ECU a 72-46 loss in Harrisonburg,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 6-6 on<lb/>
the year and 1 -2 in CAA play, shot<lb/>
only 40.9 percent in the first half as<lb/>
James Madison shot 61.1 percent<lb/>
and were up 47-20 at halftime.<lb/>
In second half play, ECU<lb/>
outscored James Madison 26-25,<lb/>
and shot 39.9 percent to the Lady<lb/>
Duke's 26.9 percent, but the im-<lb/>
provement did not come soon<lb/>
enough as J M U recorded the CAA<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
I East Carolina now stands in a<lb/>
three-way tie for fourth place of<lb/>
the CAA. James Madison, sport-<lb/>
ing a perfect conference record of<lb/>
2-0, is in a three-way tie for first<lb/>
place with Richmond and George<lb/>
Mason.<lb/>
Junior forward Sarah Gray<lb/>
paced the Lady Pirates in the JMU<lb/>
game, scoring 18 points and pull-<lb/>
ing down nine rebounds. Gray,<lb/>
who has scored in double figures<lb/>
in all 12 games this season, is cur-<lb/>
rently tied for fifth place among<lb/>
CAA leading scorers with a 16.2<lb/>
average in all games and a 17-<lb/>
point average against CAA oppo-<lb/>
nents.<lb/>
Gray, who leads ECU in total<lb/>
rebounds, has a solid hold on<lb/>
second place among the leagues<lb/>
top rebounds with 98 rebounds so<lb/>
far this season. . . . .<lb/>
Against JMU, senior forward<lb/>
Gretta Savage added 15 points to<lb/>
the Lady Pirate's effort. Savage,<lb/>
who blocked five shots against the<lb/>
Lady Dukes, is currently in sixth<lb/>
in ECU career blocks and contin-<lb/>
ues to climb.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will con-<lb/>
tinue conference play on the road<lb/>
as they travel to Fairfax, Va. to<lb/>
take on George Mason woh is 9-3<lb/>
overall and 2-0 in CAA play.<lb/>
Blue Edwards goes up for the jumper against George Mason<lb/>
Monday night. The loss against the Patriots puts ECU 9-6<lb/>
overall and 2-2 in the conference (Photo by Angela Pridgen.<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
ECU defeats JMU in front<lb/>
of a sellout home crowd<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Assistant Sport Editor<lb/>
Against Richmond earlier this season, Sarah Gray attempts a<lb/>
long pass on the breakaway. The Lady Pirates fared no better<lb/>
against George Mason Monday night than they did against the<lb/>
Dukes on Saturday as they lost to the Patriots 67-56<lb/>
As James Madison coach<lb/>
"Lefty" Driesell entered Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Saturday night, he de-<lb/>
lighted the ECU fans by taking a<lb/>
bow. But it was the Pirate team<lb/>
that would take the bows after the<lb/>
game as they defeated the Duke of<lb/>
JMU, 62-57.<lb/>
With the win, ECU moves to<lb/>
two and one in CAA play, the first<lb/>
time they have been 2-1 in confer-<lb/>
ence since 1981 -82. The Pirates are<lb/>
now 8-6 overall and have already<lb/>
won as many games as last season<lb/>
when they went 8-20.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum was<lb/>
packed as the Pirates played be-<lb/>
fore their first sellout since Feb. 7,<lb/>
1987 and the 6,500 fans were not<lb/>
disappointed.<lb/>
"It was a great crowd and a<lb/>
great atmosphere to play in Pi-<lb/>
rite coach Mike Steele said. "The<lb/>
enthusiasm they showed was a<lb/>
great lift for our team<lb/>
The home cro'd became a<lb/>
oig factor in the second half. With<lb/>
a tie game to start the second pe-<lb/>
riod, the fans ignited the Pirates.<lb/>
Following an easy James<lb/>
Madison basket to start the half,<lb/>
the Pirates started to take control.<lb/>
At 18:48 in the period, Stanley<lb/>
Love followed a Blue Edwards<lb/>
miss to put the Pirates up 32-30.<lb/>
This would be the lead ECU<lb/>
would never give up.<lb/>
After a William Davis three-<lb/>
pointer pulled the Dukes to<lb/>
within one, East Carolina took<lb/>
charge. ECU would force a five<lb/>
second call on the inbound pass<lb/>
and Edwards w5uTdrTita TJfoot<lb/>
jump shot the next trip down the<lb/>
floor. This would start a 14-6 run<lb/>
for the Pirates which would put<lb/>
them up, 54-43 with 5:20 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
But down 11, the Dukes<lb/>
would not quit. They would pull a<lb/>
run of their own. Over the next<lb/>
four and a half minutes. James<lb/>
Madison would outscore the Pi-<lb/>
rates 14-5. And following a<lb/>
See LEFTY, page 14<lb/>
Team leader "Blue" Edwards looks toward future for Pirates<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
I<lb/>
It's Sunday afternoon and the<lb/>
fans are gone, but the Pirate bas-<lb/>
ketball team is hard at work. And<lb/>
their leader during the game is<lb/>
also their leader at practice, Theo-<lb/>
dore "Blue" Edwards.<lb/>
A young man who considers<lb/>
himself quiet is anything but that<lb/>
when he steps on a basketball<lb/>
court. Edwards leads the Pirates<lb/>
in points, averaging 25.6 -ec<lb/>
game. He also leads the teams in<lb/>
rebounds and steals. He is second<lb/>
in asstetsbehind fellow senior Jeff<lb/>
Kelly.<lb/>
the Walstonburg, N.C. na-<lb/>
tive is not Jmly ECU'S leading<lb/>
basketball player, he also has a<lb/>
very "colorful" nickname. When<lb/>
Theodore "Blue" Edwards<lb/>
I was little, I was in my crib with<lb/>
my bottle when I started to<lb/>
choke Edwards said. "My little<lb/>
sister ran and told my mother that<lb/>
she had a blue baby Edwards'<lb/>
mother noticed the blueish tint of<lb/>
his skin when she entered the<lb/>
room and the nickname "Blue"<lb/>
has stuck with him since then.<lb/>
Blue began playing basket-<lb/>
ball when he was very young. "I<lb/>
had two older brothers and we<lb/>
used to play pick-up games in the<lb/>
backyard when I was little'<lb/>
Edwards said.<lb/>
He took what he learned in<lb/>
those pick-up games and used his<lb/>
talent to play three years of high<lb/>
school basketball at Greene Cen-<lb/>
tral High School. In those three<lb/>
years, Blue was named team MVP<lb/>
twice and set a school single-sea-<lb/>
son scoring record.<lb/>
After graduation, Edwards<lb/>
went to Louisburg Junior College.<lb/>
In his second year at Louisburg,<lb/>
Edwards averaged 22.3 points per<lb/>
game and grabbed an average of<lb/>
six rebounds per contest. Among<lb/>
his many honors while at junior<lb/>
college, Edwards was named sec-<lb/>
ond team National Junior College<lb/>
Ail-American.<lb/>
With a high school career like<lb/>
Edward's and great statistics like<lb/>
he showed at Louisburg, many<lb/>
people wonder why he did not go<lb/>
to a Division I school right out of<lb/>
high school. "I didn't get any of-<lb/>
fers from any real big schools<lb/>
Edwards explained. "My coach<lb/>
thought I could be a good player<lb/>
and knew that the coach at Louis-<lb/>
burg was a good fundamental<lb/>
coach who could help me<lb/>
After two years at Louisburg,<lb/>
it was then time for Blue to decide<lb/>
where to go next. It was not an<lb/>
easy decision. Many schools had<lb/>
offered him a chance to play. But<lb/>
Edwards said that there were a<lb/>
few things that made him choose<lb/>
ECU. "One reason I came here<lb/>
was that my girlfriend and I had<lb/>
decided at junior college to go to<lb/>
the same school when we left<lb/>
Edwards said.<lb/>
But probably more important<lb/>
was the fact that Edwards was<lb/>
impressed with the recruiting of<lb/>
coach Mike Dementhe. Dementhe<lb/>
let Blue know that he would be<lb/>
able to step right in and play for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
In his first season at ECU,<lb/>
Edwards made an automatic<lb/>
impact. He averaged over 14<lb/>
points and five rebounds per<lb/>
game. He shot 56.1 percent from<lb/>
the field and 73.9 percent from the<lb/>
free throw line. He dazzled the<lb/>
fans with his jumping ability and<lb/>
a wide array of spectacular dunks.<lb/>
Then Edwards ran into a<lb/>
buzz-saw. He had to sit out the<lb/>
1987-88 season for disciplinary<lb/>
reasons. It was a big disappoint-<lb/>
ment not only to Blue, but also to<lb/>
the fans who had fallen in love<lb/>
with him.<lb/>
But as this season began,<lb/>
Edwards put his past behind him,<lb/>
See BLUE, page 14<lb/>
Coach Kobe is ECU'S winningest swim coach<lb/>
ECU Swim and Dive team continues to dominate<lb/>
f<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina Swim and<lb/>
Dive team prolonged their nearly<lb/>
flawless season Saturday when<lb/>
the Pirates took on UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington in Minges Aquatic<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Both the men and the women<lb/>
had easy victories in what was<lb/>
thought by Head Coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe to be a more competitive<lb/>
meet for the Pirates. "We rolled<lb/>
over them Kobe said. "We<lb/>
dominated from start to finish<lb/>
The two wins on Saturday<lb/>
made Coach Kobe the winningest<lb/>
coach in ECU swimming history.<lb/>
He has accumulated 111 wins and<lb/>
47 losses since coaching at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The men won the meet by a<lb/>
score of 138-68 while the Ladv<lb/>
Seaha wks suffered at the mercy of<lb/>
the ECU women, 112-72.<lb/>
"Most of our swimmers<lb/>
swam their best times of the sea-<lb/>
son Kobe said.<lb/>
The men now stand at 8-0 on<lb/>
the season before having to face<lb/>
the Tarheels of UNC on Wednes-<lb/>
day. This is the best start ever by<lb/>
an ECU swim team as they con-<lb/>
tinue to remain undefeated. They<lb/>
have also tied the record for most<lb/>
consecutive wins in a season.<lb/>
The victory over UNC-W put<lb/>
the Lady Pirates' record at 7-1,<lb/>
with their only loss coming from<lb/>
the Tribe of William and Mary.<lb/>
In addition to facing the al-<lb/>
ways tough Tarheels of North<lb/>
Carolina, the Pirates have to look<lb/>
forward to another hard team to<lb/>
beat Duke University, before<lb/>
road tripping to the Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association Meet on Feb.<lb/>
8.<lb/>
The two NCAA qualifiers,<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers and Sherry<lb/>
Campbell, had good days against<lb/>
the Seahawks. Bridgers claimed<lb/>
first in the 200-yard breaststroke<lb/>
with her time of 2:26.78. She will<lb/>
be swimming the 200-yard<lb/>
breaststroke as well as the 100-<lb/>
yard breaststroke in the NCAA<lb/>
Championships in March.<lb/>
Sherry Campbell easily<lb/>
nabbed first in the event that she<lb/>
qualified for in the NCAA's, the<lb/>
three-meter diving event.<lb/>
Campbell racked up 242 points<lb/>
for her first place victory, 11<lb/>
points ahead of M. Mills of UNC-<lb/>
W.<lb/>
Sweep was the word for the<lb/>
day for the men as they had five<lb/>
sweeps on the day against the<lb/>
Seahawks.<lb/>
The East Carolina men battle their way to victory in the 200-yard freestyle event The Pirates<lb/>
easily dominated against the UNC-Wilmington team as bom the men and women rolled<lb/>
their way to the victory stand (Photo by Tom Doyle).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0014"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989<lb/>
In close race, McNeil wins in track meet<lb/>
The ECU Men's Indoor Track<lb/>
team traveled to Fairfax, VA Sat-<lb/>
urday to run in the Father Dia-<lb/>
mond Memorial Indoor Track<lb/>
Meet at George Mason Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Eugene McNeil led the Tirate<lb/>
track team by winning the 55-<lb/>
vard dash. He ran a quick 6.32 to<lb/>
edge St. Augustines' Tarrell Car<lb/>
penter by a mere one-hundredth<lb/>
of a second. McNeil's first place<lb/>
mark was the only time ECU<lb/>
placed in the finals.<lb/>
Other Pirates did well in their<lb/>
respective heats. Brian Williams<lb/>
claimed first in his heat in the 55-<lb/>
vard hurdles running a respect-<lb/>
able 7.75.<lb/>
James Parker ran for third<lb/>
place in his heat in the 55-yard<lb/>
dash when he crossed the line in<lb/>
6.6. The next heat in the 55-yard<lb/>
dash saw a fifth place for East<lb/>
Carolina when Terry Bennet ran a<lb/>
6.65.<lb/>
In the 500-meter run, Udon<lb/>
Cheek ran a fourth place finish in<lb/>
his heat when he tied Sandy<lb/>
Chapman's time of 1:06.6.<lb/>
Anthony Henry placed fifth<lb/>
in his heat in the 400-meter race<lb/>
running a 56.1.<lb/>
Brian Irving placed fourth in<lb/>
his heat in the 200-meter when he<lb/>
ran a 22.62.<lb/>
And finally, Teddy Vcrnon<lb/>
ran a 23.37 time to finish third in<lb/>
his heat in the 200-meter.<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
New football coaching staff completed<lb/>
(SID) ? Tom Tuberville, who<lb/>
has served as an assistant coach at<lb/>
the University of Miami, Ha. for<lb/>
the past three years, and Dale<lb/>
Steele, who has coached at Kansas<lb/>
State University for the last two<lb/>
seasons, were named assistant<lb/>
coaches on the East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity football staff Friday after-<lb/>
noon, announced Head Coach Bill<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
"I'm excited about both oi<lb/>
these coaches coming of staff<lb/>
said Lewis, who took over coach-<lb/>
ing duties at ECU on Dec. 3,1988.<lb/>
"Knowing that the staff is com-<lb/>
plete, 1 feel it has fit together per-<lb/>
fectly. We can forge ahead with<lb/>
our recruiting efforts and start on<lb/>
workout schedules for the<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Tuberville, as a volunteer<lb/>
coach at Miami, worked with the<lb/>
defensive line and linebackers. He<lb/>
will serve as a linebacker coach at<lb/>
East Carolina. A native of<lb/>
Camden, Ark Tuberville has also<lb/>
coached at Arkansas State for five<lb/>
seasons and was a head coach at<lb/>
Hermitage High School in Pine<lb/>
Bluff, Ark. for two seasons.<lb/>
A graduate of Southern Ar-<lb/>
kansas University, Tuberville was<lb/>
also an assistant at Hermitage<lb/>
High before receiving the head<lb/>
coaching duties at the school.<lb/>
"Coming out of the Miami<lb/>
program said Lewis, "he obvi-<lb/>
ouslv knows about what it takes to<lb/>
win. He has worked with two oi<lb/>
the finest defensive coaches in<lb/>
football ? Jimmy Johnson at Mi-<lb/>
ami and Larry- Lace well at Arkan-<lb/>
sas State. Few teams have played<lb/>
better defense than Miami has in<lb/>
the last three years<lb/>
Steele, a native of Prattville,<lb/>
All will serve as wide receivers<lb/>
coach for the Pirates. In his 12-year<lb/>
coaching career, he has been an<lb/>
assistant at Ball State (one year),<lb/>
Wisconsin (two years), Tulanc<lb/>
'TCBV" ?<lb/>
SWEETHEART Pies<lb/>
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(three years), Wichita State (three<lb/>
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the exception of Wichita State,<lb/>
where he coached linebackers for<lb/>
two seasons.<lb/>
A graduate of the University<lb/>
of South Carolina, Steele also<lb/>
spent one season coaching in the<lb/>
high school ranks at A.C. Flora in<lb/>
Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
YOUR FIRST STEP<lb/>
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To b. In a tcat.rnity is not m.tely to b. in a social<lb/>
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Bill fraimtitirs hurt mn grabrs?<lb/>
? No. them's .vary avld.nc. that loining a fraternity<lb/>
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? 33 ol man on campus without fraternities will<lb/>
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? 47 ol non members on campuses with traler<lb/>
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? 6S ot all trat.rnlly nn.mb.ra graduate<lb/>
? Scholarship programs ot fraternities produce<lb/>
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K never can be said thai fraternity pecpi. Jon t en<lb/>
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such as Greek Aeek is ust an example of some of<lb/>
the activities thai fraternities plan during ma year<lb/>
Athletics . . .<lb/>
Fraternity men enoy an active athletic aaaaaane.<lb/>
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General Fraternity Fact9:<lb/>
?All but two U.S. Presidents since 1825 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
Sixteen Vice-Presidents have been fraternity men.<lb/>
?63 of the U.S. President's cabinet members since 1900 have<lb/>
been fraternity men.<lb/>
?71 of the Who's Who in America listees are fraternity members.<lb/>
76 of the U.S. Senators fit Representatives are fraternity members.<lb/>
?85 (40 of 47) of the U.S. Supreme court Justices since 1910 have<lb/>
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85 of the fortune 500 executives are fraternity members.<lb/>
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RUSH is open to all Male College Students Regardless of classification or G.P.A.<lb/>
Tear Here-Take to The Spa (For Free January) ???????????<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0015"/><lb/>
w-<lb/>
f<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1969<lb/>
In close race, McNeil wins in track meet<lb/>
The ECU Men's Indoor Track<lb/>
team traveled to Fairfax, VA Sat-<lb/>
urday to run in the Father Dia-<lb/>
mond Memorial Indoor Track<lb/>
Meet at George Mason Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
' Eugene McNeil led the Pirate<lb/>
track team by winning the 55-<lb/>
yard dash. He ran a quick 632 to<lb/>
edge St. Augustines' Tarrell Car-<lb/>
penter by a mere one-hundredth<lb/>
of a second. McNeil's first place<lb/>
mark was the only time ECU<lb/>
placed in the finals.<lb/>
Other Pirates did well in their<lb/>
respective heats. Brian Williams<lb/>
claimed first in his heat in the 55-<lb/>
yard hurdles running a respect-<lb/>
able 7.75.<lb/>
James Parker ran for third<lb/>
place in his heat in the 55-yard<lb/>
dash when he crossed the line in<lb/>
6.6. The next heat in the 55-yard<lb/>
dash saw a fifth place for East<lb/>
Carolina when Terry Bennet ran a<lb/>
6.65.<lb/>
In the 500-meter run, Udon<lb/>
Cheek ran a fourth place finish in<lb/>
his heat when he tied Sandy<lb/>
Chapman's time of 1:06.6.<lb/>
Anthony Henry placed fifth<lb/>
in his heat in the 400-meter race<lb/>
running a 56.1.<lb/>
Brian Irving placed fourth in<lb/>
his heat in the 200-meter when he<lb/>
ran a 22.62.<lb/>
And finally, Teddy Vernon<lb/>
ran a 23.37 time to finish third in<lb/>
his heat in the 200-meter.<lb/>
RESERVE OmCERfc' TBA1M1NG CORPS<lb/>
New football coaching staff completed<lb/>
(SID) ? Tom Tuberville, who<lb/>
has served as an assistant coach at<lb/>
the University of Miami, Fla. for<lb/>
the past three years, and Dale<lb/>
Steeie, who has coached at Kansas<lb/>
State University for the last two<lb/>
seasons, were named assistant<lb/>
coaches on the East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity football staff Friday after-<lb/>
noon, announced Head Coach Bill<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
"I'm excited about both of<lb/>
these coaches coming of staff<lb/>
said Lewis, who took over coach-<lb/>
ing duties at ECU on Dec. 3,1988.<lb/>
"Knowing that the staff is com-<lb/>
plete, I feel it has fit together per-<lb/>
fectly. We can forge ahead with<lb/>
our recruiting efforts and start on<lb/>
workout schedules for the<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Tuberville, as a volunteer<lb/>
coach at Miami, worked with the<lb/>
defensive line and linebackers. He<lb/>
will serve as a linebacker coach at<lb/>
East Carolina. A native of<lb/>
Camden, Ark Tuberville has also<lb/>
coached at Arkansas State for five<lb/>
seasons and was a head coach at<lb/>
Hermitage High School in Pine<lb/>
Bluff, Ark. for two seasons.<lb/>
A graduate of Southern Ar-<lb/>
kansas University, Tuberville was<lb/>
also an assistant at Hermitage<lb/>
High before receiving the head<lb/>
coaching duties at the school.<lb/>
"Coming out of the Miami<lb/>
program said Lewis, "he obvi-<lb/>
ously knows about what it takes to<lb/>
win. He has worked with two of<lb/>
the finest defensive coaches in<lb/>
football ? Jimmy Johnson at Mi-<lb/>
ami and Larry Lacewell at Arkan-<lb/>
sas State. Few teams have played<lb/>
better defense than Miami has in<lb/>
the last three years<lb/>
Steeie, a native of Prattville,<lb/>
Ala will serve as wide receivers<lb/>
coach for the Pirates. In his 12-year<lb/>
coaching career, he has been an<lb/>
assistant at Ball State (one year),<lb/>
Wisconsin (two years), Tulane<lb/>
"TCBV" ?<lb/>
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the exception ot Wichita State,<lb/>
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Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
TOUR FIRST STEP<lb/>
TOWARD SUCCESS IS THE ONE YOU<lb/>
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and at The Fraternity Locations on:<lb/>
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unnwralty' admtniatraiion and. m in. paat taw<lb/>
dacada. hav bacon a major part ot tha untvar-<lb/>
Ky? atudant Hta.<lb/>
jlul fratrrtuhra trurt nrg pjraoca?<lb/>
? No, thara' avary avtdanca that loining a tratamity<lb/>
lajajaj your chancaa ot graduating.<lb/>
33 ot man on campua without IratarnHlaa wlH<lb/>
!t navor can ba aM that IralamHy paopla donl an<lb/>
)oy a good social Ilia Galling to know many dittarant<lb/>
paopla it only natural among tuch a cloaa-fcnii<lb/>
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tunitia tor Ihlnga to do with M apara tana E?ant<lb/>
auch a QnMfc Waak la ut an aaampla ot aoma ot<lb/>
tha acthrttiaa that tratamitiaa plan during tha yaar.<lb/>
trletic? . .<lb/>
Fcaiarnity man .njoy an acttva athlatlc aalatanoa<lb/>
Whathar it aa track maatt. liaW avanta or in<lb/>
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General Fraternity Facts:<lb/>
?All but two U.S. Presidents since 1825 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
Sixteen Vice-Presidents have been fraternity men.<lb/>
?63 of the U.S. President's cabinet members since 1900 have<lb/>
been fraternity men.<lb/>
?71 of the Who's Who in America listees are fraternity members.<lb/>
?76 of the U.S. Senators fc Representatives are fraternity members.<lb/>
?85 (40 of 47) of the U.8. Supreme court Justices since 1910 have<lb/>
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?85 of the fortune 500 executives are fraternity members.<lb/>
?Of the nation's 50 lasrgost corporations. 43 no<lb/>
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Ik"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0016"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1989 13<lb/>
Olympic Committee honors Former Pirate<lb/>
COLORADO SPRINGS, CO<lb/>
Former East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity women's basketball standout<lb/>
eora "Sam" Jones has been<lb/>
named Athlete of the Year in the<lb/>
-port of team handball for 1988 by<lb/>
the United States Olympic<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
ones was a member of the<lb/>
team that participated in the<lb/>
Summer Olvmpics in Seoul,<lb/>
South Korea. She finished the<lb/>
tournament as the second leading<lb/>
scorer with 35 goals.<lb/>
Earlier in 1988, she had been<lb/>
named MVP of the II Women's<lb/>
USA Cup and led several interna-<lb/>
tional tournaments with as many<lb/>
as 48 goals.<lb/>
Jones has been the leading<lb/>
female athlete in the sport of team<lb/>
handball since 1984. That year,<lb/>
she also took the honor of Athlete<lb/>
of the Year for her performance in<lb/>
the Olympics. Following 1984,<lb/>
she played on the Hypobank club<lb/>
in Austria and for the German<lb/>
club, Bayer Leverkusen, that won<lb/>
the German Championships in<lb/>
1986 and 1987 Pan American<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Jones is from Dudley, NC and<lb/>
was a High School Ail-American<lb/>
in 1978 at Southern Wayne High<lb/>
School. After earning Ail-Ameri-<lb/>
can honors in basketball at Louis-<lb/>
burg Junior College in 1979 and<lb/>
1980, she transferred to East Caro-<lb/>
lina. She is fourth on the career list<lb/>
for assists with 252. She was assis-<lb/>
tant basketball coach under Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi before joining the<lb/>
handball National Team in 1982.<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
3?C<lb/>
ZHK.<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
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DOC<lb/>
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DOC<lb/>
ow 5 jf<lb/>
N.C. State's Jim Valvano faces allegations<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AD ?<lb/>
sibiy shaken by allegations of<lb/>
?vrongdoing at his alma mater,<lb/>
former North Carolina State star<lb/>
"hurl Bailey says he remembers<lb/>
ie day when coach Jim Valvano<lb/>
vtured the team on how there<lb/>
luld be no trecbies passed out<lb/>
imong them.<lb/>
One of the things definitely<lb/>
j&amp;essed when 1 was there was<lb/>
Hew no handouts here said<lb/>
feiley after Utah's NBA game<lb/>
vith the Charlotte Hornets on<lb/>
1ondav.<lb/>
"I think it's absurd all these<lb/>
cusationsthings about drugs<lb/>
nd money. It's ridiculous<lb/>
Soilev said.<lb/>
I don't believe any of that<lb/>
?tutt I've heard Bailey said.<lb/>
Valvano is the focus of alle-<lb/>
gations printed on the cover of the<lb/>
Becoming book, "Personal<lb/>
uls Among the charges on the<lb/>
mer. excerpts of which were<lb/>
published last Saturday by The<lb/>
$ews and Observer of Raleigh,<lb/>
vvre that positive drug tests were<lb/>
ept secret, grades were altered<lb/>
.nd one player even played below<lb/>
is capabilities in an NCAA tour-<lb/>
rfement game to avoid a future<lb/>
drug tct that might hamper his<lb/>
yofessional career. The cover did<lb/>
njjbt name a source for the allega-<lb/>
:i.cns.<lb/>
Bailey was a member of<lb/>
V&amp;lvano's 1983 national champi-<lb/>
onship team. He said he spoke<lb/>
i?th his former coach by tele-<lb/>
hone on Sunday.<lb/>
 "V Jnniielv sujjdedL de-<lb/>
gprcssed. But you know Coach V,<lb/>
s a touch guv Bailev said. "1<lb/>
isf wish the best for him<lb/>
Bailev said he was sure that<lb/>
book would sell based on the<lb/>
cations, but added, "It's a<lb/>
: ame that it has to cost other<lb/>
eople their reputations, and the<lb/>
?attaches of their families<lb/>
Bailey said on his first day<lb/>
 ith Valvano in the fall of 1981,<lb/>
? coach told him and his team-<lb/>
mates that they would have to<lb/>
earn their own way. He said if<lb/>
v didn't go to class and flunked<lb/>
out of school, they would not<lb/>
play 1 Ie said Valvano should not<lb/>
be blamed for players not getting<lb/>
Stupid Pet tricks<lb/>
competition to<lb/>
be sponsored<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Athletic Department in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with Animal House Pets are<lb/>
sponoring a Stupid Pet Tricks<lb/>
competition. This event will take<lb/>
place at halftime of the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates Basketball game, Saturday<lb/>
Jan. 28 against arch rival UNC<lb/>
Wilmington. The entry deadline<lb/>
will be Jan. 18 and a preliminary<lb/>
round will be held Jan. 20 (site<lb/>
TBA). For more information call<lb/>
757-6491 or stop by Scales Field-<lb/>
I ?use Athletic marketing office).<lb/>
Governors' lobby<lb/>
tor NFL franchise<lb/>
COLUMBIA,S.C(AP) ?The<lb/>
'? vernors of North Carolina and<lb/>
Sv mth Carolina will be among the<lb/>
P5,000 who will be watching the<lb/>
5 i per Bowl on Jan. 22. But the two<lb/>
gi?vernors also want to be players<lb/>
-&amp;s well as spectators.<lb/>
South Carolina Gov. Carroll<lb/>
( impbell and his North Carolina<lb/>
Counterpart, Gov. James Martin,<lb/>
will lead a Carolina contingent to<lb/>
.Miami for Super Bowl XXIII. Be-<lb/>
sides San Francisco and Cincin-<lb/>
nati, the Carolinians hope to see<lb/>
She NFL's other heavyweights -<lb/>
-ihc owners and officials who de-<lb/>
cide where the NFL will put its<lb/>
$ext franchises.<lb/>
"Absolutely I'm going<lb/>
i ampbell said Friday. "I'll be lob-<lb/>
bying<lb/>
Martin is also planning to go<lb/>
g'and campaign with the owners<lb/>
jmd talk to people said Jim<lb/>
??ughrue, a spokesman for the<lb/>
forth Carolina governor.<lb/>
their degrees.<lb/>
"Nobody got nothing<lb/>
Bailey said.<lb/>
In the meantime, Bailev Mid<lb/>
he remained confident his coach<lb/>
would be cleared.<lb/>
"I'm praying for him, and I<lb/>
hope that thingsare going to work<lb/>
out, and I'm sure they will he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Other former NCSU players<lb/>
also denied the allegations and<lb/>
said that while thev talked to the<lb/>
author, Peter Golenbock, they<lb/>
didn't discuss the issues in the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Kenny Drummond said he<lb/>
was almost certain he had talked<lb/>
to Golenbock, but had been<lb/>
unaware that Golenbock was<lb/>
writing a book critical of the N.C.<lb/>
State program and Valvano.<lb/>
Drummond, who now plays<lb/>
for High Point College and was<lb/>
plaving in a tournament in the<lb/>
Bahamas during the weekend,<lb/>
said in an interview with TheNews<lb/>
and Observer of Raleigh that he<lb/>
had talked to a man he believed to<lb/>
be Golenbock.<lb/>
"If he said anything about me<lb/>
(in the book) thaU didn't say, I'll<lb/>
find him he said.<lb/>
The book focuses on the 1986-<lb/>
87 basketball team, which in-<lb/>
cluded Drummond. Two other<lb/>
members of that team, Charles<lb/>
Shackleford and Bonnie Bolton,<lb/>
told The News and Observer Mon-<lb/>
day that they had not talked to<lb/>
Golenbock.<lb/>
Shackleford, a sophomore on<lb/>
the 1986-87 Wolfpack team who<lb/>
is now a member of the NBA's<lb/>
New Jersey Nets, also said Mon-<lb/>
day that he had no knowledge of<lb/>
the actions mentioned on the<lb/>
book cover.<lb/>
"None of this stuff ever hap-<lb/>
pened while I was there Shack-<lb/>
leford said in an interview after a<lb/>
Nets practice in East Rutherford,<lb/>
N.J.<lb/>
"Maybe it happened before I<lb/>
was there or after I left, bu t i t never<lb/>
happened while I was there. I<lb/>
don't have any knowledge (of<lb/>
this) going on.<lb/>
Bolton, a junior on the 1986-<lb/>
87 Wolfpack team who was<lb/>
reached by telephone at his Wash-<lb/>
ington home, said Monday that<lb/>
he had never talked to Golenbock.<lb/>
He also said he had no knowledge<lb/>
of any of the violations alleged by<lb/>
the book cover.<lb/>
"I never got anything like<lb/>
that. I never took any money.<lb/>
Valvano never offered me any<lb/>
money. So it can't be true Shack-<lb/>
leford continued.<lb/>
HOW TO<lb/>
ENRICH<lb/>
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This excellent opportunity is part of<lb/>
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most prestigious ways of entenng the<lb/>
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you complete your Naval studies.<lb/>
You also receive a year of paid<lb/>
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In addition to the professsional ad-<lb/>
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Find out more about the Navy Nuc-<lb/>
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LT. BRIAN HALSEY<lb/>
1-800-662-7419<lb/>
NAVY OFFICER<lb/>
You are Tomorrow.<lb/>
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Come On Down<lb/>
and see the<lb/>
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Sigma Nu<lb/>
Call 830-3960<lb/>
for information &amp; rides<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0017"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
(<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17,1999 13<lb/>
I<lb/>
Olympic Committee honors Former Pirate<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
COLORADO SPRINGS, CO<lb/>
? Former East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity womb's basketball standout<lb/>
Leora "Sam" Jones has been<lb/>
named Athlete of the Year in the<lb/>
sport of team handball for 1988 by<lb/>
the United States Olympic<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Jones was a member of the<lb/>
team that participated in the<lb/>
Summer Olympics in Seoul,<lb/>
South Korea. She finished the<lb/>
tournament as the second leading<lb/>
scorer with 35 goals.<lb/>
Earlier in 1988, she had been<lb/>
named MVP of the II Women's<lb/>
USA Cup and led several interna-<lb/>
tional tournaments with as many<lb/>
as 48 goals.<lb/>
Jones has been the leading<lb/>
female athlete in the sport of team<lb/>
handball since 1984. That year,<lb/>
she also took the honor of Athlete<lb/>
of the Year for her performance in<lb/>
the Olympics. Following 1984,<lb/>
she played on the Hypobank club<lb/>
in Austria and for the German<lb/>
club, Bayer Leverkusen, that won<lb/>
the German Championships in<lb/>
1986 and 1987 Pan American<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Jones is from Dudley, NC and<lb/>
was a High School All-American<lb/>
in 1978 at Southern Wayne High<lb/>
School. After earning All-Ameri-<lb/>
can honors in basketball at Louis-<lb/>
burg Junior College in 1979 and<lb/>
1980, she transferred to East Caro-<lb/>
lina. She is fourth on the career list<lb/>
for assists with 252. She was assis-<lb/>
tant basketball coach under Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi before joining the<lb/>
handball National Team in 1982.<lb/>
<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
by Mw REAL OUrir<lb/>
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Llnmit f ??-??!??-<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
N.C. State's Jim Valvano faces allegations<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Visibly shaken by allegations of<lb/>
wrongdoing at his alma mater,<lb/>
former North Carolina State star<lb/>
Thurl Bailey says he remembers<lb/>
the day when coach Jim Valvano<lb/>
lectured the team on how there<lb/>
would be no freebies passed out<lb/>
among them.<lb/>
$ "One of the things definitely<lb/>
tessed when I was there was<lb/>
ey, no handouts here said<lb/>
i&amp;iley after Utah's NBA game<lb/>
oiith the Charlotte Hornets on<lb/>
i&amp;onday.<lb/>
I "1 think i t' s absurd all these<lb/>
cusationsthings about drugs<lb/>
,d money. It's ridiculous<lb/>
IJailey said.<lb/>
"I don't believe any of that<lb/>
s&amp;ff I've heard Bailey said.<lb/>
? Valvano is the focus of alle-<lb/>
gations printed on the cover of the<lb/>
incoming book, "Personal<lb/>
tuls Among the charges on the<lb/>
cfcver, excerpts of which were<lb/>
published last Saturday by The<lb/>
Ins and Observer of Raleigh,<lb/>
$ere that positive drug tests were<lb/>
l?pt secret, grades were altered<lb/>
a&amp;d one player even played below<lb/>
his capabilities in an NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament game to avoid a future<lb/>
cffug test that might hamper his<lb/>
professional career. The cover did<lb/>
nfct name a source for the allega-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
 Bailey was a member of<lb/>
&amp;lvano's 1983 national champi-<lb/>
onship team. He said he spoke<lb/>
vth his former coach by tele-<lb/>
pfione on Sunday.<lb/>
He'definitely "hiindpd dp-<lb/>
pressed. Bulyou know Coach V,<lb/>
?pie's a tough guy Bailey said. "I<lb/>
Sjust wish the best for him<lb/>
Bailey said he was sure that<lb/>
Sthe book would sell based on the<lb/>
?allegations, but added, "Ifs a<lb/>
shame that it has to cost other<lb/>
fpeople their reputations, and the<lb/>
'?sheartaches of their families<lb/>
Bailey said on his first day<lb/>
?with Valvano in the fall of 1981,<lb/>
the coach told him and his team-<lb/>
-mates that they would have to<lb/>
?Scam their own way. He said if<lb/>
5they didn't go to class and flunked<lb/>
Sout of school, they would not<lb/>
?play. He said Valvano should not<lb/>
be blamed for players not getting<lb/>
Stupid Pet tricks<lb/>
Competition to<lb/>
be sponsored<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Athletic Department in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with Animal House Pets are<lb/>
'sponoring a Stupid Pet Tricks<lb/>
competition. This event will take<lb/>
rplace at halftime of the Lady Pi-<lb/>
grates Basketball game, Saturday<lb/>
:1an. 28 against arch rival UNC<lb/>
jWilmington. The entry deadline<lb/>
gHvill be Jan. 18 and a preliminary<lb/>
-round will be held Jan. 20 (site<lb/>
TBA). For more information call<lb/>
?57-6491 or stop by Scales Field-<lb/>
ouse (Athletic marketing office).<lb/>
Governors' lobby<lb/>
tbr NFL franchise<lb/>
I COLUMBIA,S.C.(AP)?The<lb/>
Governors of North Carolina and<lb/>
pouth Carolina will be among the<lb/>
f 5,000 who will be watching the<lb/>
?upcr Bowl on Jan. 22. But the two<lb/>
governors also want to be players<lb/>
s well as spectators.<lb/>
South Carolina Gov. Carroll<lb/>
Stampbell and his North Carolina<lb/>
Counterpart, Gov. James Martin,<lb/>
?vill lead a Carolina contingent to<lb/>
liami for Super Bowl XXIII. Be-<lb/>
sides San Francisco and Cincin-<lb/>
nati, the Carolinians hope to see<lb/>
Mm NFL's other heavyweights -<lb/>
he owners and officials who de-<lb/>
cide where the NFL will put its<lb/>
text franchises.<lb/>
"Absolutely I'm going<lb/>
ampbell said Friday. "Til be lob-<lb/>
ying<lb/>
Martin is also planning to go<lb/>
and campaign with the owners<lb/>
nd talk to people said Jim<lb/>
ughrue, a spokesman for the<lb/>
orth Carolina governor.<lb/>
their degrees.<lb/>
"Nobody got nothing<lb/>
Bailey said.<lb/>
In the meantime, Bailey said<lb/>
he remained confident his coach<lb/>
would be cleared.<lb/>
"I'm praying for him, and I<lb/>
hope that things are going to work<lb/>
out, and I'm sure they will he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Other former NCSU players<lb/>
also denied the allegations and<lb/>
said that while they talked to the<lb/>
author, Peter Golenbock, they<lb/>
didn't discuss the issues in the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Kenny Drummond said he<lb/>
was almost certain he had talked<lb/>
to Golenbock, but had been<lb/>
unaware that Golenbock was<lb/>
writing a book critical of the N.C.<lb/>
State program and Valvano.<lb/>
Drummond, who now plays<lb/>
for High Point College and was<lb/>
playing in a tournament in the<lb/>
Bahamas during theweekend,<lb/>
said in an interview with The News<lb/>
and Observer of Raleigh that he<lb/>
had talked to a man he believed to<lb/>
be Golenbock.<lb/>
"If he said anything about me<lb/>
(in the book) that I didn't say, I'll<lb/>
find him he said.<lb/>
The book focuses on the 1986-<lb/>
87 basketball team, which in-<lb/>
cluded Drummond. Two other<lb/>
members of that team, Charles<lb/>
Shackleford and Bennie Bolton,<lb/>
told The News and Observer Mon-<lb/>
day that they had not talked to<lb/>
Golenbock.<lb/>
Shackleford, a sophomore on<lb/>
the 1986-87 Wolfpack team who<lb/>
is now a member of the NBA's<lb/>
New Jersey Nets, also said Mon-<lb/>
day that he had no knowledge of<lb/>
the actions mentioned on the<lb/>
book cover.<lb/>
"None of this stuff ever hap-<lb/>
pened while I was there Shack-<lb/>
leford said in an interview after a<lb/>
Nets practice in East Rutherford,<lb/>
N.J.<lb/>
"Maybe it happened before I<lb/>
was there or after I left, but it never<lb/>
happened while I was there. I<lb/>
don't have any knowledge (of<lb/>
this) going on.<lb/>
Bolton, a junior on the 1986-<lb/>
87 Wolfpack team who was<lb/>
reached by telephone at his Wash-<lb/>
ington home, said Monday that<lb/>
he had never talked to Golenbock.<lb/>
He also said he had no knowledge<lb/>
of any of the violations alleged by<lb/>
the book cover.<lb/>
"T never got anything like<lb/>
that. I never took any money.<lb/>
Valvano never offered me any<lb/>
money. So it can'tbe true Shack-<lb/>
leford continued.<lb/>
HOW TO<lb/>
ENRICH<lb/>
YOUR EDUCATION<lb/>
BY $1,000<lb/>
A MONTH.<lb/>
If you're a math, engineering, or physical the-art nuclear reactor and propulsion<lb/>
sciences major, you could be earning<lb/>
$1,000 a month during your junior and<lb/>
senior years.<lb/>
This excellent opportunity is part of<lb/>
the Navy Nuclear Propulsion Officer<lb/>
Candi-date Program. Ifs one of the<lb/>
most prestigious ways of entering the<lb/>
nuclear field-and rewarding, too. You<lb/>
get a $4,000 bonus upon entrance into<lb/>
the program, and $2,000 more when<lb/>
you complete your Naval studies.<lb/>
You also receive a year of paid<lb/>
graduat-level training that's the most<lb/>
comp;rehen-sive in the world, and<lb/>
plant technology. As a Navy officer,<lb/>
you'll lead the adventure while gaining<lb/>
high-level experience that win help<lb/>
make you a leader inone of the world's<lb/>
high-tech industries.<lb/>
In addition to the professstonal ad-<lb/>
vantages, nuclear-trained officers get<lb/>
an unbeatable benefits package, travel<lb/>
opportunities, promotions and a solid<lb/>
salary.<lb/>
Find out more about the Navy Nuc-<lb/>
lear Propulsion Officer Candidate Pro-<lb/>
gram,? 1 make your education start<lb/>
paying off today.<lb/>
you'll acquire expertise with state-of-<lb/>
To find out If you qualify, or for more Information, contact Navy Oflicer Opportunfciaa,<lb/>
801 Overlin Road, Suite 120, Raleigh, NC 27605-1130 or call<lb/>
LT. BRIAN HALSEY<lb/>
1-800-662-7419<lb/>
NAVY OFFICER<lb/>
You are Tomorrow.<lb/>
You are the Navy.<lb/>
ie On Down<lb/>
and see the<lb/>
NEW SIGMA NU<lb/>
FRATERNITY!<lb/>
Collect Your Prizes<lb/>
0 Student Government<lb/>
0 Social Activities<lb/>
Greek Life<lb/>
No Hazing<lb/>
0 Over 130,000 Members<lb/>
Internationally<lb/>
1 ?T<lb/>
Bob Barker<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Call 830-3960<lb/>
for information &amp; rides<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0018"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 198?<lb/>
Lefty's Dukes defeated in front<lb/>
first sellout in nearly two years<lb/>
  .  - . . ?. ??. ? ?i?? rlnihod nut tivp assists. Cus Hi!<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Claude Ferdinand shot under-<lb/>
neath, the Dukes trailed 59-57<lb/>
with just 41 seconds left to plav.<lb/>
The two teams traded baskets<lb/>
the next two trips down the floor.<lb/>
With 12 seconds left to play, James<lb/>
Madison fouled Edwards and put<lb/>
him on the free throw line. Ed-<lb/>
wards nailed both ends of the one-<lb/>
and-one to put the Pirates up 61-<lb/>
57. Lose would round out the<lb/>
scoring hitting a free throw fol-<lb/>
lowing a MU turnover.<lb/>
"I thought we gave them a<lb/>
pretty good game Coach Drie-<lb/>
sell said. "We got down by 11, but<lb/>
we fought hard to get back in. We<lb/>
had a chance to win, but a steal<lb/>
towards the end iced it for them<lb/>
The first halt of the game was<lb/>
nip and tuck to the most part. The<lb/>
big plav oi the first half was an<lb/>
Edwards' two-handed slam with<lb/>
about eight minutes to play to put disned out five assists. Gus Hill<lb/>
ECU up by six. The Dukes closed scored 14 points off the bench and<lb/>
and tied the game at 28 to go into Stanley Love chipped in with<lb/>
the half. ci8ht-<lb/>
Not onlv was the score tied, ECU also got fine play trom<lb/>
but the teams had almost identical senior point guard Jeff Kelly and<lb/>
statistics for the first half. Both freshman center Casey Mote,<lb/>
teams committed eight turnovers Kelly dished out five assists and<lb/>
in the half. ECU shot 41.7 percent had one turnover. Over the past<lb/>
and grabbed 15 rebounds, while four games, Kelly has had 14 as-<lb/>
JMU shot 42 percent and hauled sists and only one turnover. Mote<lb/>
in 14 boards. played in his first game as a Tirate<lb/>
Steele said he thought the and coach Steele said he gave the<lb/>
team did not play well the first<lb/>
half and was glad to see them pick<lb/>
up their intensity in the second<lb/>
half. Edwards supported Steele's<lb/>
feelings and added that the team<lb/>
did not hustle for loose balls in the<lb/>
first half.<lb/>
East Carolina was led in all<lb/>
categories by Blue Edwards.<lb/>
Edwards scored 23 points,<lb/>
grabbed seven rebounds and<lb/>
team the minutes that they<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
James Madison was led by<lb/>
junior Claude Ferdinand who<lb/>
finished the game with 18, four-<lb/>
teen ot which he scored in the first<lb/>
half. He also grabbed a game-higl<lb/>
nine rebounds. Barry Brown also<lb/>
chipped in with 14. William<lb/>
Davis, the Dukes leading scorer,<lb/>
was held to just seven points.<lb/>
Blue works toward goals<lb/>
Continued from p ige I i<lb/>
put on his wo.k ciothes and<lb/>
started playing basketball again.<lb/>
As a senior and the Pirate's<lb/>
premier scorer, Edwards knows<lb/>
there is a lot of responsibility on<lb/>
him and the other seniors. Under<lb/>
coach Steele. the seniors are the<lb/>
loaders on the floor Edwards<lb/>
said. "And with mv role on the<lb/>
team. I'm going to get my chances<lb/>
to score,but I'm also going to help<lb/>
my teammates any way 1 can<lb/>
Since his return, Edwards has<lb/>
made it very clear that he is not<lb/>
going to take a back seat to any-<lb/>
body in the league. All the pre-<lb/>
season hoopla went to George<lb/>
Mason senior Kenny Sanders and<lb/>
Blue made it a point to challenge<lb/>
him for player of the year 1 made<lb/>
it one of my goals to be CAA<lb/>
player oi the year and 1 think I'm<lb/>
starting to challenge Kenny for<lb/>
that Edwards said. "Idon't want<lb/>
to do it just for myself, though. 1<lb/>
think it would be good for the<lb/>
team and the school<lb/>
Edwards knows that basket<lb/>
ball is not a one-person game and<lb/>
he thinks this years team works<lb/>
well as a unit. He also feels that<lb/>
under coach Steele's format oi<lb/>
coaching that the team works<lb/>
hard to be better. "With coach,<lb/>
who starts is determined by who<lb/>
practices well. It doesn't matter<lb/>
what year you are or who you are,<lb/>
the best performers in practice<lb/>
play in the games Edwards said.<lb/>
1 le feels that the hard work<lb/>
and determination are paving off.<lb/>
"We have taken great strides to<lb/>
work ourselves up from the base-<lb/>
ment of the conference Edwards<lb/>
said. 1 le and his teammates feel<lb/>
that they can beat anybody in the<lb/>
league. They have very precise<lb/>
goals and are determined to make<lb/>
them come true. "We want to win<lb/>
the league outright and win the<lb/>
tournament, so we get a shot at the<lb/>
NCAA tournament Edwards<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But when the chants oi "Blue.<lb/>
Blue" end at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
what will be next for Blue Ed-<lb/>
wards? "It has always been a<lb/>
dream of mine to plav profes-<lb/>
sional basketball Edwards said.<lb/>
"I have some areas to improve<lb/>
before I can make it, but I'll keep<lb/>
working towards that goal. Right<lb/>
now though, the main goal is for<lb/>
us to keep winning<lb/>
It's that intensity for winning<lb/>
that makes Blue Edwards a true<lb/>
team leader for the Pirates. And as<lb/>
he and the Pirates continue to<lb/>
improve, the future looks bright.<lb/>
When this talented young man<lb/>
takes the floor to plav basketball,<lb/>
the pandomonium begins and<lb/>
there is no such thing as quiet.<lb/>
CLASS, FACULTY AND<lb/>
STAFF PORTRAITS<lb/>
Portraits for all classes will be taken from Jan. 23 through<lb/>
Jan. 27. Pictures will be taken in the Soda Shop at the<lb/>
Student Store from 9 a.m12 p.m. and 1 p.m4:30 p.m.<lb/>
This is the only opportunity to have your picture taken for<lb/>
the 1989 Buccaneer Yearbook.<lb/>
IT ISN'T YOUR YEARBOOK UNTIL<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
JAMAICA TRIP<lb/>
crreenville<lb/>
EgM travel center<lb/>
$509 per person<lb/>
March 4th - 11th<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
?Round Trip Air from Atlanta<lb/>
?Transfers &amp; Baggage Handling<lb/>
?Hotel Accomodations<lb/>
at Seawind Beach<lb/>
?Hotel &amp; U.S. Departure Taxes<lb/>
200 Arlington Blvd Suite M<lb/>
756-1521<lb/>
r r r<lb/>
eenviUe I Athletic Club<lb/>
L.T3 IT i- L.<lb/>
r t<lb/>
j. L1- <lb/>
Til<lb/>
OAKMONT DRIVE ? GREENVILLE<lb/>
The Ultimate Athletic Club<lb/>
Steam &amp; Sauna<lb/>
Hot Tubs<lb/>
Juice Bar<lb/>
Tanning Studio<lb/>
?Cardiovascular Center<lb/>
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?Indoor Track<lb/>
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SPECIAL<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
Call or visit us today!<lb/>
We've got a membership plan just for you!<lb/>
?CORPORATE<lb/>
?GUEST RATES<lb/>
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$110<lb/>
?Outdoor Pool<lb/>
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?Free Weights<lb/>
?Aerobics Exercise<lb/>
per<lb/>
semester<lb/>
V<lb/>
-s<lb/>
&amp;-<lb/>
1 d<lb/>
 its jL<lb/>
<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon Fri. 6 am -10 pm<lb/>
Sat. &amp;l Sun. 8 am - 7 Dm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058116_0019"/>
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