<?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="00057298_0001"/>
She i-aat (ftaroltnian<lb/>
Serving the East arolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
 oi. s St m<lb/>
l(? Pages<lb/>
I uesdav, NomiiiIh r 4. I?80<lb/>
(ireenville, Northarolina<lb/>
( iinil.ili'Hi (.()()()<lb/>
Board Of Trustees<lb/>
Plan For High-Rise<lb/>
Hx Mlki N(?( W<lb/>
K.<lb/>
I<lb/>
al An ui'<lb/>
be<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
one<lb/>
K.t let ic<lb/>
meed that because<lb/>
Nisons and inerea<lb/>
N( . the<lb/>
Iroppcd b the I mivei<lb/>
he NCAA i<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
M<lb/>
A Trio In Costume<lb/>
bv JON jOBCis<lb/>
Ihest thin girls were among (he man l I students who enjoyed dressing up r??r Halloween l-nday niyht<lb/>
Downtown was opened t?i the lirst time in five vears. I In- bear? He is contemplating hi long winter hibernation<lb/>
while at the same lime, college students are contemplating theirs<lb/>
Solar Energy Exhibits Highlight Greenville Energy Fair<lb/>
;d Sola<lb/>
In the Solar Cl<lb/>
i<lb/>
equipn<lb/>
Mm<lb/>
? I<lb/>
L <lb/>
equ<lb/>
 Wall<lb/>
K f<lb/>
.<lb/>
Election Day '80<lb/>
Politicians Arrive At End Of Campaign Trail<lb/>
Increase In Financial<lb/>
Aid Availability Raises<lb/>
College Enrollment<lb/>
on<lb/>
' V<lb/>
t'dueat i<lb/>
reent<lb/>
11<lb/>
?<lb/>
univei<lb/>
the<lb/>
ases to<lb/>
imbina-<lb/>
job oppor-<lb/>
wth<lb/>
reliel to<lb/>
? . 10,000<lb/>
West<lb/>
: "a has .<lb/>
.helter.<lb/>
V ai Betty Sud<lb/>
' ? ' ? 2.6 percent<lb/>
.i :<lb/>
dged<lb/>
 .idem<lb/>
? c<lb/>
 help<lb/>
?pulation<lb/>
see-<lb/>
but<lb/>
ive also<lb/>
? AI<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
the<lb/>
yeai old<lb/>
2d perceni<lb/>
K l 1 l(,ll<lb/>
H<lb/>
 e H<lb/>
ballots 1 ik<lb/>
the le<lb/>
'he 1976 presid<lb/>
has described<lb/>
ters wi<lb/>
? 60 <lb/>
ying<lb/>
e Mondas He<lb/>
Campaign I ever<lb/>
Old political campaign buttons, slickers, posters, pamphlets and the like<lb/>
make up a sizable collection of nostalgia tor Donald I oilins oi the East<lb/>
Carolina I niversitj library science faculty . oilins has thousands oi items<lb/>
of memorabilia trom social and political movements oi the past century.<lb/>
For an article about this interesting collection see page 5<lb/>
i<lb/>
fat right<lb/>
sl<lb/>
' I omoi: iw . : are<lb/>
say wru ant<lb/>
al ma<lb/>
?<lb/>
Hunt said<lb/>
is oi extreme<lb/>
the state's tobacco Indus<lb/>
"Jimmy Carter has stood<lb/>
dooi ol a tobacco warehouse<lb/>
W  ion, North C arolina and said, as<lb/>
lout' as he is preside<lb/>
re will he a fedei a<lb/>
co proj " Hun: said.<lb/>
Hunt also noted theartei<lb/>
minnistration has supported oj<lb/>
ing ol tobacco markets<lb/>
which he said "could be the salva-<lb/>
tion oi the North Carolina : i<lb/>
John East, Republi<lb/>
foi the I S Senate, and I. Beverly<lb/>
I ake, GOP candidate for governor,<lb/>
held separate news t<lb/>
throughout the state Bill c obey,<lb/>
Republican candidate foi lieuten-<lb/>
tant cine; nor. campaigned in the<lb/>
eastern pan oi the sta<lb/>
Among 'iie chargei- by 1 a I<lb/>
? "liberal big city newspaper<lb/>
editors are letting Robert Mo<lb/>
get away with murdei in his te<lb/>
sion ad where he claims the Se<lb/>
has passed a balanced bud<lb/>
? "Mr. Morgan's wasteful<lb/>
foreign Aid spending weaken- .<lb/>
economy and out national sec n<lb/>
? "Mi Morgan has also voted<lb/>
allow inter national agencies like the<lb/>
World Hank to give American tax<lb/>
dollars to 1 idel Castro's Cuba<lb/>
A m one h e a rges b<lb/>
Republican Party Chairman Jacl<lb/>
1 ee:<lb/>
? "Mr. Morgan and his friends a<lb/>
the Boa; d ol Elections<lb/>
tampered with tomorrow's eleel<lb/>
ballot in an attempt to keep the ;<lb/>
pie trom electing a Republican Con-<lb/>
gress to work with Re<lb/>
Reagan<lb/>
Among the charges byobey<lb/>
Green is "the candidate ot the<lb/>
special interests and professional<lb/>
politicians<lb/>
? "The big utility companies, the<lb/>
maioi banks and the lobbyist are<lb/>
? I<lb/>
g a 44<lb/>
.<lb/>
: ;?:<lb/>
:<lb/>
The Election<lb/>
In A utshell<lb/>
(PRl SIDI NTIA1 El 1 ri(<lb/>
Rer R Id Re;<lb/>
?<lb/>
4 - S<lb/>
memb e, 33 se<lb/>
aw A ? mds<lb/>
ol and<lb/>
(( ONGR1 SS) V a<lb/>
Den<lb/>
i<lb/>
? .<lb/>
t 01<lb/>
R e p u b I i v<lb/>
(Ci 1 RN RS) W asl<lb/>
it 10<lb/>
ips in<lb/>
ioda '?? .<lb/>
' .<lb/>
jnts loscp i . oi<lb/>
M Dix Le Ra oi<lb/>
. i<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
 incemt<lb/>
1 ditorials<lb/>
.sifieds<lb/>
' ers<lb/>
1 ROTC<lb/>
1 Os<lb/>
4<lb/>
9<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
s<lb/>
EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057298_0002"/><lb/>
1 Ml 1 S1 C ROl 1N1AN<lb/>
NOYIMB1-K4. W80<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
' ' ? t ' A<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ; ?? ? lal<lb/>
lU Fnsbee<lb/>
a students<lb/>
?ioom<lb/>
ACCOUNTING TUTORS<lb/>
The Accounting Society will pro<lb/>
vide tutoring services every<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon from 4 to 5<lb/>
p m in Rawl 339 tor Acct 2401 and<lb/>
2521 students<lb/>
AID. INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
The Ageni tor international<lb/>
Development tA I D s now ai<lb/>
rig appl ic ations tor the<lb/>
Wintei 1983 lass ot interns<lb/>
AIDs intern p pqram is a two<lb/>
jrograi to train<lb/>
. ? i OH . e S<lb/>
sf ion<lb/>
'<lb/>
? ; "?<lb/>
planning<lb/>
. and<lb/>
 si h ?<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
I Holy<lb/>
.?<lb/>
 . . 4<lb/>
? ?? v- ?? list s'udent<lb/>
from<lb/>
' ? , s. . . .?.<lb/>
with the I<lb/>
. . ?? ?  . Bill Haciden<lb/>
. I ?<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
' ? ?<lb/>
?. . ber 13<lb/>
? - - . al the<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
 ik e the put<lb/>
,   . . . ; .<lb/>
 ?. .<lb/>
 . ? ? ? ? ? . V :<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
.<lb/>
KAPPA DELTA PI<lb/>
? Eta ' I Kb<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
? ? ???<lb/>
?? tei<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Avaitaoie<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
Open<lb/>
11 A.M9 P.M.<lb/>
Sun-Thru Thurs.<lb/>
11 A.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
The Center tor Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities (CSO) In the School of<lb/>
Medn.ine has immediate openings<lb/>
for qualified tutors with expertise<lb/>
m math physics and chemistry<lb/>
You must have an academic<lb/>
record of hrah performance n the<lb/>
subiect area Wage based on<lb/>
academic classification, eg<lb/>
undergraduate graduate Contact<lb/>
D' Frye 217 Whichard Annex or<lb/>
call 757 6122 or 6075 for an inter<lb/>
 i A<lb/>
RAFFLE<lb/>
A n i500 00 in records tapes ot<lb/>
your ihone I'om the Record Bar<lb/>
n Easter Seals Holiday S500<lb/>
Record Raffle Tuxets each<lb/>
SI 00 Your group can buy and'or<lb/>
? kets isales prize J150 00 in<lb/>
or register by mail to<lb/>
. Can Easter Seals. IU E<lb/>
? d Street 758 3230<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
How to Buy Stereo Equip<lb/>
ment. a one session workshop of<lb/>
tered by East Carolina University<lb/>
Nov 10, will help potential buyers<lb/>
ot audio components learn about<lb/>
the subied before making a pur<lb/>
chase<lb/>
The program is designed to help<lb/>
the novice eliminate the confusion<lb/>
SI -rounding good sounding'<lb/>
s,stems which has arisen with the<lb/>
popularity of stereo and high<lb/>
fidelity music systems<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
'stereo equipment' program is<lb/>
available from 'he Office ot Non<lb/>
Credit Programs Dvision of Con<lb/>
no Education ECU. Green<lb/>
ALPHADELTAMU<lb/>
There will be an Alpha Delta Mu<lb/>
meeting Thursday November 6 at<lb/>
6 30pm at Western Steer This<lb/>
win be a business meeting as well<lb/>
as initiation for new members<lb/>
Dutch treat dinner guests are<lb/>
welcome AH members please at<lb/>
tend i<lb/>
HUNGER COALITION<lb/>
The Greenville Hunger Coalition<lb/>
will meet on Thursday, Nov 6 and<lb/>
Nov 13 at 4 00 p m at the<lb/>
Newman Center, 953 E Tenth St<lb/>
The Coalition is open to anyone m<lb/>
terested in studying and acting on<lb/>
the problem of local and world<lb/>
hunger We are currently planning<lb/>
the Fast For A World Harvest,<lb/>
Nov 20th<lb/>
ART CONTEST<lb/>
, ? i Res ai ' n e San<lb/>
Dieg a tornia based rcn<lb/>
pro ' ' . ?r1 san educationa1<lb/>
and ?. . ? jri uj ' as announc<lb/>
? ?? ? v sponsoring a nation<lb/>
A  an mpetit imong high<lb/>
dol and college students to l"0<lb/>
I ?. ? ? ab ? logo<lb/>
ig to Barbara<lb/>
 promot hrectot for<lb/>
A d research All entries must<lb/>
b received by midnight<lb/>
ber 30 1980 to ;h e - I ?<lb/>
 isjx first pi<lb/>
npetil ! pen 1<lb/>
ege students<lb/>
nterestec 'ing<lb/>
? f( i<lb/>
'<lb/>
COLLEGE LIFE<lb/>
AH students are invited to hear<lb/>
Tom Lowder (psychology<lb/>
graduate from University of<lb/>
Texas) speaking on<lb/>
'Extraordinary Living " Free ad<lb/>
mission and special music on<lb/>
November 12 1980, Wednesday<lb/>
8 30 p m m Mendenhall Multipur<lb/>
pose Room Sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade For Christ<lb/>
BAKESALE<lb/>
There will be a bakesale<lb/>
Wednesday Nov 5, from 9 a m to<lb/>
2pm in the Allied Health lobby<lb/>
Yummies for your tummy<lb/>
ECU SURF CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting this<lb/>
Thursday night in the bottom of<lb/>
Scott Dorm at 7 p m We will<lb/>
discuss issues about the upcoming<lb/>
meet in Myrtle Beach this Sunday<lb/>
Any interested persons are<lb/>
welcome to attend<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Chi will hold a meeting Wed<lb/>
the 5th. 7 15 in Speight 129 Guest<lb/>
speaker win be Mr Fumi James<lb/>
of the ;Ob placement office He will<lb/>
discuss tob availability in<lb/>
psychology and related fields<lb/>
Refreshments will be served All<lb/>
new members and interested<lb/>
guests are welcomed<lb/>
GAMMA THETA<lb/>
UPSILON<lb/>
The Be'a Sola chap'e' of Gam<lb/>
ma Theta Upsilon will be conduc<lb/>
ting a meeting on Wed . Nov 12 at<lb/>
5 00 in Brewster C 203 Plans will<lb/>
be made tor the Nov 16 Blood<lb/>
Bowl' AM GTU members are uro<lb/>
ed to attend<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Fountain ot Life Christian<lb/>
.vs' ; a meel Wednesday<lb/>
? -iv? at 7 p.m in Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro Culture Center Come ou'<lb/>
and enioy some good Christian<lb/>
fellowship<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Ph. Beta Lambda w meel<lb/>
? 4th a' 4 p m ii<lb/>
Rawi 103 There will be a Quest<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
LaCROSSE<lb/>
ROAD RACE<lb/>
' - ? Coast a Carolina T r a <lb/>
P,ti Plaza ??-??<lb/>
? ,???. i NC are soon<lb/>
S ring a 7 V e Road Race ana a<lb/>
V ? Run Run to be held on<lb/>
.??? ?- 15 198 a'<lb/>
v 15 g rn The mtes a,ii start and<lb/>
? at Pitt Pia;a<lb/>
?,?. ? ? awards a be<lb/>
. ' ?? i ? ? ' ? ? ?<lb/>
? is m is to the<lb/>
. ? ? :  . male<lb/>
. . ? ige group<lb/>
Cm presented to the<lb/>
. la ? ? ' ' ? " ? '<lb/>
temai ? ? '<lb/>
?  be divided into (<lb/>
 ji-oups<lb/>
v. ? ? ?? ? '? I by the Pitt<lb/>
ua Merchant a be<lb/>
  ? iway i drawing to be held<lb/>
mmediately f low rtg he finish<lb/>
? ? f v . ? Over 90 mer<lb/>
handiv rwards will be given to<lb/>
. ?? ? . ? '<lb/>
 ??, ? i, - ?. eveni ? t4 oo<lb/>
ECU students, faculty ana<lb/>
? iff . . ouraged 'o par<lb/>
pa ti Entry blanks are<lb/>
iva al ? from Pitt Plaza mer<lb/>
? . ? ? v ft ? V Rec office<lb/>
n 204 Men ria ? ? mnas'um<lb/>
? ? -r the crowd<lb/>
S.U. ARTIST<lb/>
Ape , al oni ?? ? tow ? '<lb/>
'aken for pos ' I I SI<lb/>
 ?? s' tor Spr  ' '? 0<lb/>
phcation for ms ked up<lb/>
in the Student Union Office room<lb/>
234 Vendenhall S ?  '<lb/>
Deadline November 14 IV<lb/>
The Student Union Ma<lb/>
jor Attractions Commit<lb/>
tee will meet on Wednes-<lb/>
day, November 5, at 4:15<lb/>
p.m. in Room 238 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
The. a bt -an SRA meeting a'<lb/>
5 00 Tuesday. Nov 4 in the con<lb/>
ference room n 'he basement o<lb/>
Aycock dorm All SRA member<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
tionai Honor Fraternity will hold<lb/>
its monthly business meeting at<lb/>
6 00 p m Wednesday in 132<lb/>
Austin Brothers are urged 'o a'<lb/>
tend the first pledge meeting of the<lb/>
semester at 5 00 p m Wednesoa,<lb/>
in 132 Austin<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
Each year the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Coalit.on and the mterna<lb/>
tionai agency, Oxfam America,<lb/>
sponsor a fast on the Thursday<lb/>
before Thanksgiving The money<lb/>
you save by not eating is donated<lb/>
for self help proiects to aic hungry<lb/>
people become self sufficient<lb/>
Plan to fast! Stop by the table out<lb/>
Side the Book Store on Nov 18th or<lb/>
19th to sign up<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
The Student Union Art Exhibi<lb/>
lion Committee will meet on<lb/>
Thursday November 6, at 5 30<lb/>
p m in Room 238 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center All members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
PROGRAM BOARD<lb/>
The Student Union Program<lb/>
Board will meet on Monday<lb/>
November io. at 4 00 P m in<lb/>
Room 248 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center All member s are urged to<lb/>
atteno<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES<lb/>
Mark Your Calendars Take A<lb/>
Giant Step Workshop, November<lb/>
11 and 12, 3 5 p m 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center A seminar which<lb/>
will help you take a giant step in<lb/>
to your future " Learn about<lb/>
career services available to you a<lb/>
a freshman, sophomore, iunior or<lb/>
senior Don't miss it!<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
m met Camp E mi 1 me<lb/>
Day is Novembet 18 10 3 p rr<lb/>
the Mendenhall mult ?<lb/>
room Students who wish su"<lb/>
employment with . an I<lb/>
come be 'he Cooperate I<lb/>
t.on office in 313 RdAi Bl<lb/>
arrange nterv ews a ll<lb/>
? . - <lb/>
COMMITTEES<lb/>
T he Office of the v ?<lb/>
Chancellor tor S'uden' L ?? - s1<lb/>
accepting apt ,? OnS tor ?h?- 63<lb/>
? , ? ?<lb/>
nmittee: ? ? ? ?. ? ? ? ?<lb/>
.?.???????? Corrnt<lb/>
let s Faculty Sei at ?<lb/>
Com ??? ? . ' '<lb/>
? ? ? Support Pleasi<lb/>
by room 204 Wl hard and f<lb/>
JOB SKILLS<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Due t :  ???' ? the i<lb/>
????<lb/>
. .  g ?  ? shops has<lb/>
 ? . . ? . ? ?. .??? .<lb/>
. icemi ' ?? ?<lb/>
?,  nbei - ind t ????.<lb/>
?? s piannec I I<lb/>
, ? md the Preparation o ?? ?<lb/>
Resume at 3:00 p m<lb/>
Sions w ii tit- held on bo"<lb/>
Rawi 107 An seniors are nviti It<lb/>
attend p ae emeni Set - ?'<lb/>
number is 757 6399<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
Acnt.on all jew'Sh students'<lb/>
On Tues Nov 4 Shalom  :?<lb/>
shown a' 8 (- - "?'? Ledonia<lb/>
A- SJh1 Afro American Cu<lb/>
Qer ???Net' A StOf ' I<lb/>
Strangers a be st a" al 6 .<lb/>
n 'he Cultural Ce<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
 rheta Alpha ChapH"<lb/>
A.pha kappa Alpha will be S(<lb/>
sor:ng a Student of the Year con<lb/>
test Friday. Nov 18 a' " -<lb/>
Mendenha' Aoditot tin- A<lb/>
an, nterested person p , ?<lb/>
lac1 one Of 'he AKA sororities or<lb/>
al 752 9192 Entry dead ? ?<lb/>
Nov 13<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
' Be'a I an bda a meel n<lb/>
tues lay N . ?? n :?? ? ?tt at 4 i -<lb/>
in Room R103 Then a  a<lb/>
guest speaker from Carolina<lb/>
Telephone &amp; Ti'ieu'aph Atl<lb/>
dance by all m. re<lb/>
questea<lb/>
ter??<lb/>
Steer<lb/>
H<lb/>
s<lb/>
M&amp;?<lb/>
3005 E.<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
(Beside Hastings Ford)<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
758-8550<lb/>
Fast &amp; Easy Delicious lunches<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
$-99<lb/>
Diet Plate<lb/>
4 Oz. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
Cottage Cheese &amp; fruit<lb/>
Ihicken Filet Sandwich<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Childs PlaFe<lb/>
4 Oz. Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
Old Fashion Cheeseburger<lb/>
S-J29<lb/>
No Potato<lb/>
Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries<lb/>
Steak Sandwich<lb/>
Plain, Peppers &amp; Onions,<lb/>
Mushroom Gravy, Q<lb/>
Baked Potato or V M &amp; ?<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
&amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
NO TAKE OUTS<lb/>
ON DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Monday And Wednesday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$229<lb/>
Daily Specials Served With Baked Potato or French Fries &amp; Toast<lb/>
Tuesday Ana ihursaay<lb/>
Chop Sirloin<lb/>
89<lb/>
8 0z<lb/>
30 Item Delicious Salad Bar<lb/>
Alpha (Samma JRbo<lb/>
Kortij (Harolina ialf niurraUg<lb/>
Tight Cerebral Palsy'<lb/>
fetei<lb/>
<lb/>
rtfl<lb/>
Lite Great State Professor Race'<lb/>
DATE: November 9, 1980<lb/>
(Rain date November 16, 1980)<lb/>
Time: 2:00 P.M.<lb/>
Place: NCSU TrackField, Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
For the past two years Alpha Gamma Rho Fraternity at NCSU has sponsored<lb/>
the "Lite Great State Professor Race Its main purpose is to help combat a<lb/>
dreaded affliction-Cerebral Palsy. It's also a fun event both for participating<lb/>
professors and their sponsors.<lb/>
There will be two divisions consisting of a one mile run and a 10,000 meter run.<lb/>
Participating professors will choose which run they would like to enter. F.ach<lb/>
participant will receive a "Lite Great State Professor Race" T shirt. The 1st,<lb/>
2nd, and 3rd place finishers in each race will receive trophies. The organization<lb/>
from each school which raises the most monies and those that sponsor the winn<lb/>
ing professor of each race will also be given awards.<lb/>
ENTRY FORM<lb/>
Please print name and address<lb/>
Entry fee: $25.00<lb/>
Sponsored by <lb/>
Enclosed.<lb/>
Will pay day of race.<lb/>
(Name of organization or mark "self)<lb/>
Check Appropriate School:<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
INC<lb/>
DUKE<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Please send entry form and check to: ALPHA GAMMA RHO<lb/>
r . North Carolina State University<lb/>
or contact: 2:m Hiilsborough Street<lb/>
Barry Herndon 758-9025 Raleigh, North Carolina 27(<lb/>
Terri Bosher 752-9151<lb/>
v.VFRYONE IS A W1NNF.R IN THK FIGHT AGAINST CEREBRAL PALSY<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each ol these advertised 'terns Is required to be<lb/>
readily available (or sale in each Kroger Sav-on e<lb/>
cept as specifically noted in this ad II we do run out<lb/>
of an item we will offer you your choice of a com<lb/>
parable item when available reflecting the same<lb/>
savings or a ramcheck which will entitle you to pur-<lb/>
chase the advertised item at the advertised price<lb/>
withm 30 days<lb/>
on<lb/>
Copyright 1980<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Items and Prices i<lb/>
Effective W?d ov 5<lb/>
thru Sat Nov 8 1980<lb/>
Pictured Items Only<lb/>
NONE SOLO<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
"?? o?N Sunday 600 Greenvie Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
"?? ra.flrrwi Phon 75$-703i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057298_0003"/><lb/>
I HI IAS! ROl INI AN<lb/>
MAI MBI K4. 1980<lb/>
AFROTC Cadets<lb/>
Gain Appointments<lb/>
Outstanding cadets<lb/>
1? last Carolina<lb/>
University's Air Force<lb/>
ROTC detachment<lb/>
have been appointed to<lb/>
cadci staff leadership<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
Cadet Majoi<lb/>
rhomas Gill, son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. William<lb/>
Gill of Statesville, has<lb/>
assumed the position of<lb/>
c a d e t g i o u p c o m -<lb/>
mander. He will be<lb/>
responsible for the<lb/>
training of approx-<lb/>
imately 165 cadets and<lb/>
the overall manage-<lb/>
ment of the AFROTC<lb/>
cadet corps<lb/>
C adelapt. John<lb/>
Maiquis McTillmon,<lb/>
son o Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Ross Mc I illmon of<lb/>
Greensboro, has been<lb/>
appointed inspector<lb/>
general.<lb/>
? N" graduate ol<lb/>
Ragsdale High School,<lb/>
Jamestown, he is a<lb/>
political science major<lb/>
at ECl dnA expects to<lb/>
graduate in 19S1 He is<lb/>
head manager for the<lb/>
ECU Pirates football<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Cadet Major Rebec-<lb/>
ca Turner has been ap-<lb/>
pointed deputy com-<lb/>
mander for operations.<lb/>
1 he daughter of I t.<lb/>
Col. (Ret.) and Mis.<lb/>
Frank Padilla of Fayet-<lb/>
tevtlle, she is a 1972<lb/>
graduate of Balboa<lb/>
High School in the<lb/>
Panama (anal one<lb/>
She is an honor stu-<lb/>
dent at ECU and a<lb/>
sociology major who<lb/>
expects to graduate<lb/>
next spring.<lb/>
Cadet Majoi Michael<lb/>
1 aw rence Helsabeck.<lb/>
new dep ill c om<lb/>
mdei foi the coi ps, is<lb/>
the son ol An 1 orce<lb/>
M Sgt. (Ret.) di. Mis.<lb/>
Don Helsabeck of<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
He is a graduate<lb/>
of Eastern Wayne High<lb/>
School. computei<lb/>
science major at ECU,<lb/>
Helsabeck is a senioi<lb/>
and a recipient of an<lb/>
Air Force scholarship.<lb/>
He is a member of Phi<lb/>
Mu Epsilon honor<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Cadet Capt. Jackie<lb/>
McKenzie, newly-<lb/>
appointed Arnold Air<lb/>
Society commander, is<lb/>
the son of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Jack Mckenie of<lb/>
Pinehursl.<lb/>
His memberships in-<lb/>
clude Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
honor society, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government<lb/>
Association Appeals<lb/>
Hoard and the<lb/>
Lutheran St udent<lb/>
Associat ion .<lb/>
( adei C apt. James<lb/>
Burnette Jr special<lb/>
project officer, is the<lb/>
son of Mi. and Mrs.<lb/>
James I la Burnette of<lb/>
 inchestei. I enn. and<lb/>
a 1975 graduate of<lb/>
Dunn High School.<lb/>
Dunn. N.C.<lb/>
He is a rrembei of<lb/>
the I au Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
fraternity and a senior<lb/>
industrial technolog)<lb/>
major at ECU.<lb/>
Committee Halts KA OS<lb/>
Oregon State's Stu-<lb/>
dent Activities Com-<lb/>
mittee voted recently to<lb/>
stop the playing of the<lb/>
game K.A.O.S. (Killing<lb/>
As an Organizing<lb/>
Sport) because it was<lb/>
"potentially harmful"<lb/>
to the student body and<lb/>
the rest of the com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
The committee ruled<lb/>
that the nationally<lb/>
popular fad would be<lb/>
dangerous if allowed to<lb/>
proceed during the fall<lb/>
term.<lb/>
"We felt that it could<lb/>
scare a lot of people<lb/>
says Tom Lindstrom,<lb/>
co-chairman of the<lb/>
committee. "People<lb/>
are up in arms around<lb/>
here about it. We've<lb/>
had a lot of rapists and<lb/>
other criminals roam-<lb/>
ing around. It wouldn't<lb/>
be safe<lb/>
OSl"s Experimental<lb/>
College had heiped<lb/>
organize a K.A.O.S.<lb/>
game on campus, using<lb/>
student funds.<lb/>
Under the game's<lb/>
rules, students?who<lb/>
are called<lb/>
assassins?are provided<lb/>
with a victim's class<lb/>
schedule and physical<lb/>
description. The victim<lb/>
is usually followed by<lb/>
the assassin who tries to<lb/>
make a "hit usuallv<lb/>
with a soft rubber dan.<lb/>
It the hit is made suc-<lb/>
cessful, the victim is<lb/>
knocked out of the<lb/>
game, which proceeds<lb/>
until one assassin is<lb/>
left. That person, of<lb/>
course, is declared the<lb/>
winner.<lb/>
Nbtice Notice Notice<lb/>
We Are Again Serving<lb/>
Fresh, Tossed Salads For<lb/>
Your Convenience.<lb/>
Soda Shop No. "Croatan<lb/>
Arms Race<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Passing The Sue<lb/>
Aim Pickette. 1981 Buccaneer Assistant Editor, helps pass out the<lb/>
popular new yearbook. A cop) of the BUC is available at the Student<lb/>
uppl Store for all students who were enrolled for an part of the last<lb/>
academic ear.<lb/>
Visiting Professor Dispels Popular Myths<lb/>
raking as his topic<lb/>
"The Arms Race, the<lb/>
Economy, and Infla-<lb/>
tion John Swomley<lb/>
last Frida night at the<lb/>
First P r esby I e r i a n<lb/>
Church exploded tour<lb/>
popular myths: the cur-<lb/>
rent arms race is not<lb/>
primaril intended to<lb/>
defend the United<lb/>
States; the S o v i e I<lb/>
Union is not increasing<lb/>
its armaments taster<lb/>
than the I tnited States;<lb/>
i he emphasis on<lb/>
military development<lb/>
has weakened us;<lb/>
military bases hurt the<lb/>
onom ol the com-<lb/>
munity in which the)<lb/>
e located. His conclu-<lb/>
sion therefore is in<lb/>
agreement with Nobel-<lb/>
prize winning<lb/>
economist Wassily<lb/>
I eontief's: the arms<lb/>
race keeps the poor in<lb/>
poverty. It is highly in-<lb/>
flationary.<lb/>
Di Swomlev (Ph.D<lb/>
Political Science), Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Social Ethics<lb/>
at St. Paul School of<lb/>
rheology.<lb/>
onlv a snia<lb/>
this countr<lb/>
noted<lb/>
I fraction of<lb/>
's oil comes<lb/>
from the Middle East.<lb/>
Why not fill that gap<lb/>
with Mexican oil? W ell,<lb/>
Mexican oil is state-<lb/>
owned, and t here<lb/>
would be no profits to<lb/>
the oil companies in its<lb/>
sale. nd the military<lb/>
monkey on oui back<lb/>
gets fatter while West<lb/>
Germany and Japan.<lb/>
fai less burdened by<lb/>
arms while far more<lb/>
dependent on Middle<lb/>
1 astern oil, outproduce<lb/>
us in civilian sector<lb/>
after sector.<lb/>
"Big oil' exemplifies<lb/>
the influence of big in-<lb/>
dustry on government.<lb/>
Swomley illustrated<lb/>
this with the young<lb/>
preacher's situation. In<lb/>
his congregation are a<lb/>
businessman who can<lb/>
aft ord to give the<lb/>
church $10,000 a yeai<lb/>
and a yard man who were then rebutted in<lb/>
can afford $25. Whose turn. For instance, the<lb/>
adivce does the minister huge Soviet expen-<lb/>
pay more attention to? ditures foi armaments<lb/>
Eisenhower's farewell owe much to figuring<lb/>
warning seemed pres- what it would cost us to<lb/>
cient, as Swomlev carry out their program<lb/>
noted what a large ? "To put the USSR<lb/>
piece of our economy is behind in the arms<lb/>
within the military- race Swomley joked.<lb/>
industrial complex.<lb/>
The above rebuttal<lb/>
of the first myth was<lb/>
supported in more<lb/>
detail. 1 he other myths<lb/>
"all we have to do is go<lb/>
back to draftees at $75<lb/>
a month ? Their<lb/>
large armv facing<lb/>
China, comparative<lb/>
W arsaw-NATO<lb/>
budgets, and navies,<lb/>
and our technical effi-<lb/>
ciency were other fac-<lb/>
tors considered in ex-<lb/>
posing the second<lb/>
myth.<lb/>
Similarly, uncoopted<lb/>
scholarship has little<lb/>
difficulty with the third<lb/>
and fourth myths.<lb/>
Swomley is the author<lb/>
of five books, including<lb/>
The Military Establish-<lb/>
ment 1 96 3 I.<lb/>
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Over two million people in<lb/>
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 r"<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057298_0004"/><lb/>
She last (Eawliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Richard Green, cmr <lb/>
TERM HERNDON, Dhcm, a 4r? LlSA DREW. , m E?or<lb/>
Mike Noonan. wm b??<lb/>
Charles Chanm.fr, emf<lb/>
David Norris, tammfn<lb/>
Chris LlCHOK, Btei?us mm?<lb/>
George Hettich, ?mmmmmt<lb/>
Anna Lancaster, ??.?? mmm<lb/>
Novembei 4. 1980<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Transit System<lb/>
TTs Better Than Ever<lb/>
The SGA transit system was<lb/>
literally a wreck last Spring when<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod was elected presi-<lb/>
dent o' the student government. At<lb/>
that time he inherited a bunch of<lb/>
wrecked buses, astronomical<lb/>
maintenance and repair costs, and a<lb/>
shakey transit staff.<lb/>
Shortly alter his election, Sherrod<lb/>
tired the two transit managers who<lb/>
had served in the administration of<lb/>
former president Brett Melvin.<lb/>
Alter this bold but necessary move,<lb/>
all oi the transit records mysterious-<lb/>
ly disappeared. Then the drivers<lb/>
threatened to strike and to shut<lb/>
down the bus system in protest of<lb/>
Sherrod's decision to fire the old<lb/>
managers.<lb/>
To his credit, Sherrod stood his<lb/>
ground and appointed Nicky Fran-<lb/>
cis and Danny O'Conner to take<lb/>
over the transit system. The bus<lb/>
drivers were as good as their word<lb/>
and they went on strike. Francis<lb/>
moved quickly to obtain city bus<lb/>
jvers ' k :ep the system<lb/>
operating. As a result of this quick<lb/>
and commendable action, not one<lb/>
student was deprived of transporta-<lb/>
tion. The buses rolled on schedule.<lb/>
Since Francis and O'Conner took<lb/>
over, there have been no accidents.<lb/>
Maintenance costs, which once con-<lb/>
sumed nearly 30 percent of the total<lb/>
transit budget, have been cut by 26<lb/>
percent. Some of the old drivers<lb/>
who went out on strike have return-<lb/>
ed. 1 his year the drivers were given<lb/>
their first'pay raise in many years, a<lb/>
raise well deserved.<lb/>
Also, another bus has been<lb/>
ordered, reportedly the first new<lb/>
bus ever purchased by student<lb/>
government that will undoubtedly<lb/>
serve the students more efficiently.<lb/>
Things are looking good now and<lb/>
they look even better for the future.<lb/>
A transit advisory board has been<lb/>
created to offer advise and profes-<lb/>
sional guidance for the system.<lb/>
Gary Davis, the first manager of the<lb/>
SGA transit system, is serving on<lb/>
the board. He is presently<lb/>
associated with the city transit<lb/>
system. Davis can offer much need-<lb/>
ed and necessary advice concerning<lb/>
operating costs and equipment pur-<lb/>
chases.<lb/>
There are plans to have the buses<lb/>
serviced by the city instead of a<lb/>
private car dealership. This will<lb/>
reportedly cut repair labor costs by<lb/>
one half.<lb/>
A long needed change will also<lb/>
occur April 15, 1981. The transit<lb/>
manager's position will cease to be a<lb/>
patronage plum. Future transit<lb/>
managers will be screened and ap-<lb/>
pointed by the advisory board. This<lb/>
will ensure merit as the basis for hir-<lb/>
ing rather than political loyalties.<lb/>
Ford isn't the only one with a bet-<lb/>
ter idea.<lb/>
ITS yOU&amp; MOVE!<lb/>
VA<lb/>
v3<lb/>
r-Campus Forum<lb/>
Concerned Parent Urges Action<lb/>
Vote Today<lb/>
Because of the diverse opinions of<lb/>
our staff, we were unable to come<lb/>
up with a majority endorsement for<lb/>
a presidential candidate. We opted<lb/>
to present a variety of views to keep<lb/>
students informed. Now it's up to<lb/>
you. Vote for the candidate of you<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
I think it is the most ridiculous thine 1<lb/>
have ever heard of for an institution of<lb/>
higher learning to permit the condition<lb/>
to exist as reported in The hast Caroli-<lb/>
nian regarding noise, drinking &amp;. cursing<lb/>
next to the infirmary &amp; near the library;<lb/>
not withstanding tins condition being<lb/>
present tor several years, but the tact<lb/>
ihat Rudy Alexander (whoever he is)<lb/>
stating that it takes several complaints<lb/>
bet ore he gives a slap on the wrist.<lb/>
To think that the college chancellor or<lb/>
the board of trustees would permit a<lb/>
condition such as reported to exist where<lb/>
doctors and or nurses cannot reach the<lb/>
infirmary in emergency situations is un-<lb/>
thinkable.<lb/>
I think every student should bring tins<lb/>
to the attention of their parents 1 bet a<lb/>
plugged ruckle it will not take three com<lb/>
plaints to Mr. R. Alexander to get Ins at<lb/>
tention.<lb/>
LH. CRANE<lb/>
t A Parent)<lb/>
Tarboro. N.C.<lb/>
dent bod) and not foi certain Creek<lb/>
orders. One would think thai from the<lb/>
last letter pertaining to the reserving ol<lb/>
seats, the rule on that issue would be<lb/>
clear, but evidently it is not.<lb/>
Upon arriving at the game, we were<lb/>
abruptly told by the KA Fraternity that<lb/>
we would have to leave our seats. We<lb/>
replied that the reserving ol seats is no<lb/>
longer allowed, and in fact it nevei was<lb/>
to have been permitted in the first place.<lb/>
Deeming it best not to cause trouble, we<lb/>
finally left our seats. We did feel thai we<lb/>
and oui parents were being socially<lb/>
abused.<lb/>
Speaking for mysell and other<lb/>
students of the university, I think thai all<lb/>
students and then guests should be<lb/>
allowed the enforcement ol this rule to<lb/>
guarantee equal seating. 1 also think thai<lb/>
a folio up investigation bv the propei<lb/>
authorities is in order.<lb/>
How Rl) BROWN<lb/>
Junior Class President<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Seats Still Saved In Ficklen Reward For Stolen Hat<lb/>
As a part of the non-Greek communi-<lb/>
ty, I feel that Ficklen Stadium seating<lb/>
should be open to all portions of the Stu-<lb/>
Atter the ballgame Saturday night, 1<lb/>
grabbed my old faithful redneck cowboy<lb/>
hat and proceeded downtown to join the<lb/>
multitudes at the Elbo Room wnen I<lb/>
got inside, 1 suddenly realized thai so-<lb/>
meone had jerked nn hat from my head.<lb/>
? nal was thousands oi miles from<lb/>
a s it was merely a beat up straw<lb/>
cowboy hat with a nasty almost red,<lb/>
white and blue band holding it together.<lb/>
The hai was rolled and bent up on the<lb/>
sides and bent down in the from and<lb/>
back. 1 he inside was h? Jtrtei by<lb/>
folded, yellowed piece ol newspaper that<lb/>
enabled the thing to stay on my head,<lb/>
ruction! brim had been torn away from<lb/>
the band bv hard times, but with loving<lb/>
care 1 had sown it back together.<lb/>
1 ittle value do 1 have foi many<lb/>
material things besides mv old mustang<lb/>
and mv hat mot necessarily in tl<lb/>
ordei . 1 can bui hope that 1 have touch-<lb/>
ed the heart of the abductor ol mv<lb/>
coveted hat. It so, eithei call 752 9490oi<lb/>
just diop b suite 417 Belk and throw<lb/>
the old hat into the hall (y<lb/>
it).<lb/>
Placing a monetary value on m hai<lb/>
friend is a trauma within itself. But I<lb/>
would gladly pay ten dollars or more to<lb/>
anyone who could lead to the reunion ol<lb/>
me and mv hat piece.<lb/>
Kl() PRIM 1 1 E<lb/>
Junioi. ons<lb/>
Why Vote Carter?<lb/>
Why Vote Reagan?<lb/>
B CHARLES SUNE<lb/>
The current presidential race is no<lb/>
different on its face than any other.<lb/>
Both sides have assaulted the elec-<lb/>
toiate with their individual bombast<lb/>
and rhetoric, somehow managing to<lb/>
present their stands on the "issues"<lb/>
amid the attacks and promises.<lb/>
Much to the candidates'<lb/>
displeasure, realistic solutions to<lb/>
our nation's ills are rarely reducible<lb/>
to pithy slogans.<lb/>
"Ay, there's the rub as Hamlet<lb/>
said. Complex problems defy<lb/>
simplistic solutions, and therein lies<lb/>
the fault oi the Reagan platform.<lb/>
As we enter the final decades of<lb/>
this century, we are, as a nation, too<lb/>
quick to follow any man who can<lb/>
glibly offer punchy one-liners as<lb/>
cures. Similarly, it is easy for a can-<lb/>
didate to offer the popular answers.<lb/>
I hat approach may have worked 30<lb/>
years ago. when Reagan waxed reac-<lb/>
tionary, but it is unacceptable to-<lb/>
day. Columnist David Broder wrote<lb/>
recently that  it is going to be<lb/>
tough to govern this country in the<lb/>
next four years. Budget deficits,<lb/>
high rates of inflation, loss of pro-<lb/>
ductivity and deterioration of our<lb/>
industrial plant all point to con-<lb/>
tinued economic problems<lb/>
I hose who believe any single<lb/>
political philosophy will usher in a<lb/>
new era oi prosperity should re-<lb/>
examine their positions.<lb/>
??(an we afford four more years<lb/>
oi Jimmy Carter?" as Reagan sug-<lb/>
gests?<lb/>
Better we should ask "can we af-<lb/>
ford four years of Reagan's<lb/>
economic proposals based on the<lb/>
Kemp-Roth tax cut plan a plan<lb/>
which has been described as<lb/>
"oodoo economics" by George<lb/>
Bush and "irresponsible" by<lb/>
Business Week.<lb/>
No doubt, many will vote for<lb/>
Ronald Reagan because they think<lb/>
he is best fit to "put this country-<lb/>
back on the right track They will<lb/>
be disillusioned. Granted, Carter<lb/>
hasn't solved all of society's<lb/>
maladies, but don't be snared by the<lb/>
Reagan approach simply because it<lb/>
is an alternative. That it may be,<lb/>
but it certainly is not a realistic alter-<lb/>
native.<lb/>
The lvnchpin of Reagan s entire<lb/>
program for reshaping the federal<lb/>
government is the Kemp-Roth tax<lb/>
cut plan. All other proposals de-<lb/>
pend upon passage of this plan.<lb/>
Under the plan, the economy would<lb/>
be revitalized by taking the money<lb/>
that would have been paid as federal<lb/>
tax and reinvesting it.<lb/>
Reagan proposes a 30 per cent tax<lb/>
cut, spaced over three years. At the<lb/>
same time, however, he promises in-<lb/>
creased defense spending, full<lb/>
employment, and decreased intla-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
It can't be done.<lb/>
Though it's a nice enough dream,<lb/>
it is unrealistic. Business Week said<lb/>
the proposal  would be a com-<lb/>
pletely irresponsible way to ap-<lb/>
proach the federal budget problem,<lb/>
and it would generate an intlation<lb/>
that would destroy the value of the<lb/>
currency . ? ? ? Kemp-Roth would<lb/>
add $100 billion to a deficit that is<lb/>
already dangerously swollen. It<lb/>
would'touch off an inflationary ex-<lb/>
plosion that would wreck the coun-<lb/>
try and impoverish everyone on a<lb/>
fixed income<lb/>
Reagan's plan would primarily<lb/>
benefit such traditionally<lb/>
Republican constituencies as the<lb/>
wealthy and the corporate. The<lb/>
"little man" Reagan constantly<lb/>
refers to would be forgotten.<lb/>
Conversely, Carter's tax cut plan<lb/>
offers the necessary investment in-<lb/>
centives for business, as well as cut-<lb/>
ting the taxes of those who need it<lb/>
most - lower income Americans.<lb/>
such a proposal would cost. It's<lb/>
easy to promise "whatever it<lb/>
takes but it is infinitely more dif-<lb/>
ficult to deliver on that promise.<lb/>
This haphazard approach is in-<lb/>
herently unsound. It's ironic that<lb/>
the candidate who preaches reduced<lb/>
government spending as vehemently<lb/>
as Reagan would offer defense a<lb/>
blank check.<lb/>
President Carter, on the other<lb/>
hand, is quite specific in his defense<lb/>
policy. He proposes that an addi-<lb/>
tional 25 per cent be spent on<lb/>
defense during the next five years.<lb/>
Combined with the last three and a<lb/>
half years, that would mean an ad-<lb/>
ditional 35 per cent in defense spen-<lb/>
ding during the two terms of his ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Carter has, and continues to, in-<lb/>
stitute new programs such as the<lb/>
Rapid Deployment Force and the<lb/>
MX Missile System.<lb/>
President Carter has, during the<lb/>
past four years, reversed the trend<lb/>
under the previous Republican ad-<lb/>
ministrations that decreased defense<lb/>
spending.<lb/>
By STAN R1DGLEY<lb/>
"Nothing can bring you peace but<lb/>
the triumph of principles<lb/>
Ralph U aide Emerson<lb/>
No one can solve this country's<lb/>
problems with simplistic answers.<lb/>
Jimmy Carter knows this. Sadly,<lb/>
Reagan has yet to realize it.<lb/>
Reagan's response is to promise<lb/>
all things to all people and "tell<lb/>
them what they want to hear Jim-<lb/>
my Carter offers the only realistic<lb/>
answers to our problems.<lb/>
On defense, Reagan promises<lb/>
"Peace through Strength and<lb/>
harks back to the era immediately<lb/>
following the Second World War,<lb/>
"when no nation on Earth dared"<lb/>
violate our peace. Those days are<lb/>
unmistakably gone forever, and<lb/>
with them goes that type of carte<lb/>
blanche defense policy.<lb/>
Reagan suggests spending<lb/>
"whatever it takes" to assure<lb/>
American military superiority. This<lb/>
is simply a latter day version of the<lb/>
old 1950's "Fortress<lb/>
America'Mdeal. Reagan, however,<lb/>
is not at all specific as to how much<lb/>
Charles Sune is a junior Political<lb/>
Science major from Raleigh. He has<lb/>
been active in the Democratic Party<lb/>
and was nominated as a delegate to<lb/>
Democratic National Convention<lb/>
last summer.<lb/>
The real choice in today's<lb/>
presidential election is one of prin-<lb/>
ciples, and that is something the<lb/>
Democratic Party loathes to admit.<lb/>
For two months we've seen per-<lb/>
sonal invective thrown back and<lb/>
forth between Republican and<lb/>
Democrat, and this continuous ex-<lb/>
change has tended to obscure the<lb/>
fact that each man represents a par-<lb/>
ticular philosophy ? one with<lb/>
which he will guide the country the<lb/>
next bun years if elected.<lb/>
Both candidates want basically<lb/>
the same things for this nation ?<lb/>
full employment, low inflation,<lb/>
strong defense, and equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity for the citizenry. What they<lb/>
differ on is the means bv which<lb/>
these ideals can be acheived.<lb/>
Both parties have proffered then<lb/>
specific proposals in their platforms<lb/>
which were hammered out at their<lb/>
respective conventions, but more<lb/>
important than specifics are the<lb/>
frames oi references from which<lb/>
these programs spring.<lb/>
Perhaps no better illustration can<lb/>
be made oi the difference between<lb/>
the two positions than that oi the<lb/>
problem of urban decay.<lb/>
The Democrats' solution to the<lb/>
problem is to pump money into an<lb/>
Urban Renewal Program ? we've<lb/>
seen this the last four years and it<lb/>
has not worked in the South Bronx.<lb/>
By contrast. Republicans have pro-<lb/>
posed the creation of "free enter-<lb/>
prise" zones in blighted areas in<lb/>
which tax incentives and othei<lb/>
measures would be used to entice<lb/>
businesses into these areas to rebuild<lb/>
them and provide real jobs for the<lb/>
inhabitants, not makework govern-<lb/>
ment jobs.<lb/>
The Democratic tendency to<lb/>
spend money it does not have is at<lb/>
the heart of most of 'his country's<lb/>
national problems ? inflation,<lb/>
unemployemnt, low productivity,<lb/>
budget deficits. G.K. Chesterton<lb/>
stated the Democrats' affliction suc-<lb/>
cinctly: "It isn't that they can't see<lb/>
the solution. It is that they can't see<lb/>
the problem<lb/>
Jimmy Carter has repeatedly ac-<lb/>
cused Ronald Reagan oi offering<lb/>
simplistic answers to complex ques-<lb/>
tions. But Reagan offers us fun-<lb/>
damental answers, reaching to the<lb/>
heart ol our problems. 1 he basic<lb/>
difference is that Republicans see<lb/>
the cause ol most of our problems<lb/>
ultimately as fiscal irresponsiblity<lb/>
by the federal government<lb/>
Democrats do not.<lb/>
Undei Carter, the U.S. economy<lb/>
has hit its highest inflation rate since<lb/>
Wot Id Wai 11, it- highesi tax rate in<lb/>
U.S. history, the largest number ol<lb/>
unemployed since the Great Depres-<lb/>
sion, and has seen a steady rise in<lb/>
the consumer price index and a<lb/>
steadv decline in real wages. I his is<lb/>
the legacy of Jimmy Carter the last<lb/>
four years. Ronald Reagan offers a<lb/>
fresh alternative methods that<lb/>
WO! k.<lb/>
Admittedly, Republican pro-<lb/>
posals are bold and innovative. An<lb/>
example is the much-maligned<lb/>
Kemp-Roth 30 Perceni las Reduc-<lb/>
tion Proposal. Democrats say it is<lb/>
unworkable Cartel himsell called<lb/>
it "ridiculous" and they trot out<lb/>
then experts to sa why. Vet Nobel<lb/>
Prize-winning economist Milton<lb/>
Friedman supports the proposal<lb/>
along with a battery oi other promi-<lb/>
nent economists.<lb/>
But Kemp-Roth is perhaps less<lb/>
vulnerable to criticism than the<lb/>
Democrats" extravagant progarm to<lb/>
provide 800,000jobs at a cost ol SI2<lb/>
billion. Money foi that program will<lb/>
come from just two sources - the<lb/>
taxpayer's pockets and the treasury<lb/>
printing press. This country doesn't<lb/>
need more play money m circula-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
But even allowing that Kemp<lb/>
Roth is found to be even partially<lb/>
unworkable after Reagan's election<lb/>
(Or the jobs program found un-<lb/>
workable after Carter's), these two<lb/>
proposals send a signal to the<lb/>
American public as to how these<lb/>
two men will repond to problems<lb/>
while m oiiwe. From Carter, it will<lb/>
be more of the same. If re-elected,<lb/>
he will offer mote and more oi the<lb/>
old "New Deal" solutions to<lb/>
modern dilemmas ? that is the<lb/>
frame of reference from which his<lb/>
party operates.<lb/>
But Reagan and the Republican<lb/>
Parts subscribe to no bankrupt<lb/>
policy. Republicans realize thai only<lb/>
bv holding spending and taxation to<lb/>
a minimum can government keep<lb/>
the value oi the dollar intact ? and<lb/>
that's the suresi way to reduce<lb/>
unemployemnt and inflation.<lb/>
As for the individual, the<lb/>
Republican Party tuts traditionally<lb/>
been the champion of individual<lb/>
freedom. While the Democrats deal<lb/>
in symbols, Republicans deal in<lb/>
substance<lb/>
1 he Democrats call foi coercion<lb/>
ol civic leaders and the state- in<lb/>
their ratification of the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendme n I; Repu blican-<lb/>
"reaffirm oui Party's historic com-<lb/>
mitment to equal i ights and equahtv<lb/>
for women  and support the en<lb/>
toicement o all equal opportunity<lb/>
laws and urge the elimination<lb/>
discrimination against women<lb/>
The Democrats have called I<lb/>
the establishmeni ol Martin I uthei<lb/>
King. Jrs birthday as a national<lb/>
holiday - nice symbol. Republicans<lb/>
are concerned with, what happens to<lb/>
blacks the othei 364 days ol the<lb/>
year; then platform promises to<lb/>
"open new opportunities foi black<lb/>
men and women to begin small<lb/>
businesses oi then own  bung<lb/>
strong, effective enforcement ol<lb/>
federal civil rights statute- and<lb/>
ensure thai the federal governemnt<lb/>
follows a non-discriminatory system<lb/>
oi appointments, v the Party ol<lb/>
1 incoln, we remain equally and<lb/>
steadfastly committed to the equah-<lb/>
tv ol rights io all citizens regardless<lb/>
ol race<lb/>
A vote io Reagan today is a vote<lb/>
for the traditional Republican prin<lb/>
ciples ol equality oi opportunity,<lb/>
equal justice undei the law, and<lb/>
basic rights and freedoms undei the<lb/>
constitution. A- Emerson said, only<lb/>
the "triumph of principles" can br-<lb/>
ing us peace, and only m this<lb/>
Republican was can the essential in-<lb/>
gredient of the American way ol life<lb/>
be preserved ? and that essential in<lb/>
gredient is freedom.<lb/>
The choice is clear.<lb/>
Stan Ridgley is a senior Political<lb/>
Science major with a degree in jour<lb/>
nalism from the University of Worth<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb/>
tl<lb/>
lolta<lb/>
HendN<lb/>
5 Bl<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
11<lb/>
J<lb/>
w :<lb/>
I<lb/>
ls(<lb/>
m<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
stl<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057298_0005"/><lb/>
1 HI I S1 (. AROt INI AS<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Vl MM K4. 1980<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Hunting For Fossils: A Sedimental Journey<lb/>
?. :<lb/>
o<lb/>
c<lb/>
i<lb/>
? lilc<lb/>
rntial in-<lb/>
B DOUG QUEEN<lb/>
Stafl Wriln<lb/>
One ot the mosl remarkable peo-<lb/>
ple I've mei ai East Carolina was a<lb/>
geology student by the name of Jack<lb/>
Mason. Jack, 01 Rock as we called<lb/>
him, ua. the paragon of fossil<lb/>
hunters. I vividly remember dropp-<lb/>
ing by Jack's room in I'instead<lb/>
man) a Saturday morning and fin-<lb/>
ding him preparing foi one of his<lb/>
"expeditions Alter much coercing<lb/>
by Jack to overcome my basic reluc-<lb/>
tance to anything more strenous<lb/>
than leading. 1 finally agreed to ac-<lb/>
company him on the Grand Tour ol<lb/>
Pitt Count) fossiling.<lb/>
tici packing apples, water-jugs,<lb/>
man) papei bags with rubber bands,<lb/>
and even a toothbrush into his<lb/>
knapsack, I thought we were going<lb/>
to sta for a long time. The<lb/>
ush cei tainl) did nothing to<lb/>
alia) n j basic mistrust of the<lb/>
dub n it) of "fossiling (m-<lb/>
l) latei did 1 understand the use of<lb/>
the toothbrush when 1 witnessed<lb/>
Jack's skillful hands brush away the<lb/>
accumulated sediment of five-ten<lb/>
mi<lb/>
on years to unearth a perfect<lb/>
specimen of Turritella. It was an ex-<lb/>
quisitely delicate spiral gastropod<lb/>
thai went from a large chamber to<lb/>
the tiny tip with all the grace that<lb/>
nature lavishes on even its (to our<lb/>
sometimes cumbersome eyes) minor<lb/>
members.<lb/>
I remember Rocky handing the<lb/>
Turritella up to me saying that 1<lb/>
could keep it because he had<lb/>
millions. Although he didn't literal-<lb/>
ly have millions, he had enough. As<lb/>
for myself, I stood on the bank of<lb/>
the far River with a ten-million year<lb/>
old fossil in mj hands, not knowing<lb/>
what to do with it. Since that time.<lb/>
I've fossiled almost ever) known<lb/>
outcropping of fossils in this area<lb/>
and have learned what to do with<lb/>
mv finds, and more importantly,<lb/>
how to appreciate them for what<lb/>
the) represent.<lb/>
The greatest find in fossiling for<lb/>
the beginner is the ubiquitious<lb/>
shark's tooth. The massive Car-<lb/>
charodon, ancestor of the present-<lb/>
day Great White Shark, had teeth<lb/>
that often exceeded six inches, and<lb/>
sometimes obtained the length of<lb/>
eight inches. Truly, this was a<lb/>
Man) different types of interesting fossils can be found in the dreenville<lb/>
area. Five of the most common fossils are illustrated here. Clockwise from<lb/>
upper left: Turretella. tooth of a carcharadon (Great White Miark), Sep-<lb/>
tastrea (coral), Pecten and Glemeris.<lb/>
ic Pleistocene some<lb/>
monster ot<lb/>
million years ago. This particular<lb/>
fossil can be found in the Yorktown<lb/>
Formation which crops out by the<lb/>
I at River at the bottom of the sand<lb/>
cliffs off River Road in Greenville.<lb/>
Although finding a "monster"<lb/>
tooth up to six inches is exceeding<lb/>
rare, the smaller variety can be<lb/>
found almost without looking at all.<lb/>
Just scramble down the sand cliff,<lb/>
be careful (because a slip means a<lb/>
swim) and start looking.<lb/>
A rudimentary inspection will<lb/>
reveal about three layers of sand<lb/>
and gravel composing the cliff. The<lb/>
top layer is all sand that has a few<lb/>
fossils but are too recent to have<lb/>
been effectively fossilized. These<lb/>
will often disintegrate at the touch<lb/>
of a finger. The second layer is<lb/>
gravel that will yield hundreds of<lb/>
tiny shark teeth of various grades of<lb/>
lit hiat ion (fossiliation). You may<lb/>
find the long, sharp, scimitar-like<lb/>
teeth that after a couple of million<lb/>
years ate still pointed enough to in-<lb/>
flict a wound.<lb/>
lor those of you who want to<lb/>
forego the rigors of scrambling<lb/>
down precipitious sand cliffs, there<lb/>
is an alternative. Walk, or drie, to<lb/>
Green Springs Park.<lb/>
Walk over the bridge and in-<lb/>
vestigate around until you come<lb/>
upon a natural spring that flows our<lb/>
of the hillside. This isn't the<lb/>
motherlode, but it is fun and can oc-<lb/>
cassionally offer up an interesting<lb/>
piie for the diligent.<lb/>
But mv favorite spot is<lb/>
underneath the bridge beside the<lb/>
Stop and Go on Tenth Street. It is<lb/>
dirty and mess. and I advise that<lb/>
any searcher be equipped with stur-<lb/>
dv pants and rugged boots. It is here<lb/>
that you'll find the exotic<lb/>
Glycimeris with its beautiful flutings<lb/>
cutting dramatically across the axis<lb/>
ot the growth rings. Glycimeris is a<lb/>
bivalve thai can be used for<lb/>
anything from an ashtray to a<lb/>
Calder-like mobile. The only restric-<lb/>
tion is vour imagination.<lb/>
It is also here that you can find<lb/>
another bivalve called Pecten. I too<lb/>
can serve as a collectible or an art<lb/>
object or a "what you will It is a-<lb/>
fine a shell as you will find on the<lb/>
beach with the added attractioi<lb/>
possessing an age calculated in<lb/>
millions of years.<lb/>
What is the value of looking tor<lb/>
and collecting fossils? Well, there is<lb/>
a monetary value associated <lb/>
some of the finer, rarer species oi<lb/>
Sec fossil . page 6, col. I<lb/>
Election Collection<lb/>
Teacher Collects Campaign Souvenirs<lb/>
The Grapes Of Wrath<lb/>
John ford's classic 1M40 film. Hit- drupes of Wralh. will he showing in the<lb/>
Hendrix Iheatre in Mendenhall Student (enter this Wednesdav night, Nov.<lb/>
5. at 8:00 p.m. Kased on John Steinbeck's novel, the film stars Henrv Fon-<lb/>
da and John C arradine. I he discussion group which was to have been held<lb/>
after the film has been cancelled.<lb/>
B FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
K I t?, Hurrau<lb/>
GREENVILLE ? Campaign<lb/>
lapel buttons, posters and bumper<lb/>
stickers are a familiar sight<lb/>
nowadays, and most of us will<lb/>
relegate these items to the trash can<lb/>
after Nov. 4.<lb/>
But for political paraphernalia<lb/>
collector Donald Collins, owner of<lb/>
500 campaign buttons, the<lb/>
ephemeral tokens of politics are bits<lb/>
of history that should be preserved<lb/>
and enjoyed in future years.<lb/>
An interest in history sparked his<lb/>
enthusiasm for campaign materials<lb/>
20 years ago. An associate professor<lb/>
A dvice For Students:<lb/>
Coping With Leases<lb/>
f'iiifoi note: this is the second<lb/>
in a of urrides serving as a<lb/>
ff-campus housing. It is<lb/>
as a service far ECt<lb/>
students by the SGA presidential<lb/>
i ahii<lb/>
When you rent an apartment,<lb/>
ign a lease or a ren-<lb/>
ent. It is a legal contract<lb/>
you, the tenant, and the<lb/>
to the terms and con-<lb/>
ditions oi youi tenancy. A lease has<lb/>
eim (usually 9 months or<lb/>
a year) during which the rent is fix-<lb/>
i jointly and individually<lb/>
I -? . ii cotenants) agree to be<lb/>
resp tor the rent to the end of<lb/>
the term, even if you move out,<lb/>
s It;o landlord agrees in writing<lb/>
?me othei arrangement.<lb/>
An unwritten tenancy agreement<lb/>
is a month-to-month contract. You<lb/>
can end tenancy and move out<lb/>
anytime after giving 7 days written<lb/>
notice from the first of trie month.<lb/>
The landlord can raise the rent ? or<lb/>
ask you to move out ? on the same<lb/>
7 days notice.<lb/>
leases and rental agreements<lb/>
slate conditions which are binding<lb/>
upon you and which you should<lb/>
understand before you sign. Does<lb/>
the rent include water, gas, electrici-<lb/>
ty, etc.? Be sure any verbal<lb/>
agreements with your landlord are<lb/>
added in w riting to the lease. For ex-<lb/>
ample:<lb/>
When is the rent due? Is there a<lb/>
penalty for iate payment? Is there a<lb/>
grace period? What deposits and<lb/>
fees are required? (Cleaning,<lb/>
This Week: International<lb/>
Jewish Arts Festival<lb/>
Held On ECU Campus<lb/>
or Political<lb/>
n our<lb/>
I his week on campus, the annual<lb/>
International &amp; Jewish Arts Festival<lb/>
is being held. I he festival, planned<lb/>
brate the ethnic minorities on<lb/>
oui campus, is sponsored by the<lb/>
Student 1 nion Minority Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
On fuesdasy, Nov. 4, students<lb/>
will be treated to the film "Shalom'<lb/>
h will be shown at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the 1 edonia S. Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center. The compelling story of<lb/>
Israel from its beginning to the pre-<lb/>
sent is told in this comprehensive<lb/>
documentary. Photographs and rare<lb/>
movie footage depict the earlv<lb/>
Zionists, the plight of retugee Euro-<lb/>
pean Jews after World War 11, and<lb/>
the exhilarating proclamation of the<lb/>
state of Israel in 1948.<lb/>
On Wednesday, Nov. 5, enjoy the<lb/>
various foods the world has to offci<lb/>
as samples of at least 25 different<lb/>
dishes from around the globe are<lb/>
brought to ECU. The International<lb/>
Foods festival, which will begin at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, will offer such dishes as as<lb/>
Hungarian cabbage rolls, Jewish<lb/>
blintzes, won ton soup, along with<lb/>
many others. Tickets will be<lb/>
available at the door for $1.00 to the<lb/>
first 100 patrons.<lb/>
"A Storm of Strangers" followed<lb/>
by a discussion will bring to a close<lb/>
the Jewish Arts and International<lb/>
Festival week. The film is a series of<lb/>
prize-winning ethnic films designed<lb/>
to help Americans rediscover their<lb/>
roots. The purpose is to introduce<lb/>
America's different ethnic and<lb/>
racial minorities to each other, but<lb/>
more importantly, they reveal ethnic<lb/>
minorities to themselves. Prepare to<lb/>
weep and laugh at experiences sup-<lb/>
plied by members of each minority<lb/>
who were involved in all levels of<lb/>
creation in this project. The film<lb/>
will be shown Thursday, Nov. 6 at<lb/>
8:00 p.m. in the L.edonia S. Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
Damage, Security, Key). What are<lb/>
the terms for refunding deposits?<lb/>
Do your roommates have to be<lb/>
approved by the landlord?,Can the<lb/>
rent be increased if the number of<lb/>
tenants increases? What about<lb/>
guests? When does a guest become a<lb/>
tenant? What happens when one<lb/>
roommate leaves school or becomes<lb/>
ill? Is sub-letting permitted? Is there<lb/>
a fee for sub-letting0<lb/>
Who has the right of entry to con-<lb/>
duct inspections and how often?<lb/>
Who is responsible for cleaning and<lb/>
maintenance? Will the landlord take<lb/>
care of the lawn or garden? Is writ-<lb/>
ten permission required to decorate<lb/>
the place? Will the landlord provide<lb/>
paint? What kind of picture hangers<lb/>
are allowed? (Tack and nail holes in<lb/>
walls account for many deductions<lb/>
from security deposits).<lb/>
Are there any rules concerning<lb/>
conduct, quiet hours, etc.? Are pets<lb/>
allowed? Do you have an option to<lb/>
renew your lease for a specific<lb/>
period at a fixed rent? Here are<lb/>
some things you can do to prevent<lb/>
problems:<lb/>
Do not sign a lease that is for a<lb/>
period longer than you actually plan<lb/>
to stay. Sometimes landlords prefer<lb/>
a 12 month lease but will agree to 9<lb/>
months instead. Dates starting the<lb/>
period of tenancy are written on the<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
Read and keep a copy of your<lb/>
lease and make sure it is completed<lb/>
and signed by the landlord or agent.<lb/>
Make your rent payments and<lb/>
deposits by check and specify on it<lb/>
exactly what the check is for : $300<lb/>
to Jane Doe ? $150 rent for<lb/>
and<lb/>
$150 security deposit Money<lb/>
Orders and Travelers checks are not<lb/>
good because the original copy is<lb/>
not returned to you after payment.<lb/>
If you have to pay by cash, always<lb/>
get a receipt. You have the right to<lb/>
one. (If you pay by check, your<lb/>
cancelled check is your receipt).<lb/>
Your receipts, records, and any cor-<lb/>
respondence with your landlord<lb/>
should be kept until you have mov-<lb/>
ed out and received any deposits to<lb/>
whirh vou are entitled.<lb/>
of library science at Fas! Carolina<lb/>
University, Collins has a PhD<lb/>
degree in history form the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Georgia in addition to his<lb/>
library science degrees.<lb/>
Collins has assembled a stagger-<lb/>
ing array of brochers, posters, pms<lb/>
and medals, matchbook covers,<lb/>
banners, old prints and even rare<lb/>
candidates' "giveaways" ? an<lb/>
eyeshade, a hat, a paper fan, some<lb/>
tie clasps, a mug, emory boards,<lb/>
coins and even a thimble. His collec-<lb/>
tion includes not only political<lb/>
memorabilia, but also tokens ol<lb/>
various social and reform<lb/>
movements since the late 1800V<lb/>
Some of his things are quite<lb/>
valuable on the collectibles market;<lb/>
he owns several historic lithographs<lb/>
and posters, including two rare pro-<lb/>
paganda posters used by Vichy<lb/>
France during World War II and a<lb/>
dollar certificate given long ago to<lb/>
contributors to the Jeff Davis<lb/>
Memorial.<lb/>
He did own a woman's suffrage<lb/>
banner found in a student's attic,<lb/>
but traded it for a detailed depiction<lb/>
of the Battle of the Crater from<lb/>
"Leslie's" magazine. A Collins<lb/>
ancestor died in that Civil War bat-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
Other items are common and easj<lb/>
to come by now, like the large<lb/>
"Iran: Let Our People do" button,<lb/>
but may someday be eagerly sought<lb/>
as a curiosity of 1980.<lb/>
He has a few special favorites: an<lb/>
Lhabeth Ray button, a 1904 Teddy<lb/>
Roosevelt watch fob, a<lb/>
"Governments Make War" button<lb/>
personally given to him by feminist-<lb/>
pacifist Jeannetie Rankm and a<lb/>
bronze button used for Progressive<lb/>
presidential candidate Robert<lb/>
I aFollette in 1 s24.<lb/>
"I don't really have enough of<lb/>
these things to be considered a<lb/>
serious collector Collins says.<lb/>
"Serious collectors will buv buttons<lb/>
to vompletc a series: I stopped buv-<lb/>
ing buttons a long time ago<lb/>
Scarcity, rather than age, dictates<lb/>
a button's value; some the the 1976<lb/>
Jimmy Carter campaign buttons are<lb/>
more valuable than a cloth button<lb/>
trom the 1888 Benjamin Harrison<lb/>
campaign. Many "pressings" of<lb/>
different Carter buttons, and<lb/>
relativelv few ot each, were made<lb/>
tor distribution by independent<lb/>
manrfactureres. To collect them all<lb/>
would be quite a task.<lb/>
Collins' bronze LaFollette button<lb/>
is less valuable than a cheaper tin<lb/>
one, because the tin button is<lb/>
scarcer.<lb/>
Fake buttons are a major pitfall<lb/>
for new collectors. While recent<lb/>
fakes are required to have<lb/>
"Reproduction" stamped on them,<lb/>
counterfeits do turn up to plague the<lb/>
unwary hobbyist.<lb/>
Buttons are a method of<lb/>
"advertising" one's political<lb/>
beliefs, and they invite discussion<lb/>
with the wearer, Collins believes.<lb/>
"Some collectors dislike bumper<lb/>
stickers, but 1 think of a bumper<lb/>
sticker as just a political button<lb/>
worn on a car he said. His earlist<lb/>
bumper sticker is a fragile piece<lb/>
dating from a FDR campaign.<lb/>
Collins is a liberal Democrat, but<lb/>
in the true spirit of collecting, he<lb/>
Joes not discriminate in his acquisi-<lb/>
tion of mass-produced propaganda<lb/>
pieces. Besides nuraberous<lb/>
Democratic and Republican items,<lb/>
doens ot lesser-known political and<lb/>
social groups are represented in his<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
Among them are the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan, the Young Americans<lb/>
Freedom, the John Birch Society,<lb/>
the American Independent Part,<lb/>
the American Nai Partv, Zero<lb/>
Population Growth, the Theocratic<lb/>
Partv, the Socialist Workers Partv,<lb/>
the Young Socialisi Workers, and<lb/>
for fun, the "Pat Paulsen for Presi-<lb/>
dent" campaign and the Sen. Sam<lb/>
Ervin Fan Club.<lb/>
Presidential candidates ot the<lb/>
past ? some nearlv forgotten ? are<lb/>
recalled among his button displays;<lb/>
Landon and Willkie share equal<lb/>
space with Coolidge, Taft and<lb/>
Hoover.<lb/>
Of prime interest to a collet<lb/>
Collins' series of buttons hurriedly<lb/>
pressed in 1976 before President<lb/>
Carter picked Mondale for his runn-<lb/>
ing mate: "Carter-Jacl<lb/>
' ' C a r t e r - M u s k i e ; ' '<lb/>
"Carter-Church<lb/>
"Carter-Stevenson and<lb/>
"Carter-Glenn Collins also has<lb/>
pro-Carter buttons in 15 languages.<lb/>
Another fascinating part of his<lb/>
collection are pamphlets from the<lb/>
 "dirty politics" campaign of Frank<lb/>
Merriam who opposed Upton<lb/>
Sinclair in a long-ago California<lb/>
gubernatorial race. "This wasn't<lb/>
just dirty politics; it was filthy<lb/>
said Collins.<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Long Line Last Friday Night<lb/>
This scene shows that even Halloween night is not exempt from ECL's long lines.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057298_0006"/><lb/>
1 Ml I AM l Kil INI () I 1HI K4. 1980<lb/>
bbll?  X ?v x?n?L<lb/>
1<lb/>
Photos by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
The Blues Brothers Meet Jaws<lb/>
1 hese costumes based on popular contemporary films were among manv worn b ECl students celebralinn Halloween<lb/>
VWrOT btt W f)T<lb/>
4Y Student Wins Scholarship<lb/>
IrJfMT As<lb/>
TOr iNivibieci' j<lb/>
Sandra Monteith of<lb/>
Brevard, senior interior<lb/>
design student in the<lb/>
 asl Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty School of Art. is the<lb/>
recipient of the first an-<lb/>
nual $1,000 scholarship<lb/>
a u a i d e d b y t h e<lb/>
Carolinas C haptei ol<lb/>
the American Society<lb/>
of Interior Designers.<lb/>
1 o be applied toward<lb/>
expenses for<lb/>
Monteith's senior yeai<lb/>
at I c I . the scholi<lb/>
ship is the fii<lb/>
in<lb/>
Fossil-Hunting Fun<lb/>
outstandi n<lb/>
design tu<lb/>
North<lb/>
c arolina.<lb/>
design 01 architectural<lb/>
firm.<lb/>
Her special interest is<lb/>
e n l r o n mental<lb/>
design? making use o<lb/>
natural means and<lb/>
matei ials, such as<lb/>
 .in sunlighl and<lb/>
' ipography, rather<lb/>
than artificial or<lb/>
South mechanical means, to<lb/>
? e a t e desirable<lb/>
buildings.<lb/>
An exhibition of her<lb/>
( ontinued from page 5 be;<lb/>
m- a lai l'c sha: k s<lb/>
tooth on the collecting<lb/>
market may bring ,b<lb/>
much as 150 dollai -<lb/>
Bui<lb/>
. i ? ? ?<lb/>
il these relics<lb/>
from oui biological<lb/>
past. Some o! these<lb/>
tossiIs such as the 1 ur-<lb/>
rttella, are surpassingly<lb/>
ireaieu<lb/>
u ondei t ul mobiles<lb/>
fi om sharks' teeth and<lb/>
bellamites that ap<lb/>
, A-ever,<lb/>
erve as<lb/>
a ? ork<lb/>
Is<lb/>
contemplate e<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Held<lb/>
Donald .1. Mackey ol<lb/>
 inston-Salem, N. C,<lb/>
a senior student in the<lb/>
ECU School of Art. is<lb/>
now having a show oi<lb/>
prints and drawings in<lb/>
the Kate Lewis Caller<lb/>
in the W h ic ha rd<lb/>
Building. The show will<lb/>
continue until No. 7.<lb/>
Mackey exhibition<lb/>
includes drawings and<lb/>
prints (intaglios and<lb/>
lithographs.)<lb/>
A candidate foi a<lb/>
B.F.A. degree in print-<lb/>
making with a minor in<lb/>
drawing, Mackey plans<lb/>
to attend graduate<lb/>
school for an M.F.A.<lb/>
degree in print making<lb/>
or medical illustration,<lb/>
or an M.S. degree in<lb/>
physical education.<lb/>
Mackey is the son oi<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ro I<lb/>
Mackey of Winston<lb/>
Salem, N.C.<lb/>
pieces. Foi years I car-<lb/>
: ied a fax oied piece oi<lb/>
whale bone in my<lb/>
pocket that assured me<lb/>
many times that life is<lb/>
only a transient tiling<lb/>
that must be made the<lb/>
most ol he i ? e we<lb/>
ourselves become<lb/>
fossils.<lb/>
Search out these<lb/>
areas and look for these<lb/>
fossils. If you are in-<lb/>
terested, the Geology<lb/>
Building has a perma<lb/>
nent display ol any<lb/>
fossil that ou will find<lb/>
in this area. And it you<lb/>
do find a specimen that<lb/>
they do not have, well,<lb/>
they will be very in-<lb/>
terested to see what you<lb/>
find. Who knows, you<lb/>
may find something<lb/>
that has nevei been<lb/>
found before, and then<lb/>
your name will live on,<lb/>
attached to a fossil.<lb/>
Happy hunting.<lb/>
A candidate foi the<lb/>
Bachelor oi Fine rts<lb/>
degree in interior interior design projects,<lb/>
design. Monteith ex including layouts, floor<lb/>
pects to graduate from plans and perspectives.<lb/>
ECU at the end oi tall along with a painting<lb/>
semester. ! . on and several prints, is<lb/>
graduation she plans to scheduled tor<lb/>
pursue a careei with a Mendenhall Student<lb/>
southeastern interior Center Nov. 2-9.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
LeRoux<lb/>
Capitol recording artists I.eKoux will be<lb/>
performing at the Altie I uesdax. Nov. 4.<lb/>
ELECTION DAY<lb/>
5 WED. . . IFC CONCERT wBILL DEAL<lb/>
AND THE RHONDELS<lb/>
6 THURSUGAR<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON<lb/>
AND<lb/>
CHAPTER X<lb/>
TUE. NOV.4 AT 9:00<lb/>
END OF THE WORLD<lb/>
ELECTION DAY PARTY<lb/>
$1.00 ADMISSION FOR GIRLS &amp; GUYS<lb/>
.05 DRAFT FOR EVERYONE<lb/>
ELECTION RESULTS WILL BE POSTED EVERY<lb/>
HALF HOUR &amp; IF YOUR CANIDATE IS AHEAD<lb/>
YOU DRINK FREE FOR FIVE MINUTES ON THE<lb/>
HALF HOUR.<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
INCREDIBLE<lb/>
$1.99 LUNCH!<lb/>
Monday:<lb/>
Fish Fry all you can eat $1.99<lb/>
Tuesday:<lb/>
Salad Bar. ayou can eat 1.99<lb/>
Wednesday:<lb/>
Shrimp Creole ayou can em 1.99<lb/>
Thursday:<lb/>
Chowder and Salad<lb/>
all you can eat. 1.99<lb/>
Friday:<lb/>
Fish Fry allyoucaneat 1.99<lb/>
Sunday Lunch Special:<lb/>
MOM'S DAY<lb/>
All Mothers EAT FREE<lb/>
(when accompanied by family<lb/>
of 2 or more)<lb/>
ALL YOU CANEA TSPECIAL<lb/>
to all students and faculty Monday ? Inun-<lb/>
day 5:0flpfli I'il closing you may purchase our<lb/>
f-ried Fish Sfe fat for only<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
18M)$6liM<lb/>
"A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
ISSGJH Restaurant"<lb/>
2311 S Evans St ? Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POUCV<lb/>
Each of these advertised Hems it required to be reedily available to sale a! o <lb/>
below the advertised price in each AAP Store except at specifically noted<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT NOV 8 AT A4P IN ,?4i ene<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOt ESALERS<lb/>
Highway 264 By-pass<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Ce<lb/>
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THIS WEEK S FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
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FRANCIS SWINTON<lb/>
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ROXBORO N C<lb/>
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Its easy to play<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 or diagonally on any one of the 4<lb/>
Bimes on master card<lb/>
o purchase necessary to participate.<lb/>
See game card for complete rules<lb/>
U8 WAYS TO WIN<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
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TIP ROASTS. SIRLOIN TIP<lb/>
STEAKS AND TRIMMINGS<lb/>
A4P QUALITY CORN-FED<lb/>
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$38<lb/>
10-LB<lb/>
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A4P GRADE A YOUNG<lb/>
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BUTTER BASTED<lb/>
SELF BASTING<lb/>
WITH REAL BUTTER'<lb/>
10 TO 14-LB<lb/>
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28 COUPON<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON <lb/>
good thru Sat. nov 8. at a&amp;p in Greenville N.C.<lb/>
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good thru Sat. nov 8. at A&amp;p in Greenville N.C.<lb/>
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All VARIETIES<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057298_0007"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
I HI t S1 (. AROl I MAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVI MHt K4. 1980 Pa:e "<lb/>
Pirates Blitz William And Mary,31-23<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Spurt r itilnr<lb/>
1 he hast Carolina defense came<lb/>
up with the big plays when it had to<lb/>
m a wild third quarter as the Pirates<lb/>
snuggled to a 31-23 victory over<lb/>
stubborn William and Mary Satur-<lb/>
da night.<lb/>
Following a field goal by Indian<lb/>
kicker Laszto Mike-Mayer?the<lb/>
youngest of three Mike-Mayer kick-<lb/>
ing brothers?the Pirates led by on-<lb/>
ly 14-10 with 8:28 remaining in the<lb/>
thud period.<lb/>
? tumble by Pirate halfback<lb/>
<lb/>
w ilium?Ml Mart II " 1 3 U<lb/>
tl 1M IS 31<lb/>
It 1Ntevkflrl ,J ran ll mm kuk<lb/>
?1Wright) 7 p? Irum (arri( iMike Miner Mchl<lb/>
H isniittn li run . 1 amm kukt<lb/>
VMMik. M??1 W IteM u.ial<lb/>
M 1s?frlv tumble mil nt endnne<lb/>
M 11 nllin 1 run il amm kicml<lb/>
KMXnilriHN pass trnm l.umlt i Mike-Maer kuki<lb/>
H 1Hmri fA run il amm kuk<lb/>
W Mv hut Ibein 40 iia Irum .arni? tl'u lailrdi<lb/>
VVXM H 1<lb/>
firsl rtmm 13 In<lb/>
Kn.ln ?r,i. 35-MH M UJ<lb/>
Passing v arl I ?<lb/>
I'assfs2 ls-0 I 1 1<lb/>
I'linl.5-4: i. 5-31.4<lb/>
1 umh 4: vi<lb/>
IS MM 4 4: 10 ?2<lb/>
1 "i j'? ,  25M ?<lb/>
IMIIMIM VI 1 r IIK<lb/>
Mike Hawkins on the ensuing<lb/>
possession was recovered by the In-<lb/>
dians on the EC I 22.<lb/>
William and Mary got as close as<lb/>
the Pirate eight before Indian<lb/>
quarterback Chris Ciarrity fumbled.<lb/>
ECU rookie defensive end Jeff<lb/>
Pegues recovered the loose ball to<lb/>
thwart the drive in the first of two<lb/>
big defensive plays o the quarter.<lb/>
ECU punter Rodney Allen pinned<lb/>
the Indians deep in their own ter-<lb/>
ritorv on then next possession as he<lb/>
drove one to the William and Mary<lb/>
two-yard line.<lb/>
lhe ECU defensive line followed<lb/>
up on Allen's boot; end Hal<lb/>
Stephens slamming Ganity to the<lb/>
ground in the end one as the ball<lb/>
rolled out of bounds for a safety,<lb/>
making it 16-10 Pirates.<lb/>
ECU kick returner Chuck Bishop<lb/>
then took the ensuing free kick and<lb/>
returned it 46 yards to the Indian 19.<lb/>
putting the Pit ate offense in ex-<lb/>
cellent scoring position.<lb/>
Kuvhini; Ml i nllim 21 ?un.n  121 B?m-r S-72.<lb/>
steart lt-54. HakM? 5-15 M Hr.i :n-V. (,?mi.<lb/>
i: v Mihk : in<lb/>
PaHM Ml Me??M B-l-M ?M l.arnl?<lb/>
! I  (i I5S. Mitrph? ion (I<lb/>
nr Ml Itaxmwrt l- ?M SchwWtata<lb/>
 rig)) i ! - I ran 2 II<lb/>
Stewart lets Loose<lb/>
And score the Pirates did,<lb/>
halfback Anthony Collins taking a<lb/>
pitch from quarterback Greg<lb/>
Steward from one yard out into the<lb/>
endone, putting his club up 24-10<lb/>
with 12:59 remaining in the game.<lb/>
The Indians would not give up,<lb/>
though, and took the ball 80 yards<lb/>
in ten plays to paydirt. A 33-yard<lb/>
keeper by Ciarrity was the key play<lb/>
in the drive and set up his five-yard<lb/>
pass to Corky Andrews that cut<lb/>
ECU'S lead to 24-17.<lb/>
The Pirates showed they could<lb/>
fight back also on the possession<lb/>
following Andrews' TD. A 13-yard<lb/>
run by Mike Hawkins moved the<lb/>
ball to the ECU 37.<lb/>
Freshman halfback Ernest Byner<lb/>
took over from there, rambling 63<lb/>
yards for the game's deciding<lb/>
touchdown. Bili Lamm's kick made<lb/>
il 31-17 and seemingly to lock the<lb/>
game up. The Indians, again, saw it<lb/>
differently.<lb/>
A 40-yard TD pass from Ciarrity<lb/>
to end Ed Schiefelbein shocked the<lb/>
Pirate secondary and narrowed<lb/>
ECU'S lead to 31-23.<lb/>
An onside kick by the Indians<lb/>
failed and the Pirates had their<lb/>
fourth win o the season against as<lb/>
main losses. William and Mary fell<lb/>
to 2-7.<lb/>
"We sure don't make 'em easv<lb/>
remarked ECU head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory following the contest. "We<lb/>
kept thinking they would not score<lb/>
on us and then they'd turn around<lb/>
and get a big pass piav. You have to<lb/>
give William and Mary Coach<lb/>
(Jimmye) I aycock lots of credit tor<lb/>
fighting back<lb/>
Emor) was impressed with the<lb/>
play o quarterback Greg Stewart,<lb/>
who was starting his first game tor<lb/>
Pirates Record Safety<lb/>
Last C arolina defensive back James Freer<lb/>
jars the ball loose from William and Mary<lb/>
quarterback Chris Ciarrity in his own end<lb/>
zone late in the<lb/>
31-23 victory by<lb/>
third quarter of Saturdays<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
the Pirates after regular Carlton<lb/>
Nelson was pronounced out for the<lb/>
season this pas! week.<lb/>
"dreg showed lots ol poise<lb/>
tonight Emory said. "He's still<lb/>
got a problem with his foot but he<lb/>
go! the job done<lb/>
Stewart finished the game with 54<lb/>
yards rushing on ten carries and a<lb/>
first-quarter touchdown.<lb/>
Stewart look a back seat, though,<lb/>
to an impressive performance by<lb/>
fullback 1 heodore Sutton. The bur-<lb/>
ly Kinston native rushed for 121<lb/>
yards in 26 sanies and strengthened<lb/>
his position as the school's second<lb/>
leading rushei t all time.<lb/>
Sutton moved to within 252 vards<lb/>
of Carlestei Crumpler's record total<lb/>
o 2.SS9 yards. He needs to average<lb/>
84 yards per contest in the team's<lb/>
final three games to match that<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
Garriiy was the star for the In-<lb/>
dians, completing 15 of 23 passes<lb/>
for 158 yards and three TDs.<lb/>
The Pirates enjoyed their top<lb/>
rushing game of the season, rambl-<lb/>
ing for 344 yards en route to a total<lb/>
offensive output of 353 vards.<lb/>
Stewart Questionable For ECU-Miami<lb/>
-???? ? iv?t I irtiK ttMltimort"oils, and<lb/>
Photo by JON JORDON<lb/>
Stewart Drives For Six<lb/>
ECU freshman quarterback Greg Stewart powers his way in-<lb/>
to the end zone for the first Pirate touchdown of the night<lb/>
Saturdav.<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
When it was announced late last<lb/>
week that ECU starting quarterback<lb/>
Carlton Nelson would miss the re-<lb/>
mainder o the season Pirate fans<lb/>
most sureiv said to themselves.<lb/>
"Not again<lb/>
Still, the Pirate faithful could<lb/>
take solace in the tact that Nelson<lb/>
was backed up by the capable Greg<lb/>
Stewart. Even though Nelson<lb/>
became the 29th Pirate to be termed<lb/>
" c 111<lb/>
out for the season, Stewart had the<lb/>
confidence o Coach Ed Emory and<lb/>
his staff.<lb/>
Indeed, Stewart performed well<lb/>
for the Pirates m their 31-23 win<lb/>
over William and Marv this past<lb/>
Saturdav.<lb/>
But. lo and behold, it is now<lb/>
Stewart that may miss a game, due<lb/>
to an injury to his ankle. The<lb/>
freshman signal-caller has had pro-<lb/>
blems with lhe ankle all season and<lb/>
was supped up in Saturday's game<lb/>
and reinsured it.<lb/>
"We'll just have to wait and see<lb/>
about Greg Emor) said late Mon-<lb/>
day. "It's a very serious problem<lb/>
and we're very concerned about it<lb/>
I lory said that Stew ait was<lb/>
receiving four to five icepack<lb/>
treatments dailv from Sports<lb/>
Medicine and that something<lb/>
detinue on his availability this<lb/>
weekend against powerful Miami.<lb/>
1 la. should be known by Wednes-<lb/>
day .<lb/>
"lhe doctors X-rayed him and<lb/>
found no breaks Emory said.<lb/>
"Thev told hun to stay off o his<lb/>
tee! as much as possible until<lb/>
Wednesday, when they will<lb/>
reevalute this situation. Greg has<lb/>
lots o pride and will give it all he's<lb/>
got to play Saturdav, I'm sure<lb/>
lhe Pirates' opponents this<lb/>
weekend, Miami, Ma are coached<lb/>
by former Baltimore Colt head man<lb/>
Howard Schnellenberger. Perhaps<lb/>
Schnellenberger is more famous,<lb/>
though, for his work as offensive<lb/>
coordinator of the powerful Miami<lb/>
Dolphins of the early 1970's.<lb/>
Before going to the Dolphins,<lb/>
Schnellenberger served on George<lb/>
Allen's staff with the Los Angeles<lb/>
Rams. Before that he served as a<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
it<lb/>
college assistant to the legendary<lb/>
Beat Bryant at Alabama and was<lb/>
credited with the successful recruit-<lb/>
ment of All-America quarterbacks<lb/>
Joe Namath and Ken Stabler to the<lb/>
Crimson Tide.<lb/>
On Schnellenberger's Miami staff<lb/>
is one o his former players. Earl<lb/>
M or rail. Mori all replaced starter<lb/>
Bob Gnese as quarterback o the<lb/>
Dolphins following the latter's in-<lb/>
jury early m the 1972 season.<lb/>
the Dolphins were unbeaten<lb/>
when Griese went down and con-<lb/>
tinued to roll under Morrall.<lb/>
finishing the season as Super Bowl<lb/>
champs with a perfect 17-0 record.<lb/>
Morail was also a star QB for the<lb/>
With Monarchs<lb/>
B JIMMY DuPRFF<lb/>
wi?lanl sport rdilor<lb/>
When the Pirates of East<lb/>
C arolina open their 1980-81 swimm-<lb/>
ing slates November 14 against Old<lb/>
Dominion, both the men and<lb/>
women will be looking to fill holes<lb/>
in their aquatic armour.<lb/>
The men's squad must replace<lb/>
star performers Bill Fehling and Ted<lb/>
Niernan and the women must over-<lb/>
come injuries and illness to several<lb/>
key performers. Along with Niernan<lb/>
and Fehling. senior standout Kelly<lb/>
Hopkins is no longer with the Pirate<lb/>
natators after having qualified for<lb/>
the Olympic trials a year ago.<lb/>
"He just quit said veteran ECU<lb/>
coach Rav Scharf. "I guess he just<lb/>
got tired of swimming, but he really<lb/>
let his teammates down<lb/>
Aside from those losses, the<lb/>
Pirate men return experience at<lb/>
most of their top positions. Senior<lb/>
Jack Clowar leads the team in the<lb/>
sprint events, while junior Doug<lb/>
Niernan returns as the top per-<lb/>
former in the individual medley.<lb/>
 Junior Scott Ross and freshman<lb/>
Jan Wikland of Sweden will anchor<lb/>
the distance events, with sophomore<lb/>
Matt McDonald tops in the<lb/>
breaststroke and Perrv Newman<lb/>
strong in the butterfly.<lb/>
"We've got some good per-<lb/>
fomrers in each event " said Scharf.<lb/>
-It's going to depend on what he<lb/>
other people behind them m the<lb/>
events do. The men will be kind of<lb/>
in a building year.<lb/>
"They could surprise us he ad-<lb/>
ded. "We'll go as far as they want<lb/>
to.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate swimmers are<lb/>
lead by sophomore Ail-American<lb/>
Tami Putnam, whose specialty is<lb/>
listed as the individual medley. The<lb/>
versatile performer also turned in<lb/>
standout efforts in the breaststroke<lb/>
during the 1979-80 season.<lb/>
Other top prospects for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates include freshmsan Jenniffer<lb/>
Jayes in the backstroke and<lb/>
sophomore Susan Hanks in the<lb/>
freestyle events.<lb/>
Top sprinters for the Lady Pirates<lb/>
are sophomore All-American Carol<lb/>
Shacklett in the IM, and freshmen<lb/>
freestylers Mona McHugh and Lori<lb/>
McQueston. Junior Julie Malcolm<lb/>
and freshman Sally Collins head<lb/>
East CArolina's list of distance ex-<lb/>
perts.<lb/>
"We just don't know who's going<lb/>
to swim the butterfly for the girls<lb/>
said Scharf. "Each year (the girls)<lb/>
have gotten a little better<lb/>
In each of the various dual meets<lb/>
the Pirates participate in, they will<lb/>
be behind in points before they ever<lb/>
hit the water. With no diving coach<lb/>
on staff, Scharf decided it would<lb/>
not be in the best interest of the<lb/>
athletes to recruit a skilled diver.<lb/>
"We can't honestly recruit unless<lb/>
we can offer them a program ex-<lb/>
plains Scharf. "We have several top<lb/>
high school divers who want to<lb/>
come here, but it's just not prac-<lb/>
tical. We've got great facilities here.<lb/>
We'll put somebody up on the<lb/>
board, though<lb/>
Former ECU assistant John<lb/>
Sultan now coaches at Old Domi-<lb/>
nion, and Scharf is wary of his<lb/>
former pupils' squad.<lb/>
"I'm sure John will have them<lb/>
ready for us he said. "1 wouldn't<lb/>
be a bit surprised if they shave for<lb/>
the meet<lb/>
Both squads have meets with<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, North Carolina<lb/>
State, South Carolina and Ten-<lb/>
nessee during the season, all of<lb/>
which Scharf considers to be top<lb/>
teams in the country.<lb/>
"I'm always optimistic he<lb/>
adds. "We'll do well. They do have<lb/>
some of the top programs in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"We've always swum against the<lb/>
toughest competition. How can they<lb/>
be ready when we get to the<lb/>
regionals if they haven't been up<lb/>
against that kind of competition all<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"My top priority is that the kids<lb/>
reach their potential. We've never<lb/>
worked this hard at the first of the<lb/>
season before<lb/>
Curly Neal Gets A Lift From Bob Blutinger<lb/>
Detroit Lions, Baltimore Colts, and<lb/>
a host of other teams. The 192<lb/>
AFC Player of the Year coaches the<lb/>
quarterbacks under<lb/>
Schnellenberger.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
Tickets to the ECU-N.C. State<lb/>
football on Nov. 22 in Raleigh are<lb/>
still available at the Minges ticket<lb/>
office. They can be purchased from<lb/>
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily and are<lb/>
priced at $4.50 for the first ticket<lb/>
and $9 for the second (student 11)<lb/>
required).<lb/>
The Pirate javvee football squad<lb/>
will host Fort Bragg this Sunday at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium. Garnetime is 1:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Single and season tickets to Pirate<lb/>
home basketball games are now on<lb/>
sale to the ECU faculty and staff at<lb/>
the Minges ticket office. They can<lb/>
be pruchased during regular<lb/>
business hours.<lb/>
Globetrotters<lb/>
To Visit<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Everybody's favorite basketball<lb/>
team, the Harlem Globetrotters,<lb/>
will be in Greenville for one game<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 28, at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
No team in history has attracted<lb/>
bigger audiences than the Globetrot-<lb/>
ters. Now in their second half-<lb/>
century, the Globetrotters have<lb/>
played nearly 15,000 games in 9"<lb/>
countries before more than 98<lb/>
million people.<lb/>
In their 55-year history, the<lb/>
Globetrotters have played games<lb/>
before every imaginable audience,<lb/>
and have entertained 'veryone from<lb/>
Popes to Presidents to the average<lb/>
Joe.<lb/>
This game is one stop on the 1981<lb/>
World Tour which will carry the<lb/>
Globetrotters to 46 states and nine<lb/>
Canadian provines. In addition, the<lb/>
Globetrotters will play a mere 200<lb/>
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One reason why the Globetrotters<lb/>
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Three delightful variety acts with<lb/>
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T<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057298_0008"/><lb/>
ill L'ASI Ki I IM<lb/>
Four Named All-Deep South<lb/>
Lady Pirates Fall<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057298_0009"/><lb/>
1 HI t SI C AKOl INIAN<lb/>
NOW MBI K4, 1980<lb/>
y<lb/>
Ae<lb/>
B<lb/>
let<lb/>
lar<lb/>
2<lb/>
Maryland Blanks State, 24-0<lb/>
Sooners Hand First Loss To UNC<lb/>
RA1 E1GH (UPI) -<lb/>
Sixth-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina traveled to<lb/>
Norman, Okla seek-<lb/>
ing respectability for<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference and a top bowl<lb/>
bid, but came away<lb/>
with a 41-7 loss to 16th-<lb/>
ranked Oklahoma.<lb/>
Before sufferings its<lb/>
first lost of the season<lb/>
to the Sooners, North<lb/>
c arolina had racked up<lb/>
seven straight victories<lb/>
and its defense had not<lb/>
s u i i e n d c i e d a<lb/>
touchdown all season.<lb/>
But under the scrutiny<lb/>
oi a flock of bowl<lb/>
mts. the defense's<lb/>
mtation was tarnish-<lb/>
ed as Oklahoma ran at<lb/>
will f 01 si<lb/>
touchdowns, foui of<lb/>
them in the second<lb/>
half, and picked up 495<lb/>
.Is i ushing.<lb/>
While North<lb/>
c arolina, the ACC<lb/>
leader, was suffering in<lb/>
the Oklahoma sun,<lb/>
Maryland solidified its<lb/>
hold on second place in<lb/>
the league with a 24-0<lb/>
win over North<lb/>
Carolina State and<lb/>
Clemson held on for a<lb/>
35-33 win over Wake<lb/>
forest to jump into a<lb/>
tie for third place.<lb/>
Virginia upset Ten-<lb/>
nessee on Wayne Mor-<lb/>
rison's third field goal<lb/>
of the day, a 43-vaider<lb/>
with 11 minutes to<lb/>
play, while Duke's<lb/>
defense turned back a<lb/>
second half comeback<lb/>
bv Georgia Tech foi a<lb/>
17-12 win.<lb/>
1 ai Heel coach Dick<lb/>
Crum said it was<lb/>
Sooner quarterback<lb/>
J.C. Watts who did the<lb/>
worst damage to his<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"He can do so main<lb/>
things with that of-<lb/>
fense Crum said<lb/>
about Watts, who ran<lb/>
foi three touchdowns.<lb/>
"He can go inside or<lb/>
outside, and when he<lb/>
fires those pitchouts ?<lb/>
well, there aren't main<lb/>
guys who can get it out<lb/>
there that quickly.<lb/>
"Watts is the key to<lb/>
their whole offense<lb/>
Sooner halfback<lb/>
David Overstreet added<lb/>
two touchdowns for<lb/>
Oklahoma, now 5-2.<lb/>
North Carolina's on-<lb/>
ly score came on a first-<lb/>
quarter touchdown run<lb/>
by tailback Amos<lb/>
Lawrence, who ran for<lb/>
106 yards in 20 carries.<lb/>
In College Park, it<lb/>
was once again Charlie<lb/>
W vsocki who paced<lb/>
Maryland's attack.<lb/>
W vsocki ran for 132<lb/>
yards to lead the Ter-<lb/>
rapins to a 24-0 win<lb/>
over North Carolina<lb/>
Slate ? the first time in<lb/>
113 g a m e s t h e<lb/>
Wolfpack had been<lb/>
shut out.<lb/>
The Terps, now 6-3<lb/>
and 3-1 m the ACC.<lb/>
took a 10-0 halftime<lb/>
lead on W vsocki's one-<lb/>
yard run and Dale<lb/>
Castro's field goal in<lb/>
the second quarter.<lb/>
After the half, the<lb/>
Wolfpack moved to the<lb/>
Maryland 11, but lost<lb/>
m omen t u m when<lb/>
Lloyd Burrus blocked a<lb/>
21-yard field goal at-<lb/>
tempt.<lb/>
"The defense played<lb/>
a superb football<lb/>
game said Maryland<lb/>
coach Jerry Claiborne.<lb/>
"When Lloyd blocked<lb/>
that field goal, it got us<lb/>
momentum again, as<lb/>
they had put together a<lb/>
good drive<lb/>
Claiborne also cited<lb/>
an interception by<lb/>
defensive end Mark<lb/>
Wilson, who picked o<lb/>
a screen pass in the end<lb/>
one in the thir d<lb/>
quarter to give<lb/>
Maryland a 17-0 lead.<lb/>
The Wolfpack drop-<lb/>
ped to 4-4 and 2-3 with<lb/>
the loss.<lb/>
Clemson quarter-<lb/>
back Homer Jordan<lb/>
ran for one touchdown<lb/>
and Obed Ariri kicked<lb/>
four field goals to tie an<lb/>
NCAA career record as<lb/>
the Tigers took a com-<lb/>
manding 35-7 lead mid-<lb/>
way through the fourth<lb/>
quarter against Wake<lb/>
forest.<lb/>
But Deacon quarter-<lb/>
back Jay Venuto threw<lb/>
three touchdown passes<lb/>
and Wayne McMillan<lb/>
ran for a fourth with<lb/>
lust over a minute left<lb/>
as Wake forest closed<lb/>
the gap to 35-33.<lb/>
Wake forest<lb/>
recovered its second<lb/>
straight onside kick<lb/>
alter McMillan's score,<lb/>
but Clemson's 1 err y<lb/>
Kinard intercepted a<lb/>
pass with 44 second left<lb/>
to seal the win.<lb/>
"We'd have been in<lb/>
good shape it we had<lb/>
stopped the game at the<lb/>
end of the third<lb/>
quarter said Clemson<lb/>
coach Danny ford. "I<lb/>
went to the bench a lit-<lb/>
tle too early and that<lb/>
was almost a fatal<lb/>
mistake, but thank<lb/>
goodness they bailed<lb/>
me out<lb/>
The win boosted<lb/>
Clemson to a 5-3<lb/>
season record and a 2-2<lb/>
ACC mark, good for a<lb/>
tie with Virginia foi<lb/>
third place. W a k e<lb/>
forest tell to 3-5 and<lb/>
last place in the ACC<lb/>
with a 1-4 mark.<lb/>
Virginia, playing in<lb/>
Knowille, raised its<lb/>
record to 4-4 with the<lb/>
upset ovei rennesee,<lb/>
now 3-5.<lb/>
The Cavaliers held a<lb/>
13-6 lead going into the<lb/>
fourth quarter, when<lb/>
Tennessee flanker An-<lb/>
thony Hancock tied the<lb/>
game on a 44-yard<lb/>
reverse with 12:45 lett.<lb/>
But 1:37 later, Mor-<lb/>
rison connected from<lb/>
43 yards out to put<lb/>
Virginia ahead to stay<lb/>
and defensive ba.k<lb/>
Cor win Word in-<lb/>
tercepted a pass to kill a<lb/>
Volunteer drive.<lb/>
Duke, 2-6 foi the<lb/>
season, took a 17-0<lb/>
first-half lead against<lb/>
Georgia ledi. but the<lb/>
Yello w I ackets<lb/>
dominated the second<lb/>
halt betore the Blue<lb/>
Devil defense sacked<lb/>
quarterback Stu Kgeis<lb/>
for an I 1 -yard loss with<lb/>
15 seconds left.<lb/>
Georgia lech drop-<lb/>
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Steinbrenner Undecided<lb/>
On Howser 'Situation'<lb/>
l W ()Rk (I PI)<lb/>
George Steinbrenner<lb/>
s.is he hasn't made up<lb/>
his mind one wav oi<lb/>
another regarding the<lb/>
Dick Howser<lb/>
"situation" and<lb/>
anybody who claims<lb/>
?'s about io fire his<lb/>
agei is . :el<lb/>
? peculating1<lb/>
I he possibility<lb/>
Howser might be<lb/>
dismissed momentarily<lb/>
as manage! of the<lb/>
 ankees became a mat-<lb/>
ter of increased conjec-<lb/>
ture, at least in New<lb/>
York's newspapers,<lb/>
when he was summon-<lb/>
ed from Ins home in<lb/>
fallahassee, Ha to<lb/>
St<lb/>
einbrenne: s<lb/>
I am pa,<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
Gene<lb/>
Y a n k ee<lb/>
manager<lb/>
Fla.<lb/>
home in<lb/>
Sundav<lb/>
Michael, the<lb/>
general<lb/>
also attended<lb/>
the session alter arriv-<lb/>
ing in Tampa from the<lb/>
major league general<lb/>
managers1 meeting in<lb/>
Viih Miami.<lb/>
"The three of us met<lb/>
tor an hour and we<lb/>
talked about a number<lb/>
oi things but nothing<lb/>
was decided one wav or<lb/>
another Steinbrenner<lb/>
said after the meeting<lb/>
broke up. "We'll talk<lb/>
again in the near future<lb/>
and 1 may have<lb/>
something to saj in<lb/>
another few davs. But<lb/>
nothing has been done<lb/>
yet. A ny one w ho<lb/>
claims to know I'm go-<lb/>
ing to do this or that is<lb/>
simplv guessing<lb/>
As matters stand, lit-<lb/>
tle Don Zimmer, fired<lb/>
as manager bv the<lb/>
Boston Red Sox shortly<lb/>
betote the end of the<lb/>
season, could turn out<lb/>
to be the pivotal figure<lb/>
in whatever decision<lb/>
Steinbrenner finally<lb/>
reaches with regard to<lb/>
Howser. At the mo-<lb/>
rn ent, 1mmer is<lb/>
waiting for general<lb/>
manager Eddie Robin-<lb/>
son of the Texas<lb/>
Rangers to let him<lb/>
know one wav or<lb/>
anothei whether he will<lb/>
or won't be t he<lb/>
Rangers' manager next<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Even betore Robin-<lb/>
son told Zimmei he was<lb/>
being comideied for<lb/>
the job during the<lb/>
World Series. Stem<lb/>
brenner called Zimmer<lb/>
and ottered turn the<lb/>
x ankees1 third base<lb/>
coaching job at an ex-<lb/>
cellent salaiv. Zimmer<lb/>
would've grabbed it on<lb/>
the spot, but he told<lb/>
Steinbrennei he was be-<lb/>
ing considered tor the<lb/>
Rangers' managerial<lb/>
post and the Yankee<lb/>
owner agreed to wait<lb/>
until Robinson made<lb/>
up his mind. So far,<lb/>
Robinson hasn't, and<lb/>
Zimmer is still waiting.<lb/>
Robinson and Stein-<lb/>
brenner also met in<lb/>
I a in pa during t he<lb/>
weekend and that cir-<lb/>
cumstance gave rise to<lb/>
the belief the two talk-<lb/>
ed about Howser going<lb/>
to Arlington, Texas, to<lb/>
manage the Rangers,<lb/>
Michael succeeding him<lb/>
as manager of the<lb/>
Yankees and Zimmer<lb/>
becoming the Yankees'<lb/>
third base coaching<lb/>
job.<lb/>
Zimmer, who lives in<lb/>
St. Petersburg, natural-<lb/>
ly would prefer manag-<lb/>
ing over coaching, but<lb/>
whichever wav that<lb/>
winds up. he'll be hap-<lb/>
py because his primary<lb/>
desire is to be in<lb/>
uniform again next<lb/>
season. Meanwhile,<lb/>
he's staying close to the<lb/>
telephone waiting to<lb/>
hear yes or no from<lb/>
Robinson so he can tell<lb/>
Steinbrenner yes or no.<lb/>
"Here's what hap-<lb/>
pened he says.<lb/>
"Eddie (Robinson)<lb/>
called me from the<lb/>
general managers'<lb/>
meeting in Miami the<lb/>
other night and told me<lb/>
it would take him about<lb/>
a week before he would<lb/>
name his manager.<lb/>
He's trying to make the<lb/>
right decision. 1 don't<lb/>
know who he's got in<lb/>
mind. 1 don't ask anv<lb/>
questions. I just answer<lb/>
them<lb/>
Steinbrenner and<lb/>
Robinson both like<lb/>
Zimmer, who coached<lb/>
at Montreal and<lb/>
managed the San Diego<lb/>
Padres foi nearly two<lb/>
years before coming to<lb/>
Boston where he was a<lb/>
coach for the Red Sox<lb/>
for two years and then<lb/>
managed them for four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Howser, meanwhile,<lb/>
has said he wishes to<lb/>
continue managing the<lb/>
Yankees but he hasn't<lb/>
said he would not agree<lb/>
to manage the Rangers<lb/>
in the event Steinbren-<lb/>
ner and Robinson work<lb/>
out such an arrange-<lb/>
ment between them.<lb/>
Originally, the two<lb/>
chiel candidates for the<lb/>
Rangers' managership<lb/>
were Zimmer and Bob<lb/>
Lemon, but if Stein-<lb/>
brenner feels he'd like-<lb/>
to bring in Michael<lb/>
from the front office to<lb/>
manane the Yankees,<lb/>
then Robinson would<lb/>
go for Howser as his<lb/>
manager and Zimmer<lb/>
would wind up coach-<lb/>
ing third base for the<lb/>
Yankees.<lb/>
Michael isn't so-<lb/>
meone Steinbrenner<lb/>
I bought about 10<lb/>
minutes ago in terms of<lb/>
managing the Yankees.<lb/>
The Yankee owner had<lb/>
him in mind for the job<lb/>
as far back as four<lb/>
years ago and that was<lb/>
one of the reasons he<lb/>
arranged for him to<lb/>
manage the Yankees1<lb/>
Triple A club at Col-<lb/>
umbus in 1979.<lb/>
And what happens it<lb/>
Michael gets the<lb/>
Yankees' managership<lb/>
and then doesn't work<lb/>
out Never fear. George<lb/>
Steinbrenner always<lb/>
plain ahead and makes<lb/>
sure he has a good<lb/>
backup man. He has<lb/>
ore now. too, behind<lb/>
Michael in former<lb/>
Giants1 manager Joe<lb/>
Altobelh, who did an<lb/>
outstanding job in<lb/>
leading Columbus to<lb/>
the American Associa-<lb/>
tion championship this<lb/>
past season.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
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?4<lb/>
PHOTO SUPPLIES<lb/>
Film,photopaper,enl-<lb/>
argers,chemicals.<lb/>
KODAK<lb/>
CAMERAS&amp;<lb/>
PROJECTORS<lb/>
Movie cameras,movie<lb/>
projectors,slide pro-<lb/>
jectors.<lb/>
FRAMES &amp;<lb/>
FRAMING SUPPLIES<lb/>
Matte boards,matte<lb/>
knifes&amp; blades,<lb/>
masking tape,acetate.<lb/>
SELECTED 35mm<lb/>
CAMERAS &amp;<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
Nikon,Canon,Fujica,<lb/>
Olympus.<lb/>
i<lb/>
-?e<lb/>
ALL SALES FINAL<lb/>
CASH ONLY<lb/>
NO CHARGES OR<lb/>
CHARGE CARDS<lb/>
 and<lb/>
mcra Sh<lb/>
Ap<lb/>
II y<lb/>
SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
All sportswear,<lb/>
T-shirts,hooded pull-<lb/>
overs, sweatshirts,<lb/>
jackets,raincoats, hats,<lb/>
sportshirts,infant &amp;<lb/>
childrens wear,tennis<lb/>
shorts,gym shorts.<lb/>
STUDY AIDS<lb/>
Cliff Notes,Monarch<lb/>
Notes,Schaum's<lb/>
Outline<lb/>
Series,Arco,etc.<lb/>
TEACHING AIDS<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
paper,crepe<lb/>
paper,Hayes<lb/>
b o o k s , K i d<lb/>
Stuff, cut-outs, plan<lb/>
books,E-Z rule,etc.<lb/>
SCHOOL SUPPLIES<lb/>
Note books,<lb/>
composition books,<lb/>
pencils,pens, typing<lb/>
paper,filler paper,<lb/>
index cards,etc.<lb/>
U.B.E<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
<lb/>
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