<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057425_0001"/>
?he iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 56 No. 9<lb/>
Greenville.N.C. Tuesday, September 22, 1981<lb/>
20 Pages<lb/>
English Department<lb/>
Chairman Resigning<lb/>
B DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
Dr. W Erwin Hester, chairman<lb/>
of the department of English at East<lb/>
Carolina University foi 14 years,<lb/>
will be leaving his position at the<lb/>
end of the summer session ol 1982<lb/>
to become a full-time professor.<lb/>
"I have served as chairman ol the<lb/>
ish department since 1968 and<lb/>
feel that fourteen years is lone<lb/>
enough foi a person to chair a ma-<lb/>
jor department Hester said. The<lb/>
1 nglish department should. I<lb/>
believe, continue its progress under<lb/>
adership<lb/>
Several improvements made<lb/>
Dr. Hester's leadership in-<lb/>
clude the development of a jour-<lb/>
ism minor, a concentration in<lb/>
writinj and a master's<lb/>
degree qualifying teachers for two<lb/>
ears colleges.<lb/>
Many professional journals have<lb/>
also been published under Dr.<lb/>
Hester's direction, including<lb/>
'Teaching English in the Two-Year<lb/>
College "Children's Folklore<lb/>
Newsletter" and the "Tar River<lb/>
Poetry" magazine.<lb/>
In his letter of resignation, Hester<lb/>
expressed that the English depart-<lb/>
ment "has grown to one of the most<lb/>
productive at East Carolina, both in<lb/>
quantity and, more importantly, in<lb/>
quality. The active enrollment in<lb/>
our graduate program has at least<lb/>
tripled. During a time when virtual-<lb/>
ly, all English departments have ex-<lb/>
perienced a serious decline in the<lb/>
number of undergraduate majors,<lb/>
we have maintained a large and<lb/>
vigorous program<lb/>
Dr. Hester also stated that he<lb/>
would encourage his replacement to<lb/>
continue work on combining the<lb/>
broadcasting and journalism minors<lb/>
into a journalism major.<lb/>
"The English department has<lb/>
been working toward the develop-<lb/>
ment of major communications.<lb/>
This is currently awaiting final ap-<lb/>
proval he said. Dr. Hester warn-<lb/>
ed, however, that the development<lb/>
of such a program would take time.<lb/>
Other activities begun during Dr.<lb/>
Hester's term as chairman include<lb/>
the East Carolina Folklore Archive,<lb/>
the Language Arts Conference<lb/>
which is now in its tenth year, and<lb/>
the Children's Literary Conference,<lb/>
now in its fourth year.<lb/>
Dr. W. Erwin Hester ??<lb/>
After 14 years as the chairman of the English department at East Carolina, Dr. Hester announced his resignation<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Little Freedom At Liberty Baptist<lb/>
NCHBURG, V a.<lb/>
,i i;s k ? l hnson, a sweet<lb/>
I and good-natured student,<lb/>
a as attracted to a woman he sa on<lb/>
-us one da . 1 ike any other stu-<lb/>
ison figured the logical<lb/>
ould be to ask her for a date.<lb/>
unlike most students. Ricky<lb/>
?son needed his dean's permis-<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Permission to date is nothing<lb/>
isual at 1 ibertv Baptist College,<lb/>
where Johnson was enrolled. I iber-<lb/>
tv, Baptot is the academic pasture<lb/>
damentalisl preacher Jerry<lb/>
Falwell's electronic ministry.<lb/>
Falwell, who is best known as the<lb/>
president of the Moral Majo<lb/>
- students need administration<lb/>
consent before going on a date,<lb/>
which must then be spent in a<lb/>
designated dating area.<lb/>
-s Johnson discovered, the ad-<lb/>
ation doesn't always go<lb/>
. Aitr. students' dating wishes,<lb/>
ecialb<lb/>
as in Johnson's case<lb/>
the two students are not of the same<lb/>
race.<lb/>
But such is life at I ibertv Baptist,<lb/>
which Falwell opened in September,<lb/>
191 as an academic antidote to<lb/>
"the dark spiritual condition of the<lb/>
world He strongly disapproves of<lb/>
the evolutionary theories and situa-<lb/>
tional ethics of other colleges, so<lb/>
I ibertv Baptist promotes higher<lb/>
education as a hteralist Christian ex-<lb/>
erase. In its first year, Liberty Bap-<lb/>
tist's enrollment was 110 students,<lb/>
who sometimes had to attend classes<lb/>
held in condemned buildings around<lb/>
Lynchburg. But this fall, Falwell<lb/>
welcomes some 3000 students to a<lb/>
24-building campus on a mountain<lb/>
outside town.<lb/>
While the campus isn't Iv<lb/>
1 eague  the buildings are<lb/>
prefabricated and students sleep<lb/>
tour to a room - Falwell regards its<lb/>
construction as "miracle<lb/>
Besides miracles, the college relies<lb/>
on tuition and contributions<lb/>
solicited during Falwell's weekly<lb/>
televised "Old Time Gospel Hour<lb/>
It has raised enough money to offer<lb/>
bachelors degrees in nine fields. It<lb/>
was accredited last December by the<lb/>
Southern Association of Colleges<lb/>
and Schools.<lb/>
Falwell wants to take it higher.<lb/>
His goal is "putting the school on<lb/>
the level of Harvard<lb/>
Yale, for one, doesn't want it<lb/>
there. Yale President A. Bartlett<lb/>
Giamatti raised a national con-<lb/>
troversy recently when, in his writ-<lb/>
ten message to Yale freshmen, he<lb/>
denounced Falwell and the Moral<lb/>
Majority as "peddlers of coercion"<lb/>
who are "angry at change, rigid in<lb/>
the application of slogans (and) ab-<lb/>
solutist in morality<lb/>
Moral Majority spokesman Cal<lb/>
Thomas replied that "Giamatti's<lb/>
speech was totally false and un-<lb/>
founded<lb/>
Yet Liberty Baptist openly and<lb/>
cheerfully flaunts most of the tenets<lb/>
of liberal education - free and open<lb/>
inquiry, skepticism, etc.  that<lb/>
distinguish good colleges from the<lb/>
mediocre.<lb/>
"Anytime (faculty members) start<lb/>
teaching something we don't like<lb/>
Falwell savs, "we cut the money<lb/>
off<lb/>
He also flaunts academic or-<lb/>
thodoxy in his admissions stan-<lb/>
dards, which require not only grades<lb/>
but demonstrably good "moral<lb/>
character" and an acceptance of<lb/>
Jesus Christ as the applicant's per-<lb/>
sonal savior.<lb/>
"You must be a horn-again<lb/>
Christian to be admitted to our col-<lb/>
lege summarizes President Pierre<lb/>
Guillerman. As part of the admis-<lb/>
sions process, students must write<lb/>
autodiographical descriptions of<lb/>
their conversions.<lb/>
After being admitted, students<lb/>
operate in a highly-structured and<lb/>
restrictive environment. "If a stu-<lb/>
dent is not from a disciplined<lb/>
home Ricky Johnson says, "it is a<lb/>
cultural shock. The rules are clear-<lb/>
cut, but you don't actually unders-<lb/>
tand it until you live it<lb/>
There is, for example, the<lb/>
elaborate reprimand system.<lb/>
Students can receive reprimands<lb/>
for engaging in a wide array of<lb/>
recreational activities. Marijuana is<lb/>
strictly forbidden, as is drinking,<lb/>
dancing and going to movies.<lb/>
Rock music, which Falwell con-<lb/>
siders "the devil's anthem is ab-<lb/>
solutely prohibited. So is country<lb/>
and western music.<lb/>
Students can be suspended for<lb/>
dancing, swearing, reading por-<lb/>
nography, or visiting the dorm<lb/>
(including the lobby) of a member<lb/>
of the opposite sex.<lb/>
Automatic expulsion occurs it a<lb/>
student uses drugs, joins a<lb/>
demonstration or riot, or indulges in<lb/>
"immoral behavior<lb/>
But Liberty Baptist students don't<lb/>
have much of a chance to sin. Dorm<lb/>
officials inspect their rooms daily,<lb/>
while a guard oversees the single<lb/>
road entrance to the campus.<lb/>
Students must sign out before leav-<lb/>
ing. They have to be back by 10:30<lb/>
p.m. on weeknights, and 11:30 p.m.<lb/>
on Friday and Saturdays.<lb/>
Once in, Prayer Elders conduct<lb/>
devotions at curfew times. The<lb/>
prayer sessions, like twice-weekly<lb/>
attendence at Falwell's Thomas<lb/>
Road Baptist Church, are man-<lb/>
datory.<lb/>
Faculty members also must<lb/>
adhere to rigid standards. "No way<lb/>
?ill we hire a divorced person for<lb/>
our faculty asserts associate Dean<lb/>
Glenn Sumrall. Teachers must "set<lb/>
Christian examples for the<lb/>
students<lb/>
They must avoid dancing and<lb/>
drinking beer, although Guillerman<lb/>
notes that "we don't go around<lb/>
looking in refrigerators<lb/>
All of which makes for a quiet.<lb/>
well-ordered presence in the com-<lb/>
munity. Norml town-gown ten-<lb/>
sions are minimal. Despite some<lb/>
complaints about students' attempts<lb/>
See COLLEGE. Page 5<lb/>
ECU Medical School<lb/>
Sponsoring Symposium<lb/>
On Mentally Retarded<lb/>
B MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
The diversity of attitudes toward<lb/>
mental retardation will be the topic<lb/>
of a -v mposium to be held in Green-<lb/>
ville on October 1 through the 3.<lb/>
The symposium, titled "Natural<lb/>
Abilities and Perceived Worth:<lb/>
Rights, Values and Retarded Per-<lb/>
sons iK sponsored by the East<lb/>
Carolina University School oi<lb/>
Medicine and the North Carolina<lb/>
Humanities Committee and will be<lb/>
held at the Ramada Inn on Green-<lb/>
Mile Boulevard. The conference<lb/>
directors are Dr. Loretta Kopelman<lb/>
and Dr. John Moskop, both on the<lb/>
faculty at the ECU medical school.<lb/>
According to Kopelman, the con-<lb/>
ference will provide a forum for the<lb/>
discussion of attitudes, policies and<lb/>
language concerning the mentally<lb/>
retarded. The symposium's<lb/>
multidisciplmary faculty will discuss<lb/>
these issues from a medical perspec-<lb/>
tive, as well as from those of law,<lb/>
philosophy, history and religion,<lb/>
she said<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinions4<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Sport!<lb/>
The symposium is intended for<lb/>
philosophers, physicians, nurses,<lb/>
allied health professionals and<lb/>
others concerned with the care of<lb/>
the mentally diminished, according<lb/>
to Kopelman, who is director of the<lb/>
humanities section for the school of<lb/>
medicine. However, the conference<lb/>
is open to the general public.<lb/>
Each of the speakers is renowned<lb/>
in his respective field, according to<lb/>
Kopelman. "1 am very pleased with<lb/>
the faculty we have slated she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Among the guest speakers will be<lb/>
Dr. David J. Rothman, who is a<lb/>
professor of history at the Center<lb/>
for Policy Research in New York<lb/>
City. Rothman will deliver a lecture<lb/>
titled "Who Speaks For The<lb/>
Retarded?" based on his books on<lb/>
the history of mental institutions.<lb/>
Kopelman later added that some<lb/>
of the distinguished speakers have<lb/>
agreed to attend this symposium for<lb/>
less than their usual honoraria. She<lb/>
attributed this willingness to the uni-<lb/>
que appeal of the upcoming con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
Kopelman says she hasn't an<lb/>
estimate yet as to the number that<lb/>
will attend, though she figures the<lb/>
total number of available seats at<lb/>
between 120 and 150. Advanced<lb/>
registration continues through<lb/>
September 24.<lb/>
Campaigning Begins<lb/>
In SGA Election<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Major A ttractions<lb/>
Thursday night drew a crowd of 4,000 fans and netted at profit for the ECU<lb/>
student union. See page 16.<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
unum Nr?s Vdilor<lb/>
Campaigning began last night at<lb/>
7:30 for the positions that need to be<lb/>
filled in the SGA legislature. The<lb/>
orientation meeting with the can-<lb/>
didates for day student represen-<lb/>
tative, dorm representative, and<lb/>
class officers was held at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Monday to acquaint them with elec-<lb/>
tion rules and procedures.<lb/>
The candidates are required to<lb/>
leave a $10 deposit with the elections<lb/>
chairperson, Dasha Efird-Little, to<lb/>
insure that they will clear away all<lb/>
posters and banners put up during<lb/>
the campaign. Little made it clear<lb/>
that if the elections committee had<lb/>
to remove any banners or posters,<lb/>
the candidate to whom those articles<lb/>
belonged would lose his or her $10.<lb/>
An itemized expense account is<lb/>
also required by the elections com-<lb/>
mittee, to be handed in no later than<lb/>
September 30. Each candidate for<lb/>
the legislature has a limit of $75 to<lb/>
spend on his or her campaign, and<lb/>
candidates for class officers have a<lb/>
limit of $100.<lb/>
Many of the slots in the<lb/>
legislature are still open, and several<lb/>
candidates are running unopposed.<lb/>
There are 20 day representative can-<lb/>
didates running for 25 slots. Out of<lb/>
26 dorm representative openings,<lb/>
only 19 are running for the posi-<lb/>
tions, and 4 dorms, namely Tyler,<lb/>
Fleming, Slay and Umstead have no<lb/>
representation at all.<lb/>
Each dorm will have two<lb/>
representatives in the legislature.<lb/>
Since Jones, Aycock and Scott<lb/>
dorms are the only ones that have<lb/>
three people running for the posi-<lb/>
tions, these candidates are the one<lb/>
who will need to campaign.<lb/>
The senior class candidates arc<lb/>
Russell Overman for President.<lb/>
Dwayne Naylor for Vice President,<lb/>
and John Greer for Secretary-<lb/>
Treasurer. All of these candidates<lb/>
are running unopposed.<lb/>
There is no one running for<lb/>
sophomore class or graduate class<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
The elections will be held on Oct.<lb/>
6. Voters must have an ECU l.D.<lb/>
card and an Activity card to cast a<lb/>
ballot.<lb/>
Ballot boxes will be located at the<lb/>
student store, the Croatan, Mingcs<lb/>
Coliseum, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and Belk building, as well as<lb/>
in the lobby of each dorm. Students<lb/>
are required to vote in their par-<lb/>
ticular precinct for legislators.<lb/>
However, there will be ballots at<lb/>
every poll to vote for class officers.<lb/>
All of the polls will be open from<lb/>
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. except the ones in<lb/>
Mendenhall, the Croatan, and the<lb/>
student store, which will remain<lb/>
open until 7 p.m.<lb/>
In case of a tie vote the date for a<lb/>
run-off election is set on October 13.<lb/>
TUDENT APPRECIATION WEEK<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
Downtown Greenville Association<lb/>
t<lb/>
1 11'11'liiWHt,1 wfc?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0002"/><lb/>
1HI I M l VROI INJAN<lb/>
t PTEMBER22. 19S<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Stc<lb/>
ONA<lb/>
The ECU 0<lb/>
Native 4metnam l<lb/>
ting their tuV n eel<lb/>
day Septembe'  8<lb/>
The rneetr'Q b<lb/>
5 30<lb/>
held in the<lb/>
oom at Rag!<lb/>
tend<lb/>
cso<lb/>
i ??. deni<lb/>
vt,n. ine j currently<lb/>
. ? ?<lb/>
??- graduate students i "?<lb/>
students ' e<lb/>
i hem strv anat m<lb/>
??  ?<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
??-? aqi<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
ents wl ?<lb/>
??- ?<lb/>
? ' ?'<lb/>
n al Work" C<lb/>
se' ices tot an apt ?' and<lb/>
eduie appo ? ? ?<lb/>
-?d interview s ?' ?<lb/>
ected to nave at leas'<lb/>
P E MAJORS<lb/>
Are you interested in educating<lb/>
tout peers' meeting maiors trom<lb/>
? schools? or having a great<lb/>
. The P E Maiors' student<lb/>
convention will be held October 2<lb/>
1 a' Western Carolina Univer<lb/>
 ?, It is a 9f??' opportunity tor<lb/>
majors An organuaional<lb/>
meeting tor ECU maiors will be<lb/>
heldmMingesSept :3at7 30pm<lb/>
togettvei 'h tello maiors<lb/>
om a ?op - you ouid like<lb/>
to present<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
Are you interested m learning<lb/>
more about Sign Language and the<lb/>
deat community at ECU' Then all<lb/>
you have to do is show up on Sept<lb/>
27 a' 6 p m m the multi purpose<lb/>
room at NVendenhall Student<lb/>
Center That s when the ECU Sign<lb/>
Language Club will have a cover<lb/>
d.sh supper, a captioned movie,<lb/>
elect officers for the 81 82 school<lb/>
year and nake plans tor an up<lb/>
coming camping trip You don't<lb/>
want to miss it<lb/>
SELF DEFENSE<lb/>
For the tubt time, the ECU<lb/>
Department ot intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering a<lb/>
Personal Self Defense Class You<lb/>
can learn to protect yourself dur<lb/>
mg an attack and prevent miury to<lb/>
yourself This is not karate, but is<lb/>
a practical approach to self<lb/>
defense The class will be on (von<lb/>
day at 6 30 p m in Memorial<lb/>
Gym The instructor. Joe Paler<lb/>
mo, requests that you wear loose,<lb/>
comfortable clothing Register in<lb/>
Room 204 Memorial Gym or at the<lb/>
class Cost tor the eight week ses<lb/>
sion is $5<lb/>
PACE<lb/>
The ? Una period loi 'he Protes<lb/>
, id fcdmmtstcative Creer<lb/>
. ,mination iPACEi 'S from<lb/>
tember 14 through October 13<lb/>
? ma'on .s available M 'he<lb/>
mi Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office A sufficient score on PACE<lb/>
? Government<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped S?u<lb/>
dent Services needs applications<lb/>
trom persons interested m becom<lb/>
,ng Personal Care Attendant lo<lb/>
wheelchair students Those with a<lb/>
background of assisting in<lb/>
div.duals with the activit.es of dai<lb/>
ly I,v.ng are desired If interested<lb/>
apply in 212 Whu hard Building<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
There will be a meeting ot the<lb/>
International Language Organiza<lb/>
tion on Wednesday. Sept 23 in BC<lb/>
305 Everybody is welcome to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would like to nave 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 East Carol,<lb/>
man in care of the news editor<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline for announcement<lb/>
areSpm Friday tor the T uesdsay<lb/>
paper and 5pm Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thrusdasy paper<lb/>
the space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
The Buccaneer will have a staff<lb/>
meeting September 23 at 7 p m in<lb/>
the Buccaneer Office, located m<lb/>
the Old South Building, across<lb/>
from Joyner Library<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management Ad<lb/>
mission Test IGMAT) will be of<lb/>
fered at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Saturday. October 24. 1981 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to GMAT,<lb/>
Educarronal Testing Service. Box<lb/>
966 R Princeton. NJ 08540 Ap<lb/>
phcalions must bewstmarked no<lb/>
later than September 21, 1981 Ap<lb/>
plications may be obtained trom<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center. Room<lb/>
105 Speight Building<lb/>
PLANNINGZONING<lb/>
The Greenville Planning and<lb/>
Zonmg Commission has set a<lb/>
workshop session on September 23<lb/>
in which the followmq items will<lb/>
be discussed (A) The newly pro<lb/>
posed mobile home standards, and<lb/>
(B) The proposed Land Develop<lb/>
ment Plan The session will be<lb/>
held at City Mali at 7 30 p m<lb/>
HONOR COUNCIL<lb/>
Appin atl i ,un' <lb/>
and'or Riup B<lb/>
be.ng ??? H ?<lb/>
Mendenhall Sti<lb/>
221<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
PREREGISTRATION<lb/>
CHANGES<lb/>
General allege .tudent should<lb/>
contrt. I the-1 adviser!<lb/>
tober 5 10 a ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
There w" '?'? ' ' ' " nq '<lb/>
niMendenr.al(<lb/>
portanI ?'<lb/>
an<lb/>
TREASURE HUNT<lb/>
D scovery D ?<lb/>
proud to anno<lb/>
nual Scuba D ?<lb/>
mday October<lb/>
. . ? w ?? ? ' K " '?<lb/>
?? ?'?<lb/>
CHESSCLUB<lb/>
mu"  ??<lb/>
? ? . . '<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
n . <lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
  ' ss<lb/>
. m M ha d M"?<lb/>
7 3C p m ?? ma<lb/>
v. M ' ' ?"<lb/>
-pnen B Fin<lb/>
, Or am.<lb/>
wpartmani -<lb/>
. . X ?<lb/>
lat.on ot<lb/>
na s <lb/>
lorma<lb/>
14 si 03C<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
 . nd rm<lb/>
??it be tv<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? . - .?<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS<lb/>
. s  Clare<lb/>
physic a 3ur<lb/>
. , ? week tor the<lb/>
Should 'eport 'o<lb/>
 ,rr a' I p m on<lb/>
a?? Mai Septembet JC tor a<lb/>
? ess test<lb/>
. , ? . performance on mis<lb/>
. d as a prerequisite<lb/>
? ? i sdmittance to 'he<lb/>
, . ? on ma.or program<lb/>
? . . ? ntormation cover<lb/>
available by calling<lb/>
THROW<lb/>
n vou want to throw here s<lb/>
where to go Intramural Field,<lb/>
bottom of the h,II 5 p m Tuesday<lb/>
or meeting at 8 pm. Tuesday.<lb/>
Mendenrtall room 248 Be There"1<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a Correc<lb/>
tions Social Work Organ.zat.on<lb/>
meeteing on Thursday September<lb/>
24 at 5 30 p m .n MendenhaH Shj<lb/>
dent Center room 221 All correc<lb/>
t.ons and social work maior ano<lb/>
.ntended maiors are urged to at<lb/>
tend'<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
BLOCK SHOW<lb/>
.<lb/>
SPECIAL SEMINAR<lb/>
n Medieval and<lb/>
 . ? . ? s pleased to<lb/>
. the topic tot is r-<lb/>
  . - .  A 5 VR<lb/>
yjnr - ? ? Death An in<lb/>
v i mi<lb/>
 - ? ? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
trtis excil<lb/>
? ?? . ? nattoi<lb/>
about me seminar ano or about<lb/>
. ,sance Stv<lb/>
iram coor<lb/>
, and seminar instruct?!<lb/>
. v  ? ? mar<lb/>
Daughertv lertfctns<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
it you would like home Iw sp la<lb/>
 and transportation t templet i<lb/>
H gti Holiday se'v1- pleasi<lb/>
,  ? ???. $943 or Or Hesn ? ??<lb/>
'5a v.4.<lb/>
WINTER GUARDE<lb/>
Once upon a time then was a<lb/>
vv.nter Guard rheir i . ? ? ?<lb/>
BL'CK RUSSIAN and<lb/>
everywheri "? ? went every me<lb/>
iovec fhe.r idea; ?  vn?<lb/>
for ntormalior '52 843<lb/>
E C C D E C<lb/>
GLENN PHILLIPS<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
COMING - WED<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23 -<lb/>
Ladies Free<lb/>
"If rock &amp; roll guitarists were kamikaze pilots, Glenn Phillips<lb/>
would be in heaven righl now: he attacks Ins instrument with no<lb/>
regard lor life o. limb.<lb/>
?'Dark Lights, his ihird album, crackles with melodies.<lb/>
momentum and slam-bang good humor TROLL-<lb/>
ING STONE<lb/>
Westerxi t<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STE8KH0VSS<lb/>
( B<lb/>
D<lb/>
1<lb/>
fl<lb/>
q<lb/>
Great I uncheon Specials<lb/>
11 a.m. to 2 p.m.<lb/>
411 Day<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
MON thru FR I<lb/>
Soup 8. Sandwich<lb/>
SI.9?<lb/>
Delicious 33 item<lb/>
Salai Bar<lb/>
ic D?Hei ? ??' ?'??  ,or<lb/>
unO' i S3<lb/>
FRI &amp; SAT<lb/>
Kidsunc: ,t steerburger or<lb/>
child s plat, with potato for v?c<lb/>
MINORITY<lb/>
FELLOWSHIPS<lb/>
lei lowships<lb/>
? ? , ? ?<lb/>
?? ? <lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fund! '<lb/>
, la ?'<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
ruttei ' ' '<lb/>
? ?? ?  ? ?? ?<lb/>
. ?? .<lb/>
' ' '? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
t the li<lb/>
?<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
NAACPCONVENTION<lb/>
. - ? ' ??? ?<lb/>
enhon at<lb/>
Mr 8 11<lb/>
.  ?. ? attending,<lb/>
. . . . ,<lb/>
THE WAY<lb/>
want t ? ?'?<lb/>
 ? an whe<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? : ? ? ?<lb/>
 . ? ? ' ? ' ? '<lb/>
I<lb/>
24th. II<lb/>
m 11 and 7 30 p m ,<lb/>
??. tudent<lb/>
The ECU Dec<lb/>
 it ? i<lb/>
?? .<lb/>
movement and ext<lb/>
, l : ?<lb/>
. . ? ? ?<lb/>
,ibiiity and t<lb/>
Men<lb/>
<lb/>
from S 156.1<lb/>
Thurs 12 i P<lb/>
are also offeree in BelK v<lb/>
Ml '? V ?? ?' "<lb/>
p.n ? ? '<lb/>
' '<lb/>
?? Tuesday at v p m an I<lb/>
nt Wednesday at 8 i<lb/>
Memorial Gym or at "??<lb/>
Cost is SS 00 tor classes mt meet 1<lb/>
? me per wee anoMOC I<lb/>
mai -  ? -a . pei wee isse<lb/>
l0r S week ' ?<lb/>
questions please a Sue ' ? ' ?<lb/>
a' 7S' 6064<lb/>
OCATED REHIND THE ELBO ROOM<lb/>
SORRY NO TAKE OUTS ON SPECIALS<lb/>
h ' -ar <lb/>
 Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights<lb/>
e Sold To Dea i<lb/>
H<lb/>
a ' 1. s<lb/>
GAY?<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
onal Health<lb/>
PPHA <lb/>
?<lb/>
, ' ? ? Center ah<lb/>
ARTS MANAGEMENT<lb/>
? will hoid a<lb/>
jt-nk.ns Art<lb/>
 ia, ? -oer<lb/>
I then ?-? ? ' '? ?<lb/>
. rP,t1 Greens ?<lb/>
??. ? will be "he guest<lb/>
e intormai?<lb/>
; c ?<lb/>
FOREIGN SERVICECOMEDY<lb/>
EXAMINATIONiwai ??? ? Ay den<lb/>
 . . present the<lb/>
rou C- t Tat ' With<lb/>
ihirday at s<lb/>
iy at 3 pm bept . .? i 27 at 1<lb/>
. . . ? f the 1Lon is 11<lb/>
? , ? ?.? iDle tor<lb/>
?? 524 4250<lb/>
PRE MED<lb/>
. ?. ????'?? ? ?<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
Med Pre Dental Society <lb/>
IC r nrt n Flanagan 307<lb/>
JacKse.n An.son Chairman ot the<lb/>
Department of Em.<lb/>
Med.cne of the ECU SchOO ?<lb/>
Wedicme will o? the guest<lb/>
speaker All members and in<lb/>
vrsted persons are urged to ?'<lb/>
tend Also, any<lb/>
lO.n.ng AED this tall should i<lb/>
JOB SEARCH<lb/>
A senes of workshops will be<lb/>
?lucted by 'he Career Plann.og<lb/>
rid Placement Center in the ar is<lb/>
ot interviewing technique' and the<lb/>
preparation of the resume<lb/>
Resume Preparation will oe<lb/>
held on Sept 28 at 2 p.m Sep' 29<lb/>
aiipm. sept 30 at 4 p and at<lb/>
2pm Oct 6 at 3 p m , Oct 7 a' 4<lb/>
p m ano Oct 8 at u a m Each<lb/>
workshop will last appropriately<lb/>
. hour and a Cm held in 'he<lb/>
Bioxton House (adjacent to<lb/>
Greene Dorm, Al' sen.ors are in<lb/>
yited '0 a"end<lb/>
kA<lb/>
?<lb/>
l<lb/>
?<lb/>
We're at the head of the class<lb/>
when it comes to delivering<lb/>
campus needs. Be a hlghj<lb/>
achiever in value<lb/>
shop Kroger Sav-oni<lb/>
ADVERTISED TEM POliCY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is squired to be read- .<lb/>
available for sale m each Kroger Saw-on except as spe<lb/>
cailv noted in this ad II we dc run out of an .tem we will O te<lb/>
vou your choice of a comparable item when available rt-<lb/>
t.ng the same savings or a m - entitle yo<lb/>
purchase the advert.sed item at the advemsed price mthm .<lb/>
days<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO<lb/>
MIDNIGHT-Sun 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
B??<lb/>
UN9!<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
From 4 P.M. To 9 P.M<lb/>
fc?<lb/>
?<lb/>
X<lb/>
Ph<lb/>
FlUOMK S&amp; ;<lb/>
s2.49<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
2-Jtt-<lb/>
0A-<lb/>
Includes our No. 2 Ribeye Steak, Baked Potato<lb/>
and Dinner Roll. <lb/>
JACKS<lb/>
Wax<lb/>
REG OR MINT FLUORIDE<lb/>
Aim Touthpaste<lb/>
,070<lb/>
Tube J M<lb/>
CAPTURE THE BIG GAME<lb/>
OR THE BEAUTY OF FALL<lb/>
Kodacolor II<lb/>
Film<lb/>
U.S. NO 1<lb/>
EASTERN RED<lb/>
Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
99<lb/>
DECORATE YOUR ROOM<lb/>
WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
STANDING COMPACTA<lb/>
Dieffenbachia<lb/>
$399<lb/>
5-Inch<lb/>
Pot<lb/>
N!<lb/>
 House $1,49<lb/>
AO-Ol-<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
110 12<lb/>
120 12. or ?<lb/>
135 12<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
20<lb/>
FRESH BAKED IN STORE<lb/>
FUDGE ICED<lb/>
Chocolate<lb/>
Brownies<lb/>
6 99<lb/>
K<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Added Feature<lb/>
Drawing<lb/>
coh aooW For FREE Dinners<lb/>
Register tor FREE ECU Tickets!<lb/>
P -? i.c?? VOU UO rwl MM 10 t? IKMWI to ?in<lb/>
TVW<lb/>
ftanKs<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
<lb/>
No puich??? t?c???iry Vou<lb/>
A2Oi<lb/>
PK9<lb/>
233<lb/>
COSMETICS A<lb/>
FRAGRANCES<lb/>
16?(<lb/>
o??<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
P ?S1<lb/>
rv.A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0003"/><lb/>
IHt I S1AKOI INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22. 1V8I<lb/>
GLASS<lb/>
nessee<lb/>
,)lfmb?f<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Infer 501<lb/>
(t B Fin<lb/>
Drama<lb/>
t il) pro<lb/>
?vwta'ioo<lb/>
JrftTOO of<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
M30<lb/>
WL<lb/>
? -r rhe<lb/>
Jenhall<lb/>
?. and a<lb/>
lp m.<lb/>
op<lb/>
r or<lb/>
LS<lb/>
tn<lb/>
Mass<lb/>
iring<lb/>
high<lb/>
alue-<lb/>
tv-on!<lb/>
readily<lb/>
SDOCtfl-<lb/>
e A; offer<lb/>
'eflec<lb/>
9 ou to<lb/>
?;n30<lb/>
m<lb/>
fUL<lb/>
na<lb/>
RE<lb/>
0<lb/>
State Budget Cuts Creating College Havoc<lb/>
(CPS) - George Kish has taught<lb/>
geography ai the University of<lb/>
Michigan for 41 ears. Though con-<lb/>
sidered one of the best, he may soon<lb/>
be a professoi without a depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Rodger Keller worked as a hor-<lb/>
ticulturist on the campus. He was<lb/>
dismissed in June.<lb/>
Both men are victims ol a budget<lb/>
crunch that may take years to abate,<lb/>
kellei was one of si gardeners let<lb/>
go. Kish, however, isn't being fired.<lb/>
His department is. The university<lb/>
wants to eliminate the geography<lb/>
department after this school year.<lb/>
Such radical cuts and contrac-<lb/>
tions have become commonplace at<lb/>
colleges in at least a doen states<lb/>
where soured economics, citizen<lb/>
"tax revolt" measures and budget-<lb/>
slashing legislators have accidentally<lb/>
conspired to alter campus life even<lb/>
more drastically than the Reagan<lb/>
cuts of the federal education<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
In Oregon, for example, state<lb/>
budget cuts may force the end of the<lb/>
athletic programs at Oregon and<lb/>
Oregon State. The University of Il-<lb/>
linois must soon close its clinical<lb/>
medicine program.<lb/>
A surprise state budget cut<lb/>
"could affect accreditation of some<lb/>
programs" at the University of<lb/>
Mississippi, the university<lb/>
chancellor frets. All but two state<lb/>
schools in Texas are without<lb/>
building funds. Missouri, moreover,<lb/>
has imposed an indefinite freeze on<lb/>
the stale's entire education budget.<lb/>
These .ate-level crises ? which<lb/>
have gone almost unnoticed while<lb/>
attention focused on the Reagan<lb/>
federal budget ? have had both<lb/>
ridiculous and sublime effects.<lb/>
Iowa State, for instance, won't be<lb/>
in this year's New York Times<lb/>
"Guide to Colleges" because<lb/>
"budgetary reasons" kept ad-<lb/>
ministrators from distributing the<lb/>
Times' questionaire to students.<lb/>
Massachusetts educators, reeling<lb/>
from the budget cuts in the wake oi<lb/>
last November's "Proposition 2 I 2<lb/>
" tax revolt, are busily closing down<lb/>
Boston State College and consider-<lb/>
ing closing two other community<lb/>
colleges to balance the budget<lb/>
It's an absurd case of education<lb/>
following the dollar around instead<lb/>
of vice versa grouses Roger Chin-<lb/>
ness of the Massachusetts Board of<lb/>
Regents for Public Education.<lb/>
"Some institutions are having to<lb/>
delay opening of college<lb/>
In California, the effects of the<lb/>
first tax-revolt measure ? 1978's<lb/>
Proposition 13 ? were supposed to<lb/>
hit colleges fully this year. But<lb/>
Morgan Odell, head of the Associa-<lb/>
tion of Independent Colleges and<lb/>
Universities, says astute use of the<lb/>
state's pre-13 budget surplus has<lb/>
forestalled sever cutbacks in campus<lb/>
services for at least another year.<lb/>
"It's mainly a matter of waiting<lb/>
until next fall to find out how bad<lb/>
things really are Odell savs.<lb/>
noting that state educators must<lb/>
now figure out how to cope with the<lb/>
effects of the Reagan cuts as well as<lb/>
the Proposition 13 cuts.<lb/>
"We're all singing a dismal Greek<lb/>
chorus to the same tune laments<lb/>
Frank Duddy, Jr president of the<lb/>
Association of Independent Ceil<lb/>
leges and Universities of Ohio. Dud<lb/>
dy says declining state revenues have<lb/>
exacerbated a chronic college<lb/>
budget deficiencv<lb/>
Yet nowhere in America have the<lb/>
demons of inflation, unemployment<lb/>
and miserly legislatures more brutal-<lb/>
ly hamstrung colleges than in<lb/>
Michigan, where missing tax<lb/>
revenues from the depressed auto<lb/>
industry have led to substantial<lb/>
budget slashes at ail state school.<lb/>
Campuses have tried to make up<lb/>
tor lost state funding by raising<lb/>
average public college costs to<lb/>
$3350.<lb/>
"It's getting difficult for more<lb/>
and more families to pay for col-<lb/>
lege says Kalamazoo College's ad-<lb/>
missions director David Boros,<lb/>
whose school is the state's most ex-<lb/>
pensive. "But we have no choice but<lb/>
to raise tuition<lb/>
"Currently, the only way many<lb/>
students can come to college is<lb/>
through substantial aid programs<lb/>
says Albion College Vice President<lb/>
James Hatcher.<lb/>
"But as federal aid is reduced, the<lb/>
See MSU, Page 9<lb/>
CBS Claims Friday Was Not Cause For Report<lb/>
C H AIM I Hill<lb/>
(I PI) ? The producer<lb/>
of CBS' "Sunday Mor-<lb/>
ning" sas he was nol<lb/>
pressured into airing a<lb/>
second repori on the<lb/>
University ol North<lb/>
(. arolina's desegi ega-<lb/>
tion settlement with the<lb/>
federal government<lb/>
1 he follow up aired<lb/>
Sunday, ?a tin-<lb/>
cedented in the<lb/>
 month lustorv of<lb/>
"Sundav Morning<lb/>
executive<lb/>
Shad Nor-<lb/>
Bui he said<lb/>
from I NC<lb/>
William Fri-<lb/>
James Hunt<lb/>
and othei state leaders<lb/>
had nothing to do with<lb/>
"li was not a icsult<lb/>
-<lb/>
eld<lb/>
tests<lb/>
President<lb/>
das. Go<lb/>
of any pressure because<lb/>
all of those letters<lb/>
(from North Carolina<lb/>
leaders) I've heard<lb/>
about have not arriv-<lb/>
ed Northshield said.<lb/>
"We did this because<lb/>
we thought it was the<lb/>
right thing to do<lb/>
Friday said "an<lb/>
enormous groundswell<lb/>
of indignation" caused<lb/>
CBS to broadcast por-<lb/>
tions of an interview<lb/>
with him that were not<lb/>
shown in the original<lb/>
repori on Sept. 13.<lb/>
"I thought that the<lb/>
choices they made<lb/>
(from) the hour's tap-<lb/>
ing answered some of<lb/>
the questions that<lb/>
ought to be answered<lb/>
Friday said. "I'm going<lb/>
to speak with Charles<lb/>
(Kuralt, the host of the<lb/>
show) as soon as I can<lb/>
get up with him and<lb/>
thank him<lb/>
Kuralt is a graduate<lb/>
of UNC and a member<lb/>
of the school's Jour-<lb/>
nalism Hall of Fame.<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt<lb/>
Jr who sent a<lb/>
telegram of protest to<lb/>
CBS after the original<lb/>
report, said in a state-<lb/>
ment he appreciated the<lb/>
"fuller picture" of the<lb/>
progress UNC has<lb/>
made in desegregation<lb/>
of its 16-campus<lb/>
system.<lb/>
"It's unfortunate<lb/>
this wasn't done last<lb/>
week, so the first show<lb/>
could have been more<lb/>
accurate and fair<lb/>
Hunt said.<lb/>
Earlier this year,<lb/>
UNC ended a 12-year<lb/>
desegregation battle<lb/>
with the federal govern-<lb/>
ment when a consent<lb/>
decree was filed in U.S.<lb/>
District Court in<lb/>
Raleigh outlining a<lb/>
plan to increase<lb/>
desegregation of the<lb/>
system.<lb/>
The decree, reached<lb/>
after negotiations with<lb/>
lawyers for UNC and<lb/>
the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Education, sets goals<lb/>
for increasing the<lb/>
number of black<lb/>
students at the 11<lb/>
predominantly white<lb/>
campuses and white<lb/>
students at the five<lb/>
black campuses.<lb/>
There are no<lb/>
penalties for failing to<lb/>
meet those goals.<lb/>
The original CBS<lb/>
story, presented by<lb/>
reporter Ed Rabel,<lb/>
hinted the UNC agree-<lb/>
ment could damage na-<lb/>
tional desegregation ef-<lb/>
forts.<lb/>
Friday, Hunt and<lb/>
other officials were<lb/>
outraged because the<lb/>
story included the old<lb/>
news films that includ-<lb/>
ed former Alabama<lb/>
Gov . George C.<lb/>
Wallace attempting to<lb/>
block court-ordered<lb/>
desegregation in that<lb/>
state.<lb/>
In its follow-up, CBS<lb/>
made no admission of<lb/>
error in an introduct<lb/>
ion written by North-<lb/>
shield and read by<lb/>
Kuralt.<lb/>
"This is a com-<lb/>
plicated question and<lb/>
there's more to be said<lb/>
about it than there was<lb/>
last week Kuralt said.<lb/>
He also pointed out the<lb/>
UNC agreement re-<lb/>
quires the system to<lb/>
make annual progress<lb/>
reports to a federal<lb/>
judge, a fact that went<lb/>
unreported in the<lb/>
original story.<lb/>
Northshield said he<lb/>
decided to do the<lb/>
follow-up because he<lb/>
and Rabel have been<lb/>
extremely interested in<lb/>
university deseg-<lb/>
regation for years.<lb/>
The Sunday piece "is<lb/>
unique in our history.<lb/>
 That's why it was so<lb/>
important to me to<lb/>
have it done on our<lb/>
terms, not have it look<lb/>
like it was a press<lb/>
stunt he said.<lb/>
Hinckley Complains To Post<lb/>
 SH INGTON<lb/>
( rp) - John W . Hin-<lb/>
tklev Ir , accused of<lb/>
kill President<lb/>
Reagan, wrote to a<lb/>
report complain<lb/>
about being deputed as<lb/>
a drifter and elaborate<lb/>
on his interest in actress<lb/>
Jodie Foster, the<lb/>
 ashington Post sas.<lb/>
'?you and the other<lb/>
Journalists make it<lb/>
sound like I was some<lb/>
kind ol a hobo or<lb/>
something Hinckley<lb/>
was quoted Sunday as<lb/>
writing in the un-<lb/>
solicited letter, dated<lb/>
to a Post<lb/>
T may have done<lb/>
some drifting in the fall<lb/>
of SO. but in the years<lb/>
prior to this, I was not<lb/>
roaming around the<lb/>
country the letter<lb/>
read.<lb/>
"Now that I'm in<lb/>
Maryland, she (Miss<lb/>
Foster) and I are much<lb/>
closer, in more ways<lb/>
than one Hinckley<lb/>
wrote. It was signed,<lb/>
"Yours truly, John<lb/>
Hinckley Jr<lb/>
Hinckley has pleaded<lb/>
innocent to charges he<lb/>
tried to kill Reagan,<lb/>
White House press<lb/>
secretary James Brady<lb/>
and two lawmen out-<lb/>
side a Washington<lb/>
hotel. He is being held<lb/>
without bond at Fort<lb/>
Meade, Md.<lb/>
The Post said neither<lb/>
Hinckley's defense<lb/>
lawyer nor government<lb/>
officials involved in the<lb/>
case would discuss the<lb/>
letter.<lb/>
Trying to verify the<lb/>
letter's authenticity, the<lb/>
newspaper said it sent a<lb/>
reply to the Fort Meade<lb/>
return address. It asked<lb/>
Hinckley to initial and<lb/>
send back a photostat<lb/>
of the original letter.<lb/>
On Friday, the<lb/>
newspaper received the<lb/>
photocopy initialed<lb/>
"JWH "<lb/>
along with a note dated<lb/>
Sept. 14 that said: "My<lb/>
lawyers are trying to<lb/>
hold the press coverage<lb/>
to a minimum and<lb/>
therefore will have<lb/>
nothing to do with<lb/>
reporters<lb/>
The note said Hin-<lb/>
ckley was sending along<lb/>
a "portion of a legal<lb/>
paper as proof that I<lb/>
am me Included was<lb/>
what appeared to be<lb/>
part of a court paper<lb/>
filed in the case, the<lb/>
newspaper said.<lb/>
Sepi<lb/>
repoi tei<lb/>
"My<lb/>
coun<lb/>
itrv<lb/>
recent cross-<lb/>
ventures were<lb/>
?sary because New<lb/>
Haven was so tar<lb/>
away the letter con-<lb/>
tinue i "1 would have<lb/>
traveled to Budapest to<lb/>
find Jodie Foster<lb/>
Federal prosecutors<lb/>
believe Hinckley, a<lb/>
2 6 - v e a r - o 1 d college<lb/>
dropout and son of a<lb/>
wealthy Colorado<lb/>
oilman, may have been<lb/>
motivated on the day of<lb/>
the attempt on<lb/>
Reagan's life bv an in-<lb/>
fatuation tor Miss<lb/>
I oster.<lb/>
Miss Foster, a stu-<lb/>
dem at "i ale University<lb/>
in New Haven, t onn<lb/>
plaved the role of a<lb/>
young prostitute in the<lb/>
movie "Taxi a story<lb/>
about a spurned suitor<lb/>
who stalked a political<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
Hinckley was taken<lb/>
into custody im-<lb/>
mediately after the<lb/>
March 30 shooting that<lb/>
wounded Reagan and<lb/>
three others. I n -<lb/>
vestigators found an<lb/>
unmailed letter to Miss<lb/>
Foster in his<lb/>
Washington hotel<lb/>
room.<lb/>
"Jodie, I would<lb/>
abandon the idea of<lb/>
getting Reagan in a se-<lb/>
cond if 1 could only win<lb/>
your heart the letter<lb/>
read. It asked her for<lb/>
"the chance with this<lb/>
historical deed to gain<lb/>
your respect and love<lb/>
In his letter to the<lb/>
Post, Hinckley asked<lb/>
that he not be called a<lb/>
"drifter" in future<lb/>
news accounts, the<lb/>
newspaper said.<lb/>
MONTUES. Available for<lb/>
private parties ? Papa Katz<lb/>
will cater any party or func-<lb/>
tion. We also have a mobile<lb/>
D.J. 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/>
FR, "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 -5ver 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 oe entitled to 3 guests<lb/>
per evening Nea? dress and proper 'd?n<lb/>
tification will be required o all members<lb/>
and guests<lb/>
?bring application &amp; dues to the door and<lb/>
receive your membership card that night<lb/>
,??? MEMBERSHIP ???i<lb/>
Introductory<lb/>
Membership-$1.00<lb/>
for month of Sept.<lb/>
AJ 7UE<lb/>
7-<lb/>
F? STAGES 10CHSCOGKJ!<lb/>
Cm) YORAU.vVUo &amp;TTE.V3P<lb/>
dokH PTWSiuKexauswe<lb/>
Co-SPoi?ce$DWHBo ?<lb/>
A REVEAIJNG COMEDY ABOUT REACHING THE TOP<lb/>
BY WAY OF THE BOTTOM<lb/>
River Bluff Rd.<lb/>
Behind Putt Putt<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
"A Touch<lb/>
Of Class"<lb/>
I<lb/>
 "DVAM (TNTF-AT. I<lb/>
RYAN O'NEAL<lb/>
JACK WARDEN MARIANGELA MELATO RICHARD KIEL<lb/>
"SO FINE"<lb/>
ALOBELLBERGMAN PRODUCTION<lb/>
MUSIC BY ENNIO MORRICONE PRODUCED BY MIKE LOBELL<lb/>
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ANDREW BERGMAN<lb/>
Ffom Warn B J A"er Communication Company<lb/>
 SMNATUtl<lb/>
L<lb/>
OPENS SEPTEMBER SSth AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0004"/><lb/>
Sttre last (Earoluuan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
PAUl COI l INS, ??(-h,et<lb/>
JlMMY DuPRIiE, Manaeii EM<lb/>
Chuck Foster. ,w? ? ? Charles Chandler. wmm<lb/>
Chris Lichok, ???? hm? Tom Hai l- Mr" ?"<lb/>
Alison Bartel, i Steve Bachner. &amp;r?<lb/>
Stevf Moore. a - KARFN Wendt- ??<lb/>
September 22, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
City Must Respect Students<lb/>
The leech is a parasite that latches<lb/>
onto its victims with one of its<lb/>
suckers, makes a wound with three<lb/>
tiny jaws and draws blood out<lb/>
through another sucker. When full,<lb/>
the leech drops off the victim ? its<lb/>
body distended with enough blood<lb/>
to last for months at a time.<lb/>
In much the same way, Greenville<lb/>
uses the students of East Carolina<lb/>
? taking, taking, taking ? but<lb/>
never giving.<lb/>
"Every year all the merchants put<lb/>
up signs saying 'Welcome Back<lb/>
Students " former SGA President<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod once said. "What<lb/>
they're welcoming back is our<lb/>
wallets<lb/>
Sherrod hit the nail on the head.<lb/>
Greenville is glad to have students<lb/>
spend money in the town's stores,<lb/>
bars and theatres, but that is as far<lb/>
as the hospitality goes.<lb/>
Sherrod spoke these words last<lb/>
March just after the City Council<lb/>
rezoned an entire neighborhood<lb/>
near West Fifth Street ? in<lb/>
disregard of all applicable<lb/>
guidelines ? simply to keep Kappa<lb/>
Delta sorority from buying a house<lb/>
in the area. The residents did not<lb/>
want to live near "any wild ECU<lb/>
students<lb/>
This, however, is not the only<lb/>
such example of the shabby treat-<lb/>
ment afforded ECU students by<lb/>
Greenville's citizenry.<lb/>
An ordinance recently went into<lb/>
effect that will keep students from<lb/>
parking for more than two hours in<lb/>
neighborhoods close to campus.<lb/>
Students who must be on campus<lb/>
DOONESBURY <lb/>
flBDMNS ms poucjes<lb/>
50 yOJ CAN Mi. APPf&amp;6<lb/>
TV<lb/>
for periods longer than this will be<lb/>
unable to park in these areas.<lb/>
Of even greater potential harm to<lb/>
students, though, are the city's new<lb/>
zoning laws designed to exclude<lb/>
students from living in the<lb/>
neighborhoods between campus and<lb/>
First Street. The laws do not<lb/>
specifically exclude students; they<lb/>
just toughen the restrictions on<lb/>
"multi-family dwellings" ? a code<lb/>
word for student residences.<lb/>
Greenville, like most parasites,<lb/>
does not kill its victims, however,<lb/>
for that would be tantamount to<lb/>
committing suicide. The city needs<lb/>
the university and its students to<lb/>
survive. According to a study con-<lb/>
ducted by the Department of<lb/>
Geography and Planning, students<lb/>
spent more than $28 million in<lb/>
Greenville during 1980.<lb/>
Greenville has dubbed this<lb/>
"Student Appreciation Week and<lb/>
students should not let such an op-<lb/>
portunity to voice their dissatisfac-<lb/>
tion pass by. Students could easily<lb/>
make their dissatisfaction known by<lb/>
boycotting Greenville merchants for<lb/>
an entire day, this Saturday for in-<lb/>
stance. After all, who put Greenville<lb/>
on the map?<lb/>
Consider This<lb/>
In 1962 Leo Jenkins, Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer's predecessor, was a can-<lb/>
didate for the presidency of the<lb/>
University of South Carolina. And<lb/>
everyone knows how this hurt his<lb/>
job performance; he only served 15<lb/>
more years at East Carolina.<lb/>
by Garry Trudaau<lb/>
M30OOMAU<lb/>
mttecur tun<lb/>
PKxsoece tt.it<lb/>
Home Video Replaces Movie Palaces<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
They knocked down another movie<lb/>
palace in my town recently; dismantled the<lb/>
grand marquee, all winking, colored, elec-<lb/>
tric lights; ripped out the red velour seats;<lb/>
pulled up the carpets over which three<lb/>
generations of celluloid addicts trod, pop-<lb/>
corn and candy in hand, their eyes glued to<lb/>
the giant silver screen. It wasn't the first<lb/>
old movie theatre to fall prey to changing<lb/>
social customs and economic imperatives;<lb/>
it won't be the last.<lb/>
The lucky old dream palaces, the ones<lb/>
that aren't torn down, are twinned, trebled<lb/>
and quadrupled ? diced into tiny boxes,<lb/>
sound seeping through the thin partitions<lb/>
separating Cinema 1 from Cinema 43, the<lb/>
screens criminally small, seats set at wierd<lb/>
angles in what used to be sumptuous<lb/>
balconies. They're not much, but at least<lb/>
they're working theatres, not parking lots<lb/>
or condos.<lb/>
I mourn the passing of the old movie<lb/>
theatres ? the Paramounts and Foxes ane<lb/>
Lowes of motion picture past ? because I<lb/>
savor the experienc. of going out, ensconc-<lb/>
ing myself in impossibly ornate buildings<lb/>
and passing the evening with hundreds of<lb/>
other people. Movies are a shared ex-<lb/>
perience, and there is a community,<lb/>
however fragile and fleeting, among<lb/>
moviegoers. We share the same waking<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
That's all changing, of course. Movies,<lb/>
which once provided a cheap night out for<lb/>
middle class and working people, now cost<lb/>
$4 and $5 ahead, as Hollywood cranks out<lb/>
fewer films, .with ever-inflating budgets.<lb/>
The grand old theatres, what's left of<lb/>
them, sit in decaying neighborhoods,<lb/>
where fear of crimes committed by people<lb/>
who can't get out keeps away those who<lb/>
have left.<lb/>
So, instead of nurturing the community<lb/>
of the past, we entertain a future filled<lb/>
with individually-owned techno-toys;<lb/>
video discs and cassettes; seven-foot televi-<lb/>
sion screens; cable TV with hundreds of<lb/>
channels; dishes for receiving direct<lb/>
satellite-to-home trasmissions We'll have<lb/>
private media rooms and home entertain-<lb/>
ment centers, the experts tell us, that are<lb/>
safe, familiar and comfortable. Our homes<lb/>
will increasingly become places where we<lb/>
play, and ? with the use of home com-<lb/>
puters and keyboards linked to TV screens<lb/>
? work.<lb/>
Like a lot of new technological applica-<lb/>
tions, the home entertainment center is be-<lb/>
ing promoted by gushing futurists (and<lb/>
manufacturer) as a vast improvement<lb/>
over the bad old days when people actually<lb/>
had to move from one place to another.<lb/>
Personally, I'm not so sanguine. I'll miss<lb/>
the sociability of going out to the movies,<lb/>
the surrealistic architecture of the old<lb/>
buildings, the silver screens big enough to<lb/>
drive a Mack truck into, and disappear.<lb/>
What's so great about staying home with a<lb/>
batch of clever ? and expensive, you may<lb/>
be sure ? electronic toys, anyway?<lb/>
And what's so great about working at<lb/>
home? Oh. I've heard the arguments for it.<lb/>
Instead of driving to the job and wasting<lb/>
all that energy, the arguments go. we can<lb/>
work safely and ecologically at home<lb/>
Heck, we can labor in our ratty underwear,<lb/>
if we want to, with a half-eaten sandwich<lb/>
and a drink at our terminals. Like all pro-<lb/>
gress, it's happening because it's good for<lb/>
us.<lb/>
Sounds great, but again, it's the social<lb/>
aspect that's missing from this<lb/>
technocratic vision of utopia-around-the-<lb/>
corner. What happens to the friendships<lb/>
most people make at work by coming into<lb/>
contact with living, breaching human be-<lb/>
ings? What about the political power that<lb/>
people who actually see one another everv<lb/>
day acquire when they organize? Who is<lb/>
going to land (or be assigned) the bulk oi<lb/>
the stay-at-home jobs? Women? Will the<lb/>
kids be there, too? Call me a mossback<lb/>
conservative, if you like, but the persona!<lb/>
and political implications of the new<lb/>
technologies are, to my mind, far from<lb/>
liberating.<lb/>
So. as another baroque movie palace is<lb/>
reduced to rubble or abruptly mutated into<lb/>
a four-plex, our lives, too, are scheduled t<lb/>
be remade. Me, I prefer the floating<lb/>
dream-community of the old theatres and<lb/>
the gritty but sociable reality of the<lb/>
workplace to the shiny, sterile, solitary<lb/>
future being designed for us.<lb/>
rrACCs<lb/>
raver an at<lb/>
Moral Majority<lb/>
GOCO&amp;BUN6. TOOM THE<lb/>
Gnx&amp;a&amp;OFfaMNew<lb/>
EMBLAHP SWES ASXEP<lb/>
1 P&amp; SM&amp;GEtCf F&amp;FKAL<lb/>
1 AJP TO HELPCONTJ!OL<lb/>
&amp;amGNF?smnonsoF<lb/>
t the mwecm preppy<lb/>
<lb/>
m-<lb/>
?JliU<lb/>
I<lb/>
oms the threat ofquar-<lb/>
AtiTVe mo NBGHBOWe<lb/>
states, ih four eamiops<lb/>
AtH0UNCBAJaNTiO6tAM<lb/>
V QOHBfiT flHAT 6 BeNO<lb/>
R&amp;jARPtP AS A PAfrMWK<lb/>
LY YTRUBTT STRAIN OF UASP<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
6&amp;ERNOR KING OF MASSA<lb/>
CHJstns.uHosEsmis i<lb/>
HARDEST HIT. BLAHS'THE I<lb/>
NEWPOLITICAL CUHA1EK<lb/>
UiASWHeWFOR THE PRO-<lb/>
LIFERATION OF THESE<lb/>
PESKY ELITISTS<lb/>
I<lb/>
By JOSEPH C. OLINICK<lb/>
Recently the Moral Majority announced<lb/>
that it is going to begin and focus an anti-<lb/>
pornography campaign in North Carolina.<lb/>
The campaign will seek to ban certain<lb/>
books and television programs.<lb/>
In short, the Moral Majority wants to<lb/>
restrict the freedom of Americans. There<lb/>
are only five million people in the Moral<lb/>
Majority's coalition, yet they believe that<lb/>
they have the right to dictate what 220<lb/>
million other Americans see on television,<lb/>
read in books, hear on records and do in<lb/>
general. There is no danger in allowing<lb/>
members of the Moral Majority to be<lb/>
heard like any other Americans. However,<lb/>
there is a danger in allowing the Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority to make moral decisions for the en-<lb/>
tire population.<lb/>
In essence, the Moral Majority wants to<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Should Dr. Brewer Remain?<lb/>
As an ECU Professor Emeritus of<lb/>
History, my heart has been saddened by<lb/>
recent events both on and off the cam-<lb/>
pous which have led Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer to submit his resignation.<lb/>
Having been closely associated with<lb/>
the university in one capacity or another<lb/>
for the past 31 years, I have grown to<lb/>
love her dearly. When she celebrates, I<lb/>
celebrate ? when she hurts, I hurt. She<lb/>
is hurting now and so am I as are many<lb/>
trustees, alumni, faculty, ad-<lb/>
ministrators, staff, students and friends.<lb/>
Hence, through this open letter it is<lb/>
my wish not to cast blame or point the<lb/>
finger of accusation (I have friends and<lb/>
colleagues on both sides) but rather to<lb/>
suggest a workable solution to the im-<lb/>
mediate problem.<lb/>
When the board of trustees meets this<lb/>
week with Chancellor Brewer and Presi-<lb/>
dent William C. Friday to take action on<lb/>
the resignation, I pray all will "clear the<lb/>
air" and through their open-<lb/>
mindedness, fairness, compassion,<lb/>
tolerance, forgiveness and understan-<lb/>
ding, one for the other, the resignation<lb/>
will NOT be accepted. Thus, let bygones<lb/>
be bygones so the university can con-<lb/>
tinue its pursuit of excellence under the<lb/>
leadership of Chancellor Brewer and the<lb/>
board of trustees.<lb/>
The alternative, as we all know, is the<lb/>
long agonizing search for some other<lb/>
qualified person to serve as chancellor<lb/>
while the university virtually stands still<lb/>
under an interim chancellor and fac-<lb/>
tionalism and other "power plays" take<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer deserves our sup-<lb/>
port and all of us should labor along<lb/>
with him as he strives for excellence in<lb/>
student life, institutional planning,<lb/>
athletics, fund-raising, administrative<lb/>
organization and academic quality.<lb/>
Let's accept the leadership we have<lb/>
and continue to progress toward our<lb/>
motto "To serve<lb/>
Dr. Richard C. Todd<lb/>
Professor Emeritus of History<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
end the traditional separation of church<lb/>
and state. To end that separation could be<lb/>
disastrous. In the past, when the Puritan<lb/>
Church was interwoven with the govern-<lb/>
ment, terrible things occurred. For in-<lb/>
stance, many people were hung because the<lb/>
Puritans, in a fit of religious zeal, used<lb/>
their power in the government to have peo-<lb/>
ple that they thought were witches con-<lb/>
demned and hanged. At the present time,<lb/>
Iran is in turmoil partially bescause it is a<lb/>
country in which the religion is the base of<lb/>
the government. In any case, the tradition<lb/>
of separating church and government is a<lb/>
good one. The Moral Majority, however,<lb/>
does not seem to think so.<lb/>
Why should the Moral Majority be<lb/>
taken seriously? By their own standards,<lb/>
they are hypocrites. Their Bible states that<lb/>
only God may determine what is good and<lb/>
what is bad and that man is not to judge.<lb/>
Yet, the Moral Majority has made itself<lb/>
the judge of our society, determining what<lb/>
is good and what is bad.<lb/>
The Moral Majority does have a lot of<lb/>
power and influence. Its members support<lb/>
lobbyists that put pressure on government<lb/>
officials and executives of television net-<lb/>
works. Also, its members flood major<lb/>
television networks, the FCC and state and<lb/>
federal officials with hundreds of<lb/>
thousands of letters, protesting the group's<lb/>
various targets. Furthermore, Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority members put pressure on advertisers<lb/>
that sponsor controversial programs by<lb/>
recommending boycotts of their products.<lb/>
As a result of the Moral Majority's ac-<lb/>
tions, "Charlie's Angels" and "Soap" will<lb/>
not be seen on television this fall. Now the<lb/>
Moral Majority is trying to get "Dallas"<lb/>
off the air. Actually, the Moral Majority<lb/>
opposes all of the top twenty programs ex-<lb/>
cept "Little House on the Prarie and<lb/>
even some episodes of that program do not<lb/>
meet the Moral Majority's standards.<lb/>
Libraries are also one of the Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority's targets. Works like Catcher in the<lb/>
Rye, To Kill a Mockingbird, Diary of<lb/>
Anne Frank and many others have been<lb/>
removed from some public libraries by dif-<lb/>
ferent chapters of the Moral Majority.<lb/>
More importantly, books by some of<lb/>
America's greatest writers, like Ernest<lb/>
Hemingway and William Faulkner, have<lb/>
been removed from public libraries. In<lb/>
1981, such incidents have increased by MX)<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
The victories that the Moral Majority<lb/>
has achieved are only the beginning of its<lb/>
drive to force its morals on Americans, but<lb/>
Americans can and must withstand these<lb/>
self-appointed censors who want to stop<lb/>
television from meeting the needs of the<lb/>
people and who want to repress the great<lb/>
literature of America.<lb/>
To conquer and subdue the Moral Ma<lb/>
jority, it will take courage, commitment,<lb/>
and conviction, but for the sake of thi<lb/>
country? and for the sake of freedom-<lb/>
Americans must fight to preserve and rr?<lb/>
tect their freedom from the Moral Majori-<lb/>
ty and groups like it.<lb/>
(Joseph C. Olinck, a sophomore from<lb/>
Durham, is enrolled in ECU'S General<lb/>
College.)<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, ??ghq<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/>
Nati<lb/>
Hit<lb/>
bn roM h<lb/>
D<lb/>
that<lb/>
:<lb/>
K <lb/>
there<lb/>
10,001<lb/>
enr<lb/>
this<lb/>
the -<lb/>
Col<lb/>
( ontinue<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
G<lb/>
Mac<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Thursl<lb/>
Rl<lb/>
DO'<lb/>
GREl<lb/>
SHOI<lb/>
A'<lb/>
VEI<lb/>
7!<lb/>
COP'<lb/>
Copi<lb/>
CASE<lb/>
BEI<lb/>
-?I<lb/>
CKa?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0005"/><lb/>
ices<lb/>
mav<lb/>
l a<lb/>
,ng at<lb/>
for it.<lb/>
-asting<lb/>
e can<lb/>
home.<lb/>
inderuear,<lb/>
? vjndvMch<lb/>
;ke all pro-<lb/>
od for<lb/>
s -cial<lb/>
this<lb/>
d-the-<lb/>
dships<lb/>
oming into<lb/>
human be-<lb/>
? er that<lb/>
 her every<lb/>
Who is<lb/>
the bulk of<lb/>
n? Will the<lb/>
tssback<lb/>
?nal<lb/>
t the new<lb/>
1, far from<lb/>
owe palace is<lb/>
mutated into<lb/>
? scheduled to<lb/>
the floating<lb/>
and<lb/>
? the<lb/>
ilitary<lb/>
om<lb/>
ranes. In<lb/>
ed bv 500<lb/>
Majority<lb/>
ning of us<lb/>
Means, but<lb/>
?and these<lb/>
j a ant to stop<lb/>
e needs of the<lb/>
- the great<lb/>
Moral Ma-<lb/>
mmitment,<lb/>
ike of this<lb/>
freedom?<lb/>
e and pro-<lb/>
ral Majori-<lb/>
e from<lb/>
General<lb/>
IS<lb/>
d<lb/>
Ithe "Campus<lb/>
the Opinion<lb/>
hnian will soon<lb/>
rarious faculty<lb/>
ts as guest col-<lb/>
the newspaper<lb/>
this innovative<lb/>
ft our readers<lb/>
outlet for opi-<lb/>
e restricted in<lb/>
rd to rules of<lb/>
Persons sub-<lb/>
it be willing to<lb/>
lit for their ef-<lb/>
from "ghost<lb/>
ihshed.<lb/>
in participating<lb/>
iformation may<lb/>
'xtt. managing<lb/>
Carolinian, at<lb/>
or by visiting<lb/>
on the second<lb/>
Ltions Building.<lb/>
Nationwide College Enrollments<lb/>
Hit AH-Time High This Year<lb/>
B TOM HAH<lb/>
Despite predictions<lb/>
that college enrollment<lb/>
vsould drop dramatical-<lb/>
ly in the early eighties,<lb/>
there may be about<lb/>
10,000 more students<lb/>
enrolled nationwide<lb/>
this year than during<lb/>
the 1980-1981 academic<lb/>
sear, according to the<lb/>
U.S. Department of<lb/>
Education,<lb/>
The department's an-<lb/>
nual survey predicted<lb/>
that college enrollment<lb/>
would surpass the all-<lb/>
time high set last year<lb/>
with an increase to<lb/>
12,135,000 students cur-<lb/>
rently enrolled.<lb/>
ECU has broken a<lb/>
record of its own with<lb/>
13,264 students enroll-<lb/>
ed, according to univer-<lb/>
sity registrar J. Gilbert<lb/>
Moore. There are 99<lb/>
more students at ECU<lb/>
this year, not including<lb/>
the University<lb/>
(Evening) College.<lb/>
The Education<lb/>
Department's survey<lb/>
also predicted that the<lb/>
college population<lb/>
"appears to be<lb/>
reaching its peak<lb/>
The moderate<lb/>
forecast contrasts with<lb/>
the department's<lb/>
predictions of six years<lb/>
ago, when most<lb/>
observers said college<lb/>
enrollment would<lb/>
plunge during this<lb/>
decade and that the<lb/>
bottom would drop out<lb/>
of the college industry.<lb/>
"The original predic-<lb/>
tions were patterned<lb/>
upon the availability of<lb/>
higher educations<lb/>
'natural' clientele ?<lb/>
the 18- to 24- year<lb/>
olds said Lee Eiden<lb/>
of the Department of<lb/>
Education, explaining<lb/>
the fault in the studies.<lb/>
Enrollment in that<lb/>
age group has declined<lb/>
but the gap has been<lb/>
filled with older, part-<lb/>
time students, Eiden<lb/>
said.<lb/>
fWffPJfV Each ot lhese advertised items is required to be readily available tor sale at or<lb/>
(fflrtT?lTOf? below the advertised price in each A4P Store eicept as specifically noted I<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT SEPT. 26 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 Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
College Restrictive<lb/>
C ontinued from Page 1<lb/>
at proselytizing the unconverted, the<lb/>
students have made a generally<lb/>
favorable impression in 1 ynchburg.<lb/>
"They're good kids says a local<lb/>
reporter, who declined to be iden-<lb/>
tified by name. "They act subdued<lb/>
and docile because everyone's wat-<lb/>
ching 'Jerry's kids and they're<lb/>
afraid to be themselves<lb/>
Usually, students must either ac-<lb/>
cept administration decisions, or<lb/>
leave school. Ricky Johnson, for<lb/>
one. was philosophical about his<lb/>
administratively-broken date.<lb/>
" There is an informal rule against<lb/>
interracial dating he observers,<lb/>
"because parents complain about<lb/>
it Johnson himself complained<lb/>
about the ban to Don Norman, a co-<lb/>
pastor ot Thomas Road Baptist<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
"He wouldn't give permission<lb/>
Johnson recalls, "although he said<lb/>
we could be seen together. I<lb/>
respected him for his understan-<lb/>
ding<lb/>
Rules or no rules, Johnson re-<lb/>
mained determined to follow his<lb/>
heart. He figured out a way to court<lb/>
the woman and stay in school at the<lb/>
same time:<lb/>
4T bought her an engagement ring<lb/>
that afternoon he remembers.<lb/>
They've lived happily ever after.<lb/>
Ricky Johnson later graduated from<lb/>
Liberty Baptist, and today Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Johnson still attend services at<lb/>
Thomas Road Church.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
needs staff writers.<lb/>
Call 757-6309,<lb/>
757-6376<lb/>
or 757-6377 today!<lb/>
t<lb/>
'am<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Frl. &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/>
Big<lb/>
Screen TV<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window For<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
PIZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
AAon. &amp; Thurs. 5:30-8:00S"2<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/>
COUPON ?<lb/>
pfcrxa<lb/>
41ut<lb/>
BIG SAVINGS<lb/>
ATYOUR<lb/>
HOMETOWN<lb/>
PIZZA HUT<lb/>
SO00 Off Any Large Pizza<lb/>
Q With Tills Coupon<lb/>
$O00 Off Any Medium Pizza<lb/>
(L With This Coupon<lb/>
?4 00 Off Any Small Pizza<lb/>
v I With This Coupon<lb/>
2 LOCATIONS IN<lb/>
2601E.10THST. 752-4445<lb/>
305 GREENVILLE BLVD. 756-4320<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES September 27,1981<lb/>
8PIECE BUCKET DELICIOUS<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
7 witl<lb/>
each<lb/>
only<lb/>
2<lb/>
99<lb/>
with supermarket prices<lb/>
3?<lb/>
 A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Cut Free Into<lb/>
Sirloin Tip Roast,<lb/>
Sirloin Tip Steaks,<lb/>
Sirloin Tips Mjr ??.<lb/>
Whole Boneless<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
TWO DOORS FROM<lb/>
COX FLORIST<lb/>
1)1 W 4th S'<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN'<lb/>
Steakhouse<lb/>
jv SAADS<lb/>
fef SHOE<lb/>
Mg REPAIR<lb/>
t.<lb/>
<lb/>
??'<lb/>
'?<lb/>
' v.<lb/>
'yMf 113 Grande Ave<lb/>
Qa 758m8<lb/>
' JP V. Quality<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
COPY CENTER<lb/>
Copies  4.25$<lb/>
100OR MORE<lb/>
5C1 TO W<lb/>
CASE PRICESON<lb/>
BEER &amp; WINE<lb/>
Wfcolatait A Retail ice Sales<lb/>
lib ? lb bass<lb/>
Keg &amp; ice Delivery ? 1 Hours<lb/>
Visa and Maslercharge<lb/>
Greenville - 7JM772<lb/>
Chapel Mill - ??7-?7tl<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
South t<lb/>
No. 6<lb/>
Rock<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
TUES.W 22nd<lb/>
POINTER<lb/>
SISTERS<lb/>
VIDEOTAPED<lb/>
LIVE<lb/>
AT THE ATTIC<lb/>
ON 7 FT TV<lb/>
IN PHOENIX ROOM<lb/>
ALSO SHOWING<lb/>
LEROUX&amp;<lb/>
CAROLYNIMAS<lb/>
FREE ADM<lb/>
DAIL Y SPECIALS<lb/>
MONDAY - $?! OO<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK ? ?TT<lb/>
TUESDAY - $1 QQ<lb/>
BEEF TIPS 7y<lb/>
WEDNESDAY - SI QQ<lb/>
CUBED STEAK ? ?OT<lb/>
THURSDAY - SI AO<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH ? ?QT<lb/>
FRIDAY - SO TO<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE ? T<lb/>
SATURDAY - SO QO<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS X.TT<lb/>
SUNDAY - SI QO<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK ? ?TT<lb/>
All Meals are Complete<lb/>
Including Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp; Texas Toast<lb/>
and<lb/>
Free Tea ???? m.<lb/>
Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
Take Out Service ? W03 E. 10th St. ? 7SS-2712<lb/>
264 By-Pass ? 7S4-0040 ? Hours 11 a.mIO p.m. ? MonThurs.<lb/>
10a.rn11 p.m. FriSun.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
3 or 5 lb.<lb/>
Roll Pkg<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Full-Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
eat Groc?<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
3 a 179<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Dinners<lb/>
69G<lb/>
Meat Loaf<lb/>
Salisbury Steak<lb/>
Chicken 11 OZ<lb/>
Turkey pkg-<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Blue Bonnet<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
b pkgs. WW<lb/>
BUTTERMILK OR HOMESTYLC<lb/>
Ann Page Biscuits<lb/>
4 790<lb/>
cans ? ir<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Pizzas<lb/>
? Hamburger<lb/>
? Pepperoni<lb/>
? Sausage 12 oz.<lb/>
? Cheese pkg.<lb/>
99c<lb/>
Coca Cola Tab<lb/>
Mello Sprite<lb/>
Yello2Litre$l9<lb/>
Plastic Bottle<lb/>
Each<lb/>
FAST ACTION<lb/>
Tide Detergent<lb/>
66<lb/>
49 oz.<lb/>
box<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
Northern Tissue<lb/>
rEFARf<lb/>
FRESH WITH QUALITY<lb/>
U.S. 1 EASTERN ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
White -<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
n.c. grown red or golden<lb/>
I Delicious Apples<lb/>
3<lb/>
lbs. .<lb/>
only 0<lb/>
GREAT FOR KIDS<lb/>
Sunmaid Raisins<lb/>
Mini<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
14<lb/>
V202.<lb/>
boxes<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22. 1981<lb/>
DGA Helps Keep Downtown<lb/>
"ALIVE"<lb/>
The Downtown Greenville Association was<lb/>
founded in 1975. It has grown from a charter<lb/>
group of about 75 members in their initial year to<lb/>
a 1981 enrollment of 109 members, 54 retail firms<lb/>
? 55 business firms.<lb/>
The significant reason for the creation of the<lb/>
DGA was to keep downtown Greenville from<lb/>
following the dilemma of other cities ? empty<lb/>
stores. At 'he inception of the DGA, the city of<lb/>
Greenville had 8 empty stores or tombstones.<lb/>
Since that time, there have been no more than 7<lb/>
empty stores and right now there are just three.<lb/>
When comparing this with other cities in North<lb/>
Carolina this is excellent.<lb/>
The DGA not only wants filled buildings, but it<lb/>
also wants parking places for the customers, so<lb/>
they can patronize these businesses. In 1978, DGA<lb/>
and City Hall fought over the use of parking<lb/>
meters and the DGA won the battle for the<lb/>
elimination of over 200 parking meters.<lb/>
The DGA also helps preserve two parking lots<lb/>
downtown, both near the night life oi Greenville.<lb/>
This type of work is not easy, usually taking a few<lb/>
years to complete. Such committee activity in-<lb/>
cludes research, leg work, and liason activity. The<lb/>
success they have experienced came only as a<lb/>
result of the interest and cooperation given by city<lb/>
of Greenville officials.<lb/>
As always the main interest of the DGA is trade<lb/>
promotion and in 1980 the trade promotion com-<lb/>
mittee sponsored a total of fourteen sales and<lb/>
fourteen mall events. They conduct surveys,<lb/>
distribute banners, and coordinate promotions<lb/>
with an average participation of 36 businesses.<lb/>
Promotions range from George Washington Bir-<lb/>
thday Sales to Beat the Clock Sales. These have<lb/>
met with great acceptance over the past few years.<lb/>
The DGA has many new goals to attain in the<lb/>
future. They are working towards a new look at<lb/>
Christmas time with the ordering of new decora-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
They feel that the Humber House property and<lb/>
the park and parking areas of Evans and Sixth and<lb/>
Fifth Streets could be designated a "square" and<lb/>
appropriately named the "Robert Lee Humber<lb/>
Square<lb/>
Working hard in joint sponsorship with the<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce to establish and oeprate a<lb/>
Farmers Market in the downtown area is a big<lb/>
project this year. This project has already met<lb/>
with heated discussions from city and county<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
Long range goals include establishing a<lb/>
playground for the children and a gazebo-type<lb/>
bandstand for concerts. This will hopefully be<lb/>
located on the Town Commons.<lb/>
The DGA is committed to the improvement of<lb/>
the city of Greenville, and to many this is a never<lb/>
ending battle, especially in the new age of realiza-<lb/>
tion in the United States. Hopefully, with the help<lb/>
of Greenville residents and ECU students, the<lb/>
DGA will accomplish their goals.<lb/>
204 E. 5th<lb/>
WE LOVE<lb/>
YOU ECU<lb/>
Valuable Coupon<lb/>
$100<lb/>
? OFF ANY NON-<lb/>
SALE PRERECORDED ALBUM<lb/>
OR TAPE IN THE STORE!<lb/>
GOOD WITH COUPON<lb/>
? EXPIRES SEPT. 26th, 1981 ?<lb/>
GO PIRA TESH<lb/>
COME WANDER<lb/>
DOWN TO OLD<lb/>
GREENVILLE TOWN<lb/>
FROM ECU WEST<lb/>
ON FIFTH STREET<lb/>
COLLEGE SHOP<lb/>
R.L.HODGES<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
SH00TIE FOX<lb/>
FREDDIES<lb/>
BOOK BARN<lb/>
BEDDINGFIELD DRUG<lb/>
GLOBE HARDWARE<lb/>
PDGH'S TIRE &amp; SERVICE<lb/>
STATION<lb/>
C0IASCHB STREET<lb/>
UNIVERSITT BOOK EX<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA SHOP<lb/>
FRAMING SHOP &amp; GALLERY<lb/>
THE BICYCLE POST<lb/>
WEST SIDE<lb/>
EVANS STREET<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
WCLW<lb/>
THE MUSHROOM<lb/>
BL0DNT-HARVEI<lb/>
HERRING'S MEN'S WEAR<lb/>
THE WIG SHOP<lb/>
CURRY COPY CENTER<lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELRY<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
BRODY'S<lb/>
MARIE'S<lb/>
MARATHON RESTAURANT<lb/>
FOURTH STREET<lb/>
CERTAIN THINGS<lb/>
RIGGAN SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
THE STORK'S NEST<lb/>
COX FLORAL SERVICE<lb/>
EAST SIDE<lb/>
fiWS STREET<lb/>
V.A.MERRITT &amp; SOBS<lb/>
MINGES BUILDING<lb/>
CCFFMAN'S<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS<lb/>
COIN &amp; RING MAN<lb/>
HOUSE OF HATS<lb/>
ROBINSON'S JEWELRY<lb/>
D.A.KELLY'S<lb/>
JEANS GLORY<lb/>
SMITH ELECTRIC<lb/>
CAROLINA TRADING<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
CATO'S<lb/>
LORD'S JEWELRY<lb/>
STEINBECK'S<lb/>
GIANT DISCOUNT<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIP<lb/>
SOUTH 01<lb/>
pjOMBfli ave"?<lb/>
TAFT FURNITURE<lb/>
WHITE'S STORE<lb/>
'WESTERN AUTO SUPPLY<lb/>
TYSON'S FURNITURE<lb/>
RENFREW PRINTERS<lb/>
COZART'S AUTO SUPPLY<lb/>
DIENER'S BAKERY<lb/>
KENS FURNITURE<lb/>
HOLLOWELL'S BKB6<lb/>
WTT NINTH STREET<lb/>
MORGAN'S PRINTING<lb/>
EDWARD'S AUTO SUPPLY<lb/>
JARVIS STREET<lb/>
OVERTON'S SUPER MARKET<lb/>
BANKS<lb/>
BANK OF NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Cotanche Street<lb/>
FIRST STATE BANK<lb/>
Minges Building-E-ans<lb/>
SAVING &amp; LOANS FIRST FEDERAL<lb/>
Evans Mall<lb/>
INSURANCE HOOKER-BUCHANAN<lb/>
South Evans Street<lb/>
BRANCH BANK &amp; TRUST<lb/>
Green &amp; Third Streets<lb/>
PLANTER'S BANK &amp; TRUST<lb/>
Washington -Third Streets<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA NATIONAL BANK<lb/>
First &amp; Greene Streets<lb/>
WACHOVIA BANK k TRUST<lb/>
Washington 4 Fourth Sts<lb/>
HOME FEDERAL<lb/>
South Evans Street<lb/>
TADLOCK AGENCY<lb/>
Evans Mall<lb/>
NORTH STATE<lb/>
Washington &amp; Second Streets<lb/>
H.A.WHITE 4 S0S3<lb/>
Home Federal Building-Evans Street<lb/>
GOODSON-FLANAGAN Evans Mall<lb/>
MILADY BEAUTY SHOPPE<lb/>
Third Street<lb/>
HAIR STYLING<lb/>
TRAVEL AGENCY QUIXOTE TRAVELS - Cotanche Street<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
Minges Building - Evans Mall<lb/>
A BIG WELCOME FROM THE<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Association, Inc.<lb/>
f<lb/>
k i<lb/>
f-Jff ? .<lb/>
? K<lb/>
To Show<lb/>
Our<lb/>
Appreciation<lb/>
117 East 5th Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Sale Wednesday, Thursday,<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
September 23rd through 26th<lb/>
9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
I goto<lb/>
the<lb/>
BOOK BARN<lb/>
for my<lb/>
school<lb/>
supplies<lb/>
11<lb/>
<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
??<lb/>
t<lb/>
vs<lb/>
V<lb/>
?.v<lb/>
v<lb/>
i<lb/>
 V<lb/>
?<lb/>
k?<lb/>
CALENDARS TOTE BAGS<lb/>
PAPERBACK BOOKS<lb/>
kWRITE-ON BOARDS CANDLES<lb/>
A<lb/>
?,???.??m ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0007"/><lb/>
returns<lb/>
.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Tn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0008"/><lb/>
Twenty-eight returns<lb/>
n an investment.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Tmst<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22, 1981<lb/>
Harvard Gas Inj ures 26<lb/>
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) ? A<lb/>
chlorine leak in a Harvard Universi-<lb/>
ty athletic building overcame at least<lb/>
26 people today and forced the<lb/>
evacuation of the building a block<lb/>
away from heavily congested Har-<lb/>
vard Square.<lb/>
The injured included firemen,<lb/>
students and other personnel who<lb/>
worked in the indoor athletic facility<lb/>
- which houses a huge swimming<lb/>
pool and is used for intramural<lb/>
sports activities.<lb/>
A spokesman for the Harvard<lb/>
News Office said 24 students and<lb/>
other personnel were treated in<lb/>
either the Stillman Infirmary on<lb/>
campus or Cambridge City<lb/>
Hospital. At least two firefighters<lb/>
were hospitalized.<lb/>
A university spokeswoman said<lb/>
none of those injured was in critical<lb/>
condition<lb/>
Cambridge Fire Chief Daniel<lb/>
Reagan said two tanks of toxic<lb/>
chlorine gas located in the basement<lb/>
and used to chlorinate the pool were<lb/>
shut off. But he cautioned reporters<lb/>
not to come close to the brick struc-<lb/>
ture surrounded by dormitories.<lb/>
Several firemen, students and<lb/>
other personnel were taken to the<lb/>
university infirmary and then to<lb/>
hospitals with burns on their skin,<lb/>
ears, neck and face.<lb/>
"We're trying to dissipate the gas<lb/>
with water and ventilation<lb/>
Reagan said. The chlorine leak,<lb/>
discovered at 9:45 a.m forced<lb/>
evacuation of the university swimm-<lb/>
ing team which was practicing in the<lb/>
affected building's pool.<lb/>
"This is not an emergency<lb/>
Reagan said, "but it is a potentially<lb/>
dangerous situation<lb/>
He explained that since chlorine<lb/>
gas rises it had pervaded the four-<lb/>
story structure.<lb/>
The smell was so powerful that it<lb/>
was easily detectable on the streets<lb/>
in the area, up to a block away from<lb/>
the athletic building.<lb/>
Dozens of firemen dressed in<lb/>
special gear to protect all areas of<lb/>
their body from exposure rushed in<lb/>
and out of the building.<lb/>
A police spokesman said all<lb/>
available equipment was sent to the<lb/>
Harvard Square area to assist with<lb/>
traffic control and possible evacua-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
A spokeswoman for Mt. Auburn<lb/>
Hospital said one Cambridge<lb/>
firefighter was brought in for treat-<lb/>
ment as a result of the gas leak. He<lb/>
was identified as Robert Blake, 25,<lb/>
and was reported in stable condi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
M<lb/>
Get the bugs out<lb/>
If your bicycle is in less than peak riding condition,<lb/>
come to us. Our professionals are specially trained to handle<lb/>
all aspects of bicycle servicing - from a simple tune-up to<lb/>
major repairs And we use only quality authorized parts.<lb/>
No matter what condition your bicycle is in, we'll help<lb/>
you get the bugs out.<lb/>
BICYCLE POST<lb/>
530 Cotanche St Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Phone: 757 3616 Store Hours: 9:30-5:30 MonFri. 9:00-4:00 Sat.<lb/>
r?<lb/>
(Of<lb/>
middle<lb/>
tirmeh;<lb/>
Thosi<lb/>
responsj<lb/>
most ri<lb/>
adoptee<lb/>
state's II<lb/>
I acin<lb/>
S30 mi<lb/>
Ma ?<lb/>
depann<lb/>
tenu<lb/>
iireiy<lb/>
nur<lb/>
Americi<lb/>
the Dei<lb/>
nuei<lb/>
The<lb/>
class<lb/>
forced<lb/>
severe<lb/>
periled<lb/>
<lb/>
der I<lb/>
cIik: <lb/>
phased<lb/>
teacher:<lb/>
5r<lb/>
<lb/>
When you know bicycles, you want Raleigh.<lb/>
<lb/>
N<lb/>
-  -?<lb/>
I<lb/>
PLANTERS<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
BANK<lb/>
BH in cooperation with Student Ap-<lb/>
preciation Week, will give a 20 dis-<lb/>
count to all students upon presenta-<lb/>
tion of ID card.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
IDENTIFICATION CARD<lb/>
ISSUEI<lb/>
.VOID.<lb/>
PIRATE. EC.<lb/>
Rihiic I, Bon999 A<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C 27J34<lb/>
??z<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
x<lb/>
92435<lb/>
BIRTH DATE<lb/>
777777<lb/>
ID CARD NO<lb/>
STUDENT SIGNATURE<lb/>
"Swuuj GwiUn, Sadm rtk Guduut'<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
Wants to take the<lb/>
opportunity to thank<lb/>
the students on<lb/>
Student Appreciation Week<lb/>
for allowing us<lb/>
to service your<lb/>
banking needs.<lb/>
Conveniently located<lb/>
Downtown, Carolina<lb/>
East Mall &amp; Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Member F.D.I.C.<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0010"/><lb/>
MSU Cuts Boycotted<lb/>
<lb/>
Continued from Page 3<lb/>
middle class family will have an ex-<lb/>
tremely rough time<lb/>
Those realities have evoked varied<lb/>
responses from state colleges. The<lb/>
most radical remedies have been<lb/>
adopted at Michigan State, the<lb/>
state's largest school.<lb/>
Facing a September shortfall of<lb/>
$30 million, MSU President Cecil<lb/>
Mackey first tried to cut every<lb/>
department and lay off many<lb/>
tenured faculty members, while en-<lb/>
tirely eliminating the colleges of<lb/>
nursing (one of the largest in<lb/>
America), urban development, and<lb/>
the Dept. of Urban Planning and<lb/>
Architecture.<lb/>
The subsesquent demonstrations,<lb/>
class boycotts and countless per-<lb/>
sonal denunciations of the president<lb/>
forced the university to adopt a less<lb/>
severe plan, though the three im-<lb/>
periled departments' budgets were<lb/>
barely re-funded.<lb/>
Current plans have several<lb/>
departments merging and others, in-<lb/>
cluding bio-physics, slowly being<lb/>
phased out. At least 100 tenured<lb/>
teachers mav vet be fired.<lb/>
"My blood runs Green and White<lb/>
(MSU's colors) states Tom Hock-<lb/>
ing, past president of the Council of<lb/>
Graduate Students. "But now I'm<lb/>
scared that by the time 1 get my<lb/>
M.A it may not be worth the paper<lb/>
it's printed on<lb/>
At the richer University of<lb/>
Michigan, conditions aren't much<lb/>
better. Besides axing the geography<lb/>
department, the regents cut the ex-<lb/>
tension service budget by 90 per-<lb/>
cent, and laid off permanent<lb/>
employees in a number of pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
President Harold Shapiro<lb/>
christened the cutbacks part of a<lb/>
"smaller but better" program but<lb/>
the phrase, he says, was "widely<lb/>
misunderstood<lb/>
Geography Chairman John Nys-<lb/>
tuen, for one, calls it "capricious<lb/>
"I feel like the babe thrown out<lb/>
with the bathwater says Margaret<lb/>
Wilder, a geography grad student.<lb/>
"I feel a great sadness sighs<lb/>
teacher Kish, who was nearing<lb/>
retirement. "One would like to<lb/>
think the work that one started gets<lb/>
carried on. That's part of the<lb/>
academic world. And to think that<lb/>
by the stroke of the pen<lb/>
"WE'VE<lb/>
GOT A DATE<lb/>
NOV. 19 th:<lb/>
"That's when the<lb/>
American Cancer<lb/>
Society asks every<lb/>
smoker in America<lb/>
to give up cigarettes<lb/>
for a day. Give it a<lb/>
try. You might find<lb/>
you can quit forever"<lb/>
THE GREAT AMERICAN<lb/>
SMOKEOUT<lb/>
American Cancer Society <lb/>
FLOYD G.<lb/>
ROBINSON<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
JO SPARROW<lb/>
MIKE ROBINSON<lb/>
TMi ipacc contributed by me pubtitfKt<lb/>
s<lb/>
II<lb/>
J<lb/>
NUMBERS<lb/>
A<lb/>
WAY OF<lb/>
LIFE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SUM<lb/>
when only the linest will do<lb/>
CALENDARS<lb/>
Give an original gift that's<lb/>
remembered every day of the year.<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS &amp;<lb/>
CARD SHOP <lb/>
Ml Evans St. Mall ?-W4a<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK<lb/>
&amp;NEWS 754-7177<lb/>
Greenville Sq. Shopping Ctr.<lb/>
Full Line<lb/>
of<lb/>
Hardbacks,<lb/>
Paperbacks &amp;<lb/>
Magazines.<lb/>
Local<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Out-of-Town<lb/>
Newspapers.<lb/>
Open 7 Days<lb/>
a Week<lb/>
1982<lb/>
Calenders<lb/>
25<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
OFFERING $25 TRADE IN<lb/>
on a large group of<lb/>
SEIKO WATCHES<lb/>
ALL other merchandise with<lb/>
ECU ID is 15 OFF<lb/>
We buy gold and diamonds.<lb/>
YOUR INDEPENDENT JEWELERS<lb/>
407 EVANS MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENViLLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
m Downtown<lb/>
" Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Thinks<lb/>
Students<lb/>
are<lb/>
Special!<lb/>
Student Appreciation Week<lb/>
Savings!<lb/>
Special Group<lb/>
of<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
Polo Shirts<lb/>
by<lb/>
Ralph Lauren<lb/>
Long sleeve and short sleeve.<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
Wool Flannel<lb/>
Blazers<lb/>
Navy, grey, wine, and assorted<lb/>
tweeds. Sizes 5-13.<lb/>
Calvin Klein Denim<lb/>
20?A<lb/>
You asked for it and you got it! a men's store in Greenville that is different. Different in style, different in<lb/>
merchandise, and different in price. The new Brody's for men at Pitt Plaza is like no other men's store in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Brody's for men is now open. Come in and experience this different store and find out for yourself. Save on<lb/>
the many fall fashion specials that Brody's for men will be offering. Register for over $2,000 in free prizes to be<lb/>
given away.<lb/>
You can't afford to miss it! Brody's for men at Pitt Plaza, Greenville. Like no other men's store you've ever<lb/>
seen!<lb/>
Come in today!<lb/>
Student Appreciation Week<lb/>
Savings!<lb/>
Levis<lb/>
SHIRTS<lb/>
Now<lb/>
<lb/>
Denim and Corduroy<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
Straight Leg &amp; Boot Cut<lb/>
$1290<lb/>
Ooff<lb/>
Reg. $75.00 and $80.00<lb/>
Now<lb/>
$3999<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
Latest styles in<lb/>
sizes 4-16.<lb/>
Reg. $44.00<lb/>
Now<lb/>
$3599<lb/>
Bass Weejuns<lb/>
Reg.$58.00<lb/>
Now<lb/>
$4290<lb/>
In 1936 a shoe was created that has<lb/>
withstood the ultimate test of fashion -<lb/>
timeleisness. The Bass? Weejun? - the<lb/>
look and quality that made Bass? famous<lb/>
Come in and see the origin of the<lb/>
species and its successors. Bass? shoes for<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Come in and<lb/>
Register<lb/>
for over $2,000<lb/>
in free gifts!<lb/>
'Like no other men's store<lb/>
Ibvodiit<lb/>
Pitt Plaza T<lb/>
 for men<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22, 1981<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE FOR RENT<lb/>
'?? YAMAHA DTI2S, excellent<lb/>
condition. S3 mpg. great for cam<lb/>
pus. street and trails. MOO Call<lb/>
WATER BE OS! Now students can<lb/>
buy a water bed (Queen or King)<lb/>
direct from mgt You can sa up<lb/>
to one half retail Complete beds<lb/>
with 15 yr warrenty matress. 5 yr<lb/>
warrenty thermostat heater, liner.<lb/>
frame, headboard, pedestal for as<lb/>
low as IW Queen 1W King. Call<lb/>
David. Delivery Adv 7M-24M.<lb/>
1.0 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator, 4<lb/>
yrs. old, cutting board, $50, call<lb/>
75J 7J70<lb/>
AKC REGISTERED Norwegian<lb/>
Elkhound pups 5150 Ready to go,<lb/>
call 750 1252<lb/>
DORM SIZE refrigerator for M0<lb/>
Like new! Call 750 0755 after ?<lb/>
p m<lb/>
1?M HONDA 750 Custom new con<lb/>
dition. iioo miles. 7 5 Mil after 6<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
GreeneWay ?!2S0monrh rent<lb/>
plus one half utilities. Call<lb/>
355711.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom duplex near cam<lb/>
pus. Very nice, fully carpeted,<lb/>
with fireplace. One half rent and<lb/>
utilities. 752 374, or leave<lb/>
message at 757 1031.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed,<lb/>
Oakmont So, Apts. Poof, tennis,<lb/>
cable, bus service. S7I plus one<lb/>
third utilities. No smokers.<lb/>
7M-3W4.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom house on Elm St.<lb/>
approx. one fourth mile from cam<lb/>
pus with two other girls, Rent 1125<lb/>
a month plus one third utilities.<lb/>
Call 1HJU7.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apartment. 5125<lb/>
per month plus one-half utilities<lb/>
Call 7S7 145.<lb/>
TWO MOBILE HOMES. Com<lb/>
pletely furnished, both have two<lb/>
bedrooms and art approximately<lb/>
three miles from ECU. One rents<lb/>
for ISO, the other is 175. Phone<lb/>
7M-WJ between 7 IT<lb/>
APT. AVAILABLE NOW. Effi<lb/>
ciency with private bath and en-<lb/>
try, near ECU. S?0 752-215.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
GO GREEK! The Alpha Xi Deltas<lb/>
would like to congratulate all the<lb/>
Greeks on a very successful rush.<lb/>
We are proud to announce the ad-<lb/>
dition of 1 new pledges to our<lb/>
sorority: Kim Allen, Kim Calvert,<lb/>
Wanda Cole, Cheryl Gresham,<lb/>
Kim Hastam, Robin Hess, Kelly<lb/>
Kiernan. Karen Koonce, Pam<lb/>
Manning, Jennifer Myers, Dee<lb/>
Nixon, Beth Shaw, Mona Sluder,<lb/>
Gayle Strum, Jeannie Woolard,<lb/>
Roberta Watts Congratulations<lb/>
girls! You're great<lb/>
"Clip Joint" has moved to 1 If Gar-<lb/>
rett. Call Marlena at 750-8032.<lb/>
SPORT FHI, could it be that<lb/>
TMi COSt Is coming back' Watch<lb/>
Otlt ladies! IS WEBSTER getting<lb/>
romantic' JAWS your car ran food<lb/>
to Charlotte How did the sporting<lb/>
run Where is Scarr Millar Hilton<lb/>
HEAD we hear your, a Met<lb/>
resort tor sporting' COOMCS<lb/>
come back!<lb/>
SEX: Now that wo have gotten<lb/>
your attention- II you're in<lb/>
tcrestod in coforguard then Oin<lb/>
our winter guard SLACK RUS<lb/>
SIAN, second to none Far mmr<lb/>
information, call 7H-B443.<lb/>
TYPING tar students, professors,<lb/>
etc. Kerapie Ounn 1010 E- Wright<lb/>
Rd. Greenville. NC 27S34 Call<lb/>
752-0713 altar I p.m.<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC: Convenient<lb/>
and inexpensive. Call Amy at<lb/>
7 57-3730.<lb/>
SEPTEMBER SPCCIAL: (til<lb/>
value) rS5 shampoo, haircut,<lb/>
style, unisex. Students and facul-<lb/>
ty. The Lit Force 752 SOU also.<lb/>
Free Yoga sessions I<lb/>
BE A success in your spare time.<lb/>
Pleasant, profitable work. Your<lb/>
Independent Shaklee Distributor<lb/>
will train 752 5040<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST with<lb/>
fifteen yeas experience as ad-<lb/>
ministrative secretary wants to do<lb/>
typing; at home Reasonable rates<lb/>
Call 7S4V3AM.<lb/>
Support<lb/>
The<lb/>
Down-<lb/>
Town<lb/>
Green-<lb/>
ville<lb/>
Merchants<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Srrvnt i he emmpto community<lb/>
 .tltU.<lb/>
Pubiisised ovary Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dor<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
tidal newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Subscnption Rate yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville, NC.<lb/>
Tk Cast Carolinian offices<lb/>
mru located kj Baa OM South<lb/>
Building an the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. NX.<lb/>
Telephone: 7573 4M7,?Mf<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage raters is pending at<lb/>
Greenville, M.C.<lb/>
THE MUSHROOM<lb/>
SBflDCfiGGB?- OrSlle<lb/>
(Greenville's No. 1 Balloonery)<lb/>
Beautiful, Big Balloon Bouquets-<lb/>
Delivered by costumed messenger<lb/>
Sinoina a song! Call 752-3815<lb/>
tudent<lb/>
.<lb/>
ECU Students: Come in &amp; register<lb/>
for surprise gifts (with ID)<lb/>
during student appreciation days.<lb/>
jost in: Professional face makeup for<lb/>
Halloween?and more.<lb/>
Good Things For C?ntt? People<lb/>
31t Evans St. Mall?Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Lords<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Pulsar watches<lb/>
Also complete selection of diamond rings,<lb/>
necklaces, gold chains. Complete selection of<lb/>
watch bands.<lb/>
7mm 14Kt. gold add-a-bead<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
752-6753<lb/>
Located on<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Cox Floral<lb/>
Service, Inc. <lb/>
When you think of<lb/>
Flowers think of Ours<lb/>
Complete assortment of<lb/>
fresh flowers.<lb/>
Select from our florist<lb/>
refrigerators where<lb/>
you can see what you buy.<lb/>
W<lb/>
117 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Ph. 758-2183<lb/>
Member oFTD,<lb/>
telefloral, AFS<lb/>
Dial PL 2-2136<lb/>
300 EVANS ST.<lb/>
AB3197610<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C.<lb/>
tmVW<lb/>
?)ae Jui ?)a jJcaui .Lea-ttiv<lb/>
2500 S Charles St Lb Post Office Box 930<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834-0210<lb/>
Both Have Fountain Service<lb/>
Both Have Delivery Service (within city limits)<lb/>
Also Rent and Sell Convalescent<lb/>
Aids and Equipment<lb/>
Featuring Quality Prescription Drugs<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 We will pick up your prescription, fill it, and deliver it<lb/>
 back to you.<lb/>
Hargett's ond Bigg's Drug<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
The Key To Good Health<lb/>
?<lb/>
1th e<lb/>
(Dolleae<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Student Appreciation Week<lb/>
$5.00offany<lb/>
purchase over $20.00<lb/>
Does not apply<lb/>
to sale merchandise.<lb/>
Student ID's required<lb/>
for discount.<lb/>
I Hargett's - 756-3344<lb/>
 Bigg's-752-2136 j<lb/>
tiillll?IBtMHMMIHHHII?OWIIHIIMIM?llllltHllllllllllt?IHrilllllllllltllllll(lllll?lllllll(lllll?lllllllllIHllllllllllltT<lb/>
r"? cl eta<lb/>
C WEBER "FORBES<lb/>
PHONE (919) 7523468a P O BOX 7G?419 EVANS STREET ? GREENVILLE, N C 77834<lb/>
Your downtown<lb/>
headquarters<lb/>
for a complete selection<lb/>
of<lb/>
I<lb/>
I Hi<lb/>
NO<lb/>
s<lb/>
Offer good thru<lb/>
Sept. 23-26<lb/>
222 E. FIFTH ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
919-752-5511<lb/>
I<lb/>
skirts<lb/>
slacks<lb/>
sweaters accessories<lb/>
JLlf Q discount on any purchase<lb/>
with ID by students during<lb/>
Student Appreciation Days<lb/>
September 23-26<lb/>
Located on the Downtown Mall<lb/>
blazers<lb/>
blouses<lb/>
dresses<lb/>
Noi<lb/>
.hi<lb/>
"Tl<lb/>
Do!<lb/>
3r<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 22, 1981<lb/>
11<lb/>
k"<lb/>
iiiimmiiiui!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hlillllllilllll<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
PPRECIATIOW<lb/>
526 COTAUCHE<lb/>
hop <lb/>
st. GRB5NV1UE MC. rreM<lb/>
MltCONi EM 50mri f l.fc E lens ? 179.95 <lb/>
KllKOM FE 50mm f 1.8 E lens - 289.95 <lb/>
UIKOWFM 50mm f 1.8 E lens - 239.95 <lb/>
CAMOUAE-I 50mm f 1.8 lens -tt229.95<lb/>
CAUOU Sons?shc5t - $129.95<lb/>
All Other Camera Lens<lb/>
n our store ZOJCOFF neg price<lb/>
On The Mall<lb/>
. Downtown Greenville Association sponsors Student Appreciation H eek<lb/>
ART MAOOG?<lb/>
OFF OM ALL AST<lb/>
S0PR-1ES<lb/>
-jl. -salbs oc?H oKji-ar?<lb/>
?sale ends Saturday)<lb/>
20X<lb/>
AT FIRST STATE BANK YOU'RE<lb/>
MORE THAN "JUST A FACE<lb/>
IN A CROWD"<lb/>
Standing in line is part of every student's life. Just like<lb/>
making new friends, going new places, getting used to<lb/>
your new hometown! At First State Bank you're more<lb/>
than just a face in a line. . . and we want you to know it.<lb/>
FIRST STATE BANK HAS A BETTER<lb/>
WAY OF BANKING. . . JUST FOR YOU<lb/>
I here are a lot of reasons to choose a bank<lb/>
hank locations. . special services. . . free checking<lb/>
and ul i ourse. First State Bank offers all of this to<lb/>
(.Oil<lb/>
THERE IS A BETTER WAY OF BANKING<lb/>
FIRST STATE CLUB.<lb/>
Better than free hecking!<lb/>
Ourtub a ounl is a special package of banking services<lb/>
designed just for you. For one low monthly fee you get<lb/>
su h services as no minimum balance checking. . . at-<lb/>
tractive dub checks. . accidental death insurance. . .<lb/>
special discount coupons (good at local merchants and<lb/>
theatres) and 24 hour BankAround!<lb/>
YOU MAY NEVER HAVE TO STAND IN LINE AGAIN!<lb/>
u. you can handle your banking 24 hours a day. every<lb/>
iiy u.ith a first State BankAround card. You can use<lb/>
your card at both BankAround locations in Greenville or<lb/>
at any BankAround intert hange location in North or<lb/>
South Carolina All at no charge to you!<lb/>
PLUS WE HAVE SATURDAY MORNING<lb/>
BANKING AT OUR WINTERVILLE OFFICE.<lb/>
No other bank in town offers a better banking bargain or<lb/>
lower costs. The hometown bank wants you to feel right<lb/>
at home . friendly service. . . lower costs. . . better<lb/>
banking<lb/>
It's worth (hanging banks for.<lb/>
THE HOMETOWN BANK INVITES YOU TO<lb/>
ITS DOWNTOWN OFFICE ON THE MALL<lb/>
TO VISIT YOUR HOMETOWN BANKER.<lb/>
No matter which banking plan you choose. . . student<lb/>
checking. or our regular club account. you won't<lb/>
find a better way of banking!<lb/>
First State Bank<lb/>
"THE HOMETOWN BANK" 756-2427<lb/>
Downtown branch: Corner of Northwest branch: Memorial<lb/>
3rd and Evans 3 blocks from Drive, across from hospital<lb/>
campus. complex.<lb/>
Greenville branch: Memorial<lb/>
Drive, beside Parkers<lb/>
Barbecue.<lb/>
vVinterville office: Main St.<lb/>
Winterville<lb/>
Member FDIC.<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 22. 1981<lb/>
8 ExcitingColors<lb/>
maroon, white, gold<lb/>
navy, royal blue, gray<lb/>
red,and kellvgreen.<lb/>
PRINTING $1.00 EXTRA<lb/>
svURrs<lb/>
Available in<lb/>
blue, white, pink<lb/>
and beige,<lb/>
list price 17.00.<lb/>
All Sales Final<lb/>
Cash only<lb/>
No Refunds<lb/>
U.BX r.B.10.95 U.B.E<lb/>
boded Pullovers1<lb/>
plain<lb/>
U.B.EJ1 .with couponh B.?.<lb/>
T<lb/>
u<lb/>
off<lb/>
ort Shirts<lb/>
reg. 9.95-16.95<lb/>
U.B.E)Kwith couponL r f<lb/>
U.B.EJ<lb/>
S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
Now Thru<lb/>
Sat. Sept. 26<lb/>
U.B.EJ r eg.6.95-0.95 XP B?E.<lb/>
crew Sweatshirts<lb/>
NECK<lb/>
V<lb/>
plain<lb/>
u.<lb/>
?wim coo<lb/>
SHO R rs<lb/>
r.g. 7.95 -8.93<lb/>
' U.B.E.<lb/>
<lb/>
Tennis Shorts<lb/>
U.B.E.lkwith couponffi BE<lb/>
Includes<lb/>
hats, knapsacks,<lb/>
umbrellas, mugs,<lb/>
and selected<lb/>
novelties.<lb/>
Check out our<lb/>
Caribou Mountaineering Packs<lb/>
v<lb/>
Was)<lb/>
quelj<lb/>
ing<lb/>
COU<lb/>
aiiioi<lb/>
needl<lb/>
t hr<lb/>
schoj<lb/>
mon<lb/>
Buri<lb/>
mot!<lb/>
place<lb/>
rea<lb/>
I<lb/>
'<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
seliiri<lb/>
said<lb/>
bad<lb/>
som<lb/>
if<lb/>
ill<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0014"/><lb/>
1)11 I ASl C AKOI INIAN SFPTEMBFR 22. IY8I<lb/>
13<lb/>
 Womb For Rent'<lb/>
Woman Seeks Money For School<lb/>
VANCOUVER,<lb/>
Wash. (UPI) ? Jac-<lb/>
quelyn Burkart is offer-<lb/>
ing to "rent" her<lb/>
womb to a childless<lb/>
couple for $15,000, the<lb/>
amount of money she<lb/>
needs to put herself<lb/>
through nursing<lb/>
school.<lb/>
My priority is the<lb/>
money said Ms.<lb/>
Burkart, 27, a divorced<lb/>
mother of two who<lb/>
placed a newspaper ad<lb/>
reading: "Healthy<lb/>
woman wants to carry<lb/>
pregnancy for infertile<lb/>
couple<lb/>
"In essence, I am<lb/>
selling a baby she<lb/>
said in a weekend inter-<lb/>
iew. "But I don't feel<lb/>
bad about it. I'm doing<lb/>
someone a service. I<lb/>
iove kids, but this isn't<lb/>
my baby, it's someone<lb/>
else's. I'm just growing<lb/>
it for them, renting out<lb/>
for a high fee my<lb/>
uterus<lb/>
Ms. Burkart worked<lb/>
as a pregnancy and<lb/>
abortion counselor for<lb/>
five years before<lb/>
becoming a full-time<lb/>
nursing student at<lb/>
Portland State Univer-<lb/>
sity, across the Colum-<lb/>
bia River from Van-<lb/>
couver.<lb/>
"I just don't have<lb/>
time to work. I need<lb/>
money to get through<lb/>
school she said. "I<lb/>
have easy pregnancies<lb/>
and deliveries, so 1<lb/>
decided it would be a<lb/>
fairly easy way to make<lb/>
money<lb/>
She has a part-time<lb/>
job as a nurse's aide.<lb/>
but she said her earn-<lb/>
ings just cannot pay her<lb/>
tuition, rent, child care<lb/>
and other expenses. She<lb/>
figures the $15,000 she<lb/>
would earn as a sur-<lb/>
rogate mother would<lb/>
last three years.<lb/>
"What I'd planned<lb/>
on using it for was just<lb/>
tuition and extras tak-<lb/>
ing the kids to a movie<lb/>
or out to dinner once in<lb/>
a while she said.<lb/>
The young woman<lb/>
said she will be<lb/>
psychologically<lb/>
prepared to give up the<lb/>
child to the couple she<lb/>
selects.<lb/>
"I love being preg-<lb/>
nant, and it's probably<lb/>
going to be difficult for<lb/>
me when it comes to<lb/>
saying goodbye to it<lb/>
she said. "But when I<lb/>
know that they love the<lb/>
baby and will give it a<lb/>
good home, that will<lb/>
make me feel better<lb/>
Ms. Burkart was<lb/>
married at 17 and<lb/>
separated from her hus-<lb/>
band shortly after the<lb/>
birth of her first child,<lb/>
Heidi, now 9.<lb/>
After her divorce,<lb/>
she decided she wanted<lb/>
another child so she<lb/>
performed artificial in-<lb/>
semination on herself<lb/>
using sperm donated by<lb/>
a friend. The result was<lb/>
Jeffrey, now 2.<lb/>
Ms. Burkart said she<lb/>
discussed the idea with<lb/>
her daughter.<lb/>
"Heidi is very world-<lb/>
ly as a child. I have<lb/>
never sheltered her<lb/>
she said. "Her first<lb/>
reaction was, 'Oh,<lb/>
good. If it's a girl we<lb/>
can keep it and give<lb/>
Jeffrey away<lb/>
Carolinians Approve<lb/>
Of Pres. Reagan<lb/>
CHARLOTTE<lb/>
(UPI) ?A poll by a<lb/>
Charlotte newspaper<lb/>
indicates 53 percent of<lb/>
those interviewed in<lb/>
North and South<lb/>
Carolina feel President<lb/>
Reagan has done- a<lb/>
good to excellent job.<lb/>
COMPARE OUR PHOTOFINISHING PRICES!<lb/>
?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<lb/>
7<lb/>
r<lb/>
w<lb/>
ENTIRE MONTH<lb/>
OF SEPTEMBER<lb/>
SETS OF<lb/>
COLOR<lb/>
PRINTS<lb/>
AT<lb/>
1 LOW PRICE<lb/>
ofPmans<lb/>
MEMS WEAR<lb/>
and<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ECKERD'S BISSETTE'S<lb/>
PRICE<lb/>
5.543.99<lb/>
8.206.49<lb/>
9.527.39<lb/>
14.0810.99<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
PRINTS<lb/>
12 exp. (24 prints)<lb/>
20 exp. (40 prints)<lb/>
24 exp. (48 prints)<lb/>
36 exp. (72 prints)<lb/>
at time of developing of any color print film sizes 110 - 126 - 135<lb/>
EISStTTC'S<lb/>
DISCOUNT CENTER<lb/>
PRICE<lb/>
ON THE MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
 mm kk me<lb/>
-ww w w KM w ?v u c<lb/>
Q3rwmi<lb/>
203 East 5th Street ? Greenville, n. C.27934<lb/>
Aw Ooff on a merchandise<lb/>
(except sale items) to all ECU<lb/>
students with Valid ID.<lb/>
Sizes 3-13<lb/>
4-14<lb/>
Featuring such name brands as?<lb/>
DeLanthe<lb/>
Jerell<lb/>
Greenbrook<lb/>
Act I<lb/>
Country Miss<lb/>
Jody<lb/>
Crazy Horse<lb/>
Henry Pollack<lb/>
Molly D<lb/>
College Town<lb/>
Peerless<lb/>
eJe<lb/>
downtown<lb/>
Located beside Newby's at 203 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Offer good thru Sept. 26<lb/>
s<lb/>
k<lb/>
? m.<lb/>
It has been our objective for some<lb/>
Twenty-five years to serve both the students<lb/>
and the faculty with men's clothing design-<lb/>
ed with a traditional flair. Our expertise is<lb/>
fit, quality, and service. We attempt to com-<lb/>
pletely search both the domestic and the<lb/>
European men's wear markets so that we<lb/>
can offer to you the best in traditional<lb/>
fashion at a high quality level. So, whether<lb/>
you're looking for something unusual in a<lb/>
Harris-Tweed sport coat, khaki pants or<lb/>
outerwear directed to practical and func-<lb/>
tional wear, we think you'll enjoy shopping<lb/>
in our stores. We want to be your clothing<lb/>
store.<lb/>
offtnani<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
W<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0015"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
To Show Our Appreciation<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
P.O. Box 2 ? 211 Jarvis St. ? Greenville, N.C. 27834 ? Phone: 752-5025<lb/>
Prices effective Thurs. 22nd<lb/>
thru Sat. 24th<lb/>
FRESH WHOLE<lb/>
FRYERS<lb/>
42 J<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
PORK<lb/>
PICNIC<lb/>
79 C<lb/>
FULL CUT WESTERN<lb/>
ROUND<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
$179<lb/>
Lb. I<lb/>
tffMMBIMM<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
ANY FOOD ORDER<lb/>
Regardless of size.<lb/>
MINUTE MAID FRESH<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
V2Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
98 <lb/>
Receive 10 off your grocery purchase upon presentation off<lb/>
coupon to cashier. Sorry, no discounts on keg beer.<lb/>
. Expires Oct. 3<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
Purchase<lb/>
KINGSTON FROZEN<lb/>
CHOPPED OR LEAF<lb/>
SPINACH<lb/>
5$l00<lb/>
10-Ox. Pkg.<lb/>
CLIP THIS COUPON<lb/>
DIXIE CRYSTALS SUGAR<lb/>
5-Lb. Bag<lb/>
98 C<lb/>
With this coupon and $7.50 food order excluding specials. Without coupon<lb/>
$1.78. Limit one per customer. Expires 9 26-8<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
SAV-MOR<lb/>
MARGARINE<lb/>
Lb. Pkg.<lb/>
3$l<lb/>
CUP THIS COUPON-<lb/>
COLD POWER<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
98<lb/>
Qt. Box<lb/>
Wltti this coupon and S7.SO food ordtr excluding specials. Without coupon<lb/>
"J it,?4. Limit one per customer. Expires 9 26 si<lb/>
CUP THIS COUPO<lb/>
WESSON OIL<lb/>
88<lb/>
24-Oz. Bottle<lb/>
With this coupon and<lb/>
$7 50 food order<lb/>
excluding specials.<lb/>
Without coupon<lb/>
$1.49. Limit one<lb/>
per customer.<lb/>
Expires 9-26-81.<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
MIRACLE<lb/>
WHIP<lb/>
$128<lb/>
Qt. Jar<lb/>
GRADE "A" PITT COUNTY<lb/>
LARGE EGGS<lb/>
Dozen<lb/>
78<lb/>
KRAFT REG. $1.59 VALUE I VrfVAV"<lb/>
GRAPE JELLY COLA<lb/>
2-Lb. Jar<lb/>
98 <lb/>
16-Oz. Ctn.<lb/>
Of 8<lb/>
1<lb/>
58<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
Deposit<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
Gt. Roll<lb/>
Limit 2 with $7.SO food order.<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
French, Italian, Catalina<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
DRESSINGS<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
DUNCAN HINES<lb/>
YELLOW ONLY<lb/>
CAKE<lb/>
MIX<lb/>
18-Oz. BOX<lb/>
Limit 2 with $7.50<lb/>
food order.<lb/>
68<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
BARTLETT<lb/>
PEARS<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
49 <lb/>
SERVE WITH STEAKS<lb/>
BAKING<lb/>
POTATOES<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
29 C<lb/>
?'?? ' y<lb/>
YELLOW<lb/>
ONIONS<lb/>
3 Lb. Bag<lb/>
79<lb/>
-rT"<lb/>
i i ??????<lb/>
98<lb/>
GWALTNEY<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
12-OX. Pkg.<lb/>
89<lb/>
GENERIC<lb/>
POTATO<lb/>
CHIPS<lb/>
99<lb/>
Lb. Bag<lb/>
COTTONELLE<lb/>
TOILET<lb/>
TISSUE<lb/>
Roll Pkg.<lb/>
jiffy froz.? All variottos SEALTEST ? All Flavors<lb/>
POT pies ice<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
$188<lb/>
?-Or Pkg<lb/>
5$l<lb/>
13 Gallon'<lb/>
rt? . ?" ??? ? ?<lb/>
Da<lb/>
hor<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
he:<lb/>
bioi<lb/>
Heii<lb/>
L<lb/>
Hin<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Hig<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
bea<lb/>
Huh<lb/>
H l<lb/>
I<lb/>
thei<lb/>
tog<lb/>
$10<lb/>
i<lb/>
Me<lb/>
D:<lb/>
diw<lb/>
?.?,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0016"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22. 1981 Page 15<lb/>
Bette Davis<lb/>
Bio Reveals Big Affair<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? Bette<lb/>
Davis' first husband bugged their<lb/>
home, surprised her in bed with<lb/>
Howard Hughes and blackmailed<lb/>
her for $80,000, an unauthorized<lb/>
biography of the actress says.<lb/>
In excerpts of Bette: The life of<lb/>
Bette Davis, appearing next week in<lb/>
Us magazine, author Charles<lb/>
Hingham also said Joan Crawford<lb/>
was a lesbian who wooed Miss Davis<lb/>
with perfume, flowers and letters.<lb/>
"Crawford had for years nourish-<lb/>
ed a secret desire for Bette<lb/>
Higham writes. "No lovesick male<lb/>
in those happv, half-forgotten days<lb/>
when women were still wooed by<lb/>
men tried harder to seduce a<lb/>
beautiful woman than Crawford did<lb/>
in her pursuit of Davis<lb/>
The legendary actresses starred<lb/>
together in Whatever Happened to<lb/>
Baby Jane as sisters and former<lb/>
child stars who despised each other.<lb/>
Hingham said Miss Davis spurned<lb/>
Miss Crawford's advances.<lb/>
But she fell madly in love with<lb/>
Hughes; handsome, overwhelming-<lb/>
ly wealthy and a great flier whose<lb/>
picture, I fell's Angels, was the<lb/>
"ultimate in aviation movies<lb/>
Their romance was disrupted by<lb/>
her first husband. Ham Nelson,<lb/>
who rigged a recording system in the<lb/>
walls of the house they shared and<lb/>
then eavesdropped from a sound<lb/>
truck parked on a side steet, the<lb/>
author claimed.<lb/>
Nelson "burst into the bedroom"<lb/>
and caught Hughes and his wife<lb/>
together, Hingham said.<lb/>
The author said Hughes paid<lb/>
$70,000 and Miss Davis paid<lb/>
$10,000. Then she reportedly bor-<lb/>
rowed enough money to repay<lb/>
Hughes his $70,000.<lb/>
Rolling Stones<lb/>
Rolling Again<lb/>
BOSTON (UPI) ? The Rolling<lb/>
Stones, the superstars who have<lb/>
been trying to get their rock show on<lb/>
a New England stage for the last<lb/>
week, may perform in Boston<lb/>
tonight.<lb/>
The Boston Herald American to-<lb/>
day reported the rock group's ad-<lb/>
vance team met with city officials<lb/>
Sunday afternoon to work out<lb/>
details of a concert.<lb/>
The location of the performance<lb/>
and information about the price and<lb/>
availability of tickets were to be an-<lb/>
nounced sometime today, only<lb/>
hours before the show, in an effort<lb/>
to control crowds, the newspaper<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Reporters and camera crews for<lb/>
WBZ-TV and WNAC-TV were ask-<lb/>
ed to leave a City Hall conference<lb/>
room Sunday afternoon when they<lb/>
showed up unexpectedly and walked<lb/>
into a meeting.<lb/>
Police Commissioner Joseph Jor-<lb/>
dan and other public safety officials<lb/>
were also present at the meeting.<lb/>
City officials last week rejected a<lb/>
request for a concert permit from<lb/>
the Stones, who have been rehears-<lb/>
ing for their national tour in the tiny<lb/>
central Massachusetts town of<lb/>
North Brookfield.<lb/>
The Johnny Van Zant Band Explodes A t Thursday's Concert<lb/>
Pictured above (from left to right): lead guitarist Eric Leif-Lundgren,<lb/>
vocalist Johnny Van Zant and lead guitarist Robbie Gay. The boys<lb/>
from Jacksonville, Florida shared the spotlight with neighbors<lb/>
Blackfoot and heavy metal band Def Leppard last Thursday night<lb/>
before some 4,000 fans in Minges Coliseum. The concert was sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Union Major Attractions Committee.<lb/>
Spain 's 'Mi Prima A ngelica' Here Wednesday<lb/>
B DOUGLAS QUEEN<lb/>
M?lf Wnltt<lb/>
This Wednesday evening, September 23, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Films Committee will present Carlos<lb/>
Saura's My C ousin Angelica Mi f'rima Angelica).<lb/>
Following the film, in room 221 of the student center,<lb/>
Dr. Joseph A. Fernandez of the Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literature will lead a short, informal<lb/>
discussion of fy Cousin Angelica. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served and any interested students, faculty or staff are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
The Spanish are noted for their gaiety and colorful<lb/>
festivals imbuing that culture with a potency far more<lb/>
poigant considering the disasterous Franco years that<lb/>
have muddled the land of Picasso and Miro.<lb/>
But Spain has opened up from that dark time under<lb/>
the relative democratic Juan Carlos. This is evident<lb/>
from the rather spirited film industry that has at last<lb/>
been allowed to come to grips with the horror of the<lb/>
Civil war and the brutal repression of the Republican<lb/>
cause. Out of this new spirit came a wonderful film in<lb/>
1974 entitled Cousin Angelica.<lb/>
Directed by Carlos Saura, Cousin Angelica lightly<lb/>
skips over the terrible past with an elan that neither<lb/>
gratuitiously capitalizes on the past nor ignor the rigors<lb/>
imposed upon the people of Spain on account of it. In<lb/>
all, Cousin Angelica is a finely poised and balanced<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The story concerns a middle-aged businessman, Luis<lb/>
Vazques, who is unmarried and lives alone in<lb/>
Barcelona. He is enroute to the south of Spain to lay his<lb/>
mother's bones in the family crypt, where Luis grew up<lb/>
and where his Falangist father fought for the<lb/>
Republican cause.<lb/>
As Vincent Canby, film reviewer for the New York<lb/>
Times, said about Cousin Angelica: "It is not simply<lb/>
about Luis's childhood before and during the civil war.<lb/>
It's about Luis's recollections of his childhood as he<lb/>
renews contacts with his family, especially with his<lb/>
cousin Angelica, the sweet, pigtailed little girl he once<lb/>
loved and who has grown in to a handsome, rather or-<lb/>
dinary woman whose disappointments frighten him<lb/>
An interesting theatrical technique employed by<lb/>
Saura in his film debunks the conventional flashback by<lb/>
simply having Luis walk into his memories a grown<lb/>
man.<lb/>
For instance, at one point we find Luis weeping while<lb/>
his mother and father, considerably younger than he is,<lb/>
console him. This scene does not irk nor call undue at-<lb/>
tention to itself within the context of the film. This sur-<lb/>
real approach refreshes the film where traditional<lb/>
flashbacks seem to isolate the audience in a blur of past<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The scenes between Luis and Angelica, played by the<lb/>
beautiful actress Maj;ia,Qa,CL,Feria(ridei, are. as Canby<lb/>
says, "both intensely moving and sightly perverse, being<lb/>
simultaneously a remembrance of not-quite-forgotten<lb/>
intimacies and a description of where Luis is now, a<lb/>
contemporary Spaniard whose scars remain raw, if un-<lb/>
seen. He's a Humbert Humbert with no will to act,<lb/>
without even a fantasy life<lb/>
Jose Luis Lopez Vazquez is excellent as Luis, ap-<lb/>
parently cheerful, self-contained and settled, though<lb/>
forever disconnected from the kind of family life he<lb/>
remembers with such mixed feelings.<lb/>
Spain, though, is the real subject of the film, and at<lb/>
the time it was reiesed there (1974) Cousin Angelica<lb/>
caused quite a stir with its reference to the war, Spanish<lb/>
Catholicism and the possible nobility of at least some<lb/>
members of Republican cause.<lb/>
Even if it is difficult for someone not familiar with<lb/>
the subtleties of Spanish life to get all of these<lb/>
references, the movie is extraordinarily compelling, an<lb/>
invitation into a world until recently closed, but whose<lb/>
vitality has remained undiminished.<lb/>
Admission to the film is by student ID and activity<lb/>
card or MSC membership.<lb/>
Continental Divide<lb/>
Screwball Comedy Has Class<lb/>
In the tradition of Tracy and Hepburn, Belushi and Brown "meet cute" in the fortiesish screwball comedy<lb/>
"Continental Divide The film has been playing since Thursday at Greenville's Buccaneer Theaters.<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
WMWMm<lb/>
East meets West at the Continental Divide. East is Er-<lb/>
nie Souchak (John Belushi), a writer for a Chicago<lb/>
newspaper. West is Nell Porter (Blair Brown), a back-<lb/>
to-nature "eagle freak<lb/>
Continental Divide is the movie in which they meet,<lb/>
Fight, and fall in love. The film, now playing at the Buc-<lb/>
caneer Theater in Greenville, is one of the classiest pro-<lb/>
ducts to come from the Hollywood factory in many<lb/>
years<lb/>
Almost the best thing about Divide is not what it is,<lb/>
but what it isn't: another silly slapstick-and-sex epic.<lb/>
Despite the presence of Belushi, Mr. Adolescent Animal<lb/>
House Hijinks himself, and the heavy promotion for the<lb/>
film in college newspapers such as this one, the movie is<lb/>
not what you'd expect.<lb/>
Though Divide contains profanity, it isn't over-used<lb/>
(in other words, "Fuck you isn't constantly offered<lb/>
as an example of witty repartee). Though there is a lot<lb/>
of sex in the storyline, there is no more than is normal in<lb/>
most modern relationships, and there are absolutely no<lb/>
gratuitous peep-show sex scenes.<lb/>
Though there is some physical humor, mostly con-<lb/>
sisting of a roly-poly, backpacked Belushi attempting to<lb/>
survive in the wilderness, it isn't the main subject mat-<lb/>
ter. And, best of all. . . CONTINTENTAL DIVIDE<lb/>
CONTAINS ABSOLUTELY NO CAR CRASHES!<lb/>
! This well-written, effectively-directed Film bears little<lb/>
resemblance to Stripes, Caddyshack, Blues Brothers, or<lb/>
others if that innumerable, infamous ilk. It rather<lb/>
resembles a romantic comedy made back in the 1930's<lb/>
or the 40's. In fact, it's more romantic than comedic.<lb/>
The romance begins when Souchak-Belushi, a<lb/>
muckraking journalist who has aroused the ire of a cor-<lb/>
rupt city official, grudgingly decides to literally head for<lb/>
the hills, to avoid any more attacks by the official's<lb/>
cronies. While in the Rockies, he's supposed to do a<lb/>
story on Porter-Brown, an independent-minded or-<lb/>
nithologist, who lives alone amid the aeries of the eagles<lb/>
she studies and loves.<lb/>
He meets her at the end of a sharp stick when she<lb/>
discovers him asleep in her cabin. He's a big-city boy,<lb/>
born and bred in the concrete jungle. She's into wide<lb/>
open spaces and mountain ranges. He's addicted to<lb/>
nicotine, she's into health food.<lb/>
He's ugly, dumpy, and non-atheletic; she's healthy,<lb/>
energetic and good-looking. He thinks she's a frigid<lb/>
"eagle freak She thinks he's a useless parasitic<lb/>
newspaperman. He's stuck in her cabin, unable to leave,<lb/>
while she just wants to be left alone. Under such cir-<lb/>
cumstances as these, how could anything but true love<lb/>
occur?<lb/>
Three cheers to producers Steve Spielberg, Bernie<lb/>
Brillstein and Bob Larson, writer Lawrence Kasdan<lb/>
(The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark),<lb/>
and director Michael Apted (Coal Miner's Daughter),<lb/>
The producers should be praised for gambling on a<lb/>
film so different from everything else being done today;<lb/>
Kasdan should be congratulated for a script both witty<lb/>
and warm.<lb/>
In Divide both the underbelly of the big city and the<lb/>
spirit of the untamed wilderness are brought to life on<lb/>
the screen. The nature photography, especially the<lb/>
scenes of soaring eagles, is inspiring.<lb/>
The film's stars should also be honored, both for<lb/>
their fine performances and Belushi, for having the<lb/>
courage to tackle a role quite different from those for<lb/>
which he is best known.<lb/>
In this screwball romantic comedy, Belushi and<lb/>
Brown may not be Tracy and Hepburn, maybe not even<lb/>
Fields and West, but they, and the movie, are good<lb/>
enough to stand the comparison.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0017"/><lb/>
TH? EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 23.1981 16<lb/>
Are Professors Trading Grades For Sex?<lb/>
The following article originally appeared in the<lb/>
Outlook section of the Sunday, September 6.<lb/>
1981 issue of The Washington Post. The story<lb/>
will be run in two installments. See this Thurs-<lb/>
day's East Carolinian for part two. L sed by per-<lb/>
mission. All rights reserved.<lb/>
B NOEL EPSTEIN<lb/>
Ottllook t'dllor lor Th V? hin?lon Pmi<lb/>
It is known by appropriately coarse phrases at<lb/>
more than a few colleges and universities. In<lb/>
some cases, according to higher education's<lb/>
Change magazine, it's commonly called "an A<lb/>
for a lay That's when an instructor offers a<lb/>
good grade or recommendation or other reward<lb/>
in return for sexual favors from students. In<lb/>
other instances, when punishment is threatened,<lb/>
it often goes by the alliterative "f or fail<lb/>
It's the kind of thing an Arizona State Univer-<lb/>
sity student reported in a study at that campus in<lb/>
May: "One of my professors told me, 'if you'd<lb/>
be willing to get involved in some extracurricular<lb/>
activity, it could improve your grade I asked<lb/>
him what kind of activity he meant. He said to<lb/>
meet him at his apartment at 8 that night and I'd<lb/>
find out<lb/>
It's also often the threat of retaliation inherent<lb/>
in a professor's propositioning wf fondling or<lb/>
making other unwanted advances toward a stu-<lb/>
dent. "Many professors simply don't understand<lb/>
the effect on the student of w hat they do, that she<lb/>
is frequently mortified by it but afraid she will<lb/>
offend the man who controls her grades or<lb/>
career says Bernice Sandier, director of the<lb/>
Association of American Colleges' Project on<lb/>
the Status and Education of Women.<lb/>
But whatever you call it, explicit or implicit<lb/>
sexual manipulation of students by faculty or<lb/>
other staff is becoming an increasingly visible<lb/>
and vexing issue on the nation's campuses, one<lb/>
filled with complexity and paradox, at least once<lb/>
you get past the jokes about faculty fringe<lb/>
benefits and the student who complained of en-<lb/>
ding up only getting a D from the lover anyway.<lb/>
The jokes don't help much with the nasty bits<lb/>
of evidence emerging from some campuses, the<lb/>
grievance procedures being instituted, the<lb/>
charges and countercharges filed, the handful of<lb/>
professors already disciplined, the fear of<lb/>
misunderstandings, of malicious accusations, of<lb/>
wrongly damaged careers, of professors conse- about two percent of the student respondents,<lb/>
quently staying clear of female students ? and of saying they had faced bribes or threats from in-<lb/>
that, too, shortchanging women in their educa- structors for sexual activities. That may sound<lb/>
tions. like a mere nuisance to some, just two percent.<lb/>
Start with bits of evidence. The Arizona State<lb/>
study, for example, found nine students, or See LAY, Page 17<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
: ? i: m i ?<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been bare for you since 1974<lb/>
providing private, understanding heeith oare<lb/>
to women of an agss at a reasonable oost<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're hare<lb/>
Can 781-S8B0 in Balatdh<lb/>
ben you need us.<lb/>
anytiiaa.<lb/>
SOUTH'S<lb/>
NO. 6<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
u:i<lb/>
WED. HARVEY DALTON<lb/>
ARNOLD<lb/>
(FORMER MEMBER OF OUTLAWS)<lb/>
CLIFF'S-<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Thurs. PKM<lb/>
(FORMER MEMBERSOF<lb/>
NANTUCKET)<lb/>
K<lb/>
n<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
THE ECU<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Representative on<lb/>
the Media Board.<lb/>
Pick up applications in Media<lb/>
Board secretary's office. 8 a.ml<lb/>
p.m. and 2 p.m5 p.m. Monday-<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Seafood Plate<lb/>
(Fish, shrimp, oysters)4.50<lb/>
Ocean Perch2.50<lb/>
Crab Cakes1.85<lb/>
Thurs. ?<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp2.95<lb/>
East 10th St. ? Extension past Hastings Ford<lb/>
Phone 752-3172 ? 4:30-9:00 MonSat.<lb/>
Chaps<lb/>
Hwy. 251 North<lb/>
Klmton, N. C.<lb/>
Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's Largest<lb/>
A Finest Private Club<lb/>
Presents in Sept.<lb/>
Sept. 23<lb/>
Castaways<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
Sept. 25<lb/>
Fantastic<lb/>
Shakers<lb/>
Sept. 26<lb/>
Catalinas<lb/>
Sept. 30<lb/>
Staircase<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
Oct. 2<lb/>
Chairmen<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Board<lb/>
Bands Subject to Change without Notice<lb/>
'Ifer'<lb/>
aj"?" ??<lb/>
&amp;? <lb/>
8<lb/>
r<lb/>
CLASSIC STYLE<lb/>
campus<lb/>
LeTJGRE"<lb/>
V. NECK<lb/>
SWEATER<lb/>
$2 95<lb/>
KELLY GREEN?<lb/>
RED-<lb/>
TAN OR NAVY<lb/>
MEN'SSIZESS M L XL<lb/>
BUTTON-DOWN OXFORD CLOTH<lb/>
YOUNGAAEN'S<lb/>
DRESS<lb/>
SHIRTS<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Your choice for any occasion?the polycotton ox<lb/>
ford cloth button down classic, tailored for the<lb/>
detail conscious guy who knows fashion and<lb/>
demands value.<lb/>
?Blue?White?Tan<lb/>
?Sizes l4'2 to 17<lb/>
J. HERRING'S MENSWEAR<lb/>
G?N GPtrrOFB U S1NE SS<lb/>
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Oxford Cloth Dress<lb/>
Shirts?All Colors<lb/>
Starting at 7.50<lb/>
Pants Starting<lb/>
at 10.00<lb/>
Flannel Shirts<lb/>
Starting at 6.00<lb/>
Large Selection<lb/>
of Sweaters<lb/>
Big Selection of<lb/>
Jackets. Suede,<lb/>
Leather, Ski Jackets<lb/>
and Vests. Shoes,<lb/>
Suits and Jackets<lb/>
l<lb/>
The perfect sweaters. Link stitch<lb/>
lightweight acrylic.<lb/>
illllllillllllllllllllHllllHHllllil<lb/>
DOWNTOWN SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
FREE PARKING -<lb/>
Students wID get<lb/>
additional 10 off.<lb/>
J. Herring's<lb/>
Menswear<lb/>
400 S. EVANS MALL - DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
10A.M7P.M.<lb/>
iniiiiiiii<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0018"/><lb/>
lilt I AMAKOI INIAN<lb/>
SI PlhMBl R22, 1981<lb/>
17<lb/>
ome<lb/>
Continued From Page 16<lb/>
But if you were to apply that to trie total female<lb/>
college student population of roughly 5.5<lb/>
million, you would happen to get 110,000<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Mai Rowc, special assistant to the president<lb/>
ol Mil. has been dealing with the problem for<lb/>
nine cars there ? about 25 MIT student<lb/>
grievances a year, she reports ? and helping<lb/>
numerous other campuses. She estimates that, in-<lb/>
deed, "at least two percent of any female student<lb/>
population will run into some fairly serious pro-<lb/>
blem of this kind in any given year, and an addi-<lb/>
tional significant but much smaller group of<lb/>
men. The male students usually are also concern-<lb/>
ed with male offenders The Association of<lb/>
American colleges' Sandier notes that, addi-<lb/>
tionally, there are "some instances of male<lb/>
students being propositioned by female pro-<lb/>
ws<lb/>
Nanc) Carlson, director of counseling and<lb/>
careei services at the University of Rhode Island,<lb/>
says "there are probabl) somewhere between 10<lb/>
and 100 cases a year" of these types there. A<lb/>
JO Rhode Island survey actually turned up<lb/>
ee students who reported being propositioned<lb/>
themselves in return for grades or test marks and<lb/>
?w reporting similar propositions made to other<lb/>
idents at the campus. Two students in recent<lb/>
years have gone so tar as to take their complaints<lb/>
the administration.<lb/>
In one case last year, the faculty member<lb/>
resigned when we brought it to his attention<lb/>
says Douglas Rosie, assistant vice president for<lb/>
a, ademic affairs.<lb/>
You can find other scattered examinations of<lb/>
issue with wider-ranging definitions of of-<lb/>
and thus more o them reported. But<lb/>
aps the best comment on the extent of the<lb/>
comes from Jerold Roschwalb of the<lb/>
il ssociation o State Universities and<lb/>
? Grant Colleges, whosimpl) states: "There<lb/>
? this going on than mam people believe<lb/>
an othei s fantasize<lb/>
v -osited professor-student sexual rela-<lb/>
te, h.ne long been common,<lb/>
,i; the graduate school level. A 1979<lb/>
merican Psychological Associa-<lb/>
erapy division members, in fact,<lb/>
.i quartet oi women respondents<lb/>
vived their doctorates in the<lb/>
ng six years had engaged in "intercourse<lb/>
il stimulation" with their professors.<lb/>
ces all of that was coerced.<lb/>
lie also, to be sure, women students<lb/>
r willing to sleep with professors<lb/>
? ademic benefits, particularly with<lb/>
. 's intense competition for the right medical.<lb/>
;ness or other graduate school. Prof.<lb/>
1 ivloi at the University of Rochester<lb/>
reports in his Change magazine article that "to<lb/>
many students this practice seems to be little<lb/>
more than an offer of one favor in exchange for<lb/>
another. As one of them expressed her own at-<lb/>
titude, 'I've already lost it, once more won't<lb/>
make any difference ? and I'll get an A in Bio<lb/>
That's not the kind of student achiever you'd<lb/>
want at your university, of course, and you've<lb/>
got to worry about any professor who goes along<lb/>
with selling favoritism for sex, no matter what<lb/>
lure or "midlife crisis" he may be facing. As<lb/>
MIT's Rowe aptly states of the overall problem,<lb/>
"It is most fundamentally an abrogation of the<lb/>
contract we have to lead, to teach, to inspire, to<lb/>
foster excellence<lb/>
The problem for the couple can also come<lb/>
after the affair breaks off. In one case with<lb/>
echoes of that one-liner about the student who<lb/>
got a D anyway, a former Indiana University stu-<lb/>
dent in speech pathology filed suit several years<lb/>
ago after her ex-lover professor outright flunked<lb/>
her. She claimed he acted maliciously, out of<lb/>
spite. But in March 1979 the federal district court<lb/>
judge dismissed the case, unconvinced from her<lb/>
academic work that the instructor had acted im-<lb/>
properly.<lb/>
However one feels about voluntary cases,<lb/>
though, there is no doubt that there's a serious<lb/>
problem in professorial coercion of sexual<lb/>
favors, or that until recently there was little out-<lb/>
cry about it. In part, this was because other<lb/>
faculty members or administrators who knew of<lb/>
such cases were hesitant to act.<lb/>
Jane Levin, a clinical associate at Washington<lb/>
Univerty's Graduate Institute of Education in St.<lb/>
Louis, for example, was well aware of the pro-<lb/>
blem. In the past four years, she says, three<lb/>
students came into her office "telling me that a<lb/>
male faculty member either threatened them with<lb/>
punishment or promised tham a higher grade if<lb/>
they would have sexual relations with them<lb/>
But she adds: "Quite frankly, I didn't want to<lb/>
know the details. If 1 knew who it was and more<lb/>
about what had gone on, I would have felt com-<lb/>
pelled to intervene. That would have been very<lb/>
difficult, and perhaps with negative conse-<lb/>
quences for my job. 1 do not have tenure Levin<lb/>
is now part of a group working to sensitize her<lb/>
campus to the problem.<lb/>
In large part, though, all the reports suggest,<lb/>
the invisibility of the problem was ? and still is<lb/>
in most cases ? due to the students' fears of em-<lb/>
barrassment if they reported the episodes, to<lb/>
their sense of shame or intimidation or self-<lb/>
doubt, to worries ? evidently well founded at<lb/>
some campuses ? that nothing would be done<lb/>
anyway. Better just to try to avoid the professor,<lb/>
change courses or even majors or otherwise han-<lb/>
dle it yourself.<lb/>
Some young women do indeed handle it, and<lb/>
rather nicely. The Arizona State student who<lb/>
reported being propositioned for<lb/>
"extracurricular activities for example, stated:<lb/>
"1 told him to go take a flying leap and if he ever<lb/>
said another word or changed my grade to<lb/>
something I didn't earn (lower or higher), I'd<lb/>
report him<lb/>
"Good for her says the Association of<lb/>
American Colleges' Sandier. "But unfortunately<lb/>
many other students fear that they wouldn't even<lb/>
be believed, that it would be a young student's<lb/>
word against the respected scholar's, and so they<lb/>
are just unwilling to report it. Reporting sexual<lb/>
offenses by your professor ? or what the student<lb/>
takes as such an offense ? is a very difficult step<lb/>
for most students, and certainly one which<lb/>
nobody should take lightly. That's why specific-<lb/>
policies and sensitive, confidential grievance pro-<lb/>
cedures need to be established in this area on all<lb/>
campuses ? for the sake of both sides<lb/>
You will hear variations on that theme from<lb/>
almost anybody you talk to who is groping with<lb/>
this issue: the need for policies and procedures,<lb/>
incorporated in or added to long-existing student<lb/>
and faculty grivance processes. It doesn't seem<lb/>
like much to ask. Grievance procedures for sex<lb/>
discrimination complaints in education are<lb/>
already required by federal regulation, under Ti-<lb/>
tle IX of the 1972 education amendments for<lb/>
campuses receiving federal aid. But that doesn't<lb/>
mean most institutions have done much, if<lb/>
anything, about it.<lb/>
Thursday: Student brings<lb/>
in landmark case.<lb/>
suit against professor<lb/>
BIKINI<lb/>
AWARENESS<lb/>
WEEK<lb/>
JAN. 7-<lb/>
14<lb/>
hac<lb/>
LCfitKtOitQ A60OT Coll&amp;?Tm WflfijQ lAJt<lb/>
bH OW'P AJoxis<lb/>
 IT'S TUSTTHlT An<lb/>
AJ?wO ?XWAAT? 13<lb/>
0ri? of THOSC t?0tL?<lb/>
woirrt pcf)srjc SrvticCS<lb/>
HANGOVER<lb/>
FOR ALCOHOLICS<lb/>
WEEK ?May 6-13<lb/>
0H SToP exA6GtTMT(vJ6!<lb/>
(aJHATs thvt ?<lb/>
OrO Of B'S<lb/>
SMILES<lb/>
<lb/>
DONT GET BURNED<lb/>
by Fire<lb/>
CAS<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
APPRECIATION<lb/>
WEEK<lb/>
Steinbeck'<lb/>
MOTS SHOP<lb/>
Downtown Store Only<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Editor for REBEL<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE EBONY<lb/>
HERALD<lb/>
Pick up applications in Media<lb/>
Board secretary's office - 8<lb/>
a.ml p.m. and 2 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Friday.<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
wedding bands<lb/>
diamonds<lb/>
all gold &amp; silver<lb/>
Silver coins<lb/>
china &amp; crystal<lb/>
fine watches<lb/>
&amp;RINC<lb/>
0F KEY SALES CO iN<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. SSSIS<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
umiilJJ.Mni.VMIIil'H'VJ.rTTTHai<lb/>
V<lb/>
M&amp;ZZffl&amp;P<lb/>
Angel Flight is an honorary, professional, service<lb/>
organization of dedicated individuals from leading<lb/>
colleges across the nation. It is an organization that<lb/>
works closely with Air Force ROTC, however,<lb/>
membership in Angel Flight requires no military<lb/>
obligation. Fun activities are socials, Military Ball,<lb/>
and being together as a group! There are fun and<lb/>
rewarding service projects, too, that make you feel<lb/>
good about yourself. If you're interested in having<lb/>
fun, Angel Flight isfor you!<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
DATES TO REMEMBER<lb/>
Attend 2 out of 3<lb/>
Tues Sept. 29, 5:00, Wright Annex, Rm. 308<lb/>
SUBMARINE PARTY<lb/>
Wed Sept. 30, 5:00, Wright Annex, Rm. 308<lb/>
ICE CREAM PARTY<lb/>
Thurs, Oct. 1, 5:00, Elm St. Park<lb/>
COOK-OUT<lb/>
ALL BOOKS ARE NEW.<lb/>
MANY BOOKS DISCOUNTED<lb/>
UP TO 60<lb/>
ART<lb/>
ANIMALS<lb/>
GARDENING<lb/>
COOKBOOKS<lb/>
SPOTLIGHTING OUR<lb/>
REMAINDER<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
NATURE<lb/>
ANTIQUES<lb/>
SALE BEGINS SEPT. 21 ENDS SEPT. 26<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
OWNED AND OPERATED BY EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0019"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN1AN<lb/>
ECU Upset Bid Foiled<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22, 1981 Page I 8<lb/>
Fireworks Push Pack Past Pirates<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
RALEIGH ? N.C. State<lb/>
freshman tailback Joe Mclntosh is<lb/>
fast gaining the reputation for being<lb/>
able to "do it all He did just that<lb/>
Saturday in leading the Wolfpack to<lb/>
a 31-10 victory over East Carolina.<lb/>
Mclntosh not only rushed for 167<lb/>
yards, including a 40-yard<lb/>
touchdown run, he also threw for a<lb/>
crucial go-ahead score in the third<lb/>
period.<lb/>
After the fired-up Pirates, coming<lb/>
off a humiliating 56-0 loss at North<lb/>
Carolina the week before, battled<lb/>
the Pack to a 10-10 halftime tie, the<lb/>
two clubs exchanged fumbles and<lb/>
punts until the four minute mark of<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
At that point the Pirates, who had<lb/>
just moved from their 19 to their<lb/>
33-yard line in two plays, fumbled a<lb/>
snap from center. State's Sam Key<lb/>
fell on the ball, giving the Wolfpack<lb/>
just the opportunity it needed.<lb/>
Mclntosh moved the pigskin to<lb/>
the 16 with a 17-yard burst up the<lb/>
middle. Three plays later the Pack<lb/>
N s,<lb/>
MM- 10<lb/>
7 3 7 1431<lb/>
Ml w,r, ; run (Bwhbrck kirk)<lb/>
MN Mclalmh 4(1 ran i Aulrn kick)<lb/>
NCS Aalca t Hi<lb/>
HI - Bmhhck 37 Hi<lb/>
NCS ? Avrr 7 past from Mrlntmta (Autra kkk)<lb/>
NCS ? sulH??n II ran lAuIra kkk)<lb/>
NCS ? M?do? M pant rriurn (Auirn kick!<lb/>
MlIV<lb/>
Him ataaaal17l?<lb/>
Kushe unji64M?74?-27-<lb/>
Pantag tank14116<lb/>
Paaaaala-?-1nio-i<lb/>
PUBIV5-3 23-45.0<lb/>
tambin-lml3-25-4<lb/>
Praaltln-tardt5-402-30<lb/>
Tolal nffrnvr3453?3<lb/>
IMIIVIIH At I.KADKRS<lb/>
Nushlag - Ml Htnrr 11-74. Blut 13-44. SHsoa 1?W.<lb/>
UnVi a-25. Wildrn 4-11. (nob 2-1. NCSU: Mclalmh<lb/>
24-167. Sullttan IH2. Ii?wn 7-15. Prtrrum 2 Emm 3-6.<lb/>
arra 1-2.<lb/>
Paula BCt NeKna I 1-4-0-K Ingr.m 4-3-1-42<lb/>
Sl?art 2-2t? N( SI 5cr la-9-1-109. Mclalmh<lb/>
11-0-7.<lb/>
KfCTHim - Ml Van. 2-53. O'RoarV VM. Blue 2-21.<lb/>
Btarr 1 12. Mrhofa 1-11 NGH i Qvkk 3-4S. I nmnic<lb/>
2-2. Wall 1-17. Mclalmh 1-1. Avrr) 1-7. I i.miii 1-5. Mi-<lb/>
day 1-5.<lb/>
faced a fourth-and-inches situation<lb/>
at the Pirate six. State coach Monte<lb/>
Kiffin opted to go for a first down<lb/>
or touchdown rather than have<lb/>
kicker Todd Auten try a field goal.<lb/>
State quarterback Tol Avery did<lb/>
just what was expected, pitch the<lb/>
ball back to Mclntosh. What the<lb/>
freshmen sensation did with the ball<lb/>
surprised everybody in the stadium,<lb/>
though. He threw a perfect pass to<lb/>
Avery, who easily danced into the<lb/>
endzone.<lb/>
"We had watched the corner<lb/>
come up the last time we were down<lb/>
there Kiffin said of the play.<lb/>
"The corner got fooled on that<lb/>
play, but the defensive end reacted<lb/>
well. Joe had to throw a perfect<lb/>
pass<lb/>
The suprising pass from Mcln-<lb/>
tosh was definitely the turning point<lb/>
in the contest. The fumble that gave<lb/>
State the opportunity to score also<lb/>
played a major factor in the<lb/>
Wolfpack win.<lb/>
On the play, ECU starting<lb/>
quarterback Carlton Nelson re-<lb/>
injured his neck trying to dive after<lb/>
the loose football. He returned<lb/>
several series later but was not as ef-<lb/>
fective as before the injury.<lb/>
Mclntosh's pass coupled with two<lb/>
long punt returns by Louie<lb/>
Meadows in the fourth quarter<lb/>
made the final score a deceiving<lb/>
31-10.<lb/>
Meadows returned one ECU punt<lb/>
37-yards to the ECU 34-yard line to<lb/>
set up State's second touchdown of<lb/>
the second half. Fullback Dwigh:<lb/>
Sullivan covered the last eight yards<lb/>
of the six-play drive and put State<lb/>
up 24-10.<lb/>
The next Meadows return was<lb/>
never supposed to happen. A mix-<lb/>
up on the ECU sidelines resulted in<lb/>
a Tommy Barnhardt punt to the<lb/>
State 36, where Meadows took it<lb/>
and went 64 yards into the endzone.<lb/>
Todd Auten's extra point put the<lb/>
nail in the Pirate coffin, giving State<lb/>
a 31-10 lead with 6:16 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Barnhardt's punt came with the<lb/>
Pirates facing a fourth-and-one<lb/>
situation at their own 2. The<lb/>
freshman kicker was never supposed<lb/>
Tough To Bring Down<lb/>
N.C. State freshman running back Joe Mclntosh gave the<lb/>
ECU defense fits in the Wolf pack's 31-10 vie lory Saturday<lb/>
night. Here, a number of Pirate defenders try to bring down<lb/>
the first-year sensation. End Jody Schuz and nose guard Fee<lb/>
Griffin have their hand on Mclntosh, while linebackers Mike<lb/>
Grant (49) and Ronald Reid (56) are trying to assist. Trying<lb/>
to keep Grant out of the play is Slate guard Chuck Long<lb/>
(63). (Photo By Jon Jordan)<lb/>
to have gotten the punt off, Pirate<lb/>
coach Ed Emory said following the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"There was some mis-<lb/>
communication on the sidelines<lb/>
Emory explained. "I take full<lb/>
responsibility for it. We were sup-<lb/>
posed to have faked the punt<lb/>
The two Meadows punt returns<lb/>
certainly turned what was a very<lb/>
close game for three quarters into<lb/>
what would appear on the surface to<lb/>
be a one-sided affair in the end.<lb/>
"This baTT game was lots closet<lb/>
than 31-10 said Emory. "Our kids<lb/>
just don't deserve to be printed up<lb/>
as 31-10 losers, but that's the way<lb/>
life is sometimes<lb/>
The Pirates came out and moved<lb/>
the ball impressively on their first<lb/>
possession of the contest, driving to<lb/>
the State 23 before having to settle<lb/>
for a Chuck Bushbeck field goal at-<lb/>
tempt, which was unsuccessful.<lb/>
The Pirates capitalized on a Clint<lb/>
Harris interception on their next<lb/>
drive, though, moving from their<lb/>
own 38 towards a score. The big<lb/>
play was a 43-yard pass from Nelson<lb/>
to tight end Norwood Vann. Roy<lb/>
Wiley went over from two yards out<lb/>
on the next play to put the Bucs<lb/>
ahead, 7-0.<lb/>
State evened the score on the en-<lb/>
suing possession. Mclntosh went the<lb/>
last 40 yards to tie the score at<lb/>
seven.<lb/>
On the first drive of the second<lb/>
quarter, the Wolfpack broke the tie,<lb/>
getting a 49-yard field goal from<lb/>
Todd Auten. The Pirates countered<lb/>
three minutes later, Bushbeck hit-<lb/>
ting a 37-varder to tie the score at<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
The play of Mclntosh over-<lb/>
shadowed a pair of impressive<lb/>
backfieldperformances. State<lb/>
fullback Dwight Sullivan carried<lb/>
eight times for 82 vards, while ECU<lb/>
halfback Earnest Byner rushed 11<lb/>
times for 74 yards.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 1-2, return<lb/>
home to Ficklen Stadium this Satur-<lb/>
day, to take on Toledo. The<lb/>
Wolfpack. 3-0, hosts Maryland this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Mclntosh. Meadows Pace Pack<lb/>
The play taking place in the above photo happened moments<lb/>
before N.C. State scored the go-ahead TD in the Packs'<lb/>
31-10 victory over ECU. A halfback pass from freshman Joe<lb/>
Mclntosh to quarterback Tol Avery gave State the lead it<lb/>
never relinquished. (Photo By Gary Patterson)<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Asafcilaal Sports F dilor<lb/>
RALEIGH? See Joe run. See<lb/>
Joe catch. See Joe pass. Pass? Sure.<lb/>
Joe Mclntosh did everything in his<lb/>
team's 31-10 victory over the Pirates<lb/>
of East Carolina.<lb/>
The Lexington, N.C, freshman<lb/>
not only rushed for 167 yards on 24<lb/>
carries, including a 40-yard<lb/>
touchdown run in the first quarter,<lb/>
but also threw a touchdown pass to<lb/>
quarterback Tol Avery on a well-<lb/>
executed flea-flicker.<lb/>
The play started out as a sweep<lb/>
right to Mclntosh, but the 5-11, 181-<lb/>
pound back turned around and<lb/>
threw a perfect pass to Avery, who<lb/>
momentarily stopped after the han-<lb/>
doff, fooling the Pirate defense.<lb/>
"They (East Carolina) were blitz-<lb/>
ing at the time Mclntosh said in<lb/>
describing the scoring pass. "I was<lb/>
just hoping to throw it in the general<lb/>
area. The play has been in our game<lb/>
plan all along. We've run it maybe<lb/>
10 times in practice<lb/>
"We ran that same sweep<lb/>
earlier State Coach Monte Kiffin<lb/>
said following the game. "Avery<lb/>
really had to scramble, and Joe real-<lb/>
ly made a great pass. That was the<lb/>
turning point. You've got to take<lb/>
these chances? good teams have to<lb/>
do things like that<lb/>
When Mclntosh wasn't passing,<lb/>
he was on his way to his third<lb/>
100-yard game of this young<lb/>
season? something no other State<lb/>
running back has done after his first<lb/>
three games. Mclntosh rushed for<lb/>
131 yards against Richmond and 220<lb/>
in the Wake Forest eame.<lb/>
The Wolfpack, down 7-0 in the<lb/>
first quarter, drove to the East<lb/>
Carolina 40, where Mclntosh took<lb/>
the handoff from Avery and was<lb/>
seemingly stopped by the middle of<lb/>
the Pirate line. But the agile<lb/>
freshman kept his balance and<lb/>
bolted for a 40-yard score.<lb/>
The aggressive Pirate defense<lb/>
banged up the impressive freshman,<lb/>
however. "The yardage was tougher<lb/>
tonight Mclntosh said. "ECU<lb/>
was fired up, but our guys didn't<lb/>
give up. 1 was hurt (badly bruised<lb/>
thigh) on a screen play, but to be a<lb/>
good runner, you have to be able to<lb/>
play with pain<lb/>
"Joe got banged up Kiffin add-<lb/>
ed He showed a lot tonight. There<lb/>
weren't many open holes. But give<lb/>
the ECU defense credit; they're not<lb/>
the same bunch of guys I watched<lb/>
on film. We had to throw the ball<lb/>
more<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Defensive back Louie Meadows<lb/>
proved he still had some of his old<lb/>
high school moves by returning a<lb/>
punt 64 yards for a touchdown late<lb/>
in the fourth quarter to seal the<lb/>
State win. The 5 10, 189-pound<lb/>
junior was i running back at White<lb/>
Oak High School.<lb/>
?'1 thought 1 was going to have a<lb/>
pretty good return Meadows said,<lb/>
"but I kept getting blocks. Donnie<lb/>
1 edrande threw a great one. All the<lb/>
guvs did. We (defensive backs)<lb/>
don't get to handle the ball that<lb/>
much, but returning punts helps our<lb/>
team a lot.<lb/>
"ECU has a great punt coverage<lb/>
team, but great blocking was the<lb/>
key<lb/>
Pirate Coach Ed Emory said that<lb/>
the punt Meadows ran back was<lb/>
supposed to have been faked. "We<lb/>
should have gone for the first down,<lb/>
but there was mis-communication<lb/>
on the sidelines, which I take the<lb/>
blame for<lb/>
"Louie got the defensive game<lb/>
ball Kiffin added. "He really<lb/>
deserved it. He's a great athlete<lb/>
Margin Of State Victory Very Deceiving<lb/>
Game Much Closer Than 31-10<lb/>
"Nobody deserves to have this<lb/>
happen to them after what we've<lb/>
been through<lb/>
The words came from a frustrated<lb/>
ECU football coach Ed Emory<lb/>
following his team's hard-fought<lb/>
31-10 loss to N.C. State Saturday<lb/>
night. He was speaking to a small<lb/>
gathering of media personnel.<lb/>
Emory was right on the money<lb/>
with his statement. The Pirates had<lb/>
lost just one week earlier by a<lb/>
humiliating 56-0 margin to North<lb/>
Carolina. But, in Raleigh the Bucs<lb/>
were a totally different team.<lb/>
They played the favored<lb/>
Wolfpack to a 10-10 halftime tie.<lb/>
That tie stood until the 1:56 mark of<lb/>
the third quarter. The score got<lb/>
worse in the fourth quarter when the<lb/>
Pirate specialty teams faltered,<lb/>
allowing State's Louie Meadows to<lb/>
return one punt for a touchdown<lb/>
and another one deep into ECU ter-<lb/>
ritory to set up a score.<lb/>
"If there was one area I thought<lb/>
we were sound in Emory said, "it<lb/>
was the kicking game. We had a<lb/>
couple of big breakdowns that really<lb/>
hurt us. We must work on that<lb/>
area<lb/>
Indeed, it was a shame that the<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
kicking game broke down ? taking<lb/>
nothing away from Meadows'<lb/>
returns ? for the Pirates showed<lb/>
the integrity and character in<lb/>
Raleigh that they obviously lacked<lb/>
in Chapel Hill just seven days<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Many criticisized the Pirates<lb/>
heavily following the big loss to the<lb/>
Tar Heels. This columnist was one<lb/>
of them. Surely, they needed some<lb/>
ribbing.<lb/>
But, alas, good performances<lb/>
must be complimented. The Bucs<lb/>
shook off the loss and came to<lb/>
Raleigh with the plan and the at-<lb/>
titude to win.<lb/>
ECU had a good chance of upset-<lb/>
ting the Wolfpack. Four factors<lb/>
went a long way in preventing the<lb/>
Bucs from picking up win number<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Two of them are obvious ?<lb/>
Meadows returns and the play of<lb/>
freshman sensation Joe Mclntosh.<lb/>
The First-year running back rushed<lb/>
for 167 yards, including a 40-yard<lb/>
touchdown run, and threw for the<lb/>
go-ahead score in the third period.<lb/>
Factor number three was the in-<lb/>
jury in the third period to starting<lb/>
ECU quarterback Carlton Nelson.<lb/>
The injury seemed to throw the en-<lb/>
tire Pirate attack off. Who knows<lb/>
what would have happened if the<lb/>
Pirates had been able to fight back<lb/>
with their starting quarterback<lb/>
healthy?<lb/>
The injury came on a play that the<lb/>
Pirates would just as soon forget.<lb/>
The team had just gotten a ten-yard<lb/>
run from Earnest Byner and had a<lb/>
first down on their own 33. A<lb/>
fumbled snap meant a mass of<lb/>
bodies, including Nelson's, trying to<lb/>
recover the loose ball. State got the<lb/>
fumble and six plays later a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Factor number four goes back to<lb/>
factor number one ? Meadows<lb/>
returns. The last of those returns, a<lb/>
64-yard touchdown, should not<lb/>
have occurred.<lb/>
The Pirates faced a fourth-and-<lb/>
one situation at their own 29-yard-<lb/>
line midway through the fourth<lb/>
quarter and trailed State, 24-10.<lb/>
The decision was made on the<lb/>
ECU sideline to try a fake punt.<lb/>
Some mis-communication on the<lb/>
bench, though, prevented the<lb/>
message from getting to the huddle<lb/>
on the field.<lb/>
The rest of the story is well-<lb/>
known, the Pirates punt and<lb/>
Meadows takes it all the way.<lb/>
The final score definitely put a<lb/>
damper in the Pirates' spirits. The<lb/>
team fought back and made a most<lb/>
respectable showing against the<lb/>
Wolfpack. It's just a shame that the<lb/>
score could not have reflected the<lb/>
team's efforts.<lb/>
Emory, though disheartened by<lb/>
the end result, is encouraged. In<lb/>
fact, he had some strong words for<lb/>
ECU's future opponents.<lb/>
"This just puts us that much fur-<lb/>
ther to come back from he said<lb/>
sternly. "But I will settle for<lb/>
nothing less than victory from this<lb/>
team in 1981. And we will get those<lb/>
victories<lb/>
If Emory can get the Pirates to<lb/>
come on the Field the rest of the<lb/>
season the way they did in Raleigh,<lb/>
the victories will, indeed, come.<lb/>
Intercepting<lb/>
N.C. State defensive back Perry Williams steps in front of<lb/>
ECU tight end Norwood Vann to intercept a pass from<lb/>
Pirate quarterback Kevin Ingram late in Saturday's game.<lb/>
(Photo By Jon Jordan)<lb/>
Bro<lb/>
The Pil<lb/>
Carolina,<lb/>
two-goal<lb/>
of Bill<lb/>
Mark H<lb/>
Coker (a<lb/>
Minges H<lb/>
Goalie<lb/>
had thr<lb/>
preservim<lb/>
thus tieil<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
scoreless<lb/>
ECU sen<lb/>
jp only<lb/>
season<lb/>
The Pirl<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
The E<lb/>
is LI afl<lb/>
year, sp<lb/>
matches<lb/>
The Pi<lb/>
encountel<lb/>
match<lb/>
scores r<lb/>
team<lb/>
match wj<lb/>
After<lb/>
David i<lb/>
Lady PirJ<lb/>
the taller<lb/>
"We p<lb/>
it was<lb/>
season<lb/>
ing was<lb/>
with lots<lb/>
the floor,<lb/>
way the t<lb/>
first gam<lb/>
The tw<lb/>
in the cor<lb/>
Lexanne<lb/>
impress<lb/>
Saturcu<lb/>
Tic<lb/>
Studen'<lb/>
this Sati<lb/>
football<lb/>
Toledo<lb/>
a v a 11 a b ii<lb/>
(Tuesc <lb/>
Studer<lb/>
to pick j<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
7 p.m<lb/>
Stadiuml<lb/>
Thursc<lb/>
be made<lb/>
Ticket<lb/>
Menden!<lb/>
Center f<lb/>
p.m. boi<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
u-<lb/>
?cu<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
USI<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0020"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 22, 1981<lb/>
19<lb/>
Brown Ties Record<lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
over-<lb/>
irned<lb/>
EC I<lb/>
?d 1 I<lb/>
itur-<lb/>
cr<lb/>
the<lb/>
hat<lb/>
OUT<lb/>
he<lb/>
i at<lb/>
We<lb/>
unication<lb/>
"he<lb/>
? game<lb/>
'He really<lb/>
al athlete<lb/>
4:<lb/>
in front of<lb/>
pass from<lb/>
riav Is name.<lb/>
Kickers' Defense Key To Win<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
The Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina, behind the<lb/>
two-goal performances<lb/>
of Bill Merwin and<lb/>
Mark Hardy defeated<lb/>
Coker College, 4-0, at<lb/>
Minges Field Sunday.<lb/>
Goalie Steve Brown<lb/>
had three saves in<lb/>
preserving the shutout;<lb/>
thus tieing an East<lb/>
Carolina record for six<lb/>
scoreless matches. The<lb/>
ECU senior has gien<lb/>
up only two goals all<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 2-2,<lb/>
bounced back from a<lb/>
tough 1-0 loss in the<lb/>
final minutes to Elon<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
"We improved our<lb/>
mid-field play said<lb/>
an obviousK pleased<lb/>
Brad Smith after the<lb/>
Coker match Smith<lb/>
was unhappy with his<lb/>
team's mid-field play in<lb/>
a 1-0 loss to George<lb/>
Mason last week. "We<lb/>
made some changes<lb/>
there by moving Billy<lb/>
Merwin to the middle<lb/>
Trje Pirates took 20<lb/>
shots, compared to on-<lb/>
ly four for Coker, as<lb/>
ECU scored two goals<lb/>
in the first period and<lb/>
added two more in the<lb/>
second.<lb/>
Merwin and Hardy,<lb/>
along with Brad Win-<lb/>
chell had one assist<lb/>
each for the Pirates.<lb/>
"We came back very<lb/>
well Smith said. "We<lb/>
completely<lb/>
dominated? it was a<lb/>
very good win for us.<lb/>
Brown played well, but<lb/>
you have to credit our<lb/>
defense with the<lb/>
shutout<lb/>
The win against<lb/>
C oker came after the<lb/>
Pirates suffered the<lb/>
ough defeat to Elon on<lb/>
a penalty-kick.<lb/>
Both clubs had II<lb/>
shots at the goal;<lb/>
Calloway scoring the<lb/>
eventual game-winner.<lb/>
Shields added an assist<lb/>
for Elon.<lb/>
"We got beat by a<lb/>
better team Smith<lb/>
concluded. "They<lb/>
played harder than we<lb/>
did.<lb/>
"We should have<lb/>
won that match. Elon<lb/>
was much improved;<lb/>
we're much improved.<lb/>
We fell to execute some<lb/>
of our runs (plays).<lb/>
When we failed to do<lb/>
that, they scored.<lb/>
"This week is a real<lb/>
critical week for us.<lb/>
(The Bucs travel to<lb/>
Campbell and Guilford<lb/>
before hosting the<lb/>
Wolfpack of N.C.<lb/>
State.) If we get by<lb/>
these teams, we might<lb/>
just get our winning<lb/>
season<lb/>
The Pirates finished<lb/>
last season with a 7-14-1<lb/>
mark; a mark the team<lb/>
wants to improve bad-<lb/>
ly. "Last year's record<lb/>
is deceptive Smith ex-<lb/>
plains. "We played six<lb/>
teams that were rated in<lb/>
the top 20 in the nation<lb/>
at some point in the<lb/>
seaon. We also had<lb/>
five, one-goal losses.<lb/>
"When taking over<lb/>
the Pirate program, I<lb/>
said we would be com-<lb/>
petitive immediately,<lb/>
but that it would take<lb/>
four years to build a<lb/>
winner. This is my first<lb/>
class of recruited<lb/>
seniors<lb/>
The match with<lb/>
nationally-ranked State<lb/>
is important in that the<lb/>
contest will be the first<lb/>
night match hosted by<lb/>
East Carolina. The<lb/>
match will be played at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium on<lb/>
September 30 (Wed.) at<lb/>
7:30.<lb/>
BLACK<lb/>
RUSSIAN<lb/>
E.C.CD.E.C. WINTER GUARDE<lb/>
Spikers Defeat Duke<lb/>
rlftlM<lb/>
Staff Wrilrr<lb/>
The East Carolina voilebyall team<lb/>
is l-l after.its first action of the<lb/>
year, splitting a pair of weekend<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
The Pirates won a Friday night<lb/>
encounter against Duke, taking the<lb/>
match in three straight games bv<lb/>
scores of 15-12, 15-7 and 15-3. The<lb/>
team then dropped Saturday's<lb/>
match with Appalachian State.<lb/>
After the match with Duke.<lb/>
Davidson seemed pleased with the<lb/>
Lady Pirates' performance against<lb/>
the taller Duke team.<lb/>
"We played very well considering<lb/>
it was our first match oi' the<lb/>
season Davidson said. "Our serv-<lb/>
ing was very good and we played<lb/>
with lots of intensity and unity on<lb/>
the floor. I was really surprised the<lb/>
way the team played together in the<lb/>
first game<lb/>
The two outstanding performers<lb/>
in the contests were I ita Lamas and<lb/>
Lexanne Keeter. Dale LaVanta was<lb/>
impres?nve for ECU defensivelv.<lb/>
Saturday's match against the<lb/>
Mountaineers proved to be a dif-<lb/>
ferent story, however, as the Pirates<lb/>
fell in four games bv scores of<lb/>
12-15. 12-15, 16-14, and 6-15.<lb/>
Besides losing the match the ECU<lb/>
team lost Lamus during the match<lb/>
with an ankle sprain. She is expected<lb/>
to be out of action for four to five<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Davidson was disappointed in the<lb/>
outcome of the Appalachian con-<lb/>
test. She said that both the injury to<lb/>
Lamus and the play of the Moun-<lb/>
taineers hurt the Pirates chances for<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
"The scores were fairly close but<lb/>
we didn't play all that well David-<lb/>
son said following the game. "We<lb/>
never really established an offensive<lb/>
pattern. We were making a good<lb/>
comeback in the third game of the<lb/>
match but we had the injury to<lb/>
I amus "<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be back in<lb/>
action this Friday, competing in the<lb/>
N.C. State Invitational in Raleigh.<lb/>
Next Tuesday the Bucs return home<lb/>
to face the a strong North Carolina<lb/>
team.<lb/>
?<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
PAPERS<lb/>
10,278 on file ? all subjects<lb/>
Send $1.00 (refundable) for your up-to-date,<lb/>
340 page, mail order catalog.<lb/>
We also provide research - all fields.<lb/>
Thesis and dissertation assistance available<lb/>
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE<lb/>
11322 Idaho Ave206F<lb/>
Los Angeles, Calif. 90025<lb/>
(213) 477-8226 or 477-8227<lb/>
Bicycles p<lb/>
you'll love<lb/>
Tickets Available Today<lb/>
Mite hell's<lb/>
Beauty Salon<lb/>
Students Special on Body Wave<lb/>
Warm and Gentle?Regular 33.50<lb/>
Student tickets for<lb/>
this Saturd?.v's home<lb/>
football game with<lb/>
Toledo became<lb/>
available today<lb/>
(Tuesday).<lb/>
Students will be able<lb/>
to pick up tickets for<lb/>
the game, scheduled for<lb/>
p.m. in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, through<lb/>
Thursday. Pick-ups can<lb/>
be made at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center from 8 a.m4<lb/>
p.m. both days. The<lb/>
Minges ticket office<lb/>
will be open Wednes-<lb/>
day from 8-4 and on<lb/>
Thursday from 8-6.<lb/>
The group plan is<lb/>
available for any<lb/>
organization that re-<lb/>
quests it.<lb/>
I he athletic dep rt-<lb/>
ment reminds students<lb/>
that there is a new stu-<lb/>
dent gate on the<lb/>
scoreboard (Berkley<lb/>
Drive) side of the<lb/>
stadium. It is in addi-<lb/>
tion to the student en-<lb/>
trance in the middle-<lb/>
section of Ficklen's<lb/>
north side.<lb/>
Students who may<lb/>
have trouble finding<lb/>
their seats on Saturday<lb/>
can turn to ushers for<lb/>
assistance. The ushers<lb/>
are hired by thf athletic<lb/>
department and<lb/>
students are welcomed<lb/>
'? use this service.<lb/>
Ptrute Rride<lb/>
Now<lb/>
29.50<lb/>
Creative Curl by Redken<lb/>
regular 42.00 MO W 35.00<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Phone 756 4042<lb/>
or 756 2950<lb/>
Offer Expires Oct<lb/>
? Complete line of accessories<lb/>
? Complete service department<lb/>
for most all makes of bikes<lb/>
? Free Estimates<lb/>
? Features lifetime warranty<lb/>
on Takara bikes<lb/>
WESTERN AUTO<lb/>
Only at corner of Dickinson &amp; Reade Circle<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK Of<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM ll-U<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
S1IS.M Prt?n??V Tt?t. B?"W<lb/>
Control and Problem<lb/>
F-rafMiicv Co f"<lb/>
further information can<lb/>
432 0535 (ToM Free Number<lb/>
00 771 758) between 9AM<lb/>
ind i P.A. Weekday<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N C<lb/>
CONTACT<lb/>
Soft Contacts<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
A<lb/>
we<lb/>
-EYEGLASSES<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
(SELECT<lb/>
GROUP OF<lb/>
FRAMES)<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR HlNUS SO<lb/>
Any Tint 36.85<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
SELECT GROUP M JQ?<lb/>
OF FRAMES 1 ? ?J<lb/>
GLASS ONLY ? "J<lb/>
SEUCTQOOOF OF FRAMES<lb/>
54.95<lb/>
GLASS OR PLASTIC<lb/>
AHYTIHT<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS SO<lb/>
WELCOME BACK,<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID I.D.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104 E. REDBANKS RD<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
ar Landing Seafood<lb/>
RtfUortat<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
OREINVILLE. R.C<lb/>
PMYUCIAWS OUAORANGLE<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
oricf houu<lb/>
UIU'H<lb/>
HO. IU?? TMINU RI<lb/>
km r? t<lb/>
inmiuii o??<lb/>
tUILDfftO A<lb/>
1JMW fTHIT<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. 9th St. 752-2332<lb/>
'Variety of Fresh &amp; Frozen Seafood<lb/>
?Lobster Tails 'Kino, Crab Legs<lb/>
'?Clams Crab Meat<lb/>
Hard Crabs<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI, SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Bob Hearing - AAonoger<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Sept. 22<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Sept. 23<lb/>
MonSun.<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
11:30-2:00<lb/>
6:00-8:30<lb/>
WEALSOSELL $4(100<lb/>
USED TIRES ? IUUU<lb/>
an p<lb/>
LARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD 1.88<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR?.49<lb/>
Hwy 24 Bypass, Greenville<lb/>
All You<lb/>
Can Eat<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
$499<lb/>
ALL SPECIALS GOOD<lb/>
FROM4'TIL9:30<lb/>
FROM SEPT. 22 THRU SEPT. 24<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Sept. 24<lb/>
?<lb/>
sD<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0021"/><lb/>
20<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 22, 1981<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
L<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
10?e<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
(Sale<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
Excluded)<lb/>
iV<lb/>
H<lb/>
V<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
cF<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Zr??Z7I??CQ PniZ777?ZC<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Sweatpants<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Hooded<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
S?S??SS CO UPONXz?s<lb/>
$5.00 OFF<lb/>
All Purple<lb/>
Nylon Jackets<lb/>
n<lb/>
72? ??7rri<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
SHORTS<lb/>
PLAIN<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
1 Pr.<lb/>
2Pr.<lb/>
3Pr.<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
4.00<lb/>
5.00<lb/>
1 For<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
3 FOR<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
4.00<lb/>
5.00<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
Select Group of Closeout<lb/>
Shoes (Limited Sizes<lb/>
and Quantities.)<lb/>
15.00<lb/>
?2Pr.For 25.00<lb/>
W.For 30.00<lb/>
PRINTED ?<lb/>
T-SHIRTS V<lb/>
1 FOR<lb/>
5.00<lb/>
 2 FOR<lb/>
3 FOR<lb/>
7.00<lb/>
ONE GROUP OF KNIT SHIRTS $5.00<lb/>
ECU SUPERSTRIPE HAT<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
BONDS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057425_0022"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>