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<pb facs="00057417_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 56 No. 1<lb/>
Tuesday, August 25,19S1 Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
36 Pages- 3 Sections<lb/>
Futrell<lb/>
New Chairman<lb/>
Elected By Trustees<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
MHor la Chief<lb/>
The East Carolina board of<lb/>
trustees Monday elected Ashley<lb/>
Futrell as its new chairman at its<lb/>
first meeting of the school year, at<lb/>
which three new members were also<lb/>
sworn-in.<lb/>
Futrell, a trustee for the past 11<lb/>
years and the previous vice chair-<lb/>
man, was chosen by acclamation to<lb/>
succeed Troy Pate. Pate had been<lb/>
chairman of the board for six years.<lb/>
The three new members were<lb/>
Katie Morgan, Thomas Bennett and<lb/>
Roy Flood. Morgan, the wife of<lb/>
former U.S. Senator Robert<lb/>
Morgan, is presently the only<lb/>
woman member of the board of<lb/>
trustees.<lb/>
The board also elected Ralph<lb/>
Kinsey as its new vice chairman and<lb/>
Harvey Beech to serve as secretary.<lb/>
Both were elected by acclamation.<lb/>
In accepting the chairmanship,<lb/>
Futrell told the board, "You have<lb/>
given me a high honor, but you have<lb/>
given me an even greater challenge,<lb/>
as 1 see it<lb/>
Futrell. publisher of The<lb/>
Washington Daily News, said in a<lb/>
later interview that he felt the<lb/>
university "sort of needs to do some<lb/>
settling down<lb/>
He said that ECU had made<lb/>
significant progress in recent years<lb/>
in building new facilities and in-<lb/>
stituting new programs and that it<lb/>
was now time to assure quality.<lb/>
"We need to consolidate our gains.<lb/>
"We're outstanding in many<lb/>
areas? music, art, business are<lb/>
several? but there's always room<lb/>
for improvement<lb/>
Futrell also thanked outgoing<lb/>
chairman, saying he could not fill<lb/>
Pate's shoes.<lb/>
Reflecting on his years as chair-<lb/>
man, Pate said. "The last six years<lb/>
have seen many changes for East<lb/>
CarolinaMany friendships have<lb/>
been deeloped, and 1 am thankful<lb/>
for them<lb/>
Pate then turned his seat over to<lb/>
Futrell. "Welcome to the peanut<lb/>
gallerv trustee John Bridgers jok-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The board unanimously voted to<lb/>
approve affiliation with the ECAC<lb/>
South athletic conference after hear-<lb/>
ing Athletic Drector Ken Karr's<lb/>
report on the negotiations which<lb/>
had been completed earlier in the<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Overload<lb/>
Program Flooded<lb/>
With Applications<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Ptwto By ROCHEL ROLANO<lb/>
Chairman Ashiey Futrell addresses ECU board of trustees.<lb/>
Just as overloading an electrical<lb/>
circuit can cause a system to short<lb/>
out, the record number of students<lb/>
applying for North Carolina In-<lb/>
sured Student Loans has caused that<lb/>
program refer applicants to another<lb/>
source.<lb/>
In a letter sent to applicants being<lb/>
turned down the College Founda-<lb/>
tion, Inc. explains that the<lb/>
"condition of the national<lb/>
economy, particularly the revenue<lb/>
bond market, made it impossible for<lb/>
the N.C. State Education Assistance<lb/>
Authority  to obtain adequate<lb/>
funding to meet the heavy student<lb/>
loan demand for 1981-82<lb/>
Reports indicate that as of the<lb/>
June 15 deadline for filing for<lb/>
NCISLP, loan application volume<lb/>
was up over 81 percent from the<lb/>
same period last year. Students are<lb/>
now being refered a lender-of-last-<lb/>
resort program under arrangements<lb/>
made by the Assistance Authority<lb/>
with Citibank of New York.<lb/>
"It means (students) will get<lb/>
guaranteed student loans rather<lb/>
than be turned down explains<lb/>
Robert Boudreaux, director of<lb/>
financial aid. "We're talking about<lb/>
additional processing time to fill out<lb/>
new applications which have to be<lb/>
filed with Citibank.<lb/>
"We are working on getting addi-<lb/>
tional temporary help to try to speed<lb/>
up processing and help the students<lb/>
meet the October 1 filing date<lb/>
Notarized applications must be<lb/>
turned in to the financial aid office<lb/>
for certification, but the individual<lb/>
student is responsible for having the<lb/>
application postmarked on or<lb/>
before October 1, 1981. The Bor-<lb/>
rower Certification must be com-<lb/>
pleted in the presence of a Notary<lb/>
Public "who is not affiliated" with<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
Terms of the agreement with<lb/>
Citibank are basically the same as<lb/>
that of NCISLP, but there are<lb/>
disadvantages to the lender-of-last-<lb/>
resort program.<lb/>
Students already receiving loans<lb/>
from N.C. Insured Student Loan<lb/>
Program will be expected to pay<lb/>
back the loans simultaniously when<lb/>
they are converted to repayment<lb/>
status.<lb/>
"We're talking about delaying<lb/>
loans maybe a month or two<lb/>
Boudreaux maligns. "That will un-<lb/>
doubtly put an unavoidable strain<lb/>
on some students<lb/>
Offer Special Deals<lb/>
By MIKE DAVIS<lb/>
SUN Writer<lb/>
With the beginning of a new<lb/>
semester, many things need to be<lb/>
done. One important decision or<lb/>
question, to be answered by many<lb/>
students is, "What bank should 1 do<lb/>
business with?" All banks are very<lb/>
similar in'procedure and all follow<lb/>
the rules and regulations set down<lb/>
by the state of North Carolina and<lb/>
the Federal government. All banks<lb/>
in Greenville offer the "Full Service<lb/>
Banking" for both residents and<lb/>
students of Greenville.<lb/>
The following banks offer a varie-<lb/>
ty of services, anf a few offer a little<lb/>
bit more for the students.<lb/>
-Bank of North Carolina. This<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
bank offers the "Now Account"<lb/>
which means if a savings account<lb/>
has a minimum balance of $500,<lb/>
and a checking account, then each<lb/>
account will earn 5 1-4 per-<lb/>
cent. I merest is compounded daily,<lb/>
which comes to about 5.39 annual<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
If a student does not have $500,<lb/>
then "free checking"will be ensured<lb/>
with a $200 minimum savings ac-<lb/>
Would Mean Fee Hike<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Newt Milor<lb/>
A proposed $3.8 million addition<lb/>
to Mendenhall Student Center could<lb/>
mean an increase in student fees of<lb/>
$37 per student per semester.<lb/>
The proposed addition would in-<lb/>
clude a full-service dining facility<lb/>
for 300, a ballroom with three parti-<lb/>
tions, a special dining room, a<lb/>
meeting room for 50 with a parti-<lb/>
tion, a buffet dining room for 100<lb/>
and two storage rooms.<lb/>
Plans call for the proposed addi-<lb/>
tions to be placed behind<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
When time came to vote on the<lb/>
final proposal the only opposing<lb/>
vote came from SGA President<lb/>
Lester Nail. "I'm not exactly sure<lb/>
what the students' opinion is on it<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Director Rudolph Alexander has<lb/>
done much of the work on the pro-<lb/>
posal. He stated that it is often dif-<lb/>
ficult to get meeting room space in<lb/>
the present facility and with the in-<lb/>
stallation of permanent seating in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium there is no type<lb/>
of ballroom space on campus other<lb/>
than the gymnasiums. Alexander<lb/>
also stated that dining facilities on<lb/>
campus are not adequate.<lb/>
The addition of dining facilities in<lb/>
the proposed complex is the result<lb/>
of a planning commssion goal to<lb/>
"curtail" cooking in the rooms in<lb/>
the future, according to Alexander.<lb/>
Lester Nail, SGA president, con-<lb/>
firmed that this is one of the plann-<lb/>
ing commission's goals though there<lb/>
is no set date for the transition at<lb/>
present and it is dependent on the<lb/>
construction of adequate dining<lb/>
facilities in all areas of the campus<lb/>
The proposed addition would<lb/>
take up an estimated 32,955 square<lb/>
feet of space, including hallways<lb/>
and elevator space. .<lb/>
The next step for the proposal is<lb/>
to go to Chancellor Thomas Brewer<lb/>
for approval.<lb/>
The only problem still remaining<lb/>
for the proposal is the financial pre<lb/>
jections. Alexander said that now<lb/>
might be the proper time to begin<lb/>
such a facility because he has been<lb/>
informed that there is an estimated<lb/>
15 percent increase in building costs<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
All parties involved stress the fact<lb/>
that it is only a proposal and no<lb/>
definite plans have been made.<lb/>
Representatives from a variety of<lb/>
organizations including the SGA<lb/>
and the Student Union were involv-<lb/>
ed in drawing up the end proposal.<lb/>
Nail mentioned the possibility of<lb/>
placing the question of building the<lb/>
facility on the upcoming election<lb/>
ballot for SGA legislators.<lb/>
The elections are scheduled to oc-<lb/>
cur the last week in September,<lb/>
though Nail said that he hopes to<lb/>
have the date moved up one week.<lb/>
The facility would have to be<lb/>
financed solely by student fees with<lb/>
no help from the UNC system or<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
count balance. Bank of North<lb/>
Carolina has regular services such<lb/>
as: Travelers checks, loans for those<lb/>
who qualify, safe deposit boxes, but<lb/>
does not have a 24-hour machine.<lb/>
Mr. Alexander of Bank of North<lb/>
Carolina, says that it would be ad-<lb/>
vantageous to have an account here<lb/>
in Greenville, and it would be in the<lb/>
interest of each student to balance<lb/>
their statements when they come in<lb/>
the mail.<lb/>
Bank of North Carolina has two<lb/>
locations in Greenville, E.lOth St<lb/>
and the corner of 4th and Cotanche<lb/>
St.<lb/>
-Branch Banking and Trust Co.<lb/>
They offer free checking for<lb/>
Students. They also offer the max-<lb/>
imum 5.25 percent on your checking<lb/>
account. They too are a full service<lb/>
bank with a 24-hour Teller machine.<lb/>
With school opening, Darlene<lb/>
Latham of Branch Banking urges<lb/>
students to come to the Stop-N-Go<lb/>
on 10th St. on Wed. and Thur.<lb/>
From 10:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m<lb/>
each day. Branch banking personnel<lb/>
will be opening savings and check-<lb/>
ing accounts for students with a<lb/>
minimum deposit of $100. No<lb/>
balance is required to be maintained<lb/>
to get free checking.<lb/>
Branch Banking and Trust Co.<lb/>
has three locations in Greenville;<lb/>
Green St Arlington blvd and one<lb/>
at Medical Village, out by the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
-First State Bank. As most banks,<lb/>
they too offer the Now Accounts.<lb/>
Their banking procedure is advan-<lb/>
tageous for those students who like<lb/>
to do their banking after 2:00 p.m<lb/>
and especially on Fridays. They of-<lb/>
fer automatic deposit, which is<lb/>
keyed into their computer. Almost<lb/>
all the other banks close their writ-<lb/>
ten work day out at 2:00 p.m<lb/>
which means that if a student makes<lb/>
a deposit, on a Friday, after 2:00,<lb/>
their account would not be credited<lb/>
until after 2:00 on that following<lb/>
Monday. First State credits ac-<lb/>
counts automatically.<lb/>
Teresa Morris of First State Bank<lb/>
says that their Safety Boxes are the<lb/>
lowest in town at $6 per year. They<lb/>
also have a 24-hour Teller machine.<lb/>
All of the various banks that have<lb/>
24-hour machines, all do about the<lb/>
same as if you were at a teller's win-<lb/>
dow.<lb/>
In a machine, you can get cash<lb/>
from your savings or checking ac-<lb/>
count. You can make deposits or<lb/>
payments, and you can also find out<lb/>
what your balance is in either one of<lb/>
your accounts. You can also<lb/>
transfer any sum of money from<lb/>
one account to another.<lb/>
The most important thing a stu-<lb/>
dent can do each month is to<lb/>
balance their statement with your<lb/>
records. First State Bank is located<lb/>
at 301 Evans, downtown.<lb/>
-North Carolina National Bank.<lb/>
With four locations in Greenville.<lb/>
201 W. 1st St South Park, West<lb/>
End Shopping Center, and East End<lb/>
Shopping Center, NCNB offers<lb/>
students a full service bank. They<lb/>
offer bonus Checking with a $500<lb/>
balance which earns 5.25 percent on<lb/>
both savings and whatever the<lb/>
balance in your checking, to get<lb/>
Free Checking, one has to maintain<lb/>
a savings or checking balance of at<lb/>
least $300.<lb/>
Ann Guerrant of NCNB, sys that<lb/>
NCNB if a full service bank with<lb/>
two 24-hour machines, both located<lb/>
on 264 By-Pass. If one should open<lb/>
an account with an out of state<lb/>
check, it could take as long as 10<lb/>
working days for the funds to clear.<lb/>
This is true for all banks. Also<lb/>
students are again advised to keep<lb/>
up with their checks and to balance<lb/>
their statements.<lb/>
-Peoples Bank and Trust Co. Is<lb/>
another full service bank located at<lb/>
Carolina East Mall. They too offer<lb/>
5.25 percent on regular savings, but<lb/>
they offer three different checking<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
The first checking plan is a<lb/>
regular checking account with a $2 a<lb/>
month maintainence charge and a<lb/>
.15 charge for each check written.<lb/>
Their second plan is "Peoples Free<lb/>
Checking You have to maintain a<lb/>
$200 balance in either savings or<lb/>
See CHECKING, Page 11<lb/>
Student Union Slates<lb/>
Blackfoot Next Month<lb/>
Blackfoot, with Johnny Van Zandt and Del Leppard, will appear in ECU's<lb/>
first concert of the school year on Sept. 1 in Minges Coliseum. Student<lb/>
Union Major Attractions Chairman Charles Sune predicts that the concert<lb/>
will be a sell out.<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
N?wt Editor<lb/>
Student Union Major Attractions<lb/>
Chairperson Charles Sune has an-<lb/>
nounced that Blackfoot, with<lb/>
special guests Johnny Van Zandt<lb/>
and Def Leppard will be appearing<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum on Thursday<lb/>
Sept. 17 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
"I predict a sell-out said Sune,<lb/>
"and I don't mind being quoted on<lb/>
that<lb/>
Tickets for the concert will go on<lb/>
sale to students only beginning Aug.<lb/>
31 at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall and will be made<lb/>
available to the general public Sept.<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Ticket prices will be $6 for<lb/>
students in advance of the show and<lb/>
$8 for the general public or for<lb/>
anyone at the door.<lb/>
Sune says that the Student Union<lb/>
has "in excess of $20,000 invested in<lb/>
this show but that ticket prices<lb/>
were determined on a "break even<lb/>
basis" as is the standard with Stu-<lb/>
dent Union sponsored concerts.<lb/>
"Frankly, this price, $6 for<lb/>
students and $8 public, is a steal<lb/>
said Sune. "They're as low as we<lb/>
can keep ticket prices and still break<lb/>
even<lb/>
A concert in Fayetteville featuring<lb/>
Blackfoot sold out, according to<lb/>
Sune, and the same concert being<lb/>
featured at ECU will also be<lb/>
featured in Charlotte, though the<lb/>
date on that concert is unknown.<lb/>
The Greenville appearance is the<lb/>
only upcoming area appearance<lb/>
scheduled for the group.<lb/>
Sune also said that he felt the con-<lb/>
cert was scheduled for "a good<lb/>
night, a party night, vhen the<lb/>
students still have money The<lb/>
concert will be on a Thursday night.<lb/>
Citing the success of two sell-out<lb/>
concerts last semester, Jimmy Buf-<lb/>
fett and Cheap Trick, Sune recom-<lb/>
mended that students buy their<lb/>
tickets early.<lb/>
Tickets will go on sale to the<lb/>
public in several area locations and<lb/>
in Jacksonville and New Bern.<lb/>
"1 think we've got an excellent,<lb/>
excellent package for the beginning<lb/>
of the year said Sune.<lb/>
Sune also announced the pur-<lb/>
chase of a portable metal stage for<lb/>
this and future concerts. He said<lb/>
that the stage cost the union<lb/>
$12,000. He called the purchase<lb/>
"part of the cost of doing<lb/>
business<lb/>
The stage will cut production<lb/>
costs and for the present time would<lb/>
be stored under Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
Sune added.<lb/>
An earlier attempt to schedule a<lb/>
concert featuring Joe Walsh<lb/>
sometime in September fell through<lb/>
when Walsh canceled his 16-date<lb/>
tour, according to Sune.<lb/>
On The inside<lb/>
Announcements2N<lb/>
Campus Police3N<lb/>
Opinions4A5N<lb/>
Campus Forum5N<lb/>
Buccaneer8N<lb/>
Housing9N<lb/>
Football1-3S<lb/>
FilmsIF<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25,1981 P?ae2<lb/>
,<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
M you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The tan Caroli<lb/>
man in care of the nrws editor<lb/>
There is no charge lot an-<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline for announcements is 5<lb/>
p m. Friday for the Tucsdav papei and<lb/>
5 p m. Tuesday tor IBf Thursdav<lb/>
paper<lb/>
The space is asailabie to all campus<lb/>
organizations and department!<lb/>
CHANGE IN MAT<lb/>
FEE-EFFECTIVE<lb/>
AUGUST 2d, 1981<lb/>
Mr John Childers, Director of<lb/>
Testing. ECU reports that.<lb/>
because of the continuing escala<lb/>
fion of costs passed down from the<lb/>
testing companies, the Testing<lb/>
Center is obliged to increase the<lb/>
Miller Analogies Test (MAT) fee<lb/>
from the present SIO to $13 per test<lb/>
administered The new fee will be<lb/>
effective with the beginning of<lb/>
Fall Term, August 26. IV8I<lb/>
cso<lb/>
The Center for Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities (CSO). School of<lb/>
Medicine, is currently seeking<lb/>
hghly qualified undergraduate<lb/>
and graduate students to work<lb/>
part time as tutors interested<lb/>
students with expertise in either<lb/>
chemistry, anatomy, physiology,<lb/>
b.ology, math, physics, English,<lb/>
or SLAP are encouraged to apply<lb/>
Other academic areas are also<lb/>
considered Competitive wage<lb/>
Contact Dr Frye. Center tcr Stu<lb/>
dent Opportunities, 3'7 Whichard<lb/>
Annex, or call for an appointment<lb/>
a' 757 4172 6075. or 6081<lb/>
POETS<lb/>
The American Collegiate Poets<lb/>
Anthology and International<lb/>
PuDlications is sponsoring a Na<lb/>
tional Poetry Contest in the fall of<lb/>
i?8l. The deadline is October! 31<lb/>
For more information write to In<lb/>
ternationai Publications, P.O Box<lb/>
44977, Los Angeles Ca 90044<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Responsible male wanted to share<lb/>
mobile home. $90 per month in<lb/>
eluding utilities. Eight minutes<lb/>
from campus Call 7S6-8669<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED )i a<lb/>
month plus utilities Five minute<lb/>
walk from campus Call 758 4903.<lb/>
PART TIME HELP needed Call<lb/>
for appointment only. Gordon<lb/>
Fulp Goll, Ski, Tennis Shop<lb/>
located at Greenville Country<lb/>
Club 756 0504<lb/>
FOR SALE Sanyo I.I cubic feet<lb/>
refrigerator Perfect for dorm,<lb/>
like new. only one year old $90<lb/>
neg. Call 757 3210, leave name and<lb/>
number with answering service<lb/>
KISWAHILI<lb/>
kiswahili is the most commonly<lb/>
spoken language in Africa,<lb/>
seconded by French and Arabid<lb/>
Its territorial dominance extends<lb/>
from all along the east African<lb/>
coastiands of Kenya, Uganda and<lb/>
Tanzania and embraces the cen-<lb/>
tral Affrican countries or Congo,<lb/>
Zaire. Central African Republic,<lb/>
Ruanda and Burundi. Kiswahili<lb/>
has also penetrated the western<lb/>
hemisphere only to rank fifth after<lb/>
English, French. German and<lb/>
Spanish as the most spoken<lb/>
language in the world. This year.<lb/>
ECU students will be given an op<lb/>
portunity to study an African<lb/>
language for the first time<lb/>
Kiswahili will be taught as a non<lb/>
credit course If interested, pisee<lb/>
contact Safari Mathenge at<lb/>
752 8736 or the Office of Continuing<lb/>
Education 757 6321<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of Ho-<lb/>
ly Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tuesdayevening, September I, in<lb/>
the chapel of St Paul's Episcopta<lb/>
Church, 406 4th Street (one block<lb/>
from Garrett Orom). The service<lb/>
will be at 5:30 p.m. with the<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev Bill<lb/>
Hadden. celebrating Supper will<lb/>
be served fotowing the service.<lb/>
Traffic<lb/>
The Greenville Traffic Commls<lb/>
sion will meet at 4 p.m. In the list<lb/>
floor conference room at City Hall<lb/>
on Thursday August 77.<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
interested In loining ? billiards<lb/>
league? All billiard players, man<lb/>
and women, who ara interested In<lb/>
forming a league to meet weekly<lb/>
may sign up at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Billiards Center. An organize<lb/>
tional meeting will be hatd Tues<lb/>
day, Sept IS at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Billiards Cantor. League scores<lb/>
will be handicapped so persons<lb/>
with various levels of ability can<lb/>
compete equally. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded in several divisions.<lb/>
ERA WALK<lb/>
The Greenville Chapter of the<lb/>
National Organization for Women<lb/>
will sponsor a Walk A Thon Satur<lb/>
day, Aug. 79 This event is part of<lb/>
the final year's campaign to ratify<lb/>
the Equal Rights Amendment.<lb/>
Each person will be sponsored in<lb/>
the walk by individuals or com<lb/>
panies who have pledged a con-<lb/>
tribution to NOW's ERA ratifica<lb/>
fion fund. The ten mile walk<lb/>
should take three hours to com-<lb/>
plete. All women, men, and<lb/>
children are invited to participate<lb/>
as walkers or sponsors. For more<lb/>
information, contact Lit Simmons,<lb/>
Greenville NOW president, at<lb/>
7S7 4440 or Phyllis Conner at<lb/>
757 4940 after 5 30 p.m.<lb/>
BICYCLE<lb/>
Do you have a bicycle but wish<lb/>
you knew better, safer ways to gat<lb/>
where you want to go? would you<lb/>
like company as you explore ?<lb/>
area? Are there changes you'd<lb/>
Ilka to see m laws affecting bicycle<lb/>
riders? If so. you wouto be in-<lb/>
terested in Mm Tar River Bicycle<lb/>
Club. The group sponsors bike<lb/>
rides every Saturday morning of<lb/>
varying degrees of difficulty. Aug.<lb/>
29 will be a 25 to 40 mile trip. Sept.<lb/>
S will be a shorter trip of about 20<lb/>
mites. Sept 1 will be a beginners'<lb/>
or family trip of about 45 minutes<lb/>
or an hour around town. Sept. 19<lb/>
and 26 will be longer trips, like<lb/>
that of Aug. 29. in addition, a<lb/>
business meeting is scheduled for<lb/>
Sept. 15 at 7:30 p.m. at me com<lb/>
munity buiding on 'he corner of<lb/>
Greene and Fourth Streets. All<lb/>
rides leave from the Elm Streer<lb/>
Gymnasium at 8 a.m. on Saturday<lb/>
morning. For more information<lb/>
call 758 9978<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
MSC Mixed Doubles bowling<lb/>
leagues are now being formed for<lb/>
fall semester. Students interested<lb/>
in bowling on a Monday or Tues<lb/>
day evening league may sign up at<lb/>
the ground floor bulletin board at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
league organizational meeting will<lb/>
be held Monday. September 14 at a<lb/>
p.m. Bring some friends and sign<lb/>
up today.<lb/>
MINI-COURSES<lb/>
Register today tor a non-credit<lb/>
mini-course in clogging, CPR<lb/>
training, popular dance, or<lb/>
calligraphy. These courses art<lb/>
now being offered by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and art available<lb/>
to all ECU students, faculty and<lb/>
staff MSC members and their<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
Individuals must register in per-<lb/>
son at the Mendenhall Central<lb/>
Ticket Office between the hours of<lb/>
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday. Registration will<lb/>
be accepted through me day prior<lb/>
to the first class meeting. The first<lb/>
course begins Monday, Sept. 14<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office or Tana<lb/>
Nobles at 757 6611. Also, course<lb/>
schedules and detailed inform<lb/>
fion art available at the MSC In<lb/>
formation Center.<lb/>
DROP-ADD<lb/>
Due to the renovations on<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, drop add will<lb/>
be held in Memorial Gym. It will<lb/>
not be held in Brewster as it was in<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
SKIING<lb/>
I f s not too soon to start thinking<lb/>
snow for skiing at Snowshoe, West<lb/>
Virginia at Christmas and during<lb/>
spring break. Contact Ms. Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000. Memorial<lb/>
Gym, Room 205 for information.<lb/>
Limited registration.<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
For ECU students needing help<lb/>
with non-university housing, the<lb/>
Off-Campus Housing Office<lb/>
publishes a listing of available<lb/>
rooms, apartments, houses and<lb/>
mobile homes in the Greenville<lb/>
area. Since materials are updated<lb/>
daily, students should come by me<lb/>
office in parson tor me most cur-<lb/>
rent information. Listings for<lb/>
Greenville apartment complexes,<lb/>
tor students seeking roommates,<lb/>
and a telephone tor placing local<lb/>
calls are also provided. The offices<lb/>
serves faculty and staff as well as<lb/>
students<lb/>
NUTSHELL<lb/>
A collage of current campus<lb/>
trends in education, entertain<lb/>
ment, and sports is covered in this<lb/>
year's NiuskeU masvine, distributed<lb/>
free oa campus by (ax ECU Alumni<lb/>
AwociattOB. Don Leaped. Director of<lb/>
Alumni Relations, said the magazines<lb/>
will be available near Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center, the entrance to the Student<lb/>
Supply Store and the A.J Fletcher<lb/>
Musk Building mall on Friday. Auf.<lb/>
28<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
Crafts workshops are now<lb/>
available at the Crafts Center In<lb/>
Mendenhall Pottery, darkroom<lb/>
techniques, floor loom weaving,<lb/>
photography, Christmas pat<lb/>
chwork, handbuilt Christmas<lb/>
ceramics, beginning iewelry, silk<lb/>
screening, and woodworking are<lb/>
the workshops which art<lb/>
available<lb/>
All ECU students, student<lb/>
dependents, as well as faculty.<lb/>
staff and their dependents who are<lb/>
MSC members, art eligible to par<lb/>
ticipate Everyone must register<lb/>
tor the workshops at the Crafts<lb/>
Center no later than the Saturday<lb/>
prior to the first meeting of a<lb/>
workshop Workshop schedules<lb/>
art available at the Crafts Center<lb/>
and the MSC information Center<lb/>
The first workshop begins Mon<lb/>
day. September 14, 1981<lb/>
Crafts Center hoors are 3 p.m<lb/>
until 10 p.m Monday through Fn<lb/>
day. and 12 noon until 5p m Satur<lb/>
day.<lb/>
For further information call the<lb/>
Crafts Center or Tana Nobles at<lb/>
757 6611<lb/>
PLANNING<lb/>
There has been a special call<lb/>
meeting of the Planning and Zon<lb/>
ing Commission scheduled for<lb/>
Tuesday, Aug. 25 at 12.30 p.m in<lb/>
the Council Chambers of the<lb/>
Municipal Building<lb/>
BINGO<lb/>
Get ready for bingo and ict<lb/>
cream on Tuesday, Sept 8 at 7<lb/>
p m in the Mendenhall multi<lb/>
purpose room Prizes will be given<lb/>
to bingo winners and ice cream<lb/>
will be given to all at Mendenhall's<lb/>
Monthly Blngolce Cream Party<lb/>
It's f'ee to everyone so come ioin<lb/>
the fun you lust can't lose!<lb/>
CHEERLEADERS<lb/>
The East Carolina cheertssdsu<lb/>
are planning to increase trw<lb/>
number of male cheerleaders on<lb/>
me squad this fall Prospects<lb/>
should meet at the stadium end y<lb/>
Msnges Coliseum at 5 p m on<lb/>
Wednesday Aug 26 No previous<lb/>
experience is required<lb/>
JVCHEERLEADERS<lb/>
The first meeting for those in<lb/>
terested in Junior Varsity<lb/>
Cheer leading will be held at 5 p.m<lb/>
on Tuesday, Sept 1 at the stadium<lb/>
end of Minges Coliseum Th<lb/>
schedule of practice sessions ?or<lb/>
the tryouts on Thursday. Sept 10.<lb/>
will be discussed<lb/>
L<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Smmg the campus community<lb/>
since 1921<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficlal newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business $35 yearly<lb/>
All others $25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices,<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Buil. ng on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
1 elephone: 757-6M6, 617, 6309<lb/>
wHCtf Yoo ewe e)oo6H<lb/>
To SEttD TH? VfTRY BeST<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
?? REPAIR<lb/>
yff 113 Grande Ave<lb/>
m 7541-1228<lb/>
BACK TO SCHOOL BONUS<lb/>
Ellen's welcomes you back to<lb/>
Greenville with a gift of silver jewelry<lb/>
FREE with any $10.00 purchase.<lb/>
Come see our Preppie posters,<lb/>
puzzles and plaques, large selection<lb/>
of calendars, mugs, stationary and<lb/>
Stuffed animals. And remember, we're Greenville's<lb/>
Smurf, Muppets and Animal<lb/>
Farm Headquarters.<lb/>
COPY CENTER<lb/>
Copies  4.25$<lb/>
100 OR MORE<lb/>
5C 1 TO 99<lb/>
CASE PRICES ON<lb/>
BEER &amp; WINE<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail Ice Sales<lb/>
8 lb a 4 lb bags<lb/>
Keg &amp; Ice Delivery ? 24 Hours<lb/>
Visa and Mastercharge<lb/>
Greenville ? 752 8772<lb/>
Chapel Mill ?967 9791<lb/>
HOME BUILDERS<lb/>
SUPPLY INC<lb/>
JlHLDERS HMdOUARTERS 7<lb/>
FOR YOLK EVERY BtlLPlAG !UEP -X<lb/>
Welcome Back ECU Students<lb/>
Home Builders has a<lb/>
complete supply of:<lb/>
?shelving board<lb/>
?paint<lb/>
?lock shop<lb/>
?mill work shop<lb/>
?other small building materials<lb/>
TMC<lb/>
AAIIMAO<lb/>
UH0OraSS<lb/>
CIRCLE<lb/>
We also have up-to-date supplies<lb/>
and materials for the students.<lb/>
?Interior Design<lb/>
?Industrial Tech<lb/>
?Art<lb/>
Come by for your<lb/>
complete building<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
. Wast?"Cord<lb/>
taw -a af<lb/>
DIAL<lb/>
7584151<lb/>
200 DICKINSON AVE GREENVILLE<lb/>
ViSA<lb/>
HOME BUILDERS<lb/>
SUPPLY INC<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GREAT AMERICAN<lb/>
FAVORITES<lb/>
ARE BACK!<lb/>
GET HEAPING PORTIONS<lb/>
AT A PRICE<lb/>
ALL AMERICA CAN AFFORD!<lb/>
August 27, Thursday .rsavn<lb/>
CHICKEN PAN PIE. 2 vegetables $209<lb/>
August 28, Friday<lb/>
SALMON PATTY. 2 vegetables $2W<lb/>
August 29, Saturday .r?cn<lb/>
VEAL PARMESAN. 2 vegetables S259<lb/>
August 30, Sunday <lb/>
SMOTHERED CHICKEN $239<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
August 31, Monday<lb/>
MEAT LOAF &amp; SPAGHETTI 2?9<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
September 1, Tuesday <lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN. 2 vegetables $239<lb/>
September 2, Wednesday rna<lb/>
STUFFED GREEN PEPPER $209<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
Everyday . - .<lb/>
CHILD'S PLATE ? l25<lb/>
A delicious choice of fried chicken, chopped steal, or a<lb/>
specified entree plus 2 vegetables and a roll! For<lb/>
children 12 and under with adult.<lb/>
Proud?<lb/>
Be Proud of<lb/>
ECU and your<lb/>
newspaper ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Po<lb/>
Ph<lb/>
B KARl<lb/>
NaT<lb/>
East C<lb/>
pus Polk<lb/>
on two<lb/>
to help<lb/>
campus<lb/>
ding<lb/>
Security Jl<lb/>
The firf<lb/>
the in I<lb/>
telephone<lb/>
connect<lb/>
campus<lb/>
by<lb/>
? er<lb/>
chboard<lb/>
v.hich phc<lb/>
being mat<lb/>
an<lb/>
mediately<lb/>
ed to that<lb/>
aid<lb/>
der<lb/>
officer i<lb/>
regardless<lb/>
or not the<lb/>
He<lb/>
what pr<lb/>
tern mI<lb/>
added <lb/>
puse<lb/>
I<lb/>
Back to School Special<lb/>
GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER<lb/>
WEST END STORE ONLY<lb/>
3-DAY<lb/>
COUPON SPECIALS<lb/>
S?S5<lb/>
cafeterias<lb/>
LUBE, OIL CHANGE<lb/>
Prrmlum OH<lb/>
CALL FOR<lb/>
APPOINTMENT icKONT END ALIGNMENT<lb/>
756-93711 -<lb/>
Tire Life ftooet MPG<lb/>
' Moat Care<lb/>
Carolina East Mail. Mon f rl LUNCH<lb/>
11 a.ea2:lS p.m SUPPER 4.30 p.m -<lb/>
8p m (S :30Frl.). Sat A Sun Ham -8 pm<lb/>
tontiauoualy (8:50 Sat.)<lb/>
5S4<lb/>
MONTUES. Available for<lb/>
private parties ? Papa Katz<lb/>
will cater any party or func-<lb/>
tion. We also have a mobile<lb/>
DJ. for public use.<lb/>
WED. ? "ORIGINAL<lb/>
LADIES' LOCKOUT" ?<lb/>
8:30-10:00- LADIES' ON-<lb/>
LY ? GENTS IN AFTER<lb/>
10:00.<lb/>
THURS. ? "SUPER<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT"<lb/>
Sponsored by the Sig<lb/>
Ep's ? Doors open at<lb/>
8:30 ? One cover at door<lb/>
? free beverage all night<lb/>
long.<lb/>
FRI. ? "SPECIALS<lb/>
DAY" ? with a pig<lb/>
pickin' once a month<lb/>
starting Sept. 11 from 3<lb/>
until closing ? 45C for<lb/>
your favorite beverage ?<lb/>
no cover all day.<lb/>
SAT. ? "A NIGHT TO<lb/>
REMEMBER" After a<lb/>
meal on the town ? come<lb/>
enjoy your favorite dance<lb/>
music ? hors d'oeurves<lb/>
'til 11:00 ? ladies free all<lb/>
night.<lb/>
SUN. ? "KOPY KAT" ?<lb/>
Ladies' Lockout till 10:00<lb/>
? gents in at 11:00 with<lb/>
no cover all night long.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 3 guests<lb/>
par evening Neat dress and proper idrn<lb/>
tlflcatton will be required of ell members<lb/>
and guests.<lb/>
?bring application A dues to me door and<lb/>
receive your membership card mat night<lb/>
l??? MEMBERSHIP ????i<lb/>
River Bluff Rd.<lb/>
Behind Putt Putt<lb/>
7587912<lb/>
"A Touch<lb/>
Of Class"<lb/>
I<lb/>
DAT!<lb/>
SMMATVtl ,J<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0003"/><lb/>
?ADERS<lb/>
MM IH<lb/>
g laadai OR<lb/>
 on<lb/>
LEADERS<lb/>
i s p m<lb/>
oo? 'Of<lb/>
1<lb/>
cial<lb/>
? TER<lb/>
Y<lb/>
LS<lb/>
ay<lb/>
v<lb/>
ALIGNMENT<lb/>
o.t MPG<lb/>
U art<lb/>
:non? 7 56-4J71<lb/>
tl Putt<lb/>
912<lb/>
Such<lb/>
??<lb/>
155<lb/>
Police Installing<lb/>
Phone System<lb/>
B KARF.N WENDT<lb/>
last Carolina Cam-<lb/>
pus Police are counting<lb/>
on two new programs<lb/>
help them combat<lb/>
campus crime, accor-<lb/>
ding to Director of<lb/>
security Joe Calder.<lb/>
The first program is<lb/>
the installation of 11<lb/>
telephones that will<lb/>
connect students with<lb/>
.ampus police merely<lb/>
h picking up the<lb/>
receiver. K lighted swit-<lb/>
chboard will tell police<lb/>
vhich phone the call is<lb/>
being made from, and<lb/>
an officer will im-<lb/>
mediately be dispatch-<lb/>
ed to that area, Calder<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Calder noted that an<lb/>
office! will be sent<lb/>
regardless of whether<lb/>
or not the caller speaks.<lb/>
He was uncertain of<lb/>
what problems this<lb/>
system will create but<lb/>
added that other cam-<lb/>
puses had been suc-<lb/>
cessful with it.<lb/>
According to Calder,<lb/>
all the equipment need-<lb/>
ed for the system has<lb/>
arrived but that the<lb/>
telephone company has<lb/>
not set an installment<lb/>
date.<lb/>
The phones will be in<lb/>
the following locations:<lb/>
?The large paved park-<lb/>
ing lot south of Joyner<lb/>
Library and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, in the norih<lb/>
center area of the lot.<lb/>
?The corner of Seventh<lb/>
and James Streets on<lb/>
the east side of James<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
?The middle of the<lb/>
grassy area between<lb/>
Bloxton House and<lb/>
Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
?The grassy area bet-<lb/>
ween Jenkins art<lb/>
building and Jams<lb/>
Dorm on the north side <lb/>
facing the service drive<lb/>
I Mi IASIAKOI IMAN<lb/>
MJGUS1 25. 1981<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Doonesbury Joins Paper<lb/>
Joe Calder<lb/>
of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
? lhe bus stop on the<lb/>
southeast side of Tyler<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
? The grassy area east of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum and<lb/>
west of F i c k 1 e n<lb/>
Stadium, located cen-<lb/>
trally between the col-<lb/>
iseum and the stadium.<lb/>
? In the parking lot west<lb/>
of the SI AP building.<lb/>
The grassy area by the<lb/>
ortheasl corner of<lb/>
installed<lb/>
elevators<lb/>
library.<lb/>
in the<lb/>
in Joyner<lb/>
Speight,<lb/>
?The southsest corner<lb/>
of Wright Auditorium.n<lb/>
?The west side of the Harrington Meld. nea.<lb/>
Croatan. th? restrooms.<lb/>
?The southwest corner Phones will also b<lb/>
Jenkins and the press<lb/>
box.<lb/>
Calder explained that<lb/>
the second program,<lb/>
which is still in the<lb/>
planning stages, would<lb/>
create a position for a<lb/>
crime prevention of-<lb/>
ficer at ECU.<lb/>
A proposal for the<lb/>
program was written by<lb/>
Lynn Singleton, a cam-<lb/>
pus police officer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
this week will begin<lb/>
featuring Doonesbury,<lb/>
the Pulitzer Prize winn-<lb/>
ing cartoon by Garry<lb/>
Trudeau.<lb/>
Doonesbury, with its<lb/>
now famous characters<lb/>
Zonker Harris, the<lb/>
Rev. Scot Sloan,<lb/>
Megaphone Mark<lb/>
Slackmeyer, Virginia,<lb/>
Joanie Caucus, B.D<lb/>
Uncle Duke, and of<lb/>
course its namesake<lb/>
Michael J-<lb/>
Doonesbury, will ap-<lb/>
pear on the editorial<lb/>
page.<lb/>
The cartoon has been<lb/>
well known for its<lb/>
radical political views<lb/>
expressed in a barely<lb/>
veiled humorous style.<lb/>
The cartoon debuted<lb/>
at Yale University in<lb/>
1968 when Trudeau<lb/>
was a student there and<lb/>
has since been read by<lb/>
more than 60 million<lb/>
readers in both the U.S.<lb/>
and Canada.<lb/>
Trudeau's style has<lb/>
created controversy<lb/>
many times with his<lb/>
strips (an unusual style<lb/>
for political car-<lb/>
toonists).<lb/>
The strip has been<lb/>
put on editorial pages<lb/>
and occasionally drop-<lb/>
ped (for instance, some<lb/>
newspapers dropped<lb/>
Dooneshurv when<lb/>
Trudeau look up the<lb/>
problems of Nixon and<lb/>
Kissinger visiting a<lb/>
foreign land).<lb/>
The strip was also<lb/>
dropped in some papers<lb/>
when Trudeau referred<lb/>
to Jack Lord (son o<lb/>
the President) as a<lb/>
"pothead<lb/>
Trudeau is con-<lb/>
sidered a journalists oi<lb/>
sorts. He regularly<lb/>
reads everything from<lb/>
newspapers to govern-<lb/>
ment documents to<lb/>
come up with ideas for<lb/>
strips which are not<lb/>
sent more than a few<lb/>
weeks in advance.<lb/>
Trudeau also regulai'y<lb/>
shows up for Senate<lb/>
hearings, conventions<lb/>
and other news events<lb/>
Trudeau's characters<lb/>
are often thinly-<lb/>
disguised real people.<lb/>
Such characters are<lb/>
such well-knowns as<lb/>
journalist Hunter S.<lb/>
T hompso n (U n c I c<lb/>
Duke), activist Mark<lb/>
Zanger (Megaphone<lb/>
Mark Slackmeyer), the<lb/>
Rev. William Sloane<lb/>
Coffin, Jr. (the Rev.<lb/>
W.S. Sloan, Jr.), and<lb/>
football star Brian<lb/>
Dowling (B.D)are<lb/>
Clyde, her freeloading<lb/>
boyfriend who buys a<lb/>
new Buick with silver-<lb/>
fox fur seats because<lb/>
"I'm into comfort<lb/>
Joanie Caucus is a<lb/>
former housewife who<lb/>
regulars in the realm of left family and husband<lb/>
Trudeau's strips.<lb/>
Other characters<lb/>
have unknown origins.<lb/>
Zonker is a child of the<lb/>
drug culture and talks<lb/>
to plants. Virginia, a<lb/>
liberated black student,<lb/>
has problems with<lb/>
to enter and graduate<lb/>
from law school and<lb/>
live with Rick, a<lb/>
newspaper reporter.<lb/>
Joanie and Rick<lb/>
recently shocked<lb/>
readers by getting mar-<lb/>
ried.<lb/>
A Better Way of Banking <lb/>
FIRST STATE CLUB!<lb/>
Students need more from c, bank than ust checking or<lb/>
savings . . . and First StatefCtub has it'<lb/>
Free checking, personalized Club checks, 24 hour bank-<lb/>
ing AND special discount coupons, including $2.00<lb/>
movie tickets . . . plus much, much more!<lb/>
Your Hometown Bank can help make Greenville a little<lb/>
more like home . . . with a Better Way of Banking!<lb/>
First State Bank<lb/>
. g .??. Around m G<lb/>
Member FDIC<lb/>
 ntt<lb/>
756-2427<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
! 2th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 i<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
JIBS 00 Pregnancy TpsI Birth<lb/>
Control and Problem<lb/>
Preqnancy Couns.lmq I<lb/>
turtru-r ?ntormat.on call<lb/>
832 053 Toll i ?? ? '?<lb/>
800 221 2568 "? ?? ?<lb/>
ana 5 I V ??-? etidays<lb/>
? ?  v '?<lb/>
HE ' ? ?<lb/>
ORGANIZE<lb/>
CAS<lb/>
WE ARE BUYING<lb/>
We have a buyer who has put in an order for 2,500 class rings.<lb/>
We desperately need to fill that order as soon as possible, so for<lb/>
the coming week Coin and Ring Man will be offering a SPECIAL<lb/>
PREMIUM on all class rings . . . from High Schools, Colleges,<lb/>
Armed Services, Fraternities. Sororities, Technical Institutes,<lb/>
Organizations  all class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HIGN<lb/>
PRICE all week. Take advantage of this offer.<lb/>
K<lb/>
the taco difference<lb/>
4$1.39<lb/>
39e Each<lb/>
Every Wednesday &amp; Sunday<lb/>
We also have five different<lb/>
dinners to please everyone's<lb/>
budget and the Big Red ?<lb/>
"A Meal In Itself"<lb/>
Also featuring:<lb/>
Burritos<lb/>
Enchiladas<lb/>
Sanchos<lb/>
Nachos<lb/>
Tamales<lb/>
Tostados<lb/>
Chili<lb/>
Taco Burger<lb/>
Taco Dogs<lb/>
ALSO BUYING GOLD &amp; STERLING FRATERNITY AND<lb/>
SORORITY PINS, RINGS, ETC. AND ANY GOLD OR<lb/>
STERLING NECKLACES, BRACELETS, RINGS.<lb/>
rS<lb/>
?Copyright 1 MO Coin Ring Man of<lb/>
Kay Sato Co. All Right Rr?d<lb/>
l jinmm Knjajif I<lb/>
Located beside Toyota East<lb/>
on Greenville Blvd. ? Phone 756-2072<lb/>
OF COURSE, WE<lb/>
ALSO PAY CASH<lb/>
FOR STERLING,<lb/>
SILVER COINS,<lb/>
AND ANY OTHER<lb/>
?0LD MARKED<lb/>
10K, UK, 18K.<lb/>
&amp; RING i<lb/>
0 KEY SAIES CO ??<lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST. o?"<lb/>
OPEN 9:30-5:30 MON -SAT<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
ini'Mn u i.i.MivnijJ frvnLi-iim-iUi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0004"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
QUre East (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, ?,<lb/>
Chuck Foster, um.m Ammm Jimmy Dupree, wj?u?n, trf??f<lb/>
Chris Lichok, ??,??. ? Charles Chandler. soon, Edllor<lb/>
Steve Moore, on -?  Karen Wendt. ?, &amp;?.<lb/>
Alison Bartel, ?c?- ur Steve Bachner, ru? Ed,??<lb/>
August 25. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Bus Shelter<lb/>
Expensive Solution To Problem<lb/>
Students who have had to wait<lb/>
for a bus in front of Mendenhaii<lb/>
Student Center understand the hor-<lb/>
rors of standing in the rain, snow,<lb/>
or hot sun. When shelter was taken<lb/>
inside the lobby of Mendenhaii, it<lb/>
was difficult to see when the bus ar-<lb/>
rived or to catch it before it left.<lb/>
But, these days are over, accor-<lb/>
ding to Rudy Alexander, Associate<lb/>
Dean, Mendenhaii Student Center.<lb/>
With funding from the 1979 and<lb/>
1980 Senior Classes, SGA, and<lb/>
Mendenhaii, a bus shelter has been<lb/>
partially completed in front of the<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Nicky Francis, the 1978 Class<lb/>
President, was the 'mastermind<lb/>
behind getting the money' for the<lb/>
shelter, according to Mr. Alex-<lb/>
ander. Because of Mr. Francis'<lb/>
great efforts, there will be a plaque<lb/>
placed inside the shelter in recogni-<lb/>
tion of his hard work in getting this<lb/>
project completed.<lb/>
This steel, brick and concrete<lb/>
structure has brick benches shaped<lb/>
to form the letters "E.C.U It has<lb/>
a steel frame and roof, and will be<lb/>
further lanscaped to add to its at-<lb/>
tractiveness.<lb/>
The project was executed as<lb/>
economically as possible, with one<lb/>
half of the brick donated by San-<lb/>
ford Brick Company, the design<lb/>
done by one of the faculty in our<lb/>
own Art Department, and the<lb/>
University doing the painting and<lb/>
landscaping.<lb/>
The entire project, however, ac-<lb/>
cording to Mr. Alexander, will cost<lb/>
around $20,000. The 1979 and 1980<lb/>
classes, and the SGA, raised ap-<lb/>
proximately $17,500, and<lb/>
Mendenhaii will pick up the extra<lb/>
costs, paying for the electrical<lb/>
materials and labor.<lb/>
Although the shelter is for the<lb/>
convenience of the students, and is a<lb/>
useful addition to the campus, it<lb/>
seems to be an extremely expensive,<lb/>
aesthetic solution to the problem of<lb/>
waiting for the bus in front of<lb/>
Mendenhaii.<lb/>
The Student Center is an area fre-<lb/>
quented by visitors to the campus,<lb/>
and should be an attractive<lb/>
representation of the University.<lb/>
However, this project, no matter<lb/>
how aesthetic, is an outrageously<lb/>
overpriced solution to the problems<lb/>
of this transit stop. Although there<lb/>
is a definite need for a bus stop in<lb/>
this area, the purpose could have<lb/>
been served by a more economical<lb/>
bus stop, which would have been<lb/>
less extravagant, saving the stu-<lb/>
dent's monies for more beneficial,<lb/>
worthwhile endeavors.<lb/>
Mendenhaii Addition ECU's<lb/>
Latest 'White Elephant<lb/>
Isn't it heartwarming to know<lb/>
how concerned administrators are<lb/>
with the needs and wants of the<lb/>
students at this university? And<lb/>
guess what they're planning for us<lb/>
now. That's right: A $3.8 million<lb/>
addition to Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center that would only increase stu-<lb/>
dent fees by $37 each semester.<lb/>
What a bargain.<lb/>
The proposed addition would in-<lb/>
clude, get this, three new dining<lb/>
rooms, a ballroom, a meeting room<lb/>
for 50 people and two storage<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
And if we're lucky they might let<lb/>
us students use one of the storage<lb/>
rooms or maybe even one of the<lb/>
dining rooms once in a while. Who<lb/>
needs it?<lb/>
Let's face it, students need this<lb/>
addition and the ensuing fee in-<lb/>
crease like they need a hole in the<lb/>
head.<lb/>
The addition is of questionable<lb/>
benefit to students and in this day<lb/>
and age must be regarded as an un-<lb/>
necessary luxury. In a time of ex-<lb/>
panding expenses and contracting<lb/>
financial resources, spending nearly<lb/>
$4 million on such a luxury is mere<lb/>
foolishness, especially at a universi-<lb/>
ty as desperately underfunded in<lb/>
many areas as East Carolina.<lb/>
Furthermore, Mendenhaii is<lb/>
already one of the most under-<lb/>
utilized facilities on campus. The<lb/>
addition, rather than increasing use<lb/>
of the building, migh turn<lb/>
Mendenhaii into East Carolina's<lb/>
Great White Elephant.<lb/>
And exactly what would be done<lb/>
with this white elephant?<lb/>
Plans call for one of the new din-<lb/>
ing rooms to be used by students<lb/>
since ECU's planning commission<lb/>
in its own inimitable style h?.s decid-<lb/>
ed that the university should phase<lb/>
out cooking in dormitory rooms.<lb/>
Just as surely, though, one of the<lb/>
dining rooms would be used for<lb/>
faculty dining. Technically students<lb/>
would be permitted to dine in the<lb/>
facility, but the implication in the<lb/>
term "faculty dining" is clear.<lb/>
The idea of using student fees to<lb/>
pay for a faculty dining room is<lb/>
reprehensible. To do so would be to<lb/>
blatantly exploit students.<lb/>
We might also wonder who would<lb/>
use a ballroom, most particularly<lb/>
one where no alcohol can be served.<lb/>
Fraternities and sororities are not<lb/>
likely to use such a facility, and how<lb/>
many "balls" does ECU have in a<lb/>
year?<lb/>
What's more, Mendenhaii<lb/>
already has meeting rooms by the<lb/>
score, so what would be the prac-<lb/>
tical purpose of one more?<lb/>
Perhaps the bottom line is that it<lb/>
is East Carolina's administrators<lb/>
and not its students who want the<lb/>
addition to Mendenhaii. But, at<lb/>
least where the student center is con-<lb/>
cerned, it is the students' wishes that<lb/>
should be heeded.<lb/>
Abuse It,<lb/>
You Lose It<lb/>
Campus Police are in the process<lb/>
of installing a system that, hopeful-<lb/>
ly, can help reduce crime at ECU.<lb/>
The system features 11 telephones<lb/>
scattered across campus. Students<lb/>
who are victims of or witnesses to a<lb/>
crime need only pick up the phone<lb/>
and an officer will be dispatched to<lb/>
the scene. Someone will be sent<lb/>
whether or not the student says<lb/>
anything.<lb/>
Inherent in such a system are cer-<lb/>
tain advantages and disadvantages.<lb/>
For the victim who is unable to do<lb/>
more than lift the receiver, these<lb/>
phones may be a lifesaver. On the<lb/>
other hand, the potential for abuse<lb/>
is great.<lb/>
It doesn't take a genuis to figure<lb/>
out how to use these phones to play<lb/>
pranks on the campus cops.<lb/>
We would hope, though, that<lb/>
students would realize the stupidity<lb/>
of playing such pranks: The success<lb/>
or failure of this system will depend<lb/>
on whether or not students abuse it.<lb/>
'Tarzan Land' Misconceptions<lb/>
By SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
What is it about Africa that creates the<lb/>
image of "Tarzan Land" ? miles upon<lb/>
miles of jungle land with monkeys jumping<lb/>
from one branch of a tree to another and<lb/>
the natives running around half naked,<lb/>
save the piece of zebra skin for loin cloth.<lb/>
It has never ceased to amaze me the ex-<lb/>
tent to which ignorance and sterotyping<lb/>
has been cultivated in the average<lb/>
American about foreign countries and<lb/>
especially Africa. As a second-year<lb/>
African student in the United States, it<lb/>
came as a surprise to me to be confronted<lb/>
with social prejudices from both white and<lb/>
the black races in this country. Of course<lb/>
with my prior knowledge of the United<lb/>
States as a modern Rome and a peace lov-<lb/>
ing country, I was sure that my stay here<lb/>
would be academically rewarding and that<lb/>
socially I would be judged according to my<lb/>
individual personality and not by the<lb/>
trivial media stereotyping.<lb/>
However, I was taken aback to find that<lb/>
even my most intelligent classmates viewed<lb/>
Africa as being like the TV show<lb/>
"Tarzan<lb/>
But as it turned out, I discovered that it<lb/>
is not the youth of this country who inten-<lb/>
tionally choose to despise foreign cultures<lb/>
and tradition, it is the media and the<lb/>
government in their attempt to promote<lb/>
partiotism which portray a one-sided im-<lb/>
age of the rest of the world. For instance,<lb/>
Africa is to a large extent still what Elspeth<lb/>
Huxley described in her book, The Flame<lb/>
Trees of Thika. In this book, Huxley<lb/>
recalls her impressions of Africa as it ap-<lb/>
peared when she arrived there as a child in<lb/>
1903:<lb/>
The enormous vastness of Africa seemed<lb/>
to go on forever and ever; beyond each<lb/>
range of hills lay another far horizon.<lb/>
There was no break and no order, no road<lb/>
and no town, no place even; just marks on<lb/>
a map which, when you got there, turned<lb/>
out to be merely an expanse of bush or<lb/>
plain exactly like the rest of the landscape.<lb/>
What Huxley did not know was that<lb/>
within this enormous vastness lay a hidden<lb/>
wealth ? a sophisticated civilization that<lb/>
would require study and exploration.<lb/>
Beyond each hill is a rich culture and a<lb/>
people unknown to the rest of the world.<lb/>
They are there, just like sleeping lions that<lb/>
will awaken at anytime and resume their<lb/>
positions as kings and queens.<lb/>
In the interest of improving the lot of the<lb/>
international student, not to mention inter-<lb/>
national relations between the United<lb/>
States and Africa, I have gathered here<lb/>
several differences that exist between the<lb/>
American ;youth and the down-to-earth<lb/>
African youth.<lb/>
The American youth of today has learn-<lb/>
ed to enjoy the wealth that is handed to<lb/>
him by his parents. There is no clear cut<lb/>
distinction between what the adults enjoy<lb/>
as the fruit of their efforts at work, and<lb/>
what the child sees as his due. The average<lb/>
American youth jeers at the fact that the<lb/>
average African college student does not<lb/>
drive to school. As a matter of fact, the<lb/>
American youth has been able to enjoy this<lb/>
luxury only after the benefits of the second<lb/>
world war.<lb/>
The African youth realizes and involves<lb/>
himself or herself, with the problems that<lb/>
face his or her nation and the continent as<lb/>
a whole. In most African countries, college<lb/>
age students are the first post-<lb/>
independence generation. It should not be<lb/>
surprising, therefore, if on occasion you<lb/>
find us a little more concerned about where<lb/>
we go and what we do. There is a heavy<lb/>
burden of expectation and responsibility<lb/>
on many African children as compared to<lb/>
American.<lb/>
Social prejudices can take one of many<lb/>
forms that exist. I have observed that the<lb/>
majority of white people in this country<lb/>
are more receptive to an African than to a<lb/>
black American. They arc inquisitive and<lb/>
warm, but at times patronizing because<lb/>
"the poor Africans live in jungles and are<lb/>
not privileged with the modern luxuries<lb/>
found in this country<lb/>
On the other hand, some black<lb/>
Americans in North Carolina, or at least a<lb/>
few that I have met, take little or no in-<lb/>
terest in the affairs in Africa or the<lb/>
African. It seems to m? that they stwe u<lb/>
overcome their identification with the<lb/>
Third World: the land of their roots. Con-<lb/>
sequently, there seems to be a lack of com-<lb/>
munication between the African student<lb/>
and the American. The African student<lb/>
dismisses the black American as proud and<lb/>
unwelcoming, while the black American<lb/>
brushes the African off as being backward<lb/>
and not so "cool<lb/>
(Safari Mathenge is an ECU student from<lb/>
Mombasa, Kenya.He is a junior SLAP<lb/>
major.)<lb/>
Strikes: Drastic Action By Labor<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
The three major union strikes within the<lb/>
past few months ? first the seemingly<lb/>
unending baseball strike, then the nearly<lb/>
unaverted postal strike, and most recently<lb/>
the air traffic controller's strike ? are giv-<lb/>
ing people of this nation a good look at the<lb/>
lack of effective communication among<lb/>
our business and industrial leaders.<lb/>
Obviously, the question has arisen as to<lb/>
the necessity of a strike being used as a<lb/>
means to solve the disagreements between<lb/>
employees and employers over wages and<lb/>
other compensations. Since when have<lb/>
thousands of individuals had to walk off<lb/>
the job on a nationwide scale to effectively<lb/>
convey to their employers that they are<lb/>
dissatisfied with present working condi-<lb/>
tions? On which side does the fault he,<lb/>
with the unions or with management?<lb/>
It is possible that the union leaders have,<lb/>
RCkj IlD. t Nsr cu be 1<lb/>
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in recent tunes, lost the patience to<lb/>
bargain. Instead of taking the time and<lb/>
energy to discuss and debate the grievances<lb/>
of their union members, they have chosen<lb/>
to call for strikes to get their point across<lb/>
On the other side, the employers may be<lb/>
unw illing to listen to the grievances of their<lb/>
employees ? trying to placate them on<lb/>
minor issues, but not dealing with major<lb/>
wage disputes. In this case the only alter-<lb/>
native that the union members may feel<lb/>
they have to get the compensations thev<lb/>
deserve is to walk off their jobs. Although<lb/>
this action is quite extreme and certainly<lb/>
not a positive step towards better relations,<lb/>
it seems to be the means that the unions<lb/>
have found to be most effective in reaching<lb/>
an agreeable compromise over such things<lb/>
as wage increases and retirement benefits.<lb/>
The government, in an effort to prevent<lb/>
a strike by any of its workers, has made it<lb/>
illegal for them to do so. Although this law<lb/>
may have been somewhat of a deterrant to<lb/>
the postal workers during their contempla-<lb/>
tion of a strike, the air traffic controllers<lb/>
don't seem to be affected by President<lb/>
Reagan's threats that they will lose their<lb/>
jobs permanently or be arrested if they<lb/>
don't re 1 urn to work.<lb/>
Given all of these circumstances, it<lb/>
seems that we have some people in high<lb/>
places who either have a genuine lack of<lb/>
communication skills or refuse to openly<lb/>
negotiate with labor until some extreme ac-<lb/>
tion is taken to bring grievances to their<lb/>
employer's attention. It is obvious that<lb/>
workers on a nationwide scale would not<lb/>
risk their jobs and economic security<lb/>
unless they were working under extremely<lb/>
poor conditions.<lb/>
So, why can't low wages, bad working<lb/>
conditions, etc be discussed with manage-<lb/>
ment and labor presenting opposing com-<lb/>
promises until a solution is agreed upon.<lb/>
Or maybe the baseball players and the<lb/>
air traffic controllers just needed a summer<lb/>
vacation.<lb/>
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Other Opinion<lb/>
NCAE Targets Legislators, Pushes Conditions<lb/>
By CLAUDE SITTON<lb/>
Public schools are opening all across North Carolina,<lb/>
smoothly and without interruption for the most part.<lb/>
Nothing so remarkable about that or the year after that<lb/>
may not be the case, not unless state and local officials<lb/>
head oft he crisis in employer-employee relations now<lb/>
spreading through public education.<lb/>
There is a parallel in the neglect that led to the air<lb/>
traffic controllers' walkout. The Federal Aviation Ad-<lb/>
ministration let controller complaints fester as the years<lb/>
went by. So, in violation of the law and their oaths, the<lb/>
controllers struck against the FAA, the air transporta-<lb/>
tion system and the public even though they were well<lb/>
paid.<lb/>
That same pattern has been developing in North<lb/>
Carolina for years between teachers and the school<lb/>
boards, who employ them, and the state, which sets<lb/>
their pay and qualifications. Unlike the controllers,<lb/>
teachers are not well paid. But, like that group,<lb/>
dissatisfaction with non-salary issues underlies much of<lb/>
the unrest in teaching ranks.<lb/>
Teachers no longer receive the respect and apprecia-<lb/>
tion that once substituted for money. They lack the ad-<lb/>
ministrative and parental support they enjoyed in the<lb/>
past. Abusive and apathetic students have turned<lb/>
teaching into a thankless and even dangerous task in too<lb/>
mans cases. These and other changes have driven many<lb/>
of the best teachers out of the profession and discourag-<lb/>
ed highly qualified prospects from entering it.<lb/>
Society has dumped the problems created by racial<lb/>
desegregation into the laps of the public schools and<lb/>
denied teachers and principals sufficient resources and<lb/>
disciplinary authority to deal with them. A blight of<lb/>
educational fads has helped to send achievement into a<lb/>
tailspin from which it only now is beginning to recover.<lb/>
Growing numbers of incompetent teachers have con-<lb/>
tributed their bit. And, now, the public is demanding<lb/>
higher standards of teachers and greater productivity.<lb/>
Teachers, not surprisingly, have grown increasingly<lb/>
resentful and militant. Their mood is reflected in the ac-<lb/>
tion of the North Carolina Association of Educators in<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
targeting 35 legislators for defeat. It's unfair to judge<lb/>
lawmakers by their votes on only five issues, as th<lb/>
NCAE is doing. And drafting hit lists in retaliation for<lb/>
opposition to a group's pet causes does little for the<lb/>
democratic process.<lb/>
Nevertheless, what caolition of business, industrial or<lb/>
labor interests has shown compunction about playing<lb/>
power politics? NCAE critics would have difficulty<lb/>
responding convincingly to the defense of the organiza-<lb/>
tion move offered Friday on this page by Peter G.<lb/>
Toggerson. He is a Wake County teacher and president<lb/>
of the county chapter of the Association of Classroom<lb/>
Teachers and a member of the state NCAE board.<lb/>
"NCAE has played the quiet, dignified role for years<lb/>
in its lobbying effort asserts Toggerson. "What have<lb/>
we gotten for it? We have been ignored, mistreated and<lb/>
insulted. Teachers in this state are tired of subsidizing<lb/>
not only public education, but grand state office<lb/>
buildings and horse arenas. The very folks who are cry-<lb/>
ing the loudest about the NCAE hit list are the same<lb/>
ones who talk about quality education on one hand and<lb/>
vote against it on the other<lb/>
That's the sentiment that led delegates to the NACE<lb/>
convention last spring to reaffirm their support for col-<lb/>
lective bargaining by a vote of 674 to 576. Bargaining<lb/>
with public employees is discouraged by state law. It<lb/>
would enable teachers to negotiate salaries, benefits and<lb/>
working conditions. It also would give them some voice<lb/>
in educational policy. This is the direction being taken<lb/>
nationally by the Association in response to competition<lb/>
from the AFL-CIO Teachers Union.<lb/>
No thoughtful person wants to turn either the schools<lb/>
or the teachers over to a union. That would rob teaching<lb/>
of whatever professionalism it retains, strip teachers<lb/>
and their supervisors of needed flexibility and further<lb/>
reduce the quality of instruction. Nevertheless, just as<lb/>
the AFF's neglect finally brought a controllers' strike,<lb/>
so that of state and local officials could bring the time<lb/>
when schools stay closed on opening day.<lb/>
(This article is reprinted with the permission of The<lb/>
News And Observer.)<lb/>
"TUmOHTAX CfifiWIS? NOWH-TWW WOULD DESTROY PUBLIC<lb/>
EDUCATION AS Wfc KNOW IT<lb/>
'Learning Process' Modern?<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
OKAY. LETS LOOK<lb/>
have your ueirrww<lb/>
HOME ad- lets be<lb/>
PRESS FIRST REASON-<lb/>
ABLE OtW7<lb/>
A REPUTATION IS AT STAKE<lb/>
 HERE HIKE YOURSEif, I'M<lb/>
?E AUfe-LON6PUBUCSER-<lb/>
M mM? IN FACT. TM JUST<lb/>
ABOUT TO RUN FOR FOU-<lb/>
J1CALOFFKE<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
?rtffc? W UNCLE DUKE<lb/>
3l' ' HJHOS HE SAYS HE'S<lb/>
Wr FT FROM THINKJNGOF<lb/>
i ZONK? GETTING BACK<lb/>
INTDCVLITICS<lb/>
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iV-ti<lb/>
Wf THENEWS Um<lb/>
J LASTNIWT. FOR7<lb/>
PROBABLY<lb/>
ACCEPThG<lb/>
SOMETHING<lb/>
ftifcfl?? ANY COMMENT,<lb/>
"k PUKE? <lb/>
r?&amp;!<lb/>
UK'<lb/>
By MICHAEL KERNAN<lb/>
1 spent a large part of my<lb/>
childhood at the Utica Cat and Dog<lb/>
School. The name on the letterhead<lb/>
was the Utica Country Day School.<lb/>
It was what they called a progressive<lb/>
school, which had something to do<lb/>
with the ideas of John Dewey.<lb/>
"Learning by doing "The mind is<lb/>
not a muscle<lb/>
Some of the most elite kids in<lb/>
Utica went there, and we studied the<lb/>
Depression and the Dust Bowl and<lb/>
Hitler and the CCC in Current<lb/>
Events. Those things were all very<lb/>
remote to us, and i hen we held a<lb/>
mock election in 1936, Alf Landon<lb/>
won in a landslide. Only Joan Der-<lb/>
byshire and I voted for Roosevelt.<lb/>
Joan was a senior and I was a fifth-<lb/>
grader. I was in love with her.<lb/>
I don't know what happened to<lb/>
those schools. 1 guess the Bomb<lb/>
gave progress a bad name. As far<lb/>
back as 1938, Dewey himself pro-<lb/>
tested that many disciples were over-<lb/>
doing the education-by-experience<lb/>
thing. At any rate, they faded out<lb/>
with World War II, except for a few<lb/>
charming relics supported by<lb/>
parents who remember how it was.<lb/>
Today's drillem-and-testem folks<lb/>
in the back-to-basics crowd certain-<lb/>
ly aren't about to invite them back.<lb/>
It's a shame.<lb/>
I know: Adults always say that<lb/>
education isn't what it was when<lb/>
they were young, and we will pro-<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
Former Student Misses Greenville Life<lb/>
l attended ECU in 1975 and<lb/>
'76. My major was broadcasting<lb/>
and drama. That was stopped by<lb/>
a drug round-up in June of 1976.<lb/>
I was arrested and convicted of<lb/>
sales of cocaine and MDA.<lb/>
I was given 15 to 20 years,<lb/>
which was until this year the stif-<lb/>
fest term for drugs in North<lb/>
Carolina. The last five years have<lb/>
been long, dull and boring.<lb/>
My friends have all relocated,<lb/>
so I've lost touch with them. It's<lb/>
been more than two years since I<lb/>
had anyone to keep me informed<lb/>
as to the changes taking place in<lb/>
the free world.<lb/>
I'd have to say I miss Green-<lb/>
ville a lot. A pizza from Darryl's<lb/>
1907 or breakfast at the Crow's<lb/>
Nest or happy hour at the Rat<lb/>
would be a dream.<lb/>
No one can tell me that there is<lb/>
any place in the world where you<lb/>
can find any prettier girls than<lb/>
you will find at the Elbo Room or<lb/>
Attic. Only if you have known<lb/>
the joys of Wednesday thru Sun-<lb/>
day nights around Fifth Street<lb/>
have you lived.<lb/>
Now I've been told Greenville<lb/>
is also the home of the number<lb/>
one cowboy saloon in the whole<lb/>
state. Then it would have to be<lb/>
since Super Grit is from there.<lb/>
Maybe I could be of some help<lb/>
to someone studying criminology<lb/>
or penoiogy by relating what life<lb/>
is like in the home of the people<lb/>
zoo.<lb/>
Really, the one who would gain<lb/>
would be me. Emotionally more<lb/>
than any way, letters from the<lb/>
free world sure help.<lb/>
So, I ask you to please publish<lb/>
my letter. Maybe someone will be<lb/>
interested enough to write.<lb/>
LLOYD JAY HEATH<lb/>
P.O. Box 58<lb/>
McCain, NC 28361<lb/>
Spinal Research<lb/>
1 was paralyzed from the<lb/>
shoulders down from a fall nearly<lb/>
three years ago. On the day of the<lb/>
injury, I was told that I would<lb/>
never walk again. However, to-<lb/>
day new evidence indicates that<lb/>
there is a chance for paralyzed<lb/>
persons to walk again. I want<lb/>
that chance as do, I'm sure, the<lb/>
other half million people now in<lb/>
wheel chairs. Medical authorities<lb/>
report that a cure for spinal cord<lb/>
injuries could come within three<lb/>
to five years, maybe less, if<lb/>
enough money is raised to effect<lb/>
a crash research program.<lb/>
If you would like to help me<lb/>
and others in my situation, you<lb/>
can by becoming a part of a na-<lb/>
tional organization, Spinal Cord<lb/>
Society of Minnesota, which is<lb/>
feverishly pushing politicians to<lb/>
raise the needed money. Your ef-<lb/>
forts will cost you no money. For<lb/>
further details, please write to the<lb/>
address below.<lb/>
And please, the next time you<lb/>
hear a newscaster say "He's<lb/>
paralyzed for the rest of his life"<lb/>
or "He'll be confined to a<lb/>
wheelchair for the rest of his<lb/>
life say it ain't so.<lb/>
STEVE LAIL<lb/>
192 25th St.<lb/>
Hickory, NC 28601<lb/>
Unity Urged<lb/>
The time has arisen for the<lb/>
cohesiveness and the sense of uni-<lb/>
ty that our ancestors of color<lb/>
once possesed to ignite for all<lb/>
those who see the aims and ideals<lb/>
of those same ancestors being so<lb/>
compromised.<lb/>
Pres. Reagan, (Our Pres.) who<lb/>
is surely to send us all to war for<lb/>
the sake of economy, (for whose<lb/>
sake is another question)<lb/>
preaches facts of conservaton<lb/>
and rer urcefulness from his<lb/>
secluded vacation ranch home<lb/>
while the federal government<lb/>
axes student's financial aid and<lb/>
state government increases tui-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
As we all enter into this new<lb/>
school year, make awcre of the<lb/>
gains that have been made and<lb/>
the losses that can be gained.<lb/>
Do not dishonor Martin L.<lb/>
King, Booker T. Washington,<lb/>
Frederick Douglass and your<lb/>
grandmother. We have been<lb/>
blessed with a mind capable of<lb/>
creating and innovating. The<lb/>
time is now to tighten our belts<lb/>
and roll up our pants (or dress)<lb/>
whatever the case may be.<lb/>
DWAINE JEFFERSON<lb/>
Senior, Envir. Health.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes<lb/>
letters expressing all points of<lb/>
view. Mail or drop them by our<lb/>
office in the Old South Building,<lb/>
across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification,<lb/>
all letters must include the name,<lb/>
major and classification, address,<lb/>
phone number and signature of<lb/>
the author(s). Letters are limited<lb/>
to two typewritten pages, double-<lb/>
spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for<lb/>
brevity, obscenity and libel, and<lb/>
no personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
mitted. Letters by the same<lb/>
author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
bably be hearing this again when<lb/>
schools open in several weeks. Our<lb/>
parents no doubt said the same<lb/>
thing. But for a kid at Utica Coun-<lb/>
try in those days, it was great. We<lb/>
loved coming to school. The<lb/>
teachers were good sports.<lb/>
In the first grade we were given<lb/>
little smocks and placed in front of<lb/>
standing easels with cans of poster<lb/>
paint ? I can still smell that clean,<lb/>
chalky odor, the smell of school<lb/>
itself ? and brushes as wide as your<lb/>
thumb. The teacher would gaze in-<lb/>
tently at some psychotic swirl of<lb/>
browns and muddy greens and say.<lb/>
"But that's a lovely border,<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
In the second grade we made a<lb/>
train out of blocks and sat in it in<lb/>
reverent silence. When we studied<lb/>
Holland with Miss Hentschke in the<lb/>
third grade, we made cocoa and, for<lb/>
some reason, bread.<lb/>
All I remember is sitting in our<lb/>
low chairs eating bread and cocoa<lb/>
and listening to Walter Damrosch's<lb/>
music appreciation course, a major<lb/>
attraction of the school. In the<lb/>
public schools of that day, teaching<lb/>
by radio was considered radical<lb/>
nonsense.<lb/>
That was the year we studied<lb/>
cavemen and built a cave out of<lb/>
chicken wire and burlap. We sat in it<lb/>
the whole day.<lb/>
In the fifth grade, we had Miss<lb/>
Wells and studied ancient Rome.<lb/>
We loved Miss Wells. She was tall,<lb/>
rangy and gray. We spent about a<lb/>
month studying the Roman arch.<lb/>
We made one of plaster of Paris<lb/>
bricks, molded in tiny homemade<lb/>
cardboard containers. (If anything<lb/>
killed progressive schools, it pro-<lb/>
bably was that they ran out of<lb/>
plaster of Paris.) Then we made<lb/>
model Roman catapults.<lb/>
Now, Roman catapults were all<lb/>
very well, but the thing that in-<lb/>
terested me that year, for reasons I<lb/>
can't possibly recall, was the<lb/>
guillotine. So I built a model<lb/>
guillotine instead. "Very nice,<lb/>
Michael said Miss Wells. At the<lb/>
spring fair and field day, our<lb/>
Roman exhibits were ranged on a<lb/>
table in the corridor: the arch with<lb/>
its keystone self-righteously in<lb/>
place, six catapults and a guillotine.<lb/>
The other thing we did a lot of<lb/>
was act in plays. Some we put on<lb/>
before the whole school, some we<lb/>
just did for ourselves. There always<lb/>
seemed to be a play in the works, the<lb/>
way certain people always seem to<lb/>
have a cigarette going. When we<lb/>
were studying ancient Greece we did<lb/>
"The Odyssey or at least the<lb/>
homecoming scene. We wrote it<lb/>
ourselves. Sometimes we dramatiz-<lb/>
ed a book we had all discovered in<lb/>
the school library, like The Lance of<lb/>
Kanana.<lb/>
I was Kanana, a brave little boy in<lb/>
the Holy Land. 1 always had the<lb/>
male lead, because Prentiss was too<lb/>
tall (he specialized in fathers), Jack<lb/>
and Dave were too short and<lb/>
Johnny's voice was changing.<lb/>
Besides, I stuttered. Learning was<lb/>
fun, and therapy too.<lb/>
My greatest role was not Kanana,<lb/>
however, nor Ulysses (come to think<lb/>
of it, I was Telemachus in that one,<lb/>
and Prentiss did Ulysses), nor the<lb/>
Trumpeter of Krakow. It was<lb/>
Hiawatha, in the second grade.<lb/>
What a production. We perform-<lb/>
ed it in the small pine woods behind<lb/>
the school. Jack was an owl and sat<lb/>
in a tree the whole time. Prentiss<lb/>
was Hiawatha's father, and Phyllis<lb/>
was Minnehaha. I was in love with<lb/>
Phyllis. The parents sat on folding<lb/>
chairs at the edge of the woods and<lb/>
peered into the gloom while w<lb/>
recited our verses.<lb/>
As 1 say, we studied politics too.<lb/>
In the sixth grade, when Miss<lb/>
Robinson said we should elect a<lb/>
class president, Dave objected.<lb/>
"Everybody has presidents he<lb/>
muttered. "Why don't we have a<lb/>
dictator?"<lb/>
This was in 1937, you understand.<lb/>
So Dave became the class dic-<lb/>
tator. He appointed the person who<lb/>
wiped the blackboards, the person<lb/>
who got to clap the erasers out the<lb/>
window, the person who fed the<lb/>
polliwogs. (We had captured the<lb/>
polliwogs on a field trip to the creek<lb/>
behind the school. We build a dam<lb/>
and a diversion tunnel and a holding<lb/>
pond, and it took us four hours and<lb/>
sank us up to our socks in mud and<lb/>
made us miss composition,<lb/>
geography and gym. It was very<lb/>
progressive.)<lb/>
The dictatorship was a tremen-<lb/>
dous success.<lb/>
The Cat and Dog School liked to<lb/>
say it offered preparation for life. I<lb/>
don't know about that, but certainly<lb/>
there was a bond, perhaps a sense of<lb/>
conspiracy, among kids who actual-<lb/>
ly liked going to school. When 1<lb/>
transferred to public school in the<lb/>
seventh grade we took up cavemen<lb/>
again.<lb/>
(This article is reprinted with per-<lb/>
mission from The Washington<lb/>
Post.)<lb/>
Opinions<lb/>
Solicited<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus<lb/>
Forum" section of the Opinion<lb/>
page, The East Carolinian will soon<lb/>
begin to feature various faculty<lb/>
members and students as guest col-<lb/>
umnists. The staff of the newspaper<lb/>
is proud to announce this innovative<lb/>
effort to better serve our readers<lb/>
and provide another outlet for opi-<lb/>
nions.<lb/>
The column will be restricted in<lb/>
content only with regard to rules of<lb/>
grammar and decency. Persons sub-<lb/>
mitting columns must be willing to<lb/>
accept "byline" credit for their ef-<lb/>
forts, as no entrys from "ghost<lb/>
writers" will be published.<lb/>
Persons interested in participating<lb/>
or desiring further information may<lb/>
contact Jimmy DuPree, managing<lb/>
editor of The East Carolinian, at<lb/>
757-6366, 6367 or 6309 or by visiting<lb/>
the newspaper office on the second<lb/>
floor of the Publications Building.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0006"/><lb/>
Chapter I.<lb/>
Getting J?e<lb/>
CLAIROL SHAMPOO<lb/>
Condition<lb/>
20-Oz.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
Shampoo i<lb/>
W<lb/>
SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER<lb/>
L'oreal Ultra<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
30 FREE WITH 100<lb/>
MULTI-POTENCY MULTIVITAMIN<lb/>
Centrum<lb/>
$E77<lb/>
130-Ct.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
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$5"<lb/>
 -<lb/>
REGAL K6727 WH<lb/>
SELF-BUTTERING<lb/>
Com Popper<lb/>
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REGAL K 7427 WH, 4 CUI<lb/>
Hot Pot<lb/>
$Q97<lb/>
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GILLETTE 1000 WATT HAIR DRYER<lb/>
Supermax 2 1000<lb/>
$16<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
$2 MORE<lb/>
SAVE WITH GILLETTE<lb/>
3? MAIL-IN<lb/>
REBATE!<lb/>
MEDICATED SKIN CREAM<lb/>
Noxzema<lb/>
$487<lb/>
10-Oz.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
Items end Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed . Aug 26<lb/>
tnru Sat. Aug. 29. 1981<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale<lb/>
m each Kroger Savon,<lb/>
except as specifically<lb/>
noted m this ad if we do<lb/>
run out of an item we will<lb/>
offer you your choice o'<lb/>
a comparable item when<lb/>
available, reflecting the<lb/>
samsavinga or ? rain-<lb/>
check which will entitle<lb/>
you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within<lb/>
30 days<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
rtfj<lb/>
??!<lb/>
Wit' <lb/>
34-<lb/>
' : r j?- f <lb/>
BIANCO 5R<lb/>
Remigo<lb/>
Lambrusco<lb/>
Chapter IV<lb/>
The Party<lb/>
TAB, MR PIBB.<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
$405<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
WISE<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
8-Oz.<lb/>
Twin<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
OSCAR MAYER<lb/>
ALL-MEAT SLICED<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
8-Oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
?'<lb/>
Ht- ROSE, CHABLIS<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
CRiajaJH<lb/>
Cribari<lb/>
Mello Burgundy<lb/>
$07 7<lb/>
Ltr. JW<lb/>
Bti. MM<lb/>
FAVORITE BREW<lb/>
Wiedemann<lb/>
6S4 39<lb/>
12-Oz. m<lb/>
Btis. m<lb/>
SAUSAGE OR PEPPERONI<lb/>
Tony's Pizza<lb/>
89<lb/>
r.<lb/>
1-<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
FROM THE DELI-<lb/>
SLICED TO ORDER<lb/>
14-Lb.<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Wafer Sliced Meats<lb/>
-<lb/>
3-Oz.<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
y<lb/>
Chapter III<lb/>
The Apartniej)f<lb/>
U.S.DA. INSPECTED QUALITY<lb/>
CONTROLLED CHUB PAK OR REG<lb/>
STORE PAK<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
$4 28<lb/>
Lb. &amp;<lb/>
BATHROOM<lb/>
Northern Tissue<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
SPRINGDALE HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Whole Milk<lb/>
$489<lb/>
Gal S<lb/>
Jug SI<lb/>
NOKTHCRN<lb/>
WE MAKE IT<lb/>
YOU BAKE IT<lb/>
VARIETY TOPPINGS<lb/>
For<lb/>
WITH ROLL &amp; ICE TEA<lb/>
SERVED 12 NOON TO 7 PM<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
GAl<lb/>
Only<lb/>
C .<lb/>
Oniy<lb/>
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? ftj?fM?Mi<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0007"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
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1<lb/>
v:<lb/>
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Make<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Your ONE<lb/>
STOP<lb/>
SHOPPING<lb/>
- Headquarters<lb/>
all through<lb/>
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U X<lb/>
U.S. NO 1 WHITE<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
etit<lb/>
DECORATIVE<lb/>
NORTHCRII<lb/>
Foliage Plant<lb/>
$449<lb/>
4-Inch W.<lb/>
Pot ?<lb/>
THOMPSON WHITE<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
i<lb/>
GALAXY 20" BREEZE BOX<lb/>
3-Speed Fan<lb/>
Only<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
LL &amp; ICE TEA<lb/>
NOON TO 7 PM<lb/>
ighetti<lb/>
inner<lb/>
9<lb/>
c,<lb/>
tttntcr<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT-Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
BEST RITE LINED<lb/>
ChaPter lJ<lb/>
The Class<lb/>
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
Business Analyst I<lb/>
$4Q88<lb/>
Onlv ? 1<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
?2OT<lb/>
200<lb/>
.J<lb/>
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS "MATH ON KEYS"<lb/>
BOOK AND Tl 30 CALCULATOR<lb/>
TI-30 Math Kit<lb/>
$14<lb/>
88<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
only wm WM $?11<lb/>
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR<lb/>
TI-55 Scientific<lb/>
$2888<lb/>
MEAD 5-SUBJECT<lb/>
Theme Book<lb/>
$4 27<lb/>
Ea. ?<lb/>
FABER CASTELL NO 2 YELLOW<lb/>
Venus Pencils<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
5 Subject<lb/>
Divided<lb/>
Notebook<lb/>
12-Ct.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
FrrnnTn<lb/>
1 il.il J 1 11 U<lb/>
I - .<lb/>
Only<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
? 307<lb/>
ASSORTED COLORS FIBER POINT<lb/>
Flair Pen<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
i'<lb/>
BLACK &amp;<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
COLOR<lb/>
G.E. 3-5307 A PUSHBUTTON RECORDER<lb/>
Mini Cassette<lb/>
88<lb/>
Only<lb/>
Chapter V<lb/>
The Big Q9ttj<lb/>
2 PIECES &amp; ROLL, SNACK PAK<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
FROM OUR BAKERY,<lb/>
BIG FRESH BAKED<lb/>
TIRE BREWED STROH'S OR<lb/>
Stroh's Light<lb/>
6$489<lb/>
12-Oz. <lb/>
Cans ?<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
ALL-MEAT OR ALL-BEEF<lb/>
SfcRt<lb/>
iSA VI?<lb/>
wieners<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
Chocolate Chip Cookies<lb/>
I <lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0008"/><lb/>
I H I I -<lb/>
h<lb/>
M <lb/>
 i i: i s! : -<lb/>
Page H<lb/>
Book Progresses Under Pickett's Guidance<lb/>
B I'M I (oil s 0j (hc btx), had been finished when<lb/>
she look ovei in lune<lb/>
editoi m Picket "When I took the job, 1 didn't<lb/>
ie Byland in that realize Inns little ol the book had<lb/>
c ha? indicated that been done Pickett commented "I<lb/>
have the yearbook didn't realize that nothing had been<lb/>
I and distributed on campus done<lb/>
ess Byland, on the othei hand, tell<lb/>
'?  o perceni that percent ol the work on the<lb/>
. , hack bel book had been finished when she<lb/>
gned ' lust because only H<lb/>
id paces have been sent in doesn't<lb/>
mean thai a lot more sork hasn't<lb/>
? ui thai ih .lone<lb/>
Byland said that most ot the<lb/>
ries toi the book had been writ-<lb/>
ten and edited and thai most of the<lb/>
photographs had been taken<lb/>
t ommenting on hei decision to<lb/>
resign, she said, "I dec. led to go<lb/>
ihead and do what was inevitable<lb/>
id save every body a lot ol<lb/>
meaning the Media<lb/>
i a e<lb/>
Byla<lb/>
main faili<lb/>
mana<lb/>
time<lb/>
thai n<lb/>
eithi<lb/>
tion<lb/>
need<lb/>
dub<lb/>
undei 13<lb/>
tali<lb/>
sn<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
Thr<lb/>
Ann Picket!<lb/>
 ind aid that she met with submitted a! thai lime <lb/>
axwcll the Friday before she sub 4 pages were scheduled to have<lb/>
hei resignation and that at been completed<lb/>
. he gave her the impression rhe board first asked Bvlai<lb/>
1 a <lb/>
?<lb/>
' she did not resign she would about the missed dead! : its<lb/>
te been tired "I asked turn what meeting on May 25. "Ban I<lb/>
appen it I didn'l resign, and was onnel problem Maxwell<lb/>
 would just fire me<lb/>
? rig about it, 1 decided<lb/>
md resign, she continued<lb/>
aid i w - a ol hassle u<lb/>
? "Bui<lb/>
have voted fire hei h.o e in b thai I<lb/>
explain 1 fell thai<lb/>
new hairn<lb/>
hae a chant urk the<lb/>
BUSCH K?!<lb/>
respond<lb/>
1awell. a <lb/>
dated May 20 was the<lb/>
n the board had thai<lb/>
thi I aneei<lb/>
s ? vleadhru<lb/>
paces had been<lb/>
ik Tiila<lb/>
Quench Your<lb/>
Thrist With<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
in 12 Oz Cans<lb/>
Ma <lb/>
By<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
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Supporl and<lb/>
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ton ot Six<lb/>
M.91<lb/>
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BUSCH<lb/>
FREE HAIR DESIGN<lb/>
Pay for your 1st California Concept<lb/>
Hair DesignGet your<lb/>
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ad! thru Oct 1 st!<lb/>
bi new customet<lb/>
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The Cut is the Style<lb/>
752 2967<lb/>
1100 Charles Blvd. Appt only Mon-<lb/>
Greenville, NX. Fri. 9 am 6 pm<lb/>
Room<lb/>
Tues Crazy Tuesday<lb/>
Wed Hump Nite<lb/>
Thurs College Nite<lb/>
Fri "End of Week Party<lb/>
Sat "Best in Dance<lb/>
Music<lb/>
<lb/>
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Sun "Ladies' Nite<lb/>
<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
BACK-TO-<lb/>
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SCHOOL<lb/>
Economics!<lb/>
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D're tl<lb/>
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ECU. STUDENTS<lb/>
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Calvin Klein<lb/>
Denim Jeans<lb/>
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)is11 ibutor I; .<lb/>
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Shaklee<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
Distributor<lb/>
I your I<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
? ivel Sell Natui : tred<lb/>
iyci 10 years oi Shaklet<lb/>
DANII 1 CLIFTON 752 2076<lb/>
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620 S. PITT ST.<lb/>
(BETWEEN 5th &amp; DICKINSON)<lb/>
FAMILY HAIR CARE SALON 752 5048<lb/>
SPECIAL UNTIL SEPT. 15th<lb/>
?SHAMPOO, HAIRCUT &amp; STYLE $5 95<lb/>
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Restaupant<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057417_0009"/><lb/>
weeks of<lb/>
terest pro-<lb/>
vvhat hap-<lb/>
pen of the<lb/>
m Byland<lb/>
i of u was<lb/>
v major<lb/>
?ver she<lb/>
leo-i some<lb/>
1 aked<lb/>
jl assumed<lb/>
il recently<lb/>
ahng had<lb/>
ntervies<lb/>
counted<lb/>
I a d n o<lb/>
enal<lb/>
t feel that<lb/>
lite she<lb/>
I ed un-<lb/>
"N<lb/>
veaalize<lb/>
 rdable<lb/>
lifure"<lb/>
ttes<lb/>
hair<lb/>
J<lb/>
J"erGoxJ <lb/>
? V Ser' I<lb/>
o<lb/>
r Good<lb/>
? pt 21<lb/>
 dining with<lb/>
e best food<lb/>
Thank You<lb/>
)anie Smith<lb/>
d Hostess<lb/>
IS<lb/>
I Drive<lb/>
"H834<lb/>
14<lb/>
&amp; Dinner<lb/>
ir, Steaks,<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
fampagne<lb/>
)ms<lb/>
Permitted<lb/>
mbers"<lb/>
-9.30 p.m.<lb/>
-9:30 p.m.<lb/>
a Week<lb/>
Housing Office Again Has<lb/>
Three Person Rooms<lb/>
9<lb/>
There will be "no tion is expected to be<lb/>
surprises"for returning completed in the fall,<lb/>
residence hall students, Some students have<lb/>
according to Housing expressed concern that<lb/>
Director Dan Wooten, the alarms will be easily<lb/>
but the on-campus triggered by cooking<lb/>
is<lb/>
housing situation<lb/>
tight again this fall.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Wooten, 450 students<lb/>
will be residing in three-<lb/>
person rooms. An addi-<lb/>
tional 12 will be hous-<lb/>
ing in two social rooms<lb/>
in Garret Dorm. But<lb/>
Wooten says that<lb/>
under our present<lb/>
system we guaranteed<lb/>
freshmen accomoda-<lb/>
tions" and he believes<lb/>
they have been suc-<lb/>
cessful.<lb/>
But transfer students<lb/>
have been left, for the<lb/>
most part, without on-<lb/>
campus housing.<lb/>
There are also a lot<lb/>
of proposed and actual<lb/>
changes in residence<lb/>
hall life for returning<lb/>
and freshmen students.<lb/>
The most obvious<lb/>
change will be that all<lb/>
dorm phones should<lb/>
have been connected by<lb/>
the time the students<lb/>
returned to their<lb/>
rooms. The installation<lb/>
fee and the monthly<lb/>
service charges will be<lb/>
paid by the university.<lb/>
The charges were in-<lb/>
cluded on this year's<lb/>
rent for the rooms.<lb/>
This has made possi-<lb/>
ble the elimination of<lb/>
paging systems to the<lb/>
women's residence<lb/>
halls. Wooten cited<lb/>
problems with the pag-<lb/>
ing system as the main<lb/>
reason for the addition<lb/>
of a house phone<lb/>
system. A house phone<lb/>
will be located in the<lb/>
lobby of all halls and<lb/>
will be available for use<lb/>
by visitors rather than<lb/>
the traditional paging<lb/>
sytem. The paging<lb/>
system had been tried<lb/>
in men's residence halls<lb/>
but had been unsuc-<lb/>
cessful.<lb/>
Wooten also cited Ti-<lb/>
tle IX as one of the<lb/>
determining factors in<lb/>
the change. (Title XI<lb/>
concerned equality.)<lb/>
The installation of<lb/>
smoke detectors is<lb/>
another summer addi-<lb/>
tion that will surprise<lb/>
students. Though not<lb/>
all of the units have<lb/>
been installed, installa-<lb/>
and smoking in the<lb/>
halls, but the exact sen-<lb/>
sitivity of the alarms<lb/>
has not yet been deter-<lb/>
mined.<lb/>
There has been a pro-<lb/>
posal to eliminated<lb/>
cooking from the<lb/>
rooms some time in the<lb/>
distant future. A pro-<lb/>
posed addition to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center may house addi-<lb/>
tional space for food<lb/>
service and this pro-<lb/>
posal may be a deter-<lb/>
mining factor in the<lb/>
end decision.<lb/>
Wooten said, "There<lb/>
has been interest ex-<lb/>
pressed in that area<lb/>
But the initial concerns<lb/>
are about those<lb/>
students who are three<lb/>
to six to a room. At<lb/>
present the priority for<lb/>
moving people is to<lb/>
move two of the six<lb/>
people from the social<lb/>
rooms in Garret first<lb/>
and then begin moving<lb/>
people from the three-<lb/>
person rooms. "Six<lb/>
personalities are hard<lb/>
to biend said Wooten<lb/>
as an explanation.<lb/>
One change from last<lb/>
year is that the three-<lb/>
person rooms were<lb/>
marked and all return-<lb/>
ing students who signed<lb/>
up for the rooms were<lb/>
warned that there<lb/>
might be a third person<lb/>
living with them.<lb/>
Freshmen have also<lb/>
been warned that the<lb/>
later they applied for<lb/>
housing, the better<lb/>
their chances were for<lb/>
being placed in a three-<lb/>
person room.<lb/>
One hundred and<lb/>
seventy one male<lb/>
students will be housed<lb/>
in three-person rooms<lb/>
in Jones. White, Cle-<lb/>
ment and Greene Halls<lb/>
will each receive 75 per-<lb/>
sons in three-person<lb/>
rooms. Both Cotton<lb/>
and Fleming will also<lb/>
receive some three-<lb/>
person rooms, but<lb/>
Wooten cited that these<lb/>
rooms had been<lb/>
originally designed for<lb/>
use by three persons<lb/>
and the third person in<lb/>
these rooms will be the<lb/>
last to be moved when<lb/>
space becomes<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Wooten attributed<lb/>
the lack of enough beds<lb/>
in the fall as the biggest<lb/>
problem his depart-<lb/>
ment has had to deal<lb/>
with.<lb/>
But the loss of 44<lb/>
beds in the conversion<lb/>
to co-ed dorms in the<lb/>
past year has not in-<lb/>
fluenced the procedure.<lb/>
Wooten said that<lb/>
there are almost always<lb/>
a much greater number<lb/>
of women applying for<lb/>
housing than men and<lb/>
this was a factor in the<lb/>
conversion. Wooten<lb/>
cited that his depart-<lb/>
ment has "just about"<lb/>
satisfied the on-campus<lb/>
housing requirements<lb/>
for both freshmen and<lb/>
transfer students. He<lb/>
said that there are<lb/>
"50-ish" women<lb/>
students on the waiting<lb/>
list and due to cancella-<lb/>
tions, there should be a<lb/>
smaller number left<lb/>
without on-campus<lb/>
housing in the fall. He<lb/>
also stated that most of<lb/>
the students accepted<lb/>
will be in school and<lb/>
tha the lack of on-<lb/>
campus housing deter-<lb/>
red very few students<lb/>
from attending ECU.<lb/>
ANDCONVENIENCE CENTRE<lb/>
evbaeh<lb/>
THE PLACE TO BE FOR<lb/>
BACK-TO-SCHOOL<lb/>
European<lb/>
Trained<lb/>
Stylists<lb/>
Call ahead or corrie by-<lb/>
today for the<lb/>
new fall hairstyles.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CONSULTATION<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
BOOKS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Studen ts!<lb/>
fiNG Sandwich<lb/>
Delicatessen<lb/>
2729 E. 10th Street<lb/>
(Colonial Heights<lb/>
Shopping Center)<lb/>
PICK UP YOUR COUPON BOOK<lb/>
OPEN: MONSAT.<lb/>
11 A.M8P.M.<lb/>
752-4297<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26th<lb/>
8:30 A.M8:30 P.M.<lb/>
MENDENHALL CENTER<lb/>
Student Organization Room<lb/>
rWi<lb/>
W&amp;iSP'<lb/>
TRY<lb/>
US FOR<lb/>
THE BEST SAND WICH<lb/>
SELECTION<lb/>
IN TOWN!<lb/>
TREMENDOUS STUDENT<lb/>
DISCOUNTS OFFERED<lb/>
BY MANY OF OUR 70 STORES!<lb/>
KM<lb/>
6 different breads to choose from.<lb/>
Cheese Steaks<lb/>
Cheese Burgers<lb/>
Hoagies<lb/>
and many, many more<lb/>
to select from.<lb/>
Call ahead for take out orders!<lb/>
'AfA'JAVA<lb/>
wm<lb/>
tftOflflM<lb/>
w<lb/>
.???:?<lb/>
??.?.?.?.???.<lb/>
?.?j<lb/>
m&amp;tti-<lb/>
AND CONVENIENCE CENTRE<lb/>
264 By-Pass On Hwy. 11, Greenville<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
m?mM?Mp? ? ?? ?'??<lb/>
sm.rl M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
If you missed the<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT and<lb/>
CHEAP TRICK sell-outs<lb/>
last spring then you<lb/>
WON'T want to miss . . .<lb/>
BLACKFOOT<lb/>
with special guests<lb/>
JOHNNY VAN ZANDT<lb/>
and<lb/>
DEF LEPPARD<lb/>
Checki<lb/>
Continued From Pug i<lb/>
checking. Under this plan you<lb/>
receive: money orders, travel<lb/>
checks, and cashier checks all<lb/>
of charge.<lb/>
The third plan is called<lb/>
ClubFor J4 a month, you get<lb/>
checking, check print i<lb/>
Traveller's checks, money<lb/>
and nationwide discounts at R<lb/>
way Inns, Holiday inn, Rarr<lb/>
Inn, Hertz and Avis Rent a-1<lb/>
Also, under this plan you re I<lb/>
book of coupons twice a yea<lb/>
for reduced admission at f<lb/>
resorts such as, Six Flag' O<lb/>
and Carowinds You also may<lb/>
chase $2 movie rickets good al<lb/>
Plitt, Pitt, and Park Theaters. I<lb/>
prices are comparable to<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Supply<lb/>
Moved<lb/>
B KARFS UKM)1<lb/>
"We have tried aur bes<lb/>
adequate sinage up<lb/>
Clark, Manager of the Stude: <lb/>
ply Store.<lb/>
But the current layout of the c<lb/>
pus bookstore will be coi fu<lb/>
those who have been there <lb/>
and for those who have<lb/>
they'll have to wait and see.<lb/>
Due to the renovatioi<lb/>
Auditorium one hai!<lb/>
bookstore, the area <lb/>
recently housed the entir<lb/>
tion, has been partitioned i<lb/>
books which were housed tl<lb/>
now housed upstairs in th j<lb/>
area of the auditorium a<lb/>
stage. The steps to th:<lb/>
behind the double doors that a j<lb/>
the lobby area.<lb/>
According to Clark ail<lb/>
will be located upstair, alonf I<lb/>
limited number of school supl<lb/>
such as paper, pens and f<lb/>
Clark says that he was '<lb/>
the changes will only be r !<lb/>
for two months and that after<lb/>
period the store will be return<lb/>
normal.<lb/>
Normal, that is. with some<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
The primary change will t<lb/>
addition of six large pill<lb/>
will serve as supports foi A<lb/>
auditorium. (Two more wil<lb/>
located in the store's storage<lb/>
According to Clark, I<lb/>
registers will also be locate i<lb/>
r.<lb/>
Thursday, September 17<lb/>
8PM<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS $6.00 (in advance)<lb/>
PUBLIC $8.00 <lb/>
Tickets go on sale to STUDENTS ONLY Monday,<lb/>
August 31 at 10 AM in Mendenhall. Tickets go on<lb/>
sale to the general Public Thursday, September 3<lb/>
at all area ticket outlets. Tickets will be sold on a<lb/>
first come, first serve basis.<lb/>
fM'gt<lb/>
VISA"<lb/>
The Best Piz;<lb/>
Fa<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
pizza &amp; si<lb/>
AAon. &amp; Tues. 5:30 8<lb/>
AAon. thru Fri. 11:3(<lb/>
Wed. ? All you can<lb/>
Thurs. ? Lasagna<lb/>
e<lb/>
WE'VE<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Bring this<lb/>
10dis,<lb/>
?<lb/>
QWHS<lb/>
EKS1S<lb/>
lumber toj<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
VISA'<lb/>
Checking Accounts Vary At Different Banks<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
checking. Under this plan you may<lb/>
receive: money orders, travellers<lb/>
checks, and cashiers checks all free<lb/>
of charge.<lb/>
The third plan is called "Bank<lb/>
ClubFor $4 a month, you get free<lb/>
checking, check printing,<lb/>
Traveller's checks, money orders,<lb/>
and nationwide discounts at Road-<lb/>
way Inns, Holiday Inn, Ramada<lb/>
Inn, Hertz and Avis Rent-a-car.<lb/>
Also, under this plan you receive a<lb/>
book of coupons twice a year, good<lb/>
for reduced admission at major<lb/>
resorts such as, Six Flags Over Ga<lb/>
and Carowinds. You also may pur-<lb/>
chase $2 movie tickets good at the<lb/>
Plitt, Pitt, and Park Theaters. These<lb/>
prices are comparable to $3 at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
You also under the Bank Club<lb/>
plan, bocome a member of Check<lb/>
Cash. As a member of Check Cash<lb/>
you are able to travel and cash your<lb/>
personal check at more than 6,000<lb/>
nationwide banks who are membeis<lb/>
of Check Cash.<lb/>
Beth Smith of Peoples Bank says<lb/>
that students should open an ac-<lb/>
count in Greenville and should keep<lb/>
track of your checks. It also would<lb/>
be a good to have an account here in<lb/>
the case you should need to contack<lb/>
someone to help straighten up a mix<lb/>
up. Remember Greenville has a Mer-<lb/>
chants' Bad Check List.<lb/>
-Planters National Bank. Has<lb/>
three locations in Greenville, 3rd<lb/>
St Pitt Plaza, and Carolina East<lb/>
Mall. They too are a full service<lb/>
bank, but they do not have a<lb/>
24-hour machine.<lb/>
Planters also offers the Now Ac-<lb/>
counts with standard 5.25 percent<lb/>
on both savings and checking with a<lb/>
minimum of $500. If you can main-<lb/>
tain $200 average checking or sav-<lb/>
ings balance you can avoid a $2<lb/>
a-month basic checking account<lb/>
charge and .20 each check. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Steve Shuford of Planters,<lb/>
balancing one's account is very im-<lb/>
portant, and they also offer a zero<lb/>
maintainance checking account.<lb/>
This means any balance in a check-<lb/>
ing account will not be charged, the<lb/>
only charge will be $.25 for each<lb/>
check that is written.<lb/>
-Wachovia. Has three Teller II<lb/>
locations in Greenville. There are 91<lb/>
Teller II locations through out the<lb/>
state of North Carolina. They too<lb/>
are a full service bank who offer<lb/>
5.25 percent on regular savings.<lb/>
They charge $1 a-month service<lb/>
charge on checking accounts and . 15<lb/>
each on written checks. With $500<lb/>
you get Free Way Checking.<lb/>
Wachovia is the only bank to offer<lb/>
each student a personal banker.<lb/>
Jerry Smith of Wachovia says<lb/>
that students should be thrifty, kep<lb/>
records and clearly keep up with<lb/>
their balances. Wachovia can be<lb/>
found on 10th St across from cam-<lb/>
pus, downtown in the Wachovia<lb/>
Building and also on 264 By-Pass.<lb/>
-ECU Student Bank. I located on<lb/>
the first floor of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent center. The type of service that<lb/>
they offer is check cashing for in<lb/>
and out of state checks and local<lb/>
checks. The maximum that a stu-<lb/>
dent can obtain from the bank is<lb/>
$125 every seven working days of<lb/>
the bank. However if you get a<lb/>
University payroll check for more<lb/>
than the amount, they will honor<lb/>
that check.<lb/>
The Student Bank also collects<lb/>
telephone bills. They ask that if you<lb/>
pay with a check that yu make the<lb/>
check payable to Carolina<lb/>
Telephone Co. They do however<lb/>
have a savings account that does not<lb/>
bear any interest. The hours are<lb/>
from 10:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Mrs. F. Dorey says that the<lb/>
following rules shuld be honored;<lb/>
present valid I.D. and activity card,<lb/>
clearly print your I.D. number,<lb/>
local telephone number, and local<lb/>
university address. There is a $5<lb/>
charge on all returned checks.<lb/>
Supply Store Books<lb/>
Moved Upstairs<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Ncwi Kdilor<lb/>
"We have tried our best to put<lb/>
adequate sinage up says Joe<lb/>
Clark, Manager of the Student Sup-<lb/>
ply Store.<lb/>
But the current layout of the cam-<lb/>
pus bookstore will be confusing to<lb/>
those who have been there before,<lb/>
and for those who have not, well<lb/>
they'll have to wait and see.<lb/>
Due to the renovations in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium one half of the<lb/>
bookstore, the area which until<lb/>
recently housed the entire book sec-<lb/>
tion, has been partitioned off. The<lb/>
books which were housed there are<lb/>
now housed upstairs in the front<lb/>
area of the auditorium and the<lb/>
stage. The steps to this area are<lb/>
behind the double doors that are in<lb/>
the lobby area.<lb/>
According to Clark all textbooks<lb/>
will be located upstairs along with a<lb/>
limited number of school supplies<lb/>
such as paper, pens and notebooks.<lb/>
Clark says that he was told that<lb/>
the changes will only be necessary<lb/>
for two months and that after that<lb/>
period the store will be returned to<lb/>
normal.<lb/>
Normal, that is, with some slight<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
The primary change will be the<lb/>
addition of six large pillars which<lb/>
will serve as supports for the new<lb/>
auditorium. (Two more i'l be<lb/>
located in the store's storage space.)<lb/>
According to Clark, five cash<lb/>
registers will also be located in the<lb/>
upstairs location in addition to five<lb/>
in the regular bookstore.<lb/>
Clark said the store had hired ad-<lb/>
ditional personnel to man the addi-<lb/>
tional registers and handle book<lb/>
customers. He also said that some<lb/>
additional personnel will be needed<lb/>
as long as the books are kept<lb/>
upstairs.<lb/>
At the end of the school term<lb/>
some books can be sold back to the<lb/>
bookstore for one-half the original<lb/>
price. The book will then be resold<lb/>
at three-fourths of the current price.<lb/>
According to Clark, if the price of<lb/>
the book goes up during the<lb/>
semester the price the bookstore<lb/>
pays for the book is one-half the<lb/>
new price, not that which was paid<lb/>
for the book. This is one way that<lb/>
the bookstore makes money and<lb/>
students save money.<lb/>
But apparently the bookstore<lb/>
didn't make as much money as it<lb/>
might have last year.<lb/>
According to Clark money for the<lb/>
scholarship fund did not develop<lb/>
last year. In fact, "none went in last<lb/>
year said Clark. According to<lb/>
Clark, first the funds must be used<lb/>
to pay normal expenses, such as<lb/>
salaries and operating costs. Then<lb/>
the funds go to pay off renovating<lb/>
the bookstore (done four years ago,<lb/>
which will still take an estimated<lb/>
three to four years to finish pay-<lb/>
ment) and to pay for the Student<lb/>
Center Snack Bar and to pay the in-<lb/>
terest on the two accounts.<lb/>
atti<lb/>
a<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
11:30-12:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town! (Honest)<lb/>
Fast Service!<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
k<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Screen TV<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window For<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
PIZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
AAon. &amp; Tues. 5:30-8:00$2.79<lb/>
AAon. thru Fri. 11:30-2:00$2.69<lb/>
Wed. ? All you can eat Spaghetti -5:30-8:00 $2.69<lb/>
Thurs. ? Lasagna ? One Reg. Price.Second One<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
? e<lb/>
WE'VE GOT BLOCK<lb/>
&amp; BOARDS!<lb/>
Bring this ad and get a special<lb/>
IV O discount on any shelving<lb/>
purchase for all ECU students<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lumber Cojnc.<lb/>
We also have a<lb/>
complete line of security<lb/>
hardware for your<lb/>
apartment or room.<lb/>
says<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
Dire<lb/>
torV<lb/>
ct<lb/>
ture<lb/>
SaleS<lb/>
756-3844<lb/>
-n i4 pjk, f<lb/>
11 ?JB4 ??? f<lb/>
I iJL-llUL<lb/>
lfaJk-fML.f<lb/>
CHINESE FOOD<lb/>
TIULY UNIQUE PUCE TO DINE<lb/>
FEATURING A COMPLETE<lb/>
CHINESE fir AMERICAN MENU<lb/>
THAT INCLUDES CHILDREN'S<lb/>
6- SENIOR CITIZENS' PLATES<lb/>
TAKEOUT SERVICE<lb/>
IANQUET PARTY ROOM FACILITIES<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
2317 MEMORIAL DR.<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Back<lb/>
E.C.U.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
"We Specialize In Affordable Furniture"<lb/>
 Twin Mattress &amp; Box<lb/>
260 12 Up All Wood Dinettes<lb/>
$OAQ00<lb/>
?? I Sofa, Loveseat, &amp; Chair<lb/>
We Can Special Order Student Desks<lb/>
Remember Us, For Your Furniture Needs<lb/>
BEER ?f WINE<lb/>
PACKAGE OF0-12OZ. CANS<lb/>
Budweiser W<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 ? 12 OZ. CANS BUDWEISER<lb/>
Natural<lb/>
Light 2?<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Busch$179<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 -12 OZ. CANS REGULAR A LIGHT<lb/>
Schlitz s99<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 1 2 OZ. BOTTLES<lb/>
Pabst<lb/>
Blue Ribbon $19<lb/>
1.5 LITER - HEARTY BURGUNDY, RHINE, RED ROSE,<lb/>
PINK CHABLIS, CHIANTI<lb/>
Gallo 329<lb/>
1.5 LITER - WHITE, GOLD, RED, PINK<lb/>
Taylor Lake<lb/>
Country $339<lb/>
1.5 LITER - CHI ANTI, ROSE, RHINESKELLER<lb/>
Colony 39<lb/>
V. GALLON - FLORIDA OOLD<lb/>
Orange Juice 99<lb/>
10 OZ. JAR - INSTANT<lb/>
Maxwell House<lb/>
Coffee 333<lb/>
6.5 OZ. IN OIL<lb/>
Star Kist<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
75<lb/>
OOD<lb/>
TOWN<lb/>
LFPINCSCVA<lb/>
THESE PRICES GOOD AT THE GREENVILLE FOOD TOWN STORE ONLY<lb/>
? 115 EAST RED BANKS ROAD - SOUTH PARK SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25,1981 P?ge ?<lb/>
rJ<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
ALL DAYTUES.AUG.25&amp;WED.AUG.26<lb/>
Sg Pepsi T Shirts<lb/>
FIRST 100 CUSTOMERS TUES.<lb/>
BOTH DAYS<lb/>
Pirate Rags<lb/>
Pirate Fan Hands first 50 customers tues<lb/>
2 litre Pepsi, DietPepsi,&amp;Mountain Dew<lb/>
-99<lb/>
TUES.&amp; WED. ONLY<lb/>
c??C I At<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
'?:?????"??.?;??,<lb/>
TUES.&amp; WED.ONLY<lb/>
selected<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
2.95<lb/>
<lb/>
ecu<lb/>
?SVECI4<lb/>
 TUES.&amp; WED.ONLY<lb/>
selected<lb/>
GymShorts<lb/>
2.95<lb/>
BOOK RUSH<lb/>
 HOURS<lb/>
TUES. 9-530<lb/>
WED9-5-30<lb/>
THURS8-9O0<lb/>
FRI8-900<lb/>
SAT95:30<lb/>
t?fe<lb/>
Jls<lb/>
Ifeps<lb/>
U.B.E<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
,00$<lb/>
'g;<lb/>
3j<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
AUGUST 25.1981<lb/>
Pirates Admitted To ECAC-South<lb/>
I he news came last week ? the<lb/>
- that East Carolina athletic<lb/>
followers haved waited and hoped<lb/>
for for over a year.<lb/>
L ast week the Pirates were admit-<lb/>
to the Eastern College Athletic<lb/>
iferencc (EC AC) for men's<lb/>
basketball and some unnanounced<lb/>
non-revenue sports by the league's<lb/>
executive couneil. The admission is<lb/>
ding approval from the total<lb/>
U membership, which should<lb/>
make a decision on the matter in<lb/>
September.<lb/>
ECU was placed in the ECAC-<lb/>
South, one of seven divisions of the<lb/>
232-member conference. Other<lb/>
members of the ECAC-South in-<lb/>
clude Old Dominion, George<lb/>
Mason, James Madison, Richmond,<lb/>
William and Mary, and Navy.<lb/>
The Pirate men's basketball team<lb/>
will become eligible immediately for<lb/>
conference play. ECU Athletic<lb/>
Director Ken Karr had already made<lb/>
the proper scheduling arrangements<lb/>
last spring.<lb/>
The Bucs will compete in the con-<lb/>
ference tournament, set for March<lb/>
2,4 and 6 at an undetermined sight.<lb/>
The tournament champion will get<lb/>
an automatic bid to the NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
"This is a very positive thing for<lb/>
East Carolina University Karr<lb/>
said after the announcement. "The<lb/>
best thing, of course, is that it pro-<lb/>
vides access to the NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment as early as this season<lb/>
The announcement by the ECAC<lb/>
boarJ came as somewhat of a sur-<lb/>
prise, as four of the previous<lb/>
ECAC-South members had an-<lb/>
nounced last October that they were<lb/>
pulling out of the league.<lb/>
Those clubs were ODU, Rich-<lb/>
mond, James Madison, and William<lb/>
and Mary. Those four combined<lb/>
with ECU in an effort to form an<lb/>
entirely new conference.<lb/>
Stumbling blocks greeted the five,<lb/>
though, as the group could never<lb/>
determine what school would<lb/>
become the sixth and final con-<lb/>
ference entry (NCAA requires six<lb/>
teams in a conference).<lb/>
Due to the problems the four that<lb/>
withdrew reapplied to the ECAC-<lb/>
South, at the same time, of course,<lb/>
that the Pirates applied to the league<lb/>
council<lb/>
Karr said that he did not an-<lb/>
ticipate any problems when the<lb/>
league membership makes the final<lb/>
decision in September.<lb/>
Karr also did not rule out the<lb/>
possibility that the schools would<lb/>
once again try to branch out into a<lb/>
new league at the end of the year.<lb/>
Emory Says Pirates To<lb/>
Be Greatly Improved'<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports txSHor<lb/>
East Carolina football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory may not be predicting any<lb/>
miracies but he does say that his<lb/>
Pirates will be a much better team<lb/>
than the one that went a disappoin-<lb/>
ting 4-7 a yea: ago.<lb/>
"We'll be entirely different<lb/>
orv said. "We'll definitely be a<lb/>
great K improved football team.<lb/>
We're already twice the football<lb/>
team that at this time last year<lb/>
There are various reasons why the<lb/>
er team this year than<lb/>
last, wh club suffered through<lb/>
its first sing reason since 1971.<lb/>
irse, is the fact that the<lb/>
ai coaching staff now has<lb/>
son under its belt.<lb/>
. n Emory is high on<lb/>
. tad is based on what he<lb/>
.v a ery strong group of new<lb/>
"V er pleased with the<lb/>
and transfers Emory<lb/>
"This is a very gifted<lb/>
-roup. A number of them<lb/>
already battling for starting<lb/>
,it.iOili.<lb/>
er seems assured of a<lb/>
that being defensive<lb/>
Schulz (6-4, 230), a<lb/>
Chow an. Two other<lb/>
.ruits, Mike Grant and<lb/>
are in the battle for<lb/>
s arting linebacker positions.<lb/>
ee treshman running backs<lb/>
been very impressive thus far<lb/>
Ali-State performer Jimmy<lb/>
n, Stefon Adams and James<lb/>
have looked well and ex-<lb/>
-ome early playing time.<lb/>
in split end Ricky Nichols<lb/>
een a most pleasant suprise<lb/>
early. I he tleet youngster has<lb/>
already run a pair of 4.3 40-yard<lb/>
nes and is vying for playing time<lb/>
,i- an alternating receiver.<lb/>
 : io ot transfers from Villanova<lb/>
also have made a few heads turn on<lb/>
the Pirate practice field. The<lb/>
Philadelphia-based university drop-<lb/>
football program last year<lb/>
and opened the way for Emory to<lb/>
bring in quarterback Kevin Ingram,<lb/>
ker (hack Bushbeck, running<lb/>
k Milton Corsey and linebacker<lb/>
aid Rogers.<lb/>
Rogers will miss this season due<lb/>
to i boat with mono. Bushbeck is<lb/>
Bushbeck<lb/>
Status Is<lb/>
Questionable<lb/>
hast Carolina kicker Chuck<lb/>
Bushbeck was informed Friday that<lb/>
he is suffering from Hodgkin's<lb/>
disease, a milignant cancer that af-<lb/>
fects the lymph nodes.<lb/>
Bushbeck was operated on Thurs-<lb/>
day at Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital and had a knot removed<lb/>
from his chest. He was put on hold<lb/>
as to the nature of the knot, as tests<lb/>
had to be run to determine what had<lb/>
caused the growth.<lb/>
Bushbeck was informed Friday at<lb/>
4 pm. that tests had proven positive<lb/>
for Hodgkin's disease.<lb/>
It is not known as of yet whether<lb/>
Bushbeck will be able to continue in<lb/>
his role as the Pirates' starting<lb/>
placekicker. He won the job easily<lb/>
after transferring to ECU in the spr-<lb/>
ing from Villanova, which dropped<lb/>
its football program.<lb/>
Bushbeck expressed determina-<lb/>
tion after the announcement to con-<lb/>
tinue as the ECU kicker, saying he<lb/>
plans to "keep on playing football<lb/>
until someone tells me to stop<lb/>
Tests will be run at Pitt Memorial<lb/>
this week to determine what<lb/>
treatments and procedures need to<lb/>
be taken to move the kicker toward<lb/>
recoverv. After the tests, an an-<lb/>
nouncement will be made concern-<lb/>
questionable after surgery last week<lb/>
revealed that he was suffering from<lb/>
a milignant tumor. The kicker's<lb/>
status should be known sometime<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
Ingram and Corsey, though, are<lb/>
in camp and performing admirably.<lb/>
Ingram is pushing holdovers Greg<lb/>
Stewart, Carlton Nelson and Larry<lb/>
Brobst at the quarterback position.<lb/>
Corsey is currently listed as one of<lb/>
the team's top backfield reserves.<lb/>
Though the newcomers on the<lb/>
Pirate squad have grabbed a lot of<lb/>
the early attention, Emory says the<lb/>
improvement of the holdovers has<lb/>
him just as excited as the new blood.<lb/>
"Our kids came back this fall in<lb/>
great shape he said. "We are<lb/>
showing to be faster and stronger<lb/>
than we were in May (during spring<lb/>
drills).<lb/>
"Also Emory continued, "our<lb/>
attitude is 1,000 percent better. Our<lb/>
intensity and organization are also<lb/>
much improved<lb/>
The big word in the Pirate camp<lb/>
this year, though, is "if<lb/>
"If our youth can blend with the<lb/>
rest of the team so that we have<lb/>
some chemistry and our schedule<lb/>
doesn't kill us Emory said, "we<lb/>
can be a fine football team<lb/>
The schedule is definitely a tough<lb/>
one. Included on the slate are Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Conference foes North<lb/>
Carolina, N.C. State and Duke.<lb/>
Also listed is powerful Miami, like<lb/>
Carolina a sure top 20 pick, and<lb/>
West Virginia.<lb/>
"The schedule is definitely not an<lb/>
advantage for our squad Emory<lb/>
claimed. "If we were older and<lb/>
more experienced, maybe, but it is<lb/>
awfully tough for a team as young<lb/>
1981 ECU FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
(Home Games In Caps)<lb/>
Sept. 5 ? WESTERN CAROLINA, 7 p.m.<lb/>
Sept. 12 ? at North Carolina, 1 p.m. Sept.<lb/>
19 at N.C. State, 7 p.m. Sept. 26 ?<lb/>
TOLEDO, 7 p.m. Oct. 3 ? at Duke, 1 30 p<lb/>
.m. Oct. 10 ? at Richmond, 1:30 p.m. Oct.<lb/>
17 ? at Southwest Louisina, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
(CDT) Oct. 24 ? MIAMI (Fla.), 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 31 ? at West Virginia, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 7<lb/>
? EAST TENNESSEE STATE<lb/>
(Homecoming), 2 p.m. Nov. 14 ?<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY, 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
as ours.<lb/>
The Pirate coaching staff has<lb/>
divided the schedule into six "must<lb/>
wins" and five "big games The<lb/>
five "big games" are with the five<lb/>
previously-mentioned clubs. The<lb/>
other six are Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siana, Richmond, William and<lb/>
Mary, East Tennessee State, Toledo<lb/>
and Western Carolina.<lb/>
"I told the kids that we have to<lb/>
beat those six teams Emory said.<lb/>
"We should be better than they are.<lb/>
Our program is bigger and we've got<lb/>
to win<lb/>
The five "big games" are where<lb/>
Emory hopes to make his big break.<lb/>
"If we win two of those and the<lb/>
other six we'll have a helluva team<lb/>
he said. "If we win three of the 'big<lb/>
games' and the other six we're going<lb/>
bowling someplace<lb/>
Before any of those goals can be<lb/>
reached, though, Emory says it is<lb/>
important that the young Bucs gain<lb/>
some early confidence. Therefore,<lb/>
he has placed a lot of emphasis on<lb/>
the season opener with Western<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"I certainly hope our team<lb/>
doesn't look past our first game<lb/>
with Western because of the<lb/>
Carolina game (game two on the<lb/>
Buc schedule) Emory said.<lb/>
"Western has most everybody back<lb/>
and will be a very tough opponent<lb/>
As the Pirates prepare for the<lb/>
season opener perhaps the most<lb/>
watched position on the football<lb/>
team is the quarterback spot. Cur-<lb/>
rently junior Carlton Nelson is run-<lb/>
ning ahead of Kevin Ingram, Greg<lb/>
Stewart and Larry Brobst. Emory<lb/>
made it clear over the weekend that<lb/>
all four were still under strong con-<lb/>
sideration for a starting bid,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
Stewart may be a bit behind the<lb/>
others, having been out of practice<lb/>
for about a week with a minor in-<lb/>
jury. He is expected back this week.<lb/>
Sophomore Ernest Byner and<lb/>
senior Harold Blue are running<lb/>
ahead in the race for the two<lb/>
halfback slots. Freshmen Walden,<lb/>
Corsey, Adams, along with vets<lb/>
. Leon Lawson and Marvin Cobb are<lb/>
running close behind.<lb/>
Burlington native Roy Wiley, a<lb/>
husky 6-0, 240, is the first team<lb/>
fullback. Georgia Tech transfer<lb/>
Preparing For Western<lb/>
The East Carolina football team is busy<lb/>
preparing for its Sept. 5 opener at home<lb/>
against Western Carolina. The team<lb/>
scrimmaged for several hours Sunday. In<lb/>
some of Sunday's action, the offensive<lb/>
and defensive lines converge above.<lb/>
Below, the offensive line opens a hole for<lb/>
a back to go through. The team will go<lb/>
through its last two-a-day practice routine<lb/>
today. Beginning on Thursday the club<lb/>
will have only one practice, that being at<lb/>
3:30 p.m. (Photos by Rochel Roland)<lb/>
Chip Simmons is the backup at this<lb/>
point.<lb/>
All-America candidate Tootie<lb/>
Robbins heads up what should be a<lb/>
much-improved offensive line. Rob-<lb/>
bins and his counterparts will form<lb/>
what could be the largest offensive<lb/>
front in ECU history.<lb/>
Robbins (6-5, 275) and Miami<lb/>
transfer Tom Carnes (6-5, 265) are<lb/>
the starting tackles. Mindell Tyson<lb/>
(6-4, 270) was running ahead of<lb/>
Carnes before being sidelined by an<lb/>
injury.<lb/>
Bud LaCock (6-2, 260) is at one<lb/>
guard spot while Terry Long (6-0,<lb/>
280) and Oscar Tyson (6-1, 225) are<lb/>
vying for the other guard position.<lb/>
Tony Hensley (6-0, 232) is heading<lb/>
into his second year as the team's<lb/>
starting center.<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates are look-<lb/>
ing for big things from holdover<lb/>
starters defensive tackle George<lb/>
Crump and defensive end Mike<lb/>
Davis.<lb/>
The secondary is short on depth<lb/>
but has five people with some star-<lb/>
ting experience: Freddie Jones,<lb/>
Clint Harris, Gerald Sykes, Marvin<lb/>
Elliott and Smokey Norm.<lb/>
The graduation of Jeffrey Warren<lb/>
and the loss of Rogers to mono bad-<lb/>
ly hurt the linebacking position's<lb/>
depth. Still, Mike Grant, Amos<lb/>
Twitty Glenn Morris and Donald<lb/>
Reid are on hand and fighting for<lb/>
the two starting linebacker posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
NCAA Tourney Now Accessible<lb/>
Conference Will Do Wonders For Bucs<lb/>
Chuck Bushbeck<lb/>
ing Bushbeck's availability to the<lb/>
Pirates this season.<lb/>
Bushbeck had a banner three-year<lb/>
career at Villanova before the<lb/>
school dropped its program due to<lb/>
financial problems. He connected<lb/>
on 42 of 47 extra point attempts<lb/>
during that time.<lb/>
He has been billed in many circles<lb/>
as a bonafide All-America can-<lb/>
didate in this his senior season.<lb/>
"He's an All-America person as<lb/>
well as player ECU head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory said following the announce-<lb/>
ment Friday. "The character he has<lb/>
shown today indicates the fight and<lb/>
determination that he will use to<lb/>
work toward full recovery<lb/>
Fantastic.<lb/>
ECU fans from all over must be<lb/>
overjoyed at last week's announce-<lb/>
ment that the Pirate men's basket-<lb/>
ball team will compete in the<lb/>
ECAC-South this coming season.<lb/>
The announcment of the Bucs in a<lb/>
conference is one that ECU fans<lb/>
have hoped for for quite some time.<lb/>
More importantly, the ECAC-South<lb/>
has an automatic berth to the<lb/>
NCAA national championship tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
What this means is if the Pirates<lb/>
are able to put together three good<lb/>
nights of basketball in early March,<lb/>
they could end up in the prestigious<lb/>
NCAA event.<lb/>
Sounds great, right? Well, it is.<lb/>
But it is not what ECU officials had<lb/>
in mind a few months ago.<lb/>
The Pirate brass worked all of last<lb/>
fall and throughout the summer<lb/>
with four other schools ? Old<lb/>
Dominion, James Madison,<lb/>
William and Mary, and Richmond<lb/>
? in an effort to form a new con-<lb/>
ference. The problem was that the<lb/>
five could never agree on a league<lb/>
member number six, that being the<lb/>
number required for a conference<lb/>
by the NCAA.<lb/>
Ironically, two schools that the<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
five were considering as a sixth<lb/>
member, George Mason and Navy<lb/>
(UNC-Wilmington was another)<lb/>
were already in the ECAC-South.<lb/>
The four schools that had reached<lb/>
agreement with ECU had just drop-<lb/>
ped out of that league.<lb/>
As it turned out, the four schools<lb/>
that left the ECAC-South simply<lb/>
went back in at the 11th hour. At<lb/>
the same time, ECU applied for ad-<lb/>
mission as the loop's seventh<lb/>
member.<lb/>
Last week the league council ap-<lb/>
proved ECU's application. All that<lb/>
remains for it to be official is an<lb/>
okay from the total ECAC member-<lb/>
ship of 232 schools. That appears to<lb/>
be no problem.<lb/>
Football To Benefit?<lb/>
What benefits will the Pirates<lb/>
reap from the new league?<lb/>
Quite a few, surely. There is no<lb/>
doubt that the fact that the school is<lb/>
a part of an established conference<lb/>
will help when cage coach Dave<lb/>
Odom talks to recruits this year.<lb/>
Of course, there is the big advan-<lb/>
tage of the Bucs having a lot easier<lb/>
? though not easy ? access to the<lb/>
NCAA tournament.<lb/>
The improvement of the basket-<lb/>
ball program could help Pirate foot-<lb/>
ball as well. ECU Athletic Director<lb/>
Ken Karr will no doubt develop a<lb/>
good relationship with Navy, one of<lb/>
the ECAC-South's members. Who<lb/>
knows? Eventually, he might work<lb/>
up a contract that would give the<lb/>
Pirates a home-and-home series<lb/>
with Navy. That would definitely be<lb/>
a step in the right direction.<lb/>
Karr Doing The Job<lb/>
Speaking of Karr, the man has<lb/>
come under his share of criticism in<lb/>
his first year and one-half on the job<lb/>
at ECU. Much of it has been unfair.<lb/>
Karr is an experienced, well-<lb/>
known administrator. He was a<lb/>
member of the NCAA Basketball<lb/>
Tournament Selection Committee a<lb/>
year ago. He has been on<lb/>
numerous other NCAA groups<lb/>
and was one of the founders of the<lb/>
Holiday Bowl.<lb/>
Karr's popularity among NCAA<lb/>
circles certainly played a big part in<lb/>
his scheduling future football con-<lb/>
tests with such schools as West<lb/>
Virginia, Florida State and<lb/>
Missouri.<lb/>
Karr has a lot of dreams for ECU<lb/>
athletics and is working hard to<lb/>
make them come true. Some of his<lb/>
early dreams have already<lb/>
developed, the future football con-<lb/>
tracts and the gaining membership<lb/>
to the ECAC.<lb/>
Karr has had to make some tough<lb/>
and sometimes disheartening deci-<lb/>
sions to take the steps that need to<lb/>
be taken. Having the gall to make<lb/>
such decisions is an admirable quali-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Befoie being to hard on the man,<lb/>
perhaps it would be wise to sit back<lb/>
and take a look at what he has done<lb/>
and is doing.<lb/>
No matter, it won't be long<lb/>
before things that Karr has in mind<lb/>
start happening. Maybe then his<lb/>
talents will be fully appreciated.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0014"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25. 1981<lb/>
Pace 2<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats"<lb/>
P.O. Box 2 ? 211Jarvis St. ? Greenville, N.C. 27834 ? Phone: 752-5025<lb/>
?Wvnow.buVW ,<lb/>
Welcome ou.?- t0 ieu r-<lb/>
nke a lew mmutes oi your btteets<lb/>
? .1 located at me comer 01 tte.<lb/>
We are convemen downtown Green<lb/>
? 2 owned -r e "<lb/>
e are convem? . ?w??" to<lb/>
i 2 blocks hom ECU ano day<lb/>
L metown lamily ?"?AJS meat prices, and deep<lb/>
Overton's, a "??W" Greenvdle ? low;e 0verton , we<lb/>
low 1? -?-2 J 'd-J. No stamps, no<lb/>
cut advertised specks P stop tagh boo yQU money.<lb/>
lW?te'ie S oo Have to dc. ?s p you wlll rece-ve V<lb/>
ZL Si TllSiYour checks,<lb/>
check-out ume ? gladly cash y<lb/>
U) discount- We ding Keg Beer.<lb/>
full Une ol paW SUPPU . ? Qverton's every<lb/>
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on<lb/>
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inn<lb/>
aa<lb/>
stut<lb/>
ant<lb/>
lint<lb/>
cot<lb/>
seat<lb/>
)<lb/>
see<lb/>
thr<lb/>
at<lb/>
Ofj(<lb/>
ty<lb/>
? ' S ' ?p1 to brH<lb/>
Tne coupon<lb/>
to receive<lb/>
voor W D?sc<lb/>
ount<lb/>
We will furnish a cart for you to carry your<lb/>
groceries back to your dormitory.<lb/>
RITZ<lb/>
CRACKERS<lb/>
1 lb. box<lb/>
99 C<lb/>
?JJ))f<lb/>
Dannon<lb/>
Yog<lb/>
8 oz. cups<lb/>
STROH'S<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
COCA-<lb/>
COLA<lb/>
Six Pack<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
carton of 8<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
ANY FOOD ORDER<lb/>
  . ? Regardless of size.<lb/>
Present this coupon and show your ECU ID<lb/>
to cashier. Offer expires Sept. 13th.<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
jTvPucchqse<lb/>
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Soft Drinks<lb/>
Diet Rite,<lb/>
Orange, Grape,<lb/>
and<lb/>
Root Beer<lb/>
2 litre bottle<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057417_0015"/><lb/>
Revised Group Plan Ready<lb/>
New Ticket Pick-up Set<lb/>
A restructuring plan for Ficklen Stadium was announced<lb/>
last spring by East Carolina athletic director Ken Kar. In-<lb/>
cluded in the plan is a system in which students will pick up<lb/>
tickets (free of charge) prior to each home game.<lb/>
The system is not to be confused with the now dead pro-<lb/>
posal that would have had students buying their tickets. That<lb/>
idea died, though, after it met with masses of student op-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Under the plan that was passed, students will be seated in<lb/>
the nort stands in sections 21 26. This represents a change<lb/>
from past practices which allowed students to sit anywhere in<lb/>
the north stands that they desired.<lb/>
The change came about, Karr said, as a part of the athletic<lb/>
department's push to create more revenue.<lb/>
The ticket pick-up ws brought about to prevent hassles for<lb/>
students such as have been the case in the pat, when they had<lb/>
to wait in long lines on game day to enter the stadium with an<lb/>
ID and activity card.<lb/>
"That's the biggest change as far as the students are con-<lb/>
cerned said Assistant Athletic Director for Promotions<lb/>
Ken Smith. "That should make things a lot more hassle-free<lb/>
on game days. Now studnets will have a hard ticket to get in-<lb/>
to the game<lb/>
The plan was finalized in the spring with the aid of a group<lb/>
of student leaders. An outline of the plan follows:<lb/>
. Students will sit in sections 21-26. This area will be divided<lb/>
into two different sections ? a Reserved Seating section and<lb/>
a Reserved Section.<lb/>
Tickets to the Reserved Seating section will put the<lb/>
students in a particular seat. These seats include all of section<lb/>
and half of section 25. These seats run from the 30-50-yard<lb/>
line. Tickets to this section will be distributed on a first-<lb/>
come, first-served basis.<lb/>
Tickets to the Reserved Section will seat students in any<lb/>
seat they desire from the goaline to the 30-yard line.<lb/>
(For clarification on the locations of these two sections,<lb/>
see the stadium diagram.)<lb/>
2. Students may pick up their tickets from Tuesday<lb/>
through Thursday during the week of a Saturday home game<lb/>
at the Minges Coliseum ticket office or at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office at Mendenhall Center by showing their ID and activi-<lb/>
ty card.<lb/>
The Mendenhall ticket office is open from 10 a.m. until 4<lb/>
p.m. only. The Minges office is open from 8 a.m5 p.m. on<lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday, and from 8 a.m6 p.m. on Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Students MA Y NOT pick up tickets on Fridays but will be<lb/>
allowed to make late pick-ups of the tickets remaining (after<lb/>
sales and earlier pick-ups) at a special student window at<lb/>
Minges prior to the game on Saturday. These tickets will be<lb/>
for the Reserved Section only.<lb/>
The ticket office will close the Saturday game-day pick-ups<lb/>
two hours before the contest begins. For the season opener<lb/>
against Western Carolina, the office will be open from 8<lb/>
a.m5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 5.<lb/>
3. Each student will be allowed to pick up their own ticket<lb/>
and one for one other person by presenting the ID and activi-<lb/>
ty card of both individuals on pick-up days.<lb/>
4. Each student will be allowed to purchase one student guest<lb/>
ticket per activity card for $4.50. (In the past there was no<lb/>
reduced rate for student guests.) After purchasing the one<lb/>
guest ticket the student may buy as many other tickets as<lb/>
desired at $9 each.<lb/>
SPECIAL GROUP PLAN<lb/>
5. Student group seating will be available in the Reserved<lb/>
Seating section only. All groups, whether fraternity, sorori-<lb/>
ty, dormitory or other, must register with the ticket office.<lb/>
6. Groups must request a minimum 20 tickets and must elect<lb/>
one designated representative and an alternate.<lb/>
The first group meetin will be held this Thursday, August<lb/>
27 at 5 p.m. in Room 142 in Minges Coliseum. The<lb/>
designated representatives of ALL interested groups should<lb/>
be present.<lb/>
The following is the schedule that will be followed each<lb/>
week concerning group ticket pick-ups:<lb/>
? Each Friday before games on Saturday week (for exam-<lb/>
ple, Friday, August 28 before the Saturday, Sept. 5 opener<lb/>
against Western Carolina) group reps should contact the<lb/>
ticket office and set up an appointment for the following<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
On Monday, the group representatives will be involved in<lb/>
a draw to determine where each group will be seated. This is<lb/>
done so that each group will have a fair shot at the best seats<lb/>
each week.<lb/>
On Wednesday following the Monday draw the group<lb/>
representatives will be able to pick up their tickets from the<lb/>
Minges office.<lb/>
Board To Guide A thletics<lb/>
By CHRIS<lb/>
HOLLOMAN<lb/>
SUfT Writer<lb/>
This tall a new<lb/>
organization will be<lb/>
working with the East<lb/>
Carolina athletic<lb/>
department to create<lb/>
more student involve-<lb/>
ment in the Pirate pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
The ECU Student<lb/>
Athletic Board (SAB) is<lb/>
a direct outgrowth of<lb/>
East Carolina's inten-<lb/>
tion to develop a "big<lb/>
time" athletic status,<lb/>
according to the pro-<lb/>
gram's coordinator<lb/>
Pam Holt.<lb/>
She said the purpose<lb/>
of the SAB is to lend<lb/>
leadership, interest and<lb/>
enthusiasm and to pro-<lb/>
mote and encourage the<lb/>
Pirate intercollegiate<lb/>
athletic program by<lb/>
boosting player morale,<lb/>
building fan support<lb/>
and increasing student<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
Holt is the assistant<lb/>
athletic director for stu-<lb/>
dent life.<lb/>
This fall the main<lb/>
conerns of the program<lb/>
will be football and<lb/>
both basketball teams.<lb/>
"The Student<lb/>
Athletic Board pro-<lb/>
vides a chance for the<lb/>
students of East<lb/>
Carolina to have some<lb/>
input into the Pirate<lb/>
program as to what<lb/>
they want and what<lb/>
they expect Holt ex-<lb/>
plained. "It will give<lb/>
the students involved a<lb/>
chance to meet the<lb/>
coaches and the players<lb/>
as well as the athletic<lb/>
staff. Also the SAB will<lb/>
work with hosting<lb/>
various Pirate Club ac-<lb/>
tivities and with<lb/>
meeting alumni and<lb/>
recruits<lb/>
The idea for an SAB<lb/>
is not new and has<lb/>
often been successful in<lb/>
other large athletic pro-<lb/>
grams at major univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
One of the top SAB<lb/>
organizations in the<lb/>
country is at Indiana<lb/>
University. The group,<lb/>
starting its 25th year of<lb/>
existence, works with<lb/>
the entire scope of the<lb/>
athletic program ?<lb/>
from selling tickets to<lb/>
football games to<lb/>
organizing special<lb/>
events for the children<lb/>
in the Bloomington,<lb/>
lnd. community.<lb/>
"The program at In-<lb/>
diana is a very suc-<lb/>
cessful one, and we<lb/>
eventually want ours at<lb/>
East Carolina to cover<lb/>
the same areas as the<lb/>
one at Indiana Holt<lb/>
continued. "This<lb/>
organization will give<lb/>
the students direct in-<lb/>
volvement in the pro-<lb/>
gram and a chance to<lb/>
learn about everything<lb/>
from football to public<lb/>
relations.<lb/>
"The most impor-<lb/>
tant part of the Student<lb/>
Athletic Board though<lb/>
will be to have fun. In<lb/>
order to accomplish<lb/>
our goals on campus,<lb/>
however, we need the<lb/>
support of the student<lb/>
body<lb/>
The organizational<lb/>
meeting for those in-<lb/>
terested in football and<lb/>
the SAB will be held in<lb/>
Room 142 and 143 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum on,<lb/>
Tuesday, Sept. 1 at 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
State, UNC<lb/>
Tickets On<lb/>
Sale Thursday<lb/>
Student tickets for two big East<lb/>
Carolina away football games will<lb/>
go on sale this Thursday at 5 a.m.<lb/>
Tickets to the Pirates games with<lb/>
both North Carolina on Sept. 12<lb/>
and N.C. State on Sept. 19 will go<lb/>
on sale Thursday at 5 a.m. at the<lb/>
Athletic Ticket Office in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The early pick-up time is designed<lb/>
so that students will not have to miss<lb/>
classes to buy tickets.<lb/>
Students can purchase a max-<lb/>
imum of two tickets to both con-<lb/>
tests. Passes to the State game will<lb/>
cost $5 for the first and $10 for the<lb/>
second. All tickets to the Carolina<lb/>
contests will cost students $10.<lb/>
Duke is the third and last Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference team on the<lb/>
Pirate schedule. Tickets to the Oct.<lb/>
3 game in Durham are available now<lb/>
at the Minges ticket office. Students<lb/>
can buy as many tickets to that<lb/>
game as they desire for $10 each.<lb/>
What's so Different<lb/>
about this<lb/>
Price Tag?<lb/>
about $24.<lb/>
Top quality, famous labels<lb/>
at 30-502 off the<lb/>
regular retail price!<lb/>
where? at the<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
DROPPER<lb/>
of course!<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE ? GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
10-9 MonFri. ? 106 Sat. ? 756-4001<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25, 198I p?ge 3<lb/>
$<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be<lb/>
below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store e<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
readily available (or sale at or<lb/>
cept as specifically noted )<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT AUG. 29 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER<lb/>
RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Highway 264 By-Pass<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville N. C.<lb/>
D<lb/>
BACK-TO-SCH<lb/>
II<lb/>
COSTS LESS WITH GREEN P's<lb/>
L<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
Fresh Whole Fryers<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
2 in a bag<lb/>
Limit 2 Bags<lb/>
49c<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
49?<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Bone In<lb/>
Full-Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Beef Strips<lb/>
10-14 lb. Avg.<lb/>
 Cut Free into Boneless <lb/>
V New York Strip Steaks <lb/>
lb.<lb/>
gL22S<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES V QoifinriO " ANN PAGE<lb/>
Duncan Hines Sav,n9s 2LowfatMilk<lb/>
Cake Mixes<lb/>
I8V2OZ.<lb/>
69<lb/>
0<lb/>
gal. jug<lb/>
83<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT ? Ctrl, of 6<lb/>
12-oz. cans<lb/>
205<lb/>
Budweiser Beer<lb/>
199<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
of<lb/>
6<lb/>
Coke, Mello<lb/>
Yello, Tab Sprite<lb/>
2L?er I 09<lb/>
Bottle I<lb/>
MINUTE MAID CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Shedds Spread<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
Sealtest Ice Cream<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
189<lb/>
1 Sa<lb/>
Save 76<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Pizzas<lb/>
? Hamburger<lb/>
? Pepperoni<lb/>
?Sausage i2oz<lb/>
? Cheese pkg.<lb/>
99c<lb/>
WHITE-YELLOW-BLUE<lb/>
Charmin Tissue<lb/>
4&amp;99?<lb/>
EJAOV<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Dole Bananas<lb/>
3, 100<lb/>
only I<lb/>
CALIFORNIA PLUMP<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
79?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0016"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Al'tUST 25, W8!<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Five ex-ECU gridders now<lb/>
in the professional ranks<lb/>
?<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: "Pirates in the pros" is<lb/>
designed to inform the ECU student body oj the<lb/>
efforts of former Pirate athletes as they give it<lb/>
there all in an effort to make it big on the profes-<lb/>
sional level. The feature will appear throughout<lb/>
the year when appropriate.<lb/>
A total of 11 former ECU football players were<lb/>
in various professional football training camps<lb/>
this summer. Four remain in the National Foot-<lb/>
ball League and one in the Canadian Football<lb/>
L eague.<lb/>
A capsule look at each of the players' efforts<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
WILLIE HOLLEY: A Pirate defensive back<lb/>
last season, Holley played for a time this summer<lb/>
with the now-defunct Charlotte Chargers of the<lb/>
AFA. When the Chargers folded due to financial<lb/>
problems, he had a tryout with the Ottowa Rough<lb/>
Riders of the CFL.<lb/>
Holley arrived in Canada when cuts were being<lb/>
made and simply did not have enough time to<lb/>
have a fair shot at making the Ottowa squad. The<lb/>
Rough Riders still have him on a call-up list in<lb/>
case injuries occur.<lb/>
THEODORE SUTTON: The second leading<lb/>
ground gainer in ECU history performed quite<lb/>
admirably during pre-season camp for one of the<lb/>
toughest organizations in the NFl . the Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys.<lb/>
Sutton went to the Cowboys as a free agent and<lb/>
was not cut until last Tuesday, when the squad<lb/>
was narrowed down to 60 players. The Cowboys<lb/>
are set at running back, of course, with the likes<lb/>
of Tony Dorsett, Ron Springs and Robert<lb/>
Newhouse on hand.<lb/>
Sutton was the last back that the team cut prior<lb/>
to the regular season. Sutton's agent. Ken Hut-<lb/>
chison (former ECU assistant coach) said the<lb/>
burly fullback had hopes for a shot to play this<lb/>
year in the CFL. There is also the possibility that<lb/>
the Cowboys could call him back up hould an in<lb/>
jurv occur.<lb/>
MIKE HAWKINS: The Hendei-on halfback<lb/>
lost a battle with the NC AA in the spiing concer-<lb/>
ning his eligibility with the Pirates in 1981. The<lb/>
negative decision left Hawkins with little time to<lb/>
make himself known enough tor the draft.<lb/>
Still, he latched on as a free agent with the<lb/>
Atlanta Falcons and was cut only last Tuesday.<lb/>
He, like Sutton, hopes to catch on in the CFL.<lb/>
MIKE BREW INCH ON: The Greenville<lb/>
native finished his days as a Pirate linebacker in<lb/>
1979 and failed in a pro bid with the Kansas City<lb/>
Chiefs a year ago. This year Brouington latched<lb/>
on as a free agent with the New York Jets.<lb/>
Like Sutton and Hawkins, Brewington was cut<lb/>
last Tuesday when the NFL teams cut their rosters<lb/>
to 60 teams.<lb/>
FDDIE HICKS: One of the great backs in E( I<lb/>
history, Hicks has had his problems m the pro<lb/>
PIRA TES<lb/>
in the pros<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
For two years he played with the New York<lb/>
Giants, but was cut early last season. Afterward,<lb/>
he signed a contract with the Philadelphia Eagles<lb/>
and went into this pre-season camp with high<lb/>
hopes.<lb/>
All hopes fell through for Hicks, though, as he<lb/>
was injured on the first day of sprints and was cut<lb/>
very early by the defending NFC champions. His<lb/>
chances of earning another chance in the NFL ap-<lb/>
pear slim.<lb/>
REGGIE PINCKNEY: A five-year NFL<lb/>
veteran, Pinckney rates as one of the all-time<lb/>
greats in the ECU secondary.<lb/>
Pinckney has been somewhat of a journeyman<lb/>
in the NFL and is now with the Baltimore Colts.<lb/>
He is expected to make the final cut and be a part<lb/>
of the Colt secondary in 1981.<lb/>
SAM HARRELL: A former halfback with the<lb/>
Pirates, Harrell was drafted by the Minnesota<lb/>
Vikings following the 1979 season. An injury<lb/>
forced him out of the '80 NFL season, but he is<lb/>
back and battling for the back-up fullback spot<lb/>
with the Vikings this year.<lb/>
Harrell has added quite a bit of weight since<lb/>
leaving ECU. He weighed in at 210 during his<lb/>
senior season with the Pirates and now tips the<lb/>
scales at 228.<lb/>
ANTHONY COLLINS: A second round draft<lb/>
pick by the New England Patriots this past spr-<lb/>
ing, "A.C is definitely making his mark up<lb/>
north.<lb/>
Collins, who is referred to by the northern<lb/>
press as Tony instead of Anthony, has to rate as<lb/>
one of the brighter rookies in the NFL at this<lb/>
point.<lb/>
Last week against Tampa Bay, he scored the<lb/>
winning touchdown in the fourth quarter for the<lb/>
Pats. A week earlier, he returned two kickoffs<lb/>
past the 45-yard line and led the team in rushing<lb/>
against the Los Angelas Rams. Collins romped<lb/>
for 80 yards from scrimmage in the latter contest.<lb/>
Collins is rated as the team's number one<lb/>
kickoff return man and is battling with Horace<lb/>
Ivory and Vagas Ferguson for a playing time in<lb/>
the Patriot backfield.<lb/>
Collins has drawn raves from the Boston<lb/>
media. In fact, The Boston Globe recently did a<lb/>
feature article on the Penn Yan, N.Y. native.<lb/>
ZACK VALENTINE: The ex-Pirate defensive<lb/>
end was drafted in the second round three years<lb/>
ago by the then-defending world champion Pitt-<lb/>
I 0? J1" Pirates Banking On<lb/>
Wachovia Tickets<lb/>
Ei<lb/>
ANTHONY COLLINS:<lb/>
Pats' "Tony" during Pirate days<lb/>
sburgh Steelers. After two years of impressive<lb/>
play on the specialty teams, Valentine appears set<lb/>
to make his mark as a Steeler linebacker in 1981.<lb/>
Injuries to all-pro linebackers Jack Lambert<lb/>
and Jack Ham have opened the door for Valen-<lb/>
tine during pre-season practice.<lb/>
After suffering an early-camp injury, Valentine<lb/>
returned last week to play against Philadelphia<lb/>
and did an admirable job.<lb/>
Though he is currently listed behind Loren<lb/>
Toews in the Steeler depth chart, agent Hutcher-<lb/>
son thinks Valentine has an excellent chance to<lb/>
move into a starting role due to the injuries to<lb/>
Lambert and Ham.<lb/>
HAROLD RANDOLPH: This former ECU<lb/>
linebacker has made his rounds in tryouts with<lb/>
both NFL and CFL clubs over the last several<lb/>
years. This year he tried out for the CFL's Mon-<lb/>
treal Allouettes and was cut.<lb/>
Randolph was called back to Montreal later,<lb/>
though, and got some playing time before being<lb/>
dropped again.<lb/>
DANNY KEPLEY: One of ECU's all-time<lb/>
greats and a member of the school's Sports Hall<lb/>
Of Fame, Kepley rates as one of the true stars in<lb/>
the Canadian Football League.<lb/>
A member of the Edminton Eskimos,<lb/>
linebacker Kepley has earned about every award<lb/>
that the CFL hands out. Again in 1981, he is the<lb/>
ringleader of a tough Eskimo defense.<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Aatataai SporU Milor<lb/>
For many years, the main ticket<lb/>
outlet for East Carolina football has<lb/>
been Minges Coliseum. Now,<lb/>
though, this no longer holds true ?<lb/>
thanks to Wachovia Bank and Trust<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
The East Carolina Department of<lb/>
Athletics announced in late July the<lb/>
joining of Wachovia Bank with the<lb/>
university to aarket football tickets<lb/>
for Pirate games this fall.<lb/>
Wachovia is serving as a ticket<lb/>
outlet for East Carolina in 27<lb/>
eastern North Carolina cities, utiliz-<lb/>
ing 44 branches of the bank.<lb/>
Brenda Edwards, ticket manager<lb/>
for ECU, said the distribution pro-<lb/>
gram is "doing pretty good. We<lb/>
have right many ticket orders<lb/>
She adds the program has<lb/>
nowhere to go but up. "In the first<lb/>
year, you have to give things a<lb/>
chance to get off the ground. We've<lb/>
sold many single-game tickets and a<lb/>
few season tickets<lb/>
"I'm just happy to help East<lb/>
Carolina University remarked a<lb/>
pleased Tom Bennett, Regional<lb/>
Vice-President for Wachovia and<lb/>
newly-elected ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees member, after the an-<lb/>
nouncement. "We've already had a<lb/>
good relationship with the universi-<lb/>
ty . This is just an extension to it.<lb/>
"I wanted to do it ? I went to<lb/>
school here. I've got purple blood in<lb/>
me. We just want to help sell tickets,<lb/>
plain and simple<lb/>
The agreement marks the first<lb/>
time East Carolina has ever had any<lb/>
outside ticket outlets for fans to<lb/>
have easier access in purchasing<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
East Carolina Director of<lb/>
Athletics Dr. Kenneth Karr feels the<lb/>
merger "is a major step in taking<lb/>
the East Carolina product to the<lb/>
people. Our target market for<lb/>
saturation of Pirate support is<lb/>
within a 75-nii.e radium of Green-<lb/>
ville. Wachovia will be providing ac-<lb/>
cess in this total area for our fans to<lb/>
purchase tickets.<lb/>
"It is a right step forward Karr<lb/>
continued. "Time will tell whether it<lb/>
will increase our ticket sales. We are<lb/>
extremely grateful<lb/>
Karr added that the agreement<lb/>
would enable followers of East<lb/>
Carolina football to make plans<lb/>
earlier in the week to attend games<lb/>
instead of having to make last-<lb/>
minute decisions.<lb/>
The 27 cities serving as ticket<lb/>
outlets are: Ahoskie, Aulander,<lb/>
Aurora, Bayboro, Beihaven, Bethel,<lb/>
Elizabeth City, Goldsboro, Green-<lb/>
ville, Jacksonville, Kinston,<lb/>
LaGrange, Morehead City, Mt.<lb/>
Olive, Sea Level, Hamilton,<lb/>
Harker's Island, New Bern,<lb/>
Pantego, Robersonville, Rocky<lb/>
Mount, Snow Hill, Vanceborb,<lb/>
Walstonburg, Washington,<lb/>
Williamston and Wilson.<lb/>
By J<lb/>
Iwl<lb/>
touted<lb/>
State<lb/>
again)<lb/>
Sout<lb/>
first<lb/>
Asso<lb/>
2!) pc<lb/>
the<lb/>
all it<lb/>
com<lb/>
talen<lb/>
as trl<lb/>
Pira<lb/>
squa<lb/>
H<lb/>
Andn<lb/>
( ar<lb/>
b iilo<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
final<lb/>
ped<lb/>
81-71<lb/>
Sen!<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL, GREENVILLE<lb/>
REED'S JEWELERS<lb/>
Dates: August 27, 28, 29<lb/>
Register for one of 43 prizes to be given away. Grand prize give-away<lb/>
includes ladies' diamond ring valued at $1,000, one gent's Witt-<lb/>
nauur watch, one ladies' Wittnauur watch, and $25 gift certificates.<lb/>
Reed's Jewelers opens its newest<lb/>
and finest store in Carolina East<lb/>
Mall with grand opening prizes and<lb/>
grand opening prices.<lb/>
Floating Hearts $2.00<lb/>
Bulova, Pulsa, Citizens Watches 20<lb/>
s<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
14 ct. chains<lb/>
15" ? $17.95<lb/>
18" ? $19.95<lb/>
24" ? $25.95<lb/>
14 ct. Serpentine Bracelets<lb/>
usually 14.95 sale price $7.95<lb/>
Add-A-Beads<lb/>
3mm ? 49C<lb/>
5mm ? 51.49<lb/>
7mm ?51.99<lb/>
Birth Stone<lb/>
Rings<lb/>
20 ??<lb/>
Diamond<lb/>
Earrings<lb/>
from $24.95<lb/>
and up<lb/>
Man's 12 ct.<lb/>
Diamond Cluster<lb/>
usually $1,075<lb/>
Sale Priced $575<lb/>
.4Tv<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE REED'S VALUE STORY - When we stated that there would be<lb/>
something very grand about our opening we are really talking about the<lb/>
famous diamond importing reputation we bring with us to the Greenville<lb/>
area We ve been in the ieweiry business since 1893 and are masters in the<lb/>
diamond trade We know the high standards our customers have come to<lb/>
expect from us and we know where to go to find and import rhe incredible<lb/>
gems we offer Your trust in a jeweler is part of the key to happiness when<lb/>
buying a fine diamond The quality value and honesty you find with us<lb/>
will make you one o? our many satisfied regular customers. Thank you<lb/>
for the opportunity ot serving you in this area it will be a very grand<lb/>
opening<lb/>
fMf?'k7<lb/>
Fine Jewelers and Diamond Importers<lb/>
Hours: MonSat. 10 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Mastercard, Visa, American Express,<lb/>
Reed's Charge and Lay a way<lb/>
<lb/>
oB<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0017"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
n<lb/>
Enter AP Top 20 Poll<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
It ie first<lb/>
had any<lb/>
fans to<lb/>
irchasing<lb/>
r of<lb/>
feels the<lb/>
In taking<lb/>
It to the<lb/>
rket for<lb/>
port is<lb/>
If Gree ri-<lb/>
nding ac-<lb/>
i tans to<lb/>
' Karr<lb/>
lether it<lb/>
We are<lb/>
;eement<lb/>
' Fat<lb/>
s plans<lb/>
Barnes<lb/>
e last-<lb/>
ticket<lb/>
u lander,<lb/>
i. Bethei,<lb/>
Green-<lb/>
n s t o n,<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
imilton,<lb/>
Bern,<lb/>
Rocky<lb/>
iceboro,<lb/>
ngton.<lb/>
Women Post Record Season<lb/>
B JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
M.ntging tdtior<lb/>
Two wins over highly<lb/>
touted North Carolina<lb/>
State, a near miss<lb/>
against national power<lb/>
Southern Cal, their<lb/>
first appearance in the<lb/>
Associated Press Top<lb/>
20 poll, the first trip to<lb/>
the A1AW regionals:<lb/>
all these feats were ac-<lb/>
complished by the<lb/>
talented group known<lb/>
as the 1980-81 Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Head Coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi came to East<lb/>
Carolina three years<lb/>
ago with the dream of<lb/>
builoding a floundering<lb/>
program into a national<lb/>
contender. She says the<lb/>
program has not yet<lb/>
reached her goals, but<lb/>
their 23-7 mark with a<lb/>
final AP rank of 16 had<lb/>
to be satisfying.<lb/>
The season was cap-<lb/>
ped by a disappointing<lb/>
81-70 loss at the hands<lb/>
of returning AIAW na-<lb/>
tional champion Old<lb/>
Dominion at ODU<lb/>
Field Huse. As was the<lb/>
case in many games,<lb/>
senior Kathy riley led<lb/>
ECU scorers with 29<lb/>
points, with junior Sam<lb/>
Jones adding 20.<lb/>
Lfanky Anne Donovan<lb/>
paced the Lady Monar-<lb/>
ches with 26 points,<lb/>
with and 17 rebounds,<lb/>
with South Carolina<lb/>
transfer Jean Walling<lb/>
contributing 12 points.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
quickly gtot into foul<lb/>
trouble in that contest,<lb/>
with sophomore Mary<lb/>
Dendler notching her<lb/>
third less than five<lb/>
minutes after the open-<lb/>
ing tap. Center Marcia<lb/>
Girven committed her<lb/>
third foul trying to<lb/>
guard the 6-8 Donovan<lb/>
with 11:28 before inter-<lb/>
mission, but remained<lb/>
until the 5:12 mark<lb/>
when she was charged<lb/>
with her fourth.<lb/>
Senior returnee Sam Jones hits boards<lb/>
"Wh (had) people on<lb/>
the bench that wc<lb/>
didn't need to have on<lb/>
the bench in a game of<lb/>
this type Andruzzi<lb/>
commented after the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Troubles at the free<lb/>
throw line and a re-<lb/>
juvenating attached by<lb/>
the Old Dominion of-<lb/>
fense proved too much<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates, as<lb/>
they never again<lb/>
threatened the Lady<lb/>
Monarches reign.<lb/>
"I'm really proud of<lb/>
the girls said Andruz-<lb/>
zi. "They were down 21<lb/>
points and came back<lb/>
to make a game of it.<lb/>
Not having Girven in<lb/>
therre hurt us a lot.<lb/>
Then at the end when<lb/>
we needed those one-<lb/>
and-ones, we couldn't<lb/>
hit. That cost us six<lb/>
points at a very critial<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"I think we did end<lb/>
the season on a positive<lb/>
note she added.<lb/>
"Getting into the<lb/>
regionals well certainly<lb/>
help our program<lb/>
The Lady Pirates had<lb/>
lost to Old Dominion<lb/>
89-77 earlier in the<lb/>
season, but victories<lb/>
over talented Indiana,<lb/>
West German FNa-<lb/>
tional and Virginia<lb/>
teams propelled the<lb/>
Lady Pirates into the<lb/>
national coaches' poll<lb/>
for the first time in late<lb/>
January.<lb/>
After rattling off a<lb/>
string of 64 consecutive<lb/>
in-state victories, the<lb/>
Wolfpack of N.C.<lb/>
State dropped an over-<lb/>
time thriller 78-77 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. A<lb/>
rowdy record crowd of<lb/>
4,000 ECU fans watch-<lb/>
ed as the Lady Pirates<lb/>
held off their 13th<lb/>
ranked guests.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
went without a timeout<lb/>
after a layup by State's<lb/>
dKaren Brabson. An-<lb/>
druzzi's troups were<lb/>
looking inside for<lb/>
center Girven, but 5-6<lb/>
Lydia Rountree took a<lb/>
teammate's pass, dou-<lb/>
ble pumped and calmly<lb/>
laid in the go-ahead<lb/>
bucket with five<lb/>
seconds remaining.<lb/>
NCSU signaled for a<lb/>
timeout with three<lb/>
seconds left, but their<lb/>
set play failed.<lb/>
The Wolfpack led by<lb/>
three and the Pirates<lb/>
four with less than four<lb/>
nminutes to play in<lb/>
regulation. ALaurie<lb/>
Sikes 18-foot jumper<lb/>
with 1:49 remaining put<lb/>
the Lady Pirates ahead<lb/>
72-68, seemingly icing<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
But State's Lacey<lb/>
connected on a tur-<lb/>
naround jumper to cut<lb/>
the lead to two and<lb/>
later sank a pair of free<lb/>
throws with :25 left to<lb/>
knot the score at 72.<lb/>
ECU Kathy Riley threw<lb/>
up a last second effort<lb/>
which missed the mark<lb/>
sending the game into<lb/>
overtime.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates'<lb/>
victory was the first by<lb/>
a North Carolina team<lb/>
over the Wolfpack<lb/>
since 1976.<lb/>
"This is a win for the<lb/>
entire university said<lb/>
Andruppi. "We've had<lb/>
such great support,<lb/>
especially since the<lb/>
ranking came out<lb/>
MOnday. We've<lb/>
recveived flowers and<lb/>
telegrams, and this<lb/>
crowd was somethng<lb/>
else tonight<lb/>
But there was little<lb/>
time, still, for the<lb/>
Pirates to enjoy their<lb/>
young success, as the<lb/>
nationally eighth rank-<lb/>
ed Trojans of Southern<lb/>
Cal invaded Minges<lb/>
Coliseum in the midst<lb/>
of a snowstorm.<lb/>
Despite, or possibly<lb/>
because of, inclement<lb/>
conditions, 4,500<lb/>
faithful fans packed<lb/>
Minges for this event.<lb/>
Mary Denkler again<lb/>
led the Lady Pirates<lb/>
with 26 points, but it<lb/>
wasn't quite enough to<lb/>
pull off another upset<lb/>
as the Trojans fought<lb/>
to a 77-73 victory.<lb/>
Despite identical<lb/>
twins Fpam and Paula<lb/>
McGee combining for<lb/>
27 points in the opening<lb/>
half. Southern Cal<lb/>
managed only a five<lb/>
point advantage at in-<lb/>
termission.<lb/>
With senior Sam<lb/>
Jones and junior Mary<lb/>
Denkler returning for<lb/>
the 1981-82 season, An-<lb/>
druzzi has ample<lb/>
reason to be op-<lb/>
tomistic. Jones returns<lb/>
to her guard position<lb/>
with 14.7 points and<lb/>
5.3 rebounds per game,<lb/>
while Denkler brings<lb/>
14.4 points and 6.8 re-<lb/>
bounds to the lineup.<lb/>
Richmond native<lb/>
Darlene Chaney, a 6-2<lb/>
center and 5-7 point<lb/>
guard Loraine Foster<lb/>
from Spartanburg are<lb/>
the top freshmen com-<lb/>
ing into practice.<lb/>
Back to<lb/>
School<lb/>
Eyeglass<lb/>
Special<lb/>
For all ECU Students,<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Staff<lb/>
Offer Good Through<lb/>
Aug. 31, 1981<lb/>
Located across Dr. Park<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
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DAYS A<lb/>
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HflvBwet 05 all you<lb/>
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in Chinese<lb/>
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757-1818<lb/>
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GREENVILLE<lb/>
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RESTAURANT &amp; LOUNGE<lb/>
ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOURS<lb/>
5:00 ? 6:30 AND AT 10 - 11PM<lb/>
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TRY THE DINNER BUFFET<lb/>
AT 5:30 PM EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
GIVE US A TRY ECU.<lb/>
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CLOSE TO THE ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
IOCATFD IN THE MINGES BUILDING<lb/>
CORNER OF 3rd &amp; EVANS ST. DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
OPEN LUNCH AND DINNER MONSAT.<lb/>
I<lb/>
o<lb/>
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2826 S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
AttheCamelot Inn<lb/>
756-1506<lb/>
710 N. Greene Street<lb/>
752-0090<lb/>
j<lb/>
Visit our lounge<lb/>
located in Memorial<lb/>
Dr. Restaurant ?<lb/>
lowest priced mixed<lb/>
drinks in town.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
BBQ Chicken<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
French fries, slaw<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
MONDAY - only<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Fried Trout<lb/>
French fries, slaw<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
COMBINATION Barbecue &amp; Fried Chicken-Potatoes or Stew &amp; Slaw<lb/>
White Meat$3-25<lb/>
Dark Meat$2.95<lb/>
BARBECUE AND SLAW<lb/>
Large $3-25<lb/>
Small 2.75<lb/>
BARBECUE DINNER (Potaotes, Stew, &amp; Slaw) 2.75<lb/>
BARBECUE RIBS (Choice of Sauce) 3-95<lb/>
SLICED PORK 3-2$<lb/>
CHICKEN PASTRY - Small (Pastry Only) $2.25<lb/>
Large includes 2 vegetables 2.75<lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN - Small (2 pieces) 2.75<lb/>
Large (h pieces) 3.25<lb/>
BARBECUE CHICKEN-Small (2 pieces)  2.75<lb/>
Large (h pieces) 325<lb/>
FRIED LIVERS 3-00<lb/>
FRIED GIZZARDS 3-00<lb/>
HAMBURGER STEAK 2.75<lb/>
CHILDREN'S PLATES<lb/>
Children Under 12<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE $2.00<lb/>
BARBECUE DINNER 1.50<lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN w 2 VEG 1.50<lb/>
CHICKEN PASTRY w 2 VEG 1.50<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Iced Tea<lb/>
Hot Tea<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
Sanka<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
Pepsi .hO<lb/>
Coke .L0<lb/>
Mt. Dew .U0<lb/>
Sprite .L0<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
A<lb/>
Barbecue<lb/>
Sliced Pork<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
DESSERT<lb/>
Banana Pudding<lb/>
Lemon Pie<lb/>
Chocolate Pie<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE - ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Barbecue, Fried Chicken, Brunswick Stew, Pastry,<lb/>
Boiled Potatoes, and Slaw$h.25 each<lb/>
NO DOGGIE BAG FROM FAMILY STYLE DINNERS<lb/>
ENTIRE TABLE MUST ORDER FAMILY STYLE<lb/>
2.75<lb/>
Family Style<lb/>
Chicken, BBQ, Chicken Pastry,<lb/>
Boiled Potatoes, Slaw, Brunswick Stew<lb/>
4.25<lb/>
SHRIMP PLATE<lb/>
Lunch Only<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
FRIED SHRIMP<lb/>
BOILED SHRIMP<lb/>
FRIED OYSTERS<lb/>
FRIED TROUT<lb/>
FRIED FLOUNDER FILET<lb/>
FRIED CRAB CAKE<lb/>
COMBINATION - Choice of Two<lb/>
PLATTER - Shrimp, Oysters, Crab Cake,<lb/>
Flounder Filet<lb/>
Above served with French Fries,<lb/>
CHILD'S PLATE ? of Above Prices<lb/>
SMALL<lb/>
$3.95<lb/>
$h.25<lb/>
$3-50<lb/>
$3.75<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
$h.95<lb/>
$6.50<lb/>
Slaw &amp; Bread<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
$IT9?<lb/>
$h.95<lb/>
$5.25<lb/>
We also Broil Flounder, Trout, Shrimp, Oysters<lb/>
All Seafood Cooked To Order!<lb/>
MONDAY -<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Ham Hocka or Country Style Chicken. . $2.75<lb/>
Dry Lima Beans, Cabbage<lb/>
Backbone$2.75<lb/>
Blackeye Peas, Squash, CollardB<lb/>
WEDNESDAY - Country Style Steak on rice$2.75<lb/>
Macaroni 4 Cheese, Garden Peas<lb/>
THURSDAY - Backbone$2.75<lb/>
Blackeye Peas, Mashed Potatoes,<lb/>
Collards<lb/>
Stew Beef$2.75<lb/>
Stewed Apples, Turnip Greens,<lb/>
Dry Lima Beans<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE YOUR CHOICE OF 2 VEGETABLES<lb/>
Cole Slaw<lb/>
Beets<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Brunswick Stew<lb/>
String Beans<lb/>
Candied Yams<lb/>
Boiled Potatoes<lb/>
CALL US FOR YOUR CATERING NEEDS<lb/>
We cater from 25 - 5,000. Prices range from $2.95 - $9.00<lb/>
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED<lb/>
-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057417_0018"/><lb/>
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I.D. DAWSON COMPANY<lb/>
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Phone<lb/>
752-1600<lb/>
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102 E. Main Street<lb/>
Belhaven, N. C.<lb/>
p<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0019"/><lb/>
Four Vying For QB Spot<lb/>
I Hb FAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25. 1981 Page i<lb/>
B I HRl ESC HAMMER<lb/>
'The difference is like da.v and night<lb/>
East Carolina head football codh Ed Emorv<lb/>
certainly must be able to sleep better this August<lb/>
than last ? that is, if he spends any time at all<lb/>
worrying about the Pirates' quarterback position.<lb/>
One can rest assurred that he does<lb/>
A year ago at this time the Emorv had no one<lb/>
on the team that could fill the QB spot that had<lb/>
any game experience. The signal-calling position<lb/>
was a big question mark.<lb/>
Three oung men ? Carlton Nelson, Greg<lb/>
Stewart and I arry Brobst ? battled it out for the<lb/>
carting position, with Nelson finally getting the<lb/>
nod<lb/>
NeKon went down with an injury in a mid<lb/>
season loss to nationally -ranked North Carolina,<lb/>
though, leaving Stewart at the controls of the<lb/>
Bucs' wishbone offense<lb/>
It was later discovered that Nelson had a crack<lb/>
ed vertabrae and that surgery would be required if<lb/>
he ever intended to plav football again. Even<lb/>
then, doctors said, his chances were no better<lb/>
than 50-50.<lb/>
The picture was a gloomy one foi Emory as he<lb/>
looked over the quarterbacking spot, an all-<lb/>
important spot on am tootball team. It got no<lb/>
better when he failed in efforts to sign some<lb/>
highly-touted high school seniors.<lb/>
All of a sudden, though, things began to shape<lb/>
up. The word came in April that NeKon would be<lb/>
able to plav agam this fall. In Mav. Villanova<lb/>
I niversity dropped its tootball program, leaving<lb/>
every player on the squad available for recruiting<lb/>
bv other colleges.<lb/>
One of the most sought-aftei persons on the<lb/>
'earn was rising sophomore quarterback Kevin In-<lb/>
am. Over 80 schools, including Oklahoma and<lb/>
1 ennessee ottered the speedy youngster a scholar-<lb/>
ship. It was Emorv and the Pirates that eventually<lb/>
:ided Ineram. thous<lb/>
Nelson<lb/>
The siination now is simple, vet positive for<lb/>
Emory . Ingram is a super athlete that is still learn-<lb/>
ing the ECU system. Nelson is back stronger than<lb/>
ever and working harder than ever with Ingram<lb/>
supplying lots of competition. Stewart and Brobst<lb/>
are in the thick of things after making mass off-<lb/>
season improvements.<lb/>
"We're in really good shape at quarterback<lb/>
now Emory said. "We've got four kids that<lb/>
know the offense and are very talented. We've<lb/>
come a million miles at the position from a year<lb/>
ago. That's not to sav, though, that we don't still<lb/>
have another million to go<lb/>
Emorv sas all four still have a chance to be the<lb/>
team's starting quarterback come Sept. 5 when<lb/>
the team opens at home against Western<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Currently, Nelson is running fust with the<lb/>
others bunched closelv behind.<lb/>
"If I had to play today Emory said follow<lb/>
ing a Sundav scrimmage, "I'd start Carlton<lb/>
Nelson. He's really come a long wavs and is<lb/>
showing some very positive leadership<lb/>
Nelson's recovery from the surgery is complete.<lb/>
It is now a matter of holding oif the other three<lb/>
quarterback candidates Many observors in the<lb/>
Pirate camp feel the hoopla that surrounded the<lb/>
signing of Ingram helped to stir the competitive<lb/>
spirit in Nelson.<lb/>
AUG<lb/>
Gotcha<lb/>
. 24-29<lb/>
Co vered<lb/>
WEAR<lb/>
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ANY REGULAR PRICED TOP &amp;<lb/>
MANY MORE BARGAINS<lb/>
$600 OF FREE PRIZES AND REFRESHMENTS<lb/>
:4c<lb/>
m<lb/>
'?<lb/>
Stewart<lb/>
Brobst<lb/>
"I'm sure Kevin's presence and speed on cam-<lb/>
pus have helped Carlton Emory said. "But he<lb/>
would have been in for a battle from the other<lb/>
two even if Kevin were not here<lb/>
Emory said that he was "extra pleased" with<lb/>
the progress of Ingram's adjustment to the ECU<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"Our offensive system is very complicated<lb/>
the second-year ECU mentor claimed. "I would<lb/>
hate to ask a genius to come in and learn it right<lb/>
away. I think Kevin is picking things up very fast.<lb/>
He looks better with each practice<lb/>
Stewart has been sidelined with a minor injury<lb/>
for about a week. For a time he was runnic in<lb/>
the number one spot.<lb/>
"It's a shame that Greg got injured Emory<lb/>
said. "He'll be back in a weekut will be behind<lb/>
the other three guys. He has looked aw fully good,<lb/>
though<lb/>
The improvement of Brobst over a year ago has<lb/>
been one of the pleasant surprises in the Pirate<lb/>
camp this fall.<lb/>
The ECU coach continually stressed that the<lb/>
quarterback battle was a four-man affair.<lb/>
"Nobody's out of it yet Emory proclaimed.<lb/>
"We've got 16 more practices before the Western<lb/>
game. Anything can happen between now and<lb/>
then. I'm just glad to have this kind o competi-<lb/>
tion at the position<lb/>
-<lb/>
Carlton Nelson, shown above in 1980 action, is leading a<lb/>
pack of four that are vying for the starting quarterback<lb/>
position on the ECU football team.<lb/>
At Last. A Bank That<lb/>
Treats College Students<lb/>
Like They Have Money.<lb/>
<lb/>
2-<lb/>
'?v Wf<lb/>
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7 days a week<lb/>
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Nobody works harder for your money.<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0020"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25. 1981 Pae8<lb/>
Baseball Strike? Not In The Old North State<lb/>
In Summer League<lb/>
baseball action, Todd<lb/>
Evans, above, takes a<lb/>
swing. Below, Robert<lb/>
Wells slides into se-<lb/>
cond base in a key<lb/>
game with Campbell.<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
AatelaM S?arU Mitor<lb/>
Whoever said history never<lb/>
repeats itself was on ly partly right<lb/>
when referring to the North State<lb/>
Summer League.<lb/>
Opening Day on June K) produced<lb/>
a wild affair between UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington and the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina in a game won by ECU,<lb/>
7-6, in the ninth inning.<lb/>
A month and a half later the same<lb/>
clubs were battling again ? this<lb/>
time for the North State title.<lb/>
History did repeat itself in one way,<lb/>
but not entirely, as the SeaHawks<lb/>
edged the Pirates, 3-2, on a wild<lb/>
pitch in the bottom of the seventh<lb/>
for the championship.<lb/>
The Pirates lost the game and the<lb/>
title, but in no way did that make<lb/>
for a disappointing season, accor-<lb/>
ding to Coach Gary Overton.<lb/>
"We got off to a slow start he<lb/>
said, recalling early-season hitting<lb/>
problems for his team, "but at the<lb/>
end, we were a good club. If we had<lb/>
had a hit here or there, we cold have<lb/>
won this thing. Our players had a<lb/>
good attitude at the tournament<lb/>
The league tournament, in its in-<lb/>
augural year, proved to be a success<lb/>
attendance-wise and excitement-<lb/>
wise, Overton added. Campbell, the<lb/>
regular-season champion was<lb/>
eliminated after two straight losses.<lb/>
The first four finishers during the<lb/>
regular season qualified for the<lb/>
tournament. Last-place North<lb/>
Carolina did not.<lb/>
"We accomplished several<lb/>
goals Overton continued.<lb/>
"(Catcher Jack, a transfer from<lb/>
Guilford) Curlings came a long way;<lb/>
he did a fine job. And Todd Evans<lb/>
gained a lot of experience at first.<lb/>
(Evans was an outfielder last spr-<lb/>
ing.) We were a much better team at<lb/>
the end than at the beginning<lb/>
Head Coach Hal Baird echoed<lb/>
Overton's sentiments. "By far, this<lb/>
summer league season was the best<lb/>
one. I'm not speaking specifically<lb/>
about our team's performance, but<lb/>
the media was more aware of our<lb/>
league, as were the fans.<lb/>
"I was happy with our team, con-<lb/>
sidering a lot of our players were<lb/>
playing in other leagues<lb/>
Pitchers Bill Wilder and Bob Pat-<lb/>
terson were competing in the<lb/>
Virginia Valley League, a league<lb/>
that boasts the best players from the<lb/>
East Coast. Hitting star John<lb/>
Hallow played half the season in<lb/>
that league before returning from<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Another Buc stalwart, shortstop<lb/>
Kelly Robinnette, played in a<lb/>
"little" different league this sum-<lb/>
mer ? the Alaskan League. Players<lb/>
are invited to participate, including<lb/>
many from the powerhouse Pac-10<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
Even with some of the team's best<lb/>
players missing, the Pirates returned<lb/>
an accomplished infield for summer<lb/>
league play. Third baseman Todd<lb/>
Hendley was dependable all season,<lb/>
as was Mike Sorrell at second and<lb/>
Pete Persico at shortstop.<lb/>
Outfielders Robert Wells, Jay<lb/>
Carraway and Mark Shank provid-<lb/>
ed a speedy defensive combination<lb/>
"We stablized our catching posi<lb/>
tion with Curlings Baird noted<lb/>
"Also, Charlie Smith, who was our<lb/>
regular DH during the spring, got in<lb/>
a lot of pitching work and has<lb/>
shown promise in that area. We ac-<lb/>
complished most of what we set out<lb/>
to do. We're very pleased.<lb/>
"Mike Sorrell had a real fine<lb/>
summer, as did Wells and Hallow.<lb/>
We would have like to have won it<lb/>
(the title), but I can't complain<lb/>
The Pirates finished the regular<lb/>
season with a 16-14 record, good<lb/>
enough for second place behind the<lb/>
Camels of Campbell (20-10).<lb/>
Highlights of the season included<lb/>
a 19-10 slugfest win over Campbell in<lb/>
late June. To win, the Pirates scored<lb/>
10 runs in the top of the seventh inn-<lb/>
ing. East Carolina dominated N.C<lb/>
State and North Carolina thoughout<lb/>
the season but had trouble with<lb/>
Wilmington and Campbell<lb/>
On a hot and humid night in mid<lb/>
July, Todd Evans belted a two-out<lb/>
grand slam in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh to give the Pirates a 8-4 win<lb/>
over Campbell. The Pirates' victory<lb/>
seemed deserving as the Camels us<lb/>
ed last-minute heroics to defeat<lb/>
ECU in nearly the same situation a<lb/>
week earlier.<lb/>
Pirate hurler Rick Rarney was the<lb/>
only unanimous selection to the<lb/>
league all-star team. He was 7-2 dur-<lb/>
ing the regular season and was join<lb/>
ed by teammate Mike Sorrell on the<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
-p wm ?? ??? iwy. ? ??? -ij vjpi; ?<lb/>
?? .?  ? ?? ,C ?:?!? ?-?'?<lb/>
owne<lb/>
USA<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
758-1427<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
758-1427<lb/>
204 E. 5th St. - Downtown<lb/>
(Across from New by's Sub Shop)<lb/>
1011 CHARLES STRE<lb/>
PHONE ?752-1373<lb/>
ALL SMOKING ACCESSORIES<lb/>
? NO LONGER AVAILABLE AFTER OCT. 1<lb/>
? BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS NOW!<lb/>
? PAPERS BY THE CASE<lb/>
SPECIAL ORDERS NOW BEING TAKEN ON<lb/>
QUANTITY ORDERS OF ANYTHING!<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Mon. Wed.<lb/>
8:30a.m11:00 p.m.<lb/>
ThursSat.<lb/>
8:30a.m1.00 p.m.<lb/>
750-0000<lb/>
Call For Take-out<lb/>
 It takes 12 inches<lb/>
to make a hero<lb/>
Deli Sandwiches - Salads ? Vegitarian Sandwiches<lb/>
Homemade Soups Heroes on freshly baked rolls<lb/>
New Deli Coupon<lb/>
50toff any'2 hero or specialty<lb/>
sandwich<lb/>
Most varied Biscuit COMBINATIONS!<lb/>
JUMBO Bor-B-QMBEEF RIBS<lb/>
Southern fried CHICKEN<lb/>
Homemade Apple Jacks.<lb/>
BURGERS.<lb/>
75$ off any who,e her0 c75t<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES AUG. 29 LIMIT ONE<lb/>
Good Food -Good Times<lb/>
513 Cotanche Street Across from U.B.E. Parking in Rear<lb/>
Attitude Adjustment Daily? 4 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
Ho?S<lb/>
OHM TWW WINDOW<lb/>
Smit<lb/>
As B<lb/>
With the Pm<lb/>
rirst soccer game o<lb/>
jeason looming<lb/>
weekend, head ci<lb/>
Brad Smith is regai<lb/>
'lie season with gi<lb/>
?d optimism.<lb/>
His team returi<lb/>
players and<lb/>
Starters from last y<lb/>
7-14-1 team.<lb/>
4il think that<lb/>
defense came on I<lb/>
well last year, espej<lb/>
toward the end<lb/>
season, but our<lb/>
needs a lot of imi<lb/>
ment before e j<lb/>
the kind of teai<lb/>
want to be<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The defense wi<lb/>
again be the<lb/>
strong suit and i<lb/>
Yoi<lb/>
2<lb/>
Pil<lb/>
Toba<lb/>
T<lb/>
UNIVE<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0021"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25, 1981 Page 9<lb/>
e<lb/>
?rl Wells. Jay<lb/>
k provid-<lb/>
vt combination.<lb/>
catching posi-<lb/>
 Band noted<lb/>
ih. who vas our<lb/>
he spring, got in<lb/>
k and has<lb/>
Uac<lb/>
what we set out<lb/>
aA a leal tine<lb/>
 Hallow<lb/>
i m on it<lb/>
i the<lb/>
son included<lb/>
Campbell in<lb/>
'nates scored<lb/>
seventh inn<lb/>
muted N.C<lb/>
tughoui<lb/>
ie with<lb/>
the<lb/>
.i 8 4 win<lb/>
am els us<lb/>
o defeat<lb/>
! o i n -<lb/>
n the<lb/>
Smith: Offense Needs Won<lb/>
As Booters Set For Season<lb/>
With the Pirates'<lb/>
first soccer game of the<lb/>
season looming this<lb/>
vseekend, head coach<lb/>
Brad Smith is regarding<lb/>
the season with guard-<lb/>
ed optimism.<lb/>
His team returns 14<lb/>
players and nine<lb/>
starters from last year's<lb/>
7-14-1 team.<lb/>
"1 think that our<lb/>
defense came on real<lb/>
well last year, especially<lb/>
toward the end of the<lb/>
season, but our offense<lb/>
needs a lot of improve-<lb/>
ment before we will be<lb/>
the kind of team we<lb/>
want to be Smith<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The defense will once<lb/>
again be the team's<lb/>
strong suit and is led by<lb/>
goalie Steve Brown<lb/>
who had five shutouts<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
The offense,<lb/>
however, averaged only<lb/>
one goal a game last<lb/>
season and is one of<lb/>
Smith's biggest worries<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"The key to our<lb/>
season will be the im-<lb/>
provement of our of-<lb/>
fense he said. "There<lb/>
is no way you can win<lb/>
many matches averag-<lb/>
ing only one goal a<lb/>
game. This is<lb/>
something we will be<lb/>
working on very hard<lb/>
The news is not all<lb/>
bad on offense,<lb/>
though, as senior Brad<lb/>
Winchell returns. Win-<lb/>
chell comes into this<lb/>
good for our program.<lb/>
We just need to have<lb/>
the students' support.<lb/>
"This year is a very<lb/>
important year for the<lb/>
soccer team as well as<lb/>
the other teams at East<lb/>
Carolina he con-<lb/>
tinued. "The players<lb/>
know that they need to<lb/>
make a good showing<lb/>
so everyone is working<lb/>
for improvement<lb/>
Smith, who is enter-<lb/>
ing his fifth year as<lb/>
Pirate coach, has im-<lb/>
proved his record each<lb/>
year.<lb/>
This year, against a<lb/>
schedule that includes<lb/>
Old Dominion and<lb/>
William and Mary,<lb/>
Smith is hoping for his<lb/>
first winning season.<lb/>
season needing only<lb/>
two goals to become<lb/>
the all-time leading<lb/>
scorer in East Carolina<lb/>
soccer history.<lb/>
The schedule in-<lb/>
cludes a home game<lb/>
against the nationally-<lb/>
ranked Wolfpack of<lb/>
N.C. State. That game<lb/>
will be played in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, mark-<lb/>
ing the first time soccer<lb/>
has been played there.<lb/>
"The students on<lb/>
campus have been wan-<lb/>
ting us to play a<lb/>
nationally-ranked<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference team at home<lb/>
so this should be a big<lb/>
game for us Smith<lb/>
said. "Playing in<lb/>
Ficklen should be very<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
BACK<lb/>
Your Last Chance<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
on our soon to be<lb/>
outlawed inventory<lb/>
Pipes ? Snuff Accessories<lb/>
Tobacco ? Bedspreads ? Gifts<lb/>
220E.5TH<lb/>
UNIVERSITY ARCADE<lb/>
752-481<lb/>
pipe dreamsI<lb/>
?LCOME o 1 I<lb/>
WENDY'S HAMBURGERS<lb/>
ARE FRESH NOT FROZEN.<lb/>
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ANYPLACE<lb/>
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103 GREENVILLE BLVD<lb/>
r I'M Ufiick v lnlrrn,iliondi Inr All rnjhi-rorrvrij<lb/>
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-etf<lb/>
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(ACROSS FROM NEWBY'S SUB SHOP)<lb/>
SALE EVERY WEEK<lb/>
EXCELLENT CATLOGUE STOCK<lb/>
WE BUY &amp; SELL USED LP'S<lb/>
BEST CUT-OUT SELECTION<lb/>
SMOKING ACCESSORIES<lb/>
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AND LAST BUT CERTAINLY NOT LEAST ?<lb/>
BEST PRICES IN TOWN<lb/>
P.S. LOOK FOR THE NEW "STONES" &amp;"FOGELBERG<lb/>
LP'S ? MONDAY, AUGUST 31st! ON SALE<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0022"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Awesome Robbins<lb/>
Leads Line Corps<lb/>
? "?<lb/>
?.<lb/>
Pirate football 1981 features a host of new<lb/>
faces both on defense and offense, but one<lb/>
massive lineman should be familiar to ECU<lb/>
faithfuls ? senior all-America candidate Tootie<lb/>
Robbins.<lb/>
Even if you have only seen him on campus it<lb/>
would be obvious that this hulk belongs on the<lb/>
football field, dishing out punishment to defen-<lb/>
sive linemen who dare attempt to stifle the Pirate<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
The 6-5, 275 pound Bertie County native<lb/>
established himself a year ago as a leader in the<lb/>
trenches, but the 4-7 mark posted at that time<lb/>
drew a great deal of criticism to the youthful<lb/>
front line. Now, however, experience and speed<lb/>
are the key words describing that segment of the<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"We've got a lot to prove to people reasons<lb/>
Robbins. "I think we'll be a lot better. Everybody<lb/>
is experienced. We know what to look for in a<lb/>
game and we know what the coaches are looking<lb/>
for in a game<lb/>
After All-American Wayne Inman was lost to a<lb/>
knee injury prior to the Florida State game last<lb/>
season, Robbins became a leader despite being<lb/>
hampered by injuries of his own. A pre-season<lb/>
shoulder injury and a nagging leg injury caused<lb/>
him to miss starting two games. Many speculated<lb/>
Robbins was injury-proned, but new line coach<lb/>
Terry Lewis feels differently.<lb/>
"there are two things in football that it<lb/>
generally accepted you cannot control says<lb/>
Lewis, "weather and injuries. If Tootie Robbins<lb/>
was injured last season, then I am sure it was<lb/>
legitimate.<lb/>
"He is a rare talent on the offensive line<lb/>
A rare talent, indeed. But is he the player the<lb/>
pro scouts are looking for. Not quite yet, accor-<lb/>
ding to Lewis.<lb/>
"If Tootie has one major shortcoming it would<lb/>
have to be his pass protection Lewis offers.<lb/>
"But that's not his fault either. You get better by<lb/>
repetition, and just weren't throwing the ball that<lb/>
much last year.<lb/>
"We are going to emphasize (the passing game)<lb/>
this year, and that will give him the experience it<lb/>
takes. I feel he can do it<lb/>
The Pirates will be without the services of the<lb/>
starting backfield of a year ago, as Theodore Sut-<lb/>
ton, Anthony Collins and Mike Hawkins com-<lb/>
pleted their eligibility. But Robbins has faith in<lb/>
the "new" corps of runners.<lb/>
"Experience-wise, we'll lose a lot he says.<lb/>
"But with Earnest Byner, Harold Blue and Mar-<lb/>
vin Cobb back at halfback, we'll still have good<lb/>
experienced backs. And having Roy Wiley at<lb/>
fullback will be great for blocking. Those guys<lb/>
can get the job done and we've got some good<lb/>
recruits coming in.<lb/>
"But the runningback job depends on the<lb/>
blocking up front. If we get the job done, their<lb/>
job is easy. If we don't get it done, they don't get<lb/>
it done. It's that simple<lb/>
Lewis has confidence in not only Robbins, but<lb/>
the entire offensive line.<lb/>
"Size, mobility, agility, the ability to retain<lb/>
football knowledge ? that's what it takes to be a<lb/>
great football team Lewis explains. "Barring a<lb/>
lot of injuries, I feel we have the potential to be a<lb/>
great football team.<lb/>
"We have a lack of prior success; we have to<lb/>
learn to win. But I feel this group can do it.<lb/>
"We can be great ? there shouldn't be<lb/>
anybody we fear<lb/>
?$s<lb/>
Tootie Robbins buries defender<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
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SHRIMP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Clam Chowder &amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$6.95<lb/>
4-CvndeT<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
6 and S cyUnto<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ANY MENU ITEM<lb/>
WITH PRESENTATION<lb/>
OF THIS COUPON<lb/>
One Coupon Per Meal<lb/>
Not Good Towards Specials<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION SIAItPN<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
ItFGoodrieh<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
SAllS ftSUVVlCl<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
8.00 A.M1:00 P.M.<lb/>
OPENMON. FRI.<lb/>
8:00 A.M5:30 P.M.<lb/>
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r<lb/>
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Fast, Courteous Service<lb/>
FEATURING MANY REGULAR<lb/>
MENU ITEMS<lb/>
$1.00OFF REG. MENU PRICE<lb/>
NEWSY'S<lb/>
205 E.S1-<lb/>
758-03f6<lb/>
Specialties of the House<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
(CAPPAIOLAIW KARPSALAMl)<lb/>
(?0ASTBEEF<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
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MEAT SU0<lb/>
HEAT"<lb/>
.&amp; ZJO ?Z5 4?<lb/>
f 85 3.05 35 &amp;<lb/>
L35 2J? U 4.IO<lb/>
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fi? 2.? 3? 5.30<lb/>
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AIL A83VE IKCUJpeSLEmxiE.TOMATDE.MAYOtSEASOMlKj 0Wj?el-<lb/>
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telSEft,RjOCErBBEAp(pAMA?CUS),RyE ,Sue&amp;U,Wrfcl?WMEAT<lb/>
EXTR7VS 'zsus whole<lb/>
Chee.se 25 .50<lb/>
P&amp;vezs (hot or. sweet) A 5<lb/>
Husk rooms 20<lb/>
SCOUTS 35<lb/>
30<lb/>
.73<lb/>
AssortepTreatb<lb/>
Eog Roll .vo<lb/>
Fries .45<lb/>
CheeseFkies no<lb/>
HotDooreush .45<lb/>
HuSHRjfPIES .75<lb/>
Onion RisfcS lO<lb/>
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(E66, GARLIC, HONEYt RAISIN K<lb/>
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Drinks<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
Mr. Dew<lb/>
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Tup<lb/>
Diet-Pepsi<lb/>
Lg. .45<lb/>
AllpuCanDrjnk(5 <lb/>
AllwcwnkTceiea .tO<lb/>
FOOTBALL SEASON SPECIALS;<lb/>
MONDAYS ? All Day ? 2 Hot Dogs ? 75<lb/>
All beverages discounted during<lb/>
NFL Monday Night football<lb/>
TUESDAYS ?All day?<lb/>
Any regular Steak Sandwich ? $1.00<lb/>
wpurchase of all you can drink<lb/>
tea or soft drink.<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS ? AH day ? Dollar Day<lb/>
Any 12 Sub ? SI.00<lb/>
wpurchase of all you can drink<lb/>
tea or soft drink<lb/>
THURSDAY ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
All beverages discounted for ladies<lb/>
from 7 p.m. 'til closing.<lb/>
SUNDAYS ? All Day ? 2 Hot Dogs ? 7S<lb/>
All beverages discounted during<lb/>
NCAA Football<lb/>
SATURDAYS<lb/>
All Day ? 2 Hot Dogs ? 75'<lb/>
All beverages discounted during NFL Football<lb/>
.Watch NFL and NCAA with us en Saturday. ?un?av and Man<lb/>
day nighti and with free MntfwlchM. AM you havt ta da Is pick<lb/>
th? total number of points scared in the half. Chtsest pick wins a<lb/>
tree 12 sub of your choice at the end of each half. Mvst reaister<lb/>
your pick at the cash reaister before each half begins and must be.<lb/>
present to win. .<lb/>
f<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ALL DANCE<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
THE COLLEGE STUDENTS'<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
FOR ALL DANCE WEAR <lb/>
Capezio and<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
We have a com-<lb/>
plete selection<lb/>
of leotards,<lb/>
tights; and tap,<lb/>
ballet and<lb/>
modern dance<lb/>
shoes, in a spec-<lb/>
trum of colors!<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Second<lb/>
Chance<lb/>
We Sell Used<lb/>
couches<lb/>
chairs<lb/>
beds<lb/>
lamps rw<lb/>
stereos g<lb/>
appliances(lg. and sm.)<lb/>
pictures<lb/>
typewriters<lb/>
desks<lb/>
dining tables<lb/>
coffee tables<lb/>
end tables<lb/>
sets of dishes<lb/>
carpet<lb/>
Just to name a<lb/>
televisions<lb/>
mattresses<lb/>
dressers<lb/>
chests<lb/>
night stands<lb/>
bars<lb/>
skates<lb/>
few.<lb/>
Second<lb/>
Chance<lb/>
Open: Mon Wed Fri Sat. ? 10-6<lb/>
Tues Thurs. ? '0-8<lb/>
Located across from Western Sizzlin'<lb/>
in old A&amp;P building at 2808 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Phone 757-1322<lb/>
Pira<lb/>
New<lb/>
By JIMMY DuJ<lb/>
Msut? UHs<lb/>
If you're not<lb/>
about the futj<lb/>
East Carolina Ll<lb/>
ty athletics, y<lb/>
bably haven't<lb/>
with Richard<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
Dupree took<lb/>
executive direc<lb/>
the Pirate Club<lb/>
but his root:<lb/>
grow deep He<lb/>
associated ?i<lb/>
university for I<lb/>
14 years as a<lb/>
and faculty mer<lb/>
He was gradi<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Be On<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
This con<lb/>
day is "Mei<lb/>
Pj r a t e s Do 1<lb/>
downtown Gi<lb/>
with a number<lb/>
being plannec<lb/>
Downtown Me<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
The entire<lb/>
squad will be<lb/>
on the downr<lb/>
from 11 am<lb/>
p.m. The idej<lb/>
simply general<lb/>
interest in E<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
Most all of lH<lb/>
coaches, include<lb/>
man Ed Emor<lb/>
pected to be o<lb/>
as well as<lb/>
Director Ken K<lb/>
There will<lb/>
free autograph<lb/>
ball given awa<lb/>
dition to soi<lb/>
prizes that<lb/>
awarded. Al<lb/>
meone will be<lb/>
will both sinj<lb/>
and season tic<lb/>
sale.<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0023"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25. 1981 Pagell<lb/>
Pirate Club Takes On<lb/>
New Goals, Leadership<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
?Mto<lb/>
If you're not excited<lb/>
about the future of<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty athletics, you pro-<lb/>
bably haven't talked<lb/>
with Richard Dupree<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
Dupree took over as<lb/>
executive director of<lb/>
the Pirate Club in June,<lb/>
but his roots at ECU<lb/>
grow deep. He has been<lb/>
associated with the<lb/>
university for the past<lb/>
14 years as a student<lb/>
and faculty member.<lb/>
He was graduated in<lb/>
Pirates To<lb/>
Be On Mall<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
This coming Satur-<lb/>
day is 'Meet The<lb/>
Pirates Day" in<lb/>
downtown Greenville,<lb/>
with a number of things<lb/>
being planned by the<lb/>
Downtown Merchants'<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
The entire Pirate<lb/>
squad will be on hand<lb/>
on the downtown mall<lb/>
from 11 a.m. until 1<lb/>
p.m. The idea is to<lb/>
simply generate local<lb/>
interest in ECU foot-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
Most all of the Pirate<lb/>
coaches, including head<lb/>
man Ed Emory, is ex-<lb/>
pected to be on hand,<lb/>
as well as Athletic<lb/>
Director Ken Karr.<lb/>
There will be two<lb/>
free autographed foot-<lb/>
ball given away, in ad-<lb/>
dition to some other<lb/>
prizes that will be<lb/>
awarded. Also, so-<lb/>
meone will be on hand<lb/>
will both single-game<lb/>
and season tickets for<lb/>
sale.<lb/>
1974 with a B.S. degree<lb/>
in biochemistry, then<lb/>
entered graduate school<lb/>
and joined the faculty<lb/>
of the School of<lb/>
Business in 1976.<lb/>
"1 can describe in<lb/>
one simple word the<lb/>
real reason I want to<lb/>
work for East Carolina<lb/>
University and its<lb/>
athletic program<lb/>
Dupree said at the time<lb/>
of his appointment.<lb/>
"Love. Love for its<lb/>
tradition, people and<lb/>
courage.<lb/>
"East Carolina<lb/>
means a whole lot to<lb/>
me he says. "The<lb/>
school has given me a<lb/>
lot of opportunities to<lb/>
succeed<lb/>
The first few raon-<lb/>
thes on the job have<lb/>
basically consisted of<lb/>
"getting administrative<lb/>
details ironed out the<lb/>
way I wanted to But<lb/>
Dupree has already<lb/>
begun to develop ideas<lb/>
and formulate plans for<lb/>
the future of the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Educational Founda-<lb/>
tion, better known as<lb/>
the Pirate Club.<lb/>
"One thing we are<lb/>
very interested in is<lb/>
developing a better line<lb/>
of communication bet-<lb/>
ween the Pirate Club<lb/>
and the student body<lb/>
Dupree reasons.<lb/>
"Students now are the<lb/>
Pirate Club people of<lb/>
the future. I think it's<lb/>
important to com-<lb/>
municate with them<lb/>
now.<lb/>
"If you're apathetic<lb/>
as a student, it's going<lb/>
to be hard to get you on<lb/>
the bandwagon in the<lb/>
future. People of the<lb/>
community have shown<lb/>
a willingness to support<lb/>
athletics; we need to<lb/>
work on building sup-<lb/>
port from within the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
The Pirate Club of-<lb/>
fers graduating seniors<lb/>
the opportunity to sign<lb/>
up for a free year of<lb/>
basic membership, but<lb/>
Dupree notes that<lb/>
response has historical-<lb/>
ly been low. In an ef-<lb/>
fort to reverse the<lb/>
trend, he intends to<lb/>
make it easier by setting<lb/>
up registration boothes<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Dupree encourages<lb/>
student organizations<lb/>
to plan more activities<lb/>
around athletic events.<lb/>
"I think if a fraterni-<lb/>
ty, sorority, service<lb/>
organization or<lb/>
whatever wants to plan<lb/>
something ahead of the<lb/>
game, then that helps<lb/>
boost the spirit that<lb/>
much more he says.<lb/>
"Why can't a student<lb/>
organizations have a<lb/>
band or group or<lb/>
something (in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium) earlier on the<lb/>
day of a game.<lb/>
"We're in the pro-<lb/>
cess of building an im-<lb/>
age here at East<lb/>
Carolina. When people<lb/>
begin to realize we<lb/>
can't and don't want to<lb/>
be like other schools,<lb/>
then we'll be moving in<lb/>
the right direction.<lb/>
Michigan can't be like<lb/>
Ohio State, Ohio State<lb/>
can't be UCLA, UCLA<lb/>
can't be Southern Cal,<lb/>
Southern Cal can't be<lb/>
Alabama, Alabama<lb/>
can't be UNC and East<lb/>
Carolina can't be UNC<lb/>
or N.C. State.<lb/>
"We're out to create<lb/>
an identity of our<lb/>
own<lb/>
Dupree stresses ser-<lb/>
vice when visiting<lb/>
various chapter<lb/>
meetings of the Pirate<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
"The membership of<lb/>
the Pirate Club gives<lb/>
money and time to<lb/>
benefit the program<lb/>
here at East Carolina<lb/>
he explains. "We like<lb/>
to look at it as we are<lb/>
thanking them for their<lb/>
contributions by awar-<lb/>
ding various privileges,<lb/>
rather than they con-<lb/>
tribute in order to get<lb/>
these privileges.<lb/>
"We call it The<lb/>
Spirit Of Pirate Giv-<lb/>
mg.<lb/>
Dupree sees his job<lb/>
as part of a selling force<lb/>
promoting East<lb/>
Carolina athletics.<lb/>
"We have to do a<lb/>
better job of selling our<lb/>
product Dupree in-<lb/>
sists. "We've got so<lb/>
many positive things to<lb/>
sell and so many<lb/>
resources we haven't<lb/>
tapped. I'm very op-<lb/>
tomistic about the<lb/>
future of Pirate<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
"For the entertain-<lb/>
ment dollar, (athletics<lb/>
are) hard to beat<lb/>
Golfers<lb/>
To Meet<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
Persons interested in<lb/>
playing on the East<lb/>
Carolina golf team are<lb/>
asked to attend a<lb/>
meeting tonight<lb/>
(Tuesday).<lb/>
The meeting with<lb/>
golf coach Bob<lb/>
Helmick will be held in<lb/>
Room 144 in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Prospects will play a<lb/>
try-out round later in<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
Persons wishing to<lb/>
try out for the team<lb/>
that cannot attend<lb/>
tonight's meeting are<lb/>
asked to call Helmick<lb/>
at 757-6029.<lb/>
iovia letter II<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Teller H<lb/>
. fc<lb/>
, Vn<lb/>
Sooner or later,<lb/>
you're going to<lb/>
need one.<lb/>
Medical Park102 Stantonsbur Rd.<lb/>
Pitt PlazaHwv. 264 Bypass<lb/>
Universitv802E. 10th St.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
Membi-rK.P.l.L<lb/>
 <lb/>
I 1 <lb/>
ed<lb/>
e<lb/>
- 10-6<lb/>
8<lb/>
Sizziin'<lb/>
10th St.<lb/>
H L HODGES<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
LOCATED AT 210 EAST FIFTH STREET<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
Located At 218 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Two Stores To Serve You<lb/>
Welcome To Greenville<lb/>
20 Won shoe purchase<lb/>
Coupon Good Pnffl Sept 15. Mint Pment With ECO ID Gvi.<lb/>
ASAHI<lb/>
Tretora<lb/>
<lb/>
'ELMfMCl<lb/>
I<lb/>
Adidas<lb/>
SPERRY TOP SIDER<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Fraternity and Sorority<lb/>
Jerseys<lb/>
2 color letters now available.<lb/>
ECU Sweatshirts<lb/>
&amp; Jackets<lb/>
Ask about our<lb/>
HodgesBond Shoe Chek<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0024"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25. 1981<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
Purple Pride Moves Northwardr,<lb/>
IF YOU THINK LOOKING GOOD<lb/>
COSTS TOO MUCH, CUT OUT<lb/>
FOR SAVINGS<lb/>
to Off DCMNBIMMB<lb/>
By?cb A Lomb<lb/>
S0fTC0KUai?HS?5H69<lb/>
By WILLIAM VELVERTON<lb/>
Aatetaat Sf?1i Mtlor<lb/>
and Ginger Rothermel got in some playing time, newspapers in two of three years<lb/>
The South lost to the East in their first game, Syracuse University became a sort of mini-<lb/>
Bulletin: East Carolina did not open a branch 21-17, but defeated the West, 19-7, in the next con- Olympic Village, Edwards said. There were 3600<lb/>
in Syracuse NY in late July It only seemed test- In a similar position the men's squad was in, athletes participating in the Sports Festival,<lb/>
that way because'the host city "of the National the women dropped an 18-17 decision to the Television iand attc ndan? basted morale at<lb/>
Midwest, thus spoiling advancement to the gold the Festival. ABC-TV taped the last 10 minutes of<lb/>
medal round. the men's team handball gold-medal game with a<lb/>
In the Bronze medal game, Rothermel and crowd of over 1000 attending.<lb/>
I<lb/>
in Purple and<lb/>
Sports Festival was "covered<lb/>
Gold.<lb/>
The reason? There were eight East Carolina<lb/>
students participating on the South team handball<lb/>
squads.<lb/>
The South women, led by Pirates Maureen<lb/>
Buck, Ginger Rothermel, and Gail O'Brien cap-<lb/>
tured the Bronze medal by defeating the Midwest,<lb/>
21-13.<lb/>
The Sou'h men did not fair as well; they were<lb/>
defeated by the West, 25-23, for the Bronze<lb/>
medal.<lb/>
"There wasn't a single university in the nation<lb/>
that had a contingent as large as we did said Dr.<lb/>
Wayne Edwards, East Carolina dierector of In-<lb/>
tramural and Recreational Services, who attended<lb/>
the Festival as a national coordinator for the U.S.<lb/>
Team Handball Federation.<lb/>
"This speaks well for East Carolina<lb/>
Karl Karpinski of Winston-Salem was a<lb/>
member of the South men's team handball squad<lb/>
but did not see much playing time. The South lost<lb/>
their first game to the East, 20-16, but bounced<lb/>
back to defeat the West, 22-16, in their next con-<lb/>
test.<lb/>
The South's third game, against a tough  -j . flu-j'<lb/>
Midwest squad, proved to be a heartbreaker to Up Oy i3lX kjlUllOrlS<lb/>
the men from Dixie, as they lost a 22-21 contest on<lb/>
a last-second shot. If the South had tied the game,<lb/>
Edwards said, they would have advanced to the<lb/>
gold medal round.<lb/>
Seven East Carolina women werer members of<lb/>
the South team (15 members overall). The team<lb/>
was "quite a story" in Syracuse, Edwards<lb/>
remarked. "Incredible he said. "That's the on-<lb/>
ly way to describe it<lb/>
Maureen Buck was a starter at the wing posi-<lb/>
tion, and Edwards labeled her performance as<lb/>
"super She scored two goals in the first game<lb/>
and added three more in the next three contests.<lb/>
She added three more goals in the Bronze medal<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Gail O'Brien was a starter at the circle-running<lb/>
position and also performed superbly, Edwards<lb/>
noted. She did not score as much as Buck did<lb/>
because her position is primarily for setting picks<lb/>
and screens.<lb/>
Edwards said the other players, Donna Eason,<lb/>
Shirley Brown, Jolanda Clayton, Elaine Davis<lb/>
O'Brien added one goal each.<lb/>
"I'm so proud of our kids Edwards said.<lb/>
"They've worked hard, and this has been a<lb/>
tremendous experience for them<lb/>
Team handball was introduced in the Olympic<lb/>
Games at Berlin in 2936 but was discontinued un-<lb/>
til the Munich Games of 1972. The sport returned<lb/>
to Olympic competition in the 1976 games in<lb/>
Montreal.<lb/>
Several prominent amateur athletes competed<lb/>
in the Festival. Included are four-time Olympic<lb/>
discus champion Al Oerter, 110-meter hurdles<lb/>
world record-holder Skeets Nehemiah and skater<lb/>
Scott Hamilton, the Festival champion. Highly-<lb/>
touted center Pat Ewing, a Georgetown<lb/>
freshman, created much excitement in the media<lb/>
in Syracuse.<lb/>
"There were a lot of younger people there<lb/>
Edwards said. "They are basically unknown, but<lb/>
we'll be reading about these kids in the<lb/>
Emory Show Picked<lb/>
The National Sports Festival was made up of<lb/>
33 sports including archery, bseball, basketball,<lb/>
boxing, cycling, field hockey, fencing, track and<lb/>
field, yachting, volleyball and softball. Com peti-<lb/>
tion ran from July 23-29, and many events were<lb/>
carried by the Entertainment and Sports Pro-<lb/>
gramming Network.<lb/>
The Festival was designed in Olympic-type<lb/>
fashion in order for the people of the United<lb/>
States to become more familiar with Olympic<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
iSSSSSS0<lb/>
 !?i m ?"<lb/>
I<lb/>
h<lb/>
L<lb/>
iosetocm2D4 j mdgcoukton<lb/>
D6COUKTOK?tX5USSCS AMDPHCHO<lb/>
C?r?vl?bi? torpno?tt64y?MtAdoHtrttt?ou0iAufu( I<lb/>
J? KWiMMvOptomctncCffCMtCffilriocMyw<lb/>
1<lb/>
20 OFF MOH?I?SCWPT10N<lb/>
SUNGUSSCS<lb/>
Ottcf tipuB Kuqju F? i?i ?t n Opwmefnc Ey?<lb/>
Can Cctjr kxjoon<lb/>
0??cipiftt Aufu? ft Wi ManyOptomctnc Eye<lb/>
Ct Center louOon<lb/>
&amp;6DBCOUHTFOATW7<lb/>
ON PLASTIC ICHSCS<lb/>
0rr euxrev Aufus ft mi t any Optometnc.<lb/>
Eye Cre Center location<lb/>
OPrOMCTMC<lb/>
?Y?CAA?C?KT?R<lb/>
oiar?nW??A<lb/>
m a??Nviu t tivo tipton anmex<lb/>
7S?-9404<lb/>
? ? !??<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
Nol good with any other coupons or discounts Dr. Peter HOlllS<lb/>
With the recent ex-<lb/>
pansions of The Ed<lb/>
Emory Show a total of<lb/>
15 million viewers will<lb/>
be able to take a weekly<lb/>
look at East Carolina<lb/>
football.<lb/>
The show's host sta-<lb/>
tion, WITN-TV in<lb/>
Washington ? Chan-<lb/>
nel 7 ? is the local<lb/>
outlet. The Emory<lb/>
show can be seen every<lb/>
Sunday from 12:30<lb/>
p.m. until 1 p.m.<lb/>
John Castleberry of<lb/>
WITN will be Emory's<lb/>
host and will head up<lb/>
the show that will be<lb/>
carried by no less than<lb/>
six stations in a three-<lb/>
state area.<lb/>
In addition to<lb/>
WITN, the following<lb/>
stations have con-<lb/>
tracted to carry the pro-<lb/>
gram: WKFT, Channel<lb/>
40 in Fayettville;<lb/>
WGGT, Channel 48 in<lb/>
Greensboro; WPDE,<lb/>
Channel 15 in Florence,<lb/>
S.C WTVZ, Channel<lb/>
33 in Norfolk, Va and<lb/>
WWAY, Channel 3 in<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Emory says there are<lb/>
still last-minute efforts<lb/>
to get a station to air<lb/>
the show in the<lb/>
Charlotte and Raleigh<lb/>
markets.<lb/>
Attic Enters<lb/>
10th Year<lb/>
Greenville has the distinction of housing the No. 6 live rock night club in<lb/>
the South. The Attic, located in 103 E. Fourth St. For ten years, quality<lb/>
and divt sification in music has been the Attic's goal.<lb/>
Last year the Attic presented 9 different bands to its customers, more<lb/>
than any other club in a three-state area. Such nationally famous names as<lb/>
ROBBIN THOMPSON BAND, CAROLYNE MAS, CATFISH HODGE,<lb/>
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL, JOE ENGLISH BAND WBONNIE<lb/>
BRAMLETT, NIGHTHAWKS, LE ROUX, NANTUCKET, SHABOO<lb/>
ALL STARS, DIXIE DREGGS, POINTER SISTERS, ROBIN LANE<lb/>
AND THE CHARTBUSTERS, MOTHER'S FINEST, have performed<lb/>
upon the Attic's stage in just the past year. Three of these acts, Carolyn<lb/>
Mas, LeRoux, and the Pointer Sisters were video taped for national broad-<lb/>
cast. Regional favorites such as Brice Street, Super Grit, Nighthawks,<lb/>
Eaze, Choice, The States, Sidewinder, No Vacancy, Pegasus, Snow,<lb/>
Badge, and Sutter's Gold regularly fill the Attic to capacity. In addition to<lb/>
the whole spectrum of live rock music including Album Rock, Country<lb/>
Rock, Southern, Show, Blues, Fusion, Jazz, and New Wave, the Attic also<lb/>
offers a large dance floor and your favorite beverages at easy to swallow<lb/>
prices. And on one Friday per month a fraternity or sorority sponsors an<lb/>
"afternoon delight" between 4 &amp; 7 offering even easier to swallow prices.<lb/>
Pinball and footsball are also available. The Attic, who introduced<lb/>
footsball to Greenville in 1972, has hosted the N.C. State Footsball Cham-<lb/>
pionship for the past three years.<lb/>
Located in the back room of the Attic is the Phoenix Room which<lb/>
presents live music specializing in Blues, Jazz, and Fusion Rock on Tues-<lb/>
day nights. The Phoenix also offers at 7-ft. TV screen showing selected live<lb/>
and recorded musical acts and sports events and is open to Attic customers<lb/>
on most nights of the week.<lb/>
Tom Haines and Stewart Campbell, managers of the Attic, feel that the<lb/>
clubs downtown are important to most of the students at ECU because<lb/>
they fill a void in the students' curriculum. It provides them with an alter-<lb/>
native to work and study: a place to relax, unwind, and socialize. "After a<lb/>
big test, a long term paper, or a grueling academic week, nothing beats a<lb/>
cold one, a large crowd, an accommodating date and good band ? all<lb/>
readily available at the Attic<lb/>
As Chip Gwynn (staff writer) said in a past article in this paper, "The<lb/>
Attic seems to have reached a certain pleateau of success. It has remained a<lb/>
favorite nightspot of students for several years and has remained successful<lb/>
because students know the Attic is going to book good entertainment, even<lb/>
if they have never heard of the performing band Open 6 days a week, the<lb/>
Attic's low cover charge (generally $l-$2), student oriented specials and<lb/>
Friday "Afternoon Delights" make it a favorite gathering place for ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
PAID ADVERTISEMENT<lb/>
East Carolina Dining Services<lb/>
JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
"All you can eat, three meals per day"<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Breakfast7:15-9:308:00-9:30Brunch<lb/>
Lunch11:00-1:3011:30-1:3010:00-1:00<lb/>
Dinner4:30-6:304:30-6:004:30-6:00<lb/>
MENDENHALL SNACK BAR<lb/>
"Continual Service all day long"<lb/>
BreakfastM-F SatSun.<lb/>
Lunch7:30 A.M 11:00 A.M<lb/>
Dinner7:30 P.M. 6:30 P.M.<lb/>
THE GALLEY<lb/>
"Located next door to Jones Cafete<lb/>
Lunch DinnerM-F lftTTT? SatSun. 10:30-2:30   a ? , CLOSED 4:30-7:30<lb/>
Faculty-Staff Buffet Dining MonFri.<lb/>
Reopening onAug. 31 uu,tn 11:00-2:00<lb/>
Int<lb/>
til. intrtmural Ucpj<lb/>
The staff o<lb/>
Department<lb/>
I n t r a m u r a<lb/>
Recreational Sel<lb/>
would like to extl<lb/>
sporty welcome<lb/>
the students, fi<lb/>
and staff at ECU I<lb/>
More than<lb/>
tivities have been<lb/>
ned for your enjo<lb/>
in addition<lb/>
numerous in!<lb/>
recreational op<lb/>
tuniues. They<lb/>
from traditional<lb/>
like flag f<lb/>
basketball, I<lb/>
and softball<lb/>
unique acti<lb/>
Almost Anything<lb/>
arm wrestling.<lb/>
hockey and bicy<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Each year n?<lb/>
challenging ac<lb/>
are offered.<lb/>
1981-82 is no<lb/>
tion. A genuine<lb/>
co spitting<lb/>
start the year o<lb/>
Servomation ? E.C.U.<lb/>
P. O. Box 3375<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Wei<lb/>
Stw<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Beach fashi<lb/>
Stubbies, O.<lb/>
Fashions<lb/>
for Guys &amp;<lb/>
Gals<lb/>
'efc TuCer<lb/>
Carolina east maU KSgreenvilte<lb/>
5.00 DOWN HOLDS YOUR<lb/>
PURCHASE UNTIL<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 7th!<lb/>
For just 5.00 down your<lb/>
blazer will be held on lay-<lb/>
away until Sept. 7th. On<lb/>
this date, regular monthly<lb/>
payments will begin, with<lb/>
final payment being made<lb/>
in full by December 7th.<lb/>
Layaway now!<lb/>
Misses' and Junior<lb/>
Wool Blend Blazers<lb/>
49.88<lb/>
Regular $60 to $65<lb/>
You'll be the campus hit<lb/>
with a 2 button front<lb/>
back vented and<lb/>
nylon lined blazer<lb/>
flap pockets,<lb/>
one breast<lb/>
pocket and 3<lb/>
sleeve but-<lb/>
tons Navy,<lb/>
grey, hunter<lb/>
or camel.<lb/>
CE<lb/>
N<lb/>
CAR<lb/>
321 Ei<lb/>
7!<lb/>
BOTH S<lb/>
Al<lb/>
7 DA'<lb/>
Greet t<lb/>
Fa<lb/>
Occl<lb/>
Save $10 on Jr. and Misses'<lb/>
100 Cotton Corduroy Blazers!<lb/>
29.88<lb/>
KA<lb/>
Located<lb/>
ce<lb/>
old<lb/>
t l20l,<lb/>
rot<lb/>
You'll go first class in your classic corduroy blazer with flap and<lb/>
patch pockets, notch collar and nylon lining. Jr. and misses' sizes.<lb/>
Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9:30 p.mPhone 7S6-B-E-L-K (756-2355)<lb/>
jM0tU<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
MVMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0025"/><lb/>
D<lb/>
IT<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
H69<lb/>
1 Intramural<lb/>
ICCTJU<lb/>
IMW i.?e<lb/>
-I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
lolli!<lb/>
UR<lb/>
INTIL<lb/>
7th!<lb/>
kl<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
lisses<lb/>
azers!<lb/>
8<lb/>
,tth flap and<lb/>
usses' sizes<lb/>
ECU lnii?murml Dept<lb/>
Of<lb/>
the<lb/>
of<lb/>
The staff<lb/>
Department<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
would like to extend a<lb/>
sporty welcome to all<lb/>
the students, faculty<lb/>
and staff at ECU.<lb/>
More than 40 ac-<lb/>
tivities have been plan-<lb/>
ned for your enjoyment<lb/>
in addition to<lb/>
numerous informal<lb/>
recreational oppoor-<lb/>
tunities. They range<lb/>
from traditional sports<lb/>
.ike flag football,<lb/>
basketball, volleyball<lb/>
and softball to such<lb/>
unique activities as<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes,<lb/>
arm wrestling, roller<lb/>
hockey and bicycle rac-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Each year new and<lb/>
challenging activities<lb/>
are offered, and<lb/>
1981-82 is no excep-<lb/>
tion. A genuine tobac-<lb/>
co spitting contest will<lb/>
art the vear off with<lb/>
all the big chewers con-<lb/>
gregated in front of<lb/>
Memorial Gym. A<lb/>
punt, pass and kick<lb/>
contest, patterned after<lb/>
the national competi-<lb/>
tion, will take place this<lb/>
fall. Meanwhile all the<lb/>
"major league" slug-<lb/>
gers can take a swing at<lb/>
the Home Run Derby<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
A faculty-staff rac-<lb/>
quetball tournament<lb/>
will be offered, and co-<lb/>
recreational basketball<lb/>
is sure to bring some<lb/>
new excitement for<lb/>
roundball enthusiast.<lb/>
The IRS WANTS<lb/>
YOU to participate, to<lb/>
become involved and to<lb/>
have fun. If we can<lb/>
answer questions regar-<lb/>
ding any aspects of in-<lb/>
tramural programming<lb/>
please come by 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
our Intra-Action Sport-<lb/>
sline at 757-6562.<lb/>
Entry dedlines for<lb/>
the following sports<lb/>
and activities are ap-<lb/>
proaching, so be sure to<lb/>
sign up soon.<lb/>
Intramural Sports<lb/>
Bicycle Race<lb/>
The second annual<lb/>
"Little 500style bicy-<lb/>
cle relay race is coming<lb/>
to East Carolina<lb/>
University on Thurs-<lb/>
day, Sept. 10. Foui-<lb/>
person relay teams will<lb/>
compete in the 50-mile<lb/>
race around Bunting<lb/>
Track. Men and<lb/>
women will compele in<lb/>
the race, but not<lb/>
against each other. The<lb/>
race should be one of<lb/>
the most exciting ant:<lb/>
competitive events ol<lb/>
the year, so sign up cat<lb/>
ly and keep this in<lb/>
mind: "Ladies and<lb/>
gentlemen, start your<lb/>
training<lb/>
Early Bird Swimming<lb/>
Monday. Wednesday<lb/>
and Fridav mornings<lb/>
from 7-8 a.m. (trial<lb/>
period Aug. 31-Sept.<lb/>
25). An opportunity for<lb/>
early risers (students,<lb/>
faculty and staff) to<lb/>
beat the crowds and get<lb/>
some exercise. Lap<lb/>
sv imming only.<lb/>
Friday Night Free Play<lb/>
Volleyball and bad-<lb/>
minton offered Friday<lb/>
Nights in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum gymnasium for<lb/>
interested groups or in-<lb/>
dividuals. All equip-<lb/>
ment furnished, just<lb/>
come play and enjoy.<lb/>
Dates as follow:<lb/>
Vary<lb/>
Sept. 4, 11, 18, 25; Oct.<lb/>
2, 16, 23, 30; Nov. 6,<lb/>
13, 20<lb/>
BACK TO NATURE<lb/>
Canoes, backpacks,<lb/>
tents and bicycles may<lb/>
now be rented for a<lb/>
very nominal charge,<lb/>
on a daily basis or for a<lb/>
long weekend, from<lb/>
room 115 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Hours are<lb/>
Monday-Friday from<lb/>
2-3:30 p.m. Informa-<lb/>
tion is also available<lb/>
about state and federal<lb/>
parks and camping<lb/>
sites.<lb/>
9 I<lb/>
.??<lb/>
LUGATOl<lb/>
VQRSALE<lb/>
LOCATED AT<lb/>
THE GOLF SHOP<lb/>
AT<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
WE HAVE ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF<lb/>
MEN'S AND LADIES' IZOD LACOSTE SHIRTS AS WELL<lb/>
AS IZOD SWEATERS IN THE AREAI<lb/>
IF THEY ARE BUYING TWO OR MORE, THEY CAN<lb/>
GET A QUANITY DISCOUNT (MAY MIX SIZES).<lb/>
FOR CHILDREN WE HAVE IZOD SLEEPERS, SHIRTS,<lb/>
PANTS, AND SWEATERS.<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
? 756-0504<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS<lb/>
Welcome Back,<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Students ? Take care of all of your summer needs.<lb/>
Beach fashions by Beach Towne, Cole of California,<lb/>
Stubbies, O.P Hobie and Surf Shirts.<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
MARKETING &amp;<lb/>
TRADING<lb/>
WE BUY, SELL &amp; TRADE<lb/>
Fashions<lb/>
for Guys &amp;<lb/>
Gals<lb/>
Located at<lb/>
Rivergate<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
Center and<lb/>
Atlantic<lb/>
Beach<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
752-7711<lb/>
STUDENTS, HERE IS YOUR<lb/>
CHANCE TO SAVE MONEY<lb/>
THIS FALL. It's good clean us-<lb/>
ed merchandise at REAL LOW<lb/>
PRICES. Any and all stereo<lb/>
equipment, guitars, cameras,<lb/>
watches, car stereo equipment,<lb/>
portable radios, small dorm ap-<lb/>
pliances, sporting goods, TV's,<lb/>
furniture, kerosene heaters,<lb/>
wood stoves and much, much<lb/>
more!<lb/>
417 EVANS ST. MALL<lb/>
OLD WACHOVIA BLDG.<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
PARKING ACROSS FROM ATTIC!<lb/>
757-1237<lb/>
Miss CAushf TWiW<lb/>
CMftt fall, a.C.<lb/>
enB<lb/>
CMf<lb/>
KASH&amp;KARRYNQ.8<lb/>
CON VENIENCE STORE<lb/>
Located at 14th &amp; Charles (formerly Pirate Pit Stop)<lb/>
Free Dip Of<lb/>
PINE STATE<lb/>
ICE CREAM or<lb/>
FOUNTAIN COKE<lb/>
8-21 thru 8-23<lb/>
C?ld<lb/>
o-<lb/>
6P<lb/>
$K<lb/>
riat<lb/>
ro<lb/>
$j.i?<lb/>
rfow us yexe L a4 . ,<lb/>
T,dL yo kve c 0.0U. lo yo. Miss ml 7 Ij<lb/>
rwK oJJLsJ l sW?g. peofle P?r?'e fC 3i-<lb/>
wKf eU rvtos i -fU- qys w 4- 0&amp;v?7<lb/>
kvuDfditvLio you' zMttj, odSl U. 30. dret rcMty <lb/>
"cool" iVe. cJrtwae-? ru ivw'oke. QnMpleJw ? woei<lb/>
loolcs life OM Von voJu see in M?W - Ne, k.<lb/>
L Msftf tool cMU -M?ct?.<lb/>
BAG ICE<lb/>
5(K<lb/>
SELF SERVICE<lb/>
GAS<lb/>
Thrift Motor Oil<lb/>
8H Quart<lb/>
WISE TWIN PAK POT A TO CHIPS<lb/>
9H 8 oz. pk.<lb/>
Prices Good August 22nd-September 6th<lb/>
will loot C4jf (M ?.<lb/>
 t 0br' o,<lb/>
" fOJLl- CTU ? JM-<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0026"/><lb/>
Y( ' ?<lb/>
iit<lb/>
<lb/>
hi t.(ty.)<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
pa ? ?? i<lb/>
<lb/>
PLEASE PARDON THE INCONVENIEN(<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
u to shop Student Supply Store<lb/>
ir one-stop shopping center for:<lb/>
textbooks<lb/>
v nirs<lb/>
jewelry<lb/>
?ph ing<lb/>
? rued wearing apparel<lb/>
?art supplies<lb/>
? al class rings<lb/>
?I ire reading book<lb/>
?gift items<lb/>
?medical supplies<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
vv<lb/>
,<lb/>
 . vv<lb/>
0<lb/>
oni M oim rah i<lb/>
H 1 s? (AROIIN V I'MYIKSin<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0027"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
38 Free Films:<lb/>
From Tess To<lb/>
Pvt. Benjamin<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee has booked its biggest lineup<lb/>
of free movies ever with an un-<lb/>
precedented schedule (38 films in<lb/>
all) of weekend "popular" and<lb/>
Wednesday "special" movies, dou-<lb/>
ble features, Sunday festivals, and<lb/>
late shows.<lb/>
Short discussion groups follow<lb/>
each single Wednesday night film.<lb/>
As ever, admission is by ID and<lb/>
Activity Card for students and MSC<lb/>
membership for faculty and staff.<lb/>
All films will be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre.<lb/>
This fall's list includes the follow-<lb/>
ing weekend films (shown on Thurs-<lb/>
day, Fridav and Saturday nights):<lb/>
Altered States (Aug. 28, 29), The<lb/>
Competition (Sept. 3, 4, 5), Or-<lb/>
dinary People (Sept. 11, 12), The<lb/>
Long Riders (Sept. 17, 18, 19),<lb/>
Fame (Sept 24, 25, 26), The Stunt<lb/>
Man (Oct. 1, 2, 3), Private Ben-<lb/>
jamin (Oct. 8, 9, 10), Stir Crazy<lb/>
(Oct. 15, 16, 17), The Great Santini<lb/>
(Oct. 22, 23, 24), Halloween (Oct.<lb/>
29, 30, 31), Nine To Five (Nov. 5, 6,<lb/>
7), Raging Bull (Nov. 13, 14),<lb/>
Airplane (Nov. 20, 21), The<lb/>
Elephant Man (Dec. 3, 4, 5), and<lb/>
The Idolmaker (Dec. 10, 11, 12).<lb/>
Wednesday night films (shown at<lb/>
8 p.m.) are Breaker Morant (Sept.<lb/>
2), The Tin Drum (Sept. 9), Cousin<lb/>
Angelica (Sept. 23), Melvin and<lb/>
Howard (Oct. 11), Tess (Oct. 28),<lb/>
Kagemusha (Dec. 2), and Closely<lb/>
Watched Trains (Nov. 18).<lb/>
Wednesday night double features<lb/>
(shown at 7 and 9 p.m.) include<lb/>
Throne of Blood and Macbeth<lb/>
(Sept. 30), Casablanca and Play It<lb/>
Again Sam (Oct. 21), plus Lancelot<lb/>
of the Lake and Monty Python and<lb/>
the Holy Grail.<lb/>
Sunday afternoon film festivals<lb/>
feature the movies of Fred Astair<lb/>
with Top Hat, Funny Face, and<lb/>
Daddy Long Legs (Oct. 11); and<lb/>
Alfred Hitchock with Foreign Cor-<lb/>
respondent, The Lady Vanishes, To<lb/>
Catch a Thief, and Frenzy (Nov.<lb/>
22).<lb/>
Friday and Saturday late shows<lb/>
are The Kids Are Alright (Sept. 18,<lb/>
19), Martin ? The Pittsburgh Vam-<lb/>
pire (Oct. 30, 31), and Rock 'n Roll<lb/>
High School (Dec. 4, 5).<lb/>
Wallet-size film cards that include<lb/>
a complete listing of all Student<lb/>
Union fall films, their respective<lb/>
show times, and dates, may be pick-<lb/>
ed up at the Information Desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Gold Haw. in .he mo wide puMicized scene from her "Priv Benjamin The film b only one of an incredible J?.<lb/>
Some Words Of Wisdom For A New<lb/>
By DAVID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Special lo Th? fc??l CmoUwm<lb/>
Unpack, do it all quickly, take the side of the room<lb/>
that one sees when one first enters the room. Then you<lb/>
don't contend with the open door. You will feel better<lb/>
about campus if you are able to come back to a room<lb/>
that is recognizable.<lb/>
U rains a ot in OreenviUe, one cannot allow the rain<lb/>
to signal a despondency. You will find most of the early<lb/>
days here at school unbearably hot and humid<lb/>
(especially if you are from the North) and you might<lb/>
take as many as four or five showers a day.<lb/>
You will buy a fan, and buy a couple of new albums,<lb/>
give yourself a treat.<lb/>
Do not sign up for early classes unless you are well<lb/>
disciplined. The people who take early morning classes<lb/>
are almost invariably elementary education majors who<lb/>
are coming back to school for a second degree and have<lb/>
nothing to sav beyond "Will that be on the midterm" or<lb/>
"Could you spell that again They never speak in class<lb/>
and if they do they hold opinions you would be embar-<lb/>
rassed to attribute to your little sister. They never miss<lb/>
class and are always engaged, separated or just married.<lb/>
There is not much difference between the<lb/>
bureaucracies at your old school and the ones you will<lb/>
come across here. The center of all administrative activi-<lb/>
ty at this institution is the provost. She is a woman, and<lb/>
while she is generally fair and open-minded, she is<lb/>
humorless and a company man. Plav it straight with her<lb/>
all the time.<lb/>
If you have already registered, when you receive your<lb/>
schedule, walk around campus and see where all the<lb/>
buildings are. It is easier than rushing about that first<lb/>
morning. The campus is small and all of the buildings<lb/>
are marked with signs and faces of pirates.<lb/>
You will receive an incredible amount of garbage<lb/>
from companies and student interest groups. They will<lb/>
give you anything from petitions to small bottles of<lb/>
shampoo. The petitions are useless, and the short ex-<lb/>
planation at the top gives you no idea of what the pro-<lb/>
blem is. If it makes you feel more a radical young col-<lb/>
lege student to sign it, then do. Keep the shampoo and<lb/>
give it to your roommate. You bought all that stuff<lb/>
while you were home anyhow, and it's nice to get on<lb/>
good terms with your roommate for the first few days.<lb/>
This is what to know about your roommate. If you<lb/>
generally get along well with people, do not have a<lb/>
history of violent or sexual crimes and the person in the<lb/>
bed across the floor annoys you, it is his fault, and move<lb/>
out. There is no need to make desperate efforts to get<lb/>
along with anvbody. There is a housing shortage on the<lb/>
campus and changing rooms would not be difficult<lb/>
Live off-campus if you have to. Any doctor's note will<lb/>
give you university permission to hve off campus as a<lb/>
freshman or transfer student.<lb/>
Moving off campus can be expensive, moving too tar<lb/>
from the campus will isolate you more than one needs.<lb/>
It multiplies the difficult problem of early classes, rainy<lb/>
days, cold weather, ill health, laziness. You will see peo-<lb/>
ple in your classes who are in your dorm and will talk to<lb/>
them on the walk from class. These are other possible<lb/>
roommates; check the classified ads in the school<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
And now a word about Greek life here at ECU.<lb/>
They are like goddamn locusts on this campus. They<lb/>
will be putting notices on or under your door from the<lb/>
moment you move in, until the end of first semester.<lb/>
They are fraternities (sororities). They are exactly alike<lb/>
in their structure and generally alike in philosophy. Peo-<lb/>
ple need organization. There is strength in numbers ? a<lb/>
flag to flv under. It is an immediate circle of "friends"<lb/>
It is also" fairly expensive (70-80 dollars a month) and<lb/>
anywhere from 900-1,100 dollars a year to live at the<lb/>
house.<lb/>
They will attack you with parties and company. They<lb/>
will call you "brother" and "sister The number of<lb/>
good, intelligent, responsive individuals is exactly pro-<lb/>
portionate to the number outside of organization. Ex-<lb/>
cept those in the group needed to join. There are excep-<lb/>
tions on both sides of this generality, but they prove the<lb/>
rule. <lb/>
There are other organizations you are automatically a<lb/>
member of: a class, the Men's Residence Council<lb/>
(Women's) or you are a "Day Student You will have<lb/>
representatives, who were your homeroom delegates in<lb/>
high school. There are occasional group outings where<lb/>
they give you beer, which they feel is enormously liberal<lb/>
at this institution. They are chaperoned by the heads, or<lb/>
the emplovees of the sponsoring organization. You can<lb/>
judge the entire program by the administrators they pre-<lb/>
sent to the public.<lb/>
There are very few angry young men at this umversi-<lb/>
There is nothing 1 can say on drugs or sex that would<lb/>
not sound ridiculously pompous and oratorical. There is<lb/>
a sufficient amount of both Downtown" where the<lb/>
quality of both fluctuates, but does not cease.<lb/>
You meet the people there. They are attracted to<lb/>
popular music, various forms of dance, and each other.<lb/>
There is almost vengeful disco, the same caliber rock<lb/>
and there used to be a jazz place. They are all somewhat<lb/>
See WISE, Page 10<lb/>
i 0 H<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
Reep And The Old Days<lb/>
Art Professor Worked For Hollywood<lb/>
Phoo?r?p?i By Larry Zichernun<lb/>
ECU Art Professor Edward Reep<lb/>
FWn vht East Carotin. University Artist-In-Residence EdwardI Reep<lb/>
Sown C htudio at home. Reep worked in Hollywood film<lb/>
shown here in Ms 8?a designer, an illustrator and a<lb/>
StUT? HeeaseSht d?tl of Musaolini during the second<lb/>
Wotlrrie" e -bout his impressions of life and his<lb/>
woik as an artist.<lb/>
By DIANE HENDERSON<lb/>
SufT Writer<lb/>
An art professor at East Carolina for the past<lb/>
11 years, Edward Reep has a past filled with<lb/>
unusual events ranging from the vision of<lb/>
Mussolini, dead, hanging by his heels, to an in-<lb/>
troduction with a Pope. He brings to his art and<lb/>
his teaching a world of vibrant and tragic ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
From junior high school through five years at<lb/>
the Art Center College in California, Reep was<lb/>
steeped in technical training. An unflinching<lb/>
drive to learn the art kept him going even during<lb/>
the Depression.<lb/>
"Some of the students today complain of poor<lb/>
facilities Reep remarked with a chuckle. "I us-<lb/>
ed to ride across town (to art school) in a street<lb/>
car for an hour and a half, then transfer and do<lb/>
the same again at night. Then I'd stay up most of<lb/>
the night working on the kitchen floor.<lb/>
"After my first year, I won a scholarship,<lb/>
which meant if I cleaned up nine Johns three<lb/>
times a day, I had my tuition ? $300. That was<lb/>
more than my whole family had at that time.<lb/>
"So I cleaned Johns for the next four years,<lb/>
and I went to art school for five years night and<lb/>
day ? and Saturdays<lb/>
But with all this technical training, Reep felt<lb/>
lacking as an artitst without the understanding of<lb/>
the deeper implications of painting which could<lb/>
come only with experience. He began to achieve<lb/>
this understanding after he joined the Army, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I always felt that I could not drawl knew to<lb/>
my heart that I wasn't composing and drawing as<lb/>
well as I ought to. I did learn to manipulate<lb/>
media and became a rather good technician. And<lb/>
then the War came along<lb/>
A few months before Pearl Harbor, Reep<lb/>
volunteered for a year's service, which turned<lb/>
out to be five years. But his dedication to pain-<lb/>
ting did not cease.<lb/>
"We'd get up at five in the morning and fall<lb/>
out, and we'd be through with our hiking in boot<lb/>
camp after about two in the afternoon. In the<lb/>
long summer days in July and August, 1 would<lb/>
take a shower and then put my art materials on<lb/>
my back and go up in the hills to paint<lb/>
The work the young artist did during those<lb/>
months brought him national attention. Besides<lb/>
winning first place in one Life magazine contest,<lb/>
Reep won fourth place in Life's All-Service com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
Shortly after this, Reep met the woman who<lb/>
would be his wife.<lb/>
"We were married with $13 to our names,<lb/>
Reep recalls with a smile. "We got married the<lb/>
day I graduated from officer candidate school<lb/>
and went off to the Ozark mountains, where, in<lb/>
the ice and snow, 1 fell out troops at 5:30 a.m.<lb/>
with icicles hanging from my cap. I taught a<lb/>
company how to blow up and build bridges anda<lb/>
lot of other things that I wasn't too expert in<lb/>
Reep was transferred from the ice of the<lb/>
Ozarks to the warmth of New Orleans, then to<lb/>
Alaska and back to Monterrey.<lb/>
"There I was contacted by the secretary of war<lb/>
with a telegram asking me if I would consider be-<lb/>
ing a war artist overseas<lb/>
Reep eagerly accepted the position and became<lb/>
a part of a corps of 42 artists that went<lb/>
throughout the world for the next few years,<lb/>
painting the second World War.<lb/>
"I was thrown in with some of the great artists<lb/>
of that era: Reginald Marsh, Thomas Benton<lb/>
and Yasuo Kunyoshi. And they scared me<lb/>
because I was so young and inexperienced.<lb/>
"So, 1 got a call one day from Gen.<lb/>
Eisenhower's adjutant. I went to his head-<lb/>
quarters, and he called me into his office, and<lb/>
said, 'Reepthere are five artists; and you're a<lb/>
Second Lieutenant, and I'm putting you in<lb/>
charge of these five artists And he said. There<lb/>
are five divisions going into Italy. Pick a divi-<lb/>
sion, and assign these other four men to a divi-<lb/>
sion. That is all<lb/>
"1 was with him for possibly 40 seconds and<lb/>
had to make the decision. I saw there were four<lb/>
infantry and one armored division, so I put<lb/>
myself down for the armored one, just to be<lb/>
significant Reep said with a laugh. "Soon<lb/>
after, we were on our way to Italy, the invasion<lb/>
of Salerno and up Italy<lb/>
Reep feels that his most amazing war ex-<lb/>
perience came in Italy. He and his sargeant were<lb/>
driving on a road near Milano one day. They had<lb/>
intended to bypass the city, when the sargeant<lb/>
suggested, "What the hell. Let's go into<lb/>
Milano and the quick turn Reep made led<lb/>
down a path that would bring him one of his<lb/>
most vivid memories.<lb/>
"Halfway in we were stopped by two partisans<lb/>
with machine guns. They were very excited,<lb/>
shouting, 'Americani, Amencani They had<lb/>
these big paper American flags, and they put one<lb/>
on each fender. Then they jumped on the fenders<lb/>
and said, 'Do you want to see Mussolini?'<lb/>
"So 1 drove into a service station, where they<lb/>
had Mussolini and his girlfriend and 17 other<lb/>
people killed and hanging up by their feetThen<lb/>
they were cutting them down, and people were<lb/>
lining up. Women were taking their heels off and<lb/>
beating Mussolini to a pulp<lb/>
At the end of the war, Reep returned to the<lb/>
States as a captain who had been given the<lb/>
Bronze Star. More important to his profession,<lb/>
he had also been awarded a Guggenheim<lb/>
Fellowship, which he worked on for a year after<lb/>
leaving the Army.<lb/>
Reep taught at the art school he had once at-<lb/>
tended but quit after four years and went to work<lb/>
in the film industry.<lb/>
"1 worked in the film studios as a set designer,<lb/>
an illustrator and ultimately as a scenic painter.<lb/>
!?ee REEP, Page 7<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0028"/><lb/>
jt<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25, 1981 Page 2<lb/>
The Saving Place<lb/>
BACK-TOSCHOOL SALE<lb/>
Tuesday thru Saturday<lb/>
fBMOS 25<lb/>
$17?<lb/>
X<lb/>
178.00<lb/>
5 cu. ft. Refrigerator<lb/>
Compact unit features top freeze crisper, door<lb/>
storage. Walnut color top and door.<lb/>
IBS 260<lb/>
-r<lb/>
II . i<lb/>
Our Reg. 22.74<lb/>
5-Shelf Storage Unit<lb/>
Gray finish resists stains and<lb/>
wipes clean for easy care, ideal<lb/>
for dorms, apartments &amp; more.<lb/>
19.97<lb/>
3-Speed Fan<lb/>
Wisper quiet, cools at<lb/>
three settings.<lb/>
Bluewhite.<lb/>
24.96<lb/>
Our Reg. 31.97<lb/>
12" Oscillating Fan<lb/>
3 speeds, cools entire room.<lb/>
Quiet and energy efficient<lb/>
27.97<lb/>
Our Reg 37.97<lb/>
2-Drawer File Cabinet<lb/>
Steel, comes in beige or black<lb/>
Key for safety locking<lb/>
99.00<lb/>
Compact<lb/>
Refrigerator<lb/>
Freezer compartment,<lb/>
adjustable thermostat.<lb/>
1.6 cu. ft.<lb/>
MacDonaum<lb/>
M270<lb/>
88.00<lb/>
Modular Stereo by McDonald<lb/>
AAAFM MPX radio with 8-track stereo<lb/>
player, phonograph &amp; speakers.<lb/>
15.88<lb/>
Our Reg. 21.88<lb/>
Serving Cart<lb/>
3-tier metal cart has elec<lb/>
trical outlet, brass casters.<lb/>
288C<lb/>
Renu7.it Solid<lb/>
Air Freshener<lb/>
Goes anywhere available in dtt<lb/>
te"ent scents<lb/>
? .5Limit 2<lb/>
32 ox.<lb/>
Spray 'n Wash<lb/>
Removes stains ano tougn sc<lb/>
mat .s Dr "ewe"<lb/>
.U1<lb/>
L<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
Parson<lb/>
Tables<lb/>
Stack them for more space,<lb/>
sturdy plastic, available in<lb/>
several different colors.<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
1.57<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
Products<lb/>
8 ? 16 oz bottles. Stock up now &amp;<lb/>
save<lb/>
44<lb/>
Bic Pen<lb/>
Special<lb/>
3 per pkg Black or blue ink.<lb/>
<lb/>
2.57<lb/>
<lb/>
Tri-Fold Organizer<lb/>
3 compartments, complete with paper, dividers and folder<lb/>
10" Live<lb/>
Hanging<lb/>
Baskets<lb/>
Beautiful plants for all rooms,<lb/>
many to choose from.<lb/>
V<lb/>
m<lb/>
7.97<lb/>
Live Plants<lb/>
For Show<lb/>
in 10" pots Many to choose<lb/>
from.<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
1 .Limit 2<lb/>
12 Gal. Final<lb/>
Touch<lb/>
Fabric Softener<lb/>
To give your domes tresh, scrft<lb/>
smell<lb/>
1.37umit2<lb/>
32 oz. Wisk<lb/>
Liquid Detergent<lb/>
The heavy duty laundry<lb/>
detergent<lb/>
:<lb/>
White or Avocado l<lb/>
1.37<lb/>
Sylvania<lb/>
Soft White<lb/>
2.77<lb/>
Kmart<lb/>
Corner<lb/>
Broom<lb/>
Plastic long<lb/>
wearing<lb/>
washable<lb/>
oroom<lb/>
4 pack light buios Available in 40.<lb/>
60. 75 or 100 watl<lb/>
6.97<lb/>
Bright<lb/>
Stick?<lb/>
Wicker-I<lb/>
Hamper<lb/>
Doubt ZJPP1,<lb/>
D?coCo?or?<lb/>
Complete fluorscent fixture. In<lb/>
stalls quickly, onoff switch for<lb/>
easy use.<lb/>
15.83<lb/>
Bean Bag<lb/>
Chair<lb/>
Comfortable tor all rooms<lb/>
available in decor colors.<lb/>
Padded lid, upright style, beige or<lb/>
white.<lb/>
21.00<lb/>
Limit 2<lb/>
175 Sheets<lb/>
Filler<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Fits 3 or 5 ring binders Save<lb/>
10.88<lb/>
T-Leg<lb/>
Ironing<lb/>
Board<lb/>
Ventilated top for easy ironing,<lb/>
adjustable height.<lb/>
17.97<lb/>
16 pc.<lb/>
Corelle<lb/>
Dinnerware<lb/>
v m? f<lb/>
Set ? 4 plates, 4 saucers, 4<lb/>
cups, 4 bowls.<lb/>
97<lb/>
14 NFL<lb/>
Pencils<lb/>
Choose your favorite team and keep<lb/>
them at all times.<lb/>
21.00<lb/>
Easy<lb/>
Wipes<lb/>
The all purpose, re usable cloth,<lb/>
strong, economical.<lb/>
Introducing<lb/>
Wrangler<lb/>
 &amp; Levi<lb/>
Jeons<lb/>
at Kmart<lb/>
LOW<lb/>
EVERY-<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
Our Reg. 13.97<lb/>
9.97<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Sport Shirt<lb/>
Button up front, pocket,<lb/>
fashion style in many solid<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
7.97<lb/>
Men's Nylon<lb/>
Warm-Up Jackets<lb/>
For those cool days, just around the<lb/>
corner.<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
9:30to9:00<lb/>
Friday-Saturday<lb/>
9:30 to 9.30<lb/>
12<lb/>
INCH<lb/>
di?ial<lb/>
? COMIC<lb/>
69.00<lb/>
KMC 1221<lb/>
12" BlackWhite Portable TV<lb/>
Comes on instantly Built in antenna. Goes<lb/>
anywhere.<lb/>
59.97<lb/>
<lb/>
Our Reg. 69.97<lb/>
Hoover<lb/>
Celebrity II<lb/>
Vacuum<lb/>
Canister vacuum com<lb/>
plete with attachments A 4J7<lb/>
for easy cleaning. ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
1.97<lb/>
Corefree<lb/>
Panti Shields<lb/>
48 p??r DC" COfT '<lb/>
? - eVness<lb/>
JMmai i ,j<lb/>
Quwn Six 911<lb/>
288 C<lb/>
Totol Comfort<lb/>
Knee Hi's<lb/>
t "?" SSfS Or<lb/>
1.37<lb/>
m Under Bed Chest<lb/>
JlOrflflfi  Woodgroin tool, <lb/>
Chest 4 da<lb/>
Sturdy fiberboard<lb/>
with wood grain<lb/>
finish. Save<lb/>
1.77<lb/>
200 Sheets<lb/>
Typing<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
For all typewriters Shop now for<lb/>
term papers &amp; save<lb/>
1.57<lb/>
Metal<lb/>
Propane<lb/>
Cylinder<lb/>
Disposable, many uses, save<lb/>
now<lb/>
F<lb/>
m<lb/>
12.88<lb/>
5 pc.<lb/>
Both Set<lb/>
Complete with tank cover, lid<lb/>
cover and two floor rugs<lb/>
Fried<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
with 2 veg roll<lb/>
&amp; outter.<lb/>
1.69<lb/>
1.17<lb/>
20 Qt.<lb/>
Potting<lb/>
Soil<lb/>
Our Reg. 2.37<lb/>
W<lb/>
WE<lb/>
Ready to use, odorless, won't<lb/>
burn. Save.<lb/>
Jmh'<lb/>
Shown ab<lb/>
Willis Buill<lb/>
and widt-si<lb/>
s<lb/>
Am-<lb/>
the<lb/>
full<lb/>
maSS nv -I<lb/>
As alv<lb/>
Sin;<lb/>
taking our<lb/>
Mankinc<lb/>
none were<lb/>
tion, super<lb/>
the re<lb/>
Ulysses<lb/>
The exp<lb/>
were cclcbl<lb/>
rytellin,k<lb/>
comic booi<lb/>
now, moti<lb/>
derring-do<lb/>
never<lb/>
profu-<lb/>
)m are<lb/>
lone Ranj<lb/>
l onun mt-<lb/>
Super <lb/>
a few I<lb/>
superb<lb/>
plaj i<lb/>
I<lb/>
The V i<lb/>
;wo teej<lb/>
Siegel ona<lb/>
Februarv<lb/>
world-cone<lb/>
"Listenil<lb/>
Bat<lb/>
Go(<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Wh. I<lb/>
head )<lb/>
i on<lb/>
in Pa I<lb/>
with r<lb/>
op<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0029"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25. 1981 Page 3<lb/>
e Hours:<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
0 to 9:00<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
C to 9 30<lb/>
ortt<lb/>
iV<lb/>
Goes<lb/>
ITI<lb/>
tort<lb/>
teets<lb/>
m or<lb/>
fE<lb/>
8<lb/>
?t<lb/>
cover, lid<lb/>
igs<lb/>
?eiuaj Roil<lb/>
?e Butter<lb/>
SPA<lb/>
??<lb/>
V<lb/>
Development Institute<lb/>
Provides Regional Aid<lb/>
Photograph B M?n?nnc Baine<lb/>
Shown above is the The East Carolina University Regional Development Institute located in the<lb/>
Willis Building at the corner of First and Reade Streets. "The services of i<lb/>
and widespread as any single university department<lb/>
??<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University offers<lb/>
several sources of<lb/>
assistance to the sur-<lb/>
rounding region<lb/>
beyond the boundaries<lb/>
of the campus. One<lb/>
such available resource<lb/>
is he East Carolina<lb/>
University Regional<lb/>
Development Institute.<lb/>
The institute is located<lb/>
in the Willis Building at<lb/>
the corner of First and<lb/>
Reade Streets. This<lb/>
' location, at the extreme<lb/>
northern end of cam-<lb/>
pus, gives the impres-<lb/>
sion to the casual<lb/>
observer that the in-<lb/>
stitute is not directly af-<lb/>
filiated with the univer-<lb/>
sity. In contrast to this<lb/>
impression, the services<lb/>
of the institute are as<lb/>
diverse and widespread<lb/>
as any single university<lb/>
department.<lb/>
The institute was<lb/>
founded in 1966 after<lb/>
two years of planning.<lb/>
Its initial funding<lb/>
assistance was the U. S.<lb/>
Department of Com-<lb/>
merce, which saw the<lb/>
university center as a<lb/>
foundation for increas-<lb/>
ed economic develop-<lb/>
ment in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. This associa-<lb/>
tion continued until<lb/>
1971 when state sup-<lb/>
port was obtained. The<lb/>
institute has been<lb/>
located in several loca-<lb/>
tions on campus but<lb/>
moved into its present<lb/>
facility in the fall of<lb/>
1974. The present<lb/>
16,000 square foot<lb/>
building houses a<lb/>
muUi-use auditorium,<lb/>
which is the location of<lb/>
various meetings and<lb/>
conferences. Also, the<lb/>
institute has conference<lb/>
rooms, drafting and art<lb/>
studios, office space,<lb/>
and a library which of-<lb/>
fers statistical and nar-<lb/>
rative information on<lb/>
eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and related subjects.<lb/>
The scope of service<lb/>
of the institute is<lb/>
basically divided into<lb/>
two categories<lb/>
businessindustry and<lb/>
community service.<lb/>
The business sector<lb/>
provides assistance in<lb/>
securing market data<lb/>
and assessing the<lb/>
feasibility of commer-<lb/>
cial and industrial<lb/>
enterprises in the 32<lb/>
eastern-most counties.<lb/>
Industrial park designs<lb/>
and economic profiles<lb/>
are also provided.<lb/>
 ? asnoif 4$dm ? asrtoif 14 s dm ? asnoi tfOM ? asnoq usom ?<lb/>
o<lb/>
c<lb/>
w<lb/>
3<lb/>
o<lb/>
The Place to<lb/>
Wash<lb/>
.<lb/>
t<lb/>
a<lb/>
Superheroes In Demand<lb/>
The $L<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
111 E. 10th St. (Across from Krispy Kreme)<lb/>
514 E. 14th St. (Across from Hot Dog City)<lb/>
e<lb/>
o<lb/>
Also ?<lb/>
?Color TV<lb/>
? Pinball<lb/>
?Attendant on Duty<lb/>
? Lots of Washers &amp; Dryers<lb/>
:<lb/>
3<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
America is crying for help. Superheroes by the<lb/>
score are responding to our plea, by shattering<lb/>
the confines of the comic page and leaping to<lb/>
full-blown, live-action life in our nation's major<lb/>
mass media, the movies.<lb/>
As always, they arrive in the nick of time, sav-<lb/>
ing us from the clutches of Evil Economy and<lb/>
Sinister Social Turmoil, or at least temporarily<lb/>
taking our minds away from these vile villains.<lb/>
Mankind has always needed heroes. When<lb/>
none were available, we turned to our imagina-<lb/>
tion, superstitition. religion ? superheroes were<lb/>
the result, whether their names are Siegfried,<lb/>
Ulysses, St. George or Superman.<lb/>
The exploits of these amazing adventurers<lb/>
were celebrated through the ages in song and<lb/>
storytelling. Today we tell these tales in books,<lb/>
comic books, comic strips, radio, television, and<lb/>
now, motion pictures. While daredevils and<lb/>
dernng-do were always a staple of celluloid,<lb/>
never untii this summer has there been such a<lb/>
profusion of cinematic superheroes, among<lb/>
whom are Indiana Jones, Tarzan, Zorro, The<lb/>
Lone Ranger, James Bond, Flash Gordon and<lb/>
Conan the Barbarian.<lb/>
Superman started it all. The success of his iilm<lb/>
a few years ago was the start of the current<lb/>
superhero craze, as well as the reason for the now<lb/>
playing "Superman 11 which so far has grossed<lb/>
over $75 million.<lb/>
The Man of Steel was conceived 40 years ago<lb/>
by two teenagers, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.<lb/>
Siegel once discussed ("Mediascene January-<lb/>
February 1975) what led to the creation of his<lb/>
world-conquering character:<lb/>
"Listening to President Roosevelt's 'fireside<lb/>
chats being unemployed and worried during Germany  I had the great urge to help  help COUPON<lb/>
the depression and knowing hopelessness and the despairing masses, somehow. How could I O Good for on FREE WASH onMon. ocThurt.<lb/>
fear. Hearing and reading of the oppression and x m m g 9 o.m4 p.m. - Offor epirs Soot. 30<lb/>
slaughter of helpless, oppressed Jews in Nazi See SUPERHEROES, Page 9 . w$h hou$? . w?h hous? .<lb/>
?<lb/>
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10 Off!<lb/>
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COVERS<lb/>
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OR SO BUSINESS SIZE<lb/>
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PAPER<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES<lb/>
MIKES EFFECTIVE AUG. 34 THRU 30, 1981<lb/>
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TTPOGRAPNKAL ERRORS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
ONLY AT:<lb/>
2814 EAST 10TH STRICT<lb/>
WEST END SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST CONVENIENCE CENTER,<lb/>
RT. 11 AS. MEMORIAL DR.<lb/>
? 1102 WEST 3RD STRICT<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0030"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUgUST25, 1981<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bucki<lb/>
dome.<lb/>
Novel<lb/>
Series<lb/>
c<lb/>
Char II<lb/>
the saml<lb/>
his acti<lb/>
Even<lb/>
activitiel<lb/>
boyish<lb/>
Besid<lb/>
it's han<lb/>
engineei<lb/>
market'<lb/>
Thce<lb/>
inventoil<lb/>
is devel<lb/>
Compai<lb/>
The<lb/>
several<lb/>
or gas<lb/>
of othei<lb/>
tion an<lb/>
The<lb/>
substanj<lb/>
ed on t<lb/>
metennj<lb/>
new m<lb/>
The<lb/>
that insj<lb/>
machin<lb/>
usually<lb/>
works<lb/>
togethe<lb/>
ed and<lb/>
Cam<lb/>
dinary<lb/>
is a PI<lb/>
volved<lb/>
gadget:<lb/>
trunk<lb/>
Cain<lb/>
for mo<lb/>
170B<lb/>
owner<lb/>
stde it<lb/>
much<lb/>
inside<lb/>
i<lb/>
?.v.<lb/>
X<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0031"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25, 1981 Page 5<lb/>
44<lb/>
TV Or Not TV: The Battle Rages<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller, designer of the geodesic<lb/>
done, will speak in Hendrix Theatre on<lb/>
November 17 as part of the MSC Lecture<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
Surff Writer<lb/>
The argument raging<lb/>
over television violence<lb/>
and its harmful effects<lb/>
on our society has<lb/>
escalated in recent<lb/>
months. Many people<lb/>
think that the constant<lb/>
flow of violence on TV<lb/>
watched by so many<lb/>
people is making ours a<lb/>
more violent society.<lb/>
There is one thing<lb/>
that 1 think helps keep<lb/>
TV from affecting our<lb/>
lives as much as it<lb/>
might: the fact that<lb/>
most people don't pay<lb/>
attention to the shows<lb/>
they are watching.<lb/>
Think about the<lb/>
number of times that<lb/>
you've come into a<lb/>
room where someone<lb/>
was watching TV and<lb/>
couldn't tell you what<lb/>
program was on, who<lb/>
was in it or anything<lb/>
that had happened in it.<lb/>
(That will teach you to<lb/>
come in after that<lb/>
show's started.)<lb/>
It seems that many<lb/>
people use television<lb/>
simply as background<lb/>
noise. A simple turn of<lb/>
a knob (and a lot of<lb/>
frantic fiddling with the<lb/>
fine tuning and the<lb/>
antenna) can really<lb/>
liven up a dull, quiet<lb/>
room. Or, it could also<lb/>
drown out a lot of<lb/>
racket (like from living<lb/>
in a dorm or some<lb/>
other outlandishly<lb/>
noisy place.)<lb/>
There are good<lb/>
things about the idea of<lb/>
looking upon TV as a<lb/>
mere background hum,<lb/>
instead of something to<lb/>
watch intently. For one<lb/>
thing, people can get<lb/>
lots of reading done.<lb/>
Also, people can be<lb/>
spared some of the sex<lb/>
and violence on TV,<lb/>
unless they read sexy,<lb/>
violent books.<lb/>
The radio also can<lb/>
serve as an more-or-less<lb/>
unobtrusive<lb/>
background noise for<lb/>
many people. I'm used<lb/>
to working in studios in<lb/>
the art building, which<lb/>
can be unbelievably<lb/>
dead and quiet if one is<lb/>
working alone. Even<lb/>
?he worst songs on the<lb/>
radio are somewhat<lb/>
welcome then, since<lb/>
they provide a little<lb/>
A<lb/>
By JON YUHAS<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
refurbished and resembles a modern,<lb/>
Charles Cain bears the mantle of genius with sophisticated aircraft. Cain refers to himself as<lb/>
is With A Heart<lb/>
The interior of the plane has been largely of the sixties) and DuPont, which is how he end-<lb/>
the same affable humor that characterizes all of<lb/>
his actions.<lb/>
Even when he is involved with the most serious<lb/>
activities, that smile that at times becomes a<lb/>
boyish grin is always present.<lb/>
Besides being a genius (Cain will tell you that<lb/>
it's hard to eat genins), he is an inventor,<lb/>
engineer and president of the company that<lb/>
markets one of his inventions, the Cain Encoder.<lb/>
The encoder, publicized last year along with its<lb/>
"Super Chicken" when he talks about his flying.<lb/>
Although he is an expert and IFR-rated, he never<lb/>
flies in even marginally bad weather. "There are<lb/>
old pilots, and there are bold pilots, but there are<lb/>
no old, bold pilots Charles Cain expects to get<lb/>
very old.<lb/>
After any conversation with Cain it is difficult<lb/>
not to feel like Dr. Watson. Cain, like Sherlock<lb/>
Holmes, operates on a plane somehow separate<lb/>
from the one that most men operate on. I<lb/>
inventor in Business Week and Popular Science, mind makes imaginative leaps that leave the mor-<lb/>
ed up here in Greenville, not exactly the Mecca of<lb/>
the industrial world. While at DuPont, he<lb/>
developed the Encoder and so just naturally<lb/>
headquarters his company here.<lb/>
Charles Cain's wife is MyTa Cain, the assistant<lb/>
to the vice-chancellor for academic affairs and an<lb/>
assistant professor of English here at ECU. They<lb/>
have two children, Meg, who begins her second<lb/>
year as a student at Princeton this fall, and<lb/>
Glenye, who is in the 7th grade.<lb/>
Cain earned his bachelor's degree at Vander-<lb/>
bilt University and his master's degree at<lb/>
Auburn.<lb/>
is developed and marketed by the Cain Encoder<lb/>
Company that has its headquarters in Greenville.<lb/>
The device can, when connected with any of<lb/>
several communications systems, read an elelctric<lb/>
or gas meter and report the reading and a number<lb/>
of other bits of information, including malfunc-<lb/>
tion and tampering.<lb/>
The device could save utilities companies a<lb/>
substantial amount of money that could be pass-<lb/>
ed on to the consumer. It will make time-of-day<lb/>
metering a possibility without the purchase of<lb/>
tal behind in a cloud of confused wonder. His<lb/>
taste in music runs to High Opera and his<lb/>
favorite album is The Greatest Hits of 1720<lb/>
which includes "Pacobel's Canon in D<lb/>
He can quote Milton, Shakespeare and<lb/>
Chaucer (in Middle English of course) as well as<lb/>
read German, Russian and Latin (some French<lb/>
too, enough to translate patent law).<lb/>
He is also an accomplished mechanic and has<lb/>
done most of the work of converting his Cessna<lb/>
to IFR himself. He has singlehandedly kept any<lb/>
number of cars on the road when they would<lb/>
The relatively peaceful exterior gives no hint otherwise have perished.<lb/>
that inside, Charles Cain is walking mayhem. No The Renaissance Man would certainly be<lb/>
machine is safe from his careful scrutiny, which Charles Cain in this day and time. He is a<lb/>
usually involves dismantling and studying the sublime blend of the artist and scientist as well as<lb/>
works' To be sure, the machine goes back the humanist. He moves with grace and ease<lb/>
together again, but only after its guts are examin- among his business partner Lazard Freres and his<lb/>
cd and the principle of its function is understood, less sophisticated friends such as reporters from<lb/>
" Cain's car is the first hint that he is not the or- The East Carolinian, .is gif is much more than<lb/>
dinary businessman he may appear to be. The car<lb/>
is a Plymouth Vaiiani that looks like it was in-<lb/>
volved in a hardware store holdup. Tools and<lb/>
gadgets of every description fill the back seat and<lb/>
trunk.<lb/>
Cain is also a private pilot and has been flying<lb/>
for more than 20 years. He owns a 1952 Cessna<lb/>
170B. The airplane reflects the personality of its<lb/>
owner in much the same way the car does. Out-<lb/>
side it loks like a lail-draager that has seen too<lb/>
much hard service as an Alaskan bush plane, but<lb/>
inside there is a small fortune in IFR radio equip-<lb/>
the sum of his talents. He is Plato's philosopher;<lb/>
he has seen the sun and is come back to the cave<lb/>
to enlighten the rest of us and yet has not lost any<lb/>
essence of humanity.<lb/>
Charles Cain is, besides being a Renaissance<lb/>
Man, a truly unselfish friend to many students<lb/>
and faculty members. He is generous with the lit-<lb/>
tle time that is his own and is always ready to<lb/>
share his wisdom and experience with his friends.<lb/>
Cain's skill as an engineer has gotten him jobs<lb/>
with such corporations as North American<lb/>
Rockwell (working on the guided missile projects<lb/>
sHMrTSWOBLP<lb/>
WELCOME BACK,<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID ID.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104E.REDBANKSRD.<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
relief from the silence.<lb/>
Despite the<lb/>
thousands of study<lb/>
handbooks that say<lb/>
that people must have<lb/>
absolute quiet to study,<lb/>
most of us seem to<lb/>
work a little better with<lb/>
a TV or radio going.<lb/>
(The same guidebooks<lb/>
say not to eat while stu-<lb/>
dying, and not to study<lb/>
without sitting up<lb/>
straight. I never paid<lb/>
any attention to them.)<lb/>
Having TV and radio<lb/>
to pre ide an electronic<lb/>
barrier of sound is one<lb/>
of the great changes<lb/>
that this century's<lb/>
technology has brought<lb/>
about. Just imagine liv-<lb/>
ing in, for example, the<lb/>
colonial days. People<lb/>
had to read and study<lb/>
in silence, unless they<lb/>
could afford to hire<lb/>
people to stand around<lb/>
making noise.<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
School of Bartending<lb/>
A DIVISION O BAH SERVICES INC<lb/>
LOCATED IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
E.C.S.Bs Experienced. Qualified Instructors can certify you<lb/>
as a Fully Trained Bartender upon completion of our<lb/>
Comprehensive Course in just Two Weeks!<lb/>
Bartending offers Career Opportunies, Great Pay, Flexible<lb/>
Hours, and Lots of Excitement!<lb/>
With Liquor by the Drink<lb/>
Qualified Mixologists are in GREAT DEMAND!<lb/>
Let us prepare you with The Ability end Diploma from<lb/>
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Upon Graduation you can take advantage of our Complete Job<lb/>
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Accepting Applications For Enrollment V<lb/>
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CALL NOW<lb/>
(919) 756-6644<lb/>
EACK ID COLLEGE<lb/>
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HOLLOWELL'S<lb/>
DRUG STORES<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
t Orangeades and Lemonades<lb/>
AaMt smalL33C<lb/>
rt large48C<lb/>
Fountain Coke and Pepsi<lb/>
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Banana Split.??????????????????????Je<lb/>
Sundaes?1.1<lb/>
Float<lb/>
smalL42C<lb/>
large62C<lb/>
Milkshakes62C<lb/>
Hot Dogs2forM<lb/>
We are open every day of the year to serve you.<lb/>
We have been in Greenville for over 50 years.<lb/>
This fountain special is offered only at<lb/>
Holloweirs ? 911 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Holloweirs ? 1700 West Sixth Street<lb/>
We have 3 stores to serve you in Greenville<lb/>
911 Dickinson Avenue 752-7105<lb/>
1700 West Sixth Street 758-4104<lb/>
315 Stantonsburg Road 757-1076<lb/>
Specials Good for 2 days only<lb/>
I<lb/>
ssx<lb/>
? ? ? -<lb/>
I<lb/>
:??<lb/>
m<lb/>
:5ft<lb/>
i<lb/>
sss:<lb/>
This Friday<lb/>
And Saturday!<lb/>
6 7<lb/>
10 ?L<lb/>
off All<lb/>
Regular Price<lb/>
Merchandise<lb/>
?(( JIXZ5sJ<lb/>
This is only for E.C.U. faculty and students,<lb/>
so you must bring your I.D. card and ask<lb/>
for your discount (exceptions: Polo and Pendleton)<lb/>
Lay-Away<lb/>
Put up a<lb/>
coat for<lb/>
only $10.00<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-9955<lb/>
VIRGINIA ?<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
10:00-9:00<lb/>
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m&amp;m<lb/>
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A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0032"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 25, 1981 Page 6<lb/>
Back-to - school sale<lb/>
Save on all<lb/>
plain pocket?<lb/>
jeans for<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
10.99<lb/>
Reg 13 50 Men's denim jeans<lb/>
The same great fit as the big best<lb/>
seller Polycotton blend Waist 28<lb/>
to 42<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
11.99<lb/>
Reg $15 Men's cord's in the<lb/>
same great fit, and fabric as the<lb/>
big seller Waist 28 to 4 2<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Pack-up values<lb/>
for back to school<lb/>
Special 6.44<lb/>
Feather weight nylon knapsack has a<lb/>
front pocket and top zipper closure.<lb/>
Dual adjustable padded shoulder<lb/>
straps. Washable and water repellent<lb/>
Save 8.50<lb/>
to 10.50<lb/>
on women's<lb/>
sportswear<lb/>
Sale 8.49<lb/>
to 13.49<lb/>
Ong $16 to $21 . Choose jeans or<lb/>
slacks, stripe shirts or solid shirts.<lb/>
Big saving for back to school<lb/>
clothes. Misses and junior sizes.<lb/>
15" X11" x4"<lb/>
Special 8.88<lb/>
Lightweight backpacks and roll bags<lb/>
make travelling a breeze! Constructed of<lb/>
tough nylon with a urethane coating for<lb/>
extra strength. Choice of handsome<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
Sale $12<lb/>
Reg. $15. Plain Pockets plaid shirt<lb/>
Easy care polycotton Slim fit style<lb/>
or regular fit Men s sizes S.M.L,XL<lb/>
Special 16.99<lb/>
30" footlocker with an enamel-like metal<lb/>
finish over plywood veneers. Top snap<lb/>
locks and handles. Measures<lb/>
30x16V2x1212" Choose from a wide<lb/>
range of colors.<lb/>
2<lb/>
5 off<lb/>
alarm clocks<lb/>
Timex<lb/>
fimex<lb/>
Timex<lb/>
Timex<lb/>
electric alarm, with snooze<lb/>
Keywood alarm, metal case<lb/>
lighted dial with snooze<lb/>
Daby ben. with alarm<lb/>
Reg Sale<lb/>
9 99 7.49<lb/>
1899 14.24<lb/>
1399 10.49<lb/>
1899 14.24<lb/>
R<lb/>
Whenever<lb/>
and work<lb/>
ury to a<lb/>
? my fih<lb/>
sold a thiJ<lb/>
"Whenl<lb/>
my firs' u<lb/>
in a rooij<lb/>
where n<lb/>
Shirley<lb/>
photos ol<lb/>
were ben<lb/>
'Thert<lb/>
tional I<lb/>
$350 a w<lb/>
I was mal<lb/>
smiling<lb/>
letter<lb/>
Paradincl<lb/>
and on<lb/>
scenic ps<lb/>
with stard<lb/>
do and Fl<lb/>
"I me<lb/>
but the<lb/>
couldn't<lb/>
Astaire<lb/>
'Don't <lb/>
1 was or<lb/>
came up<lb/>
and was<lb/>
want to<lb/>
To trui<lb/>
industr <lb/>
"I h<lb/>
Housner<lb/>
nouncer<lb/>
Bet You<lb/>
Tokar,<lb/>
Miller ai<lb/>
Profes<lb/>
with a si<lb/>
"I cal<lb/>
made m<lb/>
taught il<lb/>
Reep<lb/>
all his fl<lb/>
that reqi<lb/>
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were p<lb/>
birds coj<lb/>
scenic bi<lb/>
"Onc<lb/>
that a<lb/>
under tl<lb/>
just hit<lb/>
dog juj<lb/>
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For<lb/>
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Sale 7.19<lb/>
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Sale 4.39<lb/>
Reg. 5.49. Gym short with notched leg,<lb/>
elastic waist and navy stripe trim down<lb/>
sides. Polyestercotton. Grey. Assorted sizes<lb/>
25 off<lb/>
Back to school<lb/>
shoes for men &amp; women.<lb/>
Men's leather boat shoe<lb/>
Women's boai shoe<lb/>
reg $27 Sale 20 25<lb/>
reg $27 Sale 20 25<lb/>
Men's casual suede lace-up<lb/>
reg $22 Sale 1 6.50<lb/>
Women's casual leather lace-up<lb/>
reg $26 Sale 1 9.50<lb/>
22.99<lb/>
Beat the heat<lb/>
in the dorm<lb/>
with this<lb/>
three-speed box fan.<lb/>
Rib-cord<lb/>
bedspread.<lb/>
$14<lb/>
Rib-cord textured throw-<lb/>
style bedspread in easy-care<lb/>
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Shop a a.m. 'til 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Phone 756-2800<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0033"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1981<lb/>
Pe7<lb/>
S or<lb/>
torts<lb/>
20 25<lb/>
20 25<lb/>
Reep Recalls Hollywood Days<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Whenever 1 needed money 1 would quit teaching<lb/>
and work because teaching and painting is a lux-<lb/>
ury to a certain extent, and in my painting sales<lb/>
- my first 10 or 11 one-man shows ? I hadn't<lb/>
sold a thing.<lb/>
"When I first went to work in the film studios,<lb/>
my first job was on 'Duel in the Sun 1 worked<lb/>
in a room next to the Shirley Temple room,<lb/>
where two women were busy all day signing<lb/>
Shirley Temple's signature and sending out<lb/>
photos of her, and on the other side Tarzan films<lb/>
were being produced.<lb/>
"There 1 was, working for Selznick Interna-<lb/>
tional. I got paid an awful lot for those days,<lb/>
$350 a week which was about 10 times more than<lb/>
1 was making with the art school Recp noted,<lb/>
smiling.<lb/>
Later Reep worked as an illustrator on The<lb/>
Paradine Case in which James Mason starred,<lb/>
and on "Little Women He then became a<lb/>
scenic painter for MGM and worked on pictures<lb/>
with stars such as Jean Simmons, Marlon Bran-<lb/>
do and Fred Astaire.<lb/>
"I met some very profane Hollywood stars,<lb/>
but the stories that were told about the stars<lb/>
ouldn't really be believed. I was told Fred<lb/>
Astaire was a very hard man to get along with ?<lb/>
Don't have anything to do with him But while<lb/>
1 was on the set painting for 'Bandwagon he<lb/>
came up and talked to me for about a half hour<lb/>
and was just as nice a man as you would ever<lb/>
want to meet<lb/>
To this day Reep has many friends in the film<lb/>
industry. .<lb/>
"1 had (taught) a class once with Jerry<lb/>
Housner, George Fenneman (one-time an-<lb/>
nouncer for Groucho Marx's game show You<lb/>
Bel Your Life), Richard Crenna and Norman<lb/>
Tokar, who was the first Henry Aldrich, Sidney<lb/>
Miller and others<lb/>
Professor Reep remembers his class of artists<lb/>
with a smile.<lb/>
"1 called them my celebrity class, and tney<lb/>
made me laugh so much 1 don't know what I ever<lb/>
taught them<lb/>
Reep takes pride in his scenic paintings most ot<lb/>
all his film work. He explianed that it is an art<lb/>
that requires precision.<lb/>
"Many a day outside vhere the skies and trees<lb/>
were painted on a backboard, I've watched the<lb/>
tvrds come sailing in to land on a tree and hit the<lb/>
scenic backdrop and slide down to the ground<lb/>
"One day, although I didn't see it, I was told<lb/>
that a cat being chased by a dog tried to run<lb/>
under the dummy western set barroom door. He<lb/>
just hit the wall hard, was stunned and while the<lb/>
dog just watched in amazement, the cat<lb/>
recovered and ran away<lb/>
For "Bandwagon" Reep painted, in three<lb/>
weeks, a mural 500 feet long and a hundred feet<lb/>
Phonograph By Larry Zkherman<lb/>
ECU Artist-ln-Residence Edward Reep shown<lb/>
here discussing his "Lines and Occlusions<lb/>
Number 5 "To communicate, that's the rub.<lb/>
To give the private instruction that works and<lb/>
goes on to serve .<lb/>
??<lb/>
high of the city of New York.<lb/>
"But I never climbed a single ladder because<lb/>
we worked in an eight-story building, where on<lb/>
the sixth floor there were cuts in the floor. You<lb/>
just pressed a button, and the whole wall would<lb/>
go up or down. There were at least four murals<lb/>
going on at the same time. That was the heyday<lb/>
of motion pictures. Now they go on location<lb/>
more and more<lb/>
Even when he attended art school, Reep had a<lb/>
chance to get free-lance work in the film in-<lb/>
dustry But no matter how tough it was to make<lb/>
money during the Depression, the young artist<lb/>
refused to sacrifice respect for the art in order to<lb/>
cet a job.<lb/>
"1 remember once when I was called to the<lb/>
studio by a young man named Orson Welles,<lb/>
who is a couple of years older than me. Mr.<lb/>
Welles wanted me to illustrate Shakespeare s<lb/>
'Twelfth Night 'Hamlet 'Othello' - five<lb/>
books in al ? that he was going to rewrite tor<lb/>
high school consumption. After dickering with<lb/>
him ? they wanted to give me $3 a drawing, 15<lb/>
drawings in a book - 1 went back to the head of<lb/>
the art school and told him.<lb/>
"He said I should take no less than 515 a<lb/>
drawing. So I went back to RKO studios where<lb/>
Mr. Welles was having his shave and haircut at<lb/>
the time and yelling at me. He said 'Go in and<lb/>
talk to my business manager 1 did, and l got<lb/>
$15 a picture, $225 a book, which was a lot of<lb/>
money at the time. When 1 came back out, Mr.<lb/>
Welles said, 'Well, I see that you've reached an<lb/>
agreementFine. You understand I went to art<lb/>
school, and I'm going to put onion skins over<lb/>
those drawings so I can say, "Written and Il-<lb/>
lustrated by Orson Welles<lb/>
"I said 'You aren't going to do that with my<lb/>
drawings, Mr. Welles. I'll see you some other<lb/>
time And I walked out<lb/>
Although Reep enjoyed his work in films, he<lb/>
noted that painting and teaching were more im-<lb/>
portant to him. Most of the last thirty years of<lb/>
his life have been spent at the California Institute<lb/>
of the Arts (formerly the Chouinard Art In-<lb/>
stitute) where he was chairman of the painting<lb/>
department while Walt Disney was chairman of<lb/>
the board of trustees.<lb/>
"I was very fond of Disney, even though he was<lb/>
a very straight, conservative man, and I con-<lb/>
sidered myself a liberal. I think, in retrospect,<lb/>
that he was not all that extremely conservative,<lb/>
and 1 am not all that liberalWhen he died the<lb/>
school changed hands, and some new people<lb/>
were brought in. Then 1 decided there wasn t any<lb/>
future for me there<lb/>
For 11 years the professor's lively wit and<lb/>
wealth of experience have been helping young ar-<lb/>
tists at ECU grow. Reep seems to be as commit-<lb/>
ted to his students' work as he is to his own, and<lb/>
he has some definite ideas about what it takes to<lb/>
be a good teacher. .<lb/>
"To communicate - that's the rub. To give<lb/>
the private instruction that works and goes on to<lb/>
serve as a foundation for tomorrow's efforts to<lb/>
give the instruction that inspires, invigorates and<lb/>
be fully understood before moving on Reep<lb/>
wrote in a paper he once wrote about effec-<lb/>
tiveness in teaching.<lb/>
Part of that communication, Reep teels, is<lb/>
recognizing what level a student is capable of<lb/>
performing at and getting that student to work<lb/>
within guidelines, even if that means doing<lb/>
remedial work.<lb/>
A more practical concern for the school ot art<lb/>
stems from the art students' special needs in a<lb/>
university system, he continued.<lb/>
"We have not yet come of age in the school o<lb/>
art to the extent that our regimen is established<lb/>
bv us We should make our own schedule. We<lb/>
have got to either piggyback classes or extend art<lb/>
classes because the art student has special<lb/>
facilities problems. This is one of my greatest<lb/>
criticisms .<lb/>
Besides teaching, Reep sets aside a large por-<lb/>
tion of his day for painting. After a variety of<lb/>
professional experiences including working as a<lb/>
court reporter for Life magazine, preserving<lb/>
history in more than 60 paintings which will<lb/>
someday hang in a military museum for U.S. war<lb/>
memorabilia, working with men such as Ray<lb/>
Bradbury and Henry Dreyfuss, Ed Reep has set-<lb/>
tled in eastern North Carolina. But for him settl-<lb/>
ed does not mean to stagnate.<lb/>
"I'd hate to think I was stagnant. I try not to<lb/>
be. 1 think by trying to change that hopefully it<lb/>
will keep me from getting old. And until I reach<lb/>
senility, I'm happy trying to investigate different<lb/>
things.<lb/>
CASH PAID FOR DIAMONDS AND GOLD<lb/>
FLOYD G.<lb/>
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BUSINESS<lb/>
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FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
HELP SEND<lb/>
A STUDENT<lb/>
TO ECU<lb/>
For Each Student Who Opens an Account, We'll Give ECU<lb/>
One Dollar for Unrestricted Use as Scholarship Money<lb/>
x<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN'<lb/>
Tuesday Special<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
Beef tips wonions &amp; peppers or mushroom gravy,<lb/>
baked potato or French fries 8c Texas toast.<lb/>
Tuesday Only ? Free Tea<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
Take Out Service 2?03E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
Hours: 11:00a.m10:00p.m.Mon-Thur$ lOa.mll P.m. FhSun.<lb/>
Come by and open a checking account at any one of our three close-to-<lb/>
campus locations. With a regular checking account, you qualify for free<lb/>
checking as long as you keep a $200 minimum in a Planters checking or<lb/>
savings account.<lb/>
If minimum balances are not your strong point, we have a budget check-<lb/>
ing account for you, too.<lb/>
Planters National Bank in Greenville. When you consider service, conve-<lb/>
nience and all the extras, you'll find we're the logical choice.<lb/>
Planters National Bank<lb/>
PLANTERS<lb/>
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Downtown. Pitt Plaza. &amp; Carolina East Moil.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0034"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25. 1981<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Dorms: 'High Density Living'<lb/>
By DAVID NORMS<lb/>
Staff Writar<lb/>
The dorm room, with a little work in the<lb/>
decorating department, can be a wonderful place<lb/>
of quiet solitude ? a comforting shelter from the<lb/>
day-to-day pressures of life.<lb/>
You can lie down, relax and enjoy a refreshing<lb/>
interlude, that is you can until your roommate<lb/>
arrives with 12 obnoxious friends who are ready<lb/>
for a 100-decibel full-tracking of the new Van<lb/>
Halen album.<lb/>
Peace and solitude are exploded and blown<lb/>
away in a sea of beer cans and thundering music<lb/>
as a thought forms in your mind: "I've got to get<lb/>
rid of this guy or 111 go crazy<lb/>
The "roommate crisis" is something that<lb/>
strikes one out of every one college student at<lb/>
some time in his or her university career. Dor-<lb/>
mitory living is an excellent example of "high<lb/>
density population sort of like those ex-<lb/>
periments where they put hundreds of rats in a<lb/>
cage, and eventually they all kill each other.<lb/>
Pressure is bound to build up in a situation<lb/>
that throws two perfect strangers (or even im-<lb/>
perfect strangers) together in such tiny, uncom-<lb/>
fortable cells.<lb/>
Sometimes roommates may turn out to be<lb/>
merely harmless ecentrics.<lb/>
One friend of mine roomed with a guy who<lb/>
polished the bottoms of his shoes and drank<lb/>
Texas Pete.<lb/>
Another shared his room with someone who<lb/>
only listened to Black Sabbath albums and went<lb/>
to bed at 8 a.m.<lb/>
It's very important 'hat roommates have<lb/>
something in common, like schedules. For exam-<lb/>
ple, one student ? who for security reasons (my<lb/>
security) will be referred to as "X" ? would<lb/>
make everyone in the dorm shut up at ten so he<lb/>
could go to bed.<lb/>
Of course it was okay for him to get up at six<lb/>
and turn on the radio, television and stereo at the<lb/>
same time at an intense level of volume. All this<lb/>
invariably woke up "Y his roommate, not to<lb/>
mention half the dorm. "Y" usually came in at<lb/>
two in the morning and got revenge by snapping<lb/>
on the overhead light and stomping around<lb/>
enough to wake up "X<lb/>
Temperature regulation is another source of<lb/>
friction between roommates. Some people like<lb/>
the window open and the fan on in January.<lb/>
Others are glad that dorms are provided with<lb/>
heat in April and wouldn't think of opening a<lb/>
window and spoiling the 95 degree temperature<lb/>
in the room.<lb/>
Also, it often helps to have a roommate who<lb/>
likes different kinds of food than you do. This<lb/>
helps avoid having a roomie eat you out of house<lb/>
and home.<lb/>
There have been students who had to keep<lb/>
their food in other people's refrigerators to keep<lb/>
it out of reach of their ravenous roomies.<lb/>
There may come a time when the absurdities of<lb/>
the situation becomes too much and it becomes<lb/>
necessary to get rid of your roommate.<lb/>
Two things p remember are that the most<lb/>
flagrantly obnoxious people never have room-<lb/>
mates and that murder is frowned upon by most<lb/>
dorm hall advisors.<lb/>
Have you ever known two roommates who<lb/>
particularly dislike each other and were frantical-<lb/>
ly determined to drive the other one out?<lb/>
In such instances both become stubborn and<lb/>
refuse to move out, no matter what happens.<lb/>
They go through a war of attrition, bringing in<lb/>
their most obnoxious friends for parties when the<lb/>
!ar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
other is trying to sleep or eating all his food if he<lb/>
is gone.<lb/>
t People have spent months stubbornly enjoying<lb/>
the misery of this kind of domestic squabble.<lb/>
If you need to drive out a roommate,<lb/>
remember to act more weirdly thaSi he docs. Try<lb/>
putting a sheet over your head and chanting<lb/>
obscure mantras. A week of this will drive him<lb/>
out or make him kill you.<lb/>
Burning your roommate in effigy is useful as a<lb/>
hint that he is unwanted. Actually burning him is<lb/>
in most cases too drastic.<lb/>
A James Bond-like device called an "ejector<lb/>
bed" is useful but is not practical if you do not<lb/>
live on the top floor.<lb/>
Letter bombs and even transfer forms from the<lb/>
I.<lb/>
&amp; II<lb/>
tf.<lb/>
iM<lb/>
Bob Hearing ? Manager<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
BgnmnBaaggBBiggBB<lb/>
housing office have been used successfully.<lb/>
Once your roommate is gone you may want to<lb/>
avoid future trouble by hanging onto your<lb/>
coveted private room. Stay away as much as<lb/>
possible to avoid contact with prospective room-<lb/>
mates. Cultivate eccentric interests, such as<lb/>
tarantula growing or Nazism as useful tools for<lb/>
avoiding roommates.<lb/>
Of course, potential roommates can be driven<lb/>
off with anything from a simple "no" to small-<lb/>
arms fire. The surest way, however, is to go to<lb/>
the housing office and pay the extra fee for a<lb/>
private room if one is available.<lb/>
The cost may be high, but it's worth it when<lb/>
you see that "PAID" receipt wipe that smirk off<lb/>
tjie face of some smart alec.<lb/>
'Two Tickets To Timbuctoo<lb/>
tfenneth Richter's travel fUm "Two Tickets to Timbuctoo" will be<lb/>
presented on January 26 at Hendrtx Theatre. The film is part of the MSC<lb/>
Travel-Ad venture Film Series.<lb/>
SERO<lb/>
SHIRTMAKERS<lb/>
Nothing is obvious<lb/>
except the quality.<lb/>
Sold exclusively at<lb/>
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2!a nieUotie ttetmbu tfmon<lb/>
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Present ECU Student I.D. Foi<lb/>
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Good at participating restaurants.<lb/>
Offer expires September 18, 1981.<lb/>
Please present coupon to cashier before<lb/>
ordering L'mlt one coupon per customer per<lb/>
visit.<lb/>
Beef Sandwiches For Only ?<lb/>
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Good at participating restaurants.<lb/>
Offer expires September 18, 1981.<lb/>
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Si<lb/>
help thd<lb/>
SupermJ<lb/>
aiding<lb/>
caught<lb/>
He hi<lb/>
held it ij<lb/>
pearanc<lb/>
The kid<lb/>
1941,<lb/>
animate<lb/>
action,<lb/>
and<lb/>
then bv<lb/>
Mole<lb/>
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Siege<lb/>
pulps,<lb/>
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Doc wj<lb/>
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Pre<lb/>
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tion<lb/>
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crean<lb/>
Superr<lb/>
be dif<lb/>
wester<lb/>
Lord<lb/>
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began<lb/>
in full<lb/>
rhetor<lb/>
on the<lb/>
were<lb/>
claime<lb/>
Flash<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0035"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
Iviill be<lb/>
eMS(<lb/>
1<lb/>
i?<lb/>
lie<lb/>
wide Square<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
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-J<lb/>
Superheroes A bound<lb/>
Continued Front Page 3<lb/>
help them, when I could barely help myself?<lb/>
Superman was the answer. And Superman,<lb/>
aiding the downtrodden and oppressed, has<lb/>
caught the imagination of the world<lb/>
He has caught our imagination, indeed, and<lb/>
held it in his mighty grasp ever since his first ap-<lb/>
pearance in Action Comics number 1, June 1938.<lb/>
The kid from Krypton flew into films as early as<lb/>
1941, the subject of an excellent series of<lb/>
animated films. Soon, he was incarnated in live<lb/>
action, first by Kirk Alyn in "Superman" (1948)<lb/>
and "Superman vs. The Atom Man" (1950),<lb/>
model of a hero insuperable, a real hero, even if<lb/>
his achievements were in remote and fantastic<lb/>
worlds. I had a profound affection for Flash<lb/>
Gordon and his creator, along with those of my<lb/>
age group. When I think of it, it seems as though<lb/>
he actually existed. At times in my films, I seek to<lb/>
find the color and verve of Flash Gordon and his<lb/>
world . .  ?  .<lb/>
Ironically, the style of Fellini's films found<lb/>
Flash Gordon ? for the recent movie of the same<lb/>
name was designed by Danilo Donati, who<lb/>
designed many of Fellini's masterpieces.<lb/>
Though the film "Flash Gordon starring<lb/>
Sam Jones in the role and Max Von Sydow as<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1911<lb/>
Pc9<lb/>
Tight Jeans Are A Pain<lb/>
I<lb/>
ana superman vs. inc ium iviiui yijvt, ????? ? -?  , .  n an<lb/>
ft. by GeorgeR?v? in "Superman and The ?J;?2SiZ?Sof"<lb/>
Mole Man" (1951) and the long-running TV<lb/>
show.<lb/>
Siegel and Shuster were influenced by the<lb/>
pulps, cheap action-packed paperbacks, par-<lb/>
ticularly by the popular pulp hero Doc Savage.<lb/>
The Man of Bronze rather than the Man of Steel,<lb/>
Doc was the prototype for Superman, occa-<lb/>
sionally even being called by that name. Doc was<lb/>
impersonated by Ron (TV's Tarzan) Ely in the<lb/>
mid-up's movie, but has gone on the greater<lb/>
cinematic success in the incarnation of Indiana<lb/>
Jones, hero of "Raiders of the Lost Ark Like<lb/>
Jones, Doc was a globe-trotting scientistadven-<lb/>
turer. (Incidentally, the pulp's most popular hero<lb/>
was The Shadow, who is currently the subject of<lb/>
a movie script by the co-author of the new Super- Eyes Only <lb/>
extreme, it showed the continuing popularity of a<lb/>
character who first appeared in 1934 in the classic<lb/>
comic strip by Alex Raymond. Flash, a blue-<lb/>
eyed, blond Earthman fighting a repressive<lb/>
regime on the planet Mongo, is needed by us on<lb/>
Earth. The condition of Fellini's country during<lb/>
his childhood, not to mention Ming's mad<lb/>
monarchy, bears a sinister resemblance to the<lb/>
state of many modern nations, including this<lb/>
one It's a good thing that Mr. Gordon's back.<lb/>
Bond is back too. First seen in the 1952 novel<lb/>
"Casino Royale" by Ian Fleming, who used his<lb/>
WWII secret service experiences as inspiration,<lb/>
James Bond has strutted his stuff in eleven<lb/>
movies, the latest being this summer's "For Your<lb/>
man films, David Newman.)<lb/>
Pre-dating Doc by many years is a character<lb/>
who first appeared in the October 1912 issue of<lb/>
"All-Story Magazine the brainchild of Edgar<lb/>
Rice Burroughs. Though Burroughs became a<lb/>
writer only as a desperate effort against starva-<lb/>
tion his intrepid jungle man, Tarzan, has earn-<lb/>
ed a place in fiction's hall of fame beside other<lb/>
creations like Sherlock Holmes, Macbeth and<lb/>
Superman, maybe even Mickey Mouse. It would<lb/>
be difficult indeed to imagine any child in the<lb/>
western hemisphere who has not witnessed the<lb/>
Lord of the Jungle in action either in books, on<lb/>
film and TV, or in the comics. Burrough's<lb/>
characters are timeless ? and apparently "more<lb/>
popular today than ever" (quote from<lb/>
"Mediascene").<lb/>
Tarzan is indeed quite popular these days (even<lb/>
summing his desecration by Bo Derek and com-<lb/>
pany in the excreble "Tarzan the Ape Man") and<lb/>
timeless, which is the secret of his animalistic ap-<lb/>
peal He belongs not to this or any other record-<lb/>
ed age but to the primeval past. He is Adam<lb/>
before the fall, a superbly masculine savage<lb/>
whom the shackles of civilization cannot hold.<lb/>
Men want to emulate him, women want to<lb/>
monkev around with him.<lb/>
Famed film director Federico Fellini (in the in-<lb/>
troduction to the Steranko History of Comics,<lb/>
Volume One) wrote of the influence superheroes<lb/>
had on himself and his generation:<lb/>
"When the gallant vicissitudes of the heroes<lb/>
began to gain in popularity, Ital?was navigating<lb/>
in full Fascism, in full lugubriouTand repressive<lb/>
rhetoric. Fascism, it is true, relied on boldness,<lb/>
on the necessity to dare, fight and win, but these<lb/>
were only fastidious words, and those who pro-<lb/>
claimed such virtues were not really appealing.<lb/>
Flash Gordon, instead, appeared instantly as a<lb/>
Being Bond is the wish-dream of modern man.<lb/>
The super-spy is suave, sophisticated, sexy: a<lb/>
heroic Hugh Hefner. The character could be con-<lb/>
sidered a creature trapped by his culture ? so far<lb/>
he's one cf the few superheroes to have to hold a<lb/>
steady job. He's weighted down by the countless<lb/>
commercial paraphernalia of our capitalistic<lb/>
society ? Fleming's books are filled with detail-<lb/>
ed descriptions of Bond's favorite foods, clothes,<lb/>
cars and contraptions (every real Bond buff<lb/>
knows his hero won't step outside without a 7.65<lb/>
caliber Walther PPK in a Berns Martin Triple-<lb/>
draw holster). He is even officially known by a<lb/>
number ? 007 ? rather than a name.<lb/>
Christopher Reeve at "He Mm ?f Steel<lb/>
But we get the impression that beneath all that<lb/>
lies another Bond. He utilizes the trappings of<lb/>
our over-civilized society but does it so effortless-<lb/>
ly and flippantly he seems to be making fun of it<lb/>
? and us. The real Bond is a brute ? a red-<lb/>
handed, woman-raping wild man.<lb/>
Which brings us to the most savage superhero<lb/>
of all, Conan. Creatd by Robert E. Howard, an<lb/>
erratic writer who killed himself at the age of 30<lb/>
in 1936, Conan has more of Bond's modern man-<lb/>
nerisms. A product of the Myborian Age, a<lb/>
mythical period before the dawn of recorded<lb/>
history, Conan is a bloody, often-beserk bar-<lb/>
barian, at various times in his carnage-filled<lb/>
career a pirate, a professional thief, a mercenary<lb/>
soldier, a hired killer.<lb/>
Howard's hell-raising hero will soon be seen in<lb/>
an upcoming big-budget film. He's been quite<lb/>
popular in pulps, paperbooks and comic books,<lb/>
dating back to his initial appearance almost 50<lb/>
years ago, in the short story "The Phoenix On<lb/>
the Sword" in the December 1932 issue of<lb/>
"Weird Tales" magazine.<lb/>
Why then should this blood-thirsty savage not<lb/>
be a cinematic superstar? Conan will quite likely<lb/>
be the national idol of the '80's ? a symbol of<lb/>
how far we as a nation have sunk, a reason why<lb/>
we have to yell for heroes in the first place.<lb/>
Tight jeans may<lb/>
cause vaginitis, a health<lb/>
hazard affecting one<lb/>
out of five women.<lb/>
And summertime in-<lb/>
creases the hazard.<lb/>
Hot weather, wet<lb/>
bathing suits, pan-<lb/>
tyhose, tight jeans, and<lb/>
synthetic underpants<lb/>
that don't "breathe"<lb/>
all provide the in-?<lb/>
cubating environment<lb/>
thai causes vaginitis or<lb/>
inflammation of the<lb/>
vagina.<lb/>
About half the cases<lb/>
of vaginitis are caused woman who is apt to<lb/>
by monilia, a yeast in- discontinue treatment<lb/>
fection, with symptoms<lb/>
of itching, burning,<lb/>
and abnormal<lb/>
discharge.<lb/>
Just in time for the<lb/>
vaginitis season is a<lb/>
new, quick, treatment<lb/>
for moniUa. Treatment<lb/>
has been cut from 14 <lb/>
. to 7 . . . now to 3 days<lb/>
as a result of the FDA's<lb/>
approval of Mycelex-G<lb/>
3-day therapy.<lb/>
This is especially<lb/>
helpful for the average<lb/>
when the symptoms<lb/>
subside, usually within<lb/>
three days, but before<lb/>
the infection is<lb/>
eliminated.<lb/>
Other common<lb/>
causes of vaginitis in-<lb/>
clude sexual contact,<lb/>
towels and wash rags<lb/>
used by others, vitamin<lb/>
and diet deficiencies<lb/>
that weaken resistance,<lb/>
prolonged use of an-<lb/>
tibiotic and steroid<lb/>
medications.<lb/>
PHONE 758-4056<lb/>
BOYD'S BARBER &amp;<lb/>
HAIR STYLING<lb/>
By Appointments<lb/>
1008 S.EVANS<lb/>
GREENVILLE,<lb/>
sryt<lb/>
Welcome Back Students<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
JJ<lb/>
from<lb/>
Morehead City<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
We are having a PARTY ?<lb/>
UBlDjE CUM Pl2iATO'<lb/>
come CELEBRA TE the new<lb/>
school year with us<lb/>
?AADE amUWTtH<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BEVERAGE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
FRIDAY, AUG. 28th 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m<lb/>
758-5982 321 E. 10th St.<lb/>
ECU DINING SERVICES<lb/>
MEAL PLANS ON SALE<lb/>
IN<lb/>
JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
(Remodeling Now Underway)<lb/>
9:00 A.M6:00 P.M.<lb/>
In your life!<lb/>
Our 2020 Meal Plan<lb/>
offers "all you can ear" for only<lb/>
Put a little sun<lb/>
HANGING<lb/>
BASKETS now 588<lb/>
6 in. FOLIAGE 249reg.5.9?<lb/>
CLIP THIS COUPON &amp; SAVE!<lb/>
LOCATED 1 Vt MILES SOdYH OF TV STATION ON EVANS ST. EXTENSION<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0036"/><lb/>
1HM VS1 C AROl 1N1AN AUGUST 25, 1981 Page 10<lb/>
tAg0AJlr ,0UT COLUU Ttif Wf0 NAj<lb/>
W look!<lb/>
8V Pvip tiotfi<lb/>
Wise Words About ECU<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 1<lb/>
noisy and easv to get<lb/>
lost in.<lb/>
" ou will have in-<lb/>
ctors that are ex-<lb/>
iraordinarv 1 "hey will<lb/>
be viable scholars, in-<lb/>
terested in their sub-<lb/>
rhe will be unin-<lb/>
timidated b genius,<lb/>
iiid undiscouraged b<lb/>
athetic and dull au-<lb/>
snces. The) will be<lb/>
frequent, but regular.<lb/>
The others will de-<lb/>
mand attendance upon<lb/>
punishment, read from<lb/>
t text, let you leave<lb/>
. and credit ou<lb/>
with merely the ability<lb/>
to understand what is<lb/>
taught. There is a way<lb/>
to successfully deal<lb/>
with this type of in-<lb/>
uctor but 1 don't<lb/>
a i Perhaps death<lb/>
depilitory.<lb/>
rher s a woman in<lb/>
Admissions office<lb/>
med Mi - w hiteside.<lb/>
a saint. She is<lb/>
tnd intelligent<lb/>
? ai ' She can<lb/>
i. any ol our<lb/>
tions herself, or<lb/>
send you to so-<lb/>
le ot equal sinceri-<lb/>
can.<lb/>
i e things ai e im-<lb/>
Camouflaged Fatlquas And T-<lb/>
 , Sifting Bags Backpacks,<lb/>
no. Equipment, Slant Tond<lb/>
. Dlshas, And Ovnr 700 Dif-<lb/>
Nnw And Uand items<lb/>
Cowboy Boots ?M 95<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans Street<lb/>
possible to do anything<lb/>
about.<lb/>
1) Bad food in the<lb/>
cafeteria.<lb/>
2) Math 65 ? required<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
3) Parking problems.<lb/>
4) Dorm Counselors<lb/>
who take their job too<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
5) The heat.<lb/>
6) The rain.<lb/>
7) The inability of cam-<lb/>
pus cops to be<lb/>
everywhere at once.<lb/>
There are literally<lb/>
hundreds of clubs on<lb/>
this campus. There are<lb/>
cheap private music<lb/>
lessons available, and<lb/>
the music building re-<lb/>
mains open late<lb/>
everynight.<lb/>
There are student art<lb/>
shows and recitals and<lb/>
the departments are<lb/>
strong.<lb/>
This college can be<lb/>
more than a place to<lb/>
wait out the final years<lb/>
of your adolescence. It<lb/>
is not the Harvard of<lb/>
the South, but there are<lb/>
programs and resources<lb/>
at this university that<lb/>
will enable one to learn<lb/>
a great deal. One can<lb/>
grow beyond the scope<lb/>
and emphasis of this<lb/>
university, but merits<lb/>
of this institution are<lb/>
varied and can inspire a<lb/>
sense of the worth of<lb/>
intellectual develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The "EZU" concept<lb/>
is an attitude, not an<lb/>
absolute.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA<lb/>
MONEY?<lb/>
immediate opening for<lb/>
student to sell complete<lb/>
hne of screen printed<lb/>
sportswear Excellent<lb/>
commission for<lb/>
energetic person<lb/>
Rush resume to<lb/>
SPORTS&amp; SOUNDS<lb/>
Sherow Plaza<lb/>
Sherow, S. C. 29520<lb/>
THE SAVING PLACE<lb/>
White Good Sole<lb/>
Tuesday thru Saturday<lb/>
(No ?-amchecks on items below)<lb/>
Ik JM Our Reg IV 97<lb/>
t97 Twin Size<lb/>
Comforters<lb/>
Assorted styles, easy to care tor<lb/>
Full or Queen Size Reg 24 97 . . .<lb/>
16 97<lb/>
Windsor Blanket 3.57<lb/>
Laurel Blanket5.97<lb/>
Baronet Blanket 8.97<lb/>
Wovenaire Blanket 10.97<lb/>
Classic Blanket12.97<lb/>
(All above are<lb/>
standard 72 x 90 size)<lb/>
EASTERN N.Cs NO. 1 BEACH CLUB<lb/>
WELCOMES BACK<lb/>
ALLE.C.U. STUDENTS!<lb/>
? s? Doubt. ShHl. FlaVFttMd i t) <lb/>
?? ijuMcSAM FlaFM4 ?" ,<lb/>
HI Standard PiIIowcmm Pr '?'?'<lb/>
??nr? ? - wk s<lb/>
Mattress<lb/>
Pad Sale<lb/>
Twin6 00<lb/>
Full?00<lb/>
Queen 12.00<lb/>
j 5.47<lb/>
Koolnite<lb/>
Sheet Blanket<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
f V<lb/>
Thin blanket for chilly nights<lb/>
when little is needed.<lb/>
4.97<lb/>
Dainty Daisy<lb/>
Sheets<lb/>
No iron sheets in floral pat<lb/>
terns. Color choice<lb/>
Weekly Beginning September:<lb/>
MON<lb/>
BEST IN BEACH MUSIC<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
LADIES' NIGHT - BRING YOUR NICKLES<lb/>
WED<lb/>
HUMP NITE - BRING YOUR QUARTERS -<lb/>
25C<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
OVER THE HUMP NIGHT<lb/>
The Weekend Begins Here . . . Don't Miss It<lb/>
With the Best in Beach<lb/>
END OF THE WEEK 3-7 P.M. BUCKET PARTY<lb/>
BRING YOUR BUCKET UP TO 32 OZ.<lb/>
GET IT FILLED UP FOR $1.00<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
AFTER THE GAME PARTY<lb/>
Relax and Enjoy After Latest Football Game<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
THE ALWAYS FAMOUS NICKEL NITE!<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 752-9745<lb/>
<pb facs="00057417_0037"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>