<?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="00057280_0001"/>
She i-ast<lb/>
linran<lb/>
Serving the I asiarolina atmu<lb/>
s community sun i v<lb/>
V l ss ((. ;<lb/>
12 Pages I oda<lb/>
I iu'sd;t. September 2. l?xn<lb/>
(?reenillv. .(<lb/>
 it. iil.it ,11 lU.OlM!<lb/>
East To Issue New Challenge To Morgan<lb/>
H II KU (,U .<lb/>
-<lb/>
Morgan has ret used lo seen the greatest erosion of support rhroughoui his campaign I Dr. I aM a<lb/>
-ned the for tobacco in Vmeriean history, he has been er critical ol Mn ai It I C 1<lb/>
added performance in office According to can<lb/>
Michael Mann, Morgan's campaign Ma i<lb/>
ked uhat he proposed to do to director, Morgan has declined to v.<lb/>
ude only the subject improve the situation ot farmers m debate :asl K. m Vl<lb/>
he state, 1 asi tcphed that the tiist i.u in iv. n . . , . ,<lb/>
. i t j i Morgan is going to run on his we re l'oiiib<lb/>
mportant issue ol step ?a o change the leadership in record. We're not goinj et into the issm<lb/>
Uli ' the position ol havinu to respond to<lb/>
rhe Democrats have been in con Cver charge that Pn I 1 , ? I asi<lb/>
'rlothe Congress, the Senate and mighi make Republican tax cut pr. ?<lb/>
the White House tor lout years (avorcd , idenIijJ jda(c<lb/>
nigh their leadership there has I his is not some kind : Ronald Reagan, the cuts univei<lb/>
been an enormous deterioration ol I think it's a lair and rea mable should be "part ol a it rpackaee ed the I)<lb/>
-uppon it- agriculture) has. proposal las. said ol th , ainied a<lb/>
toui vtars. wt have sauj. debate challenge.<lb/>
when lie openet<lb/>
i .in campaign last Ma Bui<lb/>
r now nan.used his debate<lb/>
? ? m hide onh the subject<lb/>
. which 1 asi called the<lb/>
i issue ol j : t atci im<lb/>
N tl arolina than<lb/>
nei al, and tobacco in<lb/>
:  said ai a press c<lb/>
 i r ee m i 11 e M on da <lb/>
saul<lb/>
i n t he I cj ?? <lb/>
I ast said<lb/>
,<lb/>
' ' ?? n ba<lb/>
<lb/>
Retei ring v .<lb/>
inai<lb/>
stimulating the merican econotm<lb/>
?'?? ? ?? m ?)??? .? <lb/>
Hot Dogging Around Campus<lb/>
Man l-redcru has found an balance. He is also pondering the concept of lowering<lb/>
tin high ioi i gasoline: the seat in increase efficiency. It these ideas become<lb/>
ttiiis the hist method practical, as he hopes thai the will. Man feels that<lb/>
vehicle, a six-foot contrap- someda (no-wheeled unicvcles ma become<lb/>
ip. He has had u much sm - popular. He has even come up with a name tor it: the<lb/>
Mare is i onsidering ad- bagel.<lb/>
?rder to help facilitaU<lb/>
Photos by PETE PODESZWA<lb/>
WZMB Still<lb/>
A waits Start<lb/>
Delay In Shipments<lb/>
Postpones Air Date<lb/>
1 !<lb/>
<lb/>
leni ? ' ?<lb/>
Knrollment Declines 1.3 Percent This Year<lb/>
61.4 Million Americans In School<lb/>
Estimated expenditures of educational institutions,<lb/>
by level of instruction and by type of control:<lb/>
United States, 1980-81<lb/>
(In BILLIONS)<lb/>
total about 830.000 up slightls<lb/>
from the 820,000 pei sons en<lb/>
i the tall ol I979<lb/>
1 xpenditui es I<lb/>
pi i ate educal<lb/>
' pei ceni I the gross na<lb/>
,i product lasl yeai<lb/>
I I esc back to school" st,<lb/>
ed from the<lb/>
id projei lii m of" tht Na<lb/>
nal C cute! t oi 1 d<lb/>
public institutions<lb/>
of higher education<lb/>
$43.9<lb/>
pected to reach SlSI billion during Statistics and are subject to m<lb/>
the school yeai 1980-81, an increa revision w ei final data bei<lb/>
lilable.<lb/>
? out<lb/>
I be employed<lb/>
torking as<lb/>
, principals, supei<lb/>
? .tat 1 men bei s<lb/>
! I ol 1980 will<lb/>
of 61.4<lb/>
? i r e t a r <lb/>
aid "In a<lb/>
i ten pei smis<lb/>
- ml rhe<lb/>
NONPuBliC INSTITUTIONS<lb/>
Of HIGHER EDUCATION xy<lb/>
$2n M<lb/>
-$12.8<lb/>
public Elementary<lb/>
and secondary schools<lb/>
$103.5<lb/>
ol about 9 percent ovei the outlav -<lb/>
ol $166 billion in 1980 81. and the<lb/>
spending ol colleges and universities<lb/>
is estimated at S65 billion Public<lb/>
schools and colleges will spend<lb/>
about $147 billion during the next<lb/>
year, while prhateh controlled in<lb/>
stitutions will pa out about SM<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
Othet highlights ol the forecast:<lb/>
? bout V l million persons wert<lb/>
graduated from high school in llso.<lb/>
and the graduating class ol 1981 is<lb/>
expected to exceed million I he caught up in unorthodox religions. ha<lb/>
<lb/>
? V ZMH I<lb/>
at the di<lb/>
-<lb/>
her<lb/>
won this sunn<lb/>
Board a p p i<lb/>
t-81 budget leter<lb/>
 ee Aorkini lo gel lh? atian<lb/>
on the ail foi about two yeai -<lb/>
 MB w  be a stereo 1 M<lb/>
tion with a I)olb encodei thai <lb/>
broadcast only to the area si<lb/>
c ireenx iile Ihc i<lb/>
t( ivsei is ?p yl,<lb/>
mitoi , and the stud<lb/>
.sing ot J<lb/>
: ?<lb/>
S<lb/>
 he<lb/>
hCL's eat rad<lb/>
 - M<lb/>
band ised the<lb/>
a airini ii trai n<lb/>
letei. wl<lb/>
men I WlC'l<lb/>
?<lb/>
"came Si <lb/>
The wa - ,s, I<lb/>
don'i see an reasi n wh th<lb/>
shouldn't be on 11<lb/>
oi so. I Here ha e bet i<lb/>
blems ai<lb/>
ei - cri ssed letei sa d<lb/>
Jeter was g<lb/>
August i. when Cih<lb/>
ingsworth took o.<lb/>
id.<lb/>
Oregon Attorney<lb/>
Deprograms Cultists<lb/>
SALbM. OKI il I'll Lawyei Since that episi Rud<lb/>
Petei Rudie specializes in the field made it his legal business to u<lb/>
ol "deprogramming" young people against such relig<lb/>
abou<lb/>
peak year tot high school graduates<lb/>
s m persona! exposure lo it ' deprogramming ot "cull ' ca<lb/>
was 19 when .i.IM.imh) persons that activates me more than most at often foi parents who want ti<lb/>
tUTAi LXPLNDuuRES $181.3<lb/>
received then diplomas<lb/>
? I he estimates foi the numbei ol<lb/>
earned degrees to be conferred dui<lb/>
nit; the year 1980 81 are bachelor's<lb/>
degrees, 952,000; firsi professional<lb/>
degrees, 70,000; master's degrees,<lb/>
316,000; and doctorates, 33,000<lb/>
1 he figures foi bachelor's and first<lb/>
professional degrees represent all<lb/>
time highs. I he estimates tot<lb/>
torneys, he says. home adult children who<lb/>
Mis office lias been burglarized, members ol unorthodox religions<lb/>
his legal tiles ransacked, his pet<lb/>
sonal and business checks stolen "I see myself as restoring then<lb/>
His 1976 tax returns were audited b constitutional rights Rudie said.<lb/>
the state aftei a "tip" incorreel "The freedom not to be brainw;<lb/>
that he was cheating. He often ed is implicit in the constitutional<lb/>
gets late-night telephone calls adI guarantees we have<lb/>
"I've received death threats <lb/>
?Ml oiis, sas the M veai old<lb/>
: enrol lei<lb/>
ontrollei<lb/>
;h 12 are expected throughout<lb/>
iiicst ol the I980's as the 14- to<lb/>
1 yeai old population continues to<lb/>
decrease.<lb/>
?n nk rea e ol i I per tent, from<lb/>
ides 9 I 1.6 million last tall to I 1<lb/>
master's and doctor's decrees are Rudie. because<lb/>
ol<lb/>
hi<lb/>
and small annual decreases in the<lb/>
number of college students are pro<lb/>
ievied toi the rest ol tire decade.<lb/>
"deprogramming" work, done to<lb/>
lecalK remove people from then<lb/>
ie associations with such groups as the<lb/>
federal government for education al I nification (hutch and other<lb/>
down slightly from the peaks attain<lb/>
ed in 1977 and 1973.<lb/>
? I he suppoi pto ided b<lb/>
set l l()RNK. payt 3, coll<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
An estimated 2.5 million elemen- all levels continues to crow Federal<lb/>
milh<lb/>
quet<lb/>
dec i<lb/>
? : I rease<lb/>
) -<lb/>
i em<lb/>
ill ol 1976a : ubse<lb/>
i ? expei ienv ed mali<lb/>
students in the tail oi 1980, is e<lb/>
bi rig enrollment in in-<lb/>
ns ol higher education to<lb/>
another all time high ollege<lb/>
em oilmen however, appears to be<lb/>
s peak Attei 198<lb/>
mutton tar and secondan school teachers grants foi educational purposes<lb/>
will be engaged in classroom in-<lb/>
struction thus fall Ibis represents<lb/>
et little change ttom the number and agencies) increased nearlv three<lb/>
(including grants to individuals as<lb/>
well as to educational institui<lb/>
near me<lb/>
of teachers employed a yeai ago.<lb/>
Minor decreases at both the elemen-<lb/>
fold ovei the last lo years from<lb/>
$8 7 billion in fiscal yeai lvo to ap<lb/>
ac n<lb/>
a tarv and secondar school levels are proximately S24 4 in I98(<lb/>
religious organizations.<lb/>
Rudie who s;1s he is not a<lb/>
"deprogrammer" himself took<lb/>
an interest m the matter in 1975<lb/>
whet) his youngei bt other was<lb/>
"deprogrammed" out ol the<lb/>
I nification Church b led Patrick<lb/>
d San Diego. "Deprogramming<lb/>
f uithei decrease is expected in the college anticipated. I he instructional staff Iotal expenditures tor education moans changing the convictions (<lb/>
declines in enrollmeni in grades 9 age population (18- to 24-year-olds), at the college level is expected to from 'all sources ammounted to set of beliefs a person holds<lb/>
goraphobia6<lb/>
Announcements?j<lb/>
( lassifieds12<lb/>
( bsta Ricab<lb/>
Editoi iaU4<lb/>
1 ood<lb/>
lnm.niy<lb/>
Ulslcs<lb/>
Sutton 1 ligible 'S<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0002"/><lb/>
THt t V1-XROl INIAN<lb/>
Sb Pit MHl-R 2. W(<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Knuourucmt ills musl he<lb/>
brought lo I he r ast<lb/>
( arofmiaii office in the<lb/>
I'lihlualioiis Building I he<lb/>
should he lpevrillen, or<lb/>
dear!) ley i hit if<lb/>
handwritten, (all 757-6366<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
?<lb/>
JOURNALISTS<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
- ? g siralion tor ECU in<lb/>
tramursl competition Col<lb/>
Bowl trie competitive sport ot the<lb/>
mmd ope ' ?Per 8 and ex<lb/>
teno ? September jo Col<lb/>
leqe Bow! features ?  ? ? able<lb/>
college stu ?? ?? ? ;ui on a team<lb/>
impel . ,? .?? irtfl questions<lb/>
?? ? ? ' lem ,1'fas Ques<lb/>
h ms ? . ficern a . the<lb/>
beral arts se . ence<lb/>
 " ? msttCS Spor ts curt.<lb/>
events and mumerable otr.er<lb/>
. ? <lb/>
Mendenhall student (<lb/>
lot ? k " out  ? intran arai<lb/>
? pel ' i an part pal n in<lb/>
? ? ; ? . ?? ai tout<lb/>
imenl ? i . ? I . questions<lb/>
? . B  .iime b<lb/>
? i Pi i  Oft .??.??<lb/>
 ? .? . leiept<lb/>
cso<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
career planning assistance<lb/>
academic personal financial, test<lb/>
anxiety and or group counseling<lb/>
? . u would like to be con<lb/>
ed tor participation in any of<lb/>
the COST FREE services contact<lb/>
Dr Frye Center for Student Op<lb/>
portuni es 21) Wtuchard Annex<lb/>
or call tor an appointment a'<lb/>
TV 612? 607S or 6081<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
Trie Center for Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities iCSOi currently has open<lb/>
mqs for part time tutors in the<lb/>
following subiec t areas medicine.<lb/>
pre medicine, nurs.ng allied<lb/>
health bioioqv chemistry<lb/>
pi rsics and i ? aft I s et ? i and<lb/>
? m professions You may earn<lb/>
an income at standard campus<lb/>
? i. ' Or Br,dwell CSO<lb/>
2b  ? chard Annex or can<lb/>
? ?. . 608' or 6 ?? ' ? an ap<lb/>
pointmenl<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
? : ?? - : ? ? ?? ? deadline for<lb/>
? ?? ? to the Department<lb/>
a  rk ano Correctional<lb/>
i ? . es ' let ' wno plan to ap<lb/>
i , to ma it m usl submit an ap<lb/>
piua- ? ?? e Department Chair<lb/>
and complete rw nterviews prior<lb/>
leadi "i Students with r<lb/>
lei ' ? ' ompletion o general<lb/>
? . ? r ed 11 s who have a<lb/>
mun i 5 gt ade avei age are<lb/>
. I ? ' apply Apphi ations and<lb/>
add ' i formation may be<lb/>
so ured " ? i'i pat '?? ent Offne<lb/>
Room 312. Aihed health (Carol<lb/>
B ? Building PI r? - I 6961<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There will be a meet ng ot an<lb/>
current mempers on Tues Sept<lb/>
2 All members are encouraged to<lb/>
attend Plans for fan recruitment<lb/>
will be made Please call Mary at<lb/>
758 77?3 for details on t,me and<lb/>
location ot the meeting<lb/>
SU MEETING<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
c epted for Chairperson tor the Stu<lb/>
dent Union Special Events Com<lb/>
m.ttee Please come bv the Stu<lb/>
dent Union Office Room 234<lb/>
Mendenh.yi student Center for<lb/>
more details<lb/>
REAGAN, EAST<lb/>
On Tuesday September no at<lb/>
7 00 p m there will be an<lb/>
organisational meeting ot " e<lb/>
Students for Reagan East . ake<lb/>
and Cobey a' the Rl i;i I i<lb/>
President Headquarters s?6 S<lb/>
Cotanche St rx ?? I the Universi<lb/>
ty Boo I ' at gt ?? I n aoout<lb/>
the sal I i treaty be si ?.<lb/>
ano refreshments will pe<lb/>
available All interested students<lb/>
are invited<lb/>
ROCK CHURCH<lb/>
Rock C h uI ? student<lb/>
Fel m  p ??? ?? ee I every<lb/>
Wednesday night irom i 00 6 I<lb/>
beginn.nq Sops ? ? ? . .<lb/>
Mendenhaii am students an<lb/>
om e<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
A new pr ogan I i loci ???? <lb/>
Learning Efficiency will be rl<lb/>
fered by Dr George Weigand<lb/>
oeg.nning Septemoer j 1980<lb/>
T here will be 'wo groups One will<lb/>
meet on Monday ano Aednesda?<lb/>
a1 I 0t' p m and the other group<lb/>
will meet on Tuesday and Thurs<lb/>
lay at I 00 pm in Room 305<lb/>
 ? ght Annex The class is<lb/>
available to all students Alton<lb/>
nance is voluntary no formo'<lb/>
registration is required<lb/>
GAY COMMUNITY<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Com<lb/>
" unity will hold a get ac<lb/>
quainted" meeting Tuesday<lb/>
.?.???? i  2nd Trie ECGC meets<lb/>
? very Tuesday a' 5 00 p m a' 9S<lb/>
t 10th St Tin- purposi t II .<lb/>
?? ? ? In i this 1 uesday will be I i<lb/>
; .i ? d and new members witi<lb/>
e i mr Any questions con<lb/>
? ?  '? ?  style in Green<lb/>
? A ? 1 ' Ot .I' ' .? ' ? ' !? ? I<lb/>
' favorite beverage<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CHOIR<lb/>
iniversity Choir still ras a<lb/>
'?  .ipenmgs left m all sections<lb/>
Cioir is offered f i crte l iu? ot<lb/>
? lit and will neel Mondays<lb/>
and Wednesdays ft n .i jo s<lb/>
p m The choi- .?. Iravi<lb/>
? ? ? sp ou lo Wat  and<lb/>
?? a v irk as well as ma"ig local<lb/>
lati ippearai es lerested<lb/>
tents si ? i - Dr Brett<lb/>
Watson in -u-tcher Musk Center<lb/>
formal<lb/>
MASCOT<lb/>
' ? , .? to seiet t tr.e t as'<lb/>
Carolina university masi I<lb/>
masci ts will te held at the eas'<lb/>
end of V nget C I stum at s 00<lb/>
p m on Thursdday Sep ? t ? - :<lb/>
1980 Corre and t.  .<lb/>
ludges ona.v -tuaiiy or as a pair<lb/>
your own rendition of the P.rate<lb/>
?. ? ' ? ? creation ol a net<lb/>
tradition is evolv<lb/>
SU BOARD<lb/>
The Student union Pi<lb/>
Board wni meet on Wednesday<lb/>
Septemoer 3 at 4 00 p m rn Roon<lb/>
247 of Mendenhati Student 1 ei '? 1<lb/>
All iren bers ar ? .? II ittend<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Applications fro" St '? ' ???<lb/>
want pa'1 ? n e work are be<lb/>
? ?? ? ???. ? ?<lb/>
Center S01 E Ml icross fron<lb/>
Garrett Dorm r.??.?? fi . 'ours<lb/>
ot 9 30 3 30 Job lerviews will<lb/>
?  piaci 11 '? ? Center afti ?<lb/>
ieptembei 8 Ca rS8 2030 for fur<lb/>
? ?  . rmat ?<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
An t p  ? a St ' . ? ? '1 .<lb/>
munton will be ce<lb/>
Wedi ? - I a . ?  . ept 3rd<lb/>
the chap? Mi<lb/>
lent Center Ireel<lb/>
fi ' ??? ? , ? , .<lb/>
will be at 5 30 p - wit! Ihi<lb/>
Episcopal Chaf ? M ? Rev Bill<lb/>
Hadde ?. pper 1<lb/>
be served at t <lb/>
VARSITY<lb/>
CHEERLEADI<lb/>
NG<lb/>
A guys ??? try<lb/>
for varsity ? ? . - ? , eel<lb/>
front of Minges Colt<lb/>
<lb/>
JV<lb/>
CHEERLEADING<lb/>
lerested<lb/>
<lb/>
pn front of <lb/>
??? g<lb/>
TEAM MANAGERS<lb/>
i . ? ? ? a . ? ? ' ? ???<lb/>
ich Ray rl <lb/>
lati ? ???<lb/>
istea managers for tht<lb/>
<lb/>
st'o. eport to 1 .??<lb/>
eptt<lb/>
COMPETITIVE<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
. ? ? pat<lb/>
petitive swti . ? ? .<lb/>
' I<lb/>
T ueso ?. eptt at<lb/>
I, ? ?  expern<lb/>
?? . red<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
-<lb/>
??, . ludent ? ?? ?<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
? . .<lb/>
? '<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
?<lb/>
UNI<lb/>
MAN '? ?? '<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL<lb/>
vant a ?  ' ? ' 1. ? ?<lb/>
-f. and lea' '<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOLK DANCE<lb/>
Th. E ?S' C A'<lb/>
Exercise, Dance Classes Set<lb/>
? " Thursdays, Sept. 15 -<lb/>
Oct. 23). a program<lb/>
1 vening programs in designed to exercise the<lb/>
various forms of dance cardiovascular system<lb/>
And exercise patterns h increasing the heart<lb/>
will be ottered to adults beat and oxygen intake,<lb/>
this fall through East<lb/>
i arolina University's<lb/>
l)i ision of Continuing<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
! he courses are:<lb/>
"Basic eiobic Exer-<lb/>
cise" (Mondays and<lb/>
and "Clogging 1"<lb/>
(Wednesdays, Sept. 17<lb/>
Oct. 22) and<lb/>
Clogging I 1'<lb/>
(Wednesdays, Oct. 29 -<lb/>
No. 19), a series<lb/>
beginning with the<lb/>
College Notes<lb/>
From The National On Campus Report<lb/>
SOUTHPAWS should get special considera-<lb/>
tion, according to the Virginia Tech student<lb/>
government. Earlier this year, that body passed<lb/>
a resolution favoring installation of left-handed<lb/>
pencil sharpeners in all classrooms, while<lb/>
recently it passed another resolution favoring<lb/>
purchase of 12 percent left-handed desks for all<lb/>
classrooms. The student government cited a<lb/>
survey showing that .left-handers increase their<lb/>
writing speed 3.5 percent when given left-<lb/>
handed desks.<lb/>
SEVEN SPORTS were recently cut from the U.<lb/>
ot Colorado athletic program and a $20 student<lb/>
fee was initiated to balance the budget. About<lb/>
$360,000 is expected to be saved by dropping<lb/>
such non-revenue sports as men's baseball and<lb/>
wrestling and both men's and women's swimm-<lb/>
ing and gymnastics.<lb/>
A BILL TO HELP "RESCUE" young people<lb/>
from religious cults was recently approved by<lb/>
the New York State Senate. The bill allows a<lb/>
judge to appoint a legal conservator to super-<lb/>
vise persons who have "undergone a sudden<lb/>
and radical change in behavior, lifestyle, habits<lb/>
and attitudes<lb/>
basic clogging steps and<lb/>
progressing to more<lb/>
complex formations<lb/>
and styles.<lb/>
Other dance classes,<lb/>
repeated bv popular de-<lb/>
mand, are "Ja Exer-<lb/>
cise 1 Wednesdays,<lb/>
Sept. 17 - Nov. 19;<lb/>
"Ja Exercise 11<lb/>
Tuesdavs, Sept. 16 -<lb/>
Nov. 18; "Ballet 1<lb/>
Wednesdays, Sept. 17 -<lb/>
Nov. 19; and "Ballet<lb/>
II Wednesdays, Sept.<lb/>
17 - Nov. 19.<lb/>
A Wednesday class<lb/>
will be offered Sept. 17<lb/>
- No. 19, a program<lb/>
incorporating<lb/>
move m e n t s f r o m<lb/>
several dance forms<lb/>
such as jazz, modern<lb/>
dance and ballet.<lb/>
Information about<lb/>
clothing and footwear<lb/>
as well as registration<lb/>
materials are available<lb/>
from the Office of<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division o Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C <lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
in "Multiform" Dance telephone 757-6143.<lb/>
tJtffcBACK TO SCHOOL V<lb/>
 SPECIAL J<lb/>
1 0?c Discount to ECU Students<lb/>
UNITED FIGURE SALON<lb/>
Call 756-2820 for app.<lb/>
Red Oak Plaza.<lb/>
W mile west of Carolina<lb/>
East Mall on 264 ByPass<lb/>
the 14K LOVE GIFT' that<lb/>
everybody loves to add to!<lb/>
I4K SOLID GOLD<lb/>
BhADSON A 14 K<lb/>
SOLID GOLD CHAIN<lb/>
a GIF! OK LOVE<lb/>
GOLD BEADS Ol s<lb/>
LOVE and GIRLS<lb/>
belong TOGETHER<lb/>
Begin with one 14K<lb/>
Gold head of Love<lb/>
on a gold chain<lb/>
see your neckchain<lb/>
grow more special,<lb/>
more beautiful, more<lb/>
valuable each time a<lb/>
bead is addedfor<lb/>
any special occasion<lb/>
or for no occasion<lb/>
at all!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057280_0003"/><lb/>
I HI I AS I K()l IN1AN<lb/>
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IWNTOWN<lb/>
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Experience Earns Credit Through CLEP<lb/>
A Visit From 1904<lb/>
Greenville wa visited Sunda b a 1W4 steam engine owned h Southern<lb/>
Railway. The engine was used b (he compan from 1904 until 1950 as a<lb/>
freight engine running between Asheville, N.C. and knowille. lenn.<lb/>
Southern Railwa) sold the machine but bought it back in 1967 for excursion<lb/>
purposes. The compan operates five similar engines for excursions.<lb/>
B PKNNY AUSTIN<lb/>
Acquiring a college<lb/>
degree is often a long<lb/>
and arduous task.<lb/>
However, some studnts<lb/>
can get ahead in the<lb/>
game by earning college<lb/>
credit without having<lb/>
to do the course work.<lb/>
A student may not<lb/>
have to sit through a<lb/>
semester of classes to<lb/>
do this, but he does<lb/>
have to take and pass a<lb/>
test.<lb/>
I hese tsts are part of<lb/>
the College Level Ex-<lb/>
amination Program, or<lb/>
more simply, CLEP. A<lb/>
student may "CLEP<lb/>
his way through the<lb/>
first two years of his<lb/>
college degree, accor-<lb/>
ding to Wanda<lb/>
Wiseman of the Speight<lb/>
resting C enter.<lb/>
The national pro-<lb/>
gram was originally<lb/>
designed for people<lb/>
who did not immediate-<lb/>
 enter college after<lb/>
high school. Many of<lb/>
these people worked<lb/>
for several years or<lb/>
more before entering<lb/>
into a college degree<lb/>
program. The tests<lb/>
were developed to<lb/>
measure the knowledge<lb/>
that they had acquired<lb/>
through their work and<lb/>
life experiences,<lb/>
Wiseman said.<lb/>
The CLEP tests are<lb/>
now available lor<lb/>
anyone, she said. There<lb/>
are five general tests,<lb/>
which are given in the<lb/>
areas of history, math,<lb/>
the humanities, social<lb/>
sciences and English<lb/>
composition. The tests<lb/>
cover material that is<lb/>
taught in college in-<lb/>
troductory courses, she<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
live general tests, there<lb/>
are 47 specific subject<lb/>
tests, ranging from<lb/>
anatomy to data pro-<lb/>
cessing. These tests are<lb/>
more specific than the<lb/>
general tests, although<lb/>
some cover introduc-<lb/>
tory course material.<lb/>
A student who takes<lb/>
and passes one or more<lb/>
of the CLEP tests<lb/>
receives college credit,<lb/>
which will count<lb/>
toward his degree.<lb/>
Howeer, not all<lb/>
universities accept all<lb/>
of the C I IP tests for<lb/>
credit, Wiseman cau-<lb/>
tioned. While ECU ac-<lb/>
cepts credit for the<lb/>
general tests in math.<lb/>
the humanities, and<lb/>
English composition, it<lb/>
does not accept credit<lb/>
for the test in history<lb/>
and the social sciences.<lb/>
A student should check<lb/>
with the registrar to see<lb/>
if credit will be ac-<lb/>
cepted for a particular<lb/>
C I IP test. Wiseman<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Anyone ma take the<lb/>
tests, even high school<lb/>
students, she said. It a<lb/>
student has at least<lb/>
some knowledge ol the<lb/>
subject, or has studied<lb/>
on his own. then he<lb/>
usually does well, she<lb/>
said. A student can<lb/>
purchase a study guide<lb/>
for the more specific<lb/>
subject tests, she said.<lb/>
The study guide con-<lb/>
tains sample questions<lb/>
as well as adice for<lb/>
taking the test.<lb/>
The CLEP tests can<lb/>
also be used b transfer<lb/>
students, Wiseman<lb/>
said. Often, a student<lb/>
who transfers to a dif-<lb/>
ferent school loses<lb/>
credit hours. Instead of<lb/>
retaking the courses in-<lb/>
volved, the student can<lb/>
take a C 1 IT test and<lb/>
receive the credit hours.<lb/>
The cost of the tests<lb/>
is relatively inexpen-<lb/>
sive, she said. I he tests ECU' program has if a student should<lb/>
cost S22 each, it a stu- grown. Wiseman said, fail one of the tests, he<lb/>
dent takes more than Four years ago, onl ma retake the test as<lb/>
one at the same time, about one student a often as he likes<lb/>
then each additional month took the test. However, he must wan<lb/>
test is $18. The tests are Now she said, at least six month-<lb/>
given once a month in anywhere from three to betore taking the tesi<lb/>
Speight Testing C enter, six students take the the second time, she<lb/>
she added. tests. said.<lb/>
Want To Be<lb/>
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an art director?<lb/>
a layout artist?<lb/>
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Attorney Specializes<lb/>
In Deprogramming<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
 he work has<lb/>
brought him attention,<lb/>
not always positive.<lb/>
I he Oregon Mate bai as<lb/>
recommended the<lb/>
Oregon Supreme C ourt<lb/>
reprimand Rudie tor<lb/>
his conduct in two cases<lb/>
involving persons<lb/>
associated with<lb/>
religious groups. I he<lb/>
bar. however, said<lb/>
Rudie broke no law and<lb/>
a majot action, such a-<lb/>
a suspension ol his<lb/>
license, w o u 1 d b e<lb/>
"inappropriate<lb/>
Among his cases was<lb/>
a much-publicized trial<lb/>
in 1979 involving a S2<lb/>
million award to a<lb/>
Portland. Ore woman<lb/>
w ho claimed t he<lb/>
Church of Scientologv<lb/>
defrauded her.<lb/>
1 hrough his efforts a<lb/>
young New York man<lb/>
is no longer a member<lb/>
of the Hare Krishna<lb/>
organization but a<lb/>
second-year law stu-<lb/>
dent at Columbia<lb/>
I niversitv. An Oregon<lb/>
woman charged with<lb/>
kidnapping het<lb/>
32-year-old daugher<lb/>
was found innocent.<lb/>
Rudie was her attorney.<lb/>
I here are other,<lb/>
similar cases, which<lb/>
have helped fashion a making proposition it<lb/>
national reputation foi you go on the basis ol<lb/>
Rudie. He offers, he time spent he says.<lb/>
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. - - .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0004"/><lb/>
? <lb/>
V <lb/>
?<lb/>
?tl iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Ric hardCIri l v I<lb/>
 KRV Hi RNDON, <lb/>
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Lisa Dri w. i<lb/>
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1 I KK CiRl N . x. . <lb/>
D II) Norris.  I<lb/>
September 2. I wo<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page -?<lb/>
Croatan<lb/>
Faculty Gets Special Treatment<lb/>
In Student-Built Snack Facility<lb/>
The caste system is alive and well<lb/>
at ECU, unfortunately. We are ad-<lb/>
dressing the issue o( a separate and<lb/>
privileged dining area that is reserv-<lb/>
ed for faculty in the Croatan.<lb/>
1 he Croatan was built with bonds<lb/>
thai were backed and are being paid<lb/>
off with student fees. The faculty<lb/>
contributed nothing to the financing<lb/>
o the building or to its operation. It<lb/>
is obvious to anyone who has ever<lb/>
set foot in the Croatan that 95 per-<lb/>
cent o' its business comes from<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Why does a certain group have a<lb/>
separate area with reserved tables<lb/>
and chairs while hundreds of<lb/>
students must stand up to eat or go<lb/>
outside and sit in the heat or the<lb/>
cold.<lb/>
What is most appalling about this<lb/>
situation is that the people who sup-<lb/>
port the Croatan and who paid for<lb/>
the building are the ones being<lb/>
discriminated against, and the<lb/>
privileged few are the ones who con-<lb/>
tributed nothing.<lb/>
To test the enforcement o the<lb/>
"faculty only" policy, this<lb/>
newspaper sent one staff member,<lb/>
accompanied by the SCiA president,<lb/>
to sit in the faculty dining room.<lb/>
Within three minutes, a Croatan<lb/>
employee was on the scene to in-<lb/>
form the two students that they<lb/>
could not cat in the dining room<lb/>
because it is "reserved for faculty<lb/>
and there has been a complaint<lb/>
This unfair and neanderthal<lb/>
discrimination must cease. Faculty<lb/>
members are noi gods sitting on a<lb/>
pedestal of know ledge ? they are<lb/>
just plain ol' folkes. The ad-<lb/>
ministration should move quickly to<lb/>
eliminate this ridiculous policy.<lb/>
Enough Rooms, Professors?<lb/>
.s our new features editor has<lb/>
reminded you in many columns on<lb/>
the subject, life in the dorms can be<lb/>
tough. And it's even tougher this<lb/>
year for the people who are being<lb/>
asked to triple in some rooms.<lb/>
I luce is definitely a crowd.<lb/>
According to Vice Chancellor of<lb/>
Studciu Life timer Meyer, enroll-<lb/>
ment ai ECU this year surpassed all<lb/>
estimates, and the result has been<lb/>
the overcrowding of dormitories.<lb/>
Student 1 ite and Housing are doing<lb/>
all they can to remedy the situation,<lb/>
and students have been cooperative,<lb/>
under circumstances. To make it<lb/>
work, everyone concerned must be<lb/>
patient.<lb/>
But there is a greater problem at<lb/>
hand in addition to the growing<lb/>
housing shortage. If enrollment has<lb/>
increased to the point of forcing<lb/>
three students into one room,<lb/>
what's happening in the<lb/>
classrooms? Are there enough pro-<lb/>
fessors to go around?<lb/>
A complete study has yet to be<lb/>
made, but a random sampling by<lb/>
The Hast Carolinian revealed that<lb/>
many classes ? seemingly more<lb/>
than usual ? were closed, and<lb/>
students who needed certain courses<lb/>
for their curriculum have been left<lb/>
out in the cold. Whether or not this<lb/>
shortage is more or less severe in<lb/>
numbers than that of housing re-<lb/>
mains to be seen.<lb/>
According to a College Board<lb/>
study in May 1980, enrollment will<lb/>
rise in the next two decades even<lb/>
though the present fend is declin-<lb/>
ing. That prediction seems to have<lb/>
come true at ECU quicker than was<lb/>
expected. A housing shortage<lb/>
creates inconvenience tor students,<lb/>
but a shortage o professors affects<lb/>
the quality of their education.<lb/>
If von are one of the unluck) ones<lb/>
who must live in a dormitory room<lb/>
with two other students, be patient<lb/>
and try to make do. A problem of<lb/>
this magnitude will take time to<lb/>
solve, and the university and the city<lb/>
of Greenville must work together to<lb/>
find a solution.<lb/>
But if you are one of the unlucky<lb/>
ones who got closed out o a class<lb/>
that you needed, start asking ques-<lb/>
tions in your department about<lb/>
more professors for those courses.<lb/>
If a required course becomes full<lb/>
before students in that major are<lb/>
enrolled, something must be done<lb/>
quickly. Patience won't help where<lb/>
quality suffers.<lb/>
Dorm Deliveries<lb/>
After the Thursday, Aug. 28, edi-<lb/>
tion of The Fast Carolinian was<lb/>
distributed on campus, we received<lb/>
a flurry of complaints that<lb/>
newspapers were not delivered to<lb/>
dorm rooms. We are sorry that we<lb/>
were unable to deliver on Thursday,<lb/>
but most of our circulation<lb/>
employees were busy getting settled<lb/>
into their rooms and classes.<lb/>
Beginning today The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian will be delivered to each dorm<lb/>
room, one per single room and three<lb/>
or four to each suite. Delivery hours<lb/>
will be between 10 a.m. and 12 noon<lb/>
in male, female and co-ed dorms.<lb/>
&amp;!i$<lb/>
tffc?<lb/>
WlflfWmGI NATION OR IS IT GETTING CROWE!) IN HERE?'<lb/>
w" ??-I Night at the Opera<lb/>
PD 59: Muskie Kept In The Dark<lb/>
Presidential directives dealing with<lb/>
nuclear strategy can have a value in forcing<lb/>
the people who are responsible tor these<lb/>
things to finish their sentences and face up<lb/>
to the implications of then policy. But<lb/>
there are also several respects in which<lb/>
these documents are endemically anu" in"<lb/>
corrigible phony<lb/>
First, no nuclear war could conceivably<lb/>
hear an resemblance to the scenarios<lb/>
assumed by these statements of strategic<lb/>
intent: if they do this, we do that, then it<lb/>
the) come hack with this, we can do the<lb/>
other  ami so on. Invariably, bloods<lb/>
nuclear chaos is made to sound like<lb/>
something taking place on the center court<lb/>
at imbledon.<lb/>
Second, the best people m our strategy-<lb/>
making aparatus know this. And their<lb/>
acknowledged purpose is not to la out a<lb/>
prospectus for real war, but to create<lb/>
possibilities ol action that, once known<lb/>
and believed, will discourage an opponent<lb/>
from trying us or from pushing too haul,<lb/>
so, it is perceptions of reality, no! reality<lb/>
itself, the Pentagon planners are mainly<lb/>
concerned vsith. Defense Secretary Harold<lb/>
Brown .?id as much in his recent speech at<lb/>
Annapolis.<lb/>
1 inally, merely as an exercise in policy-<lb/>
setting, these documents have a certain ait<lb/>
o fraudulence to them. It's not always so<lb/>
certain (and the present case is a good ex<lb/>
ample) thai the strategy can be an after<lb/>
the-tact justification or a belated<lb/>
acknowledgement that, whatever we were<lb/>
claiming our strategy and intent to be. we<lb/>
were, all along, developing an arsenal thai<lb/>
could and would do something else.<lb/>
There is a pronounced element ol this<lb/>
post facto reasoning to the announcement<lb/>
that we have now formulated a nuclear<lb/>
strategy vis-a-vis the Soviet Union that in-<lb/>
corporates the improved accuracies and<lb/>
othei changed charateristics of nuclear<lb/>
weapons under development, for a long<lb/>
tune. U.S. government spokesmen weie<lb/>
more or less forswearing certain war plans<lb/>
foi which the government was. however.<lb/>
simultaneously, beginning to create a uni-<lb/>
quely, suitable arsenal. And there have also<lb/>
been official statements and hints and lur-<lb/>
ches and lunges along the way to revelation<lb/>
ot PD59 that such a change o strategy was<lb/>
being fashioned. When Secretary Brown<lb/>
said this was nothing new and not a total<lb/>
polio reversal, but something evolved and<lb/>
partial, he was no doubt absolutely right.<lb/>
And it also seems reasonable that there<lb/>
should have been some evolution Much in<lb/>
the alternative scheme that this one<lb/>
supersedes had taken on the attributes o<lb/>
any immutable, sacred doctrine that it was<lb/>
heretical and bloody-minded even to ques-<lb/>
tion, no matter how politely or from what<lb/>
responsible motives. Nor did that alter-<lb/>
l;<lb/>
E ! " - I V F :<lb/>
?1 <lb/>
'?'<lb/>
c-<lb/>
V<lb/>
)<lb/>
?? M<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
?gj <lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
x<lb/>
?<lb/>
native evidently make sufficient provision<lb/>
foi dramatic changes in Soviet planning<lb/>
and strength.<lb/>
Bui having acknowledged all that, we<lb/>
are bound to say there is something plenty<lb/>
fishy about the manner of disclosure ol the<lb/>
altered strategy and the exclusion<lb/>
Secretary Muskie from knowledge ol w<lb/>
was about to happen. It cannot have b<lb/>
inadvertent or merely "thoughtless" oi<lb/>
justified bv any theoretical division ol<lb/>
labor and jurisdiction: It was a calculated<lb/>
freeze-out. Mr. Muskie was thereby denied<lb/>
an opportunity to argue or discuss or<lb/>
recommend anything in relation to a<lb/>
presidential decision concerning the top-<lb/>
most order o national security business, a<lb/>
decision bound to have seismic reverbera-<lb/>
tions in his own field ol activity. He was<lb/>
faced with an acomplished fact.<lb/>
Secretary Muskie was right to be furious<lb/>
and noisily so. Is he there foi window-<lb/>
dressing? Is he going to be cui out ol the<lb/>
big game when it involves thai supremely<lb/>
important interconnection ol military,<lb/>
strategic and diplomatic concerns thai ac<lb/>
tually defines the U.SSoviet relationsip?<lb/>
There is a downside to the evolutionary<lb/>
trend that has led to PD59, and you get the<lb/>
idea from what happened to Mr. Muskie<lb/>
that someone, somewhere might have been<lb/>
afraid that he would make that negative<lb/>
argument, that resistance, real or imagin-<lb/>
ed, was being preempted.<lb/>
If this is so. ii doesn't say much loi the<lb/>
wav in which the final decision w is reach<lb/>
ed and inevitably fairly or noi raises<lb/>
questions about the decision itself. Bui the<lb/>
alternative hvpotheses aren't any better<lb/>
Did someone - everyone "torget" the<lb/>
secretary of state's claim to concern in<lb/>
these matters'? Was someone trymg merely<lb/>
to upstage and overwhelm him on the<lb/>
bureaucratic battlefield? for whom<lb/>
the leak ol the change ot strategv ink<lb/>
ed? 1 he Russians I he Republicans I he<lb/>
voters. Mess their poor, much put-unon<lb/>
.mil<lb/>
r, administration under attack<lb/>
politically foi a sogginess ol spun and<lb/>
weakne ?? lefense matters surely<lb/>
ihe right, even the duty, to answer<lb/>
back. nd ii also has the right duty lo let<lb/>
potential aggressoi whom all this hard<lb/>
ware and planning is meant to deter from<lb/>
aggression know what American intentions<lb/>
are. But no administration serves itself or<lb/>
its constituency or the credibility o its<lb/>
policy when it lets disorderlv and self-<lb/>
aggrandizing and suspicion breeding<lb/>
politics gel into die act. and is seen to close<lb/>
a kev lave out ot the argument I hat un-<lb/>
fortunately, is what seems to have happen-<lb/>
ed in the PD59 affair.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
lhe Eastarolinian welcomes letters ex-<lb/>
pressing all points of view. Mail or drop<lb/>
them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner I ibrary.<lb/>
Letters must includt thi name, majoi<lb/>
ana c (ossification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the author(s). Letters<lb/>
should he limited to three typewritten<lb/>
panes, double-spaced, or neatly printed.<lb/>
All letters are subject t editing fot brevii i.<lb/>
obscenity and libel. I el ten by the same<lb/>
author are limited to one each 30 days.<lb/>
pnc<lb/>
ing<lb/>
ever<lb/>
Cai<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Kr<lb/>
reP1<lb/>
Wltl<lb/>
rise<lb/>
an<lb/>
a! it<lb/>
too<lb/>
?;<lb/>
I<lb/>
Be<lb/>
pn<lb/>
bet<lb/>
j<lb/>
re<lb/>
To The Right<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
7s It Possible To Get Good Water From A Bad Well?'<lb/>
By STAN R1DGLEY<lb/>
Is it possible to get good water<lb/>
from a bad well?<lb/>
Or, more precisely, is it possible<lb/>
to get worthwhile advice from a<lb/>
liberal Democrat?<lb/>
Remarkable as it may seem, on<lb/>
one occasion a liberal friend of mine<lb/>
said something useful to me ? and<lb/>
it was neither inflationary nor irra-<lb/>
tional. He gave me advice on how to<lb/>
write a conservative column.<lb/>
Perhaps a word of context is<lb/>
necessarv. This acquaintance of<lb/>
mine, with his fiery-red beard, is an<lb/>
official o HEW, that edifice of<lb/>
original sin (I use the defunct<lb/>
acronym HI W because everyone<lb/>
knows what that stands for). He is<lb/>
as staunch a liberal as ever spent a<lb/>
taxpayer's dollar, yet his advice lor<lb/>
my column was both pithy and<lb/>
sound. Said he: "Whatever you<lb/>
write, stay away from the rhetoric<lb/>
? it turns people oft<lb/>
So, not wanting to "turn oft"<lb/>
large portions of the student body,<lb/>
the majority of which seem blacked-<lb/>
out anyway, I naturally plan to stay<lb/>
away from rhetoric. And that means<lb/>
sticking to the issues.<lb/>
So what to write about to interest<lb/>
and intrigue the ECU student?<lb/>
What can prod and poke, cajole and<lb/>
coax my liberal brethren along the<lb/>
path of conservatism? After all,<lb/>
liberals ? students included ? are<lb/>
just misguided persons who stopped<lb/>
listening to their parents at too early<lb/>
an age.<lb/>
The best beginning, unfortunate-<lb/>
ly, might also be considered the<lb/>
most mundane beginning: What is a<lb/>
Conservative? Liberals have a varie-<lb/>
ty of humorous little apothegms<lb/>
describing conservatives in any<lb/>
number of unfavorable cir-<lb/>
cumstances. But, don't listen ? it's<lb/>
only rhetoric and you might get<lb/>
turned off.<lb/>
A fair definition of a conservative<lb/>
might be "a person who moves for-<lb/>
ward while looking back Bui that<lb/>
is a bit narrow. We conservatives<lb/>
also believe in keeping the best ideas<lb/>
of those who have gone before w hile<lb/>
accepting new ideas gradually as<lb/>
thev are proven worthwhile. In these<lb/>
last five words we discover the basic<lb/>
difference between conservatives<lb/>
and liberals. For an extensive and<lb/>
apropos summary of "liberal<lb/>
look in Roget's Thesaurus under im-<lb/>
practical. That, admittedly, was<lb/>
tongue-in-cheek. Now to issues o<lb/>
substance and seriousness, but first<lb/>
a word of preface. My stand on<lb/>
some of these issues will anger<lb/>
some, but 1 never offer opinion<lb/>
without rational argument. These<lb/>
are just some of the topics to be ex-<lb/>
amined over the semester.<lb/>
I could begin by explaining why<lb/>
draft registration is a good thing ?<lb/>
from a student's point-of-view.<lb/>
We'll look at why many ECU anti-<lb/>
regisiration peaceniks are actually<lb/>
confused and have no clear idea of<lb/>
what they're really against. Nor<lb/>
why.<lb/>
We'll look at why the Russians<lb/>
reallv would prefer to deal with<lb/>
Ronald Reagan rather than Jimmy<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
We can discuss the phenomenon<lb/>
of "Doonesbury Politics" that is<lb/>
the source of many liberals' baseless<lb/>
fear of Reagan.<lb/>
We can examine why the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment is unnecessary<lb/>
and why so many of its proponents<lb/>
find it hard to be civil when discuss-<lb/>
ing the issue.<lb/>
We can look at the UNC<lb/>
desegregation battle now being wag-<lb/>
ed in federal court and ask some<lb/>
tough questions that no one has<lb/>
dared to ask. W e'l! get answers, too.<lb/>
We'll analyze the degree to which<lb/>
supposedly rational human beings<lb/>
can take leave o their senses as<lb/>
graphically demonsnated on na-<lb/>
tional television from the floor of<lb/>
the Democratic National Conven-<lb/>
tion. Specifically, the delirium<lb/>
which followed Ted Kennedy's now-<lb/>
historical speech is a comment on<lb/>
oratorical style versus realistic<lb/>
substance. Hi- speech ooed with<lb/>
the former, was devoid of the latter.<lb/>
fected positively by my unrelenting<lb/>
H eltanschauung, then this column's<lb/>
purpose will have been realized.<lb/>
As for this column's name, it was<lb/>
not hard to come by. It springs<lb/>
naturally from the prevailing mood<lb/>
of the country and, increasingly, ot<lb/>
the nation's college campuses<lb/>
The movement "to the right" has<lb/>
been glacial in its progress as traced<lb/>
over the last 20 years ? slow, yet<lb/>
relentless. We've had a long wait,<lb/>
but conservatism is a trend whose<lb/>
time has come.<lb/>
Perhaps now we'll be able to get<lb/>
good water from a good well.<lb/>
But all of these topics and more ?<lb/>
are matters for later columns that<lb/>
will treat each with a clarity unique<lb/>
to conservatism. And as the year Stan Ridgley is a senior Political<lb/>
progresses, if even one liberal is af- Science major from Clinton. N.C.<lb/>
' ?? ?? 7, MM MMMij<lb/>
 ??- ???? ? ? '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0005"/><lb/>
3<lb/>
-<lb/>
Food Chain Exec<lb/>
Explains Price Hikes<lb/>
I HI i s I t K  IN<lb/>
I HI I Mill K . '<lb/>
5<lb/>
Recent w holesale<lb/>
price increases arc tore-<lb/>
mi; the prices toi food<lb/>
even higher, according<lb/>
lo R.D. Schill,<lb/>
c aroiina Market ing<lb/>
Vi ea ice president foi<lb/>
Kroger Sa On. He<lb/>
reports that, combined<lb/>
with these increases,<lb/>
uses in mat keting costs<lb/>
and overhead will<lb/>
almost guarantee a<lb/>
food cost rise in the un<lb/>
mediate future.<lb/>
Schill predicted the<lb/>
following increases<lb/>
? PORK AND<lb/>
POU1 1 K Shop<lb/>
pets benefited from low<lb/>
poi k and poult i pi ices<lb/>
during the first hall ol<lb/>
the yeai due to an<lb/>
a b u n d ant supply.<lb/>
Because ol these low<lb/>
prices, suppliers have<lb/>
been cutting back pro<lb/>
duction. In addition.<lb/>
the heal wave earliei in<lb/>
the summer, while not<lb/>
the majoi factor, did<lb/>
reduce supply, pai<lb/>
ticulai In in broilct s.<lb/>
? HI 1 1 Beet is still<lb/>
s h oi t<lb/>
"P ! <lb/>
U P P I<lb/>
Mthough cattle pi<lb/>
ducers are beginning to<lb/>
rebuild then herds, it<lb/>
will take about two Ol<lb/>
three years foi this<lb/>
meat to reach the<lb/>
market<lb/>
? 11 osts are<lb/>
up on this tiaditionallv<lb/>
low cost alternative to<lb/>
meat, due to a complex<lb/>
series ol circumstances<lb/>
ranging from fishing<lb/>
restrictions because ol<lb/>
dolphins to the cost ol<lb/>
fuel foi fishing boats<lb/>
? I c.t.S 1 ggs are<lb/>
still an excellent protein<lb/>
bu despite recent pi ice<lb/>
increases W hile t<lb/>
are not affe. ted b heat<lb/>
as severel as broilers.<lb/>
the heat has taken its<lb/>
toll. Production has<lb/>
also decieased !<lb/>
ol the normal summei<lb/>
reaction ol chickens to<lb/>
not eat as much and<lb/>
hence la fewei and<lb/>
smallei egg<lb/>
? c M 1) I 0 DS<lb/>
Prices foi canned and<lb/>
packaged go i up<lb/>
due to supp! bt<lb/>
in reaction to lovei<lb/>
prices in recent t<lb/>
Schill emphasi- i<lb/>
theie is not a shottage,<lb/>
but rather that supply is<lb/>
now in line with de<lb/>
mand Prices are also<lb/>
i ising because ol highet<lb/>
packaging, energy and<lb/>
production costs, atu<lb/>
the high worldwide<lb/>
pi ice foi sugai is at fee<lb/>
ting main processed<lb/>
foods.<lb/>
? Mil K AND DAIRY<lb/>
Milk is in plentiful<lb/>
supply All recent price<lb/>
rises have been due lo<lb/>
iik t eases in go ei n<lb/>
ment support puces.<lb/>
Anticipation ol a milk<lb/>
parity increase are<lb/>
behind the tecent rise in<lb/>
buttei and cheese<lb/>
w holesale r ates.<lb/>
? PR DUC1 Fresh<lb/>
tt mis and vegetables<lb/>
have been good buys<lb/>
this year. I he only ma<lb/>
jot pi ice change an<lb/>
ticipated in the neai<lb/>
tut tire will be in<lb/>
potatoes.<lb/>
? C. 1 I R A 1<lb/>
Ol I Ix K Rising<lb/>
prices will continue to<lb/>
be the rale tat her than<lb/>
ie exception, Schil<lb/>
Refunder Tells How To<lb/>
Eat For $3 Per Week<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
Ol'SC<lb/>
<lb/>
I net<lb/>
S (<lb/>
a ?eek !<lb/>
t. Oi<lb/>
ila v. w<lb/>
ione ba?. k rel<lb/>
(.<lb/>
han<lb/>
i<lb/>
?. ? t i i<lb/>
Her LCI<lb/>
 as<lb/>
i<lb/>
ba <lb/>
Igei<lb/>
incs str.<lb/>
Most<lb/>
labels.<lb/>
who would like to us si<lb/>
itegies at the supermarket<lb/>
consumers throw awa<lb/>
boxtop and proofs ol put<lb/>
u consi -<lb/>
seminars is<lb/>
iv a; ' Oft of NOI<lb/>
I ? . f Com<lb/>
nuing t diK.it.on. let. Greenville,<lb/>
N. telepl ne 56143<lb/>
1 he 1 ast C arolinian<lb/>
Hack To School<lb/>
cci?il<lb/>
KdlR. by Natures Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts tor men &amp; corner<lb/>
Present ECU Student ID. Fot<lb/>
20V. Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Otter good mru )()-$()<lb/>
I<lb/>
Downtowc Mall<lb/>
Creenrilie<lb/>
L<lb/>
aooointment? onl<lb/>
75S-784F<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
Welcomes All ECU Students<lb/>
If ou like good pizza and hot oven<lb/>
iuhmarines at good lo prices come to<lb/>
I aiuoii Pizza<lb/>
iOnce you try it youll always come back<lb/>
FREE DELIVER! to your dorm<lb/>
Call for take out orders<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Small Sub. Salad, and Tea<lb/>
for $2.99<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
im k Si<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
EXPOiURI 14 ftl<lb/>
ROLL ONLY V- B<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
 Developed and Printed<lb/>
w<lb/>
f<lb/>
24<lb/>
F XPOSURI<lb/>
HUL!<lb/>
36<lb/>
t XPOSURf<lb/>
ROI i ONir"<lb/>
ThbECU Fraternities 0"<lb/>
DREnr fr REEK<lb/>
$7.97<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$Sfides$ss$$$$8<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING 2<lb/>
$1,923<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
WED. AT<lb/>
Weak Your<lb/>
GrREEK JEHSEYS<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
REDUCED<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KUDACHRONH<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING GNlLY<lb/>
$3,151<lb/>
?$$S$$$S$SSSS5S$SS$SS$SS$$J<lb/>
LOW LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTAGMRO<lb/>
PRQCESSING 0?<lb/>
SUPEP 8 ANO STAN0-R0 HOV'ES<lb/>
1SSSSSSSSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$I<lb/>
ONLY 4Zl. 1 1<lb/>
FALL<lb/>
SEMESTER<lb/>
1980<lb/>
SUN.<lb/>
MUG CLUB NIGHT<lb/>
MON.<lb/>
GAMMA DELTA IOTA<lb/>
TlE.<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
GREEK NIGHT<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
STUDENT NIGHT<lb/>
FRL<lb/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
BLOW OUT<lb/>
BEGINNING AT 3:30<lb/>
FOR THE LADIES<lb/>
WHILE THEY LAST<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
PENDANT<lb/>
TO TAKE TO<lb/>
ECU BALL GAMES<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and Operated By<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville,N.C. 27834<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0006"/><lb/>
I HI t S1 KOl INI W<lb/>
Features<lb/>
M en im k  I9?<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Costa Rica<lb/>
Alligators, Rain, Cowboys<lb/>
In this photo taken h Richard Green, Frederico and<lb/>
Alfonso, cousins of Richard's Costa Rican friends,<lb/>
earn a surfboard belonging to Mike Monahan of<lb/>
Jacksonville, VC. The photograph was taken in<lb/>
Jaco, a town on Costa Rica's Pacific coast.<lb/>
Second In A Series<lb/>
On Ana 4, Richard Green, general manager oj<lb/>
I he Eastarolinian, traveled to Costa Rica for I'<lb/>
davs on a short vacation and to complete a<lb/>
photographic essav he began in the spring o) 1979<lb/>
The first pan of the series appeared in the Aug. 2A<lb/>
issue of J he East ('arolinian, but endedprematun<lb/>
In order to maintain continuity, a portion oj las:<lb/>
week 's story s reprinted below, followed by tin ?<lb/>
cond part oj the series.<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
 i?m ral Mjiiitr<lb/>
(me week on the beach produced wonderful tans,<lb/>
peeling noses, and main new friends: a fugitive from<lb/>
( iicat Britain, three students trom Holland, and a<lb/>
surfer trom Peru. But our excursion will be<lb/>
remembered lor alligators, ram arid cowboys.<lb/>
( n the second da at Manuel Antonio, the<lb/>
"Tom's" weni into town to buy some food while<lb/>
Mike and 1 went surfing. It began to rain early in the<lb/>
afternoon, so we headed tor a small bar recant I<lb/>
the Mar i Sombra, about a mile south of where we<lb/>
were camping. We drank cervezas and played airds<lb/>
until Hi o'clock that night. I he rom's finally showed<lb/>
up the didn't buy any food, but they did have a<lb/>
bottle ot guaro (sugar-cane liquor).<lb/>
'You Missed It'<lb/>
I hat was then greeting. While in town they me!<lb/>
two vacationing computer salesmen trom Oklahoma.<lb/>
Iogethet they went alligator hunting with two hi<lb/>
hre malos, Edwin and Walter, residents of Quepos.<lb/>
I he day's catch included two medium-sized alhga<lb/>
and about 50 pounds ot clams. And we're all in-<lb/>
sti ODYSSEY . page 7. col. I<lb/>
Letters Describe World War I Life<lb/>
B MAURICE C. YORK<lb/>
Nptu 14I t f hr lust HMiliniun<lb/>
Air warfare has become too com-<lb/>
plicated. Today, the United States<lb/>
anguishes over the efficacy oi<lb/>
building powerful B-l bombers and<lb/>
deadly 1 missiles that could help<lb/>
obliterate the human race.<lb/>
During World War 1, however.<lb/>
when the airplane was a novelty.<lb/>
strategy was less complicateed.<lb/>
Military leaders worried about how<lb/>
to prevent their troops from running<lb/>
at the sight of an enemy plane. Even<lb/>
keeping the capricious machines air-<lb/>
borne often proved difficult.<lb/>
The Dorothy Repiton Knox<lb/>
Papers at the Past Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection in the J.Y.<lb/>
loyner I ibrar provide an in-<lb/>
teresting view oi the air war in<lb/>
Europe during World War I. The<lb/>
National Historical Publications<lb/>
and Records c ommission provided<lb/>
money tor processing the collection<lb/>
in W4. and now it is available for<lb/>
Verdun. A weakened British force<lb/>
braced itself for an attack by the<lb/>
superior "Fritzies Suddenly,<lb/>
before the Germans could attack,<lb/>
the plane appeared at the left oi the<lb/>
line, flying at a very low altitude:<lb/>
 misty ? ethereal) it kept mov-<lb/>
ing) dipping and swaying(,) passed<lb/>
thru the branches oi a tree that by<lb/>
some treak had not been blown oii<lb/>
the land scape I he phantom pass-<lb/>
ed along the first wave of the "spell<lb/>
bound' Cierman troops, turned<lb/>
gracefully at the end oi the line, and<lb/>
came back, "frit with numerous<lb/>
shrieks turned tor his own lines ?<lb/>
all but that first wave<lb/>
After the plane disappeared as<lb/>
mysteriously as it had come, the<lb/>
British troops discovered that the<lb/>
trasfixed Germans were dead,<lb/>
though they bore no sign oi physical<lb/>
harm.<lb/>
Other letters discuss flight train-<lb/>
ing in England, the hazards oi air-<lb/>
craft, life at an aerodrome in<lb/>
France, and German air attacks.<lb/>
They prove thai despite the dangers<lb/>
associated with the an war, some ot<lb/>
the pilots maintained an almost<lb/>
cavalier attitude.<lb/>
Don R. Harris, who in August<lb/>
1918. had to make an unexpc<lb/>
landing in the Netherlands, revealed<lb/>
to Miss Knox his ability to laugh in<lb/>
the face of dangei On Feb. 26,<lb/>
1918, he described an ail raid which<lb/>
interrupted a pooi performance ot<lb/>
"Cheating Cheaters" at 1 ondon's<lb/>
Strand "Theatre:<lb/>
"Suddenly the whole city was till-<lb/>
ed with the shrill alarm ot the police<lb/>
whistles which meant, ' 1 lie Hun an<lb/>
fleet is at our gates' 1 hen one<lb/>
could hear the explosion ot the<lb/>
maroon signals as thev gave the<lb/>
alarm to the country side. People<lb/>
began to hurriedly leave the theatre<lb/>
and an atmosphere ot nervous<lb/>
tensness (sic) made itsell felt in the<lb/>
very air on(c) breathe<lb/>
Betraying a dry wit, Harris assess-<lb/>
ed the impact oi the ? aid by quipp-<lb/>
ing, "We were interested ot course<lb/>
and though the play was  verv<lb/>
tiresome, we decided to see it<lb/>
through tor the raid if nothing<lb/>
else<lb/>
Harris discovered similarly<lb/>
tedious taie at his aerodrome in<lb/>
1 ranee. He explained in June 1918<lb/>
that he attended shows and concerts<lb/>
every evening aftei dinner. I nfor-<lb/>
tunately, however, the perfor-<lb/>
mances seemed too amateurish.<lb/>
Even so, the respite they provided<lb/>
allowed Harris to  pass the time<lb/>
trom dinner until Fritz drop(s) his<lb/>
tnst bomb and the guns begin to<lb/>
roai up into the heavens and we<lb/>
scurry to the dug-outs and<lb/>
shelters<lb/>
Miss Knov's World War 1 scrap-<lb/>
book contains a variety ot delightful<lb/>
sketches, photographs, and printed<lb/>
material arranged chronologically<lb/>
to portray America's involvement in<lb/>
the conflict. Among these items are<lb/>
a photograph ol men working on an<lb/>
airplane at Georgia lech, a<lb/>
newspaper article concerning Don<lb/>
Harris' adventures in the<lb/>
Netherlands, and  collection ot<lb/>
war-related poems.<lb/>
 scries ot cartoons bv 1 ail<lb/>
Pease, one ol Knox's corresondents,<lb/>
depicts the tollies ot "The Ihree<lb/>
Musketeers rhese cocky members<lb/>
ot the 319th Vero Service Squadron<lb/>
exhibited a decidedly casual attitude<lb/>
about their value to the war effort.<lb/>
One oi the cartons, "Howard<lb/>
c iocs Up foi a 1 light depicts<lb/>
Musketeer Howard 1 Mingos<lb/>
desperatelv clutching the rear ot an<lb/>
errant biplane high above a city.<lb/>
I he Dorothy Repiton Knox<lb/>
Papers share the stacks at EC U's<lb/>
J.Y. loyner I ibrary with 30 addi-<lb/>
tional collections pertaining to<lb/>
World Wai 1 and rich source<lb/>
material reflecting America's in-<lb/>
volvement in other wars. 1 hese col-<lb/>
lections have been described an in-<lb/>
dexed in A Guide to Milil<lb/>
Historv Resource in trie ;<lb/>
Carolina Manuscript C oliection,<lb/>
prepared m 1979 bv Donald R I en<lb/>
non, director of the collects<lb/>
In addition, the facility preserve-<lb/>
manuscripts reflecting  : worl<lb/>
missionaries in Vfrica and Asia.<lb/>
Business dealing- of North Carolina<lb/>
tobacconisi s in c hina ate<lb/>
highlighted in the tobacco collec-<lb/>
tions. Papers ot governors, I .S<lb/>
representatives and senators, and<lb/>
manuscript- belonging to famous<lb/>
writers such as Inglis Hetchre. add<lb/>
sparkle to the I a-t Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection. So, it you're<lb/>
interested in North Carolina or<lb/>
Southern historv, visit 1<lb/>
Carolina's storehouse for the past.<lb/>
The collections are available for<lb/>
research from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Tridav. 1 he<lb/>
welcomes inquiries and will be hap-<lb/>
py to assist all researchers<lb/>
New ECU Clinic<lb/>
To Help Victims<lb/>
Of Panic A Hacks<lb/>
Bv GEORGETTE HKDR1CK<lb/>
K I Mrdual W riler<lb/>
Mary had her first panic attack<lb/>
when she was 28 years old. She<lb/>
couldn't explain the sudden fear<lb/>
that gripped her when shopping,<lb/>
eating in a restaurant or driving in a<lb/>
car. Eventually, the terror she ex-<lb/>
perienced at leaving the home for<lb/>
any reason caused her to seclude<lb/>
herself in the house.<lb/>
Now 41 years old, Mary, who<lb/>
lives in a small farming community<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina, is begin-<lb/>
ning to recover from her severe at-<lb/>
tacks oi agoraphobia. The word,<lb/>
coined by a 19th-century physician,<lb/>
means an abnormal fear of open<lb/>
places.<lb/>
Psychiatrists at the ECU School<lb/>
ot Medicine recently established a<lb/>
clinic to diagnose and treat<lb/>
agoraphobics in the region. Mary<lb/>
was one of their first patients, and<lb/>
Dr. C. Lewis Ravaris, director of<lb/>
the clinic, treated her at home.<lb/>
"Mary is an example of what can<lb/>
happen if this type of disorder re-<lb/>
mains undiagnosed over a period of<lb/>
years says Ravaris, whose speeial-<lb/>
t is the diagnosis and treatment of<lb/>
phobic disorders and depression.<lb/>
"She suffered from fear during her<lb/>
attacks and between attacks, and<lb/>
she developed a chronic sense of<lb/>
anxiety<lb/>
Mary described one of her attacks<lb/>
to Ravaris this way: "I was shopp-<lb/>
ing in a grocery store. 1 reached over<lb/>
to pick up a magazine. I suddenly<lb/>
felt terrified, panicky. 1 began<lb/>
trembling and I couldn't breathe. I<lb/>
flew out of the place. 1 thought I<lb/>
was going to die, and 1 didn't want<lb/>
to die<lb/>
Ravaris says Mary's description<lb/>
of an attack is typical. "Panic at-<lb/>
tacks are very real, terrifying ex-<lb/>
periences. Patients describe poun-<lb/>
ding hearts, weak knees, faintness,<lb/>
anusea and vomiting. They feel an<lb/>
overshelming sense of impending<lb/>
doom. Many patients think they are<lb/>
having a heart attact<lb/>
Agoraphobics ultimately discovr<lb/>
they can eliminate this stress in their<lb/>
lives by avoiding situations in which<lb/>
the panic attacks occur. But this<lb/>
means staying at home ? no shopp-<lb/>
ing trips, no visits with friends or<lb/>
relatives, no football games or<lb/>
movies. Consequently, Ravaris and<lb/>
his colleagues at ECU arrange to<lb/>
visit patients in the security and<lb/>
comfort of their homes, where at-<lb/>
tacks rarely strike.<lb/>
But the problem, syas Ravaris, is<lb/>
finding out where the patients are.<lb/>
"Agoraphobics usually aren't aware<lb/>
that their problem has a name and<lb/>
can be treated. Relatives don't<lb/>
understand their sudden terror and<lb/>
constant fears, and patients resign<lb/>
themselves to the fact that they are<lb/>
doomed to live this way<lb/>
A person also may have<lb/>
agoraphobia and never recognize it.<lb/>
Atrtacks may occur only once a year<lb/>
or every few months, according to<lb/>
Ravaris, who says the condition<lb/>
most frequently strikes women bet-<lb/>
ween 15 and 35 years old. The<lb/>
disorder affects one in every 1000<lb/>
people, an estimate Ravaris says is<lb/>
"conservative<lb/>
At the ECU clinic, two drugs ?<lb/>
imipramine and phenelzine ? are<lb/>
used in the treatment program for<lb/>
agoraphobics. The medications<lb/>
have specific "anti-panic" proper-<lb/>
ties that block panic attacks almost<lb/>
immediately. They are prescribed in<lb/>
conjunction with supportive therapy<lb/>
and counseling.<lb/>
"The basic principle of therapy is<lb/>
to encourage patients to confront<lb/>
situations which have brought on at-<lb/>
tacks Ravaris says. "The drugs<lb/>
help patients do this by blocking the<lb/>
panic attacks, and gradually, pa-<lb/>
tients may begin to face their<lb/>
fears<lb/>
For example, one of Mary's first<lb/>
goals was to visit her mother's<lb/>
house. It was only a short walk from<lb/>
her home, but it was a trip she had<lb/>
not made in two years.<lb/>
See PANIC, page 8, col. 5<lb/>
A Sure Sign That Autumn Has Arrived<lb/>
is the sight of students picking up their refrigerators<lb/>
Dormitories Are Easy To Get Used To;<lb/>
It's The People There Who Are Wierd<lb/>
B DAVID NORMS<lb/>
fatum I tliinr<lb/>
The reality of dorm life can be a great shock to<lb/>
delicately nurtured folks who were brought up in anv<lb/>
type of reasonable civilized environment, such as a bar-<lb/>
barian camp or a herd of Tasmanian devils. And, bv the<lb/>
time one becomes used to the dorms, it's time to<lb/>
graduate or flunk out oi otherwise leave.<lb/>
Accepting the fact that there will be somebody living<lb/>
across the room from you helps speed the adjustment to<lb/>
dorm living. Many people never accept that fact, and<lb/>
constantly try new ways oi driving the roommate away<lb/>
in order to get a coveted private room. The resulting<lb/>
stresses and arguments help keep dorm councilors sharp<lb/>
on points ot psychology and first aid.<lb/>
AI though some particularly obnoxious people can<lb/>
drive out one roommate, nobody has managed to drive<lb/>
out the entire population of a dorm. The unique flavor<lb/>
of dorm life is derived from this inevitability of living in<lb/>
a buildine with hundreds oi people. 1 have a friend who<lb/>
a<lb/>
: 5CK.CW !A<lb/>
raises rats, and has cages rapidly filling with them. It is<lb/>
tempting to compare cages full of rats with some dorms<lb/>
I have been acquainted with. To be fair, 1 should sav<lb/>
that rats don't stay up all night playing Van Halen<lb/>
albums, nor do thev let their cages get as cluttered as<lb/>
some people (like me) let their rooms get during the<lb/>
course oi the year.<lb/>
Another nice thing about rats is that they will<lb/>
sometimes leave you alone, unlike some of the pests<lb/>
who are profiled later in this article.<lb/>
Television is alternately a source of relaxation or<lb/>
frustration; it's relaxing if you can watch it at home and<lb/>
otten frustrating in the dorms. There are always idiots<lb/>
stavmg up until 3:45 a.m. watching "Kojak" with the<lb/>
volume turned up all the way, and then having to shout<lb/>
to cartv on their conversation over the racket. Worse<lb/>
than that is trying to watch something important like<lb/>
"Heckle and Jeckle" and having the room invaded by<lb/>
some moronic neighbor who keeps talking all the way<lb/>
throueh it.<lb/>
See NEIGHBORS. P. 7, Col. 1<lb/>
 I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0007"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
me and<lb/>
Worse<lb/>
portani like<lb/>
,1 h<lb/>
the wa<lb/>
1<lb/>
Odyssey: Travels In<lb/>
Costa Rica Continue<lb/>
"N<lb/>
hi I asi k i im si !?! i im k 2 ihd<lb/>
Unusual Ice Cream<lb/>
Flavors Available<lb/>
In San Francisco<lb/>
( ontinued From paye h<lb/>
v 'ted to a clam hake tomorrow night 1 hints<lb/>
up alreaih<lb/>
?pened the bottle oi euaro and inv ited<lb/>
n iends foi a di ink<lb/>
 surfed in die morning, 'o.?k a siesta and a<lb/>
. ured camp foi the inevitable<lb/>
eaded to; tow iii ing an houi<lb/>
oui rendevous tune with the computei<lb/>
Mike, big loin and 1 decided to catch<lb/>
k to Ma : Antonio We didn't<lb/>
ke the U anded in Qucpos al<lb/>
1 om wanted to sit it<lb/>
oul computei salesmen showed, up 15<lb/>
I i t<lb/>
M Sombra, we plaved spades<lb/>
H . 1 I- and I e 1 lie<lb/>
North Americans.<lb/>
' he ('oH'boy Mentality'<lb/>
id the compute! salesmen dune<lb/>
' p.m rovvdv and reeking oi alcohol.<lb/>
One oi the "cowboys as the salesmen referred<lb/>
to themselves, sat down and proceeded to harrass<lb/>
Rita.<lb/>
She told him where to go in the finest fashion,<lb/>
bui he wouldn't give up Mike lost his tempet and<lb/>
Haded insults with the cowboy. ! or awhile a bat<lb/>
room brawl seemed so imminent thaihico, the<lb/>
waiter, came to out table and collected all the<lb/>
glass objects. I kept my beei bottle tumh in<lb/>
hand, expecting the woise<lb/>
Kortunatel foi all ol us. Mike backed ofl<lb/>
diplomatically, the cowboys realized impending<lb/>
defeat, and little lom played both sides ol the<lb/>
street, thus avoiding a senseless fight. As we were<lb/>
leaving that night, the ownet thanked us in his<lb/>
finest I nglish: " I hanks No fight<lb/>
On our wa bask to camp, little lom told us<lb/>
nething the cowbo had said: "1 guess the<lb/>
ins don't understand the cowbo mentalitv<lb/>
We didn't. And neithei would the Costa<lb/>
Ricans. h takes onh one foolish, unthinking<lb/>
tourist to ruin a welcome foi the next ioo<lb/>
travelers, in an foreign country. Software works<lb/>
fine in computers but not so well between the<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
Farewells And Plans<lb/>
So fat. everything had been damp but bearable,<lb/>
and the suit less-than-perfeci but fun. Daily por-<lb/>
tions ol use and beans hadn't wreaked havoc<lb/>
with anyone's digestive tract, yet, I he only<lb/>
undesirable incident had been out neat<lb/>
showdown with the cowboys. We turned out<lb/>
thoughts towards the nexi excursion.<lb/>
On out final morning, we had breakfast with<lb/>
Rita, I Is and 1 ex. We planned a trip to Santa<lb/>
Rosa, a national park neai Nicaragua, and they<lb/>
planned a trip to Nicaragua. Il finally dawned on<lb/>
us: We could combine our efforts and enjoy<lb/>
anothei week together. We had all become good<lb/>
! i lends.<lb/>
rentative plans made, we exchanged addresses<lb/>
ind farewells. six houi ride in a slow, hot, dus-<lb/>
ty bus put ih back in the Central Valley around 9<lb/>
p.m. Mama Sanchez whipped up i hot meal tor<lb/>
us, and aftet eating we collapsed on our beds, h<lb/>
was nice to be home again.<lb/>
e.xt: 1 week long adventure at Ptaya Naran-<lb/>
. an obscure beach in (he national park and<lb/>
wildlife preserve oj Stima Rosa, near the<lb/>
icarauuan border.<lb/>
 I I ON IX, KI I K<lb/>
SAN I-RAM ISC )<lb/>
'I)<lb/>
In led and<lb/>
I ydia Hansen's ice<lb/>
cream shop, nestled in<lb/>
a quiet neighborhood<lb/>
just a few blocks from<lb/>
the Pacific kcan, <lb/>
can gel an ice cream<lb/>
cone that tasted like a<lb/>
rose smells<lb/>
"Here, try this<lb/>
says led. his baseball<lb/>
cap slightly a- kew from<lb/>
scurrying around. He<lb/>
hands me a miniature<lb/>
size cone with a small<lb/>
scoop ol ice cteam.<lb/>
It's true. It does taste<lb/>
like a rose smells. lean<lb/>
ovei to smell the ice<lb/>
cream. I here is no<lb/>
odor. He laughs.<lb/>
"I told you. It tastes<lb/>
like a rose smells Here.<lb/>
I r this<lb/>
I his oin. . eeli.<lb/>
will) little bits id<lb/>
somi li<lb/>
good. I ed hand me a<lb/>
card. I his jce .team, it<lb/>
sas, contains 14 dil<lb/>
fere i pe s oI<lb/>
veget I rt to<lb/>
pick ou: the flavors in<lb/>
Celery i<lb/>
( a r i oi s. Zueel<lb/>
Spinach? 1<lb/>
" I he b : i<lb/>
'til th<lb/>
in it, "The<lb/>
pate:<lb/>
they find oui<lb/>
1 ' and .yd<lb/>
whom<lb/>
"I ee have run P<lb/>
n;i' Iceream fi<lb/>
With a combina-<lb/>
tion ol hard<lb/>
cheerfulness a nd<lb/>
h 11 mor 11<lb/>
ted a local !<lb/>
w hose fame a<lb/>
to all pans ol the<lb/>
uorld.<lb/>
W here else are you<lb/>
guaranteed a doggie<lb/>
cone tor our pel, even<lb/>
it it's an otter or a<lb/>
nake ' W here else can<lb/>
i gel five ddterent<lb/>
kinds ot whiskey<lb/>
flavored ice cream ?<lb/>
 hildren have to sa<lb/>
Plea or 'I hank<lb/>
you" or they don't gel<lb/>
served<lb/>
K inruly enough<lb/>
to spout an obscenity<lb/>
blasted with a squirt<lb/>
gun wielded by dead-<lb/>
eve I e e . w In i<lb/>
intenances no pn<lb/>
fanity.<lb/>
I ? ireign tourists are<lb/>
with res pee t.<lb/>
I he shop itsell has<lb/>
just enough room bet-<lb/>
ween the counter and<lb/>
Set l( I . P 8.ol. 7<lb/>
Neighbors: Annoying<lb/>
But Fascinating<lb/>
L?7)?rrsJG IfSOUT CoLLCGt  TrC UfaD lAJ<lb/>
by Dflivio AJotfRis<lb/>
( oiiiimuil trom Page f<lb/>
?nal<lb/>
In lie oi<lb/>
 ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
i'i 'i u <lb/>
t nut ol boi 11wei<lb/>
he bad -<lb/>
"t<lb/>
an om without knock<lb/>
ill ing, : bcei out<lb/>
V I one win uun .M toi and<lb/>
rid spill hall ol ii on youi<lb/>
. lI bcloi e asking it<lb/>
I hi x oa'd like one. till our<lb/>
cow boy boots with<lb/>
om Pr ingle's pot a<lb/>
hips and bu<lb/>
? w a st i k a s on y oui<lb/>
hook shel I with a<lb/>
, lighiei Peop<lb/>
: eiy. sin . .<lb/>
I<lb/>
nb dropped in<lb/>
? : ?? 'in can cause soi .<lb/>
la i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I lally, remembt<lb/>
- ihii positi<lb/>
s.<lb/>
. : ' ded w ith I lakes,<lb/>
; hree aon h uiicakes, tool<lb/>
I ' irvei<lb/>
even thinking aboui description! .At least.<lb/>
. ? - pa ??" i 1 he the are all room i<lb/>
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 OASTAL BAIL BOM) CO.<lb/>
24 Hour Prompt Service<lb/>
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ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
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flOorir)-(T voice fif MKC<lb/>
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Office!<lb/>
?Ajm?&amp;<lb/>
Settling into campus<lb/>
life doesn't exactly<lb/>
mean settling down.<lb/>
AD ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is requned to be readi<lb/>
ly available for sale in each<lb/>
Kroger Savon e?cept as spe-<lb/>
cifically noted in this ad If we<lb/>
do run out of an item we will<lb/>
offer you your choice of a<lb/>
comparable item when avail-<lb/>
able reflecting the same sav-<lb/>
ings or a ramchecK which<lb/>
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the advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
?i<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
M<lb/>
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THERE'S SOME PARTYING IN EVERY<lb/>
STUDENT'S LIFE, AND WEEKENDS ARE<lb/>
SHORT?SO WHY WASTE TIME JUST<lb/>
GETTING READY FOR THE FUN? WE'VE GOT<lb/>
EVERYTHING YOU NEED RIGHT HERE?FROM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057280_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THIr EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SliPTEMBbK2, ts?80<lb/>
Autumn's Album Selection:<lb/>
Many Are Very Overrated<lb/>
Vegetable Ice Cream<lb/>
In San Francisco<lb/>
B PAT MINCES<lb/>
S(?ff Wriler<lb/>
School has started and you have got a pocket<lb/>
full o' cash. What would any red-blooded<lb/>
American person do with all that money? Get<lb/>
fucked up, of course. Yet, some of you may wish<lb/>
to blow that wad on a more long-lasting item.<lb/>
Records are your best investment, or so the<lb/>
record companies say.<lb/>
You had better be very careful, however, or<lb/>
those same folks will sell you a crummy album in<lb/>
a heartbeat. It is up to you to shop around and<lb/>
make a wise choice, if you can make a responsible<lb/>
decision on your own. One is so flooded with<lb/>
advertisements, hype, FM indoctrination, and<lb/>
record company manipulation of our taste, that it<lb/>
grows harder each day to make an independent<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
You probably are so controlled that they have<lb/>
got you thinking that you are listening to good<lb/>
music, when in all likelihood, you are not. There<lb/>
is so much crap being passed off as good music<lb/>
and merchandised by the conglomerates that it is<lb/>
eas to lose your good taste in the shuffle. Ig-<lb/>
norance is bliss, but it is not so blissful when you<lb/>
lay down eight dollars for a bum album.<lb/>
Yet, fear not, for I have come to your rescue. I<lb/>
am your friendly neighborhood record critic who<lb/>
is here to tell you how to spend your money. You<lb/>
see, 1 have impeccable taste. I will cut through<lb/>
that vacuous fog of propaganda and put you on<lb/>
the path of musical righteousness. All I require is<lb/>
your trust. You have so much to learn, but I will<lb/>
be your Yoda.<lb/>
Here is a list of overachievers. If you listen to any<lb/>
of these guys, you have taken the record com-<lb/>
panies' bait. They have got you eating out of their<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
Billy Joel ? Glass Houses ? Billy Joel saw the<lb/>
light when the Stranger became a million seller.<lb/>
Yh produce albums of enduring quality when I<lb/>
can make a million bucks purveying mainstream<lb/>
pop and prostitute art for commercial success<lb/>
Glass Houses is Billy's worst album in which he<lb/>
attempts to meet the challenge of the new rock<lb/>
and roll by jumping on the new wave bandwagon.<lb/>
The problem is that Joel fails to realize that you<lb/>
can't make revolutionary music when you are<lb/>
part of the bourgeosie. Oh, yeah. The glass is<lb/>
really high impact plastic.<lb/>
Christopher Cross ? His first album is a tremen-<lb/>
dous commercial success. I heard the guy in the<lb/>
record shop say that this was the best album in the<lb/>
store. I laughed out loud. This is more of the<lb/>
western-pop fusion that made the Doobies such a<lb/>
big sensation. Some have called this stuff wimp<lb/>
music, but I will just call it mind-less melan-<lb/>
cholia. Don't you just love Michael McDonald<lb/>
Paul McCartney ? McCartney II ? It is hard to<lb/>
believe that this is the greatest songwriter in<lb/>
musical history. With each successive album,<lb/>
Paul climbs deeper into the banal pit of bub-<lb/>
blegum mediocrity. Every review that I have seen<lb/>
of this album finds it repulsive. You mean Paul<lb/>
had another band before Wings I try and forget.<lb/>
Bob Dylan ? Saved ? Bob thinks that we are on<lb/>
the verge of the apocalypse and is making plans to<lb/>
survive. Down in the Caribbean, he is building his<lb/>
version of the Ark and preparing to sail the seas<lb/>
of uncertainty. This album takes Long Train<lb/>
Coming and puts just a little bit more gospel<lb/>
sound into it. Bob's fans are dwindling to a few<lb/>
religios zealots who prefer to hear the word of<lb/>
God than the words of Bob. Pesonally, I liked<lb/>
him better when he was Jewish.<lb/>
Pink Floyd ? The Wall ? 'We don't need no<lb/>
ecucation It is quite evident that Pink Floyd<lb/>
learned very little in their tenure as students of<lb/>
rock. The only thing more fascinating than how<lb/>
these boys sold the record company on this<lb/>
diatribe upon modern life is how this album got<lb/>
to be a top seller. Of the four sides of vinyl, there<lb/>
may be one of good music. Too bad, it was such a<lb/>
noble effort.<lb/>
These are good albums. They are not good<lb/>
because I like them, the are good because they ex-<lb/>
hibit musical strength, vitality, and a stubborn<lb/>
resistance to the lure of mainstream commereiali-<lb/>
ty. They stand on their own virtue.<lb/>
The Pretenders ? In their first album, the<lb/>
Pretenders are bringing a new respect to the seem-<lb/>
ingly lost tradition of the powerful rock ballad. I<lb/>
am not enough of a chauvinist to talk about what<lb/>
a tough bitch Chrissy Hynde is, so we will just<lb/>
talk about how great she is. She is great. This<lb/>
album has been out for six months and it is still in<lb/>
the top twenty. You have got to respect that. The<lb/>
Pretenders are definitely contenders.<lb/>
Diana Ross ? Diana ? You say, 'WHAT Diana<lb/>
Ross Who is he kidding?' I say 'Drop dead.<lb/>
Diana is great Diana Ross is the premier female<lb/>
vocalist of the rock and roll era and with this<lb/>
album she continues her dominance. She is also<lb/>
one of the most attractive ladies in the business.<lb/>
Like a fine wine, she grows better with age.<lb/>
Pete Townshend ? Fmpty Glass ? Pete<lb/>
Townshend's solo career is almost as great as that<lb/>
of the Who. He has released three solo albums,<lb/>
and unlike Paul McCartney, he has continued to<lb/>
grow. Empty Glass is Pete's tribute to the punk<lb/>
movement, but Daddypunk shows them what it is<lb/>
all about. This is Pete's solo best, and one of the<lb/>
best albums of the Who's career. It is also one of<lb/>
the best albums of the vear.<lb/>
Michael Jackson ? Off the Wall ? This,<lb/>
however, is the number one album of the year.<lb/>
Produced by Quincy Jones, this album has been<lb/>
in the top twenty for almost a year.<lb/>
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the wall to wedge a lit-<lb/>
tle league team. The<lb/>
wall behind the counter<lb/>
is covered with<lb/>
decorated placards con-<lb/>
taining the names of<lb/>
currently available<lb/>
flavors. About 50.<lb/>
Over the years, lee<lb/>
and Ted have cooked<lb/>
up 277 flavors, ranging<lb/>
from Greek ouo to<lb/>
black vanilla.<lb/>
"The kids ask me<lb/>
why the vanilla's<lb/>
black Ted says. "I<lb/>
tell them I put black<lb/>
shoe polish in it<lb/>
A city bus driver<lb/>
halts outside, his buN<lb/>
idling, passengers ga<lb/>
ing out the window . He<lb/>
rushes in and orders a<lb/>
chocolate shake. Ted<lb/>
whips it up and he's<lb/>
gone again.<lb/>
Ted, 58, and Lee, 57,<lb/>
have been happily mar-<lb/>
ried for 38 years. When<lb/>
he quit his machinist<lb/>
job, they decided to<lb/>
open a business that<lb/>
everybodv liked. They<lb/>
chose ice cream and<lb/>
bought Polly Ann's. It<lb/>
had only eight flavors<lb/>
at the time.<lb/>
1 ee loves the<lb/>
children. She jokes that<lb/>
their tour grand-<lb/>
children were all<lb/>
allergic to ice cream but<lb/>
now can eat it.<lb/>
It's and American<lb/>
success story. And Ted<lb/>
and lee believe they<lb/>
know how to keep it<lb/>
that wav.<lb/>
"To be hones! with<lb/>
you, the) want us to<lb/>
franchise. Pve had<lb/>
chances to expand and<lb/>
1 don't want to Ted<lb/>
said. "We've talked it<lb/>
over but we're a small<lb/>
shop and we know<lb/>
many of our customers<lb/>
and we won't cut our<lb/>
product no matter what<lb/>
happens.<lb/>
" 1 he minute you ex-<lb/>
pand you lose<lb/>
something. I don't<lb/>
know what it is but you<lb/>
lose something. You<lb/>
lose contact with your<lb/>
customers. The<lb/>
customers are always<lb/>
coming in asking for<lb/>
me or lee and if we<lb/>
were off somewhere<lb/>
else it just wouldn't be<lb/>
right<lb/>
Ted's next project is<lb/>
an ice cream flavor for<lb/>
every country in the<lb/>
world, with a tiny<lb/>
paper flag from the ap-<lb/>
propriate country stuck<lb/>
on top.<lb/>
"It'll give the kids a<lb/>
chance to learn about<lb/>
the flags of other coun-<lb/>
tries he beams, otter<lb/>
ing me a taste ot Bum<lb/>
py freeway<lb/>
"What's Bump)<lb/>
Freeway?" I ask.<lb/>
"Don't you know<lb/>
he chided. "Rocky<lb/>
Road<lb/>
Panic<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
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Ravaris notes that<lb/>
the medications are not<lb/>
effective in treating<lb/>
specific phobias, such<lb/>
as tear of insects, clos-<lb/>
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For these fears, he says,<lb/>
behavior modification<lb/>
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desensitize themselves<lb/>
and overcome their<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057280_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
HI<lb/>
t<lb/>
i ni i s ikoi ii w<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
si I'11 iiu : ls?8) Pa<lb/>
ECU Awaits Ruling On Sutton Case<lb/>
1 asi c aroiina I niversity has sent<lb/>
its i eport to the NC A eoncew i ning<lb/>
the controversial Duke vs. 1 heodore<lb/>
matter and awaits a decision from a<lb/>
special committee.<lb/>
1 t I faculty reDiesentative l)t.<lb/>
In<lb/>
an<lb/>
faculty representative Dr.<lb/>
niie Schwar compiled the repot t<lb/>
and said thai he was "somewhat op-<lb/>
timistic" that the t would rule<lb/>
in favor ot Sutton's eligibility foi<lb/>
the Duke contest.<lb/>
"You hate to evei be pessimistic<lb/>
ui a matter such as tins Schwarz<lb/>
said "1 feel good about tnn chances<lb/>
and certainly hope thai things wilt<lb/>
go in 1 heodore's favoi <lb/>
Duke charged several months ago<lb/>
Sutton A,h ineligible toi the<lb/>
Blue Devil Pirate Sept. i contest<lb/>
because he participated in a jayvee<lb/>
game during his tiist yeai at E( I -<lb/>
Sutton was a walk on at the time<lb/>
was in lured m that game, the<lb/>
ii!si o' the jayvee season.<lb/>
I here is a stipulation in the Duke<lb/>
t - I athletic contrad that no<lb/>
he<lb/>
?<lb/>
o participate in a<lb/>
?en the two schools d<lb/>
ble foi championship<lb/>
a bow 1 games.<lb/>
i:ed in the game<lb/>
s ion was uijuicu in tnc gain<lb/>
.n received an extra yeai ot<lb/>
"ei being redshirted that<lb/>
lie Kinston native has<lb/>
ligibn<lb/>
 eai<lb/>
Hollev<lb/>
gone on to become one of the top<lb/>
rushers in 1 as! C aroiina history and<lb/>
needs only "45 yards this year to<lb/>
become the school's all time ground<lb/>
gainer.<lb/>
1 he NCAA rules state that a<lb/>
playei can be granted hardship is lie<lb/>
is injured in the tiist halt ot the<lb/>
season and has played in no more<lb/>
than 20 percent o his team's games.<lb/>
1 he question with Sutton arises<lb/>
because, though he played in the<lb/>
firsl ayvee game ot the season, that<lb/>
game came following the first halt<lb/>
ot the a; sits yeai.<lb/>
The entire situation has been<lb/>
passed about via the press since it<lb/>
firsi was revealed this summer. Easl<lb/>
Schwar<lb/>
( aroiina officials had hoped that<lb/>
the mattei would not have to be cat<lb/>
tied to theA A foi a. ruling.<lb/>
?V it stands now, the c A A con-<lb/>
trols much of the late ot the Sept. 6<lb/>
contest. "Having "heodore is<lb/>
critical said I C I head coach 1 d<lb/>
Emory at a Monday scrimmage. "1<lb/>
really don't see how he can be ruled<lb/>
ineligible. It he is, that will be a<lb/>
tremendous injustice to the young<lb/>
man<lb/>
Sutton himsell said last week that<lb/>
he had tired of hearing ot the matter<lb/>
and was suprised that it had arisen<lb/>
at all. "This kind ot makes me<lb/>
mad he said It 1 get a chance to<lb/>
play, 1 think I'll really be fired up<lb/>
Schwar said earlier in the week<lb/>
that the A A has three options in<lb/>
the mattei: to rule Sutton ineligible<lb/>
tor championship competition and<lb/>
therefore the Duke game, to rule<lb/>
him eligible tot all games, or rule<lb/>
him ineligible tor the entire season.<lb/>
He said Monday night, though,<lb/>
that he had tor the most part ruled<lb/>
the latter possibility out. "I have<lb/>
talked with the NCAA he said,<lb/>
"and I feel assured from my talks<lb/>
that rheodore will not miss the en-<lb/>
tire season<lb/>
Schwarz said that the NCAA<lb/>
would receive his report at least b<lb/>
"uesday and would set up a phone<lb/>
committee to begin studying it. He<lb/>
said that he has been assiued that a<lb/>
ruling will be made by 1 riday at the<lb/>
latest and hopefully sooner.<lb/>
"1 don't know the answer,<lb/>
though he said. "1 can't make a<lb/>
lot ot comment on something I<lb/>
don't know. We'll just have to wait<lb/>
until a decision is made and hope<lb/>
foi the best<lb/>
Also entering the Duke-PC U pic-<lb/>
ture is the question of cornerback<lb/>
Willie Holies's eligibility. Duke has<lb/>
claimed that it has clippings of an<lb/>
Ahoskie papei in which Holies<lb/>
and Sutton's names were listed as<lb/>
Sutton (36) Bulls Forward For Yardage<lb/>
but will he run at Duke<lb/>
having played in the game in ques-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Duke is pleading the same story<lb/>
with Holies as it is with Sutton.<lb/>
Schwarz sees no problems here,<lb/>
though. "1 base talked with Holies,<lb/>
his coaches and several others he<lb/>
said. "Willie sass he did not play as<lb/>
do all the others<lb/>
so sshs ssas he 1 -demon native's<lb/>
name in the paper '<lb/>
"ers often in jayvee games ol<lb/>
that sort, there are mixups<lb/>
Schwarz said. "It seems thai Willie<lb/>
did not make the trip and that so-<lb/>
meone else wore his ierses number.<lb/>
I he wnter evidently was not assare<lb/>
of the switch<lb/>
Wide-Open Race Is<lb/>
Foreseen In NFC<lb/>
t A Look At Duke-ECU<lb/>
EDlTi )R'S OTL This is the !<lb/>
U . i ned ! the<lb/>
?<lb/>
i ' neii with<lb/>
 Conen nee.<lb/>
i. II be cc (u d<lb/>
I  . wtball<lb/>
i<lb/>
nething aboul the<lb/>
beginnin I the National Footbal<lb/>
league season that brings out the<lb/>
worst (oi sometimes the best) in<lb/>
sportswriters. Almost ,i!i ot them<lb/>
have something lo sa about how<lb/>
the league taces and the Super B"ssl<lb/>
will come out.<lb/>
rhis ssas one yeai that thiscolum-<lb/>
. to stay assas from all<lb/>
j tions But there's<lb/>
on  irresistible aboul voicing<lb/>
.Ml season s<lb/>
coes.<lb/>
N I ION 1 MHH Hll<lb/>
CONFERKM I<lb/>
East Dis ision<lb/>
PHU ADI LPH1A c oach Disk<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
<lb/>
i! w inner here<lb/>
QB Ron lawoi ski dues is a potent<lb/>
k. ()ii defense, mid<lb/>
Bill Beiges returns<lb/>
i yeai and should be<lb/>
id hi . am to the top in<lb/>
DAI I AS All the talk has been<lb/>
.i the ret menl ol Roger<lb/>
on is sat! I an<lb/>
ny White aptly replace him Hie<lb/>
answer is that White will do the job<lb/>
1 lie defense is tough with a front<lb/>
foui ol Harsey Martin, Ed " I oo<lb/>
" tones, lohn Dutton and Ran-<lb/>
'A hite probably the league's best.<lb/>
I heowboy team remains one of<lb/>
?tie NEL's besi<lb/>
W SHlNGTON Question marks<lb/>
louts like fullback<lb/>
John Rigguis and defensive bask<lb/>
Joe Lavender. It they return, the<lb/>
'Skms could con I end tor the NFC ti-<lb/>
tle. If run. rtte'Skins will definitely<lb/>
have the odds against them Coach<lb/>
Jack Pardee will field a respectable<lb/>
squad no matter what.<lb/>
si LOUIS CARDINA1 S Ottis<lb/>
'? let son is the main weapon<lb/>
among a number ol question marks<lb/>
li g a sets veteran QB lini<lb/>
1 lart. Anytliing could happen but<lb/>
don'i expect too much.<lb/>
A GIANTS Head coach Ray<lb/>
Perkins has a tough job. I he<lb/>
organization seems doomed. Still,<lb/>
QB Phil Simms lends some hope.<lb/>
Central Division<lb/>
c (IK AGO Super halfback<lb/>
Waltei Pas ton heads up a team that<lb/>
mans expect to contend foi the<lb/>
Supei Bowl this year. Alter all. the<lb/>
Beats had the league's best second<lb/>
halt record last year.<lb/>
1)1 I Roll Excitement abounds<lb/>
m the Motor City with OB Ron<lb/>
Danielson returning following an in-<lb/>
jury last seat and the arrisal of<lb/>
former Heisman I rophy winner Bil-<lb/>
ls Sims. I ook for at least a winning<lb/>
record from the 1 ions.<lb/>
1 AMP A BAY A young, impros-<lb/>
ing and enthusiastic team. A tali<lb/>
backwards could be possible,<lb/>
though, as a repeat performance<lb/>
from a seat ago seems unlikely. A<lb/>
Spurrier Aids Blue Devils<lb/>
Duke's Cedric Jones<lb/>
killer schedule does no! help.<lb/>
MINNESOTA I he ikes are<lb/>
definitely rebuilding.<lb/>
GR1 1 BN Pre season injuries<lb/>
to the Pav k's top two QB's put a<lb/>
ipei on an already -ad situation.<lb/>
West Division<lb/>
I OS ANG1 11s I he Rams came<lb/>
on strong late iasl yeai in reaching<lb/>
the Supei Bowl. It the club can<lb/>
come to a peas ful settlement of the<lb/>
Pat Haden ss Vince Ferregammo<lb/>
battle at QB, the  repeat perfor-<lb/>
mance is possible<lb/>
1 ORI 1 NS Quarterback<lb/>
Archie Manning has finally bloom<lb/>
ed into a top notch plaser, running<lb/>
back Clinch Muncie isn't bad either.<lb/>
 wild card berth is possible tor the<lb/>
Saints.<lb/>
 11 l I he defense fell<lb/>
apart last seai and everybody knows<lb/>
sou can't svin without defense.<lb/>
SAN FRANC ISAnother sad<lb/>
situation like the one in Green Bay.<lb/>
1 INA1 NF C( NS1 NSl s Dallas.<lb/>
Philadelphia, Washington, t hicago<lb/>
oi I os Angeles could easily reach<lb/>
the Super Bow! in this the weakest<lb/>
ol the two conferences. But. look<lb/>
tor the Ranis to i epeat .<lb/>
Bv CHARLESHANDLER<lb/>
spurts 1 ihh.r<lb/>
With all the hoopla about the<lb/>
eligibility ot East Carolina fullback<lb/>
1 heodore Sutton getting most ot the<lb/>
pre game attention, the Pirate-Duke<lb/>
matchup this Saturday has received<lb/>
very little print about what to expect<lb/>
on the field. On both sides in-<lb/>
teresting things can be expected.<lb/>
I or East (aroiina the opener<lb/>
marks the beginning ot a collegiette<lb/>
head coaching career tot Ed Emory.<lb/>
A; Duke all the "Red means go"<lb/>
sas ings aie gone. All the excitement<lb/>
this seat is based on the hiring ot<lb/>
assistant coach Stese Spurrier, the<lb/>
1966 Heisman I rophy winner, to<lb/>
handle the offense.<lb/>
Undei Spurrier the Devils are ex-<lb/>
pected to pass, pass, pass. I he shit<lb/>
ring ot last sear's quarterback.<lb/>
( raig Browning, to the secondary is<lb/>
esidence ol this.<lb/>
? At the tune we moved C raig<lb/>
Spurrier explained via telephone<lb/>
Monday, "he was out fourth best<lb/>
passer. We felt sse could use his<lb/>
abilities much more ably on<lb/>
defense<lb/>
Spurriei went on to sas. though,<lb/>
ilia! the move did not mean that<lb/>
Browning's skills had diminished<lb/>
between seasons, "it sse wanted to<lb/>
stick with option football he said,<lb/>
"(. raig would be our man<lb/>
1 he changing of the Desils into a<lb/>
pass oriented team is brought about<lb/>
partis because of the club's wealth<lb/>
ot receivers. Top returnees are split<lb/>
end Ron I rederick. an ECl<lb/>
transici. and speed-burning flanker<lb/>
C'ediic Jones.<lb/>
I rederick led the team last season<lb/>
ssith 2S receptions sslnle Jones<lb/>
averaged nearly 25 yards esers time<lb/>
he touched the ball.<lb/>
Who's emni! to get the ball to the<lb/>
receivers? I he signal-calling spot<lb/>
will be shared by freshman Ben<lb/>
Bennett 11 omalifoi nia and<lb/>
sophomore Clydelinkscale.<lb/>
E( I head ioa( h Ed Emory is<lb/>
high on both t them. "When 1 was<lb/>
at (ieorgia 1 ech hist sear he said,<lb/>
"we knew ot Bennett He's a great<lb/>
quarterback. Bet ore his tour sears<lb/>
are over at Duke he'll be something.<lb/>
And linkscale is tough to.<lb/>
Ihev're not hurting at quarter<lb/>
back<lb/>
I mors added that ex pro QB<lb/>
Spurrier must surels be a big help to<lb/>
the youngsters and that his influence<lb/>
would make a big difference in the<lb/>
club.<lb/>
Of his influence, Spurriei said he<lb/>
ssas merels a teacher like all<lb/>
coaches. "I've just tried to teach<lb/>
them some basic football he said<lb/>
"I've worked a lot on basically<lb/>
teaching them to stas away from<lb/>
mistakes I hat's something we<lb/>
must do. You can't make mistakes<lb/>
against a team like bastaroiina.<lb/>
Spurtler also said the quarter<lb/>
backs must receive good protection<lb/>
from its offensive line "We're<lb/>
young up trout he said. "I don't<lb/>
know what to expect from theline-<lb/>
or the quarterbacks tor that matter<lb/>
We'll base to wait and see what hap<lb/>
pens from the whistle hlosvs<lb/>
I hough his team returns approx<lb/>
imately 1" starters from a year ago,<lb/>
Spurrier warns that Duke fans musl<lb/>
not expect too much due to the<lb/>
club's south.<lb/>
"I just hope our tans and alumni<lb/>
r e a 1 i e that w e' r e playing<lb/>
youngsters he said "We'll pro-<lb/>
bably be underdogs m every game<lb/>
we play ssith our tough schedule.<lb/>
All we can hope is that sse play to<lb/>
the best ot out ability <lb/>
last C arolma's Emory sees things<lb/>
differently. "They're low-keying it<lb/>
tins sear he said. "( 0<lb/>
(Duke's head coach Red) W ilson is a<lb/>
smart one. He's won on esers level<lb/>
1 asi sear they were ail gung ho<lb/>
with the 'Red means go' stuff. IP<lb/>
a hecouldn'l win las! sear so he<lb/>
tried to drum up support tor the<lb/>
pi i 'gram.<lb/>
" I his yeai I ui :? warned, "he<lb/>
knows bettei When a coach is low-<lb/>
key with all the veterans he's got<lb/>
coming back, you'd better watch<lb/>
out<lb/>
From his ossn team's point ol<lb/>
siess. the sseek ahead is one ot heal<lb/>
ing and waiting. Injuries to such<lb/>
players as star halfback Anthony<lb/>
Collins, tackle lootic Robbins,<lb/>
center Ions Hensley and All<lb/>
merica guard Wayne Inman could<lb/>
be healed bs garnetime, but it is nor<lb/>
a sure thing.<lb/>
C ollins returned to practice Mon<lb/>
das tor the tirst time in nine dass<lb/>
arid did so sets gingerly as his bruis<lb/>
ed ribs base set to heal fully. Inman<lb/>
also returned to practice alter miss<lb/>
ing a tew dass with knee problems<lb/>
Robbins' and Ffensley's status are<lb/>
still uncertain.<lb/>
starting tight end Norwood Vann<lb/>
will miss the sontest as will bask<lb/>
Mais m Cobb, a op reverse<lb/>
"here is also still the question ol<lb/>
the eligibility ot star fullback<lb/>
I heodore Sutton and defensive<lb/>
bask W illie Holies. Duke has a.<lb/>
cused the two and both schools<lb/>
assail the final word this week from<lb/>
theA A. I hat ruling will no<lb/>
doubt be sital come Saturday<lb/>
()! all these problems, Emory is<lb/>
concerned "We're not read-<lb/>
Duke righl now he said "I hope<lb/>
we will be bs Saturday. It sse can<lb/>
get most everybody back and the<lb/>
ruling go as n should, then we'll be<lb/>
alright. , ou can't win without sour<lb/>
best playei s, thou<lb/>
lin St<lb/>
r FDIC<lb/>
Inman. Wayne<lb/>
Pirates' Prize<lb/>
A-A Guard<lb/>
By JIMMY Dl PR1 I<lb/>
si it. I iliir<lb/>
I o say that the suscess ot the 1 ast<lb/>
C aroiina offensive unit rests on the<lb/>
shoulders ot returning Ali-<lb/>
American Wayne Inman might be<lb/>
an overstatement, but his perfor-<lb/>
mance and leadership from his righl<lb/>
guard position will certainly be a<lb/>
key factor.<lb/>
Inman is the only returnee from<lb/>
the offensive hue which prosided<lb/>
the holes in 1979 tor the Pirates to<lb/>
be ranked number one in the nation<lb/>
in rushing offense. Tackles Matt<lb/>
Mulholland and JoeGodette, center<lb/>
Jeff Hagans and guard mitchel<lb/>
Johnston base moved on. leasing<lb/>
Inman as the spiritual leader of the<lb/>
unit.<lb/>
"1 ast year, we were all the same<lb/>
age says Inman. "We'd played<lb/>
logether on the same offense tor<lb/>
three years<lb/>
"This line comes from different<lb/>
areas of the game he explains.<lb/>
"I'm a fifth year senior, we've got a<lb/>
junior college transfer (center Tony<lb/>
Hensley), we'se got players who<lb/>
played as reserves last year and<lb/>
there's Iootie Robbins who was in-<lb/>
jured last sear<lb/>
Inman missed practice sessions<lb/>
Wednesday through Saturday of<lb/>
last week due to a bacterial infection<lb/>
ot his right knee, but reported back<lb/>
to drills Monday at full speed both<lb/>
physically and mentally.<lb/>
With the Duke contest just a few<lb/>
dass away, the biggest question<lb/>
maiks remaining for ECU are the<lb/>
offensive line and the extensive in-<lb/>
jury list.<lb/>
"This group has improved 100<lb/>
percent from spring drills Inman<lb/>
states. "1 left in the spring with<lb/>
thoughts that weren't exactly plea-<lb/>
sant, but we're beginning to mold<lb/>
together as a unit.<lb/>
"Ibis is the hardest bunch of<lb/>
workers I've ever been around<lb/>
"AC was back in practice<lb/>
(Monday) said Inman, "but just<lb/>
running through the plays, noi mak-<lb/>
ing any contact. He probably won't<lb/>
be ready tor that until Saturday<lb/>
"When you hit as much as we've<lb/>
been hitting in practice reasons<lb/>
Inman, "then you're going to have<lb/>
a lot of injuries.<lb/>
"The really great teams put<lb/>
everything together and go on to<lb/>
win. We did it and won (he In-<lb/>
dependence Bowl in 1978<lb/>
Memories ot the Duke game ot<lb/>
1979 leave a particularly bitter taste-<lb/>
tor Inman and his cohorts.<lb/>
"We know that Duke didn't real-<lb/>
lv beat us he says. "We beat<lb/>
ourselves. 1 hree tumbles cost us the<lb/>
game, it's as simple as that<lb/>
After the Pirates finished the<lb/>
season 7-3-1 and tailed to receive a<lb/>
bowl berth. Pirate head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye resigned and was later replaced<lb/>
by former Pirate All-American Ed<lb/>
1 mory. Inman admits he resisted<lb/>
the change in personnel despite the<lb/>
assurance that the famed EC I<lb/>
wishbone would remain intact.<lb/>
"1 did (resent the change) at<lb/>
first he admits, "But that was my<lb/>
own fault, not the coaches I built<lb/>
up a shield, kind of a barrier, bet-<lb/>
ween myself and them.<lb/>
"1 finally told myself that if that<lb/>
was the attitude 1 was going to take,<lb/>
there was no sense in my going on<lb/>
the field and wasting my time and<lb/>
theirs. I got everything together this<lb/>
summer and got msselt into shape<lb/>
I'm reads to play football now<lb/>
I he added pressure ot being third<lb/>
team Associated Pi ess All-<lb/>
american and also, a "fifth-year"<lb/>
senior has drisen Inman to the point<lb/>
ot being a mature leader.<lb/>
"It's a great honor being chosen<lb/>
All American he admits, "but it's<lb/>
a lot of work trving to live up to it.<lb/>
The coaches really expect a lot from<lb/>
me. They tell the younger guys to<lb/>
'watch and see how Wayne does it<lb/>
I can't fall down even when it would<lb/>
be eass to gise in<lb/>
The Pirates face 'he most<lb/>
challenging schedule eset at 1C I in<lb/>
19M). with road trips to Florida<lb/>
State, Miami, North Carolina and<lb/>
N.C State to test their new lineup.<lb/>
But Inman greets the tough slate<lb/>
with optimism.<lb/>
"I'm really looking foreward to<lb/>
our schedule this year he grins.<lb/>
"When you play against players like<lb/>
(hose teams have and do well, then<lb/>
you're going to receive the recogni-<lb/>
tion you deserve. We'll be up<lb/>
against some of the best in the coun-<lb/>
try, but we're going to be ready<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
II i V<lb/>
il <lb/>
i i'i i mi k  h'vi<lb/>
Pirates Prepare For Duke<lb/>
Road Slate Awesome<lb/>
B JIMMN DuS'KI I<lb/>
w<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
such<lb/>
S minoles oi<lb/>
t ei joyed<lb/>
would ap<lb/>
? there i- little<lb/>
i coach H<lb/>
i look foi<lb/>
n 111 record<lb/>
hands ol<lb/>
: e<lb/>
Duki<lb/>
1. md na-<lb/>
? sixth<lb/>
ssch iated Press<lb/>
rith m<lb/>
,s Inter-<lb/>
is not<lb/>
. satisf) the<lb/>
? Seminoles.<lb/>
,u- -<lb/>
Ron Sim-<lb/>
i ihore<lb/>
om Ins<lb/>
on, w<lb/>
James<lb/>
Mark<lb/>
-?' ength<lb/>
Starting<lb/>
R jggie Her-<lb/>
Paul<lb/>
urn for<lb/>
ason to<lb/>
I SI n<lb/>
jon<lb/>
d b<lb/>
in -<lb/>
Kuk<lb/>
ii .is the<lb/>
late ai<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
i re, e i v i ng<lb/>
 w ill<lb/>
and<lb/>
2tui n<lb/>
able to<lb/>
lad,<lb/>
tgain.<lb/>
a ill<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
a liked<lb/>
. k 'a a S<lb/>
1979<lb/>
0 di<lb/>
J at<lb/>
shea-<lb/>
ding but<lb/>
Spidei s'<lb/>
,t veai<lb/>
ago, bin earl) trips to<lb/>
Villinova. yoming.<lb/>
 esi Vii ginia and<lb/>
A ubu in au an t he<lb/>
hapless Richmond<lb/>
veterans.<lb/>
Junioi I mi Venagle<lb/>
has been beaten mil foi<lb/>
I he op. quarterback job<lb/>
b) junioi Steve<lb/>
Krai nock, the leading<lb/>
junioi college pa-vsei in<lb/>
nation a ear ago.<lb/>
1 he new Richmond<lb/>
 eei attack alone with<lb/>
experienced runners in<lb/>
i he back field should<lb/>
provide more excite<lb/>
mem tor Spider tans in<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
Starting tackles Jesse<lb/>
Moore and lot rest<lb/>
Paulson move to guard<lb/>
to add blocking powei<lb/>
m the pocket.<lb/>
1 inebacker 1 arry<lb/>
Hi aim and comerback<lb/>
Rueben Turner return<lb/>
as the defensive leaders<lb/>
ot the Spiders, rhe<lb/>
senioi duo led Rich-<lb/>
mond in tackles a year<lb/>
a go, wit h Bra u n<lb/>
chat actei ized as<lb/>
' 'rang) i he model<lb/>
linebackei " and 1 nine:<lb/>
as "hard-nitting yet<lb/>
fleet I he pair totaled<lb/>
233 tackles and assisis<lb/>
tor the 1979 Spiders.<lb/>
Unless the Spiders<lb/>
come through earl) and<lb/>
surprise all the expeiI s,<lb/>
the Pirates should<lb/>
lin record an eas)<lb/>
 ictor).<lb/>
North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
(thei top i el unices<lb/>
to the offensive corps<lb/>
include reserv e 1 1<lb/>
Mike C hai ham .<lb/>
fullback Bill) Johnson<lb/>
and tailback Kelvin<lb/>
Bryant.<lb/>
Massive tackle Don<lb/>
nell 1 h rnnpson <lb/>
fleet Steve Streatei<lb/>
return as the defensive<lb/>
leaders alone with<lb/>
startei s ? al in Daniels,<lb/>
1 awrencc 1 ayloi and<lb/>
Darrell Nicholson ai<lb/>
linebackei and I ai<lb/>
 inters and David<lb/>
Singleton a ner-<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Johnson will replace<lb/>
the departed Doug<lb/>
Paschal (now with the<lb/>
Minnesota ikings),<lb/>
but othei replacements,<lb/>
such as Ml AC guard<lb/>
Steve Junkman, still re-<lb/>
main questionable.<lb/>
v ithoul rapid Pirate<lb/>
maturity, another long<lb/>
aftei noon.<lb/>
NX. State<lb/>
1 he Pirates close out<lb/>
i he season against<lb/>
returning - 11 a n t i c<lb/>
asi c onference<lb/>
( hampion VC . State.<lb/>
Ihe Wolf pack has<lb/>
hrough a whirl-<lb/>
wind ol change in the<lb/>
 nine months.<lb/>
Po pular Wolf pack<lb/>
coach Bo Rein resigned<lb/>
to accept the head posi-<lb/>
?: ai I ouisiana State<lb/>
I niversit). then died<lb/>
m steriouslv in a crash<lb/>
See K I<lb/>
ig 11<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each ot these adveo.sed items s 'equired to be readily available fo sale at i<lb/>
beio the adve'tised pnee io each A4P Store eicept as specifically noted<lb/>
m this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT SEPT. 6, AT AP IN GR tL. oo uiuoi f;aiAS<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Hwy. 264 By-Pass Greenville Squa. <lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
EVERGREEN<lb/>
MCAT-DAT Review Course<lb/>
Take the course individually<lb/>
in Aflqnfa in 3 fo 5 days.<lb/>
P.O. Box 77034, Atlanta, GA<lb/>
30309 phone (404)874-2454<lb/>
756-3307 Greenville Square Center<lb/>
Now ?you vmII be<lb/>
thrre whn we<lb/>
oasi Con-l<lb/>
irk in 1979. ?<lb/>
I he I NC Iai Hee<lb/>
posted on In<lb/>
tlantit (<lb/>
nee ma<lb/>
theii 8-2-1 overall<lb/>
record was enough to<lb/>
gel i hem into the Gator<lb/>
Bowl where the beal<lb/>
all the odds with a<lb/>
17-15 upset ol Big I en<lb/>
powerhouse Michigan.<lb/>
rhird-yeai coach<lb/>
Dick 'rum returns a<lb/>
solid nucleus of the<lb/>
4th ranked (I PI <lb/>
( ai olina squad, but<lb/>
will have to replace<lb/>
RAISt THE<lb/>
TITANIC<lb/>
imm. SPREADS<lb/>
BRUCE<lb/>
DERN<lb/>
ANN-<lb/>
MARGRET<lb/>
MIDDLE AGE<lb/>
?CRAZY<lb/>
J.<lb/>
I 3 105 107 109 iQ<lb/>
A story of natural love<lb/>
DKOOKE ' ME BbUE<lb/>
SHIELDS<lb/>
- 5 7 9<lb/>
bAGOON<lb/>
?<lb/>
iff '<lb/>
FRE3<lb/>
nd nu.i'<lb/>
V<lb/>
LATE SHOW<lb/>
Bete (VNiddler<lb/>
The Rose<lb/>
)?6 11 30 pm<lb/>
veteran signal callei<lb/>
Matt Kupec; a task<lb/>
which has already cans<lb/>
ed disenchantment in<lb/>
?Blue Heaven I he<lb/>
lmales tied c arolina in<lb/>
1979 24-24, and the<lb/>
Heels will well<lb/>
remember when III<lb/>
comes knocking this<lb/>
season. Offensively,<lb/>
1 NC returns preseason<lb/>
Ml-Amen cans Ron<lb/>
 ooten and Amos<lb/>
I awrence, as well as<lb/>
standout center Rick<lb/>
1 onnalle). tackle Mike<lb/>
Man. tighl end Shelton<lb/>
Robinson and flanker<lb/>
 a ne I ucker.<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Lovers<lb/>
Proudly Presents<lb/>
Doors Open<lb/>
Band Starts<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
9.30<lb/>
jus? e pinch between rhe Wheek$ j<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 3 Ladies Night<lb/>
Tonight Bill Lyerly Band<lb/>
Ladies Free<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Seafood Buffet<lb/>
Every night from 5 till closinr. we will feature<lb/>
our fabulous new Seafood Juftet - Delicious<lb/>
Fried Shrimp. Golden Brown Oysters. Fish,<lb/>
Deviled Crab, Shrimp Creole. Fried Chicken,<lb/>
Clam Chowder, Slaw. Hush Puppies<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Only $7.99<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
A Great Place for Seafood<lb/>
Lunch Dinner Catering<lb/>
All You Can Eat Special<lb/>
To all students and faculty Sunday thur<lb/>
Thursday 5.00pm. 'Til closing you may<lb/>
purchase our Fried Fish Special for only<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
Coming Soon:<lb/>
Oyster Bar<lb/>
Fresh Seafood MM<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Lunch<lb/>
Sunday-Friday<lb/>
11:30A.M. 2.00P.M.<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
5 OOP M -9 JO P M<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
5:00 P.M10:30 P.M<lb/>
231 1 S Lvans Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
P?rt Room Availably Wp II<lb/>
FurnUh the Cat lor Birth<lb/>
day Anniversaries etc lor<lb/>
Partlv. of 8 or mot Call (ot<lb/>
Reservation 756 201 I<lb/>
WINIL000 INmiTTLY<lb/>
PLAY 0LS-raSH!0NED<lb/>
$250<lb/>
No Purchase Needed! Start Playing Today!<lb/>
It's easy to play<lb/>
ill<lb/>
IN CASH<lb/>
PRIZES!<lb/>
122,330<lb/>
CASH WINNERS!<lb/>
? Pick up FREE Old Fashioned Bingo concealed<lb/>
ticket on every visit to AAP<lb/>
? Match straight row of 5 numbers vertically,<lb/>
horizontally Of diagonally on any one of the 4<lb/>
Rames on master card,<lb/>
o purchase necessary to participate<lb/>
? See game card for complete rules<lb/>
48 WAYS TO WIN!<lb/>
The Old Fashioned Bingo game is available at 120 Great Atlantic &amp; Pacific Tea<lb/>
Co. stores located In North and South Carolina. Washington County, Va. and<lb/>
Fannln County, Ga. This promotion is scheduled to end on November 29,1980.<lb/>
Old Fashioned Bingo will officially end, however, when all game pieces are<lb/>
distributed.<lb/>
'XXrS O-ART CFTCCTIVC ANGUS' r ??c<lb/>
- Mfl<lb/>
?uf ?<lb/>
: ? .111 W U i<lb/>
; ?.1. (<lb/>
; 1114<lb/>
1 1? 1 - 4 II ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ' <lb/>
? ?-?'? ???? M  <lb/>
 ?<lb/>
BUDWEISERJ<lb/>
BEER$1.89<lb/>
CTN<lb/>
OF<lb/>
12oz cans<lb/>
MILLER<lb/>
BEER$1.89<lb/>
CTN<lb/>
OF<lb/>
12oz cans<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY FRESHLY<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
IN 5 LB<lb/>
ROLL<lb/>
)<lb/>
LB<lb/>
$48<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY ALL<lb/>
MEAT FRANKS<lb/>
12 OZ.<lb/>
PKG.<lb/>
99<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
A&amp;P GRADE A"<lb/>
LARGE EGGS<lb/>
DOZEN<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON fPFFNVILLE N C<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT SEPT 6 AT AP IN OKCCIIVILLCIVV.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
?613<lb/>
46c COUPON<lb/>
IN QTRS.<lb/>
PKGS<lb/>
MRS. FILBERTS 2<lb/>
MARGARINE<lb/>
1 LB.<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
88c<lb/>
Limrr one with this coupon r,RFFNVII I F N C<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT . SEPT 8. AT AP IN UKCCPI V ILLC,n.V<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
J<lb/>
80 COUPON<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK<lb/>
BEAN COFFEE<lb/>
1 LB.<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
$199<lb/>
LIMfT ONE WfTH THIS COUPON<lb/>
OOOO THRU SAT SEPT. ?. AT AP IN GRcfcN V ILLt,IN.L.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
ri5 j<lb/>
J<lb/>
PARTY PAK<lb/>
POTATO CHIPS<lb/>
c<lb/>
TWIN PAK<lb/>
SOZ.<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
TOTINA'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
AMBURGER<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
CANADIAN 12 OZ<lb/>
BACON PKE<lb/>
99C<lb/>
CAROLINA GROWN<lb/>
RED OR GOLDEN<lb/>
DELICIOUS APPLES 4<lb/>
m<lb/>
THOMPSON WHITE<lb/>
SEEDLESS CRAPES<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
OF THE<lb/>
SEASON<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
39(<lb/>
OR ? RED EMPEROR<lb/>
? BLUE EXOTIC<lb/>
THE NATURAL , <lb/>
SNACK" LB<lb/>
88<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
n<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0011"/><lb/>
I HI I SU kt?l IM N<lb/>
Mill M Hi K<lb/>
II<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
15 <lb/>
ECU Opponents<lb/>
( iniiiun?l lrnni page 10<lb/>
coming season.<lb/>
Ncu coach Monte<lb/>
Kit tin has tor met<lb/>
LaGrange at corner- overall mark with a 5-1 Emor must tackle ai<lb/>
back will direct the record to claim the con- ECU, so the Novembei<lb/>
while recruiting for the defensive troops. ference title though 22 showdown to close<lb/>
1 he last Carolina the did not receive a the season could show<lb/>
lost to the rack 34-20, bowl bid. which leadei gets the<lb/>
but State went on to Kiffin faces much the best grades on Ins<lb/>
Pirate aids Dick Rupee post an impressive 7-4 same task at State that report card,<lb/>
and lohntn Rodgers to<lb/>
outline the Wishbone<lb/>
attack to he defense,<lb/>
bul then duties ate<lb/>
centered aiound<lb/>
rebuilding t h e<lb/>
Wolf pack ol fensiv e<lb/>
unit.<lb/>
1 he Pack is oid up<lb/>
the middle, with All-<lb/>
?mencan and (Hitland<lb/>
1 ioph unmet Jim Kit -<lb/>
chei gone at center and<lb/>
qua tier back Scott<lb/>
Smith a loss to gradua-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Juniors Chris<lb/>
Koehne and Chris Carr<lb/>
ieturn at tackle, with<lb/>
enioi s 1 in Haw son at<lb/>
light end and Wayne<lb/>
Mel can at running<lb/>
back and junior Mike<lb/>
Quick at flanker.<lb/>
seniors Bubba Green<lb/>
at tackle and Donnie<lb/>
Duke-EC<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
A vailable<lb/>
,? w ol tickets re-<lb/>
main for this Satur-<lb/>
da - ' - Duke-East<lb/>
C arolina football<lb/>
game, the I C I Promo-<lb/>
i h fice said Mon-<lb/>
?p?it? Wiiteis Neeck i<lb/>
H ii H( iit itl<lb/>
If M. 4 ill -? h?<lb/>
THE RAT<lb/>
IS BACK<lb/>
NEW MANAGEMENT<lb/>
OLD TIMES<lb/>
THE RATHSKELLER<lb/>
Order our<lb/>
Great American<lb/>
favorites<lb/>
VM<lb/>
das .<lb/>
1 ickets, sei at<lb/>
each, will remain on<lb/>
rough 1 rida and<lb/>
cai b ied at the<lb/>
HI I tcket Office in<lb/>
Mtnges c oliseum.<lb/>
fhe game mat ks<lb/>
f the Ed<lb/>
!r i at E I a<lb/>
dents . ?  fan alike<lb/>
art rged to attend the<lb/>
Pirates' matchup with<lb/>
; Big 1 ' ' ?<lb/>
Theodore Sutton Hits N( Sli Defense<lb/>
Pirate Players Featured<lb/>
In Football Press Guide<lb/>
1 asi c arolina loot<lb/>
ball press guides are<lb/>
available to students at<lb/>
the sports Information<lb/>
Office tor S3.00<lb/>
Included in the<lb/>
i lides are profiles ol<lb/>
nl:<lb/>
and ever) Pirate<lb/>
aver, as well as info<lb/>
on the coaching stafl<lb/>
School records, pic<lb/>
tures and other in<lb/>
teresting memo- are<lb/>
also included m the<lb/>
convenient and attrac<lb/>
live 44-page book.<lb/>
Interested persons<lb/>
should call SID Ken<lb/>
Smut, ai 757-6491 oi go<lb/>
b his office in the<lb/>
i icklen Stadium press<lb/>
box.<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop<lb/>
Open Til 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SALE<lb/>
ALBUMS<lb/>
$8.98-LIST-$5.77<lb/>
Commodores-X ? (ars-Panarama<lb/>
McCartney 111 - Firefall-Undertoe<lb/>
Poco-Under The (jun<lb/>
(ieore Benson-(jive Me I he Night<lb/>
Teddy Penderjra88-T.P.<lb/>
Ojays-The Year 2000<lb/>
Heart Bebe Le Strange<lb/>
Charlie Daniels Band-Full Moon<lb/>
Blues Brothers Soundtrack<lb/>
$13.98-LIST-$9,98<lb/>
Kric Clapton-Just One Night<lb/>
Honeysuckle Rose<lb/>
$9.98-LlST-$6.99<lb/>
Carlos Santana-The Swing of Delight<lb/>
$7.98-LlST-$4.99<lb/>
Maze Joy of Pain - Dynasty Adventures<lb/>
Manhattans-After Midnight<lb/>
New Nantucket-S3.99 LP and Tape<lb/>
AND GET THE SAME At<lb/>
HEAPING PORTIONS<lb/>
AT A NEW m<lb/>
LOWER PRICE!<lb/>
InL<lb/>
meali cost less at S&amp;S!<lb/>
r ?ry week. w? choose ou. mo?l<lb/>
popular entrett, combine them with<lb/>
your choice of two vegetables, and mark them with<lb/>
a new LOW price. Thank to volume purchatiny power. S&amp;S<lb/>
? -ile to offer you these Tavoritea for a price that all Americ a i an afford!<lb/>
SA I I RDA  '<lb/>
Wl DM SDA l <lb/>
 imniiy Steak<lb/>
2 vegetables Si 89<lb/>
1 HI RSDA 9 4<lb/>
( flicker) Dumpling;<lb/>
2 vegetable! $1 69<lb/>
1 R1DA v 5<lb/>
B.tk ed Spaghetti<lb/>
2 egelal li -1 79<lb/>
1 ivci ' Inion<lb/>
2 egetal l x: 9J<lb/>
SI NDW ' '<lb/>
rurl md D<lb/>
MONDAY '<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
l I SDA  '<lb/>
2 '<lb/>
ss<lb/>
Where America Comes Home To tdt<lb/>
( orot irio I osl Mat I<lb/>
iJrtilv 11in Spin ? ?)HlU'uiJ'K ? v'i I I ? 'i'<lb/>
by PIOIMCEEJ<lb/>
RH-2255 ThisCentrex AM FM stereo combines<lb/>
nvei ience with great st und.It features an automatic<lb/>
reo rd changer Arid an 8-track deck with record, play-<lb/>
k, 1 eking fast forward, pause and auti imatic recording<lb/>
1 - o mtn). Receiver o mes with tuning meter and LED<lb/>
? licator. Included are matched CL-30 acoustic-<lb/>
suspension speakers.<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
107 Trade StXJreenville<lb/>
AKAI CS-M02 $199-95<lb/>
Stereo Cassette Deck<lb/>
Dolby Noise Reduction System. Multiplex Filter.<lb/>
Sendust Record Playback Head with High Current<lb/>
Erase Head for Metal Tape Bar Meters. Timer REcord<lb/>
Playback Capability. 3-Position Tape Selector includ-<lb/>
ing Meta! Auto P . R? rrj Mute Output Level<lb/>
Control<lb/>
219.95<lb/>
9 O ' "? i ?<lb/>
KH-2277 A t tal music system that o wnbines an AM FM<lb/>
stera i receiver with cassette playback recording deck.<lb/>
aut? matic record changer and full range speakers.The eas<lb/>
access, front-l ading cassette deck includes automatic<lb/>
reo rrding level a intn ?1. pause and 1 icking fast f rward.<lb/>
AM FM multiplex tuner with quality BSR record changer<lb/>
pn aides g?d und at an aff rdable price. Matched with<lb/>
CL-3J?ao ustic- suspensi. n speakers.<lb/>
WHERE YOU CAP! BUY MORE STEREO FOR LESS MONEY EVERY DAY<lb/>
219.95<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
!HI i XS I c AROI INIAN<lb/>
Si-FI'l-MRI K2, 1980<lb/>
'500' Replaces Engine With Pedals<lb/>
B IKRK CRAY<lb/>
is IkMI Kl OKKI M'OSDI N I<lb/>
"Gentlemen, start<lb/>
your engines<lb/>
Every year in In-<lb/>
dianapolis, this famous<lb/>
command opens the<lb/>
world-renowned Indy<lb/>
500 auto race. Power-<lb/>
ful motors roar to lite<lb/>
as the race drivers close<lb/>
in tight and fast behind<lb/>
the pace car, warming<lb/>
up to the grueline 200<lb/>
laps and 500 miles that<lb/>
lay before them.<lb/>
Not very far awa in<lb/>
another Indiana town,<lb/>
a similar race takes<lb/>
place each year. But in<lb/>
this race, the "1 ltile<lb/>
500 the roar of<lb/>
engines is replaced by<lb/>
the smooth whir ot<lb/>
swift bicycles as the<lb/>
cut around a quarter-<lb/>
mile track, powered by<lb/>
strong legs. Two hun-<lb/>
dred laps and 50 miles<lb/>
later, a team of four ex-<lb/>
hausted but exhilarated<lb/>
relay racers take their<lb/>
trophy in the winner's<lb/>
circle.<lb/>
And now, a "Little<lb/>
500style bicycle relay<lb/>
race is coming to Kast<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
On September 1 1.<lb/>
several four-man and<lb/>
four-women teams of<lb/>
relay racers will meet to<lb/>
compete in a 50 mile<lb/>
race around Bunting<lb/>
Competitive Cycling<lb/>
fast-paced action for participants<lb/>
IZOD<lb/>
SHIRTSAND<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
ON SALE AT<lb/>
ADYEN GOLF AND COUNTRY<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
746-3389<lb/>
iPORTSWORU<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
m<lb/>
vMs.<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
Bring I. D. and<lb/>
Get In For Only 1.25<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
E. 10th St. Extension<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
Oyster Plate3.95<lb/>
Shrimp Plate3.95<lb/>
Seafood Plate3.95<lb/>
Ocean Perch2.50<lb/>
Blue Fish2.50<lb/>
Crab Cakes1.85<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp2.95<lb/>
III<lb/>
Track. Hopefully, the<lb/>
race will mark the<lb/>
beginning of a tradition<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
At Indiana Universi-<lb/>
ty in Bloomington,<lb/>
Ind where the "Little<lb/>
500" was born, the race<lb/>
has become so popular<lb/>
that twenty thousand<lb/>
loyal fans annually<lb/>
show their support,<lb/>
cheering the athletes on<lb/>
to the waving<lb/>
checkered flag. Since<lb/>
its first appearance, it<lb/>
has helped raise over<lb/>
$400,000 toward stu-<lb/>
dent scholarships there.<lb/>
Of course, Indiana<lb/>
U. is a larger school<lb/>
that ECU , and no one<lb/>
expects the same<lb/>
numbers for ECU's<lb/>
race. But Bob Fox,<lb/>
assistant director of<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services at<lb/>
ECU, thinks that the<lb/>
event may become one<lb/>
of the most well-<lb/>
attended activities on<lb/>
the intramural calendar<lb/>
in the years to come.<lb/>
"One of the most ex<lb/>
citing things about<lb/>
these races is passing<lb/>
the bike Bob noted.<lb/>
He explained how the<lb/>
riders, at a high speed,<lb/>
must dismount the<lb/>
bicycle and almost<lb/>
literally throw it ahead<lb/>
to the member of the<lb/>
team whose turn it is to<lb/>
take over. All of this<lb/>
must be accomplished<lb/>
with a great deal of<lb/>
precision, because the<lb/>
exchange may only take<lb/>
place within a relatively<lb/>
small stretch of the<lb/>
track. For this reason,<lb/>
the teams need plenty<lb/>
of practice before the<lb/>
actual race begins.<lb/>
Anyone who is in-<lb/>
terested in forming a<lb/>
team for this race is ad-<lb/>
vised to see the movie<lb/>
"Breaking Away" on<lb/>
the weekend of<lb/>
September 5-7. The<lb/>
film will be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Union, and features<lb/>
about ten minutes of<lb/>
footage from Indiana<lb/>
Us "I it tie 5(K)" race<lb/>
There's no better wa<lb/>
to see the bike passin<lb/>
demonstrated ? an<lb/>
see a story about bik<lb/>
racing at the same time.<lb/>
Prospective team<lb/>
members may register<lb/>
at 104 Memorial Gym<lb/>
between Aug. 26 and<lb/>
September 10. Men and<lb/>
women will compete in<lb/>
the race, but no<lb/>
against each other. In-<lb/>
trants are urged to<lb/>
begin their training as<lb/>
soon as possible. The residence halls, fratei<lb/>
intramural staff will be nities, sororities and in-<lb/>
glad to help you set up dependents, and nun<lb/>
a training schedule. win points toward the<lb/>
Teams may represent Chancellor's froph<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
CUSTOM CRAFTING and repair<lb/>
of gold and silver Buying and<lb/>
selling ol gold and silver by Les<lb/>
Jewelers 170 E 5'h St 7S8 2127<lb/>
PARKING SPACES<lb/>
AVAILABLE adiacent To cam<lb/>
pus $10 per month Payable 6<lb/>
months in advance Call Home<lb/>
Savings 758 3431<lb/>
COME BY PIPE DREAMS for<lb/>
Cigarettes. Smoking Accessories.<lb/>
Keys and Tee Shirts JIB E Sth St<lb/>
STUDENTS earn money from<lb/>
your creative talent Let Pipe<lb/>
Oreams feature your work Call<lb/>
752 4811 or come by 118 E 5th St<lb/>
AVAILABLE Female Resident<lb/>
Counselor Position<lb/>
(Recompencel Call 758 HELP<lb/>
ARABIC BELLY DANCING<lb/>
Fun and creative way to stay in<lb/>
shape Call Donna Ahitley at<lb/>
752 0928<lb/>
FOR SALE Weighthfting Bench<lb/>
for sale! il8 00 Excellent Condi<lb/>
tiom If interested call VinceMet<lb/>
caH.Room 354 Umstead<lb/>
Dorm.758 ?S7J<lb/>
FOR SALE Premeif Parade<lb/>
Drum Exce'lent Condition Costs<lb/>
S350 new, will sell for 1200 Call<lb/>
7 58 3076<lb/>
FOR SALE Livingroom Set In<lb/>
eludes one Sofa two Chairs two<lb/>
end Tables Good condition il25<lb/>
lirm Also one Oueen sue<lb/>
Matress with box springs 515 One<lb/>
Velvet Headboard 130 Call Amta<lb/>
at 752 4;77 or 757 6366<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED for<lb/>
Apartment within walking<lb/>
distance of campus Call 758 3076<lb/>
MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER SHOP<lb/>
2616 E. 110th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Custom Exhaust Systems<lb/>
Tune-ups, Brake Service<lb/>
American and Foreign<lb/>
Car Parts<lb/>
WELCOME BACK!<lb/>
ITS GOING TO BE A GREAT YEAR<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolina's<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Tues.?Crazy Tues<lb/>
Wed.?-Gents Nite.<lb/>
ThurCollege Nite.<lb/>
Watch for our exciting line up of special events<lb/>
on Tuesday nites including a Pirate Bikini<lb/>
Contest, Mud Wrestling-Boxing and MORE<lb/>
Fri.?-end of Week<lb/>
Party 3-7 9-11<lb/>
SatBest in Dance<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Sun.?Ladie's Nite<lb/>
j 4 vm li; Kit 4 r H i s tsr<lb/>
v i n : t r v y ?? , i ata<lb/>
,<lb/>
? <lb/>
 I ??'0 L k<lb/>
Write them with no servke charge when you have a student checking account at BB&amp;T.<lb/>
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation<lb/>
1<lb/>
?i ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057280_0013"/>
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