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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057432_0001"/>
?<lb/>
? ? ft ?? ? ? ft i<lb/>
I<lb/>
On The<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Most Wanted<lb/>
Student In<lb/>
America?<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Goldfish<lb/>
Gobblin'<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Pirates And<lb/>
Cajuns Battle<lb/>
This Weekend<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
lEaat (Earoltman<lb/>
I<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 57 No. 16<lb/>
Thursday, October 15, 1981<lb/>
GreeavUk, North Carolina<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Lemish Resigns<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Moving To Virginia<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Donald 1 emish: calling it quits<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
Donald L. Lemish, ECU's vice<lb/>
chancellor for institutional advance-<lb/>
ment and planning, resigned Tues-<lb/>
day to become a vice president at<lb/>
Longwood College in Farmville,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
The vice chancellor's resignation,<lb/>
which is effective Jan. 5, 1982,<lb/>
was submitted in a letter to<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B. Brewer.<lb/>
Lemish made the announcement to<lb/>
his staff at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday.<lb/>
Lemish will become Longwood's<lb/>
vice president for institutional ad-<lb/>
vancement.<lb/>
"Your resignation has caused me<lb/>
to re-examine my dedication to<lb/>
higher education the letter to<lb/>
Brewer said. Lemish explained<lb/>
Wednesday that with the<lb/>
chancellor's resignation, which is ef-<lb/>
fective June 30, he was not sure if<lb/>
the university would be committed<lb/>
to the same ideals.<lb/>
"I've been accused of not having<lb/>
purple blood and not sweating<lb/>
gold Lemish said, referring to the<lb/>
ECU colors. "I think I gave and my<lb/>
family gave to the community and<lb/>
this institution? even financially<lb/>
"1 am dedicated to ECU and will<lb/>
continue to be dedicated for the next<lb/>
three months the vice chancellor<lb/>
added.<lb/>
lemish said he was "extremely<lb/>
excited" about working with<lb/>
Longwood president Dr. Janet<lb/>
Greenwood and working for "an in-<lb/>
stitution with a history and tradition<lb/>
dating back to 1839<lb/>
Greenwood, an ECU alumna,<lb/>
was out of town Wednesday and<lb/>
was not available for comment.<lb/>
Lemish will be in charge of<lb/>
Longwood's public affairs depart-<lb/>
ment and developing alumni ser-<lb/>
vices, according to Nancy Shelton,<lb/>
the college's acting director of in-<lb/>
stitutional advancement.<lb/>
"The person developing this area<lb/>
(institional advancement) must be<lb/>
creative and energetic Shelton<lb/>
said. Lemish was chosen because of<lb/>
his "outstanding record in the in-<lb/>
stitutional advancement area, his<lb/>
expertise and his enthusiasm for<lb/>
coming to an area that is developing<lb/>
this area she added.<lb/>
Lemish accepted Longwood's of-<lb/>
fer Monday, Shelton said. The col-<lb/>
lege had been searching for a vice<lb/>
president since July, using the<lb/>
Thompson and Randall consulting<lb/>
firm in Arlington, Va. Longwood<lb/>
first communicated with Lemish at<lb/>
the end of September, according to<lb/>
Shelton.<lb/>
Brewer issued a statement Tues-<lb/>
da commending Lemish for his<lb/>
work at ECLr. "Outstanding<lb/>
development people are in extremely<lb/>
short supply, and Mr. Lemish<lb/>
qualifies as one of that select<lb/>
group Brewer said. "I am confi-<lb/>
dent that Longwood College will<lb/>
make great forward strides in<lb/>
development with Don Lemish<lb/>
F. Douglas Moore, ECU director<lb/>
of research development, will be ac-<lb/>
ting vice chancellor for institutional<lb/>
See OFFICIALS, Page 2<lb/>
Denied Change Of Maj<lb/>
SI ATTLE, Wash. (CPS) ? University of<lb/>
Washington students have to give up a routine and nor-<lb/>
mal part of student life: they are no longer allowed to<lb/>
chanae their majors.<lb/>
Moreover, the 10,000-plus UW students who have yet<lb/>
declare a major won't be able to choose one.<lb/>
Then again, many of those students ? about 3600 ?<lb/>
may be dropped from the university altogther.<lb/>
Forcing 3600 students out of the university is just one<lb/>
oi the contingency plans offered by UW adminstrations<lb/>
if a precipitous fiscal crisis in the state isn't resolved<lb/>
soon. UW, while only one of the state colleges and<lb/>
universities affected by the emergency, is Washington's<lb/>
largest campus, and the one scheduled to lose the most<lb/>
amount of monev.<lb/>
Until UW administrators decide which programs they<lb/>
have to cancel, they've stopped students from declaring<lb/>
or switching majors to prevent students from choosing<lb/>
majors that may be eliminated.<lb/>
The troubles began last month when state Gov John<lb/>
Spellman unexpectedly ordered a ten percent budge cut<lb/>
for all state schools and agencies. The university's share<lb/>
amounted to $33 million off its two-year operating<lb/>
budget, which UW President William Gerberding term-<lb/>
ed a "disaster<lb/>
Crisis May Cut Programs<lb/>
The university stands to lose twice as much if a<lb/>
lawsuit brought against the state by primary and secon-<lb/>
dary schools succeeds. Combined with the effects of the<lb/>
Reagan cuts in federal education programs, the fear is<lb/>
that "you won't even recognize this university says<lb/>
one campus reporter.<lb/>
"It's mainly a problem of the economy says admis-<lb/>
sions Director Tim Washburn, who has announced an<lb/>
indefinite freeze on applications to the campus until the<lb/>
crisis passes.<lb/>
"The state's lumber industry is really hurting<lb/>
Washburn says, "and thus our tax base is way down.<lb/>
lhe problem is Washington has no state income tax,<lb/>
and it isn't likely they're going to establish one at any-<lb/>
time in the future<lb/>
"It's just a mess all over groans Information Ser-<lb/>
vices Manager Louise Hasty, who discounts the gover-<lb/>
nor's budget-cutting rationale as "a lot of garbage<lb/>
"(The reduction order) was just a bolt out of the<lb/>
blue she says.<lb/>
"Right now we're faced with laying off something<lb/>
like 260 faculty members alone, not counting other staff<lb/>
personnel Hasty mourns. "And all those federal aid<lb/>
cuts are going to come on top of all of this. As far as<lb/>
federally-assisted research goes, we're simply going to<lb/>
go down the pipe<lb/>
Lawyers representing the state's lower-level schools<lb/>
have sued the governor, claiming the state constitution<lb/>
guarantees full funding for elementary and high<lb/>
schools. The state constitution clause doesn't apply to<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
If the suit succeeds ? as many think likely ? other<lb/>
state agencies would have to bear more of the cuts. The<lb/>
University of Washington would then have to cut $60<lb/>
million from its budget, instead of the current $33<lb/>
million.<lb/>
"We're numbed by the whole thing says a reporter<lb/>
at the campus paper, the Daily.<lb/>
Student eovernment President Clayton Lewis agrees.<lb/>
"We already cut out all the fat from our budget, and<lb/>
there's simplv nothing else left<lb/>
Lewis savs the $33 million cut will close the universi-<lb/>
ty's departments of forestry, architecture and urban<lb/>
design, education, botany, and speech.<lb/>
Students Want<lb/>
Public Colleges<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
Enrollment is down slightly at<lb/>
private Mars Hill College, and up<lb/>
slightly at public Gaston College.<lb/>
It's down six percent at private<lb/>
Nebraska Wesleyan. It's un six per-<lb/>
cent at public Kearney State College<lb/>
nearby.<lb/>
Situations like those, some<lb/>
observers believe, could be the start<lb/>
of something big: a massive student<lb/>
migration from private colleges,<lb/>
where average costs this year are<lb/>
$6,800, to public campuses, where<lb/>
costs average $3,800.<lb/>
The migration wasn't supposed to<lb/>
begin until next fall, when the pool<lb/>
of potential college students was due<lb/>
to start drying up. But the new<lb/>
restrictions on and cuts in federal<lb/>
student aid programs may have in-<lb/>
spired more students than expected<lb/>
to transfer this year.<lb/>
"I think the first effect (of the aid<lb/>
cuts) will be an enrollment shift to<lb/>
public colleges predicts Dallas<lb/>
Martin of the National Association<lb/>
of Financial Aid Administrators.<lb/>
He reasons that the fewer aid<lb/>
dollars students can get will go far-<lb/>
ther at less-expensive public schools.<lb/>
"We should see a major shift<lb/>
(from private to public) next fall,<lb/>
but I wouldn't be surprised if you<lb/>
start to see some minor shiftng this<lb/>
fall he says.<lb/>
Preliminary enrollment figures do<lb/>
show most public colleges growing<lb/>
as private colleges struggle to keep<lb/>
student populations stable. A<lb/>
Chronicle of Higher Education<lb/>
phone survey discovered all 22<lb/>
public campuses it contacted had<lb/>
enrollment jumps. A College Press<lb/>
Service survey of private colleges<lb/>
found enrollment down on most of<lb/>
those campuses.<lb/>
However, not all administrators<lb/>
attribute the enrollment swings to<lb/>
the aid cuts or to a general shifting<lb/>
of student populations from private<lb/>
to public campuses.<lb/>
Nevertheless, most of the private<lb/>
colleges that have managed to keep<lb/>
their enrollments steady this fall are<lb/>
those that guarantee meeting 100<lb/>
percent of their students' financial<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
At Nebraska Wesleyan, where<lb/>
there is no Financial guarantee,<lb/>
Registrar Bette Olson "assumes the<lb/>
decline (in enrollment) will continue<lb/>
next year though she doesn't yet<lb/>
have the statistical evidence to show<lb/>
she'll be losing students to public<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
She says a "Small Commitee"<lb/>
will meet soon to discuss ways of<lb/>
stopping the decline, perhaps by<lb/>
guaranteeing aid.<lb/>
At Mars Hill College in North<lb/>
Carolina, Registrar Robert Chap-<lb/>
man attributes the six percent<lb/>
decline in enrollment to "problems<lb/>
with financial aid but says the<lb/>
private college has no plans to start<lb/>
giving aid guarantees in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Reed College in Oregon doesn't<lb/>
guarantee aid, but does have a<lb/>
stable enrollment of 1130 students.<lb/>
"Students explains Registrar<lb/>
Gary Conner, "are finding more<lb/>
creative ways to stay in school<lb/>
His students are opting for part-<lb/>
time status, taking half-time jobs,<lb/>
and even takng more leaves of<lb/>
absense.<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Student President Quits<lb/>
Pry or On The Loose This Weekend<lb/>
Richard Pry or and Cicelv Tvson star in "Bustin' Loose" this weekend in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatt The film will be shown<lb/>
tonight at 7 p.m. and this Friday and Saturday nights at 5, 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
(the times listed in this Tuesday's edition of The East Carolinian were in-<lb/>
correct). Admission is by ID and Activity Cards or MSC membership.<lb/>
1982 Yearbook Staff Appointed<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
The recently arrested student<lb/>
government president at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro has taken a month's<lb/>
leave from his elected office.<lb/>
UNC-G President, David Miller,<lb/>
informed that school's senate on<lb/>
September 30 that he would take a<lb/>
leave of absence from his position.<lb/>
Miller and Darius Davis, another<lb/>
UNC-G student, were arrested<lb/>
September 24 by Greensboro police<lb/>
for credit card fraud.<lb/>
According to police reports,<lb/>
Davis, a part time sales clerk at the<lb/>
Friendly Avenue Sears Service<lb/>
Center in Greensboro, pocketed a<lb/>
credit card left at the store by a<lb/>
customer. The report said that on<lb/>
September 22, Miller and Davis at-<lb/>
tempted to buy two sweaters and a<lb/>
pair of slacks at Sears with the<lb/>
stolen card.<lb/>
Police say that when the store<lb/>
clerk began a routine credit check<lb/>
on the card, the two men fled from<lb/>
the store. However, several<lb/>
employees at the store recognized<lb/>
Miller and called the police.<lb/>
On September 24, Miller and<lb/>
Davis turned themselves in to<lb/>
police, after being .ontacted by of-<lb/>
ficers. Following their arrest, the<lb/>
two men were charged with "false<lb/>
pretense in relation to credit card<lb/>
fraud. Both were released without<lb/>
bond after promising to appear in<lb/>
District Court on October 1. The<lb/>
results of that preliminary hearing<lb/>
are no. known at this time.<lb/>
If convicted on charges of credit<lb/>
card fraud, Miller and Davis face<lb/>
maximum prison sentences of ten<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Immediately following his arrest,<lb/>
Miller declined any statement per-<lb/>
taining to the case. "I'm not going<lb/>
to say anything until they<lb/>
(attorneys) finish their work he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
By MIKE DAVIS<lb/>
SUflWrilcr<lb/>
The 1981-82 Buccaneer staff has<lb/>
been selected. Though many of last<lb/>
year's staff members returned,<lb/>
several ECU students applied for<lb/>
vacant positions.<lb/>
Amy Pickett returns to the Buc-<lb/>
caneer staff as manager, Lisa Col-<lb/>
eman as associate editor and Bob<lb/>
Debnam as business manager.<lb/>
Also returning are editors Jan<lb/>
Souders, of sporis; Louise Hall, of<lb/>
organizations; Mike Davis, of<lb/>
academics; Linda Briggs, classes<lb/>
editor and Paul Collins, copy<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
Returning assistant classes editor<lb/>
is Jeff Bowman, and returning art<lb/>
director is Andy Anderson.<lb/>
The new additions to the Buc-<lb/>
caneer staff include Bryan Hester,<lb/>
assistant sports editor; Cathy Wells<lb/>
and Anne Fisher as assistant<lb/>
organizations editors and Patrick<lb/>
Campbell as assistant academics<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
The staff is already at work on the<lb/>
1981-82 Buccaneer. Pickett has<lb/>
already sent the final layouts to the<lb/>
printing company.<lb/>
According to Pickett, the 1980-81<lb/>
Buccaneer should be ready for<lb/>
delivery by the end of the fall<lb/>
semester. Last year's Buccaneer will<lb/>
be available for pick up on<lb/>
December 14. All returning<lb/>
sophomores, juniors and seniors<lb/>
can pick up a copy at the Student's<lb/>
Supply Store by showing a valid<lb/>
ECU I.D. and activity card.<lb/>
The only comment Miller has<lb/>
issued to date was to the school<lb/>
senate. Explaining his leave of<lb/>
absence, Miller told the senate:<lb/>
"Due to the gravity of my present<lb/>
situation, 1 feel that it is in the best<lb/>
interest of the student body and<lb/>
myself that I temporarily<lb/>
disassociate myself with student<lb/>
government until my situation has<lb/>
been rectified<lb/>
During the president's absence,<lb/>
SGA Vice President Rusty Weadon<lb/>
will assume Miller's official respon-<lb/>
sibilities.<lb/>
'?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0002"/><lb/>
THEEASTCAROIINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ASSISTANTSHIPS<lb/>
the institute tor Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Resources s now accep<lb/>
ting applications 'or two assistant<lb/>
ships scheduled to begin ,n late tall<lb/>
of 1981<lb/>
Graduate Assistantships. Office<lb/>
Coordinator Field Team Coor<lb/>
fima'or will coordinate field team<lb/>
activities, and assist investigators<lb/>
in da'a i.ollettion and analysis<lb/>
Background in behavioral or<lb/>
social sciences preferred<lb/>
lergraduate Graduate<lb/>
ftssiStantship Data Analyst, will<lb/>
assist nves'iga'ors in 'he analysis<lb/>
i lata Must have background<lb/>
am! familiarity with computer<lb/>
programming and statistics<lb/>
c- contact D Jeffrey<lb/>
Johnson Ol Ml Man. us Hepburn.<lb/>
, Mi is building KMR at<lb/>
'J7 6S10 01 "?' ?J20 An equal op<lb/>
?  a' rmative action<lb/>
pmp<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omicron Chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda elected officers for<lb/>
the 1981 82 school year on<lb/>
September 30 They are as<lb/>
follows Betsy Steinert Presi<lb/>
dent. Fielding Miller Vice Presi<lb/>
dent Heatber Quadlm Recording<lb/>
Secretary. Kathy Wrenn Cor<lb/>
responding Secretary Bob<lb/>
Elmore. Treasurer Anne Tucker<lb/>
Reporter Janice Irvine.<lb/>
Historian and nenise Bellinger<lb/>
Parliamentarian<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
The ECU Literal v Magazine<lb/>
REBEL is looking tor an Associate<lb/>
Editor Prose Editor and Art<lb/>
Editor Applications can be picked<lb/>
up in the Publications Building n<lb/>
the Media board secretary oftice<lb/>
Any maior is acceptable<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
RUSSIAN ANYONE?<lb/>
 i led 01 ' Of Russian<lb/>
' 5St( ' M i OOld not tit<lb/>
? the i ours1<lb/>
rite ??? aoair Sri "q<lb/>
SAWf at <lb/>
. so ottered .? be Russian<lb/>
 .?? . . ? .<lb/>
R 2220 ?<lb/>
OOSt tv sky<lb/>
i- , ? v-<lb/>
ta mnt in<lb/>
 A F I 00 arn ?' may be<lb/>
five or to sat si.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
Poetry ' ,??<lb/>
I. 13 it 8 p n<lb/>
It . ? ? i . -<lb/>
feedback on i<lb/>
eir '<lb/>
? ? ? j 6 or 8 opies of<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
Student Council tor Exceptional<lb/>
Children presents speakeis on<lb/>
autism' and their related<lb/>
organiatms Marorie Riddle wll<lb/>
tie speaking on EARTH and Max<lb/>
ine Rothrock will present mlorma<lb/>
tionon TEACH Refreshments will<lb/>
De served Everyone is nvited to<lb/>
attend this fantastic program on<lb/>
Monday Octobei 19th at 4 00 pm<lb/>
n spe.ght 129<lb/>
Have a sweet tooth' The ECU<lb/>
Chapter of NSSHA will be having a<lb/>
bake sale in the Belk Building on<lb/>
Tuesday, October 20th from 8 00<lb/>
(ill 5 00 All proceeds will go<lb/>
toward our scholarship fund<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
ECU Law Society will meet on<lb/>
Thursday night. October 15 at 7 30<lb/>
m Room 221. Mendenhall Guest<lb/>
Speaker will be L mda Boon, Direc<lb/>
tor of Placement, University of<lb/>
Richmond Law School Please iom<lb/>
us Further information call Diane<lb/>
Jones 7S6 65S<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
THe PRC Society and Jeffery's<lb/>
Beer and Wine will be sponsoring<lb/>
a Co Rec Volleyball Tournament<lb/>
at Mmges Coliseum on Octobe' 31<lb/>
trom12 6pm There is a ten dollar<lb/>
entry fee First place, keg, second<lb/>
place pony keg Other prizes will<lb/>
be awarded Sign up at the PRC<lb/>
bu'ldmgBehind McDonalds and<lb/>
across from Hardees on Cotanche<lb/>
St i Deadline Oct 29 Teams must<lb/>
( onsist of six persons with at least<lb/>
two females per team<lb/>
BANKING AND<lb/>
FINANCE<lb/>
The Banking and Finance<lb/>
Fraternity along with The Real<lb/>
Estate Fraternity will hold its<lb/>
monthly meeting Wed Oct 21 at<lb/>
5 00 in Rm 221 Mendenhall The<lb/>
speaker will be Mr David<lb/>
Guilford VP of Mortgage and<lb/>
Loan, Planters National Bank All<lb/>
interested persons please attend<lb/>
Elections of officers will also be<lb/>
held<lb/>
GTU<lb/>
is the<lb/>
i"<lb/>
onor<lb/>
pate<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
PS<lb/>
vs 0<lb/>
d<lb/>
 . ??? er' lomesi<lb/>
lerest ncj quest<lb/>
morel To<lb/>
si have<lb/>
- above n at leas' i ? iass of<lb/>
nfot mat or<lb/>
? , . ?? ? at his ?? ?<lb/>
;BA?38i or call Mitch Doub at<lb/>
?<lb/>
. ? I! Why<lb/>
g Gl ml hurs<lb/>
? at 4 i" m ?? Brewstei<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
The Student A'hic'ic Boai is<lb/>
holding its weekW meeting on<lb/>
Monda, CH tober 19th at 5 30 p m<lb/>
in Mmges Room 142 143 this is 'he<lb/>
SSf dav .01, can sgn up to attend<lb/>
he m ami f I post game<lb/>
COOkOuf kea party so make<lb/>
dans to attend New members are<lb/>
eligible to come to the party along<lb/>
with a limited number ot nates of<lb/>
guests but you mus' sign up by<lb/>
Monday There is no charge tor<lb/>
members and a very nominal fee<lb/>
for guests planning to attend for<lb/>
further information can Pam hoi'<lb/>
at 757 mi:<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
rne Student Athletic Board<lb/>
urges all rrmf'S and students to<lb/>
see the football tea Off to 'he a.r<lb/>
port Fndav October (, The bus<lb/>
departs fron Belk lorm a' P 45<lb/>
r<lb/>
Officials<lb/>
Praise<lb/>
L emish<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
de eiopment after<lb/>
I emish leaves, Brewer<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the oamwj crynmumlr<lb/>
tPKt tm<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday durmg me academic<lb/>
; year and every Wednesday dvr<lb/>
i mg the summer<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian is the ot<lb/>
'fioai newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina university owned,<lb/>
operated, and published tor and <lb/>
! by the students of E ast Carolina j<lb/>
! University<lb/>
Subscription Rate ?20 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage pa?d at<lb/>
Greenville. N C.<lb/>
The Eiit Carolinian ottices<lb/>
,re located in the OW Savth<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECO.<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
Telephone tj7-J?,?3'J?<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates a pen4lt ??<lb/>
Greenville. NO<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
All history maiors and minors<lb/>
are mvited to attend Phi Alpha<lb/>
Thetas annual cookout Hotdogs<lb/>
and other refreshments' will be<lb/>
served1 Tickets can be purchased<lb/>
for S2 60 from any Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
member or m the history dept of<lb/>
tee H will be held Oct 16 at 4 30<lb/>
at the picnic area next to<lb/>
Memorial Gym<lb/>
Any hisotry maior or minor who<lb/>
has 12 s h .n history, a g p a of 3 0<lb/>
in history, and a 2 7 overall is in<lb/>
vted to become a member of the<lb/>
Lambda Eta chapter of Phi Alpha,<lb/>
Theta international Honor Society<lb/>
n History<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
 nr Student National Education<lb/>
Asscv aOn meeting will be held<lb/>
October 21 Wednesday at 4 00<lb/>
p m ,n Speight 201 All education<lb/>
maiors are invited<lb/>
CHEMICAL SOCIETY<lb/>
Or Monday October 19<lb/>
.nLan Chemical Society SHi<lb/>
dent Affiliate will tave a business<lb/>
meeting at 7 p m in Flanagan 202<lb/>
It attending, please bring a dish<lb/>
'or a covered dish supper All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend For further m<lb/>
formation, call Dawn Williams<lb/>
?'S8 894<lb/>
COURSES FOR<lb/>
NON MUSIC MAJORS<lb/>
Music Appreciation (Muse 2208'<lb/>
if the music class most often taken<lb/>
by non music maiors However<lb/>
the following music classes also<lb/>
are available tor General Educa<lb/>
lion Fine Arts credit Muse 2218<lb/>
Orchestral Music Muse 2238, Con<lb/>
temporary Music, and Muse 22S8,<lb/>
History of Jail Music<lb/>
The following performance<lb/>
groups accept non music maiors<lb/>
by permission of the instructor<lb/>
Concert Band SymphonK Band<lb/>
University Chorale Man s Glee<lb/>
Club, Women s Glee Club and<lb/>
Women's Chorus L irrnted spaces<lb/>
will be available tor private<lb/>
lessons in several applied music<lb/>
areas<lb/>
AED<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta pre<lb/>
medical society will meet on Tues<lb/>
day. October 20 at 7 30 p m m<lb/>
Plan 307 Dr Dean Hayek,<lb/>
Associate Dean of Admissions at<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine, will be<lb/>
the guest speaker All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to attend<lb/>
CHEERING SECTION<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board is<lb/>
sponsoring a group cheering sec<lb/>
tion tor the Miami IFL) home foot<lb/>
ball game on October 24 Anyone<lb/>
interested in sitting in this section<lb/>
should bring their activity cards<lb/>
by the Athletic Director's office<lb/>
located upstairs m Mmges Col<lb/>
iseum no later than S p m Friday.<lb/>
October 16 Only 100 seats are<lb/>
available, so you'd better hurry<lb/>
For further information call Pam<lb/>
Holt at 757 6417 Raise Hell tor the<lb/>
Pirates!<lb/>
GEOLOGY<lb/>
The Geology Club would like to<lb/>
invite all persons to attend Brown<lb/>
Bag Seminar no 2 on October 16<lb/>
at 1 p m m Room 301, Graham<lb/>
Building The topic will be<lb/>
Geochronology as a Tool tor<lb/>
Deciphering the Geologic History<lb/>
of the Appalachians presented<lb/>
by Dr Paul D Fullager. Prof of<lb/>
Geology UNC CH A short<lb/>
meeting ot the Geology Club will<lb/>
follow the seminar to discuss up<lb/>
coming events, including a Hallo<lb/>
ween party Remember bring<lb/>
your lunch!<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum will meet<lb/>
htis Thursday Oct 15, at 8 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall 248 Open to anyone<lb/>
wishing feedback on his or her<lb/>
poetry Those planning to attend<lb/>
are asked to bring 6 or 8 copies of<lb/>
each poem Listeners also<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
All Corso members please pick<lb/>
up your tickets immediatly! We<lb/>
need to begin selling the tickets to<lb/>
the Faculty Student Party Pick<lb/>
them up from Jackie m the Social<lb/>
Work Corrt-i hons office<lb/>
ALPHA RHO<lb/>
This is the group who love<lb/>
Metlo Yellow We cannot wait<lb/>
until we wine with the best un Fr,<lb/>
day Alpha Rho is on the g<lb/>
SURFCLUB<lb/>
A meeting will be held Wednes<lb/>
day October 21 at 7 00 8 00 p m<lb/>
Room 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
All members are urged to at<lb/>
tend New members welcomed'<lb/>
COMPUTERS<lb/>
The ECU chapter ol ACM<lb/>
(Association for Computer<lb/>
Machinery) will meet this Thurs<lb/>
day at 3 30. October 15. in Room<lb/>
221 Austin Anyone interested in<lb/>
any aspect ot computers is invited<lb/>
to attend Dr Harper ot Co<lb/>
operative Education will speak on<lb/>
the demand tor Computer Science<lb/>
maiors and minors to work thru<lb/>
the co op program<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
All Corrections and Social Work<lb/>
maiors and intended maiors are<lb/>
.nvited to attend the CORSO<lb/>
meeting Thursday, Or totn t 15<lb/>
itodal at 5 30 m room 221 ot<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center A.<lb/>
are gomg to plan the big bash<lb/>
with the faculty Please come'<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK Of<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FBOM IHt<lb/>
WEEK<lb/>
?T FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
ills ?? Pregnancy Test. Birth<lb/>
Central. and Prableat<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
832 0535 'Toll Free Numoe'<lb/>
800 221 3S?i between 9AM<lb/>
ar0 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RAl E IGM WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raieigh N C<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM? NEED INFORMATION?<lb/>
<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention<lb/>
24 HOUR SEH<lb/>
Mv<lb/>
lMta? w t-n y-<lb/>
758HELP<lb/>
HI AI fKl.ils r?'Nlt.M<lb/>
111 Evans Street<lb/>
 iviiie.N C 27834<lb/>
BEAUX ARTS BALL<lb/>
Marl making rou costumes for<lb/>
the 7th Annual Beau Arts Ball<lb/>
This ytars buarre event will be<lb/>
held at Papa ka on Friday Oc<lb/>
tober 23 at 8 00 Tickets are S3 00<lb/>
in advance S4 00 at door<lb/>
SONIC.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Of The<lb/>
Week<lb/>
Stop In For<lb/>
A Special Lunch<lb/>
7 O<lb/>
ra(0M?<lb/>
FIFTY CENTS<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
o<lb/>
FIFTY CENTS<lb/>
COLD ONES<lb/>
BEGINNING PIANO<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
Peg rifling Pa no Group classes<lb/>
-?a. a 'able to non music ma<lb/>
ung the Spring Semester<lb/>
Because of limited capacity tor<lb/>
these classes, it is not often that<lb/>
inese classes are availavle to the<lb/>
sic maior These piano<lb/>
lasses will be taught Mona<lb/>
no Wednesdays at 12 00 and Mon<lb/>
lays and Wednesdays at 1 00<lb/>
Permission to enroll in one oi<lb/>
these piano classes must be Ob<lb/>
tamed n advance from Dr<lb/>
Richard Luch Room 377 ot the<lb/>
A J Fletcher Music Cen'er<lb/>
f SONIC SPECIAL<lb/>
j FOOT LONGCONEY<lb/>
J Regular French Fries<lb/>
I Med. Drink<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Good<lb/>
with Coupon<lb/>
Oct. 12 18<lb/>
?1<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
l<lb/>
l<lb/>
ssTnM 1111<lb/>
i &amp;<lb/>
E<lb/>
( nil<lb/>
( oi 1 i.<lb/>
JU!<lb/>
studeni<lb/>
crin<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
.@ ?? ??offi ?<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
REG. $2.95<lb/>
Plays the BEST in BEACH and JAMS<lb/>
TDn?<lb/>
o<lb/>
SONIC. .<lb/>
618 Gr??nvile Blvd. ? Only .????????????? j<lb/>
SONIC<lb/>
For Friday Afternoons' JAM PARTY<lb/>
Starring the Famous 32 oz.<lb/>
"BUCKET FOR A BUCK"<lb/>
from 3:00 till??<lb/>
saul. No<lb/>
permanent<lb/>
successoi will be chosen<lb/>
until after a new<lb/>
c h a n ce 11 o i is a p-<lb/>
pointed.<lb/>
rhe vice chancellor-<lb/>
ship was one of the new<lb/>
i. ip-level administrative<lb/>
posts created b Brewer<lb/>
when he came to ECU<lb/>
in l"v I emish was<lb/>
 a search<lb/>
thai Brewer<lb/>
.uied and took over<lb/>
his present position in<lb/>
luh 1979.<lb/>
I emish holds ad-<lb/>
ministrative respon-<lb/>
sibility for direction of<lb/>
alumni relations, in-<lb/>
stitutional research, the<lb/>
E I news bureau,<lb/>
sponsored programs,<lb/>
the planning office and<lb/>
the Regional Develop-<lb/>
ment Institute.<lb/>
1 ongwood College is<lb/>
located 65 miles west of<lb/>
Richmond and has<lb/>
2TO students.<lb/>
Sat , Oct. 17<lb/>
Presents In Concert RCA Recording Artists <lb/>
Nantucket <lb/>
with Special Guest Subway<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GREAT AMERICAN<lb/>
FAVORITES<lb/>
ARE BACK!<lb/>
Buccaneer MOVIES i-i?3<lb/>
756 3307 Greenville Square Center<lb/>
13 579 "SIGNORETAT<lb/>
THE TOP OF<lb/>
HER FORM<lb/>
-Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist<lb/>
-f SENT IITIT-RIO n<lb/>
LOVE<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
pG TOMORROW!<lb/>
IF LOOKS COULD KILL<lb/>
msFW:<lb/>
r<lb/>
Select group of<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
Thomson<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
l ?4 week terminations<lb/>
Appt's Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
 800 321 0575<lb/>
iCI Camoutuged Fatifluei And<lb/>
Shirt. Sleeping Baq<lb/>
Backpacks Camping Equip-<lb/>
ment. Steel Toed Shoes. Dishes<lb/>
And Over 700 Different New And<lb/>
Used Items Cowboy Boots<lb/>
ARMYrNAVY<lb/>
liOi S Evans<lb/>
Curre undergraduate pre<lb/>
edicai students may now<lb/>
?? for several hundred<lb/>
Air Force scholarspo These<lb/>
scholarships are to be aware!<lb/>
ed tn students accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen<lb/>
Or at the besl nnino nf their<lb/>
ophn " -far The scholar<lb/>
iirov'des lor tuition.<lb/>
lab trees ana equip<lb/>
plus a SS30 monthly<lb/>
irwstioate this<lb/>
imflor at alternative to the<lb/>
cost ol medical PS a<lb/>
?,on Contact<lb/>
U S A F HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
RECRUITING<lb/>
SUITE GL I, 1100 NAVAHO DR<lb/>
RALEIGH. N C 27609<lb/>
PHONE COLLECTlvly)7SS ?I3?.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
w9&amp;f 113 Grande Ave<lb/>
8 Jppi Quality<lb/>
GET HEAPING PORTIONS<lb/>
AT A PRICE<lb/>
ALL AMERICA CAN AFFORD!<lb/>
October 15. Thursday ?OiS<lb/>
CHICKEN N DUMPLINGS9&amp;<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
October 16, Friday ?Qsq<lb/>
TROUT ALMONDINE. 2 vegetables t<lb/>
October 17. Saturday ?OW<lb/>
CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAKV<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
October 18, Sunday $029<lb/>
TURKEY &amp; DRESSING<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
October 19. Monday ?OA9<lb/>
COUNTRY-STYLE STEAKt'<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
October 20. Tuesday $009<lb/>
BROILED CALF'S LIVERtw<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
October 21, Wednesday iO 09<lb/>
BAKED SPAGHETTI. 2 vegetables t<lb/>
Slacks and<lb/>
skirts in<lb/>
assorted styles<lb/>
and colors.<lb/>
Sizes 4-16<lb/>
m<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
20<lb/>
off<lb/>
ThursFriSat.<lb/>
<lb/>
.A f<lb/>
"<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
MoovFrt LUNCH llwa? 1:1 Spa. MM<lb/>
i OM Fri). Sat. ft Saa 1 las - a<lb/>
(taesm.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shop:<lb/>
Downtown 10a.m6p.m<lb/>
Pitt Plaza 10a.m9p.m<lb/>
A MICHAEL CRICHTON FILM<lb/>
LOOKER"<lb/>
ALBERT FINNEY<lb/>
JAMES COBURN SUSAN DEY LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG<lb/>
Produced by HOWARD JEFFREY Muse B? BARRY DeVORZON<lb/>
Written and Directed by MICHAEL CRICHTON  a lado company rele;<lb/>
PG?i?i?icuio?ciSijocisiiot ' <lb/>
iOim urinon ?u? wot h turtABU roao?U?N t CH ? ? . . " '<lb/>
IEZ<lb/>
 A LADD COMPANY RELEASE<lb/>
? .NA?t? COMMU?CA! ON1- Z '??<lb/>
OPENS OCTOBER 23rd AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU!<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
n ? ??? ? - -?  ?.?.  <lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0003"/><lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 15, 1981<lb/>
rO<lb/>
ES6<lb/>
i tirtk<lb/>
oi?m<lb/>
For<lb/>
? AM<lb/>
tv Tiber<lb/>
It AU<lb/>
ON?<lb/>
I<lb/>
U!<lb/>
Engineering Grads Find Jobs Easily<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
COLI EGfi STATION, Texas -<lb/>
James Beall may be the most wanted<lb/>
student in America.<lb/>
Beall isn't a heartthrob or a<lb/>
criminal. Instead he's at or near the<lb/>
top of his engineering class, which<lb/>
happens to be at Texas Agricultural<lb/>
and Military University? widely<lb/>
recognized as one of the best<lb/>
engineering schools in the nation<lb/>
(along vsith Purdue University and<lb/>
California Technical Institute).<lb/>
As such, Beall has already been<lb/>
uined and dined by companies that<lb/>
want to hire him after graduation.<lb/>
He expects to be wooed and courted<lb/>
by dozens of other firms by the time<lb/>
he graduates later this year. He pro<lb/>
bably won't be disappointed; na-<lb/>
tionwide recruiting for engineering<lb/>
grads is fierce. They are the surest<lb/>
bets to get good jobs among the en-<lb/>
tire Class of 1982. Beall, as one of<lb/>
the top two grade-getters at one of<lb/>
the top engineering colleges, just<lb/>
may have the best time of his life<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"1 started interviewing this sum-<lb/>
mer Beall recalls. "I've had two<lb/>
plant tours and several job offers<lb/>
already, one with a petro chemical<lb/>
plant and another with an aviation<lb/>
firm<lb/>
He figures that whatever firm he<lb/>
eventually chooses will probably<lb/>
start him at $30,000 a year "or<lb/>
maybe even a little higher<lb/>
Beall's expectations aren't out of<lb/>
line. The average 1982 engineering<lb/>
graduate will earn $25,000 next<lb/>
year; Liberal arts graduates will be<lb/>
scrambling for average starting<lb/>
salaries of $10,000. Engineering<lb/>
students were less than 10 percent of<lb/>
the 1980-1981 graduating class but<lb/>
got 65 percent of the on-campus job<lb/>
offers, according to the Campus<lb/>
Placement Council of Bethlehem,<lb/>
Pa.<lb/>
Judith Kaiser, College Placement<lb/>
Council spokeswoman, says the cur-<lb/>
rent market is far different from<lb/>
seven years ago, when a recession in<lb/>
the wake of the Arab oil embargo<lb/>
slowed industry demand for<lb/>
engineers and engineering students<lb/>
actually Hocked to change their ma-<lb/>
jors.<lb/>
"In 1972, we had 3495 engineer-<lb/>
ing students enrolled recalls Dr.<lb/>
Robert H. Page, Texas A and M<lb/>
dean of engineering. "Here we are<lb/>
nine years later with three times that<lb/>
number: 11,502<lb/>
The reasons for the change are<lb/>
evident, he says. "Technology is<lb/>
getting more and more complex,<lb/>
iiiiiiiiixiiiiiiiiiiiii<lb/>
acti<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Weekday<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Fri. 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/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window For<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
WZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Thurs 5:30 8 00<lb/>
Mon thru Fri. 1 30 2:00<lb/>
Wed. - All you con eat Spaghetti 5:30-8:00 $2.69<lb/>
Thurs.?Lasagna?One Reg. Price?Second One<lb/>
$2.79<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIXXIIIIIIl<lb/>
Friday,<lb/>
Oct. 16th<lb/>
Showtime:<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
appearing at<lb/>
NO. 8<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
756-8060<lb/>
A limited<lb/>
number of tickets<lb/>
available at<lb/>
Peaches NOW<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
and it has created a great demand<lb/>
for quality engineers. The orders are<lb/>
out to recruit engineering students<lb/>
Engineering enrollment at Texas<lb/>
A and M is up 1000 from last year,<lb/>
and Page expects similar increases in<lb/>
the next several years.<lb/>
National engineering enrollment<lb/>
has skyrocketed from 195,000 in<lb/>
1972 to over 350,000 in 1980.<lb/>
"1 would expect it's up another 10<lb/>
percent for this current year<lb/>
speculates Dr. W. Edward Lear,<lb/>
director of the American Society for<lb/>
Engineering Education.<lb/>
"The job opportunities are<lb/>
great Lear ex plains. "The<lb/>
average four-year engineering stu-<lb/>
dent will have three or four job of-<lb/>
fers before graduation, and will<lb/>
earn an average of $23,000 to<lb/>
$27,000 the first year<lb/>
"The favorable job market has<lb/>
created significant increases in the<lb/>
total number of students who<lb/>
choose engineering as a major<lb/>
understates Iowa State engineerng<lb/>
Dean David Boyland. "And most<lb/>
projections indicate the demand will<lb/>
continue<lb/>
The boom, ironically enough, has<lb/>
pitched college engineering schools<lb/>
into the deepest crisis in their<lb/>
histories.<lb/>
"I think everyone is beginning to<lb/>
see the potential disaster if we don't<lb/>
do something Lear warns. "Right<lb/>
now we're dealing with a double-<lb/>
edged sword<lb/>
Enrollment jumps have made<lb/>
over crowded classes common, and<lb/>
impressive salary temptations from<lb/>
private industry have made it hard<lb/>
to hire new professors to take on the<lb/>
additional class load. Few new<lb/>
graduates choose to go on for more<lb/>
schooling when they can get high<lb/>
salaries. Experienced engineering<lb/>
professors are leaving academia to<lb/>
take those higher salaries, too.<lb/>
"Starting teachers can expect a<lb/>
salary of around $25,000 a year<lb/>
Lear says. "That's after three years<lb/>
of additional schooling, plus the<lb/>
cost and effort to get their Ph.D.s.<lb/>
When they can step out of college<lb/>
with a B.S. degree and get the same<lb/>
salary in the private sector, they see<lb/>
that they wouldn't be that far ahead<lb/>
by continuing their education<lb/>
Current instructors "can realize<lb/>
anywhere from a 30-to-100 percent<lb/>
salary improvement by moving to<lb/>
corporate jobs Lear grieves.<lb/>
He estimates there are 1600 to<lb/>
2000 vacant engineerinng positions<lb/>
on U.S. college campuses.<lb/>
Cal Tech's engineering enroll-<lb/>
ment has doubled in the last seven<lb/>
years, but dean Roy Gould is fin-<lb/>
ding it harder and harder to get in-<lb/>
structors to teach them. "1 suspect<lb/>
it's going to get harder as we have a<lb/>
smaller and smaller pool to draw<lb/>
from<lb/>
"I'm really concerned about our<lb/>
future confides Texas A and M's<lb/>
Page. "Our very best students are<lb/>
going into industry, students that<lb/>
ought to continue their education<lb/>
for the benefit of the country and of<lb/>
the student. There's an expression<lb/>
going around that says 'Industry is<lb/>
just eating its own feedcorn and I<lb/>
hope something is done to control<lb/>
the situation<lb/>
Many schools of engineering are<lb/>
now self consciously stressing the<lb/>
values of post-graduate education,<lb/>
and cooking up incentives to keep<lb/>
their students in school.<lb/>
WrfT? WLf<lb/>
Boogie Blues<lb/>
Rock-n-RolI<lb/>
758-0711<lb/>
LOCATED<lb/>
BEHIND<lb/>
ELBO<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
 <lb/>
come join us<lb/>
 for our <lb/>
SQRDO<lb/>
4 <lb/>
White Wolf has appeared in Concert with the following Na<lb/>
tional Acts:<lb/>
ATLANTA RHYTHM SECTION<lb/>
FABULOUS THUNDERBIRDS<lb/>
MOTHER'S FINEST<lb/>
THE ROCKETS<lb/>
38 SPECIAL<lb/>
SEA LEVEL<lb/>
WINTERS BROTHERS<lb/>
JAMES COTTON<lb/>
THE NIGHTHAWKS<lb/>
WILLIE DIXON<lb/>
LONNIE BROOKS<lb/>
ALLMAN BROTHERS<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
CHARLIE DANIELS BAND<lb/>
JOHNNY VAN ZANT BAND<lb/>
MOLLY HATCHET<lb/>
MITCH RYDER<lb/>
MUDDY WATERS<lb/>
PAUL BUTTERFIELD<lb/>
JOHN LEE HOOKER<lb/>
KOKOTAYLOR<lb/>
SPECUftL<lb/>
THURSDAY OCT. 15'h<lb/>
Reduced admission 9:00-10:30<lb/>
wColIege I.D.<lb/>
9:00 - First 75 Admitted<lb/>
Then - 50C TILL 10:00<lb/>
Attitude Adjustment 9-11<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Special prices on<lb/>
choice items from our<lb/>
menu-served between<lb/>
5:00 and 7:30<lb/>
maRGftaxs<lb/>
Tlie price<lb/>
of style<lb/>
lias just" come<lb/>
down!<lb/>
SIIADIUM?<lb/>
College Rings now only ?84.95<lb/>
SILADITJM rings produce the<lb/>
brilliant lustre of a fine jeweler's<lb/>
stainless.<lb/>
Men's and women's Siladium<lb/>
rings are on sale this week<lb/>
only through your<lb/>
ArtCarved representative.<lb/>
A visit to the ArtCarved<lb/>
College Ring table will give you<lb/>
the chance to see the full<lb/>
collection of rings for the fell.<lb/>
But hurry on over this sale<lb/>
runs for a limited<lb/>
time only.<lb/>
J2?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
IKTC7IRVED<lb/>
V. CLASS RINGS. INC<lb/>
DATE: OCT. 15th &amp; 16th<lb/>
TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
PLACE: ECU STUDENT SUPPLY STORE LOBBY<lb/>
Deposit required NlasterCharge or Visa accepted<lb/>
? 1981 ArtCarved Ctas Rings<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0004"/><lb/>
Stye East Eat0lInfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. smcmtf<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, tmmgimtmum<lb/>
Ric Browning, d?? oj AdM Charles Chandler. sporuEduor<lb/>
Chris Lichok. swmmo Tom Hall, mmemm<lb/>
Alison Bartel. nuiiitfin mihiuui Steve Bachner. Enitnammem Eduor<lb/>
Steve Mcxre, cv?w. .?,?,?? Karen Wendt. a, mm<lb/>
October 15, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Representation<lb/>
Student Membership Leaves Void<lb/>
What will be the most important<lb/>
decision to be made at East<lb/>
Carolina in the next year?<lb/>
The selection of a new chancellor<lb/>
? right?<lb/>
And everybody knows that this is<lb/>
a decision that should be shared<lb/>
equally by members of the universi-<lb/>
ty community: faculty, alumni,<lb/>
trustees and students ? right?<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
A selection committee consisting<lb/>
of six trustees, five faculty<lb/>
members, three alumni and one stu-<lb/>
dent has been named.<lb/>
The students' only representative<lb/>
in the selection process is SGA<lb/>
President Lester Nail. While we feel<lb/>
that Mr. Nail is well qualified to<lb/>
serve on the committee, we still<lb/>
believe that students deserve more<lb/>
of a voice in the selection.<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
There are almost 14,000 students<lb/>
at ECU, yet we have only one<lb/>
representative on the committee. On<lb/>
the other hand, slightly less than<lb/>
1,000 faculty members are given<lb/>
five slots, and half the membership<lb/>
of the board of trustees will take<lb/>
part in the search.<lb/>
There are those who argue that<lb/>
students are not qualified to make<lb/>
such a vital decision. But really,<lb/>
who is more qualified to judge what<lb/>
this university needs from its<lb/>
chancellor? After all, the school is<lb/>
here primarily for students.<lb/>
Students deserve more represen-<lb/>
tation in the selection of a new<lb/>
chancellor. The search committee<lb/>
should should see to this by naming<lb/>
one or perhaps two more students to<lb/>
its ranks.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
oooc<lb/>
heavens<lb/>
DCK WHERE ?pv<lb/>
ARE YOU OFF ?<lb/>
WSC8R&amp;V<lb/>
ANPEAftli7<lb/>
VGARteRS&amp;mm ntOJB7<lb/>
RX MY PETfTIOH PNE: OFiTS<lb/>
r thought ip start beproo<lb/>
rrKXA &amp;6ERXA<lb/>
HtYBE BlFEVEN IF 1 ONLY GET A<lb/>
fm hamcs theyll carry a lot<lb/>
0FUOGHT ?STHADSBEA HES<lb/>
press eoop<lb/>
STRATEGT<lb/>
y anCTHAmh<lb/>
6 dJteew - ILT5-<lb/>
j ROR THE GOOP OF<lb/>
?. HE. MHOS<lb/>
J - SAVON<lb/>
VHSMANUATTHBTBe:<lb/>
SW&amp; BEFORE HE CAN<lb/>
WAOFfXEOOUSKE<lb/>
SOURCES M0 TUB HANDS<lb/>
, y OF OIL AW<lb/>
? ?) .v -?? OTHER<lb/>
 2 SPtCJAL<lb/>
OH.<lb/>
PICK<lb/>
CO.<lb/>
OLD<lb/>
90Y<lb/>
Wr73rK<lb/>
?9<lb/>
UEu. HO.<lb/>
Of COIJR&amp; LOOK OlCK IE<lb/>
wear tnwq&amp;tou<lb/>
want, just use<lb/>
MY CAMP IN<lb/>
MAINE ANY<lb/>
TIME! <lb/>
3<lb/>
a<lb/>
L REALIZE 1H$(U0UUBE<lb/>
HAWOliOUTOPO. 10OO<lb/>
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THAT'S AHFUL, FOLKS<lb/>
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THi ?AST CAftOUNlAN<lb/>
Nuclear Experts Cloud The Issue<lb/>
By ART BUCHWALD<lb/>
I pride myself on having a very open<lb/>
mind on things, such as nuclear energy, as<lb/>
long as they don't build a plant near my<lb/>
home.<lb/>
So when I saw the Diablo Canyon<lb/>
demonstration in California last month I<lb/>
watched them with the calm impartiality<lb/>
which I reserve for all things that don't af-<lb/>
fect me personally.<lb/>
On one side were scruffy, unshaven, un-<lb/>
shod protestors. On the other side, were<lb/>
well-dressed state troopers, and clean,<lb/>
good-looking spokesmen for the power<lb/>
company. The dispute, as I understood it,<lb/>
was the scruffy unbathed people claimed<lb/>
the people in the white hats didn't know<lb/>
what they were doing. They had built a<lb/>
billion-dollar nuclear plant on the San An-<lb/>
dreas fault, which everyone says is going to<lb/>
cause an earthquake in California sooner<lb/>
or later.<lb/>
My wife, who doesn't know the first<lb/>
thing about nuclear energy, asked me one<lb/>
evening as we watched the scruffies being<lb/>
hauled off in sheriff's vans, "Why would<lb/>
they build a nuclear plant next to an earth-<lb/>
quake center?"<lb/>
"Because it obviously makes sense. The<lb/>
people who construct those plants know<lb/>
what they're doing. If you've been listen-<lb/>
ing to the nice, clean-cut men in white<lb/>
shirts, ties, and dark suits, you would<lb/>
know that the power company has done<lb/>
exhaustive tests, and the nuclear plant can<lb/>
withstand any earthquake shock known to<lb/>
man. Besides, we have a Nuclear<lb/>
Regulatory Commission that has the last<lb/>
word on whether a plant is safe or not.<lb/>
They would never have given their okay to<lb/>
open one, if there was the slightest ques-<lb/>
tion that building a nuke plant next to an<lb/>
earthquake fault could hurt the environ-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
"Then why are the people in the scruffy<lb/>
clothes willing to be arrested to close down<lb/>
the plant?" she asked.<lb/>
"Because they have an unrealistic fear<lb/>
of nuclear power. They don't understand it<lb/>
and, therefore, they're against it. Many of<lb/>
them are students who enjoy getting in-<lb/>
volved in civil disobedience, but they're<lb/>
willing to go to jail for their beliefs<lb/>
"Whose side are you on?"<lb/>
"I'm afraid I have to be on the side of<lb/>
those wearng the ties and coats. After all<lb/>
they've been dealing with nuclear power all<lb/>
their lives and they should know if it's safe<lb/>
or not<lb/>
"A few years ago you would have been<lb/>
on the side of the unwashed<lb/>
"I guess age does that to you. At some<lb/>
point in time you have to say that just<lb/>
because a person needs a shave doesn't<lb/>
make him right - and just because a per-<lb/>
son has short hair and dresses properly<lb/>
doesn't make him wrong<lb/>
"That's a stupid reason for taking one<lb/>
side over the other<lb/>
"There is more to it than that. The peo-<lb/>
ple who build nuclear plants are scientists,<lb/>
trained in our finest technical institutions.<lb/>
They work with computers and consult<lb/>
with famous experts who have an answer<lb/>
for every problem. The engineers and<lb/>
designers take extraordinary steps to see<lb/>
that not one bolt is put in wrong. If the<lb/>
say a nuclear plant can survive an earth<lb/>
quake, I have to accept their word for it.<lb/>
"This is not to say 1 am unsympathetic<lb/>
with the poor souls who are willing to go to<lb/>
jail because they lack faith in our great<lb/>
scientific establishment. But in this case, 1<lb/>
believe they're making a mountain oul of a<lb/>
molehill. I would bet my All Savers Bank<lb/>
Account that they are wrong<lb/>
Well, you can imagine my surprise when<lb/>
a week later, the evening news announced<lb/>
that the Diablo Canyon nuclear reactor<lb/>
could not go into service because someone<lb/>
had gotten the drawings all mixed up. and<lb/>
the wrong pipes had been installed in the<lb/>
wrong sections of the plant.<lb/>
It meant that every pipe had to be<lb/>
sonally inspected and replaced if it was<lb/>
discovered that it didn't belong there.<lb/>
A man in a nice white shirt, tie and blue<lb/>
suit from the power company exlained it<lb/>
wasn't a very serious mistake and could<lb/>
have happened to anybody.<lb/>
Another well-dressed man from the<lb/>
Nuclear Regulatory Commission said he<lb/>
was appalled at the sloppy engineering and<lb/>
was ordering an imu ediate investigation.<lb/>
They didn't put on any scruffy people<lb/>
for comment. I wish they had, because I<lb/>
wanted to find out where to send them my<lb/>
All Saver's Bank Account.<lb/>
(c) 1981, Los Angeles Times Syndicates<lb/>
'Apathy Drug' Grows In Power<lb/>
By KIM ALBIN<lb/>
Once upon a time, in an era called the<lb/>
'60's, there was a free country with hun-<lb/>
dreds of college campuses where healthy,<lb/>
concerned young adults protested ques-<lb/>
tionable acts of government and became<lb/>
involved in protecting the rights of<lb/>
everyone.<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Election Request Prompts Threats<lb/>
4<lb/>
The Polish Solidarity Union's 900<lb/>
delegates, at the second half of their first<lb/>
national convention in Gdansk, issued a<lb/>
call for free elections and democracy.<lb/>
Because they stood up for free elec-<lb/>
tions and democracy, Poland's delegates<lb/>
were subjected to ruthless threats by the<lb/>
Soviet Union and Poland's Communist<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Despite Poland's efforts, the Soviets<lb/>
are determined to stop progress by those<lb/>
striving for freedom. Historically, the<lb/>
Soviets have not hesitated to use military<lb/>
force to stop the spread of freedom ?<lb/>
witness their invasions of Hungary in<lb/>
W56, Czechoslavakia in 1968 and<lb/>
Afganistan in 1981.<lb/>
A coalition of college students<lb/>
disagree with the Soviet's manhandling<lb/>
of Poland and are making statements<lb/>
supporting Poland's right to freedom.<lb/>
Maintaining that people everywhere<lb/>
have a birthright to freedom, the<lb/>
students are circulating a petition ex-<lb/>
pressing "complete support for the peo-<lb/>
ple of Poland in their struggle to retain<lb/>
their inalienable rights This nation-<lb/>
wide campaign is critical because it sends<lb/>
a powerful message to the world:<lb/>
America's youth are firmly behind the<lb/>
Polish people in their fight against Com-<lb/>
munist oppression.<lb/>
Human rights are not a discretionary<lb/>
privilege granted by the government.<lb/>
They are a necessary demand of all free<lb/>
people. With our support, Poland will<lb/>
be free.<lb/>
JACK ABRAMOFF<lb/>
National Chairman,<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
Goodwill Mission<lb/>
The dancing and singing performance<lb/>
of the Chinese Youth Goodwill Mission<lb/>
from Taiwan, the Republic of China, at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum on Oct. 7 provided a<lb/>
delightful as well as educational ex-<lb/>
perience, and the interaction between<lb/>
the Chinese college students and the au-<lb/>
dience afterwards was certainly evidence<lb/>
of a successful exchange of goodwill bet-<lb/>
ween the people of the two countries. I<lb/>
would like to publicly express my per-<lb/>
sonal gratitude to the administration<lb/>
and the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion of East Carolina University, and the<lb/>
Ministry of Education in China for mak-<lb/>
ing such an opportunity possible for<lb/>
those of us who live in Greenville. Many<lb/>
who were at Minges on Oct. 7 also felt<lb/>
this was a wondeful event, many others<lb/>
who could not make it that evening have<lb/>
told me that they wish they could have<lb/>
been there. In order to enhance the<lb/>
chances for such a group to visit us<lb/>
again, I urge all of you who are in sup-<lb/>
port of this event to write letters to the<lb/>
following two people who are in charge<lb/>
of such programs in the Republic of<lb/>
China, expressing our appreciation for<lb/>
their successful mission and urging them<lb/>
to consider sending a similar group to us<lb/>
annually or biannually.<lb/>
Mr. H.S. Chu<lb/>
Minister of Education<lb/>
Taipei, Taiwan<lb/>
Republic of China<lb/>
Mr. C.C. Pan<lb/>
Director of China Youth Corps<lb/>
Taipei, Taiwan<lb/>
Republic of China<lb/>
KATHY C.W. CHAN<lb/>
Asst. Librarian<lb/>
Prison Letters<lb/>
I'm an inmate here in North Carolina,<lb/>
and I was wondering if you could put my<lb/>
name and address in the school paper, in<lb/>
the hopes someone will see it and decide<lb/>
to correspond with me. Thank you for<lb/>
your time and trouble.<lb/>
REGGIE L. PARKER<lb/>
P.O. Box 58<lb/>
McCain, NC 28361<lb/>
Then a good fairy, worried about the<lb/>
harmful effects of this involvement on the<lb/>
students, tried to ease their consciences by<lb/>
introducing them to a wonderful<lb/>
substances which, when smoked, would<lb/>
enlighten them to the virtues of apathy.<lb/>
The substance whas called marijuana, and<lb/>
its use among the students became<lb/>
widespread.<lb/>
Soon even the government noticed the<lb/>
change in the nation's young people, and<lb/>
although the government could not con-<lb/>
done the use of the drug, it did send<lb/>
policemen around to tell junior high school<lb/>
students what marijuana looked like, what<lb/>
to call it and which type of folk would<lb/>
most likely sell marijuana.<lb/>
Everyone paid a great deal of attention<lb/>
to the users of the drug, and before long<lb/>
the nation's teenagers began to smoke<lb/>
marijuana too. Campus political activity<lb/>
died out, and the government breathed a<lb/>
sigh of relief.<lb/>
Ten or 11 years passed. Everyone forgot<lb/>
what those healthy, concerned college<lb/>
students of the '60's wer" protesting, and<lb/>
the campuses were peaceful as never<lb/>
before. And the students of the new era,<lb/>
the '80's, lived apathetically ever after.<lb/>
A Fairy Tale? Yes, but it's not one that 1<lb/>
want to be telling to my children. At least,<lb/>
I hope iat someone can think of a better<lb/>
ending.<lb/>
It's been years since those college<lb/>
students jumped on the marijuana band-<lb/>
wagon and though we've managed to erase<lb/>
from our memories the reasons they had<lb/>
for jumping on, there are still those among<lb/>
us who persist in believing that awful pro-<lb/>
paganda: that marijuana smoking doesn't<lb/>
hurt them, that it makes them happier,<lb/>
more able to cope with the pressure of be-<lb/>
ing faced with the future. In this way, our<lb/>
nation's pot smokers justify joining the<lb/>
ranks, and inoculate themselves from<lb/>
realization of the terrible injustice that has<lb/>
been perpetrated against them: they've<lb/>
been robbed of their sensibility; their<lb/>
minds have been violated by that rapacious<lb/>
substance and by whomever it was that<lb/>
perpetuated the lie in the first place. The<lb/>
good fairy, it seems, must have been ter-<lb/>
ribly powerful.<lb/>
And the good fairy's Apathy Drug is still<lb/>
growing in power. Back in the old days, 1<lb/>
am told, most marijuana users were pretty<lb/>
discreet about their habit. Now, however,<lb/>
they can waltz up and ask me if I "Wanna<lb/>
get stoned" quicker than I can say, in my<lb/>
most recalcitrant tone. "No, I don't smoke<lb/>
it, get away from me, you lethargic<lb/>
Pothead, you They don't have to feel<lb/>
defensive about breaking the law, dulling<lb/>
their own senses, hazing their memories<lb/>
under the auspices of creating them. It's<lb/>
those of us who choose to retain our<lb/>
energies, our memories, who would be<lb/>
made to feel defensive, if indeed these slug-<lb/>
gish souls could have their way and con-<lb/>
vince us of anything.<lb/>
Marijuana smoking, as well as the<lb/>
lassitude it creates, is a danger to our socie-<lb/>
ty. Those of us who have smoked pot and<lb/>
rejected it can attest to its lymphatic in-<lb/>
fluence on the minds of its uers. It creates<lb/>
an illusory image in those minds of security<lb/>
and well-being, and I believe it also slows<lb/>
down the creative processes, not as pot-<lb/>
smokers would have it said, heightens<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The saddest part of the tale, and the<lb/>
most incredulous, is that marijuana use<lb/>
continues even though our generation has<lb/>
grown up with marijuana and is old<lb/>
enough now to know better. This fact<lb/>
makes pot smoking seem truly repugnant,<lb/>
people are jumping on the bandwagon<lb/>
even though they've been told that it's<lb/>
broken down, that it's not going<lb/>
anywhere. Repugnant, and a teensy bit<lb/>
frigntening.<lb/>
1 have faith, however, in the next<lb/>
generation. They seem light years ahead of<lb/>
our generation in thinking up their own ex-<lb/>
citing new fads, like New Wave music and<lb/>
high-energy dancing. Who knows, maybe<lb/>
they'll even rid our campuses of Toga<lb/>
parites and goldfish swallowing, at last!<lb/>
An important thing to remember,<lb/>
though, is that we don't have to wait for<lb/>
them, we can begin to reject the Apathy<lb/>
Drug right now. We can change the ending<lb/>
of the tale to a happy one, before the good<lb/>
fairy catches us.<lb/>
Fi<lb/>
G<lb/>
'I<lb/>
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and r;<lb/>
the m<lb/>
cond<lb/>
squa"<lb/>
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Apathy<lb/>
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the good<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
OCTOBER 15,1981 Page 5<lb/>
Bizarre Behavior Observed At ECU<lb/>
Assigned Deviance<lb/>
Part Of Classwork<lb/>
Full Moon Brings<lb/>
Goldfish Munchers<lb/>
B KXRFWNFMM<lb/>
?,?le iliioi<lb/>
" rhat's a piranha, don't eat<lb/>
that<lb/>
"He ain't go! no goldfish<lb/>
"Oh my Cod. look at that<lb/>
they're really eating them<lb/>
The above, plus a wide variety ol<lb/>
grimaces, cringes, smiles and cheers<lb/>
were vastly evident at 1 uesdav<lb/>
nights Chi Omega Elbo Room<lb/>
Fourth Annual Goldfish eating con-<lb/>
test. The contest, which is a fun-<lb/>
draisei for the C hi-O's, has been<lb/>
held for the last four years, and if<lb/>
past years were like Tuesday night.<lb/>
they made a lot of money.<lb/>
A record was broken in the com-<lb/>
petition. The past record was a total<lb/>
of 36 live goldfish. However Tues-<lb/>
day night at least the top three<lb/>
cntestants broke the record consum-<lb/>
ing totaK of 45 and 43 goldfish.<lb/>
The contest was well organized<lb/>
and ran as follows. In the first heal<lb/>
the munchers had twenty seconds to<lb/>
catch and consume as many goldfish<lb/>
as the could. The winners of these<lb/>
heats then went on to the thirty se-<lb/>
cond semi-final rounds and the two<lb/>
winners of the semi-finals then<lb/>
squared off in the forty-five second<lb/>
finals. In the end, David Hawkins, a<lb/>
third time entrant in the competition<lb/>
won out, after consuming a total of<lb/>
45 goldfish in the three heats.<lb/>
He won over second place Robert<lb/>
Scarbourgh (43) and third place<lb/>
Scott Cobb (45).<lb/>
In the beginning there were 350<lb/>
goldfish to be consumed (and there<lb/>
were a few left over). A total of 16<lb/>
entrants were scheduled for the<lb/>
competition, but one entrant. Matt<lb/>
McDonald, failed to come to the<lb/>
stage when called and was dis-<lb/>
qualified. Some of the other en-<lb/>
trants in the contest were Steve<lb/>
Chase, Dave Lockett. Chip Nolan,<lb/>
Robert Morse. Jeff Merritt, Terry<lb/>
Roberson, Jim Siemicki, Scott<lb/>
Brush, James Maye, Mitch<lb/>
Hamlett, and David Brown.<lb/>
The leftover goldfish, according<lb/>
to reports, will either be adopted by<lb/>
'It Chi-O's. given up for adoption<lb/>
or eaten at a fish fry for the Elbo<lb/>
Room employees.<lb/>
It was an intriguing contest, rem-<lb/>
niscent of past college days of<lb/>
Fraternity initiations, only these<lb/>
young men were competing for<lb/>
prizes of SI00. 550 and $25. Several<lb/>
of them claimed that they had prac-<lb/>
ticed for the event. And Hawkins of<lb/>
course had experience from his two<lb/>
past entries (where he placed fourth<lb/>
and second).<lb/>
Reasons for entering the contest<lb/>
were mixed. One entrant was very<lb/>
straight forward about his<lb/>
See GOLDFISH. Page 6<lb/>
Two participants in the Goldfish Eating contest<lb/>
By JOSEPH OLINICK<lb/>
sun Mki<lb/>
If you have: run into members of<lb/>
the opposite sex in the bathroom of<lb/>
your sex, witnessed "Ring Around<lb/>
the Rosie" in the Croatan, heard<lb/>
Christmas Carols in the halls, had a<lb/>
trash can thrown down at you from<lb/>
the top floor of Brewster, had your<lb/>
bike stolen or been kidnapped you<lb/>
might have been the victim of one of<lb/>
ECU's sociology classes.<lb/>
On Friday, October 2cd, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of Sociology 2110 gave her<lb/>
class an assignment: go out and per-<lb/>
form a deviant act. Then, the pro-<lb/>
fessor sent her class out onto the<lb/>
ECU campus to perform their asign-<lb/>
ment. Consequently some odd oc-<lb/>
curances took place.<lb/>
Telling of his experiences in the<lb/>
deviance experiment one student<lb/>
said, "The teacher gave us our<lb/>
assignment, and it was to leave class<lb/>
for 20 minutes and indulge in a de-<lb/>
viant act. She explained that the act<lb/>
should not be illegal, and if we did<lb/>
anything to get in trouble, it would<lb/>
be our responsibility. In other<lb/>
words, she was telling us to use<lb/>
some sense<lb/>
Our group began by going in the<lb/>
men's bathroom in the Croatan, ac-<lb/>
companied by the female members<lb/>
of the group. There was already<lb/>
another group of girls in the Men's<lb/>
bathroom. They weren't from our<lb/>
group though. So our group decided<lb/>
to go into the women's bathroom,<lb/>
which had slight success. There was<lb/>
a blind woman sitting in the<lb/>
bathroom reading a braille book.<lb/>
When she heard the voices of the<lb/>
male members of the group, she<lb/>
became obviously embarasscd.<lb/>
Since this was not as successful as<lb/>
we thought it would be, our group<lb/>
sought to perform a more obvious<lb/>
deviant act. This act involved play-<lb/>
ing 'Ring Around the Rosie' in the<lb/>
dining area of the Croatan.<lb/>
Everyone gave us obvious looks ol<lb/>
intrigue. We also heard plenty of<lb/>
laughs. After this act, we went back<lb/>
to class, and discussd the exercise.<lb/>
"The other groups did such<lb/>
things as roll the classroom with<lb/>
toilet paper. They put toilet paper<lb/>
all around the teacher. One group<lb/>
even took an idle studier for a fif-<lb/>
teen minute elevator ride. In other<lb/>
words, they kidnapped the person.<lb/>
Someone supposedly shut the power<lb/>
off in Memorial. They just saw the<lb/>
main power breaker and pulled it.<lb/>
Also one group shut off all the en-<lb/>
trances of Brewster, and campus<lb/>
police were required to open them<lb/>
Another student involved in the<lb/>
deviance experiment said "Our<lb/>
group was one of the duller groups.<lb/>
See CLASSWORK, Page t<lb/>
Pool 'Queen' Beats Male<lb/>
Stereotypes And Counterparts<lb/>
B DONNA l)Al<lb/>
The king of poo ma have to<lb/>
make room foi a queen on his<lb/>
throne a- East arolina's own Bon-<lb/>
Mexandet shoots foi the na-<lb/>
tional collegiate pool championship.<lb/>
The talented female sharpshooter<lb/>
currently ranks number two na-<lb/>
tionally among women pool players,<lb/>
and plans irn to the competi-<lb/>
tion next summer to vie for the<lb/>
championship title.<lb/>
What prompt- a female correc-<lb/>
? to begin playing one of<lb/>
I male stereotyped games?<lb/>
says she learned to play<lb/>
because "1 didn't have<lb/>
? else to do The twenty-<lb/>
no;<lb/>
the mo<lb/>
Bonnie<lb/>
simph<lb/>
anv<lb/>
two year old junior began playing<lb/>
pool basically just to "kill time"<lb/>
after moving to Greenville to attend<lb/>
school. Now she thrives on the feel<lb/>
of the slender pole, agile beneath<lb/>
her fingers, and the thrill of victory -<lb/>
especially opposing players who are<lb/>
dubious of her ability by virtue of<lb/>
her sex.<lb/>
Although Bonnie's rise to the top<lb/>
was rapid, those moments of victory<lb/>
required hours of hard preparation.<lb/>
It took the East Carolinian pool<lb/>
shark eight months, practicing three<lb/>
to four hours daily, to reach the<lb/>
point were she won the majority of<lb/>
the games she played. However, her<lb/>
rise to expertise was coupled with a<lb/>
few minor setbacks. Although at-<lb/>
titudes concerning women's roles in<lb/>
society are becomming more liberal,<lb/>
Bonnie did have a problem with ac-<lb/>
ceptance of her role as a woman<lb/>
pool player. "A lot of men don't<lb/>
think women should be around pool<lb/>
rooms said Bonnie. At one pool<lb/>
room that she encountered, "they<lb/>
will not let a woman play on their<lb/>
tables Without insinuating that<lb/>
the male ego is fragile, another pro-<lb/>
blem she encountered was the disap-<lb/>
pointment (to put it mildly) of her<lb/>
male opponents when she beat them<lb/>
at a game. "A man loves to see me<lb/>
beat his buddy she said. " but if<lb/>
you beat him, he doesn't laugh<lb/>
Once she was even told by a tavern<lb/>
owner to "Stay away from his bar<lb/>
and pool tables" because she beat<lb/>
his friend at a game of pool.<lb/>
How does "racking them up"<lb/>
and shooting for the corner pocket<lb/>
relate to the duties of a corrections<lb/>
major? Bonnie said that she might<lb/>
take a couple of vears and play pro-<lb/>
fessionally, but until then her pool<lb/>
playing prowess may bridge the bar-<lb/>
riers between herself and her clients.<lb/>
"1 can talk to the guys while 1 beat<lb/>
them. Or maybe I'll let them win<lb/>
one in exchange for good<lb/>
behavior For now, pool is a<lb/>
"good hobby" for Bonnie, but<lb/>
finishing college has top priority.<lb/>
Take a cue from Bonnie: Never<lb/>
underestimate the ability of a<lb/>
woman with a $200.00 custom made<lb/>
cue stick in hand, and a gleam of<lb/>
"8" balls in her eyes. Y6u might<lb/>
just wind up defeaed in a side<lb/>
pocket somewhere wih the blurr of<lb/>
speeding balls in your eyes and<lb/>
stains of "God Save The Queen" on<lb/>
your lips.<lb/>
Bonnie Alexander lines up a shot<lb/>
Diet Dilemmas<lb/>
Freshman Bemoans Weight<lb/>
Problems And Frat Ridicule<lb/>
Richard Pry or Busts Loose In Weekend Free Flick<lb/>
The Free Flick for this weekend, "Stir Crazy starring Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder, has been<lb/>
withdrawn due to a booking conflict beyond the control of the Student Union Films Committee. Runn-<lb/>
ing in its place is Prvor's most recent film, "Bustin' Loose co-starring Cicely Tyson. The film will be<lb/>
shown tonight at 7 p.m. only, and this Friday and Saturday nights at 5, 7 and 9 p.m. (the times listed in<lb/>
Tuesday's edition of The East Carolinian were incorrect). "Bustin' Loose" sports Pryor as a salty, off-<lb/>
color burglar-on-parole, with Cicely Tyson pfcyiag a devoted teacher of eight emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children whose private Philadelphia school has lost its funding and must close. Pryor is conned into<lb/>
drivine the school's dilapidated bus and its load of kids cross-country to Tyson's home in Washington.<lb/>
Bus breakdowns, a nymphomaniacal girl, a pyromaniacal boy and a confrontation with the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan provide Prvor the stage on which to display his comic genius.<lb/>
By JULIE MORGAN<lb/>
M?!f W ri?r<lb/>
The word diet never really held<lb/>
any significant meaning for me.<lb/>
However, during my teenage years<lb/>
mv mother did repeat the word quite<lb/>
often. You see, 1 was what you<lb/>
might call a little on the chunky<lb/>
side. Now I was not busting our of<lb/>
all my clothes mind you, but I did<lb/>
enjoy a few mosre chips than most<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Whenever my mother started a<lb/>
new fad diet she would bribe me or<lb/>
challenge me to join her. New war-<lb/>
drobes, hard cash, or even the threat<lb/>
of being grounded, never stoped me<lb/>
from having a cup of popcorn at the<lb/>
end of the first week of my diet. My<lb/>
theory was lose two; gain one.<lb/>
Weight watchers was my mother's<lb/>
favorite group of calorie couters.<lb/>
She used to pick me up from school<lb/>
and would have to wait in the lobby<lb/>
while she "weighed in Soon she<lb/>
convicned my to bcome a member.<lb/>
By this time my mother had joined<lb/>
and re-joined so many times she<lb/>
could have opened her own office.<lb/>
You might say that WW just never<lb/>
stuck to my bones.<lb/>
1 think my biggest weakness was<lb/>
eggs. However my mother came<lb/>
through for me once again. She told<lb/>
me about this new diet called "The<lb/>
Skier's Diet The directions were<lb/>
to eat a boiled egg three times a day,<lb/>
and drink lots of water. The diet<lb/>
guarenteed you to lose ten pounds in<lb/>
two weeks.<lb/>
Well 1 have to say this was the<lb/>
first diet that I ever stuck strictly to.<lb/>
At the end of two weeks 1 was<lb/>
unhappily suprised, though. I had<lb/>
only lost five pounds. Figuring out<lb/>
the reason for only half weight loss<lb/>
took a long time, but 1 did come to a<lb/>
reasonable conclusion. Sure, you<lb/>
could lose ten pounds in two weeks<lb/>
on this diet, but only if you are ski-<lb/>
ing everday at the same time.<lb/>
When I got my warning slip to get<lb/>
a physical before I entered E.C.U I<lb/>
got sick. I hate to go to the doctor's<lb/>
for a physical. But this time the doc-<lb/>
tor succeeded in making my day.<lb/>
After my examination Dr. Glenn sat<lb/>
me down for a discerntation. He<lb/>
relayed to me quite frankly, "Julie,<lb/>
it is not that you are chubby; the<lb/>
fact is, you are a "big-boned" girl<lb/>
Now was that supposed to make me<lb/>
feel better? I thought that was a<lb/>
doctor's job. His honesty did make<lb/>
a little impact on me, but apparently<lb/>
not enough. I dove into a pizza<lb/>
when 1 got back home.<lb/>
All I ever heard this summer was,<lb/>
"You better lose weight now<lb/>
because God knows you won't in<lb/>
college College was said to be a<lb/>
junk-food eater's paradise. After<lb/>
being here a month, 1 think I'm in-<lb/>
clined to agree. The night that<lb/>
would soon change my whole way<lb/>
of life was to soon come to pass.<lb/>
My friends and I attended one of<lb/>
the little sister "Rush" parties a few<lb/>
weeks ago. The night was moving<lb/>
along pleasantly, until around ten<lb/>
o'clock. Suddenly one of the<lb/>
"Frat" brothers came over to chat<lb/>
with me. Boy, was I surprised. The<lb/>
conversation seemed to glide<lb/>
without pauses. The young man.<lb/>
without any gumption what-so-ever,<lb/>
conclude his chat by asking me if 1<lb/>
wanted to be his "big sister Then<lb/>
he said he was only kidding.<lb/>
I about had a heart attack. The<lb/>
nerve of that guy! 1 was totally em-<lb/>
barassed.<lb/>
That weekend, though, 1 got to<lb/>
thinking about that remark. What<lb/>
he said was true. This time 1 was go-<lb/>
ing to start a diet, and stick to it.<lb/>
Nor a fad diet, but just cutting<lb/>
back. I go to an exercise class every<lb/>
night, and the days are going a lot<lb/>
better.<lb/>
If I ever sec that "Frat" brother<lb/>
again I'll probably thank him. He<lb/>
said what it took. However, he<lb/>
doesn't have what it takes to make<lb/>
the "big" time!<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1981<lb/>
Classwork Included Students' Deviant Behavior<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
We went through the halls of<lb/>
Brewster singing Christmas Carols.<lb/>
It was the day of Econ exams and<lb/>
there were a lot of teachers lecturing<lb/>
with the door open. Most of them<lb/>
stuck their head our the door then<lb/>
slammed it.<lb/>
"1 don't think it's the best way of<lb/>
teaching sociology. A lot of teachers<lb/>
got mad at us. The hardest part of<lb/>
being deviant is the conscience. It<lb/>
was hard to sit back and say 'lets be<lb/>
deviant Although it definitely<lb/>
made my day most interesting. I had<lb/>
never thought that I would be doing<lb/>
such in college. I never had anyone<lb/>
tell me to be deviant.<lb/>
"1 must say that I did not think it<lb/>
was very nice of one of the groups to<lb/>
till the elevator up with desks<lb/>
because there was a man in a<lb/>
wheelchair and he couldn't get<lb/>
down to the lower levels of Brewster<lb/>
because the elevator was filled with<lb/>
desks.<lb/>
"Really it (the deviance experi-<lb/>
ment) was on the verge of being out<lb/>
of control.<lb/>
"One group kidnapped the<lb/>
teacher and she seemed to like it.<lb/>
Also they rolled the room and the<lb/>
teacher with toilet paper. Someone<lb/>
in another group dumped a big<lb/>
metal trash can full of trash on top<lb/>
of one of the sculptures in front of<lb/>
the music building. The trash can<lb/>
sat on top of the sculpture for six<lb/>
days. Finally, the teacher asked that<lb/>
whoever put it there take it down. In<lb/>
another incident, someone dropped<lb/>
a trash can from the third floor of<lb/>
Brewster. It was totaled<lb/>
Another student said of ther<lb/>
group activities, "Our group ran<lb/>
through Memorial Gym, looking<lb/>
for something deviant to do. We<lb/>
ripped down some posters, and<lb/>
unscrewed light bulb. Then we<lb/>
found some mail cubby holes and<lb/>
rearranged all of the mail that was<lb/>
in them. We wanted something bet-<lb/>
ter to do and were running out of<lb/>
time. We saw some bicycles so we<lb/>
decided to steal one. We left a note<lb/>
saying why we took the bicycle.<lb/>
Then we took the bicycle up the<lb/>
third floor of Brewster and showed<lb/>
it to our teacher. Then we put it<lb/>
back. Originally we were going to<lb/>
put soap in the water fountains, but<lb/>
we though it might be illegal. So we<lb/>
didn't do it.<lb/>
"We really enjoyed it. We were<lb/>
professional deviants.<lb/>
One group dumped a trash can<lb/>
full of paper on a teacher's desk<lb/>
while he was lecturing and one<lb/>
groups started pulling desks out of<lb/>
Foreign Student<lb/>
Describes Life<lb/>
the classroom while a teacher as<lb/>
lecturing in it "<lb/>
Bonita Ratcliff, a graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in the Sociology department<lb/>
made the assignment and com-<lb/>
mented saying, "To me the exercise<lb/>
was very successful. The students<lb/>
understand what deviance was bet-<lb/>
ter than they could from a book. J<lb/>
would rather have the students go<lb/>
out and perform a deviant act that<lb/>
was legal rather than go out and<lb/>
murder somebody.<lb/>
"The students did a little bit more<lb/>
than I expected. I'm glad 1 didn't<lb/>
give them an hour. I haven't heard<lb/>
anything trom my department head<lb/>
I did get one complaint about the<lb/>
desks<lb/>
"I think it was very successful.<lb/>
I he Campus police could not<lb/>
confirm or deny the acts. Police<lb/>
Chiel Francis Eddings said "I can't<lb/>
tell you offhand (about the incidents<lb/>
that took place). 1 would have to go<lb/>
through the records. We have lots of<lb/>
reports of vandalism<lb/>
I he head o( the sociology depart<lb/>
meni could not be reached for com-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Goldfish Feasting<lb/>
Reactions Mixed<lb/>
Continued From Page S<lb/>
reasonsA hundred bucks  I<lb/>
really need the money<lb/>
Hawkins had a simpler goal. "To<lb/>
win he said before he joined his<lb/>
cheering friends.<lb/>
One of the keys in the competi-<lb/>
tions seemed to be the ability to<lb/>
catch the fish quickly. The eating<lb/>
did not seem to be anv problem at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Judges for the event were Dean<lb/>
Carroll, Lisa Ward, Robbie Smith<lb/>
and Leslie Wilmoth. The emcee was<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi's David Martin.<lb/>
It is unknown how the ASPCA<lb/>
feels about the event but judging<lb/>
from the reactions of some of the<lb/>
observers it was not totally approv-<lb/>
ed of.<lb/>
"Look at all those poor little<lb/>
fishes, waiting to die<lb/>
"I couldn't stand to drink that<lb/>
scummy water<lb/>
"I've heard that they swim<lb/>
around in your stomach for a few<lb/>
minutes until the acid kills them. I<lb/>
wonder what that feels like?"<lb/>
Most of the spectators left with a<lb/>
feeling of disbelief. I can't believe<lb/>
that guy at 45 goldfish. Forty-five<lb/>
goldfish. How could they do that?<lb/>
It's disgusting<lb/>
But the participants obviously<lb/>
didn't find it disgusting. Or at least<lb/>
they didn't show it. Not a single<lb/>
contestant used the trash cans con-<lb/>
vieniently placed behind them. And<lb/>
the audience was glad of it.<lb/>
Especially when Martin told the<lb/>
crowd that he advised everyone to<lb/>
stay clear of Hawkins if he went to<lb/>
the men's room.<lb/>
Probably good advice.<lb/>
By KRISHNA VASQUEZ<lb/>
Staff Wriler<lb/>
"Beirut is the Paris of the Middle<lb/>
East says Mike Wallace. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, this is not true today of<lb/>
Beirut; it is the setting of a war, and<lb/>
one has been going on for six years.<lb/>
It is a religious war that could last<lb/>
throughout this century.<lb/>
For many though, six years ago<lb/>
Beirut was a peaceful home. One of<lb/>
these many is Raja Atallah, a junior<lb/>
majoring in Management and<lb/>
Marketing here at ECU.<lb/>
Raju has been here in the United<lb/>
States for two years. Most of his<lb/>
family have left Lebanon to seek<lb/>
refuge from the war. Raja's parents,<lb/>
who, in Lebanon owned an in-<lb/>
surance company, are now residing<lb/>
in Saudi Arabia. His sister is in<lb/>
France, and his brother along with<lb/>
his family is in California. Raja's<lb/>
father occasionally goes back to<lb/>
Beirut to check on the family's<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Life has given Raja a hard time,<lb/>
but one wouldn't know it by speak-<lb/>
ing with him. He is easy-going and<lb/>
seems very eager to learn about new<lb/>
things, places, concepts, and<lb/>
cultures. He doesn't seem to mind<lb/>
telling people of the hardships<lb/>
which his family has encountered.<lb/>
He even laughs when he says that an<lb/>
average length telephone call with<lb/>
his parents costs about $40.<lb/>
One can see that Raja misses his<lb/>
family's and friends presence im-<lb/>
mensely. When he speaks of them<lb/>
his voice is filled with vitality. He<lb/>
does, however, get to visit with his<lb/>
brother once in a while. During the<lb/>
summer and school breaks he<lb/>
travels.<lb/>
Having studied French since he<lb/>
began school, Raja has decided that<lb/>
English will help him much more in<lb/>
the business world. Asked if<lb/>
Lebonese is difficult to learn, Raja<lb/>
explains, "Lebonese is very difficult<lb/>
because there are two languages; the<lb/>
written and the spoken. 1 still make<lb/>
mistakes when writing<lb/>
Raja claims that he loves it here in<lb/>
the U.S but would rather be back<lb/>
in Lebanon with his family and<lb/>
friends. He doesn't speak of going<lb/>
back there to live, but maybe when<lb/>
the war is over<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
ALLIGATORS FOR sale at<lb/>
bargain prices? your nod<lb/>
Lacoste headquarters? Gordon<lb/>
Fulp located at Greenville Coun<lb/>
try Club 7S4-0SO4.<lb/>
LIKE NEW: Fender guitar wifh<lb/>
handsheli case and all ac-<lb/>
cessories JI65 TS4 1805<lb/>
I9M MGB. qood condition. Call<lb/>
Renee at 7S? IS4I<lb/>
YORK CORNET (trumpet) ex<lb/>
cellent condition w mouthpiece<lb/>
case and mute. Asking (200 call<lb/>
'SI ?7M<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
S7Smonrh plus one hall utilities<lb/>
Near campus on E. Tenth St. Call<lb/>
7S 7?7d.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted 2<lb/>
bdrm townhouse approx. S blocks<lb/>
from main campus. Rent S7S mo.<lb/>
utilities one third. Contact<lb/>
7 58 6U7 Available now<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
Tar River Estates apt. 5 blocks<lb/>
from campus. 2 bedrooms. 3<lb/>
baths. $130 month one half<lb/>
utilities. ?0 deposit Call Scon<lb/>
7S7 ims around noon or late at<lb/>
night<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share apt at Eastbrook sns plus<lb/>
utilities. Call 752 4443<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom duples ntar<lb/>
Riverbiutf Rd 1120 deposit<lb/>
i)?0 month plus one half utilities.<lb/>
Call 75 2317<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WHO IS me ugliest man on cam<lb/>
pus?<lb/>
TYPING for students, professors<lb/>
etc Kempie Dunn. 101 E Wright<lb/>
Rd Greenville. NC 27(34 Call<lb/>
752713 alter 1 p.m. <lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient<lb/>
and inexpensive Call Amy at<lb/>
7S7 37J4<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST with<lb/>
fifteen years experience as ad<lb/>
mmistrative secretary wants to do<lb/>
typing at home Reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call 7 54 340<lb/>
LOOK GOOD on paper Protes<lb/>
sional typing. AMCAS, secon<lb/>
danes, resume, research papers,<lb/>
etc WRITE RIGHT. Tia-tMo.<lb/>
WE SPEAK TuralxanAPA. PRC.<lb/>
etc.) Highest quality typing, all<lb/>
styte manuals WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
757-?4 <lb/>
MARVIN tell us more about the<lb/>
kink.<lb/>
TYPING. THESIS, manuscripts.<lb/>
reports all types and quantities<lb/>
profesional quality reasonable<lb/>
rates Call 754 J7U<lb/>
LOST. ORANGEGREEN striped<lb/>
beaded chokder necklace, along<lb/>
E. It St. Thursday morning<lb/>
September 24. Contact Janice or<lb/>
Renate at 757 4451 or come by<lb/>
School of Musk office Reward.<lb/>
MOLLY: the Elbos not such a bad<lb/>
place after all, huh<lb/>
HELP NEEDED with term<lb/>
papers Good pay included Cat<lb/>
7SJ4Jt47<lb/>
LOST PINK sunglasses in front of<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building Sat. the toth<lb/>
Sentimental value. Reward. Con<lb/>
tact Jill. Jenkins room 213 or call<lb/>
754 500<lb/>
WANTED: assorted articles of<lb/>
SM parphernalia Call Wm.<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Next<lb/>
Week<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. 9th St. 752-2332<lb/>
'Variety of Fresh &amp; Frozen Seafood<lb/>
'Lobster Tails 'King Crab Legs<lb/>
' 'Clams 'Crab Meat<lb/>
'Hard Crabs<lb/>
WE ALSO SELL S-fl00<lb/>
USED TIRES 1U00<lb/>
and p<lb/>
A<lb/>
R<lb/>
I<lb/>
Is tl<lb/>
jr hi<lb/>
facelift<lb/>
This<lb/>
C a<lb/>
Home<lb/>
fer<lb/>
dei<lb/>
Ilk<lb/>
residen<lb/>
fror<lb/>
Int'<lb/>
the<lb/>
a<lb/>
the-<lb/>
Road<lb/>
'Proudly 4Wi"6<lb/>
81<lb/>
UJCTrUS<lb/>
V, DUBN&amp; OCID6ER<lb/>
- 8:OOPM- 2:0OAM<lb/>
YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE<lb/>
Only 5' From 8-9 P.M.<lb/>
35 From 9-10 P.M.<lb/>
FREEMUNCHIES<lb/>
THIS COMING<lb/>
TUESDAY, OCT. 20th<lb/>
TO TT?0LL MUSIC<lb/>
av<lb/>
&amp; ??G<lb/>
0OB&amp;aV<lb/>
Soft<lb/>
?p RECORDS a tapis m wat<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
PITTPLA4ZA<lb/>
J<lb/>
Vali<lb/>
N.<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0007"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
lent head<lb/>
ibout the<lb/>
ssful.<lb/>
id not<lb/>
Police<lb/>
1 can'i<lb/>
(incidents<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
Art School Offers<lb/>
Room Face-Lifts<lb/>
THE EAS1 CAROL INIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 15. 1981<lb/>
LettKtotfOG About Coll?UTh? Hakp 1aJW<lb/>
tH DaU? AWIS<lb/>
By TRACEY<lb/>
JAKOV1CS<lb/>
sun Wriiw<lb/>
Is there a room in<lb/>
your house that needs a<lb/>
facelift?<lb/>
This fall, the East<lb/>
Carolina School of<lb/>
Home Economics is of-<lb/>
fering a free interior<lb/>
decorating service to<lb/>
local Greenville<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
Undergraduates<lb/>
from the "Problems in<lb/>
Interiors" class have<lb/>
the option of choosing<lb/>
a project that takes<lb/>
them into the homes of<lb/>
local residents to help<lb/>
them redecorate a<lb/>
room.<lb/>
The students deal<lb/>
with a variety of mat-<lb/>
ters such as measuring<lb/>
the rooms, arranging<lb/>
furniture and putting<lb/>
together floor plans.<lb/>
They also work with<lb/>
lighting, wall cover-<lb/>
ings, window<lb/>
treatments and color<lb/>
coordination. Mrs.<lb/>
Meyers, their instruc-<lb/>
tor, says, "This pro-<lb/>
gram focuses on put-<lb/>
ting together all design<lb/>
elements towards main-<lb/>
taining effective and ef-<lb/>
ficient space<lb/>
The students present<lb/>
their ideas to the resi-<lb/>
dent in the form of a<lb/>
colorful, professionally<lb/>
done swatchboard. If<lb/>
the resident likes the<lb/>
students ideas he or she<lb/>
may hire a professional<lb/>
interior decorator to<lb/>
carry out the plans. The<lb/>
resident pays only for<lb/>
the cost of the swat-<lb/>
chboard materials<lb/>
which usually ranges<lb/>
form ten to fifteen<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
Mrs. Meyers feels<lb/>
that this program has<lb/>
great educational<lb/>
value. The program<lb/>
helps her students learn<lb/>
to deal with people,<lb/>
work out design deci-<lb/>
sions and learn to cope<lb/>
with client needs. "This<lb/>
program prepares the<lb/>
students involved for a<lb/>
professional career.<lb/>
The program is mental-<lb/>
ly exhausting, but very<lb/>
rewarding<lb/>
The deadline to app-<lb/>
ly for this program is<lb/>
October 15. Anyone in-<lb/>
terested in having a stu-<lb/>
dent work with one of<lb/>
their rooms should<lb/>
telephone 757-6929 and<lb/>
leave their name and<lb/>
telephone number.<lb/>
A?0, iwetOvEP fLrM0fi?D<lb/>
tooth ftere ?<lb/>
(Mhaha- i Hoee<lb/>
HE PO?SvT 66T OTO<lb/>
Ml U70aJ-SC?JT?:P<lb/>
H?AtfiL SMWfOO I<lb/>
H?VMftf-TWS<lb/>
LeiAo Tuofc of yoos<lb/>
Tfibres uk? sow I<lb/>
Support Your<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
az:a<lb/>
Delicious 33<lb/>
Item Salad<lb/>
Bar<lb/>
Western Steer,<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEftKHOUSE<lb/>
3005 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Sun. thru Thurs.<lb/>
11 a.m. to? p.m.<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
11 a.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
Road To Homo<lb/>
MARTY BEAR<lb/>
?<lb/>
XHOUSE-FREE<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
a.<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
M<lb/>
fit<lb/>
u.<lb/>
I<lb/>
1M<lb/>
O<lb/>
z<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
a.<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
is<lb/>
SOAP-WASH HOUSE-FREE<lb/>
"The Place to<lb/>
Wash'<lb/>
i<lb/>
The 4L<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
Across from Hot Dog City<lb/>
1-12 blocks from Belk Dorm<lb/>
SOAP-WASH<lb/>
soap<lb/>
X<lb/>
O<lb/>
C<lb/>
O<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
IS)<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
O<lb/>
c<lb/>
IS)<lb/>
Also ?<lb/>
?Color TV<lb/>
?Pinball<lb/>
IS<lb/>
D<lb/>
O<lb/>
?Attendant on Duty<lb/>
? Lots of Washers &amp; Dryers<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Free soap for every wash.<lb/>
Offer Expires Oct. 31,1981<lb/>
10 Ditterent Items Under 3.00 Every Day<lb/>
? All Day Specials ?<lb/>
Monday and Wed. Beef Tips 2.39<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 8 oz. Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Both of Above Served wBaked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries and Toast.<lb/>
2.09<lb/>
Monday thru Friday Soup &amp; Sandwich<lb/>
1AA (Steakburgeror<lb/>
9jfjf Chicken Sand.?No Potato)<lb/>
Great Luncheon Specials<lb/>
11 A.M. to 2 P.M.<lb/>
Chef Salad 1.99 4 oz. Chopped Sirloin 1.19 5S1SSE25S<lb/>
Fri Sat. &amp; Sun (Oct. 2-4) Buy 8 oi. Ribeye - Get Free Salad Bar<lb/>
Petite Sirloin 2.50<lb/>
Kids under 12 eal Stperburger or child's plate vwpotafo for 99'<lb/>
Sorry, no take outs on specials<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
-v<lb/>
<lb/>
?HSVM-dvos aaiH-asnoH HSVM-dvos aaiu-asnoHi<lb/>
MARTY BEAR - This Friday Night From 9 to 11 PM<lb/>
Tne Cotfehouse ? Downstairs In Mendenhall ? Admission 75'<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
Soft Contacts s8995<lb/>
Let us make you an appointment<lb/>
JUoa- Uue<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
A<lb/>
with the doctor of your choice.<lb/>
-EYEGLASSES-<lb/>
single vision<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
29<lb/>
95<lb/>
(SELECT<lb/>
gaoupof<lb/>
FRAMES.<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS 50<lb/>
Any Tint 36.95<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
SELECT GROUP<lb/>
OF FRAMES<lb/>
GLASS ONLY<lb/>
44<lb/>
95<lb/>
NO<lb/>
TIWT<lb/>
SELECT GROUP OF FRAMES . <lb/>
GLASS CrSPtAS-nC C4 QR<lb/>
ANY TINT iJH.JJU<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS 5D<lb/>
2nd THtuxui<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Oct. 17?<lb/>
10 A.M<lb/>
4P.M.<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
Oct. 18?<lb/>
10 A.M<lb/>
4P.M.<lb/>
rieetftzeet<lb/>
fagS<lb/>
'?mHtjjjjjt<lb/>
wmjLw l?- i<lb/>
?m<lb/>
Rise Up In The Night-<lb/>
Brice Street's debut<lb/>
on Dolphin Records?<lb/>
on sale now through<lb/>
October 21.<lb/>
5.99 (LP only)<lb/>
LPfffN<lb/>
a c s<lb/>
COMPETITION<lb/>
(Playing Field is Located Behind<lb/>
The Allied Health Building on the ECU Campus)<lb/>
? MCOBDS A TAPIS ? ?f<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Carolina East MallPitt Plaza<lb/>
JEANS<lb/>
Values To $20.00<lb/>
If Perfect Assorted<lb/>
Styles &amp; Fabrics<lb/>
Sizes 5 to 15<lb/>
&amp; 32 to 38<lb/>
ana<lb/>
116 East<lb/>
5th Street<lb/>
Greenville,<lb/>
N. C. 27834<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Monday-Saturday<lb/>
10-6<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
10-8<lb/>
COLOR PRINT FILM<lb/>
DEVELOPING<lb/>
? Kodacolor, Fuji or 3M color print film.<lb/>
? 110, 126, 135 film only.<lb/>
? Borderless, satin finish prints.<lb/>
? Dated on back.<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
COLOR PRINT FILM<lb/>
DEVELOPING<lb/>
29 Q99 R?9<lb/>
12 exposures j4 J ?<lb/>
Kodacolor, Fuji or 3M coior pnnt film. 110. 126, 136 film.<lb/>
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STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
s2<lb/>
EXPIRES OCT 21<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
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BY<lb/>
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This coupon must accompany order<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0008"/><lb/>
1HI t Sl i AROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
' .( I i ;U K<lb/>
Cajuns Not<lb/>
Ragin' Yet<lb/>
This Season<lb/>
B WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
iuat Sfnri duo<lb/>
Suddenly, the Ragin' Cajuns oi<lb/>
Southwestern 1 ouisiana aren't<lb/>
ragin' after all.<lb/>
I ast week the Cajuns were riding<lb/>
a one game winning streak the<lb/>
longest streak in the South land<lb/>
Conference- of one game, that be-<lb/>
ing d easy 34 11 victory over North<lb/>
rxas State.<lb/>
1 he winning streak didn't eon<lb/>
tinue, however, as the Cajuns fell to<lb/>
wishbone-oriented Arkanas State<lb/>
in a defensive stiuggle, 14-3.<lb/>
Arkansas State dropped a 24-20<lb/>
sion lo the University of Rich-<lb/>
mond earlier in the season. 1 ne<lb/>
Pirates defeated that same Rich-<lb/>
mond team last Saturday, 17-13<lb/>
The loss put Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siana's record at 1-4 this season,<lb/>
which is coach Sam Robertson's se-<lb/>
cond at Lafayette.<lb/>
1 ast season Southwest Louisiana<lb/>
posted a 7-4 record, one victory<lb/>
coming against the Pirates oi Fast<lb/>
Carolina. 27-21, in Greenville.<lb/>
Saturday, the Pirates travel to<lb/>
Lafayette to face the Cajuns.<lb/>
Southwestern lost its opener to<lb/>
Southern Missisippi, 33-7, and also<lb/>
fell the next week to rival<lb/>
Southeastern I ouisiana in 7-0<lb/>
defensive struggle.<lb/>
The Cajuns run a multiple offense<lb/>
which features tunning back dreg<lb/>
Davis, a sophomore who was<lb/>
sidelined last week with a twisted<lb/>
knee but has rushed 53 times for 284<lb/>
vards He is the only Southwestern<lb/>
running hack who has broke the<lb/>
yard barrier this season. Davis<lb/>
ran for 162 ards against Northeast<lb/>
Louisana.<lb/>
Senior quarterback Curt<lb/>
 aldarera has improved with each<lb/>
start this season, passing for 402<lb/>
vards and three scores prior to the<lb/>
Arkansas State contest. Caldarera is<lb/>
third in the Southland Conference<lb/>
in pasing.<lb/>
Caldarera's favorite receivers this<lb/>
season have been Greg Hobbs and<lb/>
Claude Charles, who have eight and<lb/>
s. catches respectively. Charles has<lb/>
scored three touchdowns. Tight end<lb/>
Brent Anderson also has six catches.<lb/>
Running backs Charles and David<lb/>
Foret are the leading scorers this<lb/>
season with 18 points each. Kicker<lb/>
Oscar Speer has hit on all seven of<lb/>
his extra-point attempts and three of<lb/>
five field goals prior to the contest<lb/>
with Arkansas State.<lb/>
The Southwest defense is an-<lb/>
chored by defensive back Cooler<lb/>
Mansur, who has accounted for 32<lb/>
tackles so far this season. Defensive<lb/>
end Andy Martin has chipped in<lb/>
with 28 tackles.<lb/>
As a team defensively. Southwest<lb/>
has been porous, allowing a total o<lb/>
335 yards per game this season ?<lb/>
146.5 rushing and 190 via the pass<lb/>
Offensively, Southwest has rush-<lb/>
ed for an average of 14 vards per<lb/>
game while passing for 143.<lb/>
Defensive back Michael Dupre<lb/>
leads the team m interception with<lb/>
three.<lb/>
Southwest has 39 letterman retur-<lb/>
ning, 20 on offense and 19 on<lb/>
defense. However, the Cajuns lost<lb/>
19 letterman. Of the 19. nine were<lb/>
on defense and 10 were on offense.<lb/>
The Southland Conference school<lb/>
lost 14 starters overall.<lb/>
Southwestern 1 ouisiana leads the<lb/>
series with Fast Carolina, two<lb/>
games to one. The second victory<lb/>
for the Cajuns came last season<lb/>
when East Carolina lost five<lb/>
fumbles during a 10-minute span in<lb/>
the second half to give Southwest a<lb/>
22! win in Pirate coach Fd<lb/>
Emory's debut at Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The loss was the first for Fast<lb/>
Carolina in three years on their<lb/>
home field.<lb/>
The series' opener in 1977 was a<lb/>
tough 9-7 win for Southwest in a<lb/>
defensive battle. However, in 1978,<lb/>
the Pirates bounced back to romp<lb/>
past the Cajuns, 39-9.<lb/>
EC Cagers<lb/>
Open Drills<lb/>
BIt ARLKSHANDLER<lb/>
S(i?irt Krtnur<lb/>
Practice begins today (Thursday)<lb/>
foi the Fast Carolina basketball<lb/>
team and head coach Dave Odom<lb/>
savs there is an air of optimism sur-<lb/>
rounding the new season.<lb/>
"We're very excited he said "I<lb/>
feel, personally, from a staff stand-<lb/>
point that we are probably better<lb/>
prepared and have a better idea of<lb/>
our personnel's abilities than we<lb/>
have been in the other two years<lb/>
combined<lb/>
Odom's third season at the Pirate<lb/>
helm is the team's first in the<lb/>
Fastern College Athletic Conference<lb/>
(1 (AC). The Bucs will compete in<lb/>
the FCAC -South.<lb/>
After having his teams post 16-11<lb/>
and 12-14 records the past two<lb/>
seasons as an independent, Odom<lb/>
savs he is ready to get into con-<lb/>
ference play<lb/>
"The door has been opened for<lb/>
an NCAA berth he said. "The<lb/>
league tournament in March will<lb/>
determine which conference school<lb/>
will earn the berth<lb/>
Odom is also encouraged by the<lb/>
1981-82 Pirate schedule. League<lb/>
foes Old Dominion, Richmond,<lb/>
George Mason, James Madison and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary will play in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. Navy is the only ECAC<lb/>
South school that will not come to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
In addition, the Pirates will host<lb/>
UNC -Charlotte, Ohio University<lb/>
and UNC-Wilmington. The team<lb/>
travels to such places as N.C. State<lb/>
and Duke and will compete in tour-<lb/>
naments hosted by West Virginia<lb/>
and Missouri.<lb/>
duard Charles Watkins (6-3,<lb/>
junior) heads an impressive list ol<lb/>
Pirate returnees. The New Orleans,<lb/>
la. native led the team last season<lb/>
with a 12.8 average. Other starters<lb/>
returning include Michael Gibson<lb/>
(6-8 center-forward) and Mark<lb/>
McLaurin (6-6 swingman). Point<lb/>
guard Tony Byles will be back after<lb/>
starting in 1979-80 and sitting out<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Six other lettermen from last<lb/>
season return and will be joined by<lb/>
five newcomers. Odom says,<lb/>
though, that the team seems to be<lb/>
very close.<lb/>
"In my brief informal meetings<lb/>
with the players, I can sense a feel-<lb/>
ing of unity within the program tha<lb/>
I have not felt my first two years. I<lb/>
hope this is a sign that we have made<lb/>
good progress in intangible, yet im-<lb/>
portant, ways<lb/>
Odom will be aided be a com-<lb/>
pletely re-aligned staff. David<lb/>
Pendergraft has been promoted<lb/>
from part-time to full-time assistant<lb/>
status. Tom Barrise is also new as<lb/>
the other full-timer. They replace<lb/>
George Felton, now with Georgia<lb/>
Tech, and Eddie Payne, now head<lb/>
and athletic director at Belmont-<lb/>
Abbey.<lb/>
Don Carter is the new graduate<lb/>
assistant, joining the club after serv-<lb/>
ing as head coach at Frederick<lb/>
Military Academy. Herb Krusen, a<lb/>
former ECU star, is on hand as a<lb/>
volunteer coach.<lb/>
The Pirate season begins on Nov.<lb/>
28, when Ohio University comes to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Rising To The Occasion<lb/>
The Pirate defense in last Saturday's victory over Richmond brought back memories<lb/>
of the "Wild Dogs the nickname of the ECl defense of the 1970s.<lb/>
Pirates'<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
Tough<lb/>
Bv IIMM DuPRH<lb/>
Managing <lb/>
Although 'he 1 ad P<lb/>
! a '<lb/>
fourtl<lb/>
I r u zz i '<lb/>
id i- well pn<lb/>
ot daily woi ?<lb/>
"We'll be<lb/>
basket<lb/>
teachii entals<lb/>
plain- Andi<lb/>
.ong<lb/>
? <lb/>
?<lb/>
t i<lb/>
with no lin<lb/>
<lb/>
ed an P<lb/>
23 7<lb/>
a Mai :ia Girven K<lb/>
and 1 a<lb/>
with ne ?<lb/>
Loraine 1<lb/>
V<lb/>
kname<lb/>
?<lb/>
and w<lb/>
n with<lb/>
diii<lb/>
:<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
mer <lb/>
' TI<lb/>
"Ou<lb/>
"Wi<lb/>
n two<lb/>
the Mia lboree,<lb/>
?Id Don<lb/>
on the<lb/>
hey lo.<lb/>
Noveml opener<lb/>
-<lb/>
'? I hese gii -<lb/>
?; s i i n s<lb/>
"We've playe<lb/>
know we have to com<lb/>
easy wins and exp<lb/>
or 1<lb/>
(Coliseumi. You ha<lb/>
best and win<lb/>
On The Road Again<lb/>
Emory Says SWL Game Most Vital<lb/>
BvHARI LS('HAND! EK<lb/>
sporls fr ditor<lb/>
"We must win this game. It's the<lb/>
most important one o the year for<lb/>
us<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed Emory left<lb/>
little doubt at his weekly press con<lb/>
ference Wednesday how he is ap-<lb/>
proaching the Pirates' game this<lb/>
weekend with Southwestern I oui-<lb/>
siana.<lb/>
"This game can make our<lb/>
season Emory said. "A win amid<lb/>
give us momentum going into two<lb/>
very tough games. Believe me. we<lb/>
cannot afford to look past this<lb/>
one.<lb/>
The Pirates, 3-3 after a 17-13 win<lb/>
over Richmond last week, come<lb/>
back after the game with<lb/>
Southwestern to host 1 lth-ranked<lb/>
Miami on Octobet 24 and then<lb/>
travel to powerful West Virginia the<lb/>
following week.<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana's Rajun'<lb/>
Cajuns are 1-4. a most disappoin<lb/>
ting mark for a team that had high<lb/>
expectations. I he lone win, though.<lb/>
came over Noith Texas State bv a<lb/>
34 14 margin. NTSU lost to now<lb/>
top-ranked rexas by a mere 24-13 a<lb/>
week before that.<lb/>
1 he Cajun defense is what wor-<lb/>
ries Emory the most Despite losing<lb/>
to Arkansas State. 14-3, last Satur-<lb/>
day the Cajuns allowed the nation's<lb/>
fifth-ranked rushing team only 224<lb/>
yards on the ground like the<lb/>
Pirates. Arkansas State runs the<lb/>
wishbone, lhis, said Emory, gives<lb/>
I SI an advantage.<lb/>
"They've had three weeks to get<lb/>
ready for our wishbone said the<lb/>
third-year coach. "They had an<lb/>
open date and then played Arkansas<lb/>
State. 1 hey did a great job last week<lb/>
and that concerns us a great deal<lb/>
Adding to Emory's concern is the<lb/>
fact that the Pirate offense managed<lb/>
onlv ten first downs and 201 vards<lb/>
against Richmond a week ago.<lb/>
"It's verv. ver disappointing to<lb/>
know that we ran 68 plavs last week<lb/>
and onlv averaged 2.9 yards (per<lb/>
play) Emory claimed, rhe biggest<lb/>
disappointment o all was that we<lb/>
had 25 missed assignments We're<lb/>
stopping ourselves when we do thai<lb/>
more than they're stopping us<lb/>
The Pirates obviously do not<lb/>
want a repeat oi last season, wl<lb/>
they fumbled three tunes in a<lb/>
minute period in the thud quartei en<lb/>
route to a 2" 21 loss to I SI<lb/>
Encouraging in the win over the<lb/>
Spiders was the play oi the Bus<lb/>
defense 11 11 oi the team's points<lb/>
were set up bv big plays by the<lb/>
defenders.<lb/>
"The onlv way we same hack to<lb/>
Greenville with a win was because oi<lb/>
the defensive effort displayed in<lb/>
(Richmond's) City Stadium<lb/>
Emory said point blank "The<lb/>
defense played with great, great in-<lb/>
tensity and with a great deal oi<lb/>
character. We ceitamlv hope that<lb/>
will carry over into this week<lb/>
Emory described the club's thud<lb/>
win of the year as "the shot in the<lb/>
arm we needed Still, though.<lb/>
e were some v i ,s<lb/>
Both of the Pirates' top two no<lb/>
guards, Ice Griffin and Matk If<lb/>
vin, are questionable for S I ay's<lb/>
gam v : iffin was injured I<lb/>
weeks ago against Duke and 1 rvin<lb/>
went down in the first halt I<lb/>
? eek.<lb/>
Freshman loin Smith is next in<lb/>
line at the position I ineba<lb/>
Ronald Reid has practiced some at<lb/>
nose guard a- well this week<lb/>
1 wo defensive Mskks, starter Ha<lb/>
Stephens and top reserve Steve<lb/>
Johnson, are also questionable<lb/>
Johnson had eve suigerv earlier this<lb/>
week and Stephens has a<lb/>
ankle<lb/>
Saturday's game gets undcrwav at<lb/>
8 JO p.m. EDT. It will be aired<lb/>
Uvailv bv radio stations WITN-FM<lb/>
(93.3) and WOOW -Wl (1340)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
HIIASI C AROI INI AN<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 1981<lb/>
le<lb/>
Rrr<lb/>
of<lb/>
iei young<lb/>
the rigoi s<lb/>
time<lb/>
v uIs<lb/>
.i a<lb/>
Dei<lb/>
vil'll<lb/>
- tn a<lb/>
ames<lb/>
. Rilc<lb/>
- aced<lb/>
ane.<lb/>
?<lb/>
e 1 ad<lb/>
rhides X<lb/>
? (<lb/>
know<lb/>
. but<lb/>
i ?f the sum-<lb/>
comers<lb/>
l our<lb/>
here<lb/>
is a;e hard<lb/>
?s on<lb/>
out<lb/>
who<lb/>
 have or<lb/>
are par-<lb/>
ts and<lb/>
national-<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
tfill be<lb/>
uthful<lb/>
? ? rard<lb/>
n opener<lb/>
e a top<lb/>
'op<lb/>
ne explains.<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
ontinue to<lb/>
i meet our<lb/>
ledule with<lb/>
national<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
e ! the<lb/>
ital<lb/>
mu W ? t !<lb/>
and Ervin<lb/>
naii<lb/>
1next in<lb/>
nlinebacker<lb/>
c at<lb/>
? Ct'K<lb/>
r?er Hal<lb/>
erve Steve<lb/>
-testionable.<lb/>
tervearlier this<lb/>
as a sore<lb/>
jnderwav at<lb/>
M11 be aired<lb/>
pu.WITN-FM<lb/>
Lm(1340).<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Sports-N-Shorts<lb/>
BY GREG MELTON<lb/>
Demon Deacs<lb/>
Down Pirates<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
TO ANYONE WEARING<lb/>
AN ATTIC T-SHIRT<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
wSNOW<lb/>
IM Depart<lb/>
Event Crazy<lb/>
BIGGEST A.A.G. EVER<lb/>
What has 12 legs, 12 arms, stuffs burritos<lb/>
down its face and calls itself the slut puppies?<lb/>
Well, it can only be the winner of the annual<lb/>
ECU Intramural Anything Goes Competitin-<lb/>
which was held on Wednesday, October 7 at the<lb/>
College Hill field. A total of 50 teams par-<lb/>
ticipated in the affair which is sponsored by our<lb/>
good friends at Jeffreys Beer &amp; Wine<lb/>
Distributors. They were even more generous<lb/>
than in the past as they helped conduct the<lb/>
event and also gave trophies and T-shirts to the<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
In reviewing the action it should be noted<lb/>
that all of the various events are of a relay type<lb/>
and are scored on the fastest possible time of<lb/>
completion. Picture 12 people stuffing eggrolls,<lb/>
hamburgers, burritos and pizza into their<lb/>
mouths all at once, attempting to be the first<lb/>
one to swallow the food and recite a message at<lb/>
the finish line. Well, no one got sick and all the<lb/>
?woofers" gave it their all.<lb/>
Other events included the "Campus Shuffle"<lb/>
in which contestants attempted to jump rope,<lb/>
blow 10 bubbles while chewing gum, play hop<lb/>
scotch and roll beer kegs while retaining their<lb/>
sanity.<lb/>
As mentioned earlier, the "Slut Puppies"<lb/>
finished first and congratulations go to team<lb/>
members Robin Biel. Andrew Hay, Jerry<lb/>
Phillips, Joe Rossilgnol, Diane Stetson and Sue<lb/>
Stieman. The "Georgetown Fighting Cocks"<lb/>
finished a close second followed by the<lb/>
"Scuzzmen Worms Such names must surely<lb/>
suggest the kind of enthusiasm that goes into<lb/>
entering an activity of this type.<lb/>
The ECU IM DEPT would like to thank all<lb/>
of the contestants and a special thanks goes to<lb/>
Taco Cid, Krispy Kreme, Szechuan Gardens,<lb/>
Xbram's, Domino's Pizza and Burger King<lb/>
who donated food for the "International<lb/>
Eatery" relay. Finally, thanks go to "The Se-<lb/>
md Chance" and "The Army Navy Store"<lb/>
who also loaned merchandise for the activity.<lb/>
The Almost Anything Goes affair is the kind<lb/>
thing that Intramurals is intended to repre-<lb/>
sent Everyone involved had a great time and<lb/>
we encourage all those back next year to get in-<lb/>
volved and enter a team.<lb/>
TRACK MEET<lb/>
Remember that the ECU IM DEPT is spon-<lb/>
soring a track meet on Thursday. October 15. It<lb/>
will begin at 3 p.m. and we encourage everyone<lb/>
to come out and watch as ECU's future Olym-<lb/>
pians strive to set new records in events ranging<lb/>
from the Shot Put to the Mile Run.<lb/>
Wake Forest was in-<lb/>
deed a demon toward<lb/>
the Lady Pirates of<lb/>
East Carolina in a col-<lb/>
legiate tennis match<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon at<lb/>
Riverbirch.<lb/>
The Demon Deacons<lb/>
shut out the Pirates,<lb/>
9-0.<lb/>
In singles competi-<lb/>
tion, Tay Andesle<lb/>
defeated Katherine<lb/>
Tolson, 6-1, 6-0; Kiss<lb/>
Hite defeated Debbie<lb/>
Christine, 6-0, 6-1;<lb/>
Karen Akers lost to<lb/>
Alice Rhoton, 6-1, 6-1;<lb/>
Amy Barnett defeated<lb/>
Janet Russell, 6-2, 6-1,<lb/>
Tracey Eubank was<lb/>
defeated by Katie<lb/>
Carter, 6-1, 6-2 and<lb/>
Kim Harrison lost to<lb/>
Carrie Short, 6-1, 6-2.<lb/>
The team of Andesle-<lb/>
Carter was defeated by<lb/>
Tolson-Christine, 6-1,<lb/>
6-1 in double's com-<lb/>
petition. Also, the team<lb/>
of Hite-Rhoton<lb/>
defeated Russell-Akers,<lb/>
6-3, 6-3 while Barnett<lb/>
and Short defeated<lb/>
Harrison and Kim<lb/>
McMahon, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
"The match with<lb/>
Wake Forest was quite<lb/>
an experience said<lb/>
coach Caroline Brown.<lb/>
"We're looking for-<lb/>
ward to our next match<lb/>
(against the Duke Rac-<lb/>
quet Club October 25).<lb/>
We've already beat<lb/>
them once, 8-1.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are<lb/>
now 2-3.<lb/>
East Carolina and<lb/>
Pembroke State battled<lb/>
to a double-overtime tie<lb/>
1-1 in collegiate soccer<lb/>
action Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon at Pem-<lb/>
broke.<lb/>
The two teams battl-<lb/>
ed to a scoreless First<lb/>
half time before tally-<lb/>
ing one goal each in the<lb/>
second period. ECU's<lb/>
Billy Merwin scored on<lb/>
a penalty kick while<lb/>
Pembroke's Gonzalo<lb/>
Suarez added his goal<lb/>
on a breakaway.<lb/>
For the Pirates,<lb/>
freshman goalie Danny<lb/>
Curtis had six saves,<lb/>
and Pembroke's Eric<lb/>
Burks tallied 16. The<lb/>
Pirates had 28 shots<lb/>
compared to only eight<lb/>
by Pembroke.<lb/>
The next match for<lb/>
East Carolina is at the<lb/>
University of Rich-<lb/>
mond this Saturday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
tin<lb/>
CWjuMti<lb/>
EVCRY THURS. 4 HI N&amp;Wr-S<lb/>
PRIVATE CUJB<lb/>
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Salad Bar<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
MONDAY -<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK<lb/>
n.99<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
BEEF TIPS.<lb/>
THURSDAY -<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
n.69<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
CUBED STEAK<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE<lb/>
3.79<lb/>
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Tea<lb/>
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(FINAL ATTIC APPEARANCE)<lb/>
SUNDAY, OCT. 18th AT JJ's<lb/>
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FEA TURING<lb/>
EARLY BEATLES AND STONES:<lb/>
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ALSO SERVE FANTASTIC<lb/>
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BUY ANY MEAT<lb/>
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6 A.M6 P.M. Only Monday<lb/>
Oct 12-Friday 16<lb/>
No Coupon Required.<lb/>
SATURDAY OCT. 17th<lb/>
14k Gold Sale<lb/>
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Manufacturer's Sale<lb/>
It's like the legendary Ah Boba's<lb/>
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14 Karat plumb gold See<lb/>
thousands of pieces displayed on<lb/>
plush, black velvet dazzling<lb/>
chains, bracelets pendants<lb/>
charms, earrings pins - truly fine<lb/>
imported jewelry for men and<lb/>
women All the popular<lb/>
styles and many unique origmol<lb/>
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abroad Sale prices range from<lb/>
1 99 to 1.500 00<lb/>
Don't Miss It!<lb/>
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(FREE)<lb/>
Bottle of Jewelry Cleaner for First<lb/>
100 People Saturday Morning<lb/>
(FREE)<lb/>
SURPRISE<lb/>
PACKAGES<lb/>
2.5CL<lb/>
Values to 25.00<lb/>
14K<lb/>
PUFFED<lb/>
HEART<lb/>
5.99<lb/>
UK<lb/>
FILLIGREE<lb/>
INITIALS<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
with 15"<lb/>
14K<lb/>
Chain<lb/>
ea.<lb/>
14K<lb/>
SANDOLLAR<lb/>
EARRINGS<lb/>
17.95<lb/>
MATCHING CHARM<lb/>
$<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
14 K Serpentine<lb/>
Chain<lb/>
7" Bracelet 7.99<lb/>
15" Necklace 13.99<lb/>
18" Necklace 15.99<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK<lb/>
n.99<lb/>
All Meals are<lb/>
complete Including<lb/>
Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries <lb/>
Texas Toast<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
STAR<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
FINAL<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
W3E !??? SI<lb/>
rse-2u<lb/>
2M Bypass -7U 0040<lb/>
Hours II a.mIt p.m.<lb/>
Mm Thvn.<lb/>
10 a m. II p.m. FriSwi.<lb/>
D. DAWSON CO<lb/>
2818 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville Location Only<lb/>
NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS NO LAYAWAYS <lb/>
SALE HOURS 9:30 A.M. till 7:00<lb/>
1<lb/>
master charge<lb/>
j 'Ml X'l-B?H? ; MM)<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
<lb/>
Fri. Oct. 10th We Will Be Closing Early At 4 30 P.M.<lb/>
To Prepare For Our Largest Jewelry Sale Only.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THi F.ASTCAROI 1NIAN<lb/>
CK TOBlR IS. I'M I<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLERWILLIAM YELVERTONCHUCK FOSTER( HR1SHOI IOMANJIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
(54-17-1)(50-21-1)(49-22-1)(46-25-1)(45-26-1)<lb/>
ECU AT SOUTHWESTERN 1 OUISIANAECU 24-13ECU 28-0ECU 21-101 CU 23 7Southwest 28-21<lb/>
UNC AT N.C STATEUNCUNCUNCUM (<lb/>
CLEMSON AT DUKEClemsonClemsonClemsonClemsonC lernson<lb/>
MARYLAND AT WAKE FORESTMarylandMarylandMarylandMarylandWake f-orest<lb/>
VA. TECH AT WEST VIRGINIAWest Va.West VirginiaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaW est Virginia<lb/>
MISSOURI AT IOWA STATEMissouriMissouriMissouriMissouriMissouri<lb/>
IOWA AT MICHIGANMichiganMichiganMichiganMichiganMichigan<lb/>
TEXAS A &amp; M AT BAYLORTexas A&amp;MTexas A&amp;MBaylorBaylorIexas A &amp; M<lb/>
SMU AT HOUSTONSMUSMUSMUSMUHouston<lb/>
TEXAS AT ARKANSASTexasTexasTexasTexasArkan<lb/>
MIAMI (Fla.) AT MISSISSIPPI ST.MiamiMississippi StateMiamiMiamiMiami<lb/>
FIOR1DA STATE AT PITTSBURGHPittsburghFlorida StatePittsburghFlorida StateHonda State<lb/>
North Carolina Rips Pirates<lb/>
B CHRIS<lb/>
HOLLOMAN<lb/>
suit Wntrr<lb/>
The University of<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
destroyed any hopes of<lb/>
an East Carolina upset<lb/>
Tuesday night in<lb/>
Chapel Hill by soundly<lb/>
defeating the Pirates,<lb/>
15-0, 15-11 and 15-2.<lb/>
The match was very<lb/>
different from the first<lb/>
meeting in Greenville<lb/>
which went down to the<lb/>
wire. The loss left the<lb/>
Lady Pirates with a 1-4<lb/>
record against A1AW<lb/>
Division I competition.<lb/>
After the match head<lb/>
coach Lvnn Davison<lb/>
was highly disap-<lb/>
pointed with the per-<lb/>
formance of her Pirte<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"I really have a lot of<lb/>
trouble finding<lb/>
anything positive about<lb/>
the match Davidson<lb/>
said. "They say that<lb/>
you learn from your<lb/>
mistakes, and if that is<lb/>
so then we should be<lb/>
very knowledgeable bv<lb/>
now.<lb/>
"One of the pro-<lb/>
blems we had during<lb/>
the match was that the<lb/>
team had trouble<lb/>
receiving the serve<lb/>
she explained. "We<lb/>
never really had a<lb/>
chance to use our of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
"I was just vei disa-<lb/>
pointed in the loss<lb/>
continued Davidson.<lb/>
"One o our trainers<lb/>
asked me how 1 fell<lb/>
after the match and I<lb/>
told her thai I fell<lb/>
about the same wav<lb/>
coach (Ed) Emorv fell<lb/>
after the football game<lb/>
with Carolina.<lb/>
"We played poorlv<lb/>
but the Carolina<lb/>
coaches knew we had a<lb/>
beter team than we<lb/>
displayed she aid.<lb/>
"Their coaching stafl<lb/>
fell that we just didn't<lb/>
play verv well<lb/>
The Pirates now<lb/>
must regroup to face a<lb/>
very tough Ap- earlier in the season, so seeding in the<lb/>
palachian State team we need to bounce back t Chapel<lb/>
on Friday in Minges and win this one she Hill<lb/>
Coliseum. I he Moun- said. "We reallv need<lb/>
taincers defeated the to beat Appalachian<lb/>
Pirates earlier in the verv badly because this<lb/>
season at Boone. is an AI AW Division I<lb/>
"We lost a pretty game and our record<lb/>
tough match to Sl will determine our<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you since 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all agBe at a reasonable oost<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when<lb/>
Can 781-S6S0 in Mli?b<lb/>
uneed us.<lb/>
?:i<lb/>
olleball is on the rise in North Carolina.<lb/>
I<lb/>
DON'T MISS IT!<lb/>
SEMI-ANNUAL<lb/>
31VS<lb/>
nVM3QIS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21<lb/>
WATCH FOR OUR AD IN<lb/>
TUESDAY'S EDITION OF<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BLDG.<lb/>
OWNED AND OPERATED BY<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Items anft Pi ?<lb/>
Effe ' ??<lb/>
Oct 17 1981<lb/>
Copyigbt 1981<lb/>
Kroge' Sa on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None So'd To Dealers<lb/>
<lb/>
(<lb/>
Fall means<lb/>
football, fun, and<lb/>
fine savings at the<lb/>
One-Stop-Shopping<lb/>
Place, Kroger Sav-on!<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
available for sale m each Kroger Savon, except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad if we do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable item when available, reflec<lb/>
ting the same savings er a ramcheck which will entitle you to<lb/>
purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat 8 AM TO<lb/>
MIDNIGHT?Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
IN CONCERT - ONE NIGHT ONLY<lb/>
Legendary singer,songwriter,and<lb/>
entertainer<lb/>
LEON RUSSELL SHOW<lb/>
Fri. 9 Oct. 23<lb/>
<lb/>
GREAT IN SPAGHETTI<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
fefffjfe<lb/>
SVotf<lb/>
X<lb/>
JUBILEE SHEER<lb/>
, v?R PBB<lb/>
 Coca-c?te<lb/>
I2A-U. 1 30<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS CUT-UP<lb/>
MIXED FRYER PARTS<lb/>
OR GRADE A'<lb/>
Advance Tickets- $8.00 per person<lb/>
Available at Apple Records, Western<lb/>
Pleasure, &amp; at the Carolina OpryHouse.<lb/>
For further information call 758-3943.<lb/>
(Hank Wilson's Back)<lb/>
cGHt<lb/>
Kagu<lb/>
Sauce<lb/>
GILLETTE MICROSMOOTH<lb/>
Atra Shaving<lb/>
Cartridges<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
10-Ct.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
mmw 4<lb/>
BREAKFAST SPECIAL<lb/>
FRESH BAKED BIG<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
??? For<lb/>
?rEB aut<lb/>
KROGt<lb/>
Vilcn?ts<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
V,<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
J f<lb/>
? l<lb/>
yn<lb/>
t??<lb/>
PKQ<lb/>
0<lb/>
Off<lb/>
suoo<lb/>
MfTAii<lb/>
m<lb/>
COSMETICS A<lb/>
FRAGRANCES<lb/>
fSgSSSJ<lb/>
16?,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057432_0011"/>
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