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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057285_0001"/>
?he lEaHt ?aroltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 8<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
Abortion<lb/>
Camg ft 'A Type Of Murder<lb/>
Students Plan Campus Petition<lb/>
By IK.KRN GRA<lb/>
Managing tliioi<lb/>
"We're not a formal, organized<lb/>
anti-abortion group. It's just thai<lb/>
some oi us think it is wrong and we<lb/>
want to do something<lb/>
Mike Rogers, a lunior music ma-<lb/>
joi at E( U, was speaking on behall<lb/>
ol a small group that plans to cir-<lb/>
culate a petition against SGA<lb/>
funded abortions on campus begin-<lb/>
ning next Monday.<lb/>
The member- ol the group say<lb/>
theii decision to petition the student<lb/>
body foi support in opposing<lb/>
student-funded abortionns arose<lb/>
from their religious beliefs.<lb/>
However, the petition will be bas-<lb/>
ed on moral, not religious grounds.<lb/>
Stating that "abortion is a type ol<lb/>
murder the petition is addressed<lb/>
to the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
It asks "that the SGA pass a law<lb/>
stating that no student fees will ever<lb/>
fund an abortion<lb/>
ECU is one of three universities in<lb/>
the state that have medical loan<lb/>
funds for students which can be us-<lb/>
ed to fund abortions.<lb/>
According to a recent SGA<lb/>
change in the loan fund, the money<lb/>
may be borrowed for any medical<lb/>
reason. I he limit is $150, which<lb/>
must be repaid.<lb/>
SO President Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
said Wednesday that "am time<lb/>
students feel strongly tor or against<lb/>
an issue, and bring it before the stu-<lb/>
dent bod) in the form of a petition,<lb/>
we're glad to have that kind ol in-<lb/>
put<lb/>
Although Sherrod said he en-<lb/>
couraged the petition in principle,<lb/>
he said he did not want to get per-<lb/>
sonally involved with it in the SGA.<lb/>
"This is something that the SGA<lb/>
legislature will have to decide<lb/>
Sherrod said.<lb/>
Rogers said his group would can-<lb/>
vass dormitories and students on<lb/>
campus, and would bring the issue<lb/>
before the legislature at its first<lb/>
meeting scheduled for early<lb/>
November.<lb/>
Elections for 1980-81 legislature<lb/>
members will be held November 1.<lb/>
"Our mam contention is that the<lb/>
fetus is an organism, a human being<lb/>
 a person Rogers said.<lb/>
"We don't buy the argument thai<lb/>
a fetus is a tumor or something<lb/>
A Wild Rush Party?<lb/>
No. Rush tek is still ?" strong in Greenville, but no This house, which used<lb/>
one has reported partying a house to the ground yet. has been demolished to<lb/>
Pho'o bv JOHNJORDAN<lb/>
to he 1ocatedonNinthStreet.<lb/>
makeroomfornewparking<lb/>
May<lb/>
B Mlkr NOONAN<lb/>
tanMaal St?? 1 diior<lb/>
Several Greenville merchants may<lb/>
e affected if a proposed Federal<lb/>
ntiparaphernalia Act is approved<lb/>
) the next session o the State's<lb/>
General Assembly.<lb/>
According to the wording of the<lb/>
proposed Act, it was drafted at the<lb/>
request o state authorities to enable<lb/>
states and local jurisdictions to cope<lb/>
with the paraphernalia problem.<lb/>
Ms. Carol Martoccia. one ol<lb/>
Greenville's leading merchant- ol<lb/>
smoking accessories, has reason to<lb/>
be concerned about the outcome oi<lb/>
dislike that word because ol its<lb/>
negative connotations<lb/>
The proposed act would further<lb/>
prohibit the sale o accessories to<lb/>
minors, and include- an article<lb/>
outlining the potential ottense- and<lb/>
penalties, making the possession, or<lb/>
use. ot any item listed as parapher-<lb/>
nalia a crime, which may be<lb/>
punishable bv hue. onment,<lb/>
or both<lb/>
Ol special significance concerning<lb/>
the existing law is the intent in the<lb/>
customers mind a- to what the ac<lb/>
cessory is to be used for. On the en<lb/>
trance to Ms. Martoccia's store is a<lb/>
sign "Not intended tor illegal use<lb/>
But. according to Ms. Mario,<lb/>
eia the thing that bothers me is<lb/>
that you can go into a hardware<lb/>
-tore and buy a gun, and the<lb/>
salesman isn't going to ask you who<lb/>
you are going to shoot with it. 1<lb/>
don't force people to come in here<lb/>
and buy anything, and 1 don't ask<lb/>
them what they're going to do with<lb/>
it. It's simply a store, and 1 sell the<lb/>
things that people request. None ol<lb/>
it i- illegal<lb/>
If the proposed Act is pased in the<lb/>
next session ot the General<lb/>
Assembly, it will be illegal for any<lb/>
person to own or posse any drug<lb/>
paraphernalia.<lb/>
Mr. Irank Feree, owner ol ppie<lb/>
Records in Greenville, another seller<lb/>
ol paraphernalia, -aid "It wouldn't<lb/>
bother me in the lea-t it they outlaw<lb/>
ed it all. 1 really don't believe they<lb/>
will be able to. It has always been a<lb/>
sideline to us1<lb/>
Ms. Donna 1 abai. ownei ol 1 he<lb/>
Mushroom, said "1 was the first<lb/>
person in town to sell accessories,<lb/>
but 1 decided to discontinue it with<lb/>
the exception ol paper- and screens.<lb/>
1 needed the room in the store<lb/>
oi<lb/>
other thine<lb/>
she added<lb/>
Photo bv GARY BLEVINS<lb/>
A $50 Bong<lb/>
in the shadow of the law<lb/>
the proposed Act.<lb/>
"The state is going to have a hear-<lb/>
ing on this in January, but in the<lb/>
meantime, there are some test eases<lb/>
going on right now which may well<lb/>
determine that it will not go before<lb/>
the General Assembly<lb/>
Until the proposed Act becomes<lb/>
law, it is legal to engage in the sell-<lb/>
ing and buying of drug parapher-<lb/>
nalia which is defined in the propos-<lb/>
ed act as "all equipment, products,<lb/>
and materials of any kind which are-<lb/>
used, intended for use, or designed<lb/>
for use, in planting, -toring,<lb/>
containing, concealing, injecting,<lb/>
ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise in-<lb/>
troducing into the human body a<lb/>
controlled substance in violation o<lb/>
this Act<lb/>
"This list includes just about<lb/>
everything 1 have in the store Ms.<lb/>
Martoccia added.<lb/>
According to Ms. Martoccia,<lb/>
"Most of my articles are what is<lb/>
termed paraphernalia, although 1<lb/>
Based On Grade Predictions<lb/>
Admissions Requirements<lb/>
Slowly Rising At ECU<lb/>
By 1KRRYGRAY<lb/>
Mnaniny r tfitOf<lb/>
It's getting a little bit hauler each<lb/>
vear to get into ECU.<lb/>
The change, according to Ron<lb/>
Brown, assistant director o admis-<lb/>
sions, is "almost imperceptible" on<lb/>
a year-to-year basis, But viewed<lb/>
over the last five or six years. Brown<lb/>
said, the statistics are steadily in-<lb/>
ching up.<lb/>
Brown emphasized that the<lb/>
reason behind ECUs tougher en-<lb/>
trance requirement- can easily be<lb/>
misunderstood.<lb/>
Somoza Killed<lb/>
Sl NC ION, Paraguay (UPI)<lb/>
former Nicaraguan President<lb/>
Anastasio Somoza was assassinated<lb/>
bv baooka fire yesterday as he rode<lb/>
in his car in downtown Asuncion,<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
Police said Somoza, 53, who fled<lb/>
Nicaragua in July 1979 and later<lb/>
took up residence in exile in<lb/>
Paraguay, was killed by three men<lb/>
firing a bazooka at his white<lb/>
Mercedes-Ben, hitting it with one<lb/>
round.<lb/>
Also killed in attack were<lb/>
Somoza's driver and a bodyguard,<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
Assassins Used Bazooka<lb/>
Three other men in a blue<lb/>
Chevrolet wagon at the same time<lb/>
sprayed Somoza's car with<lb/>
submachine-gun fire, police said.<lb/>
"The drivers's body was thrown<lb/>
60 feet from the car one officer<lb/>
said. "Somoza's body was all chop-<lb/>
ped up by the explosion, but what<lb/>
was left was stuck in the car<lb/>
Police said the attackers had shot<lb/>
more than 25 rounds of machine-<lb/>
gun fire into Somoza's car.<lb/>
The attackers, who struck at<lb/>
10:20 a.m. EDT yesterday a short<lb/>
distance from Somoza's home,<lb/>
escaped in the blue Chevrolet used<lb/>
in the attack but five blocks away<lb/>
switched to a Volkswagen beetle,<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
The government immediately<lb/>
closed Paraguay's border with<lb/>
Argentina to prevent the killers<lb/>
from leaving the country.<lb/>
Somoza arrived in Paraguay, a<lb/>
landlocked South American country<lb/>
about the size o California, in<lb/>
August 1979. about a month after<lb/>
he left Nicaragua because his Na-<lb/>
tional Guard lost ground in bloody<lb/>
fighting with rebel forces led by the<lb/>
Sandinista army.<lb/>
Paraguayan President Alt redo<lb/>
Stroessner, a -launch anti-<lb/>
communist who has ruled Paraguay<lb/>
with an iron fist for 25 years,<lb/>
welcomed Somoza into Paraguay<lb/>
despite strong objections from op-<lb/>
position politicians.<lb/>
'This is not a case where higher<lb/>
entrance requirements are creating a<lb/>
higher caliber student body. It's the<lb/>
other way around: what is happen-<lb/>
ing is that an increasing number of<lb/>
the more promising students are<lb/>
competing to be admitted here, and<lb/>
this is forcing us to raise our stan-<lb/>
dards he said.<lb/>
Brown said that the university<lb/>
must raise standards to prevent an<lb/>
overflow of incoming students. The<lb/>
standards are determined<lb/>
mathematically by a "giaade<lb/>
prediction formula" that is derived<lb/>
from the records o each new stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"The grade prediction formula,<lb/>
he explained, is a "tool used to<lb/>
predict the academic success o an<lb/>
incoming freshman, using the ex-<lb/>
perience gained from freshmen with<lb/>
similar qualifications the previous<lb/>
year<lb/>
Brown said the formula was bas-<lb/>
ed on SAT scores and overall high<lb/>
school records, and that it had an 85<lb/>
percent success rate in predicting the<lb/>
year-end grades of incoming in-<lb/>
dividual students. If an applicant's<lb/>
predicted grades fall below a certain<lb/>
cut-off point, he or she will not be<lb/>
admitted. Brown said.<lb/>
"The cut-off point is raised or<lb/>
lowered in accordance to the size o<lb/>
freshman class we can ac-<lb/>
comodate he added.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer, a strong<lb/>
vocate ol higher academic standing<lb/>
for ECU since he became chancellor<lb/>
three years ago, said, "1 was very<lb/>
pleased to learn ol this. I think it<lb/>
shows a recognition o the quality ol<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
"1 would like to see us have a goal<lb/>
in our planninglookmg five or ten<lb/>
years down the road  that the<lb/>
average SAT scores for students<lb/>
would be up to 950 to 970 he add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
According to Ron Bru. n. the<lb/>
average SAT scores for last year's<lb/>
freshman class was about 866. "1<lb/>
think that is a reasonable goal he-<lb/>
said. "I'm very optimistic about the<lb/>
future of this university, and 1 think<lb/>
we could have that kind ol SAT<lb/>
average in five to ten years Brown<lb/>
said that the national average SAT<lb/>
score was about 910.<lb/>
Both Dr. Brewer and Brown<lb/>
agreed that the SAT -core- were on-<lb/>
ly a general gauge of a student<lb/>
body's capability, and that they are<lb/>
not the prime factoi used in con-<lb/>
sidering students for admission.<lb/>
"The best indication ol a stu-<lb/>
dent potential Brown said, "is<lb/>
the grade prediction, and the grade<lb/>
prediction average tor the freshman<lb/>
class is rising because ECV attrac-<lb/>
ting a higher caliber student<lb/>
Dodging The Enemy, Illusions Of Glory<lb/>
(C PS)There will be people on<lb/>
campus this fall - ordinary-looking<lb/>
souls  who fear they're being<lb/>
hunted by assassins, challenged bv<lb/>
dragons, and beguiled by magicians.<lb/>
DaUv -living for them will be an exer-<lb/>
cise in dodging the enemy and purs-<lb/>
ing illusions of glory.<lb/>
Hut the ostensible outbreak of<lb/>
paranoid schizophrenia is really just<lb/>
Parn peak popularity in the last<lb/>
haff de" aPde the best known variety<lb/>
olves around Dungeons A<lb/>
revolves derivatives. The<lb/>
Dragons<lb/>
Dragons ju like "Assassin"<lb/>
SFfitS An Organs<lb/>
they're being Played everywhere<lb/>
?nc &amp; Dragons, which bor-<lb/>
Dung iTavifv " ?m the worn ot<lb/>
rows heaviiy<lb/>
J.R.R. Tolkein, is actually formally<lb/>
organized on "at least 200 cam-<lb/>
puses" by various kinds of<lb/>
"Tolkein fellowships boasts Mar-<lb/>
ta Crosby of the Tolkein League.<lb/>
"Assassin" and its namesakes<lb/>
boomed into prominence last<lb/>
winter, when bizarre reports of<lb/>
students hunting one another spread<lb/>
from midwestern campuses to the<lb/>
University of Florida, UCLA, and<lb/>
points in between.<lb/>
Most frequently called "Killing<lb/>
As An Organized Sport it has its<lb/>
roots in the sixties. It takes its<lb/>
acronym, KAOS, from the "Get<lb/>
Smart" spy spoof television series,<lb/>
though the game's theme was<lb/>
plagiarized from other media. ?<lb/>
It is roughly based on "The<lb/>
Seventh Victim a 1953 science fic-<lb/>
tion novel by Robert Sheckley that<lb/>
evolved into a 1965 film called "The<lb/>
Tenth Victim<lb/>
As the story would have it, a<lb/>
futuristic society eliminates war by<lb/>
allowing its most aggressive citizens<lb/>
to commit legalized murder. The<lb/>
killer's goal is to down ten victims<lb/>
before someone else kills him (or<lb/>
her). If the killer succeeds, he or she<lb/>
becomes a hero, is given luxuries<lb/>
and wealth, and never has to work<lb/>
again.<lb/>
The story was translated into a<lb/>
game played with toy weapons. It W<lb/>
enjoyed a brief vogue at Oberlin SWK. a<lb/>
College in the late sixties before it ? jr<lb/>
was replaced by other fads, and was !?$&amp;&amp;?.<lb/>
largely forgotten.<lb/>
See KILLING, Page 5, Col.l<lb/>
New GI Bill Students May<lb/>
Get Delay In VA Benefits<lb/>
Man And Beast<lb/>
WASHINGTON, DC (CPS) -<lb/>
Unless Congress moves quickly to<lb/>
pass a $40 million supplemental ap-<lb/>
propriations bill, thousands of<lb/>
veterans will not get their education<lb/>
aid checks on time, Veterans Ad-<lb/>
ministration officials warned recent-<lb/>
ly-<lb/>
Any delay in payment would at-<lb/>
fect nearly 128,000 veterans who<lb/>
registered for benefits under the GI<lb/>
Bill since August 28. While those<lb/>
who have been regularly receiving<lb/>
payments should not experience any<lb/>
delays, vets who have just registered<lb/>
since August 28 and who expected<lb/>
the usual month's advance pay-<lb/>
ment, payment for classes already<lb/>
taken, or money for work-study<lb/>
programs may have to wait.<lb/>
The reason is that the 1980 budget<lb/>
ceiling has already been reached.<lb/>
Unless Congress votes to fund the<lb/>
program with an additional 140<lb/>
million, many veterans could be<lb/>
severelv affected.<lb/>
"If vou extend the delay beyond a<lb/>
month, it will take a major toll<lb/>
warned Dallas Martin, executive<lb/>
director of the National Association<lb/>
of Student Financial Aid Ad-<lb/>
ministrators.<lb/>
"I suspect that a fair number will<lb/>
have to drop out, at least for a short<lb/>
time<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements 2<lb/>
Civil War5<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Forecast10<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Nutrition5<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
F<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0002"/><lb/>
1 HI I M i KOI IM <lb/>
s 'l HU K 18, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
ACU 1<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
 ?. ? ? ?  ? ? pa'e in<lb/>
1980 ACU 1<lb/>
.?I iui nan ei ?? 11<lb/>
 : , ?.? , ? .<lb/>
. ?. ? Even's will ini le B ???<lb/>
? . .<lb/>
? i ibli<lb/>
B<lb/>
cso<lb/>
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EPISCOPAL<lb/>
CO OP<lb/>
BacKgamm - i<lb/>
part I r. A<lb/>
. . ? ? , ? ? i<lb/>
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ml rma'i " ? i<lb/>
i ? .?. g i i ?<lb/>
enl all<lb/>
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TRAVEL<lb/>
YOUTHGRANTS<lb/>
' ? ?<lb/>
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lies m<lb/>
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SOFTBALL<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
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? ? ??-<lb/>
s 10 p m<lb/>
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SNOW SKI<lb/>
CHESSCLUB<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS<lb/>
JOB SEARCH<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
SWIMTEAM<lb/>
i , ? ?<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
COMMUNITY<lb/>
week I  . ? . . ? ? ?<lb/>
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CPR<lb/>
ANGEL FLIGHT<lb/>
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SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
UNIVERSITYCLUB<lb/>
FREE WILL<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
? UAGE<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
ARMY NAVY STOP. C<lb/>
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? FW, Dack, Flifht, Snerktl ?<lb/>
J Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas. ?<lb/>
 SIMM. Combat Boots, Plus. <lb/>
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10-6 MonSat. ? 756-5844<lb/>
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THE TAS1t WORTH SHOPPING FOR<lb/>
,V<lb/>
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iTe<lb/>
ttling into campus<lb/>
oesn't exactly<lb/>
mean settling down.<lb/>
AD ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
ItBms Is required to be readi-<lb/>
ly available for saie In each<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on except as spe-<lb/>
cifically noted In this ad If we<lb/>
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comparable item when avail-<lb/>
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ngs. or a ralncheck which<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase<lb/>
the advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
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/>
COLD BEER TO THAT HOT NEW ALBUM!<lb/>
DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW OR<lb/>
8-Oz.<lb/>
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ON A FRESH BAKED BUN<lb/>
Lunchmeat<lb/>
Hoagie<lb/>
$119<lb/>
Records &amp; Tapes<lb/>
8<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
$<lb/>
149<lb/>
H Pius<lb/>
Deposit<lb/>
FROZEN SAUSAGE. CHEESE<lb/>
OR PEPPERONI<lb/>
Fox Pizza<lb/>
FOOD.DRUG.GEN<lb/>
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NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
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9 AW TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. ? Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml hAST K)I ISI-XN si ?? MW K I. lK"<lb/>
OT<lb/>
;0M<lb/>
Students Serve As Ambassadors<lb/>
B CHERYL FISHER<lb/>
Stall vv mi, i<lb/>
1 -is Carolina<lb/>
I niversity is about<lb/>
students rhe students<lb/>
,ue out job. It we have<lb/>
no students we have no<lb/>
university stated Dan<lb/>
I emish, Vice<lb/>
C hancelloi oi nstitu-<lb/>
nal dvancement<lb/>
and Planning.<lb/>
I emish is heading up<lb/>
1I mbasssador<lb/>
Program and he feels<lb/>
program is needed<lb/>
foi the external rela<lb/>
' ionship ot the univei si<lb/>
v<lb/>
' A hat bettei way to<lb/>
ojecl an image of the<lb/>
unixeisits than through<lb/>
the students? e have<lb/>
the best students in<lb/>
North Carolina so, let's<lb/>
expose the best students<lb/>
in North i arolina he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
 c c o r d i ng t o<lb/>
1 emish, the objective<lb/>
of the Ambassador<lb/>
Program is to "Create<lb/>
a volunteei corp ot<lb/>
students to serve the<lb/>
university in public<lb/>
relations, admissions<lb/>
and fund raising ef-<lb/>
forts<lb/>
I hi oughout t he<lb/>
per i 0 d l n w h l c h<lb/>
students are involved in<lb/>
the Ambassador Pro-<lb/>
gram he feels they will<lb/>
have the opportunity to<lb/>
come in contact with<lb/>
important people, mak-<lb/>
ing an impression<lb/>
which may be of great<lb/>
influence to students<lb/>
later in life.<lb/>
The basic respon<lb/>
sibilitv of an am-<lb/>
bassador will be as<lb/>
hosts and hostesses<lb/>
during the various ac-<lb/>
tivities oi the university<lb/>
to entertain legislative<lb/>
friends, corporations,<lb/>
fund leaders and<lb/>
donators.<lb/>
Other duties ol an<lb/>
ambassador will consist<lb/>
of conducting tours.<lb/>
telephoning student ap-<lb/>
plicants and to help<lb/>
with university funding<lb/>
bv working on the<lb/>
alumni phone-a-thon.<lb/>
1 emish insisted the<lb/>
tune element of the<lb/>
program was strictly<lb/>
according to individual<lb/>
commitment. As an<lb/>
organization plans dit-<lb/>
fereni activities the am-<lb/>
bassadors can schedule<lb/>
their participation in<lb/>
the activities according<lb/>
to their availability.<lb/>
Me said the Alumni<lb/>
A s soc i a t i on h a s<lb/>
budgeted $2,000 of in-<lb/>
itial support to the Am<lb/>
bassadoi Program tor<lb/>
the purchase of blazers.<lb/>
In the tuture students<lb/>
should be able to work<lb/>
on a point system to<lb/>
earn a blazer through<lb/>
their serx ice.<lb/>
Rick Robins, Annual<lb/>
Support Director, and<lb/>
Maria Christopher, an<lb/>
1 c l s dent are<lb/>
organizing the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
According to ap-<lb/>
plications the program<lb/>
has atriacted the besi<lb/>
students II has.<lb/>
I he application<lb/>
deadline to the pro-<lb/>
g r a in w h i c h v a S<lb/>
September 10 is now<lb/>
open. A nyone in-<lb/>
terested in the program<lb/>
may apply at the<lb/>
I aylorlaughtet Alumni<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
Some Students May Lose<lb/>
Food Stamp Assistance<lb/>
By M R( HAKNES<lb/>
Mafl ? nirr<lb/>
? law concerning eligibili-<lb/>
ty 1 d stamps will affecl as<lb/>
many as 200 1I students, accor<lb/>
dine to Edward Garrison, director<lb/>
Pit! County Department of<lb/>
Sov a s. ? v ices,<lb/>
"Approximately 75 percent ol<lb/>
those students will no longer be<lb/>
chgib'e Garrison said Wednesday<lb/>
Vnd these are full-time students<lb/>
However, students who are<lb/>
. stamp aid under new<lb/>
. delines may find some<lb/>
 the Financial Aid ol fice,<lb/>
rding to Directoi Robert<lb/>
Boudi eaux.<lb/>
"11 they are students who may<lb/>
? food stamps<lb/>
: financial aid,<lb/>
they ca apply foi assistance he<lb/>
" 1 hei ? et cally. anyone corn-<lb/>
in demonstrating a financial<lb/>
d max have his need met 100 per-<lb/>
. to a I niied Press n-<lb/>
nal (I Pi) release, the I S<lb/>
V ? . Department reports that<lb/>
200,000 students nationwide were<lb/>
. food stamp aid before the<lb/>
euide ines went into et feel<lb/>
i r<lb/>
Amendments to the food stamp<lb/>
laws, which took effect Sept. 1<lb/>
should cut that figure to 150,000,<lb/>
according to I PI.<lb/>
In all, there is a list of situations<lb/>
under which student recipients may<lb/>
continue to qualiiv It includes<lb/>
Those with low income and<lb/>
disability;<lb/>
-Heads ot households with<lb/>
dependents;<lb/>
-Students already participating in a<lb/>
federal work-study program;<lb/>
-Those already participating in a<lb/>
tederal work incentive program.<lb/>
Garrison added that students.<lb/>
too, are caught in the trend toward<lb/>
balancing the tederal budget.<lb/>
"In the wisdom of Congress, it<lb/>
was felt, apparently, that the college<lb/>
student should not be supported by<lb/>
taxpayer money in the form ot food<lb/>
stamps 1 question the wisdom ol<lb/>
Congress. 1 think the future ot oui<lb/>
country depends on the education ol<lb/>
voting people.<lb/>
"I think its important that we<lb/>
begin to do more to help ail<lb/>
segments ot the population to<lb/>
achieve as much education as possi-<lb/>
ble. The world is verv complex to<lb/>
dav but its nothing as complex as its<lb/>
going to be in the near future.<lb/>
ANNOUNCING<lb/>
THE WINNERS<lb/>
IN OUR STUDENT APPRECIATION DAYS'<lb/>
EVENT IN DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
GRAND PRIZE<lb/>
$50 GIFT CERTIFICATE-ann steele<lb/>
Apple Records Rosemary Lucai<lb/>
Art &amp;amera Shop Rene Lawson<lb/>
,? Store Roemar) Lucai<lb/>
Katrina Retnpaon<lb/>
Kl'iuni Harvey Ki.ihulayton<lb/>
Boot Barn Susan Bacon<lb/>
Brodv i Shelia Brick house<lb/>
t ato i W end) B.is t:<lb/>
( entral Newi Sharon Kinu<lb/>
I ertain 1 hings Alne Bower<lb/>
( offman s Joseph Ku hardson<lb/>
I ollege "hop Kathv Garrow<lb/>
? Floral Service William Ralph Bovd<lb/>
rt s Auto Suppk - J B Hudson<lb/>
. and Hiiik Man Brenda Cole<lb/>
( urrv opv t enter Beverlv Dav<lb/>
I) A Kelly's I anja Sewell<lb/>
Diener's Bal-erv Angela Washington<lb/>
( Heber Forties Alison Wainwriiht<lb/>
- reddies Jill Kunnum<lb/>
Friendly Wik shop Ann Neaton<lb/>
(?azebo J j Mi Daniel<lb/>
' Disi ount laretta hove<lb/>
be Hardware Valerie iahron<lb/>
H I. htodfes0 lania Sewell<lb/>
Hollow ell's Drus Laure r aucette<lb/>
Harvest Natural hoods - Jane Thompson<lb/>
House f Hats Judv Kea<lb/>
I Sue Jan Sarah Dickerson<lb/>
Jason's Kimberlv Johnson<lb/>
Jean's Clorv - Dara Godlev<lb/>
J HernriK Mens Wear Vern Davenport<lb/>
l.autares Jewelr Barbara Forehand<lb/>
1 ord'l Jewelers Shiriev Williams<lb/>
Marl-dv I andy Laura Harrison<lb/>
V A Merritt &amp; Sons Iammie Donahue<lb/>
Morgan Printers Bonita Bullock<lb/>
Mushroom - Beth Burnette<lb/>
Kitty Cremms<lb/>
Lisa Rowland<lb/>
Mike Collura<lb/>
Laurie Austen<lb/>
Hart Iheatre Marv Lue Britt<lb/>
Pr.? tors Ltd Irma I homas<lb/>
Pu?h s hre Service Vicki Braddy<lb/>
RiK?an Shoe Repair Jody Lantraiu hi<lb/>
Robinson Jewelry Rohm Clayton<lb/>
I he Shoe Room In. Jane Thompson &amp;<lb/>
Dan C arrijan<lb/>
Smith EJectri Sandra Powell<lb/>
1 he Snooty I ox Robin Clayton<lb/>
Steinbeck s Chip Dickinson<lb/>
latt ()ftne Equipment Janet Halhdav<lb/>
I aft Furniture Mania Reed &amp;<lb/>
Keila Mc(jlohon<lb/>
University Bool- Exchange Art Diehl<lb/>
Western Auto Supplv Roger (rait<lb/>
White's Store Hael Johnson<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop!<lb/>
OpenTil 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SALE<lb/>
LIST $8.98 ALBUMS<lb/>
SALE $5.77<lb/>
Cars<lb/>
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WE BUY USED ALBUMS<lb/>
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INCLUDES LEATHERS,<lb/>
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ENTIRE STOCK OF<lb/>
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The Place<lb/>
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For Savings<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
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Layaways<lb/>
Charge Cards<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Vovru<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<lb/>
We rejjet that each OJ sou who participated in the Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Student Appreciation Dav s could not he a winner However. You can be a<lb/>
winner when vou shop Downtown Greenville<lb/>
DOW I OVV N GKhr.NV It IK ASSCK IA I ION l(<lb/>
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GREEiWILLfi<lb/>
 t<lb/>
9 ALIVE SPORT TEAM<lb/>
Carlester Crumpler Jim Woods<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0004"/><lb/>
QUf ?g0t (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving ihe campus community since 1V25.<lb/>
Rk h-ri)Ciri t v<lb/>
Terry Hi rndon,<lb/>
Chris I i hok,  u<lb/>
Georgi Hettich, ,<lb/>
Ami x I m m i h. -<lb/>
I I KtO C i k "i . t i<lb/>
1 ISA DKl W, , , <lb/>
Ch kl t s Chandi I K.<lb/>
I)ll) NORR1S,  i<lb/>
Scptcmbei 18, lsKt<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
I'juc 4<lb/>
Rush Week<lb/>
A Time For Decisions<lb/>
Thank God it's Friday.<lb/>
That's a feeling that will prevail<lb/>
tomorrow when Rush finally winds<lb/>
down, or culminates, with the clos-<lb/>
ing ceremonies and celebrations.<lb/>
For fraternities and sororities, the<lb/>
week will have been a hectic one-<lb/>
parties every night and classes the<lb/>
next day. For potential pledges, the<lb/>
week will have been a whirlwind o<lb/>
new faces. But Friday will also be a<lb/>
day when important decisions are<lb/>
made.<lb/>
The Greek segment 01 the ECU<lb/>
student body is small compared to<lb/>
many universities in the country,<lb/>
but they do their share of partying<lb/>
and their share of service for the<lb/>
university and Greenville eom-<lb/>
muniiies. The Greek life is one of<lb/>
the many rewarding ways to enjoy<lb/>
(or endure) college life at ECU.<lb/>
As Harry Tumus, president of the<lb/>
Interfraternity Council, said in an<lb/>
open letter in this paper earlier in<lb/>
the semester, a rushee should visit<lb/>
all the houses, ask about all the dues<lb/>
and other requirements, meet all the<lb/>
members of each house?consider<lb/>
everything. He was addressing men<lb/>
interested in fraternities, but the ad-<lb/>
vice also applies to women consider-<lb/>
ing sororities.<lb/>
Of course the Greek life isn't for<lb/>
everybody, and if you have been at-<lb/>
tending rush this week, you should<lb/>
have a good idea if the Greek life is<lb/>
for you and which chapter you hope<lb/>
to join. It's an important decision,<lb/>
one that will undoubtably affect<lb/>
your life for years to come. So con-<lb/>
sider all of your options carefully,<lb/>
and think about how you want to<lb/>
spend your college years. It can<lb/>
make all the difference in the world.<lb/>
Avoiding Traffic Jams<lb/>
If you attend a class in Brewster,<lb/>
you have probably noticed the terri-<lb/>
ble student traffic jams on the stairs<lb/>
near Memorial Gym. A trip to the<lb/>
third floor can take as long as five<lb/>
minutes. It's hard to say just wh<lb/>
everyone wants to use that one<lb/>
stairwell, but there is an answer to<lb/>
standing in line.<lb/>
Instead of fighting the masses,<lb/>
being nudged and bumped to your<lb/>
final destination, overheating<lb/>
because the person behind you spill-<lb/>
ed his drink down your leg or has<lb/>
stopped to chat with someone, try<lb/>
an alternative route. Just use one o'<lb/>
the other three entrances to the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Walk slowly and enjoy the<lb/>
weather while it lasts. You'll get<lb/>
where you're going in about the<lb/>
same amount o' time, but at least<lb/>
you will be in a better mood when<lb/>
you get there.<lb/>
? HfRE 1 HAT THOSE<lb/>
? ' ?'?c"  VESTi QR?aJ<lb/>
Ll r lfL0 V?r)SUfl?<lb/>
?LHGEs)CE CfZEATlM T)<lb/>
OTErOVAL SUCCEbb<lb/>
Hrl bKcAT C<lb/>
i T?sts ia)<lb/>
WE CW THIMGS <lb/>
AAS GOop fT ;<lb/>
'PARDON M?, m R0NM.D KBA&amp;M4 m m RUNNING AGAINST iMNlY CART2R<lb/>
YOU WANT TQSe&amp; fOUR N0R6 YBARS OF IN&amp;PT BUNBUN??<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
DO<lb/>
'Reserve' Seating Questioned<lb/>
1 am writing this letter to address a<lb/>
problem that was mentioned in Tues-<lb/>
day's Easl Carolinian. The problem is<lb/>
that some o our fraternal organizations<lb/>
seem to think they are somehow better<lb/>
than the rest of the student body. This<lb/>
must be the case since they think they are<lb/>
entitled to "reserve" seats on the 50<lb/>
yard line tor their members.<lb/>
I have just one question to ask them.<lb/>
Just who in the Hell do they think they<lb/>
are? Buster Brown? What makes them<lb/>
special and allows them to come into the<lb/>
game late and sit on the 50 yard line<lb/>
while students like myself come earlier<lb/>
and have to sit at the 10? I can answer<lb/>
that question myself. Nothing' I hey are<lb/>
no more entitled to those seats than<lb/>
anyone else. The pledges in these I rats<lb/>
had better wise up and disobey their<lb/>
"masters" from now on, because now<lb/>
that the student body know this practice<lb/>
is going on, it will not be tolerated. So<lb/>
meone could eventually get hurt trying<lb/>
to "reserve" a seat. There are enough<lb/>
tights in the stands as it is.<lb/>
C ilenn Reaves<lb/>
Junior. PT . Major<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The I us( Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
I etters must include the name, mc<lb/>
and classification, address, phom<lb/>
number and signature oj the autho<lb/>
letters should he limited to thret<lb/>
typewritten pages, double-spaced, r<lb/>
neatly printed. All letter an subject to<lb/>
edilinn for brevity, obscenit and libel.<lb/>
Spendings Cuts 'Take Time'<lb/>
By DIANE CURTIS<lb/>
I nited Prrs International<lb/>
WASHINGTON ' Republican presiden-<lb/>
tial candidate Ronald Reagan is patterning<lb/>
his plan to cut federal spending by Si95<lb/>
billion over five years on a money-saving<lb/>
scheme that bombed when he tried it in<lb/>
California.<lb/>
Earlier this month in Chicago, Reagan<lb/>
presented an ambitious program to<lb/>
"balance the budget, reduce tax rates and<lb/>
restore our defenses<lb/>
The road to a balanced budget is to be<lb/>
achieved partly with a 2 percent cut in<lb/>
spending in 1981, increasing the slashes to<lb/>
10 percent by 1985 for a total reduction in<lb/>
projected federal spending of S195 billion<lb/>
over five years.<lb/>
The way Reagan plans to accomplish<lb/>
this shearing, he said, is "through a com-<lb/>
prehensive assault on waste and inefficien-<lb/>
cy"<lb/>
"The old phrase is to cut, squeeze and<lb/>
trim explained one of Reagan's top<lb/>
economic advisers during a not-for-<lb/>
attribution briefing.<lb/>
No specific programs are targeted for<lb/>
extinction, the adviser added. Instead, the<lb/>
bloodletting will simply eliminate S195<lb/>
billion in "fraud, waste and ex-<lb/>
travagance<lb/>
He did not pinpoint the source of that<lb/>
"fraud, waste and extravagance<lb/>
But the "cut, squeeze and trim" ap-<lb/>
proach failed when Reagan, as Califor-<lb/>
nia's newly elected governor, tried it in<lb/>
1967.<lb/>
"We are going to squeeze and cut and<lb/>
trim until we reduce the cost of govern-<lb/>
ment he said in his January inaugural<lb/>
address.<lb/>
"It won't be easy nor will it be pleasant<lb/>
and it will involve every department of<lb/>
government, starting with the governor's<lb/>
office  Any major business can tighten<lb/>
its belt by 10 percent and still maintain the<lb/>
quality and quantity o! its operation. So<lb/>
too can government<lb/>
What Reagan optimistically proposed<lb/>
was a 10 percent across-the-board cut in all<lb/>
state departments and agencies. But as<lb/>
lawmakers and constituents rallied against<lb/>
the arbitrary slashes, especially in menial<lb/>
health and higher education, the governor<lb/>
backed off from his money-saving scheme<lb/>
and his first budget was 10 pet cent higher<lb/>
than the previous year's.<lb/>
During recent stumping in a Polish<lb/>
neighborhood of Milwaukee, Reagan<lb/>
stressed his record as governor and said his<lb/>
economic proposal would work "because<lb/>
it did" in California.<lb/>
He cited a freeze on government hiring<lb/>
which he promises will be his first act as<lb/>
president and formation oi task forces to<lb/>
"go in and look at government agencies<lb/>
and come back and tell us where the ex<lb/>
travagance and the waste is and how w?<lb/>
can cut it down<lb/>
He said his policies restored C alifornia's<lb/>
credit rating, eliminated the "deficit posi-<lb/>
tion allowed the government toretun<lb/>
billion to taxpayers and cut the a -<lb/>
nual increase in spending in half.<lb/>
He did not mention that he also in<lb/>
two ol the largest tax increases in .<lb/>
ma history.<lb/>
But while Reagan does promise<lb/>
balanced budget, reduced taxes and an in-<lb/>
crease in military spending, the<lb/>
nomination candidate has adopted a n<lb/>
restrained tone in his economic promises.<lb/>
During campaigning tor the primaries.<lb/>
Reagan sold the Kemp-Roth three-yeai ;<lb/>
percent tax cut bill as an economy<lb/>
stimulant that would pa for itsell in add<lb/>
ed government revenues.<lb/>
Now. he warns that turning the economy<lb/>
around is nor easy and "will take time<lb/>
ErTHHvTHfc BOMBER'S MORE NHMH THAN THOUGHT OK WE'VE KEN SCREWED<lb/>
To The Right<lb/>
Carter Blunders This Week, Reagan Offers Advice<lb/>
By STAN RIDGLEY<lb/>
On his way in the back door of a<lb/>
Corpus Christi high school gym-<lb/>
nasium to speak to a group of Tex-<lb/>
ans Monday. Jimmy Carter slipped<lb/>
on a grassy bank and pitched for-<lb/>
ward.<lb/>
A secret service agent quickly<lb/>
pulled the failed president to his<lb/>
feet, but the stumble outside the lit-<lb/>
tle gym portended ill for the Carter<lb/>
Campaign. Indeed, it set off a series<lb/>
of serious tactical blunders that has<lb/>
put the Democrats on the defensive<lb/>
from which Carter will be hard-<lb/>
pressed to recover.<lb/>
At the same time, his opponent<lb/>
Ronald Reagan has spent a relative-<lb/>
ly trouble-free week, meeting with<lb/>
Republican congressional leaders in<lb/>
Washington in a show of party uni-<lb/>
jy, and moving in to Texas on a suc-<lb/>
cessful campaign swing. The con-<lb/>
trast with Carter's poor showing<lb/>
this week is a comment on how fast<lb/>
the political tide can turn.<lb/>
Carter's trouble began Monday in<lb/>
the sweltering high school gym when<lb/>
he chastised Reagan for his in-<lb/>
discreet remarks made two weeks<lb/>
ago: "You've probably noticed that<lb/>
the campaign staff of my<lb/>
Republican opponent has put him<lb/>
under wraps said Carter,<lb/>
because when he's spoken on his<lb/>
own the last few days he's gotten<lb/>
himself into trouble<lb/>
Fine. We've all heard this from<lb/>
Carter before and recognize it as a<lb/>
fundamental of his campaign: make<lb/>
Reagan the issue and emphasize the<lb/>
irresponsible nature of his offhand<lb/>
remarks. But Carter wasn't<lb/>
satisfied, and he continued: "Well,<lb/>
the point is, when you're in the<lb/>
White House, in the Oval Office as<lb/>
president, that's where the most dif-<lb/>
ficult questions come  and you've<lb/>
got to be able to respond accurately<lb/>
in a way that doesn't embarrass you<lb/>
personally and does not embarrass<lb/>
our nation<lb/>
Carter then proceeded to embar-<lb/>
rass himself ? not once, but twice.<lb/>
At that same meeting in Corpus<lb/>
Christi, Carter played heavily on a<lb/>
statement by Iran's Ayatollah<lb/>
Ruhollah Khomeini concerning the<lb/>
fate of 52 American hostages, say-<lb/>
ing:  (They) are making<lb/>
statements that might very well lead<lb/>
to resolution of this problem in the<lb/>
future<lb/>
Carter was chagrined to find that<lb/>
his Secretary of State, Edmund S.<lb/>
Muskie, was simultaneously con-<lb/>
tradicting him in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
So the next day, Tuesday, Carter<lb/>
found himself 'clarifying' his earlier<lb/>
remarks, saying that there is 'no<lb/>
prospect at this time" for a resolu-<lb/>
tion of the hostage stalemate.<lb/>
Carter's other mistake was<lb/>
perhaps more serious because it<lb/>
charged Reagan with stirring up<lb/>
racial hatred in this country. He<lb/>
made his remarks in Atlanta from<lb/>
the pulpit of Ebenezer Baptist<lb/>
Church, saying: "You've seen in<lb/>
this campaign the stirrings of hate<lb/>
and the rebirth of code words like<lb/>
'states rights' in a speech in<lb/>
Mississippi and a campaign<lb/>
reference to the Ku Klux Klan in<lb/>
relation to the South. Hatred has no<lb/>
place in this country. Racism has no<lb/>
place in this country<lb/>
Predictably, Carter's remarks<lb/>
drew strong approval from the<lb/>
predominatly black audience ? as<lb/>
would any ipse dixit.<lb/>
An ip.se dixit is any arbitrary<lb/>
statement thai elicits positive<lb/>
response, such as "We all love our<lb/>
mothers" or "We need jobs tor<lb/>
everyone All of us ? including<lb/>
Reagan ? agree that hatred and<lb/>
racism have no place in this country.<lb/>
But Carter's unfortunate word<lb/>
order suggested that Reagan<lb/>
represents hatred and racism in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Now, it must be remembered that<lb/>
Carter is counting on the black vote<lb/>
in the south and that he might be a<lb/>
bit overealous in his effort to win<lb/>
the support of black leaders. In that<lb/>
effort, however, Carter has exposed<lb/>
himself as being susceptible to the<lb/>
same kind of verbal slips of which<lb/>
he accuses Reagan. And that makes<lb/>
Carter's attacks on Reagan ring<lb/>
hollow.<lb/>
The troubles that Carter has had<lb/>
this week come on the heels ol his<lb/>
refusal to appear with the two other<lb/>
major candidates in an televised<lb/>
debate, but his position is bv no<lb/>
means unsalvageablc. In fact, he<lb/>
could take a bit of advice from<lb/>
Ronald Reagan:  whether we're<lb/>
on the opposite sides of the fence or<lb/>
not, we ought to be trying to pull the<lb/>
country together and not tear it<lb/>
apart<lb/>
Are you listening Jimmy9<lb/>
Stan Ridgley is a Political Science<lb/>
major with a degree in journalism<lb/>
from the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
1 ?'?-<lb/>
.1 ran it<lb/>
stvlf.<lb/>
Ki<lb/>
Is<lb/>
?<lb/>
s<lb/>
B!<lb/>
1 20 v<lb/>
are e<lb/>
akm<lb/>
decei<lb/>
bulk<lb/>
res i<lb/>
soverc<lb/>
H<lb/>
cause<lb/>
1861<lb/>
It<lb/>
the<lb/>
blatat<lb/>
const<lb/>
Soutl<lb/>
federi<lb/>
powel<lb/>
plied<lb/>
tion<lb/>
sategl<lb/>
msnol<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0005"/><lb/>
! Ml EAST( XKOi IM <lb/>
Fe<lb/>
si I' 11 MH1 k Ik. 1980<lb/>
Page<lb/>
w<lb/>
I ice<lb/>
Costa Rica<lb/>
ECU Offers Courses In<lb/>
Central American Paradise<lb/>
"You cannot imagine what it's like to be dropped off at a strange home, in a<lb/>
strange country, where nobody speaks English, It was the most difficult yet ex-<lb/>
citing experience of my life. M<lb/>
Jeanie Vasteek yets a bucket bath. Peurto dargas<lb/>
Style, from l.otta. a park service ranger in Costa<lb/>
Rica. I otta has studied at I-( hapel Hill and has<lb/>
been on two voyages with Jacques Cousteau.<lb/>
Killing As Organized Sport<lb/>
Is Campus Fellowship Fantasy<lb/>
Continued from page I<lb/>
Game rules vary from campus to<lb/>
Generally, players arc<lb/>
? it list and are required to<lb/>
a minimum number of peo-<lb/>
on the list weekly to -tav in the<lb/>
game. As they hunt, they arc being<lb/>
hunted b others, but the players<lb/>
n'l know who is out to get them.<lb/>
1 hey can be ?'killed" in the shower,<lb/>
by best friends. Ml is fair, though<lb/>
classrooms and crowds are con-<lb/>
sidered ofl limits, the game con-<lb/>
tinues until there is but one sur-<lb/>
vive<lb/>
Harold Clark, who takes his<lb/>
he chiel on "G<lb/>
Smart organized a giant KAOS<lb/>
i "summer project" at the<lb/>
,ersit oi Texas last June. He<lb/>
ad in the local paper<lb/>
25 players. He got 65.<lb/>
The survivor eventually collected<lb/>
u1 SI65 for his skill as tracking<lb/>
id assassinating the other 64 con-<lb/>
testants over almost three months ot<lb/>
saky business.<lb/>
Dungeons &amp;. Dragons is the better<lb/>
own and more complex role-<lb/>
laying game, but can be just as<lb/>
consuming as KAOS. There are<lb/>
ties oi students flunking out o<lb/>
hool because of D &amp; D.<lb/>
"It's fun explains ill Ni<lb/>
a vice president with Tactical<lb/>
die- Rules, a game production<lb/>
company in Geneva, Wisconsin.<lb/>
And profitable. Niebling says<lb/>
 the D &amp;. D equipment his<lb/>
duces and markets have<lb/>
ubled annually each year since<lb/>
1A, and have quadrupled in the<lb/>
: 12 months.<lb/>
"You see the field growing faster<lb/>
and taster understated Jamey<lb/>
Adams, an editor at Games<lb/>
Magazine. "There are an number<lb/>
ol imitators coming out with othei<lb/>
role-playing games involving<lb/>
gangsters, King Arthur, science fie<lb/>
tion<lb/>
1) &amp; D, ol course, involves an ar-<lb/>
ray ol unearthly characters, derived<lb/>
from Tolkein books about Middle<lb/>
Earth. Each player assumes the<lb/>
identity ol one o the characters,<lb/>
and takes direction from the<lb/>
Dungeon Master, a combination o<lb/>
a r e 1 e r e e a n d spontaneous<lb/>
playwright. He creates fanciful,<lb/>
demanding situations to which the<lb/>
characters must respond.<lb/>
He may sav. "You are crossing a<lb/>
. . ovei the Valley of the Ser-<lb/>
pants, when it suddenly collapses,<lb/>
hurling you into a sea of reptilian<lb/>
monsters<lb/>
The reason for the campus in-<lb/>
terest in role-playing fantasies is. ac<lb/>
cording to University oi Minnesota<lb/>
sociologist Gary Alan Fine, is a<lb/>
desire "to move away from passive<lb/>
intellectual acti ities,<lb/>
sion<lb/>
notabh telev<lb/>
fine spent 18 months researching<lb/>
D&amp;D and foui othei fantasy games,<lb/>
and found the appeal in the "science<lb/>
fiction sub-culture" was the oppoi<lb/>
tunity to live out fantasies they<lb/>
would ordinarily experience passive-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
I he people who participate in the<lb/>
game he discovered, "tend not to<lb/>
be the sorority oi fraternity types.<lb/>
I hese are intense people<lb/>
Nutrition<lb/>
B KK HAKIH.RF.FN<lb/>
(mi. ral Mansgri<lb/>
Editor's Note: This article is reprinted from the Sept.<lb/>
4, 1979, edition oi The East Carolinian. The costs and<lb/>
courses ottered have been updated for the Spring 1981<lb/>
( osta Rica Program.<lb/>
 I slipped the tape box onto the shelf, my ears were<lb/>
still ashmg from wearing those cumbersome head<lb/>
phones foi three houi s.<lb/>
I was leaving the language lab when I saw a notice,<lb/>
"ECl c osta Rica Program on the bulletin board. It<lb/>
said to see Dr. Robert t ramer in the Brewstei Building,<lb/>
room A 222, so I decided to drop by on ins way to<lb/>
Spanish class and check u out. ! hat mined out to be the<lb/>
best notice 1 evei read<lb/>
Dr. c ramei is m interesting and friendly man with a<lb/>
lot oi t list hand knowledge ol 1 at in merica. He and<lb/>
his wife have traveled extensively and have been the<lb/>
directors oi the C osta Rica Program for eight years. Be<lb/>
ing an avid photographer, "Doc" showed me some<lb/>
beautiful slides oi c osta Rica, and immediately I knew<lb/>
that I had to visit this tropical wonderland<lb/>
But what about the cost ol this exotic excursion? And<lb/>
what kinds oi classes were offered? And ! don't even<lb/>
speak Spanish!<lb/>
He explained that the cost ol the trip was the same as<lb/>
one semester at II in Greenville, plus a program fee<lb/>
o $475, a round-trip plane ticket from Miami to San<lb/>
lose (S2S2. Pan Am), necessary visas and spending<lb/>
money I ach oi the 15 students in the program would<lb/>
live with aosta Kuan family in Heredia, 11 kilometers<lb/>
north oi San Jose, al a cost ol $125 month, which in<lb/>
chide- loom and board, and laundry usually done once<lb/>
a day<lb/>
I wish 1 could live that cheaply in Greenville!<lb/>
We would study at I niversidad Nacional in Heredia.<lb/>
rhe courses offered this yeai include: "ropical Biology<lb/>
(3 Ins.), Geography oi Middle America (2 hrs.), Beginn<lb/>
ing and Advanced Spanish Conversation (3 hrs.)<lb/>
Spanish C uliure (2 his). Field Studie<lb/>
this one!), Anthropology (3 hrs.), and Intt<lb/>
Relations ol (. entral America (3 his<lb/>
pei classmen are also encouraged to .<lb/>
study in then respective fields<lb/>
Don't tret ? all classes are taught in !<lb/>
Spanish, ol course).<lb/>
According to Dr.ramer, the 15 slots<lb/>
trip are "tilling up last And this yeai like thi<lb/>
years, more girls than boys have signed up " In<lb/>
there weie 11 girls and 4 boys, and in 1979 I<lb/>
5 boys.<lb/>
rhis year the program begins Ian iv<lb/>
16. I he program includes 21 held trip<lb/>
eight one-day, and eight half-day I he<lb/>
the field Studies course, and before I lei<lb/>
had seen more oi the country than any<lb/>
(my C osta Rican family, that is)<lb/>
In this small country located betwe<lb/>
Panama, the climate varies from eo<lb/>
regions to tropical rain forests to a<lb/>
beautiful beaches And we saw it all.<lb/>
But the biggesi thrill was leaving the I i<lb/>
almost iour months You cannot i <lb/>
it like to be diopped oi I at a stranj<lb/>
country, where nobody -peak- I nglish i<lb/>
difficult yet exciting experience ol my lib<lb/>
all ot us a new perspective on the good ol' I<lb/>
I he only ieal problem that any ol .<lb/>
"culture shock but theramers were al<lb/>
help us solve whatever p r o b 1<lb/>
I he WH1 program will be the last foi Di <lb/>
Dr. John Bort oi Intercoastal Marine R<lb/>
the assistant director this spring and will d<lb/>
director of the program when C ramei It i In I<lb/>
future, the directors will be from vari<lb/>
and will change every few ear accordii<lb/>
"We want to keep it going saidra<lb/>
good program " Very few oi the students<lb/>
beer, to (. o-ta Rica would argue with thai<lb/>
Defeating Diet Dilemnas<lb/>
t ;<lb/>
tm<lb/>
By LOU ANNE FORBES<lb/>
Sl?fl N nln<lb/>
Diets are like opinions<lb/>
everybody has one Fortunately, all<lb/>
diets hae one basic thmg in com-<lb/>
mon: putting less food m youi<lb/>
mouth than your stomach want- to<lb/>
hold. Or. to put it another way,<lb/>
eating food- lower in calories to<lb/>
satisfy your hunger, lor example,<lb/>
just one quartet-pounder with<lb/>
cheese would have the same amount<lb/>
of calories as a huge salad, especial-<lb/>
ly it it had a low .alone dressing.<lb/>
Cutting back on calories is a good<lb/>
thing for you. but be careful not to<lb/>
forget about good nutrition. Even<lb/>
on a diet, you must take in enough<lb/>
vitamins, minerals, tats, car-<lb/>
bohydrates and protein to keep your<lb/>
bodv functioning properly Your<lb/>
new diet won't help you much if it<lb/>
gives you anemia<lb/>
The be-t way to lose weight is to<lb/>
combine proper exercise with a<lb/>
reduction in calorie intake. Exercise<lb/>
can make you look and feel better.<lb/>
help work ofl frustration, and. oc-<lb/>
casionally, let you eat that tempting<lb/>
ice cream cone or drink a cold bottle<lb/>
ol beet without bothering your con-<lb/>
science. The type ol exercise really<lb/>
doesn't matter, as long as you co<lb/>
something.<lb/>
Trying to maintain a well-<lb/>
balanced diet is harder here at<lb/>
school than back home at Mom's<lb/>
dinner table, but it is possible, with<lb/>
a little effort.<lb/>
A health book can help you find<lb/>
your specific nutrient needs. Once<lb/>
you've determined those need<lb/>
stick to the diet chart, lor instance.<lb/>
it you are allowed two piece- ot<lb/>
bread a day, and you eat a piece of<lb/>
toast for breaktast. then eat only the<lb/>
bottom half of the bun on your<lb/>
roast beet sandwich at lunch.<lb/>
Beware of vending machines.<lb/>
When you run out of groceries, the<lb/>
Student Center is closed, and you<lb/>
can't attord to go out, it's a great<lb/>
temptation to hit the vending<lb/>
machines. I his is often the downfall<lb/>
o your dtet. Because oi the lack ot<lb/>
low-calorie snacks, one tends to get<lb/>
potato chips and candy bars. Skim<lb/>
milk, tomato juice, dried fruits,<lb/>
raisins, or yogurt bars would be tas-<lb/>
ty substitutes, would ounce for<lb/>
ounce be low in calories, and would<lb/>
provide better nutrition.<lb/>
Be careful about fast-food places,<lb/>
too. It's helpful to keep one of those<lb/>
little books that lists the calorie con-<lb/>
tents oi different foods <lb/>
ing to be eating out<lb/>
To start your diet, d<lb/>
number of calories von n i<lb/>
sume every day. using a<lb/>
chart from a health I<lb/>
the amount o activity<lb/>
the amount o calories ?<lb/>
Plan to eat, say, five h<lb/>
calories a day less than ?<lb/>
This will enable you I<lb/>
two pounds a week. Mosl<lb/>
some weeks, you will 1(<lb/>
(hooray!) and and some w?<lb/>
will not lose a pound (oops!<lb/>
most important thing<lb/>
is DON! C.I I DISCOl R<lb/>
If you go on an eating bit<lb/>
make a resolution to d<lb/>
mediately, and stick<lb/>
gain doesn't have to be pern<lb/>
if vou don't want it to bt<lb/>
A Big<lb/>
War<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Contrary to the popular belie!<lb/>
that slavery was the root and cause<lb/>
the civil war, most educated<lb/>
Americans today, from both the<lb/>
uth and the North, realize that<lb/>
this bloody conflict was over Jeffei<lb/>
sonian principles of government.<lb/>
We, as a nation, are beginning to see<lb/>
that we have come lull circle in the<lb/>
120 years since the civil war began<lb/>
Today we are in the midst of a<lb/>
great national debate in which we<lb/>
are engaged in a battle and cause<lb/>
akin to a holy war, to return to a<lb/>
decentralized government where the<lb/>
bulk of government powers are<lb/>
reserved for the individual and<lb/>
sovereign states.<lb/>
It was this same crusade and<lb/>
cause that led us into the civil war in<lb/>
1861.<lb/>
It was after the War ot 1812 that<lb/>
the federal government became<lb/>
blatantly nationalistic and broadly<lb/>
constructionist in its policies.<lb/>
Southern political leaders, fearing a<lb/>
federal government with expanding<lb/>
powers under the doctrines of im-<lb/>
plied powers and broad construc-<lb/>
tion of the Constitution, sought to<lb/>
safeguard the interests of the<lb/>
minoritv South by championing<lb/>
state<lb/>
government<lb/>
rights and local self-<lb/>
The South wanted a<lb/>
weak central government in<lb/>
Washington, with all powers not<lb/>
specifically delegated to the federal<lb/>
government being reserved for the<lb/>
individual states, as the United<lb/>
States Constitution had provided<lb/>
tor. More than anything, they<lb/>
wanted strict construction of the<lb/>
Constitution.<lb/>
After the Missouri Compromise<lb/>
ot 1820. the South depended upon<lb/>
its equal voting power in the Senate<lb/>
to block any dangerous federal<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
An impartial study of the early<lb/>
history of the American Republic<lb/>
from the period when a band of<lb/>
patriots, following the wave of<lb/>
Washington's sword, transferred<lb/>
power from a king to the people,<lb/>
will demonstrate that when Colonies<lb/>
were transformed into States, the<lb/>
latter delegated, in a written Con-<lb/>
stitution, the powers to be conferred<lb/>
on the federal government. But all<lb/>
powers not so delegated were reserv-<lb/>
ed to the states themselves because<lb/>
thev had never parted from them.<lb/>
Hence, sovereign power belonged to<lb/>
a State, while only derivative, and<lb/>
not primitive, power was possessed<lb/>
by the federal government.<lb/>
The slate did not confer upon the<lb/>
federal government, that they were<lb/>
then forming, a right to coerce one<lb/>
of their number for any purpose;<lb/>
for it is not natural that the creator<lb/>
should create either executive,<lb/>
judicial or legislative authority<lb/>
anywhere in which it would be po-<lb/>
tent enough to destroy or diminish<lb/>
the power it had reserved for us own<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
The Southern people were<lb/>
educated in the belief that the<lb/>
allegiance of the citizen was due first<lb/>
to his state, and that in any conflict<lb/>
between his native state and the<lb/>
federal government, his place was<lb/>
with his state ? at her feet he<lb/>
should kneel and at her foe his gun<lb/>
should be pointed. This is the only<lb/>
explanation of the great and en-<lb/>
thusiastic responce by the masses of<lb/>
our Southern ancestors to the call<lb/>
for arms to defend their beloved<lb/>
land and the great social order<lb/>
which existed there.<lb/>
It has been said that man is under<lb/>
no circumstances so independent as<lb/>
he is when the next step is for life or<lb/>
death. The men who were to be<lb/>
enrolled as the soldiers of a new<lb/>
C onfederacy of states, to battle for<lb/>
its existence, knew they were taking<lb/>
a step which might bring to them a<lb/>
hostile bullet and a soldier's grave.<lb/>
The movement to change the map<lb/>
of North America and make two<lb/>
republics grow where only one grew<lb/>
before, was enthusiastically received<lb/>
by the great body of the Southern<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The Honorable Jefferson Davis<lb/>
said in his inaugural address on the<lb/>
steps of the state capitol at Mon-<lb/>
tgomery, Alabama that<lb/>
"government rests upon the consent<lb/>
of the governed, and  it is the<lb/>
right of the people to alter or<lb/>
abolish a government whenever it<lb/>
becomes destructive of the ends for<lb/>
which it was established When the<lb/>
Southern states entered into the<lb/>
Union of the United States in 1789,<lb/>
it was with the undeniable recogni-<lb/>
tion of the power of the people to<lb/>
resume their authority delegated to<lb/>
that government whenever, in their<lb/>
opinion, its f unct i o n<lb/>
perverted and it ends del<lb/>
The declared purpose<lb/>
union, from which the<lb/>
withdrew, were to estab<lb/>
insure domestic tranquility,<lb/>
vide for the common def<lb/>
promote the general welfare,<lb/>
secure the blessing- oi<lb/>
ourselves and our prosperity<lb/>
It was the judgement<lb/>
sovereign states that compi sed the<lb/>
Confederacy that the federal<lb/>
government had been ed<lb/>
from the purpose- tor whic' it<lb/>
ordained, and had ceased to answer<lb/>
the ends for which it was establish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The Southern legislatures<lb/>
declared in their secession vote- that<lb/>
as far as they were concerned, the<lb/>
government created by the constitu-<lb/>
tion should cease to exist when it<lb/>
drifted beyond its constitutional<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
In taking this action, our<lb/>
ancestors merely asserted a right in<lb/>
which the Declaration of In-<lb/>
dependence of 1776 defined in-<lb/>
alienable.<lb/>
? W I<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0006"/><lb/>
6 rHE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 18,191<lb/>
bl Vtollp A)ori<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
Campus Events:<lb/>
Wednesday 17<lb/>
? 4:00 P.M. Frisbec golf S. Ficklen I.M.<lb/>
field<lb/>
? 4:(M) P.M. Home economics intercouncil<lb/>
picnic<lb/>
? 7:00 P.M. Womens volleyball: N.C.<lb/>
Slate Raleigh N.C.<lb/>
Thursday 18<lb/>
? 3:30 P.M. Soccer Catawba College<lb/>
Home<lb/>
? 8:00 P.M. Artists Series: EMPIRE<lb/>
BR sS QUINTET Hendnx Theatre.<lb/>
rickets: Students $2.00, Public $5.00.<lb/>
? 8:00 P.M. ECU Poetr Forum meeting in<lb/>
204 Austin.<lb/>
Friday 19<lb/>
? Sororit) Rush ends - Preferential Night.<lb/>
? 12:00 Noon - 3:00 P.M. Family Fun l)a.<lb/>
? 5:00, 7:00&amp; 9:00 P.M. movie "10" Hen-<lb/>
dnx Theatre.<lb/>
Saturday 20<lb/>
? 2:00 P.M. Womens volleyball: Ap-<lb/>
palaichain State - Boone N.C.<lb/>
? 5:00, 7:00&amp;9:00 P.M. movie "10" Hen-<lb/>
dnx Theatre.<lb/>
? 7:30 P.M. Football: Florida State.<lb/>
Tallahasee.<lb/>
Sunda 21<lb/>
? v - ? El College I lot<lb/>
? s? p i Faculty Recital: Otto Henry,<lb/>
 i t lei ' ? R ? I Hall.<lb/>
i ? ion. 21st - 29th<lb/>
Metal smithing and jewelry making in the<lb/>
Southeastern United States. Cray Art<lb/>
; asl Carolina Museum o Art. Sun-<lb/>
days 1 i) - 4:00 P.M weekdays 10:00 - 5:00<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
Monday 22<lb/>
? 3:30 Soccer Belmont Abbey College at<lb/>
Belmont N.C.<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Buccaneer:<lb/>
"The Hunter" staring Steve McQueen.<lb/>
Shows at 1:00, 3:10 &amp; 7:10;<lb/>
"Final Countdown" staring Kirk Douglas,<lb/>
Martin Sheen &amp; Katherine Ross. Shows at<lb/>
1:15, 3:15, 5:15 7:15 &amp; 9:15;<lb/>
"1 he People Who Own the Dark" Shows at<lb/>
1:00. 3:00, 5:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00.<lb/>
Pitt Plaza:<lb/>
"The Little Dragons" Shows at 3:30, 5:20.<lb/>
7:10 &amp; 9:00;<lb/>
"Smokey and the Bandit Two" staring Burt<lb/>
Reynolds, Jackie Gleason, Jerry Reed, Dom<lb/>
DeLuise and Sally Field. Shows at 3:00,<lb/>
5:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00;<lb/>
"XANADU" staring Olivia Newton-John.<lb/>
Shows at 3:30, 5:20. 7:00 &amp; 9:00.<lb/>
Park Theatre (Downtown)<lb/>
"DYNAMO" Shows at 7:10 cV 9:00 MI.<lb/>
3:30, 5:20 7:10 &amp; 9:00 Saturday &amp; Sunday.<lb/>
Senior Show<lb/>
Announced<lb/>
i iai 1 reeman oi<lb/>
(. rouse. N.C, a senior<lb/>
student m the 1I<lb/>
School of Art. is now<lb/>
having a show ol art<lb/>
works oi various<lb/>
media, in the Kate<lb/>
1 ewis Gallery in the<lb/>
Whichard Building.<lb/>
The show will continue<lb/>
through Sept. 26<lb/>
Freeman's exhibition<lb/>
includes intaglio.<lb/>
lithograph and<lb/>
c o 1 oi and a rylic pain<lb/>
tines and di twines in<lb/>
B.S. degree in art<lb/>
educ it ion with a minor<lb/>
in pi i n t ma k i n g ,<lb/>
Freeman plans to enter<lb/>
the Ml-A Program in<lb/>
printmaking at ECU,<lb/>
and later plans to<lb/>
teach, on either the col-<lb/>
lege or high school<lb/>
level. He is a member<lb/>
o the ECU Print<lb/>
Group, the North<lb/>
Carolina Watercolor<lb/>
Society, and the<lb/>
Southeastern Center<lb/>
foi Contemporary Art.<lb/>
He is the son ol Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Bill i iceman<lb/>
o Crouse, N.C.<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Lovers<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 Juffet - Delicious<lb/>
Fried Shrimp, Golden Brown Oysters. Fish.<lb/>
Deviled Crab, Shrimp Creole. Fried Chicken.<lb/>
Clam Chowder, Slaw, Hush Puppies<lb/>
S-WD'SSHOK<lb/>
RbPAIR<lb/>
Krawi. vr.<lb/>
c7SJS-1 x<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C ?<lb/>
No 1<lb/>
NigMclub<lb/>
THUR. IN<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
8:00PM<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
FRl. SAT. SUN.<lb/>
TAINT<lb/>
FRl 3:30-7:00<lb/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
DELIGHT<lb/>
OLDE TIME SQUARE<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
HOMETOWN BOYS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
GREENGRASSCLOGGERS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
CLOGGING CONTEST<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 Mkt<lb/>
Party Room Available We'll<lb/>
Furnish the Cake lor Birth-<lb/>
day. Annlveraarlea, etc for<lb/>
Parties of 8 or more. Call for<lb/>
Reservation 7 56 2011<lb/>
Hours.<lb/>
Lunch<lb/>
Sunday-Friday<lb/>
11:30 A.M. 2.00P.M.<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
5:00 P.M9:30 P.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
5:00 P.M -10.30 P.M.<lb/>
2311 S. Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
Back To School<lb/>
Special<lb/>
KOte, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men A women<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. Fot<lb/>
20 Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru SEPT. 20, 1980<lb/>
Downtown Mali<lb/>
Greenrilie<lb/>
?ppoi inentaonly<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
Cut This Coupon<lb/>
71<lb/>
ui<lb/>
tl<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
h?<lb/>
'I<lb/>
si<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J.D. Dawson<lb/>
2818 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Come by and pick up<lb/>
your<lb/>
Complimentary Catalog<lb/>
Exceptional<lb/>
Values<lb/>
Great<lb/>
Gifts<lb/>
V<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
Get ready tor<lb/>
fall with an exciting new Design Cut and<lb/>
take advantage of fantastic savings.<lb/>
Thru Sept. 30<lb/>
00 OFF all Curly Perms or Body Waves<lb/>
ree Shampoo Blowdry,or Shampoo Set<lb/>
with All Haircuts.<lb/>
Call today for appointment or consultation<lb/>
7523419<lb/>
2800 E 10th St.<lb/>
What It Is Angel Flight is an honorary, professional,<lb/>
service organization with the objectives of becoming in-<lb/>
volved in the community. We help sponcor the Red<lb/>
Cross Blood Drive, have a Halloween Carnival for Boys<lb/>
Homes, and we also sponsor families during holidays.<lb/>
Fun Activities we have Reg parties, dances, baPe<lb/>
sales, cook outs, and a military ball. Our biggest joy is<lb/>
being together. There is no Military Obligation<lb/>
Dates To RememberSeptember<lb/>
23(Tuesday); submarine party<lb/>
24(Wednesday); a keg party<lb/>
25(Thursdayk a popcorn party<lb/>
Become an Angel<lb/>
Empire Brass<lb/>
Quintet<lb/>
HENDREX THEATRE ? EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Thursday, September 18, 1980<lb/>
Admission: E.C.U. Students ? $2.00; Public $5.00<lb/>
All Tickets at the Door $5.00<lb/>
Tickets Available at Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenball Student Center<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Artists Series Committee<lb/>
McMillian's Cafeteria<lb/>
Under New Management<lb/>
Open: Mon-Sat<lb/>
A<lb/>
C<lb/>
0<lb/>
u<lb/>
p<lb/>
0<lb/>
n<lb/>
Cut This Coupon<lb/>
"<lb/>
?M;N!? Call us for ECU<lb/>
31P Football Picnics<lb/>
Great Chicken - Best Prices<lb/>
Dine In Take Out<lb/>
or DRIVE THRU<lb/>
Call In Orders<lb/>
752-1211 2415 E 10th<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
-11:30-2:00<lb/>
-4:30-8:00<lb/>
-11:30-2:00<lb/>
Serving<lb/>
8<lb/>
15<lb/>
18<lb/>
8<lb/>
5<lb/>
Different Meats<lb/>
Different Vegetables<lb/>
Different Salads<lb/>
Different Deserts<lb/>
Different Breads<lb/>
Located in the Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Bring your card and get a free drink<lb/>
w.o1  ?'??r?ttrri<lb/>
WS?? ftTf f rr7i<lb/>
D;<lb/>
i<lb/>
ija'<lb/>
titilla<lb/>
Include<lb/>
deligl <lb/>
Dot' ?<lb/>
) rend I<lb/>
H "<lb/>
drama<lb/>
Strt<lb/>
hut .<lb/>
din,<lb/>
'All!<lb/>
the P i<lb/>
For<lb/>
Glir<lb/>
!<lb/>
'<lb/>
(<lb/>
 -<lb/>
en.<lb/>
??<lb/>
bu<lb/>
ep<lb/>
?<lb/>
Th<lb/>
H<lb/>
ttt<lb/>
'<lb/>
3<lb/>
I?k<lb/>
1<lb/>
All<lb/>
fo<lb/>
CIA!<lb/>
ATTI<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057285_0007"/><lb/>
I HI t S!AROI SI PI i 1HI K l.v 1980<lb/>
"ersity<lb/>
5 Qfl<lb/>
'H<lb/>
Dama Season Ticket Sales Begin<lb/>
Ike 1 asi ? arolina Playhouse an-<lb/>
y ires it's 1980 81 season ot plays<lb/>
will tickle youi fancy, tap yoin<lb/>
pes, tame youi wicked husband and<lb/>
tie your tortured soul<lb/>
I on the bill are the<lb/>
t httul I930's musical corned)<lb/>
Sea, Moliei e's mad. c ap<lb/>
e he Doctor in Spitt '<lb/>
David Rabe's powerful<lb/>
ol im paratroopers<lb/>
Getting Out, a hard-<lb/>
drama about a young<lb/>
light lot lite; and roun<lb/>
i out the season, the Playhouse<lb/>
Shakespeare's d namic<lb/>
u .aesai<lb/>
- will he a ven special yeai foi<lb/>
?oiive because, with one c<lb/>
each major production will<lb/>
be presented in a different facility<lb/>
on the ECU campus. Because ol the<lb/>
renovations now being made in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium, the<lb/>
Playhouse is moving it's plays this<lb/>
yeai to Fletcher Hall in the Musk<lb/>
Department and to Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center. The Playhouse hopes<lb/>
to move into the all new McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium nest season<lb/>
Dames at Sea the long-run, otl<lb/>
Broadway musical opens the season<lb/>
tor the Playhouse I his nostalgk<lb/>
look at the era of the Hollywood<lb/>
musical is tilled with tap dancing,<lb/>
singing and wall-to-wall laughter.<lb/>
I his fun-filled evening ol entertain<lb/>
ment is suitable tor everyone's<lb/>
tastes It will keep you smiling and<lb/>
humming all the wa home. A reci<lb/>
pient of the New York Outei irele<lb/>
Critics Award as best musical of the<lb/>
year, Dames at Sea will be presented<lb/>
in V.I. Fletcher Hall. Octobet 9-15<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Next, a special added attraction<lb/>
will be Moliei e's The Doctor In<lb/>
Sf)ite of Himself, It you would like<lb/>
to find out how a shrewish wile<lb/>
tames her husband, don't miss this<lb/>
zanny, farcical comedy. It will be<lb/>
presented as a lull dinnei theatre<lb/>
performance in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, October 30 through<lb/>
November 1, at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Streamers, the third production<lb/>
ottered, will feature an all male<lb/>
cast. It is a powerful drama named<lb/>
tor the Armv Paratroopers who<lb/>
stteak to their deaths trailing<lb/>
unopened parachutes. The Drama<lb/>
Department's Studio Theatre will be<lb/>
the site for this unsettling drama. It<lb/>
will run November 17-22 and 24-25<lb/>
at K:15 p.m.<lb/>
The major off-Broadway success<lb/>
Getting Out will be the next produc-<lb/>
tion. This moving and well written<lb/>
play probes deeply into the past and<lb/>
present of a young woman fighting<lb/>
for her life against incredible odds.<lb/>
I his hard-hitting drama is fast<lb/>
becoming a big hit across the coun<lb/>
try. It will run February 18-21 and<lb/>
February 23-28 in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
I he final ol the major produc-<lb/>
tions offered this season will be the<lb/>
powerful Shakespearean classic,<lb/>
Julius Caesar. This drama will be a<lb/>
political look at one of<lb/>
Shakespeare's most moving and<lb/>
powerful plays. It will be presented<lb/>
in Mendenhall's Hendrix Tin<lb/>
Foreign Newspapers Offer<lb/>
Glimpses Of Other Lands<lb/>
K l)A II) NORKIs<lb/>
always been fascinated bv newspapers<lb/>
es, and the further awa the place.<lb/>
. mating the newspaper. Mv personal<lb/>
action includes newspapers from New oik<lb/>
in Chinese and Hebrew, and a copv<lb/>
i iban Communist Part newspaper,<lb/>
? sent week after week to this office, (it is<lb/>
ta . thrown awa unopened week alter<lb/>
newspapers are nice conversation<lb/>
hut are difficult to read. A s II interesting,<lb/>
readable paper is I he limes, a<lb/>
i ondon newspapet which is available<lb/>
1 i I library. I he paper is fairh small, as<lb/>
? an overseas edition, (imagine the cost of<lb/>
 say, the Sundav edition ol I he New<lb/>
ew.s section is interesting, because ol the<lb/>
ml ol detailed foreign news, fhis is nature<lb/>
? ? paper, though. I he most fun parts<lb/>
. some ol the ones you might not think<lb/>
? rst, such, as the ads or the I section.<lb/>
 glimpse at the IV section ol the limes was<lb/>
to dispel am notion that I nglish televi-<lb/>
- all highh cultured and in good taste. Each<lb/>
e three big networks there has its share ol<lb/>
a- all ol us on this side ol the Atlantic i<lb/>
liai with Foi instance, B1K -2 offers Dallas<lb/>
c 5 on Mondays. It'sver) populai over there,<lb/>
itl not with the chap who writes the<lb/>
 v His little note read. "Yet another<lb/>
is seemingh endless series being<lb/>
s supposedly innovative channel<lb/>
annel also has Rhoda and 1 'he Dukes<lb/>
ms ol Britian have then own special<lb/>
erams I he Welsh branch ol BB<lb/>
otters such varying fare as Welsh-language news<lb/>
and I nghsh language High Chaparral. Happv<lb/>
Daw is ottered on the I Istei station.<lb/>
Another network, Thames Television, has such<lb/>
famihai shows as 1 ittle House on the Prarie nd<lb/>
Mork and Mind.<lb/>
Besides other merican shows, such as Fantasy<lb/>
Island, there are some British shows on, too,<lb/>
mosl ol which are nor well-known over here.<lb/>
I here are a few British game shows. I his con-<lb/>
jures up an intriguing image of an Oxford-<lb/>
accented Montv Hall type, saving things like.<lb/>
"Do you wan: to keep the tour thousand pounds<lb/>
you have just won, or do you want to exchange it<lb/>
foi what's behind Portal Number One?"<lb/>
Since the BBC is non-commercial, there are no<lb/>
ads to contend with during the programs, one<lb/>
trouble with this is that an hour-long American<lb/>
show without commercials is onl 25 minutes<lb/>
long. (Well, okay, Fifty or fifty-five minutes,<lb/>
maybe i So, main shows start at odd times like<lb/>
6:55 oi 7:05 oi 9:10. It sounds contusing, but 1<lb/>
suppose one get? used to it.<lb/>
I he advertisements arc interesting, too. Main<lb/>
companies like to make a point o publicising the<lb/>
faci that thev have done business with, the Royal<lb/>
1 amilv. ()ne wondei s how much a firm's business<lb/>
increases because ol being rhe Official Purveyoi<lb/>
ol Flooi axes to Hei Majesty.<lb/>
I he classified section has some surprises also.<lb/>
One ad read. "Rooms . vailable to let in 17th cen-<lb/>
tury priory, surrounded by fields in vale ol Berke-<lb/>
ly, Gloucestershire It sounds much more in-<lb/>
teresting than "One-bedroom apartment, two<lb/>
blocks from campus. . only, no pets<lb/>
Anot,her ad that caught my eye was in the help<lb/>
wanted section. It wanted volunteers foi an ex-<lb/>
? on e Roman r uins in i am<lb/>
bridgeshire. You know, it I didn't have that exam<lb/>
next week. . .<lb/>
MM<lb/>
April 7 at 8:15 p.m with a matinee<lb/>
performance April 8 at 1:00 p.m<lb/>
and April 9-11 at 8:15<lb/>
Edgai Loessin, chairman ol the<lb/>
1 astarolina Drama Department<lb/>
will direct Dames at Sea and Julius<lb/>
Caesar. Travis lock hart, member<lb/>
of the directing faculty of the 1 C L<lb/>
Drama Department will direct The<lb/>
Doctor In Spue of Himself. Cedric<lb/>
Winchell, also a member ol the<lb/>
directing faculty of the E I Drama<lb/>
Department will direct Streamers<lb/>
and Getting Out.<lb/>
Season tickets tor all tour produc-<lb/>
tions Dames at Sew. Streamers.<lb/>
Getting Out, and Juliusaesar - are<lb/>
now available at 110.00. These<lb/>
tickets can be purchased from 10-4<lb/>
Monday through Friday in the<lb/>
Playhouse Box Otl ice or by sailing<lb/>
757-6390. The box otl ice is located<lb/>
in room 108 ol the Drama Depart<lb/>
ment on the E I campus.<lb/>
Tickets for the special dim<lb/>
theatre production of The Doctor In<lb/>
Spite oj Himself will be $9.00 foi<lb/>
the general public, and $7.00 for<lb/>
ECU students. The perform;<lb/>
will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Oct<lb/>
30, 31 and November 1. The sp<lb/>
dessert performance will only b<lb/>
I CI students, faculty and si<lb/>
The price ol admission will I<lb/>
tor ECU students, and $4.50<lb/>
faculty and staff. The des err<lb/>
formance will begin at 7:15 p.m<lb/>
October 27, IX and 29.1<lb/>
can be purchased from 10 4 ii<lb/>
Mendenhall Student entei 1<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
i uttnm Crafting<lb/>
and Repair<lb/>
Original Handcrafted Jewelry<lb/>
in Silver and Gold<lb/>
120 E. 5 it.<lb/>
(.reenxiUe, .( . 27834<lb/>
Buying and Selling<lb/>
Gold and Silver and Coins<lb/>
7582127<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
llttlWIEKOP<lb/>
PftEONANCY<lb/>
$l76 00"alllnclvtiv?"<lb/>
pregnancy ttt, birtf con<lb/>
trol. ana problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counting For fvrtrter<lb/>
information call 132 0535<lb/>
(toll ' Irta number<lb/>
tOO 221 25?t) between 9<lb/>
A M 5 P M weekday<lb/>
ftaleiftt WeTtefi't<lb/>
Health Organita,ion<lb/>
? 17 Watt Morgan St.<lb/>
Ralelgtt. N C 27MJ<lb/>
Susan<lb/>
Miry Anne<lb/>
Carroll<lb/>
Ellen<lb/>
Lo -etta<lb/>
Pam<lb/>
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Lynn<lb/>
Denise<lb/>
We are the women who make the Fleming<lb/>
Center a special plaoe afflsrtng CrteiVCy.<lb/>
personal. ocrn.fV1ent.lal oare at a reasonable<lb/>
oost and at times oarrvsnlent to you.<lb/>
Saturday abortion hours<lb/>
Vsxyssxly<lb/>
Sradng birth, ooatrol boors<lb/>
Call 781-8680 In Ralel vxytima<lb/>
The Flaming Oentsr .T613 HaworUi Drive Ralal?i,NC 8760G<lb/>
J.D. DAWSON CO.<lb/>
2818 E.lOth St. Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
WE WANT YOUR GOLD RINGS,<lb/>
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FAMOUS LABELS FOR LESS<lb/>
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j&amp;mkWm&amp;ESM W&amp;&amp;H&amp;SR ?  - 5&amp;z<lb/>
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CLASS DOESN'T COST<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Dropper<lb/>
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r,y<lb/>
bfJ<lb/>
<lb/>
Brody's has complete outfits of af-<lb/>
fordable originals for women. Featured<lb/>
are Brody's mud mocs, $28.00; wide<lb/>
wale corduroy cheeno's, $21.00; oxford<lb/>
cloth shirts, $18.00 and women's<lb/>
Shetland wool sweaters, starting at<lb/>
$16.00.<lb/>
Where Our Prices Are<lb/>
As Popular As Our Styles<lb/>
F<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
REGISTER FOR<lb/>
FREE GIFTS<lb/>
VALUES OVER $500<lb/>
iffe Square<lb/>
10-9Mon-Fr. -10-6 Sat -756-4001<lb/>
Layaway<lb/>
p-a<lb/>
Enter Brodvs "W elcome BarkECl 'Con test!<lb/>
?Ml ou Need ToIs:<lb/>
1 )Bring youi ECUID and Acth it( ard Ueihei sirre<lb/>
2)Ask am salesperson tor an entry)lank.<lb/>
3)HII in entry Mank and return it UsalespersonB<lb/>
I his contest is onltor ECU Students.Underyr,iduateorsjraduale.<lb/>
No Purchase Necessar ? ou DoNot eidlo BePresenlToWin.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0008"/><lb/>
I HI I SI (. K( 'I IM VN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates Take<lb/>
With A-A Inman, Jones<lb/>
On Bench, Out For Year<lb/>
Bn M VK! I s( M) IK<lb/>
? i i<lb/>
<lb/>
.t!l team<lb/>
l ,i,i State<lb/>
?nally<lb/>
<lb/>
Inman and<lb/>
: Freddie lones<lb/>
1 <lb/>
knee in the fall.<lb/>
I he Hope Mills native was<lb/>
operated on at 1 p.m. yesterday<lb/>
(Wednesday) at I'm counts<lb/>
Memorial Hospital and will miss the<lb/>
entire season.<lb/>
1 he injury ends Inman's eol-<lb/>
legiete career, as he is ineligible tor<lb/>
tor consideration as a hardship case<lb/>
suffered because he is already in his fifth yeai<lb/>
a ruesdav on tne squad alter being redshirted<lb/>
foi the in 1976. rhe NCAA allows a playei<lb/>
ind lones are lost onj five years to play foui seasons.<lb/>
?? 1 he loss ot V ayne is a great<lb/>
low not only to the club Emory<lb/>
?But said, "but to the athletic depart<lb/>
? a great ment here and to Wayne himself.<lb/>
Out thoughts, prayers and feelings<lb/>
go oui to him.<lb/>
I rida "The bad thing is that we can still<lb/>
go play Saturday. Wayne can't.<lb/>
1 hat's sad because 1 know how he<lb/>
was looking forward to playing a<lb/>
losses said<lb/>
1 moi at a<lb/>
is<lb/>
nou '<lb/>
the Hot<lb/>
. (. !<lb/>
:s teUei team like 1 lorida State<lb/>
. m<lb/>
Ten Seminoles<lb/>
Emory, Pirates Look<lb/>
To 'Do Something Big<lb/>
A<lb/>
O<lb/>
I I<lb/>
? <lb/>
IU II KI I n H M)I I K<lb/>
I<lb/>
"V<lb/>
i<lb/>
.<lb/>
Replacing Inman at right guard<lb/>
( i fo will be junior Bud Lacock, a<lb/>
the 245-pound Wilmington native,<lb/>
as the Backing up I acock will be freshman<lb/>
?,<lb/>
?HHmv<lb/>
i<lb/>
? try<lb/>
- are<lb/>
ates ha<lb/>
N :man Quick of 1 aunnburg.<lb/>
I he injury to Jones came in<lb/>
Saturday's 2 2 1 loss to<lb/>
Southwestern 1 ouisiana. He,<lb/>
suffered a knee injury. Jones will be<lb/>
.Kk redshirted, though, "and will have<lb/>
w<lb/>
ful<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
W ;<lb/>
years o eligibility remaining.<lb/>
1 mory said, will be sorely<lb/>
d in the not-so-deep Pirate<lb/>
sec ?<lb/>
?v, ou can't imagine how m .<lb/>
i reddie could mean to us at 1 lorida<lb/>
 he said. "He is one ol the<lb/>
? sopl on ensive backs in<lb/>
country<lb/>
Moving to Jones' weak side safety<lb/>
. i position will be junior Smokey Noi<lb/>
ris. Freshman C lint Harris, who<lb/>
i " Emory is very high on, will be the<lb/>
backup<lb/>
Startii e in Myers' noseguard<lb/>
? ? th? second week in a<lb/>
row will be fresl<lb/>
1 en ? 1 ong, a 2- poun<lb/>
ECU OB Carlton Nelson pilches, will lead<lb/>
Pirates against FSL Saturday<lb/>
 <lb/>
-<lb/>
:<lb/>
<lb/>
W<lb/>
?<lb/>
vs<lb/>
ithout help from Wayne Inman (1 I and Freddie Jones R)<lb/>
Wilh Two 1980 Shutouts<lb/>
FSU Strong Defensively<lb/>
the<lb/>
"s t ,<lb/>
: con-<lb/>
? ing si: the<lb/>
ighest<lb/>
?<lb/>
, - tenth in the<lb/>
oil and<lb/>
 Press, bu<lb/>
;on-<lb/>
I ? team in tfu<lb/>
outing?<lb/>
you<lb/>
 ; r. tisiana Si ate on<lb/>
?mg<lb/>
. ago goes<lb/>
ich Ed<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
- ei mic team<lb/>
in<lb/>
" 'The NFL 1 oda' show on CBS<lb/>
ranks i lorida State number one<lb/>
said Emory, "and that's the way we<lb/>
look at it. The Associated Press and<lb/>
I PI rank them nine and ten, but<lb/>
they are a much bettei team than<lb/>
at.<lb/>
"They are one oi the top defen<lb/>
sive football teams in the country li<lb/>
will be a great challenge to our of-<lb/>
fense<lb/>
rhe Seminoles defensive unit, led<lb/>
by senior All-American candidate<lb/>
Ron Simmons at noseguard, has<lb/>
a wed their opponents only 13<lb/>
firstdowns and just 295 total yardt<lb/>
through the first two outings.<lb/>
The Seminoles return eigl<lb/>
starters from the 1979 defensive unit<lb/>
which guided FSl to an undefeated<lb/>
record in regular season action.<lb/>
senior Mark Macek returns al<lb/>
defensive tackle, but he is pushed b<lb/>
rumor James Gilbert for the starting<lb/>
berth Senior end Arthur Scott is the<lb/>
only othei i<lb/>
the 1 5 ridary rei irns<lb/>
all si<lb/>
Hunter from the team which as<lb/>
nationally sixth (AIM ranked in-<lb/>
cluding a 24-7 loss at the hand<lb/>
Oklahoi the Orange Bowl<lb/>
Offensively, the Seminoles have<lb/>
also handled the opposing defense?<lb/>
in equally mastei ful tyh Sei<lb/>
tailback Sam Platt has rushed foi<lb/>
186 yards a lone 1 SI rusl<lb/>
touchdown, will junior I<lb/>
MikeWl<lb/>
104 yards.<lb/>
Pass . the or.<lb/>
Seminoles, I i beginn-<lb/>
ing oi the season, i<lb/>
coach Bobby Bow den and 1<lb/>
were uncei I jumoi<lb/>
Rick Stockstill.<lb/>
The loss ol the two top<lb/>
callers tor 1979 has thu<lb/>
to be no problem, as Stockstil<lb/>
( i a as<lb/>
.   . (979<lb/>
I, 245)<lb/>
step<lb/>
r h e P<lb/>
make theii marl<lb/>
D ? ?<lb/>
Stadium and con .<lb/>
li ?bb Bowde<lb/>
1 SI<lb/>
l u a v<lb/>
all<lb/>
gan Bow<lb/>
Pirate have an <lb/>
id the ?<lb/>
n Satui<lb/>
 , .<lb/>
easy I us. 1 ast C arolina's ;<lb/>
gram has bee on soli<lb/>
stt ! ?l p Itt<lb/>
Stalking His Prey<lb/>
Florida Male All-America noseguard Ron Simmons iOt and<lb/>
learn in ale await opposing offense<lb/>
WITN To Televise ECU-FSU<lb/>
FSl Coach Bobb Bowden<lb/>
Stockstill and Simmons<lb/>
PIRAll NOTES:<lb/>
It you can't make the trip to<lb/>
Tallahassee this Saturday foi ECU'S<lb/>
matchup with nationally-ranked<lb/>
Florida tate. have no tear.<lb/>
The game will be telecast live buck<lb/>
to Greenville and surrounding areas<lb/>
via W1TN-TV, Channel 7 in<lb/>
w ashington.<lb/>
Plav-bv-play and color commen-<lb/>
tary will be provided by Hub Burton<lb/>
and Mike Weaver, one-time Pirate<lb/>
starting quarterback<lb/>
The telecast will begin at 1 p.m.<lb/>
with the kickofl coming minutes<lb/>
later.<lb/>
Most everyone knows that<lb/>
Florida State is ranked among the<lb/>
nation's top ten teams. There's<lb/>
good reasons behind that too.<lb/>
The Seminoles have won V) o<lb/>
their last 18 games. The only loss<lb/>
came at the hands of super-power<lb/>
Oklahoma, 24-7, in the Orange<lb/>
Bowl back in January.<lb/>
<lb/>
Things went in different direc for 1 asiarolina and 1 ' rida State last week, rhe Seminoles cl bered Lou ? tl 52-0 while Pirates c nmiti trier tumbles and lost t v ithwesternCharles Chandler ?-<lb/>
I ouisiana 2-2 1. 1 .e:s thmg seemeo to go right ! SI in it- home openei 1 hings<lb/>
w ert ? <lb/>
start as an all-<lb/>
time attendance n arl - 623 was<lb/>
set.<lb/>
Three Sen u quai terl i ?<lb/>
tossed a total oi six touchdown<lb/>
passes in the win 1 out were<lb/>
credited! to starter Rick<lb/>
Stockstill, who replaces<lb/>
stai limmy Jordon.<lb/>
Defensively the Seminoles picked<lb/>
up then second consecutive shutout<lb/>
after downing 1 si 16 () one week<lb/>
earlier. Both came without the ser-<lb/>
vices of All-America nose guard<lb/>
Ron Simmons<lb/>
FSU held Louisville to mmu? five<lb/>
- rushii rid 56 <lb/>
ten .<lb/>
11 ' ? i e s nake it<lb/>
 in a row they will have<lb/>
breal HI - marl g in 100<lb/>
straight games.<lb/>
Speaking ol R the<lb/>
6-1, 225-pounder has some incn<lb/>
ble statistics Ml he does is bench<lb/>
press 52 pounds and run a 4 6<lb/>
 ard dasl i a bad athlete,<lb/>
huh'<lb/>
1 si coach Bobby Bow den has<lb/>
wat 0-11 ii 1975 H<lb/>
?<lb/>
the clul<lb/>
. -<lb/>
V. ith this ?<lb/>
Bow den is 36-12 il<lb/>
i schoHeart's U<lb/>
no progr at;<lb/>
Ik 1i<lb/>
Row ,?<lb/>
 ? ? ia<lb/>
Wh1 We<lb/>
()l NOTI Ol 1 kl 1 <lb/>
who was reportedly o<lb/>
al 1 SI betore Bowden bi<lb/>
down to stay<lb/>
<lb/>
Remembei I<lb/>
1 hough backs -<lb/>
credit tor the success '<lb/>
team, especially one that runs the<lb/>
wishbone like 1 c I , there is no<lb/>
more important person op, the sq<lb/>
possib ? <lb/>
awarded a pai<lb/>
Heat- i Delight.<lb/>
isk<lb/>
h s how :he w<lb/>
. iae.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057285_0009"/><lb/>
I HI t ASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
SfcPTLMBER 18, 1980<lb/>
les<lb/>
ook<lb/>
? 4<lb/>
is Big<lb/>
stars,<lb/>
i feai<lb/>
imply<lb/>
is Prey<lb/>
ud Ron Simmons (50) and<lb/>
Isc<lb/>
su<lb/>
Alabama Ranked First;<lb/>
OSU Drops To Second<lb/>
B DAVIDMQFFIT<lb/>
I PI Sports Writer<lb/>
ing<lb/>
against<lb/>
1 o<lb/>
leWeel<lb/>
psi Ht<lb/>
tve<lb/>
? oi men often<lb/>
igh, as the<lb/>
? . A local<lb/>
nuch of<lb/>
a local ice cream<lb/>
gnize a "Lineman<lb/>
following every Pirate<lb/>
ten L;d Emory will<lb/>
uck lineman is.<lb/>
Alabama puts its<lb/>
reclaimed No. 1 rank-<lb/>
on in Saturday<lb/>
what Bear<lb/>
Brunt iWnks is the<lb/>
best quarterback the<lb/>
Crimson ride will face<lb/>
this season-<lb/>
phe ride will be in<lb/>
a, ksoi ? Miss to pla<lb/>
theOleMiss Rebels and<lb/>
thai means the highh<lb/>
 ! a bam a<lb/>
must contain<lb/>
ircade who has<lb/>
p righl where<lb/>
! last season<lb/>
the<lb/>
istern Con-<lb/>
total offense.<lb/>
'We won't face a<lb/>
ei one, that's for<lb/>
 Bryant said o<lb/>
 si i cade s ho is<lb/>
a icing 206 yards per<lb/>
game while getting the<lb/>
Rebels ofi to a 1-1<lb/>
start. 1 hat average is<lb/>
m leading because Ole<lb/>
 gave Fourcade an<lb/>
early rest last week<lb/>
alter the Rebels jumped<lb/>
into a big first-half lead<lb/>
enroute to a 61-7 rout<lb/>
of Memphis State.<lb/>
Alabama hasn't<lb/>
played since opening on<lb/>
Sept. 6 with a 26-3 vic-<lb/>
t( r over Georgia Tech<lb/>
that indicated the<lb/>
to.<lb/>
del<lb/>
Jo!<lb/>
pi?.<lb/>
he<lb/>
!c I<lb/>
S,<lb/>
fere<lb/>
bo<lb/>
si<lb/>
Crimson Tide defense<lb/>
is just as fierce as it was<lb/>
last season when<lb/>
Alabama posted a<lb/>
perfect record and won<lb/>
the national champion-<lb/>
ship but that the rebuilt<lb/>
offense needed more<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"1 don't know if the<lb/>
extra week helped us or<lb/>
hurt us said Bryant,<lb/>
"but 1 guess we'll find<lb/>
that out Saturday<lb/>
Alabama, boasting<lb/>
the longest current win-<lb/>
ning streak in the na-<lb/>
tion, is a two-<lb/>
touchdown favorite as<lb/>
it goes after its 23rd<lb/>
straight victory Satur-<lb/>
day. The Crimson Tide<lb/>
also will be seeking to<lb/>
hand Bryant his 298th<lb/>
career victory.<lb/>
The only other con-<lb/>
ference game in t he-<lb/>
Sou t li eastern Con-<lb/>
ference Saturday is<lb/>
Mississippi State at<lb/>
V 'underbill with State a<lb/>
17-point favorite.<lb/>
In SEC versus ACC<lb/>
action, 91 h - r a n k e d<lb/>
Georgia hosts Clem-<lb/>
son, Auburn hosts<lb/>
Duke and Florida visits<lb/>
Georgia Tech. Also,<lb/>
Kentucky hosts In-<lb/>
diana, LSU hosts Col-<lb/>
orado, Tennessee hosts<lb/>
Washington State.<lb/>
lOth-ranked Florida<lb/>
State hosts hast<lb/>
Carolina, 18th-ranked<lb/>
South Carolina visits<lb/>
4th-ranked Southern<lb/>
C a I, Miami visits<lb/>
Houston, Southern<lb/>
Miss hosts Louisiana<lb/>
Tech and Tulane hosts<lb/>
Rice<lb/>
Georgia, awesome in<lb/>
last week's 42-0 win<lb/>
over then 19th-ranked<lb/>
Texas A"M, has no in-<lb/>
tention of taking Clem-<lb/>
son lightly not after the<lb/>
Bulldogs, despite being<lb/>
runnerup in the SEC,<lb/>
lost to three ACC foes<lb/>
last season, including<lb/>
12-7 to Clemson.<lb/>
"There was a time<lb/>
when an SEC team<lb/>
could let up against one<lb/>
from the ACC and still<lb/>
win said Georgia<lb/>
coach Vince Dooley,<lb/>
"but that day is over<lb/>
Be that as it may,<lb/>
Georgia, sparked by<lb/>
freshman Herschel<lb/>
Walker who rushed for<lb/>
five touchdowns and<lb/>
229 yards in his first<lb/>
two college games, is a<lb/>
10-point favorite.<lb/>
Auburn, forced to go<lb/>
all the way with third-<lb/>
string quarterback Joe<lb/>
Sullivan, younger<lb/>
brother of 1971<lb/>
Heisman Trophy win-<lb/>
ner Pat Sullivan,<lb/>
squeezed past TCU last<lb/>
week, 10-7, and with<lb/>
No. 1 quarterback<lb/>
Charles Thomas (torn<lb/>
thigh muscle) and No. 2<lb/>
quarterback Randy-<lb/>
Campbell (knee) still<lb/>
questionable, Sullivan<lb/>
may have to go the<lb/>
route again this week.<lb/>
"I'd like another<lb/>
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"1 was a little bit ner-<lb/>
vous last week. 1 didn't<lb/>
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