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<pb facs="00057433_0001"/>
?he iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 57 No. 17<lb/>
Tuesday, October 20, 1981<lb/>
Greeavilk, Nortfc Carolina<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
FOOD DAY<lb/>
Coalition Fights Hunger<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Miff ?rilr<lb/>
More than 40 ECU students,<lb/>
staff, and faculty members par-<lb/>
ticipated in a series of educational<lb/>
events concerning hunger and<lb/>
malnutrition last week.<lb/>
The central focus was<lb/>
"International World Food Day<lb/>
which was set aside by the Food and<lb/>
Agricultural Organization of the<lb/>
United Nations to call attention to<lb/>
the problems associated with<lb/>
hunger.<lb/>
Although World Food Day was<lb/>
actually on October 16, the ECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition sponsored events<lb/>
throughout the week. These events<lb/>
included showing films in two local<lb/>
elementary schools followed by<lb/>
discussion, circulation of literature<lb/>
on campus, a legislative letter<lb/>
writing campaign in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, and street theatre<lb/>
presentation.<lb/>
Many students were surprised<lb/>
when they saw the skit begin on the<lb/>
street in front of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store. "It was a shock effect<lb/>
noted .left Whisnant. an ECU<lb/>
Political science major who par-<lb/>
ticipated in the skit. The presenta-<lb/>
tion contrasted the daily lives of<lb/>
typical college students with the<lb/>
starving millions in the developing<lb/>
world. "It (skit) might have made<lb/>
some of them think. Thev stayed<lb/>
and watched it and many clapped<lb/>
for us afterwards" said Marybeth<lb/>
Kozar, an ECU physical therapv<lb/>
major in the skit. "We shouldn't be<lb/>
so caught up in trivial things she<lb/>
added<lb/>
Whisnant, noting that some<lb/>
students laughed at the skit, said,<lb/>
"Laughter is just the other side of<lb/>
crying; the whole thing went right<lb/>
by them ? it was ignorance<lb/>
"We had their attention, it was<lb/>
very well presented said per-<lb/>
former Wendy Barnwell, an ECU<lb/>
student from Guyana. "The con-<lb/>
trast was there. I think a lot of peo-<lb/>
ple take things for granted. They<lb/>
aren't aware of what is going on, '<lb/>
continued Barnwell.<lb/>
The ECU Hunger Coalition spent<lb/>
five weeks in preparation for World<lb/>
Food Day activities. "We were very<lb/>
satisfied. The programs in the<lb/>
schools went very well noted<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondel, an ECU cam-<lb/>
pus minister and member of the<lb/>
Hunger Coalition<lb/>
The Coalition encouraged<lb/>
students in Mendenhall to take the<lb/>
time to write a letter to their con-<lb/>
gressman or senator concerning a<lb/>
hunger issue. "We provided paper,<lb/>
pens, envelopes, and even the<lb/>
stamp said Sister Shondeii. Ovei<lb/>
80 students wrote letters, she said.<lb/>
"We're trying to get people's con-<lb/>
sciousness raised, get them to work<lb/>
on activities Sister Shondeii said.<lb/>
"This will help people to become<lb/>
conscientious in their own lives after<lb/>
we lead them<lb/>
Part o your education is to be<lb/>
well rounded. That's whv we have<lb/>
so many different required<lb/>
courses Kozar noted. "If we<lb/>
SGA Proposes More<lb/>
Student Involvement<lb/>
?-<lb/>
I'h H. t. VHS I'UMUMIN<lb/>
Members of the ECU Hunger Coalition stage a street theater presentation.<lb/>
aren't exposed to n (hunger) now,<lb/>
we'll probably be less likely to listen<lb/>
to it as adults Asked whv she was<lb/>
involved with the Hunger Coalition,<lb/>
Kozar said guess mv conscience<lb/>
gets at me. Here I am with a nice<lb/>
place to live, good food, nice clothes<lb/>
? somehow it's noi fair. How come<lb/>
I'm not living like thev (the poor)<lb/>
are<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
"The world system needs to be<lb/>
changed Barnwell said. "The rich<lb/>
have continuously exploited a lot of<lb/>
peole. Thev must always be in con-<lb/>
trol all the tune it's self interest.<lb/>
1 hev must be living comfortably.<lb/>
It's an historical pattern o' white<lb/>
supremacy in the rich nations<lb/>
Recently the Presidential Com-<lb/>
mission Report on World Hunger<lb/>
also criticized the United States and<lb/>
other developed nations of having<lb/>
placed a very low priority on helping<lb/>
developing nations.<lb/>
" The United States is still the best<lb/>
country noted Barnwell "Here<lb/>
See COALITION, Page 3<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
The SGA passed a resolution<lb/>
yesterday which states there should<lb/>
be more than one student represen-<lb/>
tative on the committee to select a<lb/>
new chancellor.<lb/>
The proposal was written in view<lb/>
of the fact that the selection com-<lb/>
mittee consists of six trustees, five<lb/>
faculty members, three alumni and<lb/>
only one student ? the SGA presi-<lb/>
dent ? who represents nearly 14,000<lb/>
members of the campus community<lb/>
effected by the decision of the com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
The proposal will be sent to the<lb/>
selection committee before the<lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. 20 open hearing. The<lb/>
hearing is designed to give all<lb/>
members of the university com-<lb/>
munity input on the criterion for<lb/>
finding a new chancellor. Students<lb/>
have specifically been alloted the<lb/>
time between 9:45 and 10:15 a.m. to<lb/>
speak on this issue.<lb/>
A memorandum from the selec-<lb/>
tion committee encouraged written<lb/>
statements, oral presentations and<lb/>
group resolutions. Persons wishing<lb/>
to speak at the hearing should in-<lb/>
form the executive secretary of their<lb/>
intentions before the meeting.<lb/>
A second resolution was passed<lb/>
by the SGA in which the students<lb/>
expressed their trust that the selec-<lb/>
tion committee "will select can-<lb/>
didates for the chancellorship who<lb/>
have demonstrated unyielding com-<lb/>
mitment to excellent academic pro-<lb/>
grams, extra-curricular oppor-<lb/>
tunities which promote a broai and<lb/>
enriching overall experience, and a<lb/>
proven understanding that places<lb/>
students' welfare and interests as a<lb/>
top priority<lb/>
This resolution will also be<lb/>
presented to the selection committee<lb/>
before the hearing.<lb/>
In other action, SGA Speaker<lb/>
Gary Williams established a task<lb/>
force to examine the reasons behind<lb/>
the restrictions of the Student loan<lb/>
Fund, specifically the Medical<lb/>
Emergency Fund. Because ol con<lb/>
troversy over the way the monies<lb/>
were being used by the students, the<lb/>
summmer legislature suspended the<lb/>
fund.<lb/>
A bill was also passed bv the<lb/>
legislature allocating $465 for an<lb/>
Oktoberfest on October 28, bv the<lb/>
International Language Organiza-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The newly elected representatives<lb/>
for Jones Dormitory were announc-<lb/>
ed. They are Mitchell Haber and<lb/>
Keith Johnson.<lb/>
Speaker Gary Williams announc-<lb/>
ed the committee appointments.<lb/>
The committee chairpersons are<lb/>
Linda Bishop for both screenings<lb/>
and appointments, and planning<lb/>
and policies, Mitch Davis for stu<lb/>
dent welfare. Bob Mills on rules and<lb/>
judicial, and Andy Lewis for ap-<lb/>
propriations. Jim Mclntyre was ap<lb/>
pointed parlimentanan, and Russel!<lb/>
Overman is the representative to the<lb/>
transit advisory board.<lb/>
Greenville Boy Fighting For His Life<lb/>
B GLENN PARKS<lb/>
staff U nlrr<lb/>
Two-month-old Donnie Lassiter<lb/>
underwent a bone marrow<lb/>
transplant Tuesday and Fridav.<lb/>
The operation, performed at<lb/>
Boston Children's Hospital in Mass.<lb/>
was Donnie's only hope for sur-<lb/>
vival.<lb/>
Donnie Lassiter was born in<lb/>
Greenville at Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital. Several days after his<lb/>
birth, Donnie developed serious<lb/>
skin rashes, red spots on different<lb/>
areas of his body and ugly sores that<lb/>
were increasingly growing larger.<lb/>
Doctors at PCMH suspected Don-<lb/>
nie of having a rare white blood cell<lb/>
disease called Actin-Polymerization<lb/>
Defect. Dr. Tate Holbrook. a<lb/>
pediatrician at PCMH, kept the in-<lb/>
fant alive with continuious treat-<lb/>
ment with antibiotics after diagnos-<lb/>
ing the disease through studies done<lb/>
at Massachusetts General.<lb/>
Young Donnie developed another<lb/>
complication due to the defect. The<lb/>
tissue around his rectal area was dv-<lb/>
ing and a colostomy was performed<lb/>
because of a possible spread of in-<lb/>
fection upward toward the in-<lb/>
testines.<lb/>
Holbrook also diagnosed patent<lb/>
ductus arteriousus, a congenital<lb/>
defect in Donnie's heart. After con-<lb/>
ferring with the doctors in Boston,<lb/>
Holbrook decided to transport the<lb/>
patient to Massachusettes General<lb/>
for the bone marrow transplant.<lb/>
However, Holbrook kept the pa-<lb/>
tient at PCMH for a couple of<lb/>
weeks because he felt Donnie was<lb/>
too weak to undergo surgery at thai<lb/>
point. Donnie has undergone the<lb/>
surgerv for the heart defect and is<lb/>
reportedly recuperating well.<lb/>
Because o the variety of the<lb/>
disease, doctors Joel Rappeport and<lb/>
Robbie Parkman, who performed<lb/>
the hone marrow transplant, are<lb/>
pathfinding and gaining insight to<lb/>
treatment of such diseases.<lb/>
Although several successful bone<lb/>
marrow transplants have been per-<lb/>
formed, none have been performed<lb/>
for Donnie's particular disease. On-<lb/>
ly two previous cases of actin<lb/>
polymerization have been diagnos-<lb/>
ed; the earlier cases occurred before<lb/>
the advent o the bone marrow<lb/>
transplant. Since that time, three<lb/>
centers for bone marrow transplants<lb/>
have been established. The John<lb/>
Hopkins Institute m Baltimore, the<lb/>
lied Hutchinson Cancer Center in<lb/>
Seattle and the Sloan Kettering<lb/>
C cuter in New York. Normally bone<lb/>
marrow transplant patients from<lb/>
Greenville are sent to Seattle.<lb/>
However Donnie I assiter is the<lb/>
youngest patient to undergo such a<lb/>
transplant and special considera-<lb/>
tions had to be made.<lb/>
A bone marrow transplant is a<lb/>
complex operation. However, it<lb/>
basically involves complete removal<lb/>
of the patients blood in the bone<lb/>
marrow o the hip bones and<lb/>
replacement with blood cells of a<lb/>
compatible donor with similar<lb/>
genetic make-up absent of actin<lb/>
polymerization. With the surrogate<lb/>
blood cells, which are immature and<lb/>
capable of growth, the patient can<lb/>
fight off infection in a normal<lb/>
fashion.<lb/>
Donnie's sister, 5-year-old Don-<lb/>
nielle, is the donor whose blood will<lb/>
be placed in Donnie's hip bones.<lb/>
Massachusetts law requires a court<lb/>
order, psychological testing and<lb/>
family counseling for potential bone<lb/>
marrow transplants from one minor<lb/>
to another. Although this drawback<lb/>
caused some stress for Donnie's<lb/>
parents, Donnie and Dot Lassiter,<lb/>
they consider it necessary and are<lb/>
willing to accept the challenges they<lb/>
have confronted concerning Don-<lb/>
nie's disease.<lb/>
Donnie's hospital bills have been<lb/>
paid by insurance. However, the<lb/>
family has incurred numerous<lb/>
related expenses. The family had to<lb/>
fly commercially to Boston and the<lb/>
Reagan Speaks At York town<lb/>
Freedom 'Protected'<lb/>
YORKTOWN, Va. (UPI) ?<lb/>
President Reagan, looking out over<lb/>
a wind-swept Revolutionary War<lb/>
battlefield, said Monday his ad-<lb/>
ministration is working to protect<lb/>
the freedoms won 200 years ago in<lb/>
America's fight for independence.<lb/>
Standing before a historic and<lb/>
colorful tableau at the site of the<lb/>
British surrender at Yorktown 200<lb/>
vears ago, Reagan drew parallels<lb/>
between the goals of his administra-<lb/>
tion and those of America's col-<lb/>
onists.<lb/>
"In a masterly execution of a tex-<lb/>
tbook siege. General Washington<lb/>
and his grab-bag army defeated the<lb/>
finest troops King George could<lb/>
field Reagan said in remarks<lb/>
prepared for the occasion.<lb/>
"Today, when people tell some of<lb/>
what we are trying to do cannot be<lb/>
done, 1 remember that moment at<lb/>
Yorktown, when we achieved a<lb/>
miraculous success without the help<lb/>
of a massive and centralized govern-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Equating his own efforts to those<lb/>
who won the right of self-rule from<lb/>
the British, he added, "Ours was a<lb/>
philosophical revolution that chang-<lb/>
ed the very concept of govern-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Within the crowd who heard his<lb/>
remarks were men in red coats, col-<lb/>
onial rags and crisp French tunics ?<lb/>
who had been participants in a re-<lb/>
enactment of the battle that ended<lb/>
the Revolutionary War on Oct. 19,<lb/>
1781.<lb/>
An afternoon re-enactment Mon-<lb/>
day of the British surrender and a<lb/>
victory parade, reviewed by Reagan<lb/>
and Francois Mitterrand, capped a<lb/>
four-day bicentennial ceremony at-<lb/>
tended by more than 100,000 peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
The event served a dual purpose<lb/>
by bringing Reagan together with<lb/>
Mitterrand, whose presence<lb/>
underscored Franco-American<lb/>
cooperation at Yorktown.<lb/>
ECU Hosting Charlie Daniels<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
Nrw, t.dil?r<lb/>
The Charlie Daniels Band will<lb/>
appear at Minges Coliseum next<lb/>
month, according to Student<lb/>
Union Program Director Ken<lb/>
Hammond.<lb/>
The concert, which is schedul-<lb/>
ed for November 20, will last<lb/>
"for a couple of hours Ham-<lb/>
mond said. No other musical ar-<lb/>
tists are scheduled to perform.<lb/>
The contract for the concert is<lb/>
now being negotiated, according<lb/>
to Major Attractions Chairman<lb/>
Jerry Dilsaver.<lb/>
"An Evening with Charlie<lb/>
Daniels" will begin at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Hammond said 6,000 tickets will<lb/>
be on sale by the first week of<lb/>
November.<lb/>
ECU students will pay $7 for<lb/>
advance tickets, according to the<lb/>
program director. Tickets for the<lb/>
general public will sell for $9, as<lb/>
will all tickets sold at the gate.<lb/>
Student tickets will be available<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
ticket office. Other tickets will be<lb/>
sold at Apple Records on Fifth<lb/>
Street as well as the Record Bar<lb/>
stores at Pitt Plaza and Carolina<lb/>
East Mall.<lb/>
"There's been a lot of student<lb/>
interest generated about this con-<lb/>
cert Hammond said. "Tickets<lb/>
will probably sell briskly; it's ad-<lb/>
visable to buy early<lb/>
The decision whether to have<lb/>
festival or reserved seating has<lb/>
not been made, according to<lb/>
Dilsaver.<lb/>
The Charlie Daniels Band<lb/>
plays country rock and has such<lb/>
notable hits as "Long Haired<lb/>
Country Boy "The South's<lb/>
Gonna Do It Again" and "The<lb/>
Devil Went Down To Georgia<lb/>
Dilsaver took over as Major<lb/>
Attractions chairman after<lb/>
Charles Sune resigned October 1.<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
????? ? MM rim km in<lb/>
Glen Maughan, a Vietnam veteran, protests military recruitment at the<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store. Many students have not even registered for<lb/>
the draft.<lb/>
first several nights they stayed in a<lb/>
room "the size of a broom closet<lb/>
Holbrook said. They later moved to<lb/>
the Ronald McDonald house for the<lb/>
families of hospitalized children<lb/>
paying approximately $18 a night.<lb/>
The family also has to pay food ex-<lb/>
penses and taxi fares from<lb/>
Massachusetts General to Boston<lb/>
Children's Hospital. The family is<lb/>
overcoming other financial battles<lb/>
but the real battle they face is an<lb/>
emotional one.<lb/>
Holbrook wants to set up a<lb/>
private tax-free fund for children<lb/>
who need care for cancer and<lb/>
unusual blood disorders. Any per-<lb/>
sonal or organizational contributing<lb/>
can be made by contacting<lb/>
Holbrook at Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Dodgers To<lb/>
Be Jailed<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Miff Wnler<lb/>
Though draft registration in the<lb/>
United States has become a stan<lb/>
dard part of a man's eighteenth bir-<lb/>
thday since its re-implementation in<lb/>
1980, several men around the coun-<lb/>
try have neglected to register. Ac-<lb/>
cording to a U.S. Department of<lb/>
Justice spokesman, prosecutions<lb/>
against these non-registrants will<lb/>
soon begin.<lb/>
Tom Stewart, speaking for the<lb/>
Justice Department last month,<lb/>
estimated that as many as 20 percent<lb/>
of all young men required by law to<lb/>
register have not done so. However,<lb/>
Stewart and John Russell, another<lb/>
Justice Department spokesman,<lb/>
both maintain that the exact number<lb/>
of non-registrants in not yet known.<lb/>
Stewart did not reveal any specific<lb/>
information about the prosecutions<lb/>
other than affirming that the cases<lb/>
will be conducted, on an individual<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
See DODGERS, Page 3<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinions4<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
Entertainment5<lb/>
Sports7<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday. October<lb/>
JO. in tne chapel of St Pauls<lb/>
Episcopal Church. 406 4th Street<lb/>
(one block from Garret? Dorm)<lb/>
The service will be at 5 30 p m<lb/>
with the Episcopal Chaplain, the<lb/>
Rev Bill Hadden, celebrating<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma Freshman Honor<lb/>
Society will hold a general<lb/>
meeting Tuesday. October 20, at<lb/>
5 00 p m in room 312 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center AH members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
THe PRC Society and Jetferys<lb/>
Beer and Wine will be sponsoring<lb/>
a Co Rec Volleyball Tournament<lb/>
at M.nges Coliseum on October 31<lb/>
from 12 6pm There iS a ten dollar<lb/>
entry fee First place. Keg second<lb/>
place, pony Keg Other prizes win<lb/>
be awarded Sign up at the PRC<lb/>
building (Behind McDonalds and<lb/>
across from Hardees on Cotanche<lb/>
St i Deadline Oct 20 Teams must<lb/>
consist of six persons with at least<lb/>
two females per team<lb/>
BEAUX ARTS BALL<lb/>
The seventh annual School of<lb/>
Art Beaux Arts Ball wiH be held on<lb/>
Fr.day. October 23 a' 8 00 p m a<lb/>
PaDa Katz on East Tenth Street<lb/>
Tickets are S3 00 in advance and<lb/>
14 00 at the door They are<lb/>
available in the School of Art<lb/>
School of Music and Department<lb/>
Of Drama Offices NOTE Only<lb/>
those m costume will be admitted<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
There will be a discussion on<lb/>
historic preservation downtown<lb/>
rev i tatization community<lb/>
development, and grantsmanship<lb/>
in Brewster D 209 at noon on<lb/>
Wednesday Oct 21 Wat Brow"<lb/>
and Phil Guy of Tarborc will be<lb/>
the speakers All interested per<lb/>
sons are welcome to attend<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
The Student National Education<lb/>
Association meeting will be held<lb/>
October 21 Wednesday at 4 00<lb/>
p m in Speight 201 All education<lb/>
majors are invited<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The N C S'uden' Legislature<lb/>
will meet Tuesday. Oct 20 at 7 00<lb/>
p.m in room 212 Mendenhall All<lb/>
members and interested Darties<lb/>
please attend<lb/>
INFLUENZA<lb/>
influenza vaccine is available at<lb/>
the Student Health Center Tne<lb/>
cost is $3 for each injection<lb/>
Students with chronic illnesses<lb/>
diabetes, asthma, or those who are<lb/>
on chemotherapy for malignant<lb/>
diseases ana those having unusual<lb/>
exposure should come by the Stu<lb/>
dent Health Center between 8am<lb/>
and 5pm Monday through Fri<lb/>
day during October or Novembet<lb/>
CHEMICAL SOCIETY<lb/>
On Monday, October 19.<lb/>
American Chemical Society Stu<lb/>
dent Affiliate will have a business<lb/>
meeting at 7 p m in Flanagan 202<lb/>
It attending, please bring a dish<lb/>
for a covered dish supper. All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend For further in<lb/>
formation, call Dawn Williams,<lb/>
758 8948<lb/>
FICTION WORKSHOP<lb/>
We are putting together a small,<lb/>
very serious, fiction writing<lb/>
workshop If you already write<lb/>
well, want to write well enough to<lb/>
pubhsh ana know how much work<lb/>
lies between the former and the<lb/>
latter, give us a call at 7S8 2430 or<lb/>
756 5112<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
Wanted Male, musicians,<lb/>
singers dancers, poets, or<lb/>
whatever your talent, to par<lb/>
ticipate m The Student of the Year<lb/>
Pageant, sponsored by Alpha Kap<lb/>
pa Aipha Sorority, Inc The<lb/>
deadline for contestant applica<lb/>
tions will be October 29 So on<lb/>
November 17, be prepared for<lb/>
another AKA Affair Alpha Kap<lb/>
pa Alpha is also looking forward to<lb/>
the students presence at their<lb/>
dance which will be held October<lb/>
24 from 10 p m til 2 a m , at the<lb/>
Cultural Center Come iam"<lb/>
alter the game' We also en<lb/>
courage more minority students to<lb/>
participate in SOULS Please '<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet this Wednes<lb/>
day night at 7 30 hi the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center Everyone is<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
LIBRARY PROGRAM<lb/>
A successful library program is<lb/>
one which reaches out to the com<lb/>
munity it serves A panel of school<lb/>
and public librarians will explore<lb/>
ways and means tor doing this in<lb/>
the October 22 program of the<lb/>
1981 82 Library Science Lecture<lb/>
Series<lb/>
Mr Willie Nelms. Director of<lb/>
Sheppard Public Library in<lb/>
Greenville, will address the topic<lb/>
of public library outreach Project<lb/>
CHEER, Sheppard's outreach to<lb/>
daycare centers in Pitt County,<lb/>
will be discussed by project direc<lb/>
tor Ms Dorsey Sanderson Ms<lb/>
Jean Johnson, Media Supervisor<lb/>
for Wake County Schools, and Ms<lb/>
Helen Tugwell. media coordinator<lb/>
at James B Hunt Jr High School<lb/>
in Wilson, will discuss school<lb/>
library outreach to teachers,<lb/>
students, and the general com<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
The program will start at 6 30<lb/>
p m in room 221 of the East Wing<lb/>
of Joyner Library on the ECU<lb/>
campus A social hour will follow<lb/>
the lecture All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend<lb/>
The lecture series is being spon<lb/>
sored jointly by the ECU Depart<lb/>
ment of Library Science, the Pitt<lb/>
Greenville Media Society, and the<lb/>
ECU Library Science Alumni<lb/>
Association CEU credit can be<lb/>
earned by teachers and librarians<lb/>
who attend at least 5 of the 6 lee<lb/>
lures in the series A S5 00 fee will<lb/>
be charged for those persons wan<lb/>
ting CEU credit<lb/>
Additional information on this<lb/>
lecture and others in the sries can<lb/>
be obtained by calling the Depart<lb/>
ment of Library Science at<lb/>
757 6621<lb/>
SURFCLUBL<lb/>
A meeting will be held Wednes<lb/>
day 7 8 p m in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall on the following<lb/>
dates October 21. 28. November 4.<lb/>
11. 18. and December 2, 9 All<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
New members welcomed!<lb/>
ASSISTANTSHIPS<lb/>
The Institute for Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Resources is now accep<lb/>
ting applications for two assistant<lb/>
ships scheduled to begin in late fall<lb/>
of 1981<lb/>
Graduate Assistantships. Office<lb/>
Coordinator?Field Team Coor<lb/>
dinator, will coordinate field team<lb/>
activities, and assist investigators<lb/>
in data collection and analysis<lb/>
Background in behavioral or<lb/>
social sciences preferred<lb/>
Undergraduate?Graduate<lb/>
Assistantship, Data Analyst, will<lb/>
assist investigators in the analysis<lb/>
of data Must have background<lb/>
and familiarity with computer<lb/>
programming and statistics.<lb/>
Please contact Dr Jeffrey<lb/>
Johnson or Mr Marcus Hepburn,<lb/>
Mamie Jenkins building, ICMR at<lb/>
757 6810 or 757 6220 An equal op<lb/>
portunity, affirmative action<lb/>
employer<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha would like to<lb/>
congratulate the winners of their<lb/>
annual field day The sorority win<lb/>
ner was Alpha Phi The fraternity<lb/>
division was won by Sigm Nu<lb/>
SCANDINAVIAN<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
Scandinavian Seminar is now<lb/>
accepting applications tor its<lb/>
1982 13 academic year abroad in<lb/>
Denmark, Finland. Norway, or<lb/>
Sweden This unique learning ex<lb/>
perience is designed for college<lb/>
students, graduates, and other<lb/>
adults who want to study n a Scan<lb/>
dinavian country, becoming part<lb/>
of another culture and learning its<lb/>
language A new one semester<lb/>
program, only in Denmark, is also<lb/>
now available<lb/>
After orientation in Denmark<lb/>
and a 3 week intensive language<lb/>
course, generally followed by a<lb/>
family stay, students are placed<lb/>
individually at Scandinavian Folk<lb/>
Schools or other specialized in<lb/>
stitutions, where they live and<lb/>
study with Scandinavians of<lb/>
diverse backgrounds The Folk<lb/>
Schools are small, residential<lb/>
educational communities intended<lb/>
mainly for young adults Both<lb/>
historically and socially, these<lb/>
schools have played an important<lb/>
part in the development of the<lb/>
Scandinavian countries Midway<lb/>
through the folk school year, all<lb/>
the Seminar students and staff<lb/>
meet in the mountains of Norway<lb/>
to discuss progress and make<lb/>
plans for the spring A final ses<lb/>
sion is held at the end of the year to<lb/>
evaluate the year's studies and ex<lb/>
periences<lb/>
Because the Scandinavian coun<lb/>
tries are small, open, and accessi<lb/>
ble, the year provides an unusual<lb/>
opportunity for the student to ex<lb/>
plore his or her particular field of<lb/>
interest by doing an independent<lb/>
study project On the basis of a<lb/>
detailed written evaluation of<lb/>
their work, most college students<lb/>
receive full or partial academic<lb/>
credit for their year<lb/>
The fee, covering tuition, room,<lb/>
board, and all course connected<lb/>
travels in Scandinavia, is S5.900<lb/>
interest free loans are granted on<lb/>
the basis of need, as are a few par<lb/>
tial scholarships<lb/>
For further information, please<lb/>
write to SCANDINAVIAN<lb/>
SEMINAR. 100 East 85th Street.<lb/>
New York. N Y 10028<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 I<lb/>
CHEERING SECTION<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board is<lb/>
sponsoring a group cheering sec<lb/>
tion for the Miami (FL) 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 in Minges Col<lb/>
iseum no later than 5pm Friday.<lb/>
October 16 Only 100 seals are<lb/>
available, so you'd better hurry<lb/>
For further information call Pam<lb/>
Holt at 757 6417 Raise Hell for the<lb/>
Pirates!<lb/>
BEAUX ARTS BALL<lb/>
Start making you costumes tor<lb/>
the 7th Annual Beaux Arts Ball<lb/>
This years bizarre event will be<lb/>
held at Papa Katz on Friday, Oc<lb/>
tober 23 at 8 00 Tickets are S3 00<lb/>
m advance, 14 00 at door<lb/>
WE DARE YOU!<lb/>
The Omicron Chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda dares any major in<lb/>
business, business education, and<lb/>
office administration to become a<lb/>
member of this national organiza<lb/>
tion You don't have to walk on hot<lb/>
coals, sing a solo, or do anything<lb/>
out of the ordinary to ioin<lb/>
BUT you do have to be prepared<lb/>
for one of the most interesting,<lb/>
activity oriented organizations on<lb/>
campus Our next meeting is<lb/>
Wednesday. Oct 21 at 4 p m in<lb/>
Rawl 341 WE DARE YOU TO<lb/>
COMEH<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
All Corso members please pick<lb/>
up your tickets immediatly" We<lb/>
need to begin selling the t.ckets to<lb/>
the Faculty Student Party Pick<lb/>
them up from Jackie in the Social<lb/>
Work Corrections office<lb/>
SLAP<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 On<lb/>
till 5 00 All proceeds will go<lb/>
toward our scholarship fund<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
Remaining School of Musk<lb/>
Events tor October Oct 23 24<lb/>
Opera Scenes. 8 00 AMiiarr<lb/>
Tell, Boris Godonov, Marriage of<lb/>
Figaro. Macbeth. Rigoletto, Oct<lb/>
25, Symphonic Wind Ensemble<lb/>
Concert 8 15, Memorial Gym<lb/>
Oct 26 Paul Tardif piano Facul<lb/>
ty Recital, 8 15 Oct 27 Sigma<lb/>
Alpha lota Musicale, 6 00 Oct 30<lb/>
Mark Harrel. trumpe' Gary<lb/>
Blizzard, trombone Senior<lb/>
Rectal, 7 30<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI, SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
ONA<lb/>
The Organization of Native<lb/>
Americans will be meeting tonight<lb/>
(Oct 20) m CSO office (top floor<lb/>
back part of Whichard Building)<lb/>
Everyone is welcome to attend<lb/>
The meeting will begin at 5 30<lb/>
p m<lb/>
BEAT MIAMI!<lb/>
There will be a Beat Miami Pep<lb/>
Rally Thursday Oct 72 at 7 p m<lb/>
on College Hill in front of Tyler<lb/>
dorm The ECU pep band and<lb/>
cheerleaders will be there along<lb/>
with Coach Ed Emory Music will<lb/>
be provided by the Elbo Room and<lb/>
free fnsbees and food coupons will<lb/>
be given away by Burger King Br<lb/>
ing your blanket and beverages<lb/>
and celebrate the upset victory<lb/>
that s going to take place this<lb/>
Saturday when the Pirates host<lb/>
'he 13th ranked Miami Hur<lb/>
r.canes<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
The ECU Literary Magazine<lb/>
REBEL is looking for an Associate<lb/>
Ed'tor Prose Editor and Art<lb/>
Editor Applications can be picked<lb/>
up in the Publications Building n<lb/>
the Media board secretary office<lb/>
Any maior is acceptable<lb/>
TRAFFICOFFICE<lb/>
The ECU Traffic Office,<lb/>
presently located m the old laun<lb/>
dry building, will close at the end<lb/>
of the business day on October 27.<lb/>
1981 and reopen for business on<lb/>
November 2. 1981 in a new location<lb/>
at 1001 East Fifth Street, across<lb/>
from the Spilman Building<lb/>
Police operations will continue<lb/>
m the old laundry building until<lb/>
October 30 A dispatcher will be on<lb/>
duty at the present location to pro<lb/>
cess emergency traffic matters<lb/>
only until October 30 The seventy<lb/>
two hour period on traffic citations<lb/>
will be extended to exclude the<lb/>
period the Traffic Office is not<lb/>
operational<lb/>
All pc'ice. traffic and mfor<lb/>
maiton services will be moved to<lb/>
1001 East F ifth Street by the end of<lb/>
the business day on October 30.<lb/>
1981<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/>
MonSun.<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues,<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
11:30-2:00<lb/>
6:00-8:30<lb/>
o<lb/>
 <lb/>
LARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD 1.88<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; LOUNGE<lb/>
ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOURS<lb/>
5:00-6:00 AND AT 10-11 PM<lb/>
WE HAVE A NEW FORMAT<lb/>
A NEW MENU AND,<lb/>
NEW AFFORDABLE PRICES.<lb/>
TRY THE 5.95 DINNER BUFFET<lb/>
AT 5:30 PM TO 9:30 PM EVERY<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
GIVEUSATRYE.C.U.<lb/>
YOUR WALLET WILL LIKE US.<lb/>
CLOSE TO THE ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE MINGES BUILDING BASEMENT<lb/>
CORNER OF 3RD&amp; EVANS ST. DOWNTOWN CREENVIL1 E<lb/>
OPEN LUNCH AND DINNER MONSAT.<lb/>
n!<lb/>
'it .74<lb/>
a . r-oc<lb/>
and<lb/>
presi<lb/>
?  El<lb/>
? I<lb/>
BEA<lb/>
Ea Amp a<lb/>
SET OF i<lb/>
?? 741<lb/>
FO<lb/>
R O' <lb/>
Vi morit<lb/>
I<lb/>
F6 V I<lb/>
bdr" ?<lb/>
Ji?<lb/>
.49<lb/>
Hwy 264 Bypass, Greenville<lb/>
H Sun. Testing Equipment<lb/>
H N.C. Inspection Station<lb/>
Road Service &amp;<lb/>
1<lb/>
&amp; Bucaneer Babes<lb/>
present the 2nd Annual<lb/>
MALE BEST CHEST<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
TUES OCT. 20th<lb/>
1st ? $100.00 &amp; PONY KEG<lb/>
2nd ? $50.00 &amp; FREE PASS<lb/>
3rd ? $25.00 &amp; FREE PASS<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
Mr. Gatti's Pizza &amp; ETC.<lb/>
Western Steer<lb/>
Flower Basket<lb/>
Casablanca<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
Foreign and Domestic Cars<lb/>
COREY'S EXXON<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SERVICE CENTER<lb/>
2753 East 10th Street<lb/>
758-2913<lb/>
i<lb/>
come join us"<lb/>
 for our <lb/>
SHRDO<lb/>
SPEC3ftL<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
:?:?:?<lb/>
:?:?:?:<lb/>
???.???.<lb/>
:??<lb/>
m<lb/>
10<lb/>
Discount to All<lb/>
ECU Students and Faculty<lb/>
On AH Repair Work.<lb/>
Located beside N.C.<lb/>
Department of Motor Vehicles<lb/>
OWND &amp; OPERATED BY REX COREY<lb/>
m<lb/>
SSKS<lb/>
Special prices on<lb/>
choice items from our<lb/>
menuserved between<lb/>
5:00 and 7:30<lb/>
?17.<lb/>
Tues<lb/>
Oct. 20<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Oct. 21<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 22<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
1st ANNUAL<lb/>
CHAPTER TEN<lb/>
WET T-SHIRT<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
TUES, OCT 20,1981<lb/>
Open to Everyone or Sponsored<lb/>
Organizations<lb/>
Contestants can enter up<lb/>
until Tues. night 1020.<lb/>
By day<lb/>
he is<lb/>
Woody<lb/>
Allen.<lb/>
But When<lb/>
Night Falls<lb/>
And The<lb/>
Moon Rises,<lb/>
Humphrey Bogart<lb/>
Strikes Again.<lb/>
1st Prize<lb/>
2nd Prize<lb/>
3rd Prize<lb/>
-8200<lb/>
-850<lb/>
- $25<lb/>
4<lb/>
99<lb/>
Emcee<lb/>
JOHN MOORE<lb/>
"The American Dream"<lb/>
Judging will be done by 3 surprise guests<lb/>
Doors Open at 8:30 So come early!<lb/>
? -CW?? &amp;????? I'M<lb/>
An Arthur P Jacobs Production in association<lb/>
with Rollins-Joffe Productions<lb/>
"PL Ay IT AGAIN. SAM<lb/>
A Herbert Ross Film<lb/>
HCCDY AUEN dune iiius<lb/>
andSU4N VU 4 I HSSHII 4L?<lb/>
b??,MBMnn? !?M.?,(MnHh mart ????-?????????uim<lb/>
lr????1i.U?M UUMr "??? T Ci-H lit  m<lb/>
?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0003"/><lb/>
Dodgers To Be Jailed<lb/>
( ontinued from Page I<lb/>
Stewart did comment, however, that<lb/>
neighbors and friends ot the non-registrants<lb/>
have been (he most common sources, used<lb/>
hv the Justice Department in seeking the ol<lb/>
fendei s<lb/>
Russell sas thai a list ot 108 names oi<lb/>
non-registrants has been turned in to his of<lb/>
fice. Now, he sas. the lustice Department<lb/>
plans to seek them out.<lb/>
ccording to Russell, letters will be sent to<lb/>
these young men affording them a second<lb/>
chance to register without penalty. It the<lb/>
non-registrants still fail to register after a se-<lb/>
cond warning, Russell says, their names v.il<lb/>
be turned over to the FBI for tint her pro-<lb/>
cessing.<lb/>
If convicted of failure to registei for the<lb/>
draft, a young man will face a maximum<lb/>
penalty of five years in prison and a $10,(XK)<lb/>
fine.<lb/>
Beginning with those bom in 1960, all men<lb/>
must register upon reaching their eighteenth<lb/>
birthdays. Forms are available at any U.S.<lb/>
post office.<lb/>
Coalition Fights<lb/>
World Hunger<lb/>
I HI I AS I i AkOl 1MAN<lb/>
u r M k 20, iwi<lb/>
(ontinued from Page I<lb/>
you know you have a<lb/>
chance to get ahead<lb/>
in response to the ernes<lb/>
tion of what can be<lb/>
done for the poor,<lb/>
Barnwell said, "They<lb/>
(students) have to have<lb/>
information and join<lb/>
our organization or<lb/>
some other<lb/>
The Hunger (Hah<lb/>
tion is now in its<lb/>
eleventh year of cam-<lb/>
pus organizing and will<lb/>
be planning othei ac-<lb/>
tivities throughout the<lb/>
year. I hese include<lb/>
speaking to groups,<lb/>
showing films, a<lb/>
hungei tast on the<lb/>
1 hut sday before<lb/>
rhanksgiving, and the<lb/>
Walk tor Humanity in<lb/>
the s pi i n i. "All<lb/>
students are welcome 0<lb/>
participate said<lb/>
various tioup<lb/>
members.<lb/>
I he fastarolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
. '? ilMf'U<lb/>
Published every Tuesdd, ?<lb/>
1.1, dm "t  ? ? ?<lb/>
,? evei . Wednesday hj'<lb/>
iny It<lb/>
i ?asl arolin ai " ? '<lb/>
? . . A . . !?? ? ?<lb/>
University " <lb/>
opt ated and publisl ?<lb/>
I . '? . , I East C rtrlinrt<lb/>
Subscription Rle $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
POST MA ST I U ? ?<lb/>
?? ??<lb/>
nitti Building ECU G<lb/>
Telephone ??) titt 6J67 6J0?<lb/>
Application to mail a second<lb/>
class postage rales is pending ai<lb/>
Greenville North Carolina<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
No. 6<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
LIGHTNING WELLS<lb/>
BLUES BAND<lb/>
in the Phoenix Room<lb/>
wed<lb/>
RCA RECORDING ARTIST<lb/>
WSIDEWINDER<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
? OH K CORNE T  utnpel . <lb/>
condition v? mouthpiece<lb/>
casa and mute Ask.nq 1200 call<lb/>
'S8 6'84<lb/>
ft it F erej ??<lb/>
Has dS pound capacit<lb/>
ioad and weighs 7(- pounds Lit<lb/>
and dinot' racks m<lb/>
eluded Excellent condition l?s<lb/>
ihan or. eai old<lb/>
rtt A 00 BLAUPAUNKT qraphu<lb/>
tq Amp 80 ? Si? Great loi<lb/>
?- a i- -f sj<lb/>
?F ladies goit ciubs qood<lb/>
i Can<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
AiSTEO<lb/>
R O O v V i<lb/>
S'S -non'h<lb/>
block"<lb/>
campus k s<lb/>
third C on ta c<lb/>
?S8 c 14 ? A . a ti'i no<lb/>
VI JO month plus one hall utilities<lb/>
e 2317<lb/>
FOR RENT larqe furnished<lb/>
room m piivate home Quiet<lb/>
neighborhood ii?0 month<lb/>
utilities included Securitv<lb/>
deposit Special deal it gone on<lb/>
weekends 'i6 ?83S ikeep trying'<lb/>
ROOMMATES WANTED to share<lb/>
expenses tor large house sn<lb/>
blocks trom campus See Dennis<lb/>
Rm 125 Jenkins Art Bid before S<lb/>
E !4th Alter S<lb/>
NEEOED iMMEOI?TELY<lb/>
Roommate to share 2 be oom<lb/>
ap! Dt Rent i!20plus<lb/>
hi . ? ies Serious student<lb/>
M Cindy at 52 4406<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
ta; Rivei Estates apt s blocks<lb/>
t lampus 2 bedrooms T<lb/>
bail" sO month one hail<lb/>
utilities S90 deposit Call Scott<lb/>
'vvft around noon or iae at<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
.nareapt atEastbrook SIlSpius<lb/>
utilities Call ?S2 4443<lb/>
f-i MAt E ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom dupus near<lb/>
R i v er bluf I Rd SWO depos<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SG KM Students professors<lb/>
9 E. Wricjhf<lb/>
Re G een. iu nc<lb/>
p m<lb/>
SHAMPOO HAIRCUT and style<lb/>
ISI2 00 value) The Lite Force<lb/>
7S2 5048<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient<lb/>
and inexpensive Call Amy a'<lb/>
"7 3734<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST with<lb/>
fifteen years experience as ad<lb/>
mmistrative secretary wants to do<lb/>
typing at home Reasonable rates<lb/>
Call 756 1660<lb/>
LOOK GOOD on paper Profes<lb/>
sionai typing AMCAS. secon<lb/>
daries resume research papers<lb/>
etc WRITE RIGHT 7 56 ?946<lb/>
WE SPEAK Turabian lAPA PRC<lb/>
et Highest quality typing, all<lb/>
style manuals WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
S- 9?46<lb/>
HERMAN LIVESi Take it from<lb/>
me Victoria<lb/>
TYPING THESIS manuscripts<lb/>
reports all types and quantities<lb/>
profesional quality reasonable<lb/>
rates Call 756 374t<lb/>
LOST PINK sunglasses in front ot<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building Sat the 10th<lb/>
Sentimental value Reward Con<lb/>
tact Jill Jenkins room 213 or call<lb/>
7 51 5060<lb/>
ARROW RECONDITIONING<lb/>
straightened refletched renock<lb/>
ed Call 752 5132<lb/>
HEY GUYS we thnuqht lileguar<lb/>
ding on Sunday afternoon was<lb/>
really boring but thanks to your<lb/>
I meter nude swim at Minges<lb/>
Pool we ve decided that STREAK<lb/>
ING is alive and well at E CU the<lb/>
shocked lifeguards'<lb/>
WHO IS the ugliest man on cam<lb/>
pus'<lb/>
FREE EXERCISE classes Mon<lb/>
day and Wednesday attpm The<lb/>
Life Force 752 5048<lb/>
WANTED FEMALE resident<lb/>
counselor Must complete training<lb/>
and internship in short term client<lb/>
systems Payment in kind (room,<lb/>
utilities local phone) Call the<lb/>
TO JANE HATHAWAY Hope to<lb/>
day is filled with lots ot happiness<lb/>
and love Happy Big 1 ?? In honor<lb/>
ot this special day we have<lb/>
donated your carpet squares to<lb/>
Clement Dorm in your name<lb/>
We love ya' Eighth floor Clement<lb/>
the surfer s woman retired<lb/>
cheerleader Queen ot Hoots, the<lb/>
new dopette and Padduigton s<lb/>
Mamma Let s have a happy<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
AttiSOF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 14<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
S'lS 00 Pregnancy Test Birth<lb/>
Conne1 and<lb/>
P r egnanc v<lb/>
Problem<lb/>
Counseling I l<lb/>
v vs eek 3a vs<lb/>
? . (MEN<lb/>
- .    ? N<lb/>
)an St<lb/>
iSPOBTSWOBUl<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID ID.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104 E. REOBANKS RD.<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
Real Crises Center 758 HELP one So 'ire one up'<lb/>
rMONRAMlTl<lb/>
I UNLIMITED (<lb/>
i Get Your Sweaters &amp; Shins<lb/>
Readv for the Fail.<lb/>
Co-Ed Outlet<lb/>
I Located next to P!itt Theatre<lb/>
Mon. Sat. 10 9 Call 335 2424<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you slnoe 1974<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all agM at a reasonable ooet<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
Pan 7Bl-CSgQ fa maletth<lb/>
? :i<lb/>
ji.MI<lb/>
&amp;S5S<lb/>
CAMPUS ORGANIZATION<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
.?<lb/>
wPilot.The<lb/>
pensyou<lb/>
hove fq hold <lb/>
ontowith ?<lb/>
Iwohandsfi<lb/>
Rodney Dcngettieia<lb/>
 Get your claws off my<lb/>
Pilot pen See I don t<lb/>
? ic respect'<lb/>
October 28. 1981<lb/>
?<lb/>
k <lb/>
ety foi ?? . '?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
itureof Easl<lb/>
 .<lb/>
m "PLEASE wm<lb/>
k r YOUR "I<lb/>
SWEETIE" 1<lb/>
HOMECOMING I<lb/>
MUMS<lb/>
$500<lb/>
only <lb/>
OnSaleOct 26th Nov 5th<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Sponsored by Fletcher Dorm<lb/>
Veranda Room<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
TueSat.<lb/>
"Odyssey"<lb/>
Happy Hour MonSat.<lb/>
6:30-7:00<lb/>
Free Hors d'oeuvres<lb/>
264 South<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
1<lb/>
. ? ? ner be <lb/>
. ??  e 3ircvs<lb/>
1 ? 31 1 tine pi<lb/>
rti r ??' fnougri cort)on  i<lb/>
horges on4v 79 'or it<lb/>
Peopt ge isonitorKi<lb/>
? ,?? tsmypei - ? - ' -Ke0u<lb/>
A ?? - , : IRQ; . n It writes wlp ctecrr so<lb/>
??? nnc ?-?: cottot helps ??<lb/>
 rrtfrom going SQUISH sc peop'e<lb/>
rait f Ol " 89 "Sr<lb/>
. " - a" pet<lb/>
-<lb/>
PILOf<lb/>
fine point marker pens<lb/>
People take to a Pnot - I " 6 ? owp<lb/>
CAS<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
Of H<lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH)<lb/>
OPEN 9:30-5:30 MON -SAT.<lb/>
PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
PMENNMiONM v-OPfiES<lb/>
ccmo<lb/>
DISCOVER THE CHOCOLATE MINT FLAVOR OF IRISH MOCHA MINT.<lb/>
ifl1. lJMnirJ<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0004"/><lb/>
QJiie ?ast darnlfnf an<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. cmamf<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree, MM???or<lb/>
Ric Browning. nKMrMMH? Chari es Chandler, spon emo,<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ???, ??.?,? Tom Hall , s,ws ?,???<lb/>
Alison Bartel, nionrr-rfir-Bi- Steve Bachner. Emtmmmm ??(??<lb/>
Steve Moore. g Jim ft- ? Karen Wfndt, sw ????<lb/>
October 20. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Circus Time<lb/>
Legislature Up To Old Antics L<lb/>
Most observers would much<lb/>
agree: last year's SGA Legislature<lb/>
was a three-ring circus.<lb/>
legislators were constantly runn-<lb/>
ing around, whispering to one<lb/>
another during debate, breaking<lb/>
their own rules and generally doing<lb/>
anything but paying attention to<lb/>
what was going on on the floor.<lb/>
Everyone hoped that this year<lb/>
would be better, that this year's<lb/>
legislators would bring some sense<lb/>
of purpose to their job. But if Mon-<lb/>
day's meeting is any indication this<lb/>
year's SGA may be as erratic as its<lb/>
predecessor.<lb/>
The legislature was faced with<lb/>
what seemed to be a simple task:<lb/>
decide whether or not to allocate<lb/>
$465 to the International Language<lb/>
Organization for its Oktoberfest.<lb/>
Logically, the SGA should have<lb/>
voted the bill down. According to<lb/>
the legislature's own guidelines, all<lb/>
appropriations bills are supposed to<lb/>
be submitted at least one week prior<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
to their consideration and should<lb/>
first be examined by the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee. Neither of these<lb/>
procedures was followed.<lb/>
What's more, Dean Rudy Alex-<lb/>
ander pointed out that the<lb/>
Oktoberfest as currently scheduled<lb/>
violates state law since no liquor<lb/>
may be sold on state property and<lb/>
the ILO is planning to sell tickets to<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
Finally, the ILO's constitution<lb/>
has not even been approved by the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Despite all thi- there was not one<lb/>
vote against the bill. What there was<lb/>
plenty of, however, was extracur-<lb/>
ricular activitv during the debate.<lb/>
Shades of SGA Legislature 1980-81.<lb/>
The legislature is supposed to be a<lb/>
calm, deliberative body that debates<lb/>
each bill upon its merits and then<lb/>
makes a decision.<lb/>
No one would ever have guessed<lb/>
that, though, following yesterday's<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
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AGCUAS BEfOREIHEUIAR<lb/>
THAI7 FR1ENPSOfWURST<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Library Noises<lb/>
I am a concerned student that believes<lb/>
that a bad situation exists on campus<lb/>
and hope this letter will remedy the<lb/>
situation. A majority of the students at<lb/>
any institution of higher education can<lb/>
pretty well assume that a good quiet<lb/>
place to study will be at the library. I<lb/>
have always considered myself part of<lb/>
that majority until recently.<lb/>
For the past two weeks I have gone to<lb/>
the A.J. Fletcher Music Library and<lb/>
tried to study. I might as well have gone<lb/>
downtown to Pantana Bobs or have sat<lb/>
on the 50-yard line during the halftime<lb/>
program at a football game. 1 believe<lb/>
when someone left the barnyard door<lb/>
open all the animals rushed in the music<lb/>
library.<lb/>
The entire time I was there Thursday I<lb/>
might have been able to read two or<lb/>
three pages in my text but that didn't<lb/>
even happen. I was too busy telling the<lb/>
people around me to quiet down. For<lb/>
one thing, I don't believe this is my<lb/>
responsibility since the librarian was on<lb/>
duty not more than 20 feet from where I<lb/>
sat. I think she was taking the blind-<lb/>
woman approach to the problem. I'm<lb/>
sure it is not the responsibility of the stu-<lb/>
dent who is trying to get a higher educa-<lb/>
tion to maintain control of the library. If<lb/>
they are, I will be there to p;ck up my<lb/>
paycheck on Friday.<lb/>
This is not the first time that I have<lb/>
noticed a problem with the decibel level<lb/>
in the library. But I hope after this letter<lb/>
it will be the last. It might not be that<lb/>
loud the entire time the library is open,<lb/>
but every time 1 try to study there I<lb/>
might as well have a beer in my hand,<lb/>
because that is the atmosphere that I<lb/>
have seen maintained there.<lb/>
All I ask is that someone maintain<lb/>
control of the library and keep the noise<lb/>
level to a minimum. A quiet place to<lb/>
study can be a hard place to find on such<lb/>
a large university campus. But the<lb/>
library should always be a place in which<lb/>
students can go to find such a place.<lb/>
FRANK GIBSON<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
Investigative Documentaries Popular<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
You remember investigative reporting.<lb/>
It was all the rage in the wake of<lb/>
Watergate, when mole-like reporters blink-<lb/>
ed in stupefaction at suddenly finding<lb/>
themselves in the public eye. Robert Red-<lb/>
ford nd Dustin Hoffman played Wood-<lb/>
ward and Bernstein in a glossy movie, and<lb/>
enrollments in journalism schools soared.<lb/>
It looked, for a moment, like the second<lb/>
golden age of muckraking had dawned.<lb/>
Well, it didn't. Today investigative<lb/>
reporting is largely back in the closet in<lb/>
American media, just another fad in the<lb/>
commodity culture whose popularity has<lb/>
peaked. Most media executives tired of the<lb/>
time and expense it takes to launch first-<lb/>
rate investigative projects, shied away<lb/>
from stepping on the toes of the powerful<lb/>
and made sure that most of the muckrak-<lb/>
ing that does get done focuses on small-<lb/>
time crooks rather than the system that<lb/>
nourishes them. Thus, the show business-<lb/>
cum-muckraking success of "60 Minutes<lb/>
It gets a bit depressing when you scour<lb/>
the mass media for hard-hitting, socially-<lb/>
conscious reporting. If, however, you peer<lb/>
into the nooks and crannies, the search can<lb/>
be rewarding. I was reminded of this<lb/>
recently, when I took in an all-day con-<lb/>
ference on investigative reporting that<lb/>
featured expose artist Jessica Mitford,<lb/>
media critic Ben Bagdikian and David<lb/>
Weir, director of the Center for In-<lb/>
vestigative Reporting (CIR), a non-profit<lb/>
journalistic venture based in Oakland. The<lb/>
affair was MC'd by Carl Jenson, who<lb/>
directs Project Censored, an annual<lb/>
round-up of supressed stories.<lb/>
The entire group was top-notch, but it<lb/>
was Weir, author (with Mark Shapiro) of a<lb/>
recent, ground-breaking book entitled Cir-<lb/>
cle of Poison, who grabbed and held my<lb/>
attention with his anecdotes and analysis<lb/>
of the low-paying, back-breaking, decided-<lb/>
ly unglamorous field of investigative<lb/>
reporting.<lb/>
Circle of Poison uncovers the<lb/>
widespread use of lethal pesticides banned<lb/>
for sale in the U.S. but made here and ex-<lb/>
ported to Third World countries. Once<lb/>
aboard, the toxic chemicals are used on<lb/>
food which is then shipped back to the<lb/>
U.S. He and Shapiro wrote the book, Weir<lb/>
explained, "out of a sense of outrage that<lb/>
we would have one standard for ourselves<lb/>
and another for people overseas and<lb/>
because he sees reporting as "a tool to<lb/>
make a more democratic society Weir's<lb/>
work, which first appeared in Mother<lb/>
Jones, alerted foreign officials to the<lb/>
dangers of imported pesticides, and pro-<lb/>
mpted legislation here ? reforms that<lb/>
Weir views as limited but valuable.<lb/>
"Reporters, by themselves, don't<lb/>
change things Weir cautions. "But 1<lb/>
believe that if you give people information<lb/>
with which to make decisions, they will be<lb/>
better able to make sane ones At the<lb/>
CIR, Weir went on, "we're trying to make<lb/>
reporting more preventive. Some jour-<lb/>
nalists write just to write. We don't<lb/>
Weir and his colleagues were tipped to<lb/>
the pesticide story by a clipping from a<lb/>
Brazilian newspaper reporting the deaths<lb/>
of 13 children from a pesticide outlawed in<lb/>
the U.S. but still made here for export.<lb/>
When the reporters began their research,<lb/>
corporate spokes-people assured them that<lb/>
Third World people were glad to have the<lb/>
pesticide to help them grow desperately-<lb/>
needed food.<lb/>
"It turned out not to be true Weir<lb/>
recalls. "We never found a country where<lb/>
more than 50 percent of pesticides were us-<lb/>
ed for local food production. They're used<lb/>
to grow exotic, expensive exports.<lb/>
Multinationals are destroying the local<lb/>
basis for agriculture Weir added, "in<lb/>
favor of large, plantation-style farms "<lb/>
This is leading some countries to depend<lb/>
on the U.S. for all but a few specialized<lb/>
crops. "If you're looking for the basis ol<lb/>
imperialism in the late 20th century con-<lb/>
cludes Weir, "look at food<lb/>
David Weir and his six full-time col-<lb/>
leagues at the CIR will do about 25 stories<lb/>
this year. Most will be for alternative<lb/>
media outlets (although some will go to the<lb/>
big boys, such as ABC-TV's "20 20"<lb/>
where a co-founder of the CIR now<lb/>
works.) This is consistent with the historic<lb/>
role of alternative media, which broke<lb/>
such shattering stories as Upton Sinclair'1-<lb/>
exposure of the meat-packing industry,<lb/>
reports of civilian deaths in U.S. bombing<lb/>
raids on North Vietnam and news of the<lb/>
My Lai massacre.<lb/>
Producing such stones anywhere will<lb/>
not be easy in the anxious, angry eighties.<lb/>
Weir believes, for a number of reasons.<lb/>
Among them are lawsuit-happ public<lb/>
figures, the Reagan administration's at-<lb/>
tack on the Freedom of Information Act,<lb/>
IRS Pressure on non-profit foundations<lb/>
that fund dissident journalists and the<lb/>
dwindling number of national outlets foi<lb/>
catalytic muckraeking pieces.<lb/>
It looks rough. And yet Weir, in a<lb/>
cautious way, is optimistic. "People like<lb/>
investigative reporting he says, "they are<lb/>
not turned off to learning more. That ac-<lb/>
counts for a lot of the popularity of '60<lb/>
Minutes And a recent, major survey of<lb/>
cable-TV showed that the second most<lb/>
desired item was investigative documen-<lb/>
taries<lb/>
Yorktown Marks True Birthday<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
I celebrated the Bicentennial yesterday.<lb/>
You may be thinking I'm five years too<lb/>
late. I'm talking about the most important<lb/>
bicentennial of the American Revolution<lb/>
? the victory at Yorktown.<lb/>
The signing of the Declaration of In-<lb/>
dependence in 1776 theoretically created<lb/>
this nation, but in actuality it was Corn-<lb/>
wallis' surrender on Oct. 19, 1781, that<lb/>
broke the British stronghold on the col-<lb/>
onies.<lb/>
As a good Southerner, I've always felt<lb/>
that the importance of the surrender has<lb/>
been underplayed. Prevailing opinion has<lb/>
it that the Revolutionary War was centered<lb/>
in Philadelphia and Bunker Hill. After the<lb/>
Civil War, there was a sense that American<lb/>
history was no longer ours, and our part in<lb/>
the creation of this country was somehow<lb/>
less important than the North's.<lb/>
So, despite the horror tales about how<lb/>
hard it would be to get to Yorktown this<lb/>
weekend, I was determined to go and pay<lb/>
my respects to those who made this nation<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
I arrived in Williamsburg at 8:30 a.m. to<lb/>
catch a shuttle bus to Yorktown. No cars<lb/>
were allowed anywhere near the battlefield<lb/>
unless they belonged to VIP's or par-<lb/>
ticipants in the celebration. When my<lb/>
grandfather attended the sesquicentennial<lb/>
in 1931, there was a massive traffic jam<lb/>
and many people were too late to see Presi-<lb/>
dent Herbert Hoover. 1 paid my $5 for the<lb/>
15-mile trip at a parking lot and climbed<lb/>
aboard the same kind of yellow bus I had<lb/>
refused to ride in high school.<lb/>
State police lined the narrow country<lb/>
road into the town, ready to turn away<lb/>
anyone who tried to buck the system.<lb/>
Everyone on the bus seemed bright-eyed<lb/>
and chipper, even the driver, whose<lb/>
previous experience had been picking up<lb/>
children on Monday through Friday. As<lb/>
we reached the woods outside Yorktown, I<lb/>
spotted isolated camps and colonial-<lb/>
garbed families looking tired, hungry and<lb/>
cold.<lb/>
The line of buses was long outside the<lb/>
Yorktown Victory Center, so we asked the<lb/>
driver to let us out to walk. Then all the<lb/>
pasengers from Williamsburg had to wait<lb/>
in line for another bus to take us to the bat-<lb/>
tlegrounds.<lb/>
I stepped off the shuttle and walked<lb/>
right into the British "Call for Parley or<lb/>
plea for negotiations with the American<lb/>
troops. Hopping into a trench for a better<lb/>
photograph, I found myself in the presence<lb/>
of 20 British soldiers.<lb/>
The troops looked real. Their costumes<lb/>
weren't made of felt and their wigs weren't<lb/>
from Woolworth's Halloween aisle ? they<lb/>
looked as if they had been worn for some<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The average costume, as I found out<lb/>
later, cost $1,000. No detail was left un-<lb/>
noticed, and the emphasis was on authen-<lb/>
ticity. The "soldiers who had come from<lb/>
all over the country to participate in the<lb/>
military re-enactments, were stationed in<lb/>
large, white-tented encampments near the<lb/>
battlefield. The rules had been made<lb/>
perfectly clear to them ? no cigarette<lb/>
smoking, no drinking out of plastic or<lb/>
paper cups, no plastic eyeglasses, no<lb/>
wristwatches and "bedraggled is best<lb/>
The official tally of marching par-<lb/>
ticipants was 4,000, although there seemed<lb/>
to be more. Wives and children came<lb/>
along, too, all in colonial costume. Only a<lb/>
time machine could have made me feel<lb/>
more like I had stepped into the 18th Cen-<lb/>
tury. The spell was broken but briefly<lb/>
when a colonist pulled out a camera from<lb/>
beneath his cloak.<lb/>
Sometimes illusion reached too far into<lb/>
reality. Walking across the battleground<lb/>
after a colonial warfare exhibition, I felt<lb/>
uncomfortable but couldn't figure out<lb/>
why. Then 1 noticed that 1 was the onl<lb/>
person around dressed in modern clothes,<lb/>
and took a short cut to get away from the<lb/>
procession. A female park ranger, meeting<lb/>
me at the fringe of the field, said black<lb/>
powder was still on the ground. When<lb/>
stepped on, black powder acts like a<lb/>
miniature land mine.<lb/>
There was a lot more to see, and visitors<lb/>
to the celebration often walked a mile to a<lb/>
shuttle bus, myself included. At 5 p.m. my<lb/>
legs had had enough, so I waited in line for<lb/>
a 45 minutes to catch a bus back to the Vic-<lb/>
tory Center and a way home. A mob scene<lb/>
ensued as people tried to find the right bu?<lb/>
home. The solution was to load everyone<lb/>
going to a general area and take the<lb/>
passengers wherever they wanted. One<lb/>
hour later, after touring the gamut of hotel<lb/>
parking lots, waiting for Presidents<lb/>
Reagan and Mitterrand to pass and listen-<lb/>
ing to bus driver that sounded like Martha<lb/>
Raye, I found my car.<lb/>
And it was all worth it. A sense of pride<lb/>
and accomplishment came with the<lb/>
fatigue. 1 had honored my heritage.<lb/>
If you couldn't make it to the Yorktown<lb/>
Bicentennial, there's still a chance for you<lb/>
to honor your own Southern heritage. The<lb/>
400th anniversary of the first attempted<lb/>
English colonization is coming up. Find<lb/>
out the name of the ship that brought the<lb/>
.olonists to Roanoke Island. Here's a hint:<lb/>
it wasn't the Mayflower.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
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THF FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
(K TOW R 20, IV8I<lb/>
PageS<lb/>
Bogart &amp; Allen<lb/>
Twin Feature<lb/>
On Wednesday<lb/>
Woody Allen, Diane Keaton and Tony Roberts in a scene from "Play It Again, Sam" ? playing again Wednesday nighl.<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Staff W rilrr<lb/>
This Wednesday night, October<lb/>
23, the Student Union Films com-<lb/>
mittee will present an unusual dou-<lb/>
ble feature, consisting of Casablan-<lb/>
ca (7 p.m.), the classic Humphrey<lb/>
Bogart film, and Wooody Allen's<lb/>
Play It Again, Sam (9 p.m.), which<lb/>
is in part a parody of and was in-<lb/>
spired by, Casablanca.<lb/>
The films will be shown in the<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre and admission is<lb/>
by ID and activity cards or 1S(<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Casablanca is a classic Hollywood<lb/>
movie in the most positive sense of<lb/>
the term, containing all the conven-<lb/>
tions of 1940's filmmaking rolled in-<lb/>
to one captivating film which sports<lb/>
an all-star cast, romance, adven-<lb/>
ture, humor, mystery, colorful<lb/>
characters, exotic locale,<lb/>
memorable songs, and more.<lb/>
For those unfortunate few who<lb/>
have never seen Casablanca, this<lb/>
1942 Warner Brothers production<lb/>
revolves around the character ot<lb/>
Rick Blaine (Bogart), a rugged<lb/>
American individualist living in<lb/>
Casablanca in the French Morocco<lb/>
He is owner and operatoi t Rick's<lb/>
American Cafe, a meeting place foi<lb/>
ruffians and refugees from the sui<lb/>
rounding World VA<lb/>
Rick stays aloof from inti<lb/>
and politics: once an idealist, he<lb/>
became bitter and cynical alter his<lb/>
lover, llsa 1 und (lngrid Bergman)<lb/>
deseited him. Oik day llsa walks in-<lb/>
to Rick's ate with he: husband Vic<lb/>
tor 1 aslo (Paul Henn id), a famous<lb/>
freedom fighter. It is during this en<lb/>
trance that the real action ol<lb/>
Casablanca begins, bringing Kick<lb/>
back into the whirlwind of romance,<lb/>
war and intrigue.<lb/>
I'lay It Again, Sam, the title ol<lb/>
which is a paraphrase ol the best<lb/>
known line from i asablanca ("Play<lb/>
it uium, Sam" is nevei actually<lb/>
spoken in the film), is diu<lb/>
Herbert Ko' 1972 film version ol<lb/>
Woody Allen's 1969 stage produc-<lb/>
tion,<lb/>
-Vlen has the usual Allen trouble<lb/>
in finding a meaningful (or am<lb/>
other type) relationship with a<lb/>
woman. He tmds a spiritual advisor<lb/>
in the image ol the immortal<lb/>
Bogart, who materializes to offei<lb/>
advice and helpful wisecracks.<lb/>
A Shopping Guide For That Elusive Sanity<lb/>
By DAVID NORMS<lb/>
si?ff Wnlrr<lb/>
I ike many of the familiar features of American life.<lb/>
grocery stores are pretty much the same all over.<lb/>
Perhaps the biggest difference between individual stores<lb/>
Tickets Now A valiable<lb/>
Tickets for The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee<lb/>
Williams, being produced and directed locall<lb/>
h Stephen B. Finnan, are now available<lb/>
through the Central Ticket Office at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (757-6611. ext.<lb/>
266) and the Methodist Student Center<lb/>
(758-2030). The production opens November<lb/>
10 and runs through November 15. Fvening<lb/>
performances are scheduled at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
November 10-14; a matinee performance is<lb/>
scheduled at 2:15 p.m. on Sunday, November<lb/>
15. General admission price is $3.50; student<lb/>
tickets are $2.50. A group discount of $2.00<lb/>
per ticket is available for groups of ten (10) or<lb/>
more. The Class Menagerie will be performed<lb/>
at the Methodist Student Center, 501 Fast<lb/>
Fifth Street in Greenville. For further infor-<lb/>
mation, contact Steve Finnan at 757-3546.<lb/>
is in their front doors: some have automatic doors, and<lb/>
others have doors you have to open yourself.<lb/>
When I was a kid, 1 really hated having to go along to<lb/>
the grocery store while my mom was shopping. It was<lb/>
especially bad after I got too old to ride in the shopping<lb/>
cart and had to hike all over the store. Somehow,<lb/>
shelves of produce and canned goods just don't capture<lb/>
a child's interest.<lb/>
I used to wish that I was grown up so that I wouldn't<lb/>
have to keep going to the supermarket every Friday. The<lb/>
trouble is, being grown up (or at least, sort of grown up)<lb/>
does not exempt one from having to go grocery shopp-<lb/>
ing. In fact, it's worse, since I have to pay for them<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Supermarkets have some of the world's most<lb/>
elaborate air conditioning, judging by their Arctic<lb/>
temperatures at this time of year. (It's a good thing, I<lb/>
suppose, since nobody likes warm lettuce and melted<lb/>
frozen food.) Besides, the cold temperature gives you a<lb/>
chance to wear your winter coats in June without collap-<lb/>
sing from the heat.<lb/>
After getting to the grocery store and putting on a<lb/>
jacket, the next thing to do is to find a shopping cart,<lb/>
preferably one with four wheels.<lb/>
Next, the obstacle race begins. First, you have to<lb/>
maneuver the cart past the checkout counters and the<lb/>
mob of people clustered around them. Many-<lb/>
passageways near the front of stores are not much wider<lb/>
than a shopping cart, so navigation can get tricky.<lb/>
Now the thing to do is to pick an aisle and browse<lb/>
through it. Some aisles will have puzzling titles like:<lb/>
"Aisle 7: Pickles, Deodorants, etc others will have<lb/>
less original headings like "Produce<lb/>
The produce section is often one of the most un-<lb/>
predictable areas of a supermarket. Unlike potato chips<lb/>
and pretzels, vegetables and things are sometimes out of<lb/>
season when you want them. The quality varies<lb/>
sometimes, too. You can find really scraggly-looking<lb/>
lettuce one week and really nice, top-quality lettuce the<lb/>
next, for example.<lb/>
The snack food section, by contrast, is pretty consis-<lb/>
tent. Snacks never go out of season, since pretzels, corn<lb/>
chips, etc are easily grown in factories. They are put in<lb/>
nice, clean plastic bags, unlike vegetables which often<lb/>
lie in a big pile with dirt on them.<lb/>
The candy section can be located either by its sign, or<lb/>
the sound of little kids being dragged along behind har-<lb/>
ried mothers, yelling "I want that "I want that "I<lb/>
Freddie's Fair<lb/>
Bad Service Spoils Good Food<lb/>
Bv KATHY WEYLER<lb/>
staff Wnlrr<lb/>
Right in the middle of downtown Greenville, on Fifth<lb/>
Street, is a restaurant whose very exterior seems to ex-<lb/>
ude the word "expensive This is Freddie's, located in<lb/>
the much-renovated Old Hope Fire Department<lb/>
building, and with its stained glass windows and daily-<lb/>
changing chalkboard menu (sans prices), it does indeed<lb/>
appear expensive.<lb/>
Cuisine<lb/>
If this was your unfounded impression of Freddie's,<lb/>
the owner fooled you, too. My dining partner and I ex-<lb/>
pected sky-high prices on our luncheon visit and were<lb/>
astonished to find that items on the menu range from<lb/>
SI .50 to $4.45. Our bill, including two elaborate and ex-<lb/>
pensive desserts, came to just over $7.00.<lb/>
Freddie's is a very adult restaurant with an at-<lb/>
mosphere that is almost sedate. You just wouldn't come<lb/>
into Freddie's, curl up in a booth (feet on the seat) and<lb/>
spread out your studying gear.<lb/>
With its bright flowered tablecloths, plants, track<lb/>
lighting and classical jazz music, Freddie's is an ex-<lb/>
cellent place to enjoy a restful lunch or dinner, or just a<lb/>
glass of wine and good conversation with a friend or<lb/>
two.<lb/>
The menu at Freddie's is rather distinctive. Ap-<lb/>
petizers, largely fresh fruits and vegatables, are offered,<lb/>
as are soups and salads, with delicious home-made<lb/>
dressings. The salads are unusually crisp and fresh ?<lb/>
priced from $1.50 to $4.25.<lb/>
want that at each different kind ol candy. (When i<lb/>
was a kid. they'd knock a knot on mv head it 1 acted lik<lb/>
that in public.)<lb/>
Kids really liven up a trip to the grocery story, rhey<lb/>
add suspense bv running around all ovei the place, mak-<lb/>
ing more obstacles in the crowded aisles to hav<lb/>
dodge around with the cart I hey add pathos when thev<lb/>
cry and throw tantrums on the floor because their mom<lb/>
won't buy them a "Klingon Blastei kay Gun"<lb/>
something like that. Some kids stay pretty quiet, doing<lb/>
nothing more noisy than trying to taste evei thing in the<lb/>
store.<lb/>
The canned food section is kind ol a treasure hunt.<lb/>
The idea is to reach to the back o each shelf to find the<lb/>
older (and cheaper) cans. Sometimes, all you gel is old<lb/>
See SHOPPING. Page 6<lb/>
Vegetarians will be happy to hear that Freddie's of-<lb/>
fers meatless meals ? Vegetarian Delights ? in addi-<lb/>
tion to salads. Sandwiches consist mostly of a variety of<lb/>
meats and cheeses on several kinds of bread. They are<lb/>
served with sprouts and pickle slices. Freddie's deserves<lb/>
a round of applause for using real, thick-sliced roast<lb/>
beef instead of the insipid lunch meat variety so often<lb/>
found in restaurants (especially those "sliced thin, piled<lb/>
high" fast-food establishments).<lb/>
If you prefer something other than soup, salad, or a<lb/>
sandwich, Freddie's also offers an outstanding selection<lb/>
of entrees and daily specials. Such delights as quiche,<lb/>
chicken and broccoli crepes, baked trout fillet, beef ber-<lb/>
naise, chicken potpie and stuffed potatoes are available<lb/>
for a change of pace from typical downtown fare.<lb/>
The usual beverages (coffee, tea, etc.) are offered.<lb/>
Beer and wine are available, though the selection is a bit<lb/>
slim. Prices are about average. Cream sherry by the<lb/>
glass is also offered, a rarity except in the best<lb/>
restaurants.<lb/>
The menu at Freddie's is a little deceptive regarding<lb/>
desserts: At the time of our visit, half the selections on<lb/>
the menu weren't available (as is often the case with<lb/>
many non-dessert selections as well), and several items<lb/>
that were available weren't listed. So if you want<lb/>
dessert, it's best to ask the waiter what is and isn't<lb/>
available. That is, you can find him.<lb/>
While Freddie's offers great food and a very con-<lb/>
genial atmosphere, the service isn't exactly one of their<lb/>
best features. In fact, on our second visit, the service<lb/>
was only a little short of deplorable. We waited some<lb/>
fifteen minutes before anyone came to take our order,<lb/>
yet several parties seated after us received prompt ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
It's too bad that a restaurant that has so much to of-<lb/>
fer ? good food, original cuisine, a pleasant at-<lb/>
mosphere, full take-out and catering services ? is a bit<lb/>
slow in the service department. If anybody sees Freddie,<lb/>
tell him to give his waiters a pep talk.<lb/>
Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm Speaking In February<lb/>
United States Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm will speak in Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on February 4, 1982. Chisholm was the first woman, and the first black to seek the nomination of<lb/>
a major political party for the Presidency of the United States.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 20, 1981<lb/>
UntiOfrJG AiouT-CocxrfeC- Ths Hp ktoi<lb/>
Bi Dwip aJois<lb/>
Shopping: Disorder<lb/>
Arranged By Aisles<lb/>
THIS SOfT PfrOK 15.<lb/>
P(L?TTY SAP<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
cans with a little dust<lb/>
and the same price,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
At times, they pile up<lb/>
cans into giant<lb/>
pyramids at the end of<lb/>
the aisle, either for a<lb/>
special display or<lb/>
because they've run out<lb/>
of shelves. They always<lb/>
tempt me, probably<lb/>
because of all those<lb/>
Jerry Lewis movies<lb/>
where they crash shop-<lb/>
ping carts into them.<lb/>
A particularly in-<lb/>
teresting part of many<lb/>
supermarkets is the<lb/>
gourmet section. They<lb/>
offer odd stuff like rat-<lb/>
tlesnake meat, caviar.<lb/>
chocolate-covered ants<lb/>
and so on. One o' these<lb/>
days, I'm going to try<lb/>
some of that stuff.<lb/>
By contrast, the<lb/>
household goods sec-<lb/>
tion has always been<lb/>
one oi the least in-<lb/>
teresting to me. Mops,<lb/>
brooms, floor wax and<lb/>
that kind of thing are<lb/>
pretty low on my shop-<lb/>
ping priority list, since<lb/>
she only housekeeping 1<lb/>
usually bother with is<lb/>
washing dishes now<lb/>
and then.<lb/>
Did you ever leave<lb/>
your cart somewhere,<lb/>
wander down an aisle<lb/>
to get something, and<lb/>
then wander back and<lb/>
get someone else's cart<lb/>
by mistake? (1 hope<lb/>
some of you have, or<lb/>
this is going ?o make<lb/>
me feel really dumb.)<lb/>
I've done it once or<lb/>
twice and didn't notice<lb/>
until 1 looked closely at<lb/>
the cart and wondered<lb/>
why I had picked up a<lb/>
pack of fried grasshop-<lb/>
pers. At the same mo-<lb/>
ment, there was<lb/>
somebody who was<lb/>
wondering why her<lb/>
fried grasshoppers had<lb/>
turned into a bag of<lb/>
Cheetos.<lb/>
The last batch of<lb/>
stuff to buy in the store<lb/>
is contained in the little<lb/>
shelves crowded<lb/>
around the checkout<lb/>
counter. Reading<lb/>
material assaults the<lb/>
eve ("Flying Saucer<lb/>
Kidnaps 'CHIPS'<lb/>
Star "Fantastic<lb/>
Doughnut Diet ? Lose<lb/>
Eight Pounds A Day<lb/>
"Hidden Heartbreaks<lb/>
of 'Loveboat' Cast)<lb/>
in the tabloid<lb/>
newspaper racks. Into<lb/>
another shelf is cramm-<lb/>
ed every possible kind<lb/>
of candy and crackers.<lb/>
Sometimes, the lines<lb/>
at the checkout counter<lb/>
can be interminably<lb/>
long. (That's how I'm<lb/>
so familiar with the<lb/>
headline style of those<lb/>
screaming tabloids.)<lb/>
After reading the<lb/>
covers of The National<lb/>
This and The Midnight<lb/>
That, there are still a<lb/>
couple of things to do<lb/>
to pass the time.<lb/>
One is to add up<lb/>
what the groceries cost,<lb/>
but that's not much<lb/>
fun. Usually, watching<lb/>
the rich variety of<lb/>
customers trapped in<lb/>
the line with you is<lb/>
more worthwhile.<lb/>
There is usually a<lb/>
 1OtTRTHE CbLOW?<lb/>
AMP 5V&amp;A? Of A<lb/>
&amp;?GOLA(LOfTVfilrtK<lb/>
?L<lb/>
woman shopping for<lb/>
her large family, with a<lb/>
cart piled precariously<lb/>
with tons of provisions.<lb/>
If you get behind her in<lb/>
line, you'll be there<lb/>
awhile.<lb/>
You might see the<lb/>
host of a spaghetti din-<lb/>
ner, frantically buying<lb/>
the last ingredients<lb/>
before the ravenous<lb/>
guests arrive.<lb/>
The ones buying the<lb/>
six pack oi beer are<lb/>
p r o b a b 1 v college<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The father cooking<lb/>
for the kids while Mom<lb/>
is out of town is most<lb/>
likely buying another<lb/>
couple of packs of hot<lb/>
dogs.<lb/>
Last of all, you meet<lb/>
the checkout clerk, who<lb/>
has to put up with a<lb/>
never-ending parade of<lb/>
customers, many of<lb/>
whom are of the ob-<lb/>
noxious variety. (I<lb/>
wrote alot about kids<lb/>
cutting up in the store,<lb/>
but there are plenty of<lb/>
adults who are much<lb/>
worse.)<lb/>
Being in the checkout<lb/>
line brings up one thing<lb/>
about shopping that's<lb/>
nicer now than when I<lb/>
was a kid: I can buy all<lb/>
the candy I want. It's<lb/>
just too bad that I<lb/>
don't like candy as<lb/>
much as I used to.<lb/>
I DLAY IT I<lb/>
: AGAIN,<lb/>
j UM"<lb/>
Vkcdnrsdav N.ghi ? Hcndtn Thcairtj<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiml<lb/>
UNIVERSITY I<lb/>
I COMMITTEES FOR I<lb/>
I STUDENT MEMBERS I<lb/>
A,5i<lb/>
Adnrx<lb/>
-?s be r"g trAen tof s'lxte's sH.ng re s&amp;e o<lb/>
t. tor ?- '98' 62 scHool ?eor A -un-t' ot Un'ver<lb/>
?ees and Fjj ie"C'e Comm 'tee<lb/>
Thesecorwr Meei - ' ' lent ?iardtsjif :<lb/>
)MW TTEES :<lb/>
A.ji ? wwn tees :<lb/>
Alcohol &amp; Drug EJlk-ox Corrvtte ;<lb/>
CoTtr-e" e' Internal ovr Stude' Ata"s :<lb/>
( rr  t' Res Jente L'? ;<lb/>
Committee on Status of M-ncxtties <lb/>
L1mrr.rtee o Student Heo.lt Se'Mces ?<lb/>
Hondicoroed Student Severs Carnrn ????<lb/>
Ses.dente S'at.js Appeals omm.t-ee :<lb/>
Scbolosti Wee.e"d Comm.ttee :<lb/>
T'ctt Apoea'S Com.t.ee :<lb/>
Cimie-Vv f k - ??? ee ?<lb/>
Poc '? Senate A Joderv Committee ?<lb/>
?i m is l " - " - ee ?<lb/>
JftfCI : . 1 'TPP ;<lb/>
? -  ? ? . - ??ectveness :<lb/>
Course Diojj Appeals Committee :<lb/>
Continuing Education Commttee<lb/>
Credits Conw. itfee<lb/>
Geneioi Goi'eoe CommitTee<lb/>
5'ude-t Scboiotsn.p e'sowships arxJ financioi Ai.i<lb/>
Tecxbe- Educator Comm.ttee<lb/>
tee<lb/>
? riesC mm rtee<lb/>
ApplN nt an) -no. be p cKed up ot the toliov?ing locations Otice o' me<lb/>
. -p Q . rot Student Lte 204 Wh.chard Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Information Desk SGA Otice syVendenhol'Studen'Center, Ctff.ce<lb/>
f.murni Recreo'ionai Se? es ujemooi G and Residence Hall<lb/>
: Dnec'ors Offices<lb/>
? - Jn ,?  great ? apprec ates "re eHorts .it those s'ude"ts ?ho<lb/>
I tve served m the past and hope ?ho? students ??8 continue fhetr ?ten?l 5<lb/>
? onj pottcipa'ion Qursvons one ut membe'sb.p may be d"eted to the :<lb/>
? ?? ? ot the vce l'in tor S'udent Lite i7S7 6S :<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiimtiiiiiiiiiniimiiumiiitmiiiii<lb/>
J<lb/>
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f<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<lb/>
I.<lb/>
4<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
European<lb/>
Trained Stylists<lb/>
Call ahead or come by today<lb/>
for the new fall hairstyles.<lb/>
i<lb/>
j<lb/>
 ? iui trie new iuii riUirbtyifcJb.<lb/>
I! FREE CONSULTATION !<lb/>
1!<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
I<lb/>
it'<lb/>
The<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
House"<lb/>
Famous<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
MONDAY -<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
THURSDAY -<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
n.69<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
BEEF TIPS U.S.D.A. RIB EYE<lb/>
M.99<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
CUBED STEAK.<lb/>
n.89<lb/>
3.79<lb/>
SATURDAY -<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
with<lb/>
ECU ID.<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK<lb/>
M.99<lb/>
All Meals are<lb/>
complete Including<lb/>
Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp;<lb/>
Texas Toast<lb/>
TjkeOu? Service<lb/>
JtCJE lOthSt<lb/>
7S?-2711<lb/>
14 Bypass?TSe-0040<lb/>
Hours II ?.m10p.rn.<lb/>
Moo. Thurs.<lb/>
10a.m11 p.m. Fri.Sun.<lb/>
N<lb/>
HUNGATES<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
"0 teJon,<lb/>
The Best in<lb/>
Greek food, Pizzas, and Subs.<lb/>
Try our delicious Souvlakia<lb/>
Special only $2.55<lb/>
Now delivering after 5:00<lb/>
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II Conveniently<lb/>
II Located Across From ECU<lb/>
Phone 752-0326 at 506 Evans st<lb/>
;llllt.llllTUMIlMllfMMnillllM1MMnMUtMnMMMnnniUUMUMIMnMMHMnMMnilllinilXPIMinilMIMtnMHMMfMII)<lb/>
HALLOWEEN<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
Jr diA Hl<lb/>
CAPITOL RECORDING ARTIST<lb/>
Delbert McClinton<lb/>
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BODY GLITTERS<lb/>
.HUNG ATES fangs<lb/>
 P,TTPLAZA SrL000<lb/>
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ALSO IN RALEIGH, DURH AM &amp; Wl LMINGTON <lb/>
THURS OCT. 22<lb/>
With Special Guests GOOD HUMOR BAND<lb/>
ADVANCE $6.50 DOOR $7.00<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiilllllimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiitMMniiiiiiMitmillllllllllltllllllillllllllllllllHIIIIIIIiliUiilAliUIUl<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Apple Records, s<lb/>
JJ's I<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
HALLOWEEN<lb/>
SIDEWALK<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
YOUR FORTUNE TOLD FREE BY MADAME ZOLA<lb/>
DRAWING FOR FREE PRIZES<lb/>
10<lb/>
PEPSI'S<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21<lb/>
8:30 A.M4:00 P.M.<lb/>
ON THE SIDEWALK BETWEEN RAWL AND WRIGHT BLDG.<lb/>
RAIN DATE OCT. 22<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE 1<lb/>
East Carolina University fl<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
ByHAKIhs<lb/>
LAFAVl I l<lb/>
Carolina pushed<lb/>
the .500 mart<lb/>
over a month<lb/>
Soutrmesrn<lb/>
night<lb/>
Going<lb/>
not easy for I ?<lb/>
they and the 1-<lb/>
exchanged ti Khci;<lb/>
in a vsiIl<lb/>
K I<lb/>
I M<lb/>
1 M<lb/>
K I<lb/>
I M<lb/>
K I<lb/>
I SI<lb/>
K I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
K I<lb/>
1 s<lb/>
K I<lb/>
Seen<lb/>
V Mil 15 p?<lb/>
ti.rn i rue<lb/>
. itil'<lb/>
r it?i d' -<lb/>
Pairiei ???<lb/>
Punt-<lb/>
t umti.<lb/>
Prn?.<lb/>
Huvhm,<lb/>
lefru<lb/>
Maldrn M<lb/>
li.mm I ' I .xlr<lb/>
Pls-lKf<lb/>
4:i2l IM ?<lb/>
v. ? .<lb/>
 i Helfetw<lb/>
ECU defei<lb/>
Pir<lb/>
Arel<lb/>
In<lb/>
East v<lb/>
nation in rusi<lb/>
veekv ol i<lb/>
i <lb/>
dav.<lb/>
The P I<lb/>
averaging 1<lb/>
the ground ;<lb/>
tallied 1.690<lb/>
Big 1<lb/>
Ncbra 1<lb/>
nation. aer<lb/>
respe'oeU<lb/>
ranked 1 ??<lb/>
rushing<lb/>
eame<lb/>
ECU'S opl<lb/>
weekei I<lb/>
on the ta<lb/>
tionallv tn<lb/>
24; t yards<lb/>
Nrireki<lb/>
No t ?ro????<lb/>
.rIU SI<lb/>
M.Srnr sj<lb/>
Snikrtn 1 ?'<lb/>
Free si.lr<lb/>
SMI<lb/>
(mortis<lb/>
Mtlnmi<lb/>
S ? st?ir<lb/>
?.rkiaui si<lb/>
MKt?t??<lb/>
Tolree<lb/>
latfMea Si<lb/>
Soelhere Mm<lb/>
Mt? Ml<lb/>
4rfcaev?<lb/>
VkMktofUM Si<lb/>
I?.st CABOUI<lb/>
?i Trtw st<lb/>
TrtM AAM<lb/>
t<lb/>
? IM<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0007"/><lb/>
Uf?5<lb/>
a)K<lb/>
-<lb/>
H<lb/>
.mum<lb/>
Uli 1 S1 I. KOl IM N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
()( IOBI-K 20 IMI<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Bucs Survive Cajun Scare, Win 35-31<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDI ER<lb/>
"sport V diUtr<lb/>
1 FAYETTE, I a. 1 ast<lb/>
v arolina pushed its record above<lb/>
the 500 mark tor the lust time in<lb/>
over a month with a 35 M win ovei<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana Saturday<lb/>
ht.<lb/>
Going to 4-3 on the season was<lb/>
not eas for the Pirates, though, as<lb/>
the and the Ragin' t ajuns literati)<lb/>
exchanged touchdowns and the lead<lb/>
in a wild second halt I he lead<lb/>
1 si<lb/>
l si<lb/>
H I<lb/>
t si<lb/>
H I<lb/>
4 " U<lb/>
7 ! U 7<lb/>
tuirt 11 run iSprrr LnV<lb/>
 4wn 4 run HuAI'isl. Wuk<lb/>
sjrfr IB Hi<lb/>
?ni 5  trm sifrt .Hu.hfHk k ?<lb/>
aa spcr ki. k '<lb/>
N ? 14) un Bu?hhrtk k,H k<lb/>
I<lb/>
hivl (X- ? n.<lb/>
Paurt<lb/>
un Km.hi t<lb/>
sprrr aara<lb/>
Huvhhrt k ki.k<lb/>
K I<lb/>
:i<lb/>
 i5i<lb/>
4?<lb/>
?? j ;<lb/>
I si<lb/>
I<lb/>
lift<lb/>
SHI IIH XI 1 r 5I? Ks<lb/>
,t HI I ??-n 12 IM. ?ir? 12 ? Ma<lb/>
,in "  Ingrain : Kfcoh 1 lr- ' irs <lb/>
t  ; j k l)an 12-41 fott I4-t. C haiman 10<lb/>
Htnn -5 i aldarrra 1 1<lb/>
? t( ! Srln 1 2-8 Z1- Ingram I ' ; si<lb/>
 . iMarm : - 14 : ??<lb/>
,m , l ann MS Him : ?' I HI In<lb/>
i FfcafraKf ? m H '<lb/>
? a.l?ril I II' luimj" ' ?<lb/>
changed a total of ten tunes<lb/>
The ke to the I CU wm was the<lb/>
re-emergence of its offense, which<lb/>
had been stalled for two weeks in a<lb/>
row I he offense piled up 407 vards<lb/>
against the Cajuns, 358 coming via<lb/>
the ground attack<lb/>
Halfback I eon 1 aw son had his<lb/>
best night ever, gaming 120yards on<lb/>
12 cat ties, including a 43 yard<lb/>
touchdown run in the first halt<lb/>
rhreeothei Pirate backs quartei<lb/>
ba. k Carlton Nelson, fullback Rov<lb/>
Wile and halfback Harold Blue<lb/>
added a combined total ol 188<lb/>
I Cl head coach Id Emon was<lb/>
ecstatic following the win, one thai<lb/>
he had said would be crucial it the<lb/>
Pirates were to airv out theii goal<lb/>
oi finishing with a winning season<lb/>
"I'm jusl as happv .is hell to gel<lb/>
out ol here with oui teeth and a<lb/>
w in aid " 1 hat foui point win<lb/>
is jusl beautiful to us<lb/>
He was obviousl) proud ol his of-<lb/>
fense, which came back time and<lb/>
tin aftei the Cajuns had stolen<lb/>
id<lb/>
"We m he ball the besi we<lb/>
have all yeai fense I n<lb/>
claimed "We moved it when we<lb/>
had to, I asked them to come back<lb/>
one tune, then twice. Bui the had<lb/>
to come bad ? e times 1 hat's a<lb/>
real credit to then<lb/>
rhe Imaies led a) the hall 14-10<lb/>
but fell behind when I si capitaliz<lb/>
ed on .i Harold Blue tumble on the<lb/>
Kl 42 rhe Cajuns scored on their<lb/>
first second bait possession<lb/>
fullback David Fore, got one of his<lb/>
four touchdowns in the game at the<lb/>
end of that five-play drive, going<lb/>
over from one yard out to put his<lb/>
team ahead 17-14.<lb/>
EC U wasted little time recaptur-<lb/>
ing the lead, driving 86 yards<lb/>
following the US1 score to go<lb/>
ahead. 21-17. Quartei back Carlton<lb/>
Nelson capped the 12 play drive<lb/>
with a 30-yard scoring scamper.<lb/>
Once again the Cajuns answered<lb/>
the Pirates' challenge. A 26-yard<lb/>
pass from I si Oilurl Caldarera<lb/>
to tight end Brenl Anderson<lb/>
highlighted a 63 vatd drive.<lb/>
Another one vard run bv Forel near<lb/>
the end of the third quarter gave the<lb/>
t ajuns the lead, this time by 24-21.<lb/>
Aftei the Pirates stalled and had<lb/>
to punt, Southwestern took over on<lb/>
its 19-yard line. 1 he 1I defense<lb/>
held this tune, calling foi a punt<lb/>
from Cajun 1 an rrussell I he<lb/>
pendulum ol momentum changed<lb/>
again when freshman Jimmy<lb/>
Walden returned the punt 77 vaids<lb/>
for vet another go ahead score.<lb/>
Chuck Bushbeck converted the ex-<lb/>
tra point and it was the Bucs ahead.<lb/>
28-24<lb/>
Walden's return appeared to turn<lb/>
the game around. 1 he Cajuns stall<lb/>
ed on the ensuing drive and had to<lb/>
turn the ball back back over to the<lb/>
Bucs<lb/>
I SI got it right back, though,<lb/>
when Carlton Nelson fumbled and<lb/>
the . 'ajuns recovered at the ECU 12.<lb/>
Four plays latei I oret scored his<lb/>
tourth touchdown, this one from<lb/>
five yards out to give his club a<lb/>
31-28 lead with 8:53 remaining in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The Pirate offense responded<lb/>
again. Taking over on their own 28,<lb/>
the Bucs drove quickly toward<lb/>
paydirt. Two runs totalling 27 yards<lb/>
by fullback Roy Wiley set up a<lb/>
27-yard touchdown dash by Harold<lb/>
Blue with 6:43 left in the contest.<lb/>
The 35-31 Pirate lead appeared to<lb/>
be a shaky one when Southwestern<lb/>
took the kickoff and quickly moved<lb/>
to its own 47-yard-line. The Cajuns'<lb/>
hopes were dashed when ECU<lb/>
linebacker Glenn Morris picked off<lb/>
a C aldarera pass at the 3:35 mark<lb/>
and returned it to the USL 42. From<lb/>
there the Pirates ran the clock out.<lb/>
USE coach Sam Robertson was<lb/>
disappointed following his team's<lb/>
fifth loss in six starts, pointing two<lb/>
kev points that he felt were the<lb/>
game's determining factors.<lb/>
"We didn't keep our poise he<lb/>
said. "They came up with some big<lb/>
plays that hurt us. I felt the penalty<lb/>
when we had too many men on the<lb/>
field and the (Walden) punt return<lb/>
were the turning points in the<lb/>
game<lb/>
The penalty that Robertson spoke<lb/>
of certainly was a key. It came with<lb/>
only 29 seconds left in the first half.<lb/>
ECU kicker Chuck Bushbeck at-<lb/>
tempted and missed a 47-yard field<lb/>
goal A flag negated the play,<lb/>
though, as 12 Cajuns were on the<lb/>
field at the time of the kick. ECU<lb/>
started anew with a first down at the<lb/>
USI 15.<lb/>
TD Grab<lb/>
ECU tight end<lb/>
Norwood Vann<lb/>
(80) fights off a<lb/>
Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana<lb/>
defender and<lb/>
hauls in a TD<lb/>
pass from<lb/>
quarterback<lb/>
Greg Stewart<lb/>
near the end of<lb/>
the first half in<lb/>
the Pirates'35-31<lb/>
win Saturday<lb/>
night. The score<lb/>
was set up by a<lb/>
Cajun penalty.<lb/>
(Photo By Chap<lb/>
Our lev)<lb/>
The Pirates scored on the first<lb/>
plav following the flag, quarterback<lb/>
Greg Stewart hitting tight end Nor-<lb/>
wood Vann for the six. Bushbcck's<lb/>
extra point put the final touches on<lb/>
the 14-10 halftime advantage<lb/>
ECU is back at home this Satur-<lb/>
day to face nationally-ranked<lb/>
Miami (Ha.) The Hurricanes are<lb/>
3-2, but have lost to a pair of other<lb/>
ranked clubs, Texas and Mississippi<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Rough Road Now Ahead<lb/>
Saturday Win Crucial<lb/>
Prioto Bv Chap Gurley<lb/>
ECU defensive end Hal Stephens (93) leads horde of Pirates tackling USL's David Fore.<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Are 21st<lb/>
In Nation<lb/>
?<lb/>
last Carolina ranks 21st in the<lb/>
: on in rushing offense after seven<lb/>
veeks of collegiate plav, according<lb/>
( A statistics realeased Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
rhe Pirates, 4-3 on the year, are<lb/>
raging 241.4 vards per game via<lb/>
ground attack. The Bucs have<lb/>
tallied 1.690 vards in 379 carries.<lb/>
Big F ight Conference powers<lb/>
Nebra ka and Oklahoma lead the<lb/>
on, averaging 354.8 and 346.4,<lb/>
respective!) , North Carolina's third-<lb/>
ked far Heels are thud in<lb/>
vmg as well, tallying 318.7 per<lb/>
I CU's opponent for this coming<lb/>
weekend. Miami (Ha) also appears<lb/>
the stat lists, ranking 13th na-<lb/>
tionally in passing offense with a<lb/>
24? 6 yards-per-game average<lb/>
s AKI MHM.clHW I i OSMS<lb/>
iOnl? lop 25 I mm rr I islfdi<lb/>
East Carolina's 35-31 win over<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana last Satur-<lb/>
day was one that the Pirates needed<lb/>
badly. Even head coach Ed Emory<lb/>
listed it in the "must win" category<lb/>
during the preseason.<lb/>
The victory has the team sitting at<lb/>
4-3 with another month of football<lb/>
remaining to be played. Dates with<lb/>
Miami (Fla.), West Virginia, East<lb/>
Tennessee State and William &amp;<lb/>
Mary lie ahead.<lb/>
The Pirates achieved two big<lb/>
things with Saturdays victory. One,<lb/>
the club has already equalled the<lb/>
wins accumulated by the 1980 Bucs.<lb/>
who went 4-7. Two, the team has<lb/>
put itself in relatively good position<lb/>
to finish with a winning season.<lb/>
Doing so will not be an easy task,<lb/>
though, as all four opponents offer<lb/>
their share of challenges. The fact<lb/>
that three oi the games will be<lb/>
plaved in Greenville's Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium should work to ECU's ad-<lb/>
vantage.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
This week Emory and the Pirates<lb/>
face the unenviable task o hosting a<lb/>
powerful Miami team that has lost<lb/>
two games by a total oi 11 points<lb/>
and was ranked 13th in last week's<lb/>
UP1 Top Iwentv poll The two<lb/>
losses came at the hands o Texas,<lb/>
14-7, and Mississippi State this past<lb/>
weekend, 14-10.<lb/>
The Hurricanes have beaten some<lb/>
tough opposition as well, winning<lb/>
over Southeastern C onfetence con-<lb/>
tender Florida and Houston of the<lb/>
Southwestern Conference.<lb/>
The Hurricanes fell to Texas just<lb/>
one week before the 1 onghorns<lb/>
humiliated Oklahoma and rose to<lb/>
the number one position in the na-<lb/>
,J Cage Practice Starts,<lb/>
Clubs Want 'Gold'<lb/>
Fast Carolina's Stacy Weitzel (8) fires a shot over the net in<lb/>
the I ad Pirates' volleyball match with Appalachian State<lb/>
this past weekend. looking on in the left hand corner are<lb/>
ECU's Lexanne Keeter (left) and Miti Davis. Appalachian<lb/>
staged a big comeback to down the Lady Bucs.<lb/>
B WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
taVaaatMM Sports rdilor<lb/>
As the world of college football<lb/>
continues on its zany course, basket-<lb/>
balls can be heard pounding the<lb/>
Minges Coliseum floor every after-<lb/>
noon at 3:00.<lb/>
In mid-October?<lb/>
Practice makes perfect.<lb/>
Which, according to assistant<lb/>
men's basketball coach David<lb/>
Pendergraft, can lead to " a pot at<lb/>
the end of the rainbow<lb/>
And according to lady Pirate<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi practice can<lb/>
enable the young talent on her team<lb/>
to mature. And make her a better<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
For the men Pirates, that "pot of<lb/>
eold'<lb/>
Shr?sK?<lb/>
' ghmi<lb/>
s artilma<lb/>
An.ma SI<lb/>
M. n? s<lb/>
southern ?!<lb/>
Prnn sialr<lb/>
sMt<lb/>
 rtl?<lb/>
Hh?mt<lb/>
s SMC<lb/>
rkgnw SI<lb/>
 mug.<lb/>
MuhigaM<lb/>
rtnta<lb/>
Indiana Si<lb/>
s.wih?r? Mm<lb/>
Mi, sial?<lb/>
.r?ansa?<lb/>
V a.hlfigum si<lb/>
r s Midi IS<lb/>
X ml Te?a? St<lb/>
I lak<lb/>
raai um<lb/>
turfman<lb/>
 KI?s<lb/>
212V<lb/>
tin<lb/>
I?12<lb/>
i;r4<lb/>
IIKYl<lb/>
ItSJ<lb/>
IM0<lb/>
1771<lb/>
mi<lb/>
1629<lb/>
1?M<lb/>
S4J<lb/>
1S45<lb/>
I5M<lb/>
M2<lb/>
152<lb/>
1511<lb/>
1416<lb/>
HW0<lb/>
17 J<lb/>
mh<lb/>
1421<lb/>
i.m<lb/>
?VWKM.r<lb/>
?4 ?<lb/>
ltt 4<lb/>
tin 7<lb/>
U2 I<lb/>
110 7<lb/>
Ml ?<lb/>
W2 0<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
:Kh :<lb/>
2 l<lb/>
2-1 <lb/>
2A 2<lb/>
2 7<lb/>
2s? 1<lb/>
HI S<lb/>
2-55 7<lb/>
255 J<lb/>
255 i<lb/>
251 K<lb/>
24ft 0<lb/>
241 I<lb/>
UaJ.7<lb/>
m 7<lb/>
1M<lb/>
2J.V0<lb/>
Lady Pirates Take Early Lead, Then<lb/>
Falter In Loss to Appalachian State<lb/>
Bv Will 1AM YH VERTON<lb/>
 s?iNt?ni Np'?f t I- dll??C<lb/>
Formei Ne York Yankee cat-<lb/>
cher Yogi Berra, when asked about<lb/>
a futile ninth-inning rally in a game<lb/>
won bv the Yankees said, "It ain't<lb/>
over 'til it's over<lb/>
I he I ady Pirates o' Easl<lb/>
Carolina learned the meaning of this<lb/>
statement the hard way after a tive-<lb/>
set collegiate volleyball duel with the<lb/>
Mountaineers ol Appalachian State<lb/>
last Frida) afternoon at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum<lb/>
I at c arolina won the first two<lb/>
games of the match and needed one<lb/>
more victory to take the match.<lb/>
Then things changed.<lb/>
The Mountaineers won the next<lb/>
three sets to take the match.<lb/>
"We played the best we ever have<lb/>
in the first two games said head<lb/>
coach I ynn Davidson. "Fverything<lb/>
worked for us. But we lost our com-<lb/>
posure in the third game and got<lb/>
very complacent.<lb/>
"You can never think you have<lb/>
won a match ? even with match<lb/>
point. You can never let up '<lb/>
7-16 this season.<lb/>
"You can't play good every game<lb/>
of a match Davidson noted. "We<lb/>
did everything good in the first two<lb/>
games<lb/>
Davidson was pleased with the<lb/>
performance of Lita Lamas, who is<lb/>
recovering from an injury. "Lita<lb/>
had some great serves that barely<lb/>
cleared the net.<lb/>
"We came to the point where we<lb/>
llll. I VM VMll I ??- ?? ? - ?<lb/>
For a while it looked as though felt like we could do anything. We<lb/>
the Lady Pirates would never let up<lb/>
as they stormed to take the first two<lb/>
sets, 15-5 and 15-8, before Ap-<lb/>
palachian State rallied to take the<lb/>
next three, 15-5, 15-8 and 15-5.<lb/>
The loss dropped East Carolina to<lb/>
expected it to continue to happen,<lb/>
but it didn't happen that way<lb/>
The Lady Pirates travel to<lb/>
Williamsburg for a match with the<lb/>
Indians of William and Mary Thurs-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
is in the form of a post season<lb/>
tournament since Fast Carolina is<lb/>
the newest member of the Eastern<lb/>
College Athletic Conference<lb/>
(ECAC). The Pirates will compete<lb/>
in the ECAC-South, and the winner<lb/>
of the tournament receives an<lb/>
automatic bid to the NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"It helps knowing there's gold at<lb/>
the end of the rainbow<lb/>
Pendergraft savs. "Basketball is a<lb/>
tournament sport. We'll be able to<lb/>
maintain our in tensity in late<lb/>
February, knowing there's a tourna-<lb/>
ment, unlike last year. We've got<lb/>
something to look forward to<lb/>
East Carolina opened practice last<lb/>
Wednesday, and so far, says<lb/>
Pendergraft, each session has had<lb/>
positive results. "The intensity's<lb/>
there, and the enthusiasm's there<lb/>
he says. "The upperclassman have<lb/>
been leaders<lb/>
Pendergraft, promoted from<lb/>
part-time to full-time assistant, says<lb/>
the team's attitude is one of<lb/>
"wanting. Wanting to see improve-<lb/>
ment over last year. One of anticipa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The newcomers? Al Mack,<lb/>
Charles Green, Bruce Peartree and<lb/>
David Reichenecker? "all have im-<lb/>
pressed us with their ability to adapt<lb/>
to what we're trying to do<lb/>
Pendergraft says. "(College) is a<lb/>
whole lot more business-like than<lb/>
what they've done in the past. We're<lb/>
proud of them<lb/>
Although he practiced with the<lb/>
team last season, Maine transfer<lb/>
Tom Brown becomes eligible this<lb/>
fall. Guard Tony Byles, an old<lb/>
See PENDERGRAFT. p. 8, col. 3<lb/>
turn Texas, of course, suffered a<lb/>
humiliation themselves this past<lb/>
week at the hands of Arkansas.<lb/>
Mississippi State was picked<lb/>
before the season by many in the<lb/>
knowledgeable category as the best<lb/>
team in the SEC The club has but<lb/>
one loss, to Missouri, and may just<lb/>
live up to that billing. MSU ranked<lb/>
in at number 16 last week and is sure<lb/>
to move up.<lb/>
In other words, the Miami Hur-<lb/>
ricanes have lost ? and barely lost<lb/>
? to two of the very best teams in<lb/>
the country. Both games were on the<lb/>
road. The loss to Mississippi State<lb/>
would not have occurred had the<lb/>
Hurricanes not had a touchdown<lb/>
called back. That happened with<lb/>
just six seconds remaining in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The Bucs travel to West Virginia<lb/>
on October 31 after hosting Miami.<lb/>
The Mountaineers did a number on<lb/>
a good Virginia Tech team this past<lb/>
weekend, winning 27-6. Another<lb/>
WVU victim was Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference victim Maryland. That<lb/>
one was played in the Terrapins'<lb/>
back yard.<lb/>
West Virginia's only loss in six<lb/>
games was to Pittsburgh, a club that<lb/>
will rank in at either number one or<lb/>
two in this week's poll. The<lb/>
awesome Panthers won that one,<lb/>
17-0. Not bad considering that same<lb/>
Pitt team destroyed llth-ranked<lb/>
Florida State by a 42-14 margin just<lb/>
this past Saturday.<lb/>
Obviously, the rest of the month<lb/>
of October does not find the Pirates<lb/>
in anything near a favorite's posi-<lb/>
tion. On the contrary, the Bucs will<lb/>
be heaw underdogs in both games.<lb/>
Should ECU go on to lose both of<lb/>
those contests they will finish out<lb/>
with home games against ETSU and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary, with a winning<lb/>
season necessitating wins in both<lb/>
contests. Not easy, but not<lb/>
anywhere near impossible either.<lb/>
East Tennesse State has played<lb/>
some good football and currently<lb/>
rests in second place in the Southern<lb/>
Conference. The club is 3-1 in con-<lb/>
ference play and 4-2 overall.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary has begun to<lb/>
play well of late, winning two in a<lb/>
row after a slow 0-4 start.<lb/>
So the challenges are simple for<lb/>
the hopeful Pirates. Two wins in<lb/>
four games and 6-5 goes down in the<lb/>
books as the club's 1981 record.<lb/>
Emory felt before the season<lb/>
began that a winning record was a<lb/>
necessity to get the Pirate program<lb/>
headed back in the right direction.<lb/>
The team certainly has four (or at<lb/>
least two) crucial games ahead.<lb/>
None, though, was as crucial as<lb/>
last Saturday's win over<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana's Ragin'<lb/>
Cajuns. A loss in that one would<lb/>
have dampened the team's chances<lb/>
of a 6-5 campaign, not to mention<lb/>
what it would have done to morale.<lb/>
As it is, though, the Pirates stand<lb/>
in position to have that most impor-<lb/>
tant winning season. Their play in<lb/>
the next four weeks can eitter make<lb/>
or break that opportunity.<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057433_0008"/><lb/>
I rHE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 20, I ?W I<lb/>
Bucs Get A Kick<lb/>
From Va. Weekend<lb/>
uisUM Sports rdili'i<lb/>
Fast Carolina travel-<lb/>
ed to historic Virginia<lb/>
last weekend tor two<lb/>
soccer matches and<lb/>
made a little history<lb/>
themselves by winning<lb/>
both games.<lb/>
Saturday, the Pirates<lb/>
defeated the University<lb/>
of Richmond, 4-2, and<lb/>
added another victory<lb/>
the next day by<lb/>
defeating Virginia<lb/>
Wesleyan, 2-1.<lb/>
The wins improved<lb/>
the Last Carolina<lb/>
record to 5-7-1.<lb/>
"We surely<lb/>
dominated despite the<lb/>
close scores said<lb/>
coach Brad Smith.<lb/>
"The last three to five<lb/>
games we've outshot<lb/>
our opponents, but we<lb/>
just haven't put the ball<lb/>
in the net That all<lb/>
changed Saturday,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
The contest with the<lb/>
University oi Rich-<lb/>
mond saw tour dif-<lb/>
ferent Pirates ? Tom<lb/>
Lawrence, D w ay ne<lb/>
Degaetano, Brian Win-<lb/>
chell and Mark Har-<lb/>
dy? kick the ball<lb/>
cleanly into the net.<lb/>
Degaetano's goal<lb/>
as unassisted, unlike<lb/>
the other three which<lb/>
came from the precise<lb/>
parsing of Billy Merwin<lb/>
who set a new school<lb/>
record for assists in a<lb/>
match.<lb/>
Pirate goalie Steve<lb/>
Brown, back from an<lb/>
eye injury, recorded<lb/>
eight saves while Rich-<lb/>
mond defenders had<lb/>
seven.<lb/>
The Pirates con-<lb/>
tinued their agressive<lb/>
style of play as they<lb/>
outshot the Spiders,<lb/>
15-8.<lb/>
The loss dropped<lb/>
Richmond to 1-9 this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"We worked the ball<lb/>
well, made two mental<lb/>
mistakes on defense<lb/>
which cost us two<lb/>
goals, but we played<lb/>
better as a team<lb/>
Smith added.<lb/>
East Carolina lived<lb/>
up to their coach's ex-<lb/>
pectations Sunday as<lb/>
freshman Mark Hardy<lb/>
scored an unassisted<lb/>
goal with eight seconds<lb/>
left to defeat Virginia<lb/>
Wesleyan, 2-1.<lb/>
East Carolna's Kyle<lb/>
Milko scored the only<lb/>
goal in the first half,<lb/>
but Virginia<lb/>
Wesleyan's Tony Pr-<lb/>
ingle tied the match<lb/>
early in the second<lb/>
period.<lb/>
For East Carolina<lb/>
goalie Steve Brown<lb/>
continued his fine<lb/>
defensive play as he<lb/>
stopped 12 Wesleyan<lb/>
shots. Tom Redden ad-<lb/>
an<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. 9th St. 752-2332<lb/>
PIRA TES<lb/>
in the pros<lb/>
A.C. Outshines Earl<lb/>
former ECU running back Anthony Collins<lb/>
had another big day for the National Football<lb/>
! eague's New England Patriots Sunday. In the<lb/>
process the former Pirate outdueled the man who<lb/>
is considered the greatest runner in the game to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Collins rUShed 17 times for 89 yards in the Pats'<lb/>
38-10 win over Houston. The win pushed New<lb/>
England's record to 2-5.<lb/>
Collins1 figures bettered those of Earl Camp-<lb/>
bell, the two-time defending league rushing cham-<lb/>
pion. The Oiler star rushed 27 limes ? ten more<lb/>
than Collins ? but managed only 86 yards.<lb/>
Collins , New England's leading rusher, now<lb/>
has gained 460 yards on the year on 107 carries,<lb/>
which translates to a 4.3 yards-per-carry average.<lb/>
He also has 1" pass receptions for 162 yards. The<lb/>
Penn Van, N.Y. native has tallied four<lb/>
touchdowns, all four of them coming on rushes.<lb/>
If Collins continues at his present pace (65.7<lb/>
yards per game) he would finish the year with<lb/>
1,051 yards. Nine games remain in the Nil<lb/>
season.<lb/>
ded 15 saves for<lb/>
Virginia Wesleyan.<lb/>
The Pirates outshot<lb/>
Wesleyan, 17-16, and<lb/>
Brian Winchell added<lb/>
an assist for East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
For Virginia<lb/>
Wesleyan, J.P. Mur-<lb/>
phy chipped in with an<lb/>
assist.<lb/>
Smith says he has<lb/>
been pleased with the<lb/>
play of his freshman<lb/>
and newcomers; citing<lb/>
that both scores in the<lb/>
Virginia Wesleyan con-<lb/>
test were from first-<lb/>
year players. However,<lb/>
he stressed the fact that<lb/>
the Pirates don't have a<lb/>
set number of starters.<lb/>
"We really feel like we<lb/>
play with 16 or 17<lb/>
players he says.<lb/>
East Carolina travels<lb/>
to North Carolina-<lb/>
Wilmington for a<lb/>
match Wedcsnday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Pendergraft:<lb/>
Door Open<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
familiar face, returns to<lb/>
the team after a year's<lb/>
absence.<lb/>
Andruzzi says prac-<lb/>
tices have been "going<lb/>
pretty well But she<lb/>
adds that she has<lb/>
"three or four players<lb/>
out with a virus.<lb/>
! "The girls are work-<lb/>
ing hard. They're a<lb/>
very young team, but<lb/>
they're very attentive<lb/>
The Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Andruzzi says, have a<lb/>
unique attitude so far<lb/>
. during preseason<lb/>
drills They're<lb/>
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veterans used to be the<lb/>
young kids. They're<lb/>
waiting for someone to<lb/>
take a leadership role.<lb/>
This has become a good<lb/>
teaching experience<lb/>
Since the Hast<lb/>
Carolina men are now a<lb/>
conference member,<lb/>
the new affiliation has<lb/>
become somewhat of a<lb/>
coaching tool, also,<lb/>
says Pendergraft.<lb/>
"There is a tournament<lb/>
at the end of each<lb/>
season, which is every<lb/>
player's dream. We've<lb/>
always said we're an in-<lb/>
dependent. Now. we<lb/>
can say we're in a con-<lb/>
ference. The doors<lb/>
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ISPAGHETTII<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
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Chaps<lb/>
Hwy. 258 North<lb/>
Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's Largest<lb/>
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SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
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COX FLORIST<lb/>
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SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
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October 21<lb/>
North Tower?Ladies' Night<lb/>
October 23 Kid Shaleen<lb/>
October 24 Tempest<lb/>
EVERY WEDS,<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
October 28<lb/>
Castaways ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
October 30<lb/>
We play it all.<lb/>
October 31<lb/>
Fantastic Shakers<lb/>
(Halloween Party)<lb/>
Ladies' Night ? Lady Members Free<lb/>
Bands Subiect to Change Without Notice<lb/>
Memberships Required<lb/>
Annual Memberships ? $10 Special<lb/>
Price for ECU Students wID's<lb/>
$5.00 ? Available Sept. &amp; Oct. Only<lb/>
All ABC Permits Phone 523-244?<lb/>
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Highway 264 Bypass<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
OKTOBERFEST<lb/>
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U.S.D.A. INSPECTED HEN<lb/>
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Turkeys<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRASN FED BEEF<lb/>
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Round Roast<lb/>
Gwaltney<lb/>
Great Dogs<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
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32 oz.<lb/>
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Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
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Save54?<lb/>
SAVE 76?<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
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Va gal.<lb/>
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Coca Cola<lb/>
Sprite Tab<lb/>
Mello Yello<lb/>
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gallon<lb/>
jug<lb/>
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FROZEN?SAVE 40<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Hamburger 113i oz. <lb/>
Combination pkg.<lb/>
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TATER BOY FROZEN<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
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DECORATED ? ARTS N FLOWERS<lb/>
Scottowels<lb/>
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bi<lb/>
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63<lb/>
SAVE 16'<lb/>
Viva Napkins<lb/>
mm. ? 69 j<lb/>
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FRESH WITH QUALITY<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP SOLID ICEBERG<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
large<lb/>
heads<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
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Tangerines<lb/>
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