<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057492_0001"/>
?he SaHt (Earoliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.3<lb/>
Tuesday, August 31, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Problems Caused By Financial Aid Hold Up<lb/>
B DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Mai! Wrmr<lb/>
By the opening of school last<lb/>
week, federal assistance funds still<lb/>
were not aailable. leaving many<lb/>
students without means to pay ex-<lb/>
penses, and the Financial Aid Office<lb/>
scrambling for alternatives.<lb/>
According to a report to the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees dated August 20,<lb/>
the school "did not receive an<lb/>
allocation of funds from the federal<lb/>
government until August 16 leav-<lb/>
ing "East Carolina University, as<lb/>
well as all other schools, operating<lb/>
in the dark in regard to student<lb/>
financial aid<lb/>
Funds usually arrive around the<lb/>
first of July.<lb/>
In addition, "the school received<lb/>
only a partial allocation the<lb/>
report said, "with no indication of<lb/>
what the final authorization will<lb/>
amount to With 80 percent of<lb/>
financial aid originating from the<lb/>
federal level, most aid was<lb/>
unavailable as tuition and other bills<lb/>
came due.<lb/>
Robert Boudreaux of the Finan-<lb/>
cial Aid Office admitswe're hang-<lb/>
ing on with a shoestring, hoping to<lb/>
find something out before we run<lb/>
into overcommitments He cited<lb/>
several reasons for the hold up, in-<lb/>
cluding a six-month delay in the<lb/>
start of aid programs at the federal<lb/>
level.<lb/>
Also, this year the government<lb/>
for the first time verified every Pell<lb/>
grant application until June 16 when<lb/>
Congress cut off funds for this pro-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
Normally only 10 percent of the<lb/>
applications are reviewed. In addi-<lb/>
tion, less funds were available this<lb/>
year due to budget cutbacks.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Student Life<lb/>
Elmer Meyer Jr. was also frustrated<lb/>
and concerned with "the inability of<lb/>
the U.S. Department of Education<lb/>
to provide institutions with timely<lb/>
information"and he, too, blamed<lb/>
some of the problem on the policies<lb/>
of the Reagan administration. "The<lb/>
university is not happy with the way<lb/>
this has had to work said Meyer,<lb/>
"but we're powerless to make it<lb/>
work better<lb/>
While angry at the federal govern-<lb/>
ment for playing politics with stu-<lb/>
dent aid, Meyer was confident that<lb/>
no students had yet been forced to<lb/>
drop out, and that most who need<lb/>
aid will eventually receive it.<lb/>
Boudreaux was less confident,<lb/>
noting that while students were able<lb/>
to enter school through suii last<lb/>
minute actions by the Financial Aid<lb/>
Staff as deferments of tuition and<lb/>
emergency loans, many may not<lb/>
have the funds to continue the<lb/>
semester and meet basic expenes if<lb/>
federal aid does not come through<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
The Sarah E. Clement Emergency<lb/>
Loan, for example, which many<lb/>
students obtained in order to enter<lb/>
school, is no more than $400 and<lb/>
must be repaid within 60 days.<lb/>
According to the trustees report,<lb/>
more students will need emergency<lb/>
aid this fall than ever before, due to<lb/>
"the small number who have thus<lb/>
far been awarded financial<lb/>
assistance and Bourdeaux em-<lb/>
phasized that the school still does<lb/>
not know exactly how much money<lb/>
will be available for students this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Last year, approximately 9,100<lb/>
financial aid awards were given to<lb/>
between five and six thousand ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Meyer noted that many students<lb/>
expected and prepared for less<lb/>
money to be available, but no one<lb/>
anticipated this current drastK<lb/>
uncertainty of federal aid.<lb/>
Meal Plan Use Increases<lb/>
B CORDON 1POCK<lb/>
siaff Wnlrr<lb/>
The customary aversion that ECU<lb/>
students have had tor on campus<lb/>
dining over the past 15 years is slow-<lb/>
ly but surely lading, due to changes<lb/>
in the economy, improvements in<lb/>
facilities and an overall change in<lb/>
student attitudes.<lb/>
According to Dr. Elmer Meyer.<lb/>
vice-chancellor for student life, the<lb/>
number of students on meal plans<lb/>
has nearly doubled in the past three<lb/>
years from "94 to nearly 1500 this<lb/>
fall A 50 percent increase in the last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
L a reek because of increased par-<lb/>
ticipation, the two most popular<lb/>
meal plans (15 and 20 meals per<lb/>
week) are 18 percent cheaper than<lb/>
they were two years ago. Escalating<lb/>
prices in restaurants and fast-food<lb/>
outlets are compelling many<lb/>
students, especially freshmen, to eat<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Improvements in the facilities are<lb/>
also a factor. The old Jones<lb/>
cafeteria is now the remodeled Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Dining Hall. The galley<lb/>
also sports a shiny new facelift, and<lb/>
plans for the redecoration of<lb/>
Mendenhall snack bar are slated for<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
The majority of dorm students<lb/>
still eat out or in their rooms, ex-<lb/>
plained Meyer. This is fortunate<lb/>
since. Meyer stated, the present<lb/>
facilities are just adequate to serve<lb/>
the numbers now using them.<lb/>
According to Meyer, the College<lb/>
Hill Dining Hall is operating at near<lb/>
capacity and Jim Mayo, manager of<lb/>
Mendenhall snack bar, says that<lb/>
facility is doing five times the<lb/>
business it was designed for.<lb/>
But the extent of in room cooking<lb/>
will be curtailed significatantly in<lb/>
the future. The ECU long range<lb/>
planning document states, "as soon<lb/>
as possible, but no later than 1988,<lb/>
the preparation of meals using<lb/>
cooking appliances shall be pro-<lb/>
hibited in residence hall dorms<lb/>
where students reside<lb/>
All of these factors point to the<lb/>
need for a new dining facility on the<lb/>
main campus and to the likelihood<lb/>
that one will be constructed in the<lb/>
near future. According to Meyer,<lb/>
the only delay is state funding tor<lb/>
such a project.<lb/>
Registration Resister Jailed<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
?siatf nirr<lb/>
On Thursday, 21-year-old college<lb/>
student Benjamin H. Sasway was<lb/>
found guilty in federal court for<lb/>
refusing to register for the military<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
Sashay is the second person in as<lb/>
many weeks to be convicted, as the<lb/>
Justice Department continues its<lb/>
crackdown on non-registrants.<lb/>
Last week Enten Eller was also<lb/>
cvonvicted of registration refusal in<lb/>
federal court in Virginia.<lb/>
So far only five men have been in-<lb/>
dicted for registration refusal from<lb/>
a total which, some estimates claim,<lb/>
numbers near one million.<lb/>
The charge for refusal is a felony<lb/>
and carries a maximum penalty ot<lb/>
five years in prison and a S 10,000<lb/>
fine.<lb/>
Federal District Judge Cordon<lb/>
Thompson Jr. ordered Saswav to be<lb/>
held in jail without bail awaiting his<lb/>
sentencing which is scheduled for<lb/>
October 4. THompson gave the<lb/>
order just minutes after the eight<lb/>
women and four men jury announc-<lb/>
ed its verdict concluding 50 minutes<lb/>
of deliberations.<lb/>
Thompson jailed Saswav because<lb/>
he felt that he might attempt to flee<lb/>
to Canada to avoid a jail term.<lb/>
Saswav claimed, during a July<lb/>
television interview, that a decision<lb/>
to flee would be a selfish action.<lb/>
"He has said he wouldn't (flee), but<lb/>
the statement indicated he knows<lb/>
about it said lhompson.<lb/>
Saswav. like Tiler, is a student.<lb/>
He is majoring in political scienced<lb/>
at Humboldt State University in Ar-<lb/>
cata, California.<lb/>
Eller attends school in Virginia.<lb/>
In a 1980 letter to then President<lb/>
Jimmy Carter, Saswav stated that<lb/>
he objected to registration and a<lb/>
draft on moral urounds. He believes<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSEN<lb/>
 Thought MASH Was On<lb/>
A TV junkie eagerly awaits his favorite program. Sources confirmed that moto-TV will soon be available at<lb/>
your local motorcycle dealership.<lb/>
Attorney General Post Vacant<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
The 1982-83 post of ECU student<lb/>
attorney general still remains vacant<lb/>
as a result of student body president<lb/>
Eric Henderson's decision not to ap-<lb/>
point either of the two students<lb/>
recommended by a "blue ribbon"<lb/>
selection committee last spring.<lb/>
The committee was made up of<lb/>
five members who included Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum, associate dean and direc-<lb/>
tor of residence life; Jame Mallory,<lb/>
associate dean of student life; the in-<lb/>
cumbant attorney general plus<lb/>
representatives of the honor and<lb/>
review boards.<lb/>
During the spring interviewing<lb/>
sessions, the committee recom-<lb/>
mended student public defender<lb/>
Hank Little and Ken Hooper.<lb/>
Henderson, in a letter to Mallory,<lb/>
dated July 16, said that after<lb/>
carefully considering both can-<lb/>
didates, he made his decision to not<lb/>
appoint either.<lb/>
"I had a chance to experience<lb/>
both of these guys in action during<lb/>
the conflict of my adminstration<lb/>
said Henderson, "and I didn't<lb/>
believe they were qualified for the<lb/>
post<lb/>
Little told the East Carolinian<lb/>
that he "expected" he would not be<lb/>
chosen due to his support of David<lb/>
Cook in the student election. "He<lb/>
(Henderson) wrote a letter to me,<lb/>
saying that due to the recent events<lb/>
of our past, he felt we couldn't work<lb/>
together said Little.<lb/>
Henderson was referring to the<lb/>
spring trials in which he and David<lb/>
Cook were going through legal bat-<lb/>
tles to determine the final presiden-<lb/>
tial choice.<lb/>
Little added that "the attorney<lb/>
See HENDERSON, Page 3<lb/>
 i<lb/>
Photc 8, SCOTT LABSEK<lb/>
Book Buying<lb/>
Students, once again, spent their hard earned money on books. They found prices this ear higher than ever,<lb/>
with some students spending as much as $150.<lb/>
that the draft could lead to United<lb/>
States involvement in another Viet-<lb/>
nam like conflict. He called the U.S.<lb/>
role there "interventionist<lb/>
"Ususally registration lead to a<lb/>
draft, said ECU art student Jeff<lb/>
Hoppa "1 couldn't justify myself<lb/>
going to war unless the United<lb/>
States were attacked<lb/>
Hoppa, a sophmore, believes the<lb/>
next war will be an "economic war"<lb/>
and he wouldn't support it. He did<lb/>
however register for the draft.<lb/>
Student reactions to the Justice<lb/>
Department prosecutions have<lb/>
generally been mixed. Two weeks<lb/>
ago a group of ECU students<lb/>
demonstrated in support of Eller at<lb/>
the 10th Street Post Office.<lb/>
Others such as freshmen biology<lb/>
student Richard Bevis think that<lb/>
Eller and Saswav are "copping out"<lb/>
by their refusal to register.<lb/>
"Everybody has a patriotic duty to<lb/>
his country adds Geology-<lb/>
freshman David Rhodes. "Refusal<lb/>
to register is being unpatriotic<lb/>
Rhodes says that Eller and<lb/>
Saswav should have sought non-<lb/>
combative service instead of refusal.<lb/>
Bevis and Rhodes have also both<lb/>
registered.<lb/>
Another ECU Art student senior,<lb/>
Dorothy Gardner, opposes the<lb/>
registration and the draft for a dif-<lb/>
ferent reason. "If there's going to<lb/>
be a draft 1 believe it should fall<lb/>
equally on men and women she<lb/>
said. A 1981 Supreme Court deci-<lb/>
sion disqualified women from the<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
"Thomas Jefferson said he would<lb/>
be willing to be a soldier, so his son<lb/>
could be a farmer?I would be will-<lb/>
ing to be a soldier so my daughter<lb/>
could be president continued<lb/>
Gardner.<lb/>
ECU Catholic Campus Minister<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell who has been<lb/>
offering draft counseling for East<lb/>
Carolina Students who are struggl-<lb/>
ing with their decisions said, "There<lb/>
needs to be some vehicle or method<lb/>
by which people can express their<lb/>
conscience without threat of pro-<lb/>
secution<lb/>
Outside the California courtroom<lb/>
a group of opponents of a possible<lb/>
draft demonstrated their support<lb/>
for Saswav.<lb/>
His parents Joseph R. and<lb/>
Delores C. Saswav were both upset<lb/>
with the decision of Thompson.<lb/>
During a tearfilled press conference<lb/>
following the verdict they defended<lb/>
their son. "It's unjust if you can't<lb/>
make a moral decision in free coun-<lb/>
try said Mrs. Sasway.<lb/>
Mr. Sasway claimed his son<lb/>
wasn't given the chance to share<lb/>
with the jury the philosophical and<lb/>
moral deminsions of his position of<lb/>
opposition to registration and the<lb/>
draft. "All law. to be just, there<lb/>
must be individual consideration<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Judge Thompson said that he<lb/>
respcted Benjamin Sasways<lb/>
"conscience" but that he could not<lb/>
respect hs position because it was<lb/>
against the law.<lb/>
He only allowed the jury to con-<lb/>
sider two elements of the law.<lb/>
failure to register and intent Ben<lb/>
should have had the opportunity to<lb/>
at least face the jury and say why he<lb/>
was doing what he was doing<lb/>
declared his father.<lb/>
Sasways attorney Mr. Charles T.<lb/>
Bummer said there would be an ap-<lb/>
peal. He added that his client was<lb/>
trying to "improve his countrv" by<lb/>
taking a stand against what he con-<lb/>
sidered an unjust national police.<lb/>
Sister Shondell said she regarded<lb/>
Sasway and Ellers sentences as<lb/>
"harsh" and "terribly vindictive"<lb/>
in a "supposed" peace time when<lb/>
there is no draft yet in effect.<lb/>
Presently three other men have<lb/>
ben indicted, on registration refusal<lb/>
sharges, by the Justice Department.<lb/>
A total of 160 young men are alledg-<lb/>
ed to be slated for further indict-<lb/>
ments in the near future.<lb/>
NOW To Begin Fund Raising<lb/>
Candidates To Receive Support<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Mill W rllrr<lb/>
With the recent defeat of the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)<lb/>
still fresh in their minds the Na-<lb/>
tional Organization of Women<lb/>
(NOW) announced last week its<lb/>
plans to begin a $3 million fund rais-<lb/>
ing drive to back candidates who are<lb/>
sympathetic to womens issues.<lb/>
National NOW President Eleanor<lb/>
Smeal laid out the ground work of<lb/>
the new proposal during a<lb/>
Washington, D.C. press conference<lb/>
last Thursday.<lb/>
Thursday also marked the 62nd<lb/>
anniversary of womens gaining the<lb/>
right to vote.<lb/>
NOW plans to have more than 80<lb/>
political action committees (PAC)<lb/>
in 39 states before the November<lb/>
elections. Smeal said that $1 million<lb/>
of the money would be used to sup-<lb/>
port local and state races, with the<lb/>
other $2 million being used for<lb/>
federal races.<lb/>
If NOW's goal of $3 million is<lb/>
reached it will make them "one of<lb/>
the largest PAC's in the nation<lb/>
said Smeal.<lb/>
In North Carolina, which was a<lb/>
crucial state in deciding the final<lb/>
fate of ERA, the NOW committee<lb/>
has targeted Anne Bagnal, a former<lb/>
Republican state senator, for<lb/>
defeat. Bagnal, who was outspoken<lb/>
in her opposition to ERA, is trying<lb/>
to defeat Democratic representative<lb/>
Stepehn L. Neal, who Smeal says is<lb/>
"dedicated to women's rights<lb/>
Greenville's NOW chapter presi-<lb/>
dent Dot Gronert is enthusiastic and<lb/>
supportive of the national drive to<lb/>
fund candidates who are strong in<lb/>
their support of womens issues.<lb/>
"We're not stressing 'getting out' so<lb/>
much as we're stressing getting<lb/>
women 'in' - or men who are sym-<lb/>
pathetic to women's issues<lb/>
Gronert told the East Carolinian.<lb/>
The local NOW chapter took part<lb/>
in a series of nationwide events, this<lb/>
past Saturday, to dramatize and in-<lb/>
form the public of the new PAC<lb/>
campaign. The main North<lb/>
Carolina event was the<lb/>
"PACWALK-A-THON" which<lb/>
was walking event that took place<lb/>
said<lb/>
from "Boone to Beaufort'<lb/>
Gronert.<lb/>
"There was somebody on the<lb/>
road all across North Carolina<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
The walk took place in three-mile<lb/>
segments and was designed to pro-<lb/>
mote the new campaign as well as to<lb/>
assure the public that "equal rights<lb/>
for women is not dead The slogan<lb/>
for the walk was: "All across North<lb/>
Carolina - women make the dif-<lb/>
ference<lb/>
Despite the defeat of ERA,<lb/>
Gronert seemed optimistic that the<lb/>
amendment would be back. "We<lb/>
don't have equal rights, we need to<lb/>
start now and change the laws which<lb/>
discriminate against women, one by<lb/>
one she said.<lb/>
The ERA was re-introduced in<lb/>
congress on July 16th, but it will<lb/>
probably die in committee.<lb/>
Gronert and NOW hope that<lb/>
enough pro-ERA candidates are<lb/>
elected in November, that the ERA<lb/>
will eventually be adopted to the<lb/>
See WOMEN, Page 3<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 31, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
it you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
? ? the announcement column,<lb/>
mease type it on an announcement<lb/>
?orm and send it lo The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care o the produc<lb/>
'?on manager<lb/>
Announcement form are<lb/>
available at me East Carolinian<lb/>
ottice m the Publications Building<lb/>
Myers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sized paper cannot be ac<lb/>
i epted<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncemcnts but space is often<lb/>
mited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that vcuf announce<lb/>
men' will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest 'hat you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publ'Ci'y<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
s s p i-i Monday tor the T uesday<lb/>
lot" ano 5pm Wednesdayy for<lb/>
Ihc I'sdav paper No ar<lb/>
notmcemctlts received after these<lb/>
deadlines witt be printed<lb/>
'? I pace 'S available to an<lb/>
ampuS organizations and depart<lb/>
 its<lb/>
OUTDOOR<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
Registration and information on<lb/>
a variety ot outdoor recreation op<lb/>
pir-u.tics are available through<lb/>
"e 'S5 Cu'door Receation<lb/>
Cefi'i" in M3 Memorial Gym<lb/>
Recently scheoe'ed events m<lb/>
)e Horseback Riding<lb/>
September r y is 23 30 Segmn<lb/>
-a Canoeing Clinic September 3<lb/>
M 4 Whitewater Ra"mg Tr,p<lb/>
Nri?eber 10 and 1) Call 7S7 6911<lb/>
Stop b? the center 13<lb/>
v-??-? a Gym1 or tur'ner inter<lb/>
APPLY NOW<lb/>
Students w"c r'enc 'o apply to<lb/>
M "r n Soc-ai work or Correc<lb/>
? -ns in the Fall of 1981 should re<lb/>
3ues1 an appcat'oo and an ap<lb/>
potntmenl tor an -n'erview from<lb/>
me Department Offce 312 Carol<lb/>
Belk lAllied Health Bu'lding'<lb/>
cor rrere information call Mrs<lb/>
.  rs' (iv6' F' 718<lb/>
Deadline 'or fall applications<lb/>
September 7. Students are en<lb/>
"jQvtc appiv 3ur Tg summer<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
rrpr'rreni of 'ntramura'<lb/>
Recreational Services s looking<lb/>
' is an EJi'er for tie m'ramura!<lb/>
Nwsoaper TENNIS SHOE TID<lb/>
P T S Experience 'n writing<lb/>
lyovl a desig- required Con<lb/>
tacl Na'ic Vile 204 Memcr'3:<lb/>
? . - call Tfj "<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
i e i Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellows?) c ?" have 'ner ?-$!<lb/>
neeting n Wednesday<lb/>
p tern tier 1 a- 'CO pm<lb/>
v. ? hal R'Vjir 248<lb/>
TIBETAN BUDDHIST<lb/>
GROUP<lb/>
 ' IIP tOt V dtSCUSStOfl dOO<lb/>
practice ot T.he'p Vatrayana<lb/>
B"fl'Srr orrne last year will<lb/>
beg n ?' .??v is w a nppf ng<lb/>
September 1 a S OC at UI3<lb/>
? vr?r' tifi a" interested per<lb/>
- ns r'p r?vted f-cr .ntormatiop<lb/>
 b? ?5fl OSS even ngs<lb/>
SUPERVISOR WANTED<lb/>
" ne Department of im REC Ser<lb/>
SI "as a dosi'io- oper tor a pe'<lb/>
? ' it-wiedge and skii' n<lb/>
?t 9US spec's ol ou'eoor 'ecrea<lb/>
tincluding ampig backpack<lb/>
ami"ig and biking Please<lb/>
 ? o c x ,?' ?5? 6187<lb/>
MODEL UNITED<lb/>
NATIONS CLUB<lb/>
The V'ldei United Nations Club<lb/>
will tmo an organizational meting<lb/>
m pr'emtxT 7. 1987 The meeting<lb/>
 :i he heia t room BC 104<lb/>
Anybody interested m attending s<lb/>
, P r-? o come The meeting .s<lb/>
at 3 DO n BC 104 or Thursday<lb/>
 epten r.pr ?<lb/>
KARATE<lb/>
aii tcaate Club officers and<lb/>
members are asked to meet in the<lb/>
? f Memnr.a' Gym.<lb/>
September 2nd a' 7 30 p m Br.ng<lb/>
, ? r Gi tor a short workout<lb/>
?S7 4S4<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Fra'urn'v<lb/>
located at 700 E 10th Street across<lb/>
from Umstead Dorm would like<lb/>
students ot ECU to get 'eady tor<lb/>
the Fall Rush which will begm<lb/>
nex week Monday Sept 6<lb/>
LABOR PAINS PARTY Beer<lb/>
Blast Tuesday Sept 7, BLUE<lb/>
HAWAIAN LUAU Wednesday<lb/>
Sept 8 the Orqinal LAS VEGAS<lb/>
PLAY BOY BUNNY NIGHT1'<lb/>
For additional information vail<lb/>
752 S-S43 Rules are available<lb/>
OFFICIALS NEEDED<lb/>
A new school year is begimniz<lb/>
and as usual many students a-e<lb/>
looking lor ways o earn ex'ra<lb/>
money The Depar'ment ol<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
has lobs available for apprx<lb/>
imately 35 40 students The work<lb/>
hours range from j 45 p m o<lb/>
I 1 00 pm MonoavS through<lb/>
Thursday and occasionally "r<lb/>
weekends No expedience is<lb/>
necessary Trammg cin.es are<lb/>
'equired and the tirst chin is on<lb/>
Thursday Sep'ember 2. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym Room 102 at 6 00<lb/>
p rri Please bring with ycxj Social<lb/>
Security cards and Class<lb/>
Schedules<lb/>
RADIOTALK SHOW<lb/>
HOST<lb/>
The Department ot iM REC Ser<lb/>
vices is looking re a person in<lb/>
teres'ed m communication broad<lb/>
casting to hos' a radio show In<lb/>
teres'ed persons shoulo contact<lb/>
Nance Mize 204 Memorial Gym<lb/>
or call 757 638?<lb/>
MEN SGLEE CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Men's Gioe c'ur in<lb/>
vites any men interested in sine<lb/>
ng in 'he iv82 "83 Glee Club to<lb/>
contact the School ot Music The<lb/>
Glee Club will be perform ng "ie<lb/>
Beethoven Ninth with the ECU<lb/>
Orches'ra n November anc ?<lb/>
make its annual Sprmq Tour<lb/>
March as well as mak. Ifl<lb/>
numerous ether concert a1<lb/>
pearaces ttirouori :u; Nortl<lb/>
Carolina The Glee Cop met -k<lb/>
M W F at 12 00 (I hr credit and<lb/>
is open to a mei campus widi<lb/>
For more in'urma'idn, or t y j<lb/>
have a screen e conflict conta '<lb/>
Mr Glenn a' the School ot Musk<lb/>
757 6851 or at 758 7090<lb/>
HOME ECONOMICS<lb/>
New s'odenfs. old students even<lb/>
if you're not a s'udem corn<lb/>
over to a lomt meeting of 30 mc<lb/>
Home Ec organizations on iirs<lb/>
day. Sep 7"d a' 5 00 p "? in the<lb/>
Van Landmgham room ot the<lb/>
Home Ec bu'ding You'll have trf<lb/>
opportunity 10 find Oc ' what<lb/>
AHEA YHDL. FCA NCVA CTA<lb/>
Phi U anc SPA are an about met '<lb/>
some new oeopie hear a lerril<lb/>
speake' anc best ot sli therrv<lb/>
be retresh"ie'1s So be there an?<lb/>
be sQuari<lb/>
GOD<lb/>
Dcyc-ubei-eveGod? Were ? u<lb/>
taught tha' God wants us to have<lb/>
an abundan' en'oyable I '<lb/>
ijohn 10 '0 I 1 n othy f 17. God<lb/>
lays out 'he pr nciples ano a'<lb/>
titudes you need to live n" er<lb/>
icyabte. full life in the Bibv a" '<lb/>
is H s 3'C ' i Pete' 1 0 <lb/>
Come check cu' our rellOWShiot<lb/>
where we learn to live Itte or<lb/>
lovably like God wants ?. I<lb/>
hursday Sept J no Monda<lb/>
?sep' 6. a' Mendenha<lb/>
Cen'er a 7 3C p m in RM 243<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
' he fc CU delegation ot the NCSL<lb/>
will mcel 7 30 Tuesday night<lb/>
Auyust 3) in Room 217 of<lb/>
MendenhaH Student Center All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are encouraged to attend<lb/>
HONOR STUDENTS<lb/>
SUGGEST<lb/>
SEMINAR TOPICS<lb/>
fcve'y students dream of being<lb/>
able to design h.s or her own<lb/>
course can become a reality tor<lb/>
Ireshman nd s- nhomore Honors<lb/>
students a" East Carolina<lb/>
 asl si" ester the Honors Pro<lb/>
gram offers several topic<lb/>
oriented, non spec alist Honors<lb/>
Seminars which are generated by<lb/>
either faculty proposal or Honors<lb/>
ciude-i request<lb/>
Ideally, these seminars are m<lb/>
lei disc ipunarv ano are moderated<lb/>
by 'wo tai ulty members from dit<lb/>
terent departments Some.<lb/>
however are handled by a single<lb/>
p, rtesot rhey aw on topics which<lb/>
'i hly nder the headings on<lb/>
1 i)i' 87 8tj ot the 1982 84<lb/>
. itall g 11 They meet tor noe ses<lb/>
each week .no narr 3 sti<lb/>
credit towards General Education<lb/>
r pc)uiriTe-i's<lb/>
I- a Ity members from an<lb/>
depart I ents Ol the university are<lb/>
invited 10 submit proposals tor<lb/>
sen- nars to be 'aught Likewise<lb/>
Honors students may submit both<lb/>
toe cs an I ? ggested ia uli.<lb/>
mc mbi rs 1 noderate the<lb/>
seminars ?? a '?  ry tommittee<lb/>
on 'hi Honors Pi or am sr' ts the<lb/>
sen, ? . ? ?? iHered<lb/>
STUDENT ATHLETIC<lb/>
BOARD (SAB)<lb/>
Are you interested in getting to<lb/>
know our coaches and<lb/>
athletes special seating ar<lb/>
rangements for football<lb/>
games being involved with the<lb/>
total athletic program"<lb/>
Come to the Orientation<lb/>
Meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
September 1. 1982 at 7 00 p m in<lb/>
244 Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
PRESSRELEASE<lb/>
Do you need a book or a tournal<lb/>
article from another East<lb/>
Carolina University library" Try<lb/>
'he delivery service now being ol<lb/>
tered by the three campus<lb/>
libraries (Joyner. Health<lb/>
Sciences, and Music I Requests<lb/>
tor books and or lournal articles<lb/>
may be made at any ol the three<lb/>
libraries, and the requested item<lb/>
will be delivered to the library ol<lb/>
your choice Deliveries to each lib<lb/>
rary will be made three times a<lb/>
day, Monday through Friday This<lb/>
service is oltered to ECU faculty,<lb/>
staff and students<lb/>
To request an item, you will<lb/>
need to go to one ol the libraries<lb/>
anad lilt out a request form In<lb/>
Joyner, go to the Circulation Desk<lb/>
tor book requests and to the<lb/>
Periodicals Desk tor lournal re<lb/>
quests At the Health Sciences and<lb/>
Music Libraries, all requests are<lb/>
handled at the Circulation Desks<lb/>
For more details, brochures are<lb/>
available at each ol the three cam<lb/>
pus libraries<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of pap i if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Inclose<lb/>
75C per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Return lo THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 ruesdas before<lb/>
Wednesday publications<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No. lines<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
at 75C per line $.<lb/>
Nn insertions.<lb/>
.encli'c-d<lb/>
rr1????F??"?? ?j4j -<lb/>
- ?- -r Ij<lb/>
-?<lb/>
1??? - ?<lb/>
!?<lb/>
.1 1 1 1 i 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
T1 11 1 1 1t t<lb/>
i<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are needed from<lb/>
those interested in becoming Per<lb/>
sonal Care Attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students We are par<lb/>
ticularly interested in anyone who<lb/>
ahs a background ot assisting m<lb/>
dividuals whith their activities ot<lb/>
daily living For futher details,<lb/>
contact Office ot Handicapped<lb/>
Student Services. 212 Wicharo<lb/>
Building. 757 6799<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
The Junior Varsity Cheerleader<lb/>
Tryouts will be held at the east end<lb/>
of Mmges Coliseum at S 00 p m on<lb/>
Thursday. September 9. 1982<lb/>
Practice sessions will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday Sept 1, Thursday<lb/>
Sept 2, Monday Sept 6, Tuesday.<lb/>
Sept 7 at the east end ol Mmges<lb/>
Cohseum at 5 00 p m<lb/>
Come to the first practice ses<lb/>
Sion on Wednesday Sept 1 dressed<lb/>
10 work out<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Cenier<lb/>
would like to invite everyone It<lb/>
10m in with us tor celeorating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday in the Biolog<lb/>
Lecture Hall starting at '2 30 and<lb/>
s. 00 everv Wednsday at thi-<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center Dmner<lb/>
and good friendship follows Mass<lb/>
every Wednsoay so come out and<lb/>
OFF CAMPUS<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
' ? c wiii o? teed ng a<lb/>
mate or wou lie lo I<lb/>
s' are an apar" ? I for Fa<lb/>
tac' the Oft Campus H . .<lb/>
? - ?? .<lb/>
757 68' before June 14 Or ? ??<lb/>
'?or will begin a' 'ra I<lb/>
many student w 1; De ?,e?.ng k<lb/>
commodacns A-<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
? ?? ? ?<lb/>
? ? . ?<lb/>
 ? -<lb/>
? . .<lb/>
p<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
' tx. ? ' (Of ItH<lb/>
.3 of1. ?  U'proposa1<lb/>
' Of stted ifa ? i'ing by<lb/>
Sep'enbet6-1 ?Dr David<lb/>
Sanch?i sC Kr d i na 1ur oit the<lb/>
HonoS P? O'am 1n English<lb/>
p. paA isliiBuildma<lb/>
1 an 1US Ft ?n 'herinformation<lb/>
Df-ng a friend ing<lb/>
r<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIANS COUPON<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
"? ? . ,??? ? thru psyco<lb/>
? ration, tt r. i 0 irgam?<lb/>
 fo a structured,<lb/>
nfortabli H 1 the i.brar?<lb/>
r the boot saic- NO<lb/>
k is over 83 ' rVolunteers<lb/>
needed 1 . e longer<lb/>
irs it . j ?? ? terested, stop<lb/>
????: siqn oup or call<lb/>
r 4 attei 5 p.nn L ib' ar. 5<lb/>
brary hours Monday 10 1<lb/>
?vie. 10 13 Wednesday 10 s<lb/>
rsday 1  Friday MM<lb/>
Ie 1 pa ' ?' t s Cli access this<lb/>
nester I v car pat.ng .n th<lb/>
ll ir vil o i. well as the<lb/>
, meetings Ps Chi ol<lb/>
?? ??? always looking withir<lb/>
iresi ind new deas Please di<lb/>
 " . ? lea snai ?<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
The rW BEBEl IS eri It 1<lb/>
m ssec I nr hte spr.nq. you an<lb/>
pick II up m Mendennan ? ' ?<lb/>
Library beginning Sept 1 A ,<lb/>
artistrs and illusfrator?. a' si<lb/>
work was pnr'ed in the ffc"Bl .<lb/>
may pick I or in the RE BE<lb/>
fice in the Polbica' one B I '?<lb/>
 mwf from? DO 113C Copm<lb/>
las' year s writter subm ss<lb/>
may be dug up 'oc<lb/>
The REBEL need ar Av at<lb/>
Ecitor to 'earn a"d w rfc rw ire<lb/>
nex' year s Ed torship The n sii<lb/>
reguirement is ded'ca'io- Ji - ?<lb/>
m any maior can app:? Di f I .<lb/>
the office and spean to Rick G<lb/>
don the Ed'tor. durg S oHci<lb/>
hours MWF 9 00 M 30<lb/>
I he t list Carolinian<lb/>
? : I 1 .inc!<lb/>
'a'e S2C  ar ly<lb/>
,1 olinuin olf ices<lb/>
?hr Old South<lb/>
1 ampgs ot ECU.<lb/>
$<lb/>
(This coupon must<lb/>
accompany order<lb/>
12<lb/>
Off Complete<lb/>
Eye Glasses With<lb/>
This Coupon<lb/>
Offer<lb/>
Good<lb/>
til<lb/>
83182<lb/>
Greenville Store Only<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
for ECU students on<lb/>
prescription glasses.<lb/>
Bring in ad &amp; student ID.<lb/>
30<lb/>
DISCOUNT ON<lb/>
B&amp;LRAYBAN<lb/>
SUNGLASSES<lb/>
(WITH G 15 LENSES)<lb/>
CALL US FOR AN EYE EXAMINATION WITH THE DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
fcfAfl<lb/>
VUE<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
CS<lb/>
315 PARK VIEW COMMONS 7521446<lb/>
ACROSS FROM OOCTORS PARK<lb/>
OPEN 9AM TIL 5 30 P M<lb/>
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. Across from ECU<lb/>
Today from 4 p.m. on<lb/>
25 KEGS until it's gone,<lb/>
ONLY 99C ADMISSION.<lb/>
All food 30 off<lb/>
Music by D.Js<lb/>
Geep Johnson<lb/>
&amp; Roy Richardson of<lb/>
Professional Music<lb/>
L<lb/>
Everyone be<lb/>
-ure &amp;<lb/>
come out &amp;<lb/>
party<lb/>
jjjjBi<lb/>
6J66 ejd? 630'<lb/>
E?30?3????1?CT<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
National Service Sorority<lb/>
WHEN: Sept. 7, 8, 9 6:30 p.m. each night<lb/>
WHERE: Coffeehouse (located in MendenhaH, bottom floor)<lb/>
WHAT: Ice C ream Party, Service Project, Cook out (respectively)<lb/>
H h JA KE THE DIFFERENt E KEC 4 I SE<lb/>
WE ARE THE DIFFERENt El<lb/>
For more info call: 758-8702 ? ask for Terry<lb/>
NNXVVVVVVVVV.VVV<lb/>
HHitckeW Hair Stifling Academif<lb/>
Is offering the students<lb/>
a back to school SPECIAL<lb/>
Hair Cuts - reg. $7.00<lb/>
thru Sept. 4, 1982 - $5.00<lb/>
Call for Ella, Paula or Kim<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center ?<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Phone - 756-2950 or 756-4042<lb/>
'fl,tJJJjrJJJrJJJ177J7JffffIMJ7Z<lb/>
I nLrko.MMUrvMn W. "k "? i A d<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
j<lb/>
Photographers Needed<lb/>
Apply before Sept. 1 st w ith<lb/>
Media RonrH ;p<lb/>
flooi . i  .icatioiii Bunding.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Must have:<lb/>
Phone &amp; Car<lb/>
I B &amp; W Darkroom Experience<lb/>
f f,T 4L M Located i mile past<lb/>
JF lr 1 -?ff Hastings f-ord on<lb/>
" 1 . 1 W0 10th St. extension<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday,<lb/>
and Wednesday<lb/>
Ocean Perch Nuggets<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Hamburger Steak<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Beef Tips$2.99<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato, Tossed Salad<lb/>
may be substituted for Slaw359 extra<lb/>
SOI ?.S?3t. Across from<lb/>
GorrA Dorm<lb/>
Gei Afuamtd<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 31. 192<lb/>
s<lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
9<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
Si<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
s<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
Rep Faces Prison Term<lb/>
WINDSOR, N.C.<lb/>
API! State Rep. G.<lb/>
Ronald Taylor faces a<lb/>
possible prison term of<lb/>
up lo 40 years after<lb/>
pleading guilty to con-<lb/>
spiracy and willful bur-<lb/>
ning in a fire that<lb/>
destroyed three<lb/>
warehouses owned by<lb/>
another lawmaker.<lb/>
Taylor, D-Bladen,<lb/>
pleaded guilty to the<lb/>
charges Monday and<lb/>
agreed to halt his re-<lb/>
election bid. On the<lb/>
same da, another man<lb/>
was indicted on nine<lb/>
counts of conspiracy<lb/>
and vMllful burning in<lb/>
the destruction o the<lb/>
warehouses.<lb/>
Howard F. Waits.<lb/>
48, was indicted on six<lb/>
counts of conspiracy to<lb/>
burn and three counts<lb/>
ol willful burning in the<lb/>
April 23 fire at<lb/>
warehouses owned by<lb/>
state Sen. J.J. "Monk"<lb/>
Harrington, D-Bertie.<lb/>
Bond was set at<lb/>
$75,000.<lb/>
Taylor also faces a<lb/>
federal bribery charge<lb/>
in connection with an<lb/>
FBI investigation in<lb/>
Columbus County.<lb/>
Watts was charged with<lb/>
aiding and abetting in<lb/>
that bribe.<lb/>
Sentencing for<lb/>
Taylor, who pleaded<lb/>
guilty to one count of<lb/>
conspiracy and one<lb/>
count o( willful burn-<lb/>
ing, was delayed until<lb/>
the next term o' Bertie<lb/>
County Superior<lb/>
Court, scheduled to<lb/>
start Oct. 25. He faces<lb/>
a mavimum prison<lb/>
term of 40 years.<lb/>
Prosecutors claimed<lb/>
la!or conspired with<lb/>
B1 a d e n Counts<lb/>
residents Graham<lb/>
Franklin Bridgers and<lb/>
Sandy White Jr. to<lb/>
burn three warehouses<lb/>
owned by Harrington.<lb/>
Taylor heads a farm<lb/>
machinery business<lb/>
that has been involved<lb/>
in legal battles with a<lb/>
company owned by<lb/>
Harrington over<lb/>
patents for tobacco-<lb/>
harvesting equipment.<lb/>
In agreeing to delay<lb/>
sentencing, Fountain<lb/>
told Allen Bailey,<lb/>
Taylor's attorney, he<lb/>
expected Taylor to<lb/>
resign his House seat<lb/>
and drop his re-election<lb/>
bid. Taylor won<lb/>
nomination for a<lb/>
fourth term in the June<lb/>
29 Democratic<lb/>
primary.<lb/>
"I can assure you<lb/>
that this matter has<lb/>
been given considera-<lb/>
tion and that it will oc-<lb/>
cur Bailey told Foun-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
Incumbent Rep. Edd<lb/>
Nye, D-Bladen, lost out<lb/>
in a three-way race for<lb/>
two legislative seats in<lb/>
the June primary. Nye<lb/>
said he will seek the<lb/>
ballot position vacated<lb/>
by Taylor.<lb/>
A federal grand jury<lb/>
indicted Taylor last<lb/>
month on a charge of<lb/>
taking a $1,500 bribe in<lb/>
exchange for his help in<lb/>
getting a liquor license<lb/>
issued in the town of<lb/>
Bolton. The indictment<lb/>
was part of an FBI pro-<lb/>
be of corruption and<lb/>
other crime in Colum-<lb/>
bus County.<lb/>
Special prosecutor<lb/>
Lester Chalmers told<lb/>
Superior Court Judge<lb/>
George M. Fountain<lb/>
three $100 bills given to<lb/>
Taylor by undercover<lb/>
agents investigating the<lb/>
Columbus County case<lb/>
were recovered from<lb/>
Bridgers, who has<lb/>
pleaded guilty to<lb/>
charges of conspiracy<lb/>
and willful burning of a<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Watts also was in-<lb/>
dicted with Taylor in<lb/>
the federal bribery in-<lb/>
dictment. That indict-<lb/>
ment charged Watts<lb/>
traveled from Colum-<lb/>
bus County to Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, S.C to receive<lb/>
a $1,500 bribe from<lb/>
FBI undercover agents.<lb/>
The indictment said<lb/>
Watts, described by a<lb/>
prosecutor as a<lb/>
"strong-arm man<lb/>
aided and abetted<lb/>
Taylor in the alleged<lb/>
bribe-taking. Bond was<lb/>
set at $10,000 for Watts<lb/>
on that charge.<lb/>
Henderson Acts<lb/>
Within Rules<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
general does not work<lb/>
the SGA presi-<lb/>
s a solid work-<lb/>
u mship bei<lb/>
wee !i the two isn't<lb/>
ssary anyway<lb/>
Hoopei c mid not be<lb/>
?vd for comment,<lb/>
ma qualified<lb/>
iree, I he I astaroli-<lb/>
earned thai he<lb/>
gch sen for<lb/>
the p 'He feh like<lb/>
? e . tabbed in the<lb/>
Ht - ampaigned<lb/>
Eric,1 said the<lb/>
soui .<lb/>
H oper also claimed<lb/>
al Henderson said he<lb/>
"wasn't loyal enough"<lb/>
added the source<lb/>
"I'm not here to<lb/>
judge personalities<lb/>
d Henderson. "He's<lb/>
? oper) supposed to<lb/>
iideni eader and<lb/>
lidi ihow up for a<lb/>
trial during the spr-<lb/>
ing " Hei dei in felt<lb/>
thai H?oper's no show<lb/>
vas ample reason not<lb/>
to appoint him.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Mallory, everything<lb/>
Henderson has done<lb/>
has been above board.<lb/>
"That's his prerogative<lb/>
as president. This is not<lb/>
the first time this has<lb/>
happened said<lb/>
Mallory.<lb/>
We're not going to<lb/>
plav games. The<lb/>
judicial process is big-<lb/>
ger than L;nc Hender-<lb/>
son or Dean Mallory<lb/>
added Mallory. "We<lb/>
won't make a farce of<lb/>
this process He in-<lb/>
dicated there is a limit<lb/>
to how many rejections<lb/>
an SGA president can<lb/>
make.<lb/>
The "blue ribbon"<lb/>
selection committee<lb/>
will be reconvening this<lb/>
Thrusday at 2 p.m. in<lb/>
the W hichard building.<lb/>
Mallory invites all<lb/>
students interested in<lb/>
interviewing to come<lb/>
bv. "We'd like to get a<lb/>
whole loi of can-<lb/>
didates said Mallory.<lb/>
"Competition is the<lb/>
spice oi lite<lb/>
Henderson says that<lb/>
he has no personal<lb/>
preference as to the<lb/>
final choice he will<lb/>
make. He also says that<lb/>
he harbors no bad feel-<lb/>
ing for HoopeT or I it-<lb/>
tie. Recently, he even<lb/>
appointed Little to the<lb/>
committee which will<lb/>
be rewriting the elec-<lb/>
tion rules, he said.<lb/>
WomenOrganize<lb/>
Continued From Page I<lb/>
I nited States Constitu<lb/>
tion. "We want to be<lb/>
ready when the Equal.<lb/>
Rights Amendment<lb/>
comes back to the<lb/>
states said Gronert.<lb/>
Gronert also said<lb/>
that local women's<lb/>
rights groups in Green-<lb/>
ville would soon be<lb/>
making an announce-<lb/>
ment to the public of a<lb/>
special nature in their<lb/>
drive for womens<lb/>
equality.<lb/>
Other state races<lb/>
which will be heavily<lb/>
targeted by the<lb/>
NOW PAC program<lb/>
include those in Il-<lb/>
linois, Florida,<lb/>
Missouri, and possibly<lb/>
Nebraska.<lb/>
Their primary pro-<lb/>
ject will be an effort to<lb/>
defeat Illinois governor<lb/>
James Thompson.<lb/>
Thompson, a<lb/>
republican, particularly<lb/>
angered ERA sup-<lb/>
porters by his refusal to<lb/>
meet their demands<lb/>
during the often bitter<lb/>
struggle there.<lb/>
Smeal said that an<lb/>
"ERA supporters"<lb/>
PAC group would be<lb/>
forming a base of sup-<lb/>
port for Thompson's<lb/>
challenger, Democrat<lb/>
Adlai Stevenson. The<lb/>
Illinois races will be<lb/>
funded with over<lb/>
$100,000 from NOW,<lb/>
Smeal added.<lb/>
Although the new<lb/>
poliical action commit-<lb/>
tees have not ruled out<lb/>
their support of<lb/>
Republican candidates,<lb/>
both Smeal and<lb/>
Gronert were not hap-<lb/>
py with most<lb/>
Republican candidates.<lb/>
"Republicans by and<lb/>
large have deserted<lb/>
us concluded Smeal.<lb/>
Shuttle Begins<lb/>
Beginning on Sept. 7,<lb/>
the SGA Transit will<lb/>
begin a shuttle service<lb/>
between Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and the<lb/>
ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
The shuttle will<lb/>
operate through Oct.<lb/>
28, at which time a<lb/>
decision will be made<lb/>
whether to continue the<lb/>
service, depending on<lb/>
the amount of student<lb/>
use during the two-<lb/>
month trial period.<lb/>
Therefore, insufficient<lb/>
use by students will ter<lb/>
minate the shuttle ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
Transportation will<lb/>
run between 3 p.m. and<lb/>
9:30 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Thursday, and<lb/>
there will be no service<lb/>
on school holidays.<lb/>
The shuttle will<lb/>
depart Mendenhall on<lb/>
the hour and half hour,<lb/>
with the final run at 9<lb/>
p.m. and will leave<lb/>
from the School of<lb/>
Medicine at quarter<lb/>
past and quarter till the<lb/>
hour through 9:15 p.m.<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
The East Carolinian Requests<lb/>
Student Support For It's New<lb/>
Health Column, Any Questions<lb/>
Concerning Health Will Be<lb/>
Answered By A Qualified Nurse.<lb/>
Direct Questions To News Desk.<lb/>
INTRODUCING . . .<lb/>
ONE DAY EYEGLASS<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Now, on most single vision plastic lenses<lb/>
we can provide you with the finished pro-<lb/>
duct in 24 hours. Affordable fees, quick,<lb/>
accurate service. Seeing is Believing.<lb/>
DR. PETER W. HOLLIS<lb/>
?Y?CAftEC?HT?K<lb/>
OF GR??NVllL? P A<lb/>
TIPTON ANNEX. 228 GREENVILLE BLVD<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses<lb/>
Must Be Presented At Time Of Order<lb/>
Other Discounts Do Not Apply<lb/>
C<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
Paid for Diamonds and Gold<lb/>
FLOYD G.<lb/>
ROBINSON<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
407 Evans Mall<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
JO SPARROW MIKE ROBINSON<lb/>
BUSINESS - 758-2452<lb/>
INDEPENDENT JEWELERS<lb/>
9no?)06O06W?-<lb/>
Not all clinics are the same.<lb/>
ABORTION is a difficult decision that's<lb/>
made easier by the women of the Fleming<lb/>
Center. Counselors are available day and<lb/>
night to support and understand you. Com-<lb/>
fort, safety, privacy, and a friendly staff . .<lb/>
that's what the Fleming Center is all about.<lb/>
insurance accepted ree pregnancv telling<lb/>
All inclusive fees Salurrta appointments<lb/>
Up to 18 weeks er e?rl pregnano tests<lb/>
Call 781-5550 day or night.<lb/>
The Fleming Center makes the difference.<lb/>
IftftflOOOO<lb/>
ITALIAN N1TE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
OPEN : 6-11 Sun. thru Thurs.<lb/>
6-12 Fri.&amp; Sat.<lb/>
pttflflOOftflftOOOOOCOOOd<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SPAGHETTI!<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
Plus Garlic Bread CQQ<lb/>
o<lb/>
14<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Served  " H mematfe Biscuit<lb/>
, ? . ? ?? ?' D ??. -<lb/>
Sun Gravy"<lb/>
22"<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
iV<lb/>
EXPIRES 9'6 82<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
loflOoooonnoooooo-Q-o-o-??<lb/>
I<lb/>
? naaaaaaaaaaaaaoao-gi<lb/>
Country f<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
2 FOR$1<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
expires ? 6 12<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
nnooooOoAnflflflnUo-eTTrg<lb/>
o'nnnooonnnnnoououuu'cJ<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
FOR$1<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
umnftm<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
29<lb/>
nnnflflflminnflHuoflura<lb/>
KflooooooooooOoftooOOO<lb/>
.??<lb/>
I v<lb/>
?<lb/>
14<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Se'vecl 'tr Homemade Biscuit<lb/>
and you' choice ol Out) Rice"<lb/>
Caiuo Pintos" Of Caiui Gravy-<lb/>
2$2"<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
EXPIRES9 612<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
paaaaaaaaaaaaaoaPTroTi<lb/>
nnnnnocoonoooOUUOffd<lb/>
Country<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
2 FOR$1<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
V<lb/>
txmfswtm<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
nnnnnflflUonnnnHBHUtW<lb/>
pflflflpoooftaflflfluouuuou<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
FOR!<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
?miJH?i<lb/>
UMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
Sn-nnaQQonnnPflOBBPBi<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Famous Chicken n Biscuits<lb/>
SER VING<lb/>
BISCUITS<lb/>
ALL DA Y<lb/>
911 S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
??8L?JLAJe??? ??"?? ?- ???" ,<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0004"/><lb/>
(Wr ?a0t (Ear0ltnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, owm<lb/>
Mike Hughes, &amp;e<lb/>
WAVERI V MERRITT. hror?f Mwr?M?<lb/>
KOHl Rl RlX'KS, Buunas Manaxrr<lb/>
Phil I IP MANESS. rt Mtar<lb/>
Chris lichok, nnvismw mnmm<lb/>
JONI GUTHRIE, ,vhi,loUf??.r<lb/>
Cindy Pieasants, ?,&amp;???<lb/>
Ernest Conner,  ,???<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER, tmmmmmtmi UHm<lb/>
Cornet i Medlock, ? ti?<lb/>
Mike Davis, ??,?,??? ???<lb/>
August 31, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Textbooks<lb/>
Rising Costs Outrageous<lb/>
We all knew college was going to<lb/>
be expensive long before we ever got<lb/>
here. That came as no surprise ?<lb/>
or, at least, it shouldn't have.<lb/>
But something that does come as<lb/>
a surprise ? actually, more like a<lb/>
shock ? is the outrageous prices be-<lb/>
ing charged for textbooks and other<lb/>
class materials. This year, for exam-<lb/>
ple, full time students are finding it<lb/>
next to impossible to exit the<lb/>
bookstore without spending at least<lb/>
$100. Some bills total as high as<lb/>
$150.<lb/>
It's nothing to spend $25 to $35<lb/>
on just one class. In fact, most<lb/>
larger textbooks cost that much by<lb/>
themselves. Still, many classes<lb/>
"require" two or three smaller texts<lb/>
as parallel reading, references, etc.<lb/>
And each of these may be $5 to $10<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
Granted, the cost of a college<lb/>
education is exorbitant, and none of<lb/>
us came to Greenville expecting to<lb/>
iive money. But likewise, it's pretty<lb/>
safe to say that none of us came<lb/>
here expecting to pay ridiculous<lb/>
sums for textbooks.<lb/>
And whatever happened to last<lb/>
year's SGA campaign promises of a<lb/>
university-wide system of book ren-<lb/>
lal? It certainly seemed like a great<lb/>
idea last year. Was Eric Henderson<lb/>
serious? Was it merely a convenient<lb/>
ploy to attract a few more votes?<lb/>
Who knows?<lb/>
Perhaps the rising cost of books<lb/>
and supplies doesn't concern<lb/>
everyone. For some students, the<lb/>
prices may not have increased<lb/>
substantially to call for outrage. But<lb/>
for most of us, the cost of materials<lb/>
has escalated far too much already.<lb/>
For instance, a recent, informal<lb/>
mini-study of the textbook re-<lb/>
quirements used for several classes<lb/>
on campus indicated an average in-<lb/>
crease of approximately $5 per class<lb/>
from two years ago.<lb/>
In other words, the books re-<lb/>
quired for many courses will cost<lb/>
you about $5 more than that class'<lb/>
materials did in August 1980.<lb/>
Multiply that times five classes.<lb/>
Sure, several courses now require<lb/>
additional texts, but most have<lb/>
simply increased that much in price.<lb/>
Maybe that's not so bad, until you<lb/>
consider what you get back at the<lb/>
end of the semester ? that is, if you<lb/>
can sell your books back. A good<lb/>
deal of the time, you can't. And<lb/>
sadly, there just isn't much use for a<lb/>
$30 collection of single-owner<lb/>
philosophy-of-science textbooks<lb/>
once the class is over. (Some of us<lb/>
couldn't find much use for them<lb/>
while the class was in session.)<lb/>
It is difficult to pin the blame on<lb/>
any one party in particular. Higher<lb/>
prices are more the result of a sort<lb/>
of chain reaction.<lb/>
Textbook authors revise their edi-<lb/>
tions about every-other year to keep<lb/>
up with advances, changes and the<lb/>
like. Publishers take advantage of<lb/>
nationwide demand and raise the<lb/>
bulk costs to individual distributors,<lb/>
like the college bookstore. (Printing<lb/>
costs have, indeed, risen, but not<lb/>
sufficiently to justify the increase in<lb/>
book costs.) And, in turn, the cam-<lb/>
pus bookstore raises the cost to in-<lb/>
dividual purchasers (i.e poor col-<lb/>
lege students).<lb/>
And the campus dilemma is set.<lb/>
Teachers and professors ?<lb/>
although probably with absence of<lb/>
malice ? adhere strongly to the<lb/>
publishers' edition changes, forcing<lb/>
said students to buy new books<lb/>
every-other year or so. But, then<lb/>
again, instructors have a duty to<lb/>
"keep up" with the trends and ad-<lb/>
vances in education ? a duty to us,<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
Still, it is conceivable that<lb/>
teachers could try to economize for<lb/>
the benefit of students by planning<lb/>
course structures and schedules in<lb/>
advance. Students have no qualms<lb/>
buying the necessary books and sup-<lb/>
plies for their classes. But nothing is<lb/>
more frustrating than dishing out 25<lb/>
bucks for a text which gets used on-<lb/>
ly once or twice all semester.<lb/>
Indeed, college does cost a lot ?<lb/>
a bundle to run and an arm-and-a-<lb/>
leg to attend. But textbook buying<lb/>
? of all things ? is (or should be) a<lb/>
controllable factor in the total cost<lb/>
of higher education. Unfortunately,<lb/>
we at ECU have yet to see that con-<lb/>
trol in practice.<lb/>
Dear Mom and Dad,<lb/>
I really wanted to write sooner,<lb/>
but this first week of school has<lb/>
been grueling indeed<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
Judge Gives 'Vindictive' Sentence<lb/>
?"Campus Forum"<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
"Perhaps the most fundamental objec-<lb/>
tion to draft registration is moral. Only in<lb/>
the most severe national emergency does a<lb/>
government have a claim to the mandatory<lb/>
service oj its young people. In any other<lb/>
time, a draft or drajt registration destroys<lb/>
the very values that our society is commit-<lb/>
ted to dejending. "<lb/>
The above is a quote from Ronald<lb/>
Reagan during his 1980 presidential cam-<lb/>
paign. The convictions last week in federal<lb/>
court of Enten Eller and Benjamin H.<lb/>
Sasway for refusal to register are indicative<lb/>
of Reagan's continued sellout of the<lb/>
American people. Another "promise" has<lb/>
gone unkept.<lb/>
Registration is a bad idea; a draft is a<lb/>
bad idea; and what they lead to ? war ?<lb/>
is also a bad idea.<lb/>
Approximately one million American<lb/>
men have opted for refusal ? the Supreme<lb/>
Court "refused" all women from involun-<lb/>
tary service ? and now Eller and Sasway<lb/>
have their heads on the justice depart-<lb/>
ment's chopping block, while millions of<lb/>
others will never have to face prosecution.<lb/>
These types of "selectivity" are<lb/>
descriminatory and unconstitutional, and<lb/>
furthermore, they weaken the patriotic en-<lb/>
thusiasm of our youth ? all this at a<lb/>
tremendous monetary cost. The tab for<lb/>
registration is high, and the subsequent<lb/>
prosecution of resisters will cost U.S. tax-<lb/>
payers milions of dollars more.<lb/>
Eller and Sasway have both cited their<lb/>
moral beliefs as the reason for refusing to<lb/>
register. Both have openly and honestly<lb/>
documented their positions with the justice<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"It's something I do with a great deal of<lb/>
sadness said Eller, a Christian opposed<lb/>
to military service. "The reason I made<lb/>
this decision and maintain it is simply that<lb/>
I'm trying to be faithful to God<lb/>
Sasway is also morally opposed to<lb/>
military service. In 1980, he wrote a letter<lb/>
to President Carter saying that resumption<lb/>
of registration and a draft could lead the<lb/>
United States into another Vietnam-like<lb/>
conflict.<lb/>
Sasway's fears are legitimate. I have<lb/>
always believed that if you give a military<lb/>
general a bunch of bodies, he'll find some<lb/>
way to use them. Remember, when there<lb/>
isn't a war going on, the military is fun-<lb/>
damentally unemplod. In other words,<lb/>
they're searching for work. The end of<lb/>
their search may bring on the deaths of our<lb/>
sons ? possibly us all.<lb/>
The harshness exhibited by Federal<lb/>
District Judge Gordon Thompson in his<lb/>
refusal to release Sasway pending his Oc-<lb/>
tober sentencing adds further to the vindic-<lb/>
tiveness and selectivity of this dangerous<lb/>
law.<lb/>
Thompson jailed Sasway, without bail,<lb/>
because he believed Sasway might decide<lb/>
to flee to Canada to avoid a jail sentence.<lb/>
Thompson disregarded the fact that<lb/>
Sasway has no prior criminal record.<lb/>
Sasway is on record (from an interview<lb/>
he gave in July) that he would not flee, that<lb/>
he personally considered such actions as<lb/>
"selfish<lb/>
What basis did Thompson have for not<lb/>
believing him? Obviously, Sasway is will-<lb/>
ing to accept the consequences of his ac-<lb/>
tions; he has been up-front and open from<lb/>
the beginning.<lb/>
"He has said he wouldn't (flee), but the<lb/>
(July) statement indicated that he knows<lb/>
about it Thompson said.<lb/>
How absurd! Anvone. faced with the<lb/>
prospect of having his head blown off in a<lb/>
war, certainly knows that his options in-<lb/>
clude going to Canada Whv didn't Saswav<lb/>
leave long ago if this was his intention1<lb/>
Because he wouldn't cop-out, because he<lb/>
wanted to help change a bad law. because<lb/>
he is a man of conscience who is willing to<lb/>
sacrifice his own freedom1, and comforts<lb/>
for a higher moral value.<lb/>
Ben Sasway wouldn't compromise<lb/>
Enten Eller wouldn't compromise. In to-<lb/>
day's society, it's nice to see that the<lb/>
United States of America still has citizens<lb/>
who believe in principles and liberties<lb/>
Resorting to war as a solution to interna-<lb/>
tional conflict is no longer (and never a<lb/>
a viable option.<lb/>
In our nuclear-armed world, anytime we<lb/>
opt for violent solutions to our probJenis,<lb/>
we risk Armageddon.<lb/>
Ben Sasway and Enton Eller know <lb/>
it's time we all did. We should ail recai<lb/>
words of pacifist A.J. Muste: "There <lb/>
way to peace ? peace is the wav "<lb/>
Draft Registration: The Way To Equality?<lb/>
Resisters Using 'Understandable But Selfish Reasons'<lb/>
The recent trials of young men refus-<lb/>
ing to register with the Selective Service<lb/>
have again brought the issues of the<lb/>
draft and registration to our attention.<lb/>
A protest even took place recently in<lb/>
Greenville. Yet, I question the patent ex-<lb/>
cuses that most resisters give: moral,<lb/>
religious and political objections to war<lb/>
and the American institutions for wag-<lb/>
ing war. Certainly some young men are<lb/>
sincere in their beliefs, but let's be<lb/>
honest. Those who are crying the loudest<lb/>
are, for the most part, white and middle-<lb/>
or upper-class, and don't want to serve<lb/>
for understandable but selfish reasons.<lb/>
It's a drag being in the Army when you<lb/>
can spend your time in college. Don't<lb/>
draft me! Let the poor kid who can't<lb/>
find a job volunteer. Put the black guy<lb/>
in combat boots; I'd rather party. This is<lb/>
the truth hidden in the hearts of most<lb/>
resisters and their parents who support<lb/>
them. They have no qualms about let-<lb/>
ting the poor, the minorities and the<lb/>
disadvantaged defend America. It mat-<lb/>
ters little to them that although blacks<lb/>
account for about 11 percent of this<lb/>
country's population, they make up<lb/>
about 40 percent of her army.<lb/>
Whether it was right or wrong, the<lb/>
draft insured that all segments of<lb/>
American society shared equally in her<lb/>
defense. Today's volunteer force<lb/>
amounts to little more than the repug-<lb/>
nant practice, common in the first half<lb/>
of the 19th century, of paying another to<lb/>
serve in your stead.<lb/>
Citizen armies have been the<lb/>
trademark of democracies from<lb/>
Classical Greece to Israel today. It was<lb/>
the citizens of Athens who met the Per-<lb/>
sians on the beach at Marathon, not<lb/>
their slaves. And whether you like Israel<lb/>
or not, you must admire her citizen army<lb/>
that has repeatedly defended her. A ma-<lb/>
jor difference between the Roman<lb/>
Republic and the Roman Empire was<lb/>
that the former's armies were comprised<lb/>
of Roman citizen soldiers, and the tat-<lb/>
ter's armies were professional soldiers<lb/>
hired from provinces outside Italy.<lb/>
America's professional volunteer forces<lb/>
are starting to look more and more like<lb/>
those mercenaries of empirial Rome.<lb/>
So look at the faces, clothes and ex-<lb/>
pensive lawyers of America's resisters.<lb/>
How many are poor, black, Samoan,<lb/>
Puerto Rican, Hispanic or Filipino?<lb/>
Then tour a Navy ship, or visit an Army<lb/>
base; look at the faces of the soldiers<lb/>
and sailors.<lb/>
Immoral or not, the military draft was<lb/>
about the only real equality the nation<lb/>
has ever had.<lb/>
Gordon I pock<lb/>
Senior, English<lb/>
Registration Laws<lb/>
I am worried about our country<lb/>
because of some recent events about<lb/>
some young men who are threatening to<lb/>
go to prison rather than register for the<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
We must have laws and laws that men<lb/>
obey and respect, or our whole world<lb/>
will really turn into a jungle. However, I<lb/>
understand why a young person might<lb/>
want to be forced into the military ser-<lb/>
vice. Our military has a bad record of<lb/>
mistreating young people.<lb/>
I read some criticism of the Army<lb/>
from a communist colonel who defected<lb/>
to our side in the Korean war. He said<lb/>
that our Army encourages cheap<lb/>
politicking. I think that good com-<lb/>
manders see to it that the different ranks<lb/>
don't mingle together. If 1 am up for a<lb/>
promotion, and he is also up, but he is<lb/>
going over to the boss' house for dinner<lb/>
every night or taking the boss out for a<lb/>
beer, then he might jus' get promoted<lb/>
before I do.<lb/>
I don't want to be part of a war<lb/>
machine that drops bombs just to get rid<lb/>
of bombs and not hit military targets.<lb/>
This our Air Force did in Germany and<lb/>
probably elsewhere.<lb/>
No, the American people can't elect<lb/>
leaders who try to make fools of our<lb/>
young people and expect our laws to be<lb/>
respected.<lb/>
There should be some way that poor<lb/>
living conditions, such as loud music or<lb/>
a drunk barracks companion could be<lb/>
reported quietly without bringing atten-<lb/>
tion to the person making the report.<lb/>
Commanders who fail to take action<lb/>
against an enemy who is preparing an at-<lb/>
tack against the U.S. should be shot<lb/>
Only then should we prosecute a man<lb/>
for failing to report for the draft<lb/>
Bill Bloomer<lb/>
218 Esplanade St.<lb/>
Charlotte, NC 2821?<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 Jovner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfsj. Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. AH let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks wilt be permitted.<lb/>
Al<lb/>
S'<lb/>
7<lb/>
<lb/>
? i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0005"/><lb/>
I HI EAS1 c AROl 1MAN AUtU S ?l. 1982 $<lb/>
J<lb/>
.<lb/>
i u c<lb/>
be<lb/>
?n a<lb/>
ne ?e<lb/>
1 IdTlS,<lb/>
.1 the<lb/>
s no<lb/>
p<lb/>
?<lb/>
le a man<lb/>
K" letters<lb/>
Mail or<lb/>
Hd South<lb/>
irar<lb/>
ail letters<lb/>
ijor and<lb/>
number<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
n pages.<lb/>
All let-<lb/>
brevity,<lb/>
honal at-<lb/>
Scholarship Established<lb/>
H Kl News Bureau<lb/>
Because of a father's<lb/>
dedication io formal<lb/>
schooling and devotion<lb/>
to his alma mater,<lb/>
students in the School<lb/>
v?t 1 ducation at Easi<lb/>
(. atoUna I niversit)<lb/>
will benefit in years to<lb/>
come from annual<lb/>
scholarships in his<lb/>
name.<lb/>
1 he famih ol the late<lb/>
J Worth Carter of<lb/>
Fayetteville has given<lb/>
$10,000 to establish, a<lb/>
memorial at ECU to be<lb/>
known as the J . orth<lb/>
Carter Scholarship in<lb/>
Education Fund.<lb/>
"It is something he<lb/>
would have wanted,<lb/>
something he talked<lb/>
about and intended to<lb/>
do,1' Mis Jessie Carter<lb/>
said ot her husband,<lb/>
who was a school prin-<lb/>
i. pal in Cumberland<lb/>
( ounty, N.C. . tor 2S<lb/>
 ears.<lb/>
"He felt so strongly<lb/>
about education and<lb/>
was so loyal to 1 as!<lb/>
Carolina, we all knew it<lb/>
was the right thing to<lb/>
do said .1 Worth<lb/>
Carter Jr. of<lb/>
Goldsboro, one ot<lb/>
c arter's two sons who<lb/>
are ECU graduates.<lb/>
 daughter.<lb/>
Char I tte Carter ot<lb/>
Favette !l!e. is a senioi<lb/>
a: ECU.<lb/>
"He didn't want his<lb/>
tildren to go to school<lb/>
any place else " said his<lb/>
net son. Donald C.<lb/>
i a: ter of Greenville.<lb/>
Both sons hold<lb/>
master's decrees<lb/>
in<lb/>
business administration<lb/>
from ECl .<lb/>
Carter died last No.<lb/>
3 at the age ot 59. Born<lb/>
 Edgecombe Count).<lb/>
?a; Rock Mount.<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
he received<lb/>
tu-<lb/>
rn aster's degree in<lb/>
education administra-<lb/>
tion a' East Carolina in<lb/>
1952. Aftei tour years<lb/>
in the Sampson Coun-<lb/>
ty's school sstem he<lb/>
ime principal a<lb/>
tovei b lenientar<lb/>
School in Cumberland<lb/>
Count) in 1953 and<lb/>
from 195b until his<lb/>
retirement in 1980 was<lb/>
principal oi William H.<lb/>
Owen Elementary near<lb/>
Fayette tile.<lb/>
He had served as<lb/>
district president ot the<lb/>
N.C. Association oi'<lb/>
Educators in the 197()<lb/>
and as a delegate to the<lb/>
national convention.<lb/>
He was active in prin-<lb/>
cipals' organizations<lb/>
and serv ed on<lb/>
legislative committees<lb/>
of the NCAE.<lb/>
I he family met with<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John<lb/>
M. How ell. Dr.<lb/>
Richard Warner, dean<lb/>
of the School ot Educa-<lb/>
tion, and Di . F.<lb/>
Douglas Moore, vice<lb/>
chancellor of Institu-<lb/>
tional Advancement<lb/>
and Planning, to pre-<lb/>
sent funds for the<lb/>
memorial. In addition,<lb/>
thev presented several<lb/>
hundred dollars in con-<lb/>
tributions from<lb/>
v arter's friends, col-<lb/>
leagues and co-workers<lb/>
who had heard ot the<lb/>
scholarship plans.<lb/>
There will be<lb/>
mote Mis (alter<lb/>
promised Dr. Howell.<lb/>
1 he funds vv 111<lb/>
establish a corpus from<lb/>
w h ic h scholarshi p<lb/>
awards will be made<lb/>
from interest earnings,<lb/>
beginning this year, to<lb/>
an undergraduatge stu-<lb/>
dent from Cumberland<lb/>
County w ho is a i ising<lb/>
junior or rising senioi<lb/>
in the School ol i dura-<lb/>
tion. Awards will be<lb/>
based on scholarship,<lb/>
need and citizenship.<lb/>
"We are delighted to<lb/>
have this memorial<lb/>
Howell said. "This is<lb/>
one thing we've always<lb/>
not had enough of <lb/>
student assistance pro-<lb/>
vided by private help.<lb/>
We are most grateful<lb/>
and inspired by this<lb/>
gift<lb/>
W ai net said I he<lb/>
scholarship memorial<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
. r gra Jei Rus ' X '<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
i , ? . lit aca ????? t ?? ?<lb/>
Kt-iw-Hr. h ?if m t- ? ' C . 1st<lb/>
will be regarded by<lb/>
faculty, students and<lb/>
future students "as the<lb/>
best kind of expression,<lb/>
from the wife and fami-<lb/>
ly of one whose love of<lb/>
education was deep and<lb/>
lasting He expressed<lb/>
thanks for "something<lb/>
we quite frankly don't<lb/>
often get in educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Moore added that<lb/>
ECU officials<lb/>
"recognize the overall<lb/>
impact oi' this gift, and<lb/>
the long range effect it<lb/>
will have on the univer-<lb/>
sitv and the reci-<lb/>
pients It is an exam-<lb/>
ple, he said, "of what<lb/>
we want to do<lb/>
university-wide<lb/>
through alumni and<lb/>
private gift support.<lb/>
The university wants<lb/>
to provide every area<lb/>
with a base of scholar-<lb/>
ship support, and place<lb/>
the awards where the<lb/>
people affected can<lb/>
make the decisions<lb/>
Moore said. In this<lb/>
case, the Carter<lb/>
memorial will have an<lb/>
impact upon education<lb/>
and an impact upon<lb/>
Cumberland County,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The first recipient of<lb/>
the J. Worth Carter<lb/>
Scholarship in Educa-<lb/>
tion will be selected<lb/>
next spring with the<lb/>
award for the school<lb/>
year 1983-1984. Each<lb/>
scholarship will be for<lb/>
one academic year and<lb/>
will be renewable,<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDCNT UNION<lb/>
UJIOUKUIU UMVHHin<lb/>
gfJpBffV Fach ot these advertised .terns 7 qu.red to be readily a.a.lable ?o? ???? A<lb/>
(luTOHSSlbeto,h'advefi,sed pr,ce ,n ach A&amp;p s,?" eicep spoc'V J<lb/>
VMMJlilPr m this ad,???<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT , SEPT 4, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE. N C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Gt eenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Welcome Back E. C. U.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
6iO Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Buy One ?<lb/>
Get One Free<lb/>
16 0Z. LOAF WHEAT<lb/>
Less<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
Buy One ?<lb/>
Get One Free<lb/>
DOLLY MADISON 8 PACK<lb/>
Cinnamon<lb/>
Rolls<lb/>
Buy One ?<lb/>
Get One Free<lb/>
12 GALLON CARTON<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
756-3023<lb/>
24HOURS<lb/>
Buy One ?<lb/>
Get One Free<lb/>
12 OZ. JAR SWEET<lb/>
Mt. Olive<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
Cubes<lb/>
TOWINC<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
sub smion<lb/>
K M STATION II HAS A<lb/>
VAMFTT OF OVEI 23<lb/>
SANDWICHES TO CHOOSE FIOM<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
19<lb/>
Ctn. of<lb/>
6<lb/>
12oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
2<lb/>
A&amp;P Chilled<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
12 gallon<lb/>
carton<lb/>
88 c<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 4??tt1?rmina1ions<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALLTOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800-321 0575<lb/>
Gl Camoullaqpd Faliques and<lb/>
T Shirts Sleepmq Bags<lb/>
Backpaos Campinq Equip<lb/>
mpnt Steel Toed Shoes<lb/>
D'shes and Over ?00 Different<lb/>
N- ?f. and Used Items Cowdo<lb/>
Boots J36 ?s<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
WE SEW<lb/>
LEATHER COATS<lb/>
Kk<lb/>
jf<lb/>
 e welcome returning<lb/>
Pirates &amp; Freshmen<lb/>
Fast delivery<lb/>
7 days a week.<lb/>
BEER COMING SOON<lb/>
One Block East<lb/>
of the Attic<lb/>
215 E.8th<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
? Video Games<lb/>
Open MonWed.<lb/>
10:30a.m. 11:00 p.m<lb/>
ThursSat.<lb/>
10:30a.ml :30 a.m.<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 noon-11 p.m.<lb/>
THEY OFFER A "COMPLETE<lb/>
MEAL ON A BUN AND<lb/>
AIE OPEN 7 DATS A WEEK<lb/>
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
25C<lb/>
off any half sub<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
50C<lb/>
off any whole sub<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Sirloin (? 2-)Q78<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
Bone<lb/>
In<lb/>
Expires Sept. 14, 1982.<lb/>
A4P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Sirloin Tips<lb/>
157<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Boneless Whole<lb/>
Cut Free!<lb/>
9 Lb. To 12 Lb.<lb/>
Avg. Wt. lb<lb/>
Meat Franks<lb/>
118<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
SEWM?<lb/>
r<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
t8&amp;<lb/>
SOUTH S<lb/>
ROCK NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
MORMAN QUEEN<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
Collecj Nite - Fre? Ad<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
iLodiet' Nitei<lb/>
FRI &amp; SAT<lb/>
NO VACANCY<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
? Robbin<lb/>
Thompson Band <lb/>
the<lb/>
upper<lb/>
level<lb/>
DINNlRSPtCIAlS<lb/>
EVERY DAY So clock til lOo clock<lb/>
Mondo. H ippy Hour 0C s<lb/>
"ij : 00 Spe ?ls<lb/>
Tuesday Pzza Buttp' $J 9 Ladies<lb/>
Nigr?<lb/>
Wednesaa Salad Bar Special All You<lb/>
Car Ea J2 15<lb/>
Thursday Soaghctti Special All You<lb/>
Can Eat S2 49 Champagne Jam Nine<lb/>
until One<lb/>
l-rida HaPP Hours 4 until 7 Jl 00<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Saturday Happy Hours 7 until 10<lb/>
Jl 00 Spec iais<lb/>
Sunday Lasagna Speoai All You<lb/>
Can Eat S2 W<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
PEDESTRIANS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HAWKINS<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
CRUISEMATICS<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
Glenn Phillips<lb/>
Band<lb/>
Happy Hour Every Day<lb/>
10C Draft<lb/>
The excitement is here<lb/>
six nights a week!<lb/>
t AST CAROLINA'S<lb/>
PARTY CINTER<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
CRAZY TUESDAY<lb/>
ICbeck club lot dittrrcnt<lb/>
??? o week<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
PONY NITE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF WEEK PARTY - 3-7, 9-11<lb/>
Check club to. bar tpme'tatt)<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
U.S. 1 EASTERN ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
White Potatoes<lb/>
-? CALIFORNIA<lb/>
RED CARDINAL ? BLACK EXOTIC<lb/>
OR THOMPSON GREEN<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
79<lb/>
TAB, SPRITE, MELLO YELLO<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
2 liter<lb/>
plastic<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
79<lb/>
Across "om U B E<lb/>
SUCotancrieSt Greenville<lb/>
7S? 0080 for TAKEOUT<lb/>
open Mon Sat - ? 30 a m I 00 a<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR DAILY<lb/>
4 p m .7 p m<lb/>
VIDEO. PINBALL<lb/>
FOOSBALL, BILLIARDS<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
PROTEUS<lb/>
(Progressive Jaix)<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Laughing Matter<lb/>
(Progressive Rock)<lb/>
nd<lb/>
trier<lb/>
poyScfc<lb/>
Looking for<lb/>
something to do<lb/>
after that last<lb/>
class?<lb/>
Come try the<lb/>
new place in town.<lb/>
Open everyday with<lb/>
a 4-8 Happy Hour.<lb/>
25C 12 Oz. Draft<lb/>
tffP'RQjP-<lb/>
109 E Sth SI IS l.6l<lb/>
(,()()!) Il1l<lb/>
DARTS<lb/>
Mon. at 8:00<lb/>
FREE PINBALL 3 4<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 4 7<lb/>
No open 7 days a week 3pm la<lb/>
largest selection<lb/>
of imports<lb/>
fcthtUr<lb/>
6ROG5<lb/>
IW Last MhSt<lb/>
7S2 S71I<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
5:30-8:00<lb/>
Not op?n to the<lb/>
General Public.<lb/>
K?s<lb/>
Af<lb/>
CPU<lb/>
 REALLY FINE<lb/>
Ann Page<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
Polar Bars<lb/>
6 il5'<lb/>
I J'67i<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
I?r<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. SEPT. 4 AT A4P J<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
<lb/>
Tomato<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
79?<lb/>
w<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT SEPT. 4 AT A4P.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
671 I<lb/>
?"CPU<lb/>
A&amp;P QUAL<lb/>
Chan<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON f<lb/>
J<lb/>
MIK<lb/>
Briquets<lb/>
AP<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 OROER<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT SEPT. 4 AT AAR<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0006"/><lb/>
HI i S1 . AKi -l INIAN<lb/>
At Gl SI 11, 1982<lb/>
Fired Worker Kills Man At IBM Plant Durham<lb/>
1<lb/>
Kl S E A RCH<lb/>
Rl NGI I PARK,<lb/>
 . (I Pi) ? A<lb/>
formei employee who<lb/>
had threatened co<lb/>
i kei - opened fire<lb/>
with an ? imattc rifle<lb/>
at an IBM plant Mon<lb/>
iy, killi on ma i<lb/>
and woundinj inother.<lb/>
. rid rtun : i ? himsell<lb/>
in the head with a den<lb/>
ngei foll ? i high-<lb/>
speed i hase luthorities<lb/>
 lid<lb/>
uthoi i t iden<lb/>
tified ? ht -???? pect as<lb/>
. onai d ' ? k'ho<lb/>
s. ? ? i i o i<lb/>
n b I in<lb/>
an u tad for<lb/>
mosi twi before<lb/>
he was dismissed -Vug<lb/>
i i i ? mutated<lb/>
hai i ' made<lb/>
;om<lb/>
other employees at the<lb/>
IBM facility said<lb/>
Dui ham County<lb/>
Sheriff's Department<lb/>
Capt. Tommy King.<lb/>
Sheriff William<lb/>
Allen said police of-<lb/>
ficers who stopped<lb/>
Avery at a roadblock<lb/>
did not realize he had<lb/>
wounded himself.<lb/>
"Evidently, when he<lb/>
stopped. he shot<lb/>
himself with a small<lb/>
derringer and threw it<lb/>
up under the seat<lb/>
Allen said. "My people<lb/>
said thev thought it was<lb/>
a bruise. They took him<lb/>
to the hospital and an<lb/>
 ra showed a bullet<lb/>
in his head. That's<lb/>
when he told them he<lb/>
shot himself<lb/>
The dead man was<lb/>
identified Ralph A.<lb/>
Glenn. 53, an<lb/>
"inventory control<lb/>
specialist" at the plant,<lb/>
which is a major IBM<lb/>
research facility that<lb/>
also produces com-<lb/>
ponents for computer<lb/>
keyboards. Glenn had<lb/>
been with IBM since<lb/>
1973.<lb/>
Glenn died during<lb/>
surgery at Duke<lb/>
Medical Center.<lb/>
Richard D. Martin,<lb/>
who was wounded in<lb/>
the chest, also under-<lb/>
went surgery at Duke.<lb/>
Three other people,<lb/>
reported to be suffering<lb/>
minor injuries such as<lb/>
cuts and scrapes, were<lb/>
treated<lb/>
Michael F. Pandich,<lb/>
director of communica-<lb/>
tions for the plant, said<lb/>
neither of the wounded<lb/>
men had been Avery's<lb/>
supervisor. He said he<lb/>
did not know if Avery<lb/>
knew either man.<lb/>
He declined to say<lb/>
why Avery had been<lb/>
dismissed.<lb/>
Pandich said Avery<lb/>
avoided security per-<lb/>
sonnel by entering<lb/>
through a loading dock<lb/>
of Building 205 in the<lb/>
IBM complex, which<lb/>
has 19 buildings on 521<lb/>
acres and employs<lb/>
5,500 people. Pandich<lb/>
said Avery, wearing<lb/>
military fatigues, fired<lb/>
some shots in that<lb/>
building but no one was<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
He then used a<lb/>
passageway to go to<lb/>
Building 201, where<lb/>
Martin and Glenn were<lb/>
hit. Pandich said Mar-<lb/>
tin was standing out-<lb/>
side his office when he<lb/>
was shot.<lb/>
He said he did not<lb/>
know where Glenn was.<lb/>
A warning was given<lb/>
over an intercom<lb/>
system to workers, tell-<lb/>
ing them to barricade<lb/>
themselves in their of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
"All of a sudden I<lb/>
heard a friend of mine<lb/>
running down the<lb/>
hallway saying a guy<lb/>
had come in with a<lb/>
weapon said 1MB<lb/>
employee Ron Coe<lb/>
said. "The guy went in-<lb/>
to the first aid room, 1<lb/>
heard two shots and he<lb/>
came out of first aid<lb/>
Pandich said no one<lb/>
was hit in the first aid<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Authorities said the<lb/>
man exchanged shots in<lb/>
a nearby parking lot<lb/>
with officers respon-<lb/>
ding to an emergency<lb/>
call. Shots by officers<lb/>
knocked out some of<lb/>
the windows of Avery's<lb/>
car.<lb/>
He then headed for<lb/>
Interstate 40 and a<lb/>
chase began ? with<lb/>
speeds up to 90 mph.<lb/>
Avery was arrested<lb/>
when he stopped at a<lb/>
roadblock on the out-<lb/>
skirts of Raleigh,<lb/>
authorities said.<lb/>
Horace Roberts, an<lb/>
IBM employee who was<lb/>
in the parking lot, said<lb/>
the gunman fired from<lb/>
his car as he was leav-<lb/>
ing the area.<lb/>
"I turned around<lb/>
and he started shooting<lb/>
out the window<lb/>
Roberts said. "I bit the<lb/>
dust<lb/>
Allen said an<lb/>
automatic rifle, a<lb/>
.22-caliber rifle and a<lb/>
derringer were in the<lb/>
car.<lb/>
Allen said Avery<lb/>
would be charged with<lb/>
murder.<lb/>
It was the second at<lb/>
tack at an IBM plant<lb/>
this year. In May, a<lb/>
former employee drove<lb/>
his car through glass<lb/>
doors into IBM offices<lb/>
in Bethesda, Md , and<lb/>
opened fire, killing<lb/>
three people and woun-<lb/>
ding eight others before<lb/>
surrendering 7 hours<lb/>
later<lb/>
During the seige, the<lb/>
suspect, Edward<lb/>
Mannn. 18, of Mit<lb/>
chelKille, Md told a<lb/>
reporter he staged the<lb/>
shooting to get even<lb/>
with the compan) He<lb/>
worked tor IBM<lb/>
about 13 years and quit<lb/>
after becoming involv<lb/>
ed in a workmen's .om<lb/>
pensation suit<lb/>
Mann is to stand trial<lb/>
Dec. 6<lb/>
Prison Inmate Dies<lb/>
RALEIGH. N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? A state Cor-<lb/>
rection Department of-<lb/>
ficial says an autopsy<lb/>
has been ordered to<lb/>
determine what caused<lb/>
the death of a 19-ycar-<lb/>
old Polk Youth Center<lb/>
inmate.<lb/>
Stuart Shadbolt said<lb/>
Charles E. Hargrove<lb/>
became ill about 3 p.m.<lb/>
Mondav and was taken<lb/>
to the center's first aid<lb/>
room, where he lost<lb/>
consciousness.<lb/>
Hargrove then was<lb/>
taken to the C entral<lb/>
Prison Hospital, w nere<lb/>
he died about 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
after efforts to revive<lb/>
him tailed.<lb/>
"I' apptrar<lb/>
been death by natu<lb/>
causes Shadbolt said<lb/>
"No Foul play<lb/>
suspected<lb/>
Shadh. Ii a :<lb/>
hodv a- sent I The<lb/>
North Cai<lb/>
Memorial Hospital<lb/>
Chapel Hill for an<lb/>
autopsv<lb/>
milmi ii ii ii i in i?<lb/>
ECU'S<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Center<lb/>
i C razy Tuesday<lb/>
ed Pony Nite<lb/>
rhurs College Nite<lb/>
End of Week Party"<lb/>
Best in Dance Music<lb/>
'Ladies7 Nite"<lb/>
V<lb/>
V ,<lb/>
417 Cotanche St. (Downtown)<lb/>
libfctUiljiMJiillMilMlitftfJjtfCMHifa<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Students!<lb/>
We align, full rotate<lb/>
&amp; computer balance.<lb/>
rru<lb/>
320 W.Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 756-5244<lb/>
pekwg aim<lb/>
Hair Salon Unisex<lb/>
With a large number of<lb/>
ECU students (male &amp; female) as<lb/>
our customers, we are looking forwar i<lb/>
to catering to our every hair care<lb/>
need. College students of today<lb/>
demand certain styles that H ?<lb/>
PEKING CLIPPER is accustomed to<lb/>
doing We stay open lues &amp; 1 hurs<lb/>
n.ghts till 9 30 p m<lb/>
I!<lb/>
Bv V<lb/>
v. ?<lb/>
31 :<lb/>
jte<lb/>
HWW?<lb/>
I r-i<lb/>
$1 OFF small 2-item pizza OR $2 OFF large 2-item pizza<lb/>
fftr expires 91582. yi??t Offer good only with this coupon.<lb/>
! WHEN IT COMES TOVpiZZA P.T.A. COMES TO YOU. '<lb/>
Pizza Transit<lb/>
FRESH HOT PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERED FREE<lb/>
(in service zone)<lb/>
nty, Inc<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
You know PTA delivers great<lb/>
hot pizza. But did you know that<lb/>
with every pizza PTA delivers cold<lb/>
Cokes too? Free 14-ouncers.<lb/>
It's the Meal Deal.<lb/>
Savings for real.<lb/>
When it comes to pizza,<lb/>
PTA comes to you.<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
i irnpujwuiwi ??u"u<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST SI, I9?2<lb/>
en<lb/>
4e<lb/>
tor<lb/>
m<lb/>
liv-<lb/>
m-<lb/>
rial<lb/>
ic<lb/>
It a<lb/>
in<lb/>
in<lb/>
Garden Growing Is Fun<lb/>
B MlkEHXMKK<lb/>
Muff n!?r<lb/>
The tune is i, jhl i<lb/>
students who want to<lb/>
start a tall garden at<lb/>
their apartments, 01<lb/>
perhaps even in a dorm<lb/>
room.<lb/>
One it ip to the<lb/>
grocery store will v1k<lb/>
tate the wisdom ot tr<lb/>
mg to grovk . me<lb/>
egeiables AnJ mosl<lb/>
gardeneiv would tell<lb/>
you that tending a<lb/>
garden is worth the ef-<lb/>
fort even when it<lb/>
doesn't work out to be<lb/>
the most economical<lb/>
way to eat egetabh.<lb/>
The taste of the<lb/>
home-grow n egetabl<lb/>
usually confirms the et<lb/>
fort and leads the<lb/>
gardener t. sweat thai<lb/>
next year's effort will<lb/>
be the best ever.<lb/>
According to Sam<lb/>
Uzell, the Pitt C ount<lb/>
Agricultural Extension<lb/>
agent, two things are ot<lb/>
vital importance ii<lb/>
planning a fall garden<lb/>
These are the control ot<lb/>
insects and an abihu to<lb/>
water youi plants.<lb/>
Greenville weathei<lb/>
tends to be er dr<lb/>
during the months ot<lb/>
September and Oct bet<lb/>
and most of the insect<lb/>
population seems to<lb/>
have achieved its full<lb/>
potential at this time.<lb/>
Many ot these insects<lb/>
just love to eat young,<lb/>
tender greens.<lb/>
Uzell recommended<lb/>
planting mustard<lb/>
greens, spinach, beets,<lb/>
carrots, broccoli, cab-<lb/>
bage, kale, kohl-rabi,<lb/>
radishes, rutabegas,<lb/>
and leaf lettuce (head<lb/>
lettuce would have a<lb/>
problem). Ine adven-<lb/>
turous gardener may<lb/>
also want to try snap<lb/>
beans (choose a 50-day<lb/>
variety), cucumbers,<lb/>
and squash. Uzell also<lb/>
recommended that<lb/>
gardeners use Wando<lb/>
peas if they want to try<lb/>
growing sweet peas.<lb/>
Ms. Jan Kitrell, a<lb/>
local greenhouse<lb/>
owner, also recom-<lb/>
mended onion sets,<lb/>
sugar snap peas, and<lb/>
turnips. She recom-<lb/>
mended that collards be<lb/>
planted from seedlings<lb/>
rather than from seed<lb/>
at this date.<lb/>
I he Organic Garden-<lb/>
ing inagaine recom-<lb/>
mends, in addition to<lb/>
the above suggestions,<lb/>
thai eardenerss can also<lb/>
try brussel sprouts,<lb/>
parsley, and parsnips at<lb/>
this time. Don't expect<lb/>
your parsnips until<lb/>
March.<lb/>
Gardeners who use<lb/>
chemical pesticides will<lb/>
most likely want to use<lb/>
either sevin dust or<lb/>
malathion, according<lb/>
to Uzell. If gardeners<lb/>
don't know which in-<lb/>
sect is chomping down<lb/>
on their young, tender<lb/>
plants, they can bring a<lb/>
specimen of the insect<lb/>
to the agricultural ex-<lb/>
tension office for iden-<lb/>
tification.<lb/>
Gardeners planting<lb/>
collards, cabbage, or<lb/>
others of the kole crops<lb/>
will have trouble with<lb/>
cabbage loopers, im-<lb/>
ported cabbage worm,<lb/>
diamondback moths,<lb/>
and harlequin bugs<lb/>
said Uzell.<lb/>
Organic gardeners may<lb/>
want to try bacillus<lb/>
thuringiensis, also<lb/>
known as dipel to fight<lb/>
these bugs.<lb/>
Another trick, accor-<lb/>
ding to Uzell, would be<lb/>
to find an infected<lb/>
worm (blackish in col-<lb/>
or) and put it in a cup<lb/>
of water and then into a<lb/>
blender, and then spray<lb/>
the mixture on your<lb/>
plants. Chances are<lb/>
pretty good that the<lb/>
other worms will catch<lb/>
the virus and die -<lb/>
hopefully.<lb/>
Students living in<lb/>
dorms will have a much<lb/>
more difficult time in<lb/>
getting a crop of food<lb/>
growing, but certain<lb/>
vegetables can be<lb/>
grown in containers.<lb/>
Containers should<lb/>
have good sterile pot-<lb/>
ting soil and good<lb/>
drainage, besides a<lb/>
location where they can<lb/>
get maximum sunlight<lb/>
while they are growing<lb/>
to maturity. "Leaf let-<lb/>
tuce doesn't need too<lb/>
much sun said<lb/>
Kitrell, "but a cherry<lb/>
tomato plant would<lb/>
need 6 to 8 hours of full<lb/>
sun<lb/>
More information on<lb/>
fall gardens can be ob-<lb/>
tained by calling<lb/>
"Extension Teletip a<lb/>
service of the North<lb/>
Carolina Agricultural<lb/>
Extension Service. The<lb/>
number to call is<lb/>
-7301 and ask<lb/>
number 2919.<lb/>
pencil and<lb/>
1-800-662-<lb/>
for topic<lb/>
Have a<lb/>
paper<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
handy to take<lb/>
Walking Gets You Around<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEI! I<lb/>
siff W -llfi<lb/>
Editor's note: This is<lb/>
the second of a two-<lb/>
pan series on way to<lb/>
travel in Green ville. In<lb/>
the first part, rma<lb/>
lion about the SO. 1<lb/>
bus, city bus and local<lb/>
bike routes was eiven.<lb/>
This segment will sun:<lb/>
up the other way s to f<lb/>
arround in Greenville.<lb/>
There are three moi<lb/>
ways to get around<lb/>
without a cai walk<lb/>
ing, wheelchaii am:<lb/>
motorcycle.<lb/>
Walking, you<lb/>
way of getting i und<lb/>
the university. ilso<lb/>
fine wa to see ireen<lb/>
ville. Within the city, i<lb/>
you know whore u<lb/>
look, is a house that<lb/>
was a boat.<lb/>
wilderness park, a seep<lb/>
ing spring on a hillside,<lb/>
a night-lighted stained<lb/>
glass, a rose garden and<lb/>
a manicured residentila<lb/>
area near a towering<lb/>
modern chruch steeple<lb/>
Historic interest sup<lb/>
plements the seme at<lb/>
the Jones-Lee House,<lb/>
the Long House, the<lb/>
Humber House, the<lb/>
J a r v i s House, the<lb/>
decaying Port Terminal<lb/>
(a former gambling<lb/>
den) and the barred<lb/>
windows of an old jail<lb/>
For more informa-<lb/>
tion on these and other<lb/>
locations contact the<lb/>
Greenville Area Preser-<lb/>
vation Association.<lb/>
Medical research en-<lb/>
dorses Harry Truman's<lb/>
habit Walking is a<lb/>
good and healthy exer-<lb/>
cise and here in Green-<lb/>
ville, it can be one of<lb/>
the gest was to see the<lb/>
city .<lb/>
In the area of<lb/>
wheelchairs, East<lb/>
Carolina is proud of<lb/>
eading the state in<lb/>
naking its building ac-<lb/>
cessible. Still some<lb/>
lassroom buildings<lb/>
ick elevators or have<lb/>
in entrance ramp at<lb/>
ne door only.<lb/>
Barrier-free campus<lb/>
levelopment continues<lb/>
and this fall a<lb/>
multicolor campus map<lb/>
-bowing parking area<lb/>
and coded to show ac-<lb/>
cessibility will be<lb/>
available from the of-<lb/>
fice of Handicapped<lb/>
Student Services.<lb/>
The Greenville<lb/>
engineer reports that all<lb/>
new curbs in town are<lb/>
built with ramps but<lb/>
some problems do ex-<lb/>
ist.<lb/>
"Downtown's not<lb/>
too bad said ECU<lb/>
wheelchair student<lb/>
Brian Rangely referring<lb/>
to w heelchair ac-<lb/>
cessability. Rangely, a<lb/>
junior, majoring in<lb/>
English, says the<lb/>
university has worked<lb/>
with the city to build<lb/>
curb cuts in the<lb/>
sidewalks to make<lb/>
wheelchair travel<lb/>
easier.<lb/>
He did feel, however,<lb/>
that "apart from the<lb/>
downtown area"<lb/>
wheelchair travel was<lb/>
often dangerous<lb/>
because there are often<lb/>
no curb cuts and many<lb/>
times no sidewalks at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
"Sidewalks would be<lb/>
a major improvement<lb/>
in many area said<lb/>
Rangely. He also added<lb/>
that placement of curb-<lb/>
cuts were not always<lb/>
logical, because they<lb/>
were often only placed<lb/>
on one end of a block.<lb/>
According to Range-<lb/>
ly, 10th and Charles<lb/>
street areas are the<lb/>
most dangeruos.<lb/>
In contrast to the<lb/>
above modes of<lb/>
transportation, motor-<lb/>
cycles and mopeds re-<lb/>
quire gas, but not much<lb/>
more. And as with<lb/>
bicycles, you can main-<lb/>
tain the machines<lb/>
yourself.<lb/>
If you can afford the<lb/>
up keep, insurance,<lb/>
license, registration and<lb/>
parking fees, travel<lb/>
with a car offers con-<lb/>
vience to the in-<lb/>
dividual.<lb/>
Typical daily fixed<lb/>
cost are estimated at<lb/>
$3.42, whether driven<lb/>
or not. If in addition,<lb/>
eight miles are com-<lb/>
muted the estimate goes<lb/>
up to $4.38 per day<lb/>
driven.<lb/>
Your schedule,<lb/>
together with housing<lb/>
may force you to com-<lb/>
mute so consider car<lb/>
pooling. For long-<lb/>
distance trips,<lb/>
Mendenhall furnishes a<lb/>
pool board.<lb/>
For long distance<lb/>
travel via public-<lb/>
transportation, there is<lb/>
the bus, train and air.<lb/>
The bus station is<lb/>
four block from cam-<lb/>
pus. AMTRAK sta-<lb/>
tions are in Rocky<lb/>
Mount and Wilson.<lb/>
The Greenville bus runs<lb/>
to the commuter airline<lb/>
at Greenville Airport<lb/>
for connections to ma-<lb/>
jor airports. A regional<lb/>
airport is 30 miles away<lb/>
in Kinston and the<lb/>
Raleigh-Durham air-<lb/>
port is about 100 miles<lb/>
away.<lb/>
Additional informa-<lb/>
tion about ways to get<lb/>
around can be obtained<lb/>
at the office of the vice-<lb/>
chancellor for student<lb/>
life, phone 757-6541.<lb/>
NTE Examination Offered<lb/>
By GREG HIDEOUT<lb/>
4c.uMaai t?s hdilor<lb/>
Education majors<lb/>
will be offered the Na-<lb/>
tional Teachers Ex-<lb/>
amination (NTE) four<lb/>
times this school year,<lb/>
Educational Testing<lb/>
Service has announced.<lb/>
The NTE consists of<lb/>
two parts; the core bat-<lb/>
tery, which tests com-<lb/>
munication skills and<lb/>
general knowledge, and<lb/>
a speciality area test.<lb/>
According to ECU's<lb/>
department of educa-<lb/>
tion, the test is not<lb/>
reguired for graduation<lb/>
but is a necessity for<lb/>
certification to teach<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Core area examina-<lb/>
tions will be offered<lb/>
Nov. 13 and March 5.<lb/>
For the 82-83<lb/>
academic year the core<lb/>
section of the test does<lb/>
not count. John S.<lb/>
Childers,? director of<lb/>
the testing center, said<lb/>
the core is in an ex-<lb/>
perimental phase in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Specialty area tests<lb/>
will be given on Oct. 30<lb/>
and Apr. 30. These<lb/>
tests determine the pro-<lb/>
spective teacher's ap-<lb/>
titude in their specialty.<lb/>
NTE scores are used<lb/>
by many school<lb/>
districts as part of the<lb/>
criteria in the section<lb/>
of new teachers. A<lb/>
higher score is presum-<lb/>
ed to offer better<lb/>
employment chances<lb/>
according to some<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Students who want<lb/>
further information<lb/>
should contact the<lb/>
testing center at<lb/>
757-6811.<lb/>
MARSH'S SURF-N-SEA<lb/>
GIRL'S OP Shorts, Pants, Shirts12 Price<lb/>
All Bathing Suits50 off<lb/>
All Summer Clothing50 off<lb/>
GUY'S Shorts, Bathing Suits, Shirts50 off<lb/>
Summer stuff has to go<lb/>
fall OP Shirts, Jackets &amp; Sweaters ? NOW HERE<lb/>
A11 new Esprit now arriving!<lb/>
206 E. 5th St. Downtown<lb/>
Vfcchovia<lb/>
THlern<lb/>
Teller II is on duty weekdays,<lb/>
weekends and holidays. All<lb/>
day and night. At over 100<lb/>
locations, whenever you have<lb/>
banking to do, Teller II is ready.<lb/>
If you've never used Teller LI,<lb/>
ask a Personal Banker for a<lb/>
demonstration this week. You'll<lb/>
discover how easy banking<lb/>
anytime can be.<lb/>
Wachovia Tetter B<lb/>
Convenient In East Carolina I 'nui-rsity<lb/>
Carolina East Convenience Center Highwav 11<lb/>
Cniversitv 802 E. 10th St.<lb/>
'Coming September 7. 1982<lb/>
Anytime<lb/>
MrmNrFM v.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
r t<lb/>
A<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0008"/><lb/>
THfc EASTCAROI INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Al GUST31, W2<lb/>
Page)<lb/>
Auditions For<lb/>
'The Mikado'<lb/>
Being Held<lb/>
'8283 MSC Theatre Arts Series Has 'Acting Company' For March<lb/>
Above: A scene from The Acting Company's current production of classic Tartuffe'm the Hendrix Theatre. For further information about<lb/>
Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. The troupe, under the direction of John the entire series or season ticket availability, phone theentral lickti<lb/>
Houseman, will perform the play in Hendrix Theatre on March 25. Office in Mendenhall Student tenter at 757-6611, extension 266, bet-<lb/>
1983. On March 26, the company will he performing Moliere's comedy ween the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.<lb/>
Ml NEWS Bl RUl<lb/>
GREENVH 1 1 Singing, danc<lb/>
ing, and acting audition- tor the<lb/>
East Carolia I niversity production<lb/>
ot (.filbert and Sullivan's operei I<lb/>
The Mikado, arc scheduled foi<lb/>
Monday, and ruesday, Nop! 6 and<lb/>
7, in EC l 's Messick Theatre Arts<lb/>
Center. The auditions will begin at<lb/>
p.m. each evening in Room 206.<lb/>
The production, a ioint venture<lb/>
ot the ECU Playhouse and the 1(1<lb/>
School ot Music, will be the fourth<lb/>
in Last Carolina's 75-year history.<lb/>
The Mikado is well known as one<lb/>
ot ihe mosl popular musical<lb/>
frivolities m the English language.<lb/>
Written bv the iegendar team of<lb/>
Gilbert and Sullivan, the operetta is<lb/>
a ivrieal and romantic tale I I<lb/>
tastk happenings in a mythical<lb/>
Japanese village alL p I<lb/>
There are 30 roles open :<lb/>
amg bv the newest member ot the<lb/>
ECU drama faculty, Cherry (<lb/>
rison. M- Garrison comes I i f<lb/>
with more than 100 directing<lb/>
from California campuses ?<lb/>
tI San Fransisco State and<lb/>
Jose City College<lb/>
"We have a wide vanetv ot role-<lb/>
available tor the how she<lb/>
"We'll be looking tor singers and<lb/>
dancer- vho are also talented a.<lb/>
udii inees should c ome<lb/>
prepared to sing one ballad or aria<lb/>
and one comic -one. perhaps from a<lb/>
(iilbert and Sullivan show A pianit<lb/>
will be provided, and audmonee-<lb/>
should bring their own music. They<lb/>
should aKo prepare a one-minute<lb/>
serious monologue and a one-<lb/>
minute comic monologue. A simple<lb/>
movement audition will be required<lb/>
1 role- It ! also nquired that<lb/>
auditionees bring a photograpv and<lb/>
resume, if available<lb/>
Ihe fikado will be perl  in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre Octobei 2s 2?.<lb/>
Nov. 1 and 3 1 I I students,<lb/>
and staff and local r<lb/>
arc all invited fo audition.<lb/>
Scripts are available in the<lb/>
Reserve Room at Joyner library on<lb/>
campus lor turther information,<lb/>
Phone 757-6390<lb/>
Spielberg's Childhood Fantasies Come To Life<lb/>
B MIC HIKOKAKITAM<lb/>
NEW YORK ? As a child growing up in the '50s,<lb/>
Steven Spielberg knew, just knew, that another magical<lb/>
and somehow terrifying world lay just beyond the placid<lb/>
surface of his family's suburban life. F.ven the tiny<lb/>
crack in his bedroom wall, illumunated by the hallway<lb/>
light, promised all sorts of awful marvels.<lb/>
"1 remember lying there, trying to go to sleep he<lb/>
says, "and 1 used to always imagine little Hieronymus<lb/>
Bosch-like creatures inside, peeking out and whispering<lb/>
to me to come into the playground of the crack and be<lb/>
drawn into the unknown there, inside the wall of my<lb/>
home in New Jersey<lb/>
lo this day, Spielberg says he continues io be<lb/>
fascinated by "what I think is there but cannot see<lb/>
That capacity for wonder, combined with a prodigal im-<lb/>
agination, has informed nearly all his films from Jaws<lb/>
to Close Encounters of the Third Kind to Raiders of the<lb/>
Lost Ark.<lb/>
In his latest pictures, Spielberg returns to the subur<lb/>
ban milieu of his own childhood, but invests that world<lb/>
with two dramatic and highly disparate visions of the<lb/>
supernatural: Poltergeist, which he produced and co-<lb/>
wrote, is a darkly imagined horror movie, portraying a<lb/>
family threatened by the vengeful spirits of the dead:<lb/>
while T the story of a 10-year-old boy who befriends<lb/>
an extraterrestrial stranded on earth, is, in effect, a con-<lb/>
temporary fairy tale, offering a vision oi innocence and<lb/>
hope.<lb/>
"Poltergeist is what I fear, and E. I. is what I love<lb/>
Spielberg explains. "One is about suburban evil and the<lb/>
other is about suburban good. I had different motiva-<lb/>
tions in both instances; In Poltergeist, 1 wanted to ter-<lb/>
rify and I also wanted to amuse ? I tried to mix 'he<lb/>
laughs and screams together. Poltergeist is the darker<lb/>
side of my nature ? it's me when I was scaring my<lb/>
younger sisters half to death when we were growing up<lb/>
Hollywood Legend<lb/>
Fonda Worked Hard At Craft<lb/>
By V1NC FNTCANBY<lb/>
Nr? N ??rk limes Nr?s Sericr<lb/>
NEW YORK ? It always is difficult to describe ac-<lb/>
curately what Henry Fonda brought to his perfor-<lb/>
mances that made him different from every other film<lb/>
and stage actor of his generation. That is a measure of<lb/>
his particularity.<lb/>
As a leading man Fonda, who died recently at the age<lb/>
of 77, was always a character actor, and as a character<lb/>
actor, always a leading man, even when showing up as<lb/>
Admiral Nimitz in something as disposable as Midway.<lb/>
Except for Young Mr. Lincoln he never went in for<lb/>
much make-up. He didn't wear putty noses like Paul<lb/>
Muni. He wasn't the sort of romantic figure who could<lb/>
compete with Clark Gable or Cary Grant, though he<lb/>
was almost Grant's equal when it came to comedy. He<lb/>
could affect a drawl when necessary, but he didn't<lb/>
possess the distinctive mannerisms of James Stewart or<lb/>
the politically aggressive machismo of John Wayne.<lb/>
Spencer Tracy was always more laid-back ? more<lb/>
comically in charge of the circumstances around him ?<lb/>
than Fonda who, even toward the end of his career, in-<lb/>
vested his performances with a kind of intensity that<lb/>
was forever youthful.<lb/>
Where James Cagney. in the recent Ragtime as in the<lb/>
early Public Enemy, seems barely able to contain the<lb/>
energy of his personality, Fonda seems always to be har-<lb/>
boring his, as if it wouldn't be good WASP form to let it<lb/>
show. And he didn't, not until his Oscar-winning per-<lb/>
formance in On isolden Pond, which, though his energy<lb/>
must have been in short supply by then, is one of the<lb/>
most vigorous, most witty performances of his career.<lb/>
He was such a good guy that when he played a bad<lb/>
guy ? a thoroughly rotten, sadistic, murdering S.O.B<lb/>
as he once did in Sergio Eeone's Once upon a Time in<lb/>
the West ? we tended to side with him, assuming that<lb/>
this was the new order of the cosmos. It was one of<lb/>
Leone's darkest jokes.<lb/>
The public personality of Henry Fonda was so<lb/>
modest, so steadfast and so self-effacing that too often<lb/>
we didn't recognize the decisions, the discipline and the<lb/>
intelligence that gave shape to his work. We mixed up<lb/>
the actor with the roles he played. We thought of him as<lb/>
the ail-American boy of the pre-World War II genera-<lb/>
tion, and those all-American boys didn't become actors.<lb/>
That was sissy stuff.<lb/>
All-American boys stayed close to the soil (The<lb/>
Farmer Takes a Wife), played cops-and-robbers (Jesse<lb/>
James, The Return of Jesse James), protected hearth-<lb/>
and-home (Drums Along the Mohawk), honored mom<lb/>
(The Grapes of Wrath), fought injustice (Mister<lb/>
Roberts) and occasionally became its victim (You Only<lb/>
Live Once, The Wrong Man), and were astonishingly<lb/>
naive around women (The Lady Eve).<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
In idealizing Fonda in this way, we shortchanged the<lb/>
artist. However, that was very much the way films<lb/>
worked on the imaginations of those of us who grew up<lb/>
attending to the shadow-figures on movie screens in the<lb/>
'30s, '40s and '50s.<lb/>
It was therefore something of a shock when I once<lb/>
heard him talk with passion, insight and a good deal of<lb/>
humor about acting. It was in the mid60s in the course<lb/>
of an interview that had been set up in connection with a<lb/>
piece about Peter, Jane and Henry Fonda as an acting<lb/>
family, the "new" Barrymores, which they never really<lb/>
became or aspired to become.<lb/>
Fonda's public relations man had arranged the<lb/>
meeting reluctantly since, he said, Fonda did not like to<lb/>
talk about his children and wasn't at all happy about<lb/>
some of the things they were then saying in public. Hav -<lb/>
ing been given a list of all of the things Fonda would not<lb/>
discuss, I entered the office where he was waiting with a<lb/>
certain amount of apprehension.<lb/>
"Well he said, "what do you want to talk about?"<lb/>
He was, perhaps, the healthiest looking man I'd ever<lb/>
met. It was nothing that seemed consciously acquired. It<lb/>
just looked natural, as did the casual but expensive<lb/>
tweediness of his clothes. He was formidable not in<lb/>
manner but in physical perfection ? I was not used to<lb/>
meeting movie stars.<lb/>
I told him that I had originally been interested in what<lb/>
he thought about the then-burgeoning careers of Jane<lb/>
and Peter, but that I'd been warned that this was forbid-<lb/>
den territory. He hesitated a second or two, sighed,<lb/>
laughed and then started to talk, and the supposedly<lb/>
shy, taciturn public personality didn't stop talking for<lb/>
more than two hours.<lb/>
Among other things he recalled the first time he had<lb/>
seen Jane on the Broadway stage in, I think, a not-great<lb/>
play called The tun Couple. He had been the nervous<lb/>
parent, not at all sure that she was ready for the big<lb/>
time. The curtain went up, the parental panic increased<lb/>
and then suddenly, as he described it, he was aware that<lb/>
she had "taken off She was safely inside the role and<lb/>
the performance was airborne.<lb/>
There is, he went on, a magical moment early in each<lb/>
See FONDA'S, Page 9<lb/>
? and  I. - nn optimism about the future and mv op<lb/>
limism about ? hai if w i- like to grow up in Arizona and<lb/>
New Jersey<lb/>
(Poltergeist and II ate held over at Greenville's<lb/>
Plitt Entertainmententer.)<lb/>
? romantic and an idealist when it come- to making<lb/>
movies. Spielberg is not so much interested in depicting<lb/>
lite a- it is, so much a- life a- it might be ? heightened<lb/>
and idealized on the wrreen<lb/>
CihoN (Poltergeist), extraterrestrials (IT.l I 1 (-<lb/>
(Close Encounters) and vengeful killer shark- (Jaws<lb/>
help anima e his Jure In others, a single incident ?<lb/>
a young outlaw ouple's decision to retrieve their ch<lb/>
in The Suaarnnd Express, tor instance, or the ap<lb/>
pearaike of a J  ;se submarine off the coast<lb/>
( alifornia in 1941 triggers an accelerating sequence<lb/>
ot even's, the -n ot wonderfully improbable event-<lb/>
that happen onlj in the movies.<lb/>
"I havt. .i real chemical imbalance between wh,<lb/>
and what's not Spielbe-  T tend to side<lb/>
with what isn't real in picking a subject, more than I do<lb/>
 th what's really happening o ere in ihe street ?<lb/>
enough Ji' t :i tke movie- that reflect life a- we see<lb/>
t ev . day .<lb/>
'There's no proof UFOs exist or that ghovts ev<lb/>
but it always nice to imagine what ou think could be<lb/>
'here, and the bes movies that are slightly above one-<lb/>
normal eye level ? something vou have to reach up<lb/>
and uspend . sbelief<lb/>
Indeed, the s movies Spielberg kes mat<lb/>
have " -  e effect on audiences 'hat the p<lb/>
saw a- a young boy had on his youthful imaf 03<lb/>
I - "take peOj<lb/>
ot then -eat- to get them involved ? through shcfwi<lb/>
Nee KID. Page 11<lb/>
s<lb/>
m;<lb/>
ont<lb/>
-<lb/>
m<lb/>
? I<lb/>
au(<lb/>
he<lb/>
kn<lb/>
I<lb/>
w,<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
j<lb/>
<lb/>
Henry Fonda in one of his best-known roles as the legendary Tom Joad in a scene from The drapes of M rath<lb/>
A<lb/>
I<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0009"/><lb/>
5 he<lb/>
ion;<lb/>
It oul<lb/>
nan-<lb/>
?'<lb/>
N rath.<lb/>
Fonda's Style Was Unique<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN AUGUST 31. I9K<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
stage performance, no<lb/>
matter how many times<lb/>
one has done the role,<lb/>
when the actor either<lb/>
becomes airborne or re-<lb/>
mains unhappily earth-<lb/>
bound, hoping that the<lb/>
audience doesn't know<lb/>
the difference. When<lb/>
he was aware that Jane<lb/>
knew what he knew, he<lb/>
didn't have to worry<lb/>
about her being an ac-<lb/>
tress any longer. She<lb/>
was on her own.<lb/>
Since that interview<lb/>
I've talked to a number<lb/>
of people who were<lb/>
associated with Fonda<lb/>
in various stage ven-<lb/>
tures and almost all of<lb/>
them have remembered<lb/>
the care ? sometimes<lb/>
maddening ? with<lb/>
which he prepared for<lb/>
his roles and his<lb/>
sometimes angry impa-<lb/>
tience with what he<lb/>
took to be the sloppy or<lb/>
the second-rate.<lb/>
Backstage he was not<lb/>
the benign fat her-figure<lb/>
we might have liked to<lb/>
think he was. He was<lb/>
from one piece of ice to<lb/>
the next in the movie's<lb/>
climactic sequence, but<lb/>
that Hay down Fast<lb/>
was a "personal<lb/>
triumph" for the young<lb/>
leading man.<lb/>
Fonda never did<lb/>
make that many<lb/>
unintentional, out-and-<lb/>
out howlers. Offhand,<lb/>
1 can think of only one<lb/>
other, the 1973 Ask<lb/>
H ednesday about the<lb/>
terrible emotional com-<lb/>
plications that confront<lb/>
a 50-ish woman<lb/>
(Elizabeth Taylor) who<lb/>
has head-to-foot<lb/>
cosmetic surgery to<lb/>
make her look a less-<lb/>
frumpy 40. Fonda got<lb/>
in and out of that one<lb/>
easily, as the woman's<lb/>
husband who's seen<lb/>
briefly at the beginning<lb/>
and at the end.<lb/>
With his first film<lb/>
The Farmer Takes a<lb/>
Wife (1935), a screen<lb/>
version of his Broad-<lb/>
way play, Fonda's<lb/>
Hollywood career<lb/>
became airborne and<lb/>
remained airborne for<lb/>
the rest of his life.<lb/>
Uraham Bell he also<lb/>
played the lead in John<lb/>
Ford's Young Mr. Lin-<lb/>
coln and Frank lames<lb/>
in Jesse James with<lb/>
Tyrone Power.<lb/>
In Fonda's greatest<lb/>
performances our<lb/>
idealized vision of him<lb/>
as the staunch, unaf-<lb/>
fected, completely<lb/>
natural American male<lb/>
worked to mask the<lb/>
talent. Although he<lb/>
created the way we<lb/>
thought of him,<lb/>
especially his would-be-<lb/>
playboy in Preston<lb/>
Sturges' The l.ady Eve<lb/>
and his Wyatt Earp in<lb/>
Ford's My Darling<lb/>
C lementine.<lb/>
If Fonda's finest per-<lb/>
formance up to 1955<lb/>
was in Mister Roberts,<lb/>
our inclination was to<lb/>
credit this to the fact<lb/>
that the role was writ-<lb/>
ten for him and that he<lb/>
had, after all, played it<lb/>
for more than 1,000<lb/>
performances on the<lb/>
stage. We took him so<lb/>
much for granted that<lb/>
few critics realized ex-<lb/>
actly how fine he really<lb/>
was as the bookish, in-<lb/>
troverted Pierre in King<lb/>
Vidor's underrated<lb/>
War and Peace, in<lb/>
which his very<lb/>
American-ness italiciz-<lb/>
ed the perfect simplicity<lb/>
of the character.<lb/>
In the later years of<lb/>
his career, as he turned<lb/>
his attentiobn more and<lb/>
more to the stage where<lb/>
he could play the sort<lb/>
of roles that appealed<lb/>
to him, such as<lb/>
Clarence Darrow, he<lb/>
continued to make a<lb/>
good living in films<lb/>
playing smallish or<lb/>
cameo roles designed to<lb/>
lend class to such pop<lb/>
epics as Rollercoaster,<lb/>
Battle of the Bulge and<lb/>
Midway. These Films<lb/>
didn't enhance his<lb/>
reputation, but they<lb/>
didn't hurt it either.<lb/>
When On Golden<lb/>
See HENRY, Page 11<lb/>
tOLT<lb/>
Selected Shirts?1 Y? &amp; ?15?? 7<lb/>
 Plus Tax N<lb/>
00<lb/>
I<lb/>
ECU Pirate Shirts15<lb/>
And 25?o off<lb/>
all other shirts in stock<lb/>
AYDEN GOLF &amp; COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Open 7 days ? 746-3389<lb/>
- ECU STUDENTS GREEN FEES $6.00 DURING WEEK -<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
Center<lb/>
(Across from<lb/>
Radio Shack)<lb/>
10-6 Daily<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756 6088<lb/>
an artist who worked<lb/>
extremely hard to ac-<lb/>
quire his manner of ef-<lb/>
fortless grace, which in<lb/>
films is sometimes<lb/>
bestowed by the cameia<lb/>
but which, in the<lb/>
theatre, is as impossible<lb/>
to fake as a high-C.<lb/>
Fonda was not only a<lb/>
great film star, he was a<lb/>
great film actor He<lb/>
lent authenticity to the<lb/>
good films and.<lb/>
somehow, was never<lb/>
seriously damaged by<lb/>
the bad ones. In review-<lb/>
ing his second film.<lb/>
Way down Fast, Andre<lb/>
Sennwald, The Times<lb/>
film critic, wrote that<lb/>
the movie was an<lb/>
unintentional<lb/>
"howler what with<lb/>
Rochelle Hudson's<lb/>
woebegone, unmarried<lb/>
mother-to-be leaping<lb/>
through On Golden<lb/>
Fond. There were years<lb/>
that weren't<lb/>
memorable and plenty<lb/>
of films that don't im-<lb/>
mediately ring a bell ?<lb/>
Spendthrift (1936) and<lb/>
Wild Geese Calling<lb/>
(1941), among others<lb/>
? but the studio<lb/>
system was good to<lb/>
him<lb/>
He wa making so<lb/>
many films, in siKh<lb/>
rapid order, that the<lb/>
good films and-or the<lb/>
good performances<lb/>
neutralized the possibly<lb/>
damaging effects of the<lb/>
films that were per-<lb/>
functory. No one could<lb/>
ever build a career play-<lb/>
ing Thomas Watson to<lb/>
Don Ameche's Alex-<lb/>
ander Graham Bell, but<lb/>
the same year Fonda<lb/>
made Alexander<lb/>
pand OpeoinsT<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPT. 2, 1982<lb/>
I ook For Thesf Famous Brands<lb/>
df;xter<lb/>
naturalizer<lb/>
9 WEST<lb/>
BEES by Beacon<lb/>
MIA<lb/>
SPORTO<lb/>
muni<lb/>
off any pair of<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
(stock only)<lb/>
vai r.iri.MsiAt.<lb/>
HAPPY<lb/>
HOUR<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
4p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
<lb/>
Ol PON COUPON COUPON COUPON COl<lb/>
25 OFF ANY<lb/>
I 12 HERO<lb/>
T EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 30. 1982<lb/>
COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COl<lb/>
PON<lb/>
DELI SANDWICHES, HEROES, SOUPS, SALADS,<lb/>
VEGETARIAN SANDWICHES, FRESHLY BAKED<lb/>
BREADS ? LIVE ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY<lb/>
DIAL FOR<lb/>
TAKEOUT<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
VIDEO, PINBALL, BILLIARDS<lb/>
513COTANCHEST.<lb/>
ACROSS FROMU.B.E<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
? r<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
Coupon Expires 9-4-tt.<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
Student Nome.<lb/>
ID Number.<lb/>
Amt. of Purchase<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY-SATURDAY<lb/>
Fresh, Whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
Gwoltney<lb/>
Great Bologna<lb/>
Lb 119<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
$259<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
2"<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle - No Limit<lb/>
PEPSI OR COKE<lb/>
98C<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
MOUNTAIN DEW<lb/>
89f<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Joy Liquid<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
49 C<lb/>
12 Oz. Bottle<lb/>
6 Pack<lb/>
12 Ox. Cans<lb/>
2<lb/>
ONLY A DIME<lb/>
U.S. No. 1<lb/>
White<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
10<lb/>
DA IR Y FRESH SPEC!A LS<lb/>
Fresh, Whole<lb/>
Maola Milk<lb/>
' Gallon<lb/>
Paper Carton<lb/>
98?<lb/>
Old South Fresh<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
Vj Gallon<lb/>
Paper Carton<lb/>
98<lb/>
Clip This Coupon<lb/>
Bounty<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
Gt.Roll<lb/>
With this coupon and $10.00 food order excluding adver-<lb/>
tised specials. Without coupon 89 Limit one per<lb/>
customer. Expires 9-4-12.<lb/>
Golden Grain<lb/>
Macaroni &amp;<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
00<lb/>
7 14 Ox. Box<lb/>
3l<lb/>
New Crop<lb/>
125 Size<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
Peanut Butter &amp;<lb/>
Jelly Specials<lb/>
Jif Creamy or Crunchy<lb/>
Peanut<lb/>
Butter<lb/>
$149<lb/>
18 Ox. Jar 1<lb/>
Each<lb/>
10<lb/>
Garner Apple or<lb/>
Grape Jelly<lb/>
68 <lb/>
16 Ox. Jar<lb/>
t<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Mil l-ASl t ARCH INI <lb/>
MCI SI 31 182<lb/>
Poland's Amazing 'Man Of Iron'<lb/>
Itself A Living Part Of History<lb/>
oil? lEast Olaroltman<lb/>
This Wednesday<lb/>
evening, Sent 1, in<lb/>
Mendcnhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre, the Siiidcni<lb/>
Union Films Commit-<lb/>
tee will screen Poland's<lb/>
gripping political<lb/>
drama Man of Iron<lb/>
The 1981 Oscar<lb/>
nominee tor Best<lb/>
Foreign I anguage Film<lb/>
will begin at 8 p.m ad-<lb/>
mission is h ID and<lb/>
Activity Card tor<lb/>
students and MSC<lb/>
Membership for faculty<lb/>
and staff.<lb/>
Following the film in<lb/>
Room 244 (MSC<lb/>
Auditorium) of the stu-<lb/>
dent center. Dr. Philip<lb/>
.1. Adler of the History<lb/>
Department will lead a<lb/>
short, informal discus<lb/>
sion of Man of Iron<lb/>
Coffee and doughnuts<lb/>
will be served and all<lb/>
interested student?.<lb/>
faculty and staff are<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
ewsweeli film critic<lb/>
lack Kroll discussed<lb/>
Man of Iron in the<lb/>
December ?8, 1981 edi-<lb/>
tion of the magaine.<lb/>
Following is an excerpt<lb/>
from his review. (Use<lb/>
b permission; all<lb/>
rights reserved):<lb/>
"The events in<lb/>
Poland have made An<lb/>
drej Wajda's Man of<lb/>
Iron even more com<lb/>
petting, more necessarv<lb/>
to sec. than it was The<lb/>
film is not onlv a<lb/>
remaikable svnthesis of<lb/>
art and history-tn-the-<lb/>
making; it is itself a liv<lb/>
ing part of the history.<lb/>
Filmed at white heat in<lb/>
: h e w a k e o t i h e<lb/>
dramatu events thai<lb/>
culminated in the<lb/>
triumph of the Solidari-<lb/>
; moement in Augu:<lb/>
1980, Man of Iron was<lb/>
rushed to completion<lb/>
asi Mas ujs! before its<lb/>
scheduled showing dur-<lb/>
ing the Cannes Film<lb/>
Festival. Mam doubted<lb/>
that the Polish<lb/>
authorities would allow<lb/>
a film so critical of the<lb/>
government to be<lb/>
shown, at least without<lb/>
extensive cuts. But an<lb/>
uncen sored Man of<lb/>
Iron arrived at Cannes<lb/>
at the last moment and<lb/>
won the Golden Palm<lb/>
as best film. There's lit<lb/>
tie doubt that it was on<lb/>
lv W ajda's interna<lb/>
tional standing and<lb/>
reputation as Poland's<lb/>
leading filmmaker that<lb/>
got his picture through<lb/>
the Polish censorship.<lb/>
"It's hard to think of<lb/>
anothei film that has<lb/>
the special excitement<lb/>
o! Man of Iron. As<lb/>
boih a romantic and a<lb/>
revolutionary in the<lb/>
Jjsmc Polish vein, a<lb/>
d a has always<lb/>
dramatized the clash<lb/>
beiwec n huge,<lb/>
d e h u m a ii i i n g<lb/>
historical forces and<lb/>
the individuals caught<lb/>
up within fhem. From<lb/>
A deneraiion, Kanal,<lb/>
and Ashes and<lb/>
Diamonds in the '50s to<lb/>
his present work, Wa-<lb/>
jda's films are a history<lb/>
of the Polish sensibility<lb/>
as it collides with the<lb/>
great totalitarian forces<lb/>
of the century ? the<lb/>
Nazis in World War 11<lb/>
and Stalinist Com-<lb/>
munism after the war<lb/>
"He shows you<lb/>
human beings trying to<lb/>
create a genuine moral<lb/>
revolution within ?<lb/>
and against ? these<lb/>
false political revolu-<lb/>
tions. Wajda knows<lb/>
that just as the great<lb/>
political enemy is the<lb/>
sheei physical force of<lb/>
the oppressor, the great<lb/>
moral enemy is the bad<lb/>
faith and cowardice of<lb/>
the oppressed. That's<lb/>
why he tells the storv of<lb/>
the Solidarity revolu-<lb/>
tion through the eves of<lb/>
W'inkiel, a once<lb/>
courageous TV jour<lb/>
nalist and filmmaker<lb/>
who's become a scared<lb/>
and alcoholic hack.<lb/>
"W'inkiel is sent by<lb/>
his superiors ostensibly<lb/>
to do a story on the<lb/>
Solidarity strike in the<lb/>
Gdansk shipyards, but<lb/>
in reality to smear one<lb/>
of the strike's key<lb/>
figures, a worker nam<lb/>
ed Maciek ? the "man<lb/>
of iron As W inkicl<lb/>
encounters and<lb/>
interviews" the<lb/>
various figures con-<lb/>
nected with Maciek ?<lb/>
old friends, relatives<lb/>
and Maciek's wife, a<lb/>
filmmaker who unlike<lb/>
W'inkiel refused to<lb/>
knuckle under to the<lb/>
system ? the journalist<lb/>
gripped by conscience<lb/>
and trapped between<lb/>
his admiration for the<lb/>
Solidarity people and<lb/>
.?v<lb/>
?7<lb/>
 c -P y -O ?<lb/>
&amp; (-J -? no<lb/>
4?<lb/>
Imth Street!<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
3UNTRY STYLE STEAK<lb/>
&amp;MBURGER STEAK<lb/>
t irtfc QUE BEEF RIBS<lb/>
' H IEDCHICKEN<lb/>
: E W BEEF<lb/>
 HICKI N PASTRY<lb/>
iARBEQUE CHICKEN<lb/>
nLUlQLLML.lM VEGETARi fs<lb/>
ELAROS BAKED APPLES<lb/>
&amp;8BAGE YAMS<lb/>
SLACK EYE PEAS CORNONTHECOB<lb/>
CASHED POTATOES OKRA<lb/>
LG. PLATE<lb/>
7 5 ? ???<lb/>
Pi US T AX<lb/>
REG. PLATE<lb/>
2"<lb/>
ViG. PLATE "<lb/>
 ran nil<lb/>
"2 PLUS TEA &amp; TAX<lb/>
?!0 plustaxTake Out Orders<lb/>
752-076 . f<lb/>
WE DELIVER 5 Pi ATESOR MORE - FREE ! 'T<lb/>
WE CATER ANY OCCASION CALL US!<lb/>
?oo oooooooonooooo666A6fl"v?cTcTcTr5cS6oooooo<lb/>
ooo<lb/>
0<lb/>
p<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
ARCADE<lb/>
VARIETY SHOP<lb/>
&amp; GRILL<lb/>
Hamburgers &amp; Hotdogs<lb/>
Video Game Room<lb/>
Corner of 5th &amp; Reade<lb/>
)OOOOOOQOOOOQ(<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
a<lb/>
OPEN24HOURS DRIVE THRU WINDOW<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT ?<lb/>
CHICKEN $2.99<lb/>
This meal includes Chicken<lb/>
Fries, Biscuits &amp;<lb/>
1 Small Tea (no refills)<lb/>
Good MonWed. 5 9 p.m.<lb/>
No TakeOuts<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ? 752 1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
Buck<lb/>
2704 E.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 In. Towing Service<lb/>
Welcome Back E.C.U<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
, Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
J<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
for Slaw35t extra<lb/>
NS.VNSSVSNSN<lb/>
 N SNVVVSSNSVX<lb/>
The Shoe Outlet<lb/>
201 West 9th Street<lb/>
Discount Prices<lb/>
50-75<lb/>
OH Regular Price<lb/>
Men's &amp; Ladies' SHOES<lb/>
BASS FREEMAN<lb/>
HANOVER TOPSIDER<lb/>
FLORSHEIM DINGO BOOTS<lb/>
Next door to<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
-??<lb/>
&amp; <lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
to<lb/>
I<lb/>
ne<lb/>
rrH<lb/>
?I<lb/>
in<lb/>
s p<lb/>
- i<lb/>
v<lb/>
!S<lb/>
Ofl<lb/>
Ii!<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
inj<lb/>
?sj<lb/>
sa<lb/>
lav<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0011"/><lb/>
Kid Spielberg<lb/>
Giving Us Modern Movie Myths<lb/>
. hi 1 i AKHI iMAN<lb/>
AUGUST 31. 1982<lb/>
11<lb/>
Film<lb/>
Continued From Page 10<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
ship ? ma kind of<lb/>
emotional dialogue"<lb/>
with the film.<lb/>
Spielberg says he<lb/>
never dreamed of<lb/>
becoming a director as<lb/>
a child; he dreamed of<lb/>
becoming "all those<lb/>
heroic people up there<lb/>
on the screen And as<lb/>
far as he is concerned,<lb/>
making movies still<lb/>
provides a certain<lb/>
vicarious pleasure, a<lb/>
kind of celluloid<lb/>
substitute for all his<lb/>
Walter Mitty dreams.<lb/>
"In the past he<lb/>
says, "I've made<lb/>
movies about ex-<lb/>
periences that I've<lb/>
never had because that<lb/>
uav I can explore all<lb/>
those 'what-ifs You<lb/>
see, I'm all the<lb/>
characters in my<lb/>
movies. I was as much<lb/>
Indiana Jones as Har-<lb/>
rison ford was in<lb/>
Haiders, and in E.T I<lb/>
was t.Ts eyes.<lb/>
Through the movie, I<lb/>
had to imagine what it<lb/>
would be like to be a<lb/>
creature visiting earth<lb/>
and what life would be<lb/>
like from his perspec-<lb/>
tive<lb/>
The real heroes in<lb/>
most of Spielberg's pic-<lb/>
tures, however, are not<lb/>
such an o m a IO u S<lb/>
characters as H.T but<lb/>
people who represent<lb/>
his version of Alfred<lb/>
Hitchcock's innocent<lb/>
bystanders. They are<lb/>
"ordinary people as<lb/>
Dr. Lacombe says in<lb/>
(lose Encounters,<lb/>
"under extraordinary<lb/>
circumstances" ? peo-<lb/>
ple like the suburban<lb/>
families m Close En-<lb/>
counters. E.T. and<lb/>
Poltergeist, who live in<lb/>
pleasant ranch houses<lb/>
filled with appliances<lb/>
and television sets and<lb/>
refrigerators stocked<lb/>
with beer and Cokes<lb/>
and potato salad.<lb/>
"Thev're common,<lb/>
everyday tvpes of peo-<lb/>
ple to whom nothing<lb/>
really happens until I<lb/>
come along Spielberg<lb/>
says. "In the movies<lb/>
I've made. I've tried<lb/>
very, very hard to take<lb/>
the bystander, toughen<lb/>
him up. thereby robb-<lb/>
ing him of his in-<lb/>
nocence, in order to<lb/>
combat the forces that<lb/>
are against him. I love<lb/>
movies where there are<lb/>
opposing forces and<lb/>
they're stronger than<lb/>
the hero and the hero<lb/>
must succeed either by<lb/>
finding a way around<lb/>
or straight through<lb/>
In the case of E. 7<lb/>
Spielberg points out,<lb/>
the opposing force is<lb/>
not a tangible enemy<lb/>
like the shark in Jaws,<lb/>
Henry<lb/>
Fonda<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 9<lb/>
Pond came along, it<lb/>
seemed as if he had<lb/>
been saving up for this<lb/>
for the last 20 years.<lb/>
Unlike his earlier great<lb/>
performances, this one<lb/>
looked effortless as<lb/>
well as theatrical. It<lb/>
was as if he had finally<lb/>
combined everything he<lb/>
had learned in films<lb/>
and on stage to create a<lb/>
character that was<lb/>
simultaneously larger<lb/>
than life but not so<lb/>
large that it would be<lb/>
out of the camera's<lb/>
focus.<lb/>
As usual Henry Fon-<lb/>
da had not attempted<lb/>
to disguise himself. He<lb/>
hadn't radically altered<lb/>
his look and his man-<lb/>
nerisms to imitate so-<lb/>
meone. Instead, he had<lb/>
absorbed the character<lb/>
in such a way that the<lb/>
special Fonda per-<lb/>
sonality became that of<lb/>
Norman Thayer. This<lb/>
is the secret of the kind<lb/>
of "effortless" film ac-<lb/>
ting of which Fonda<lb/>
was a master. His tim-<lb/>
ing was as impeccable<lb/>
as Jack Benny's. He<lb/>
saved the best to the<lb/>
last.<lb/>
but the intrusion of the<lb/>
grown-up world.<lb/>
Whereas 10-year-old<lb/>
Elliott wants only to<lb/>
love and be loved bv his<lb/>
extraterrestrial friend,<lb/>
this grown-up world,<lb/>
represented by corps of<lb/>
doctors and techni-<lb/>
cians, wants to preserve<lb/>
E.T. as a specimen of<lb/>
alien life.<lb/>
"1 always thought of<lb/>
the adult world as being<lb/>
symbolized by tall peo-<lb/>
ple who cast giant<lb/>
shadows Spielberg<lb/>
says, "people who<lb/>
don't think like kids,<lb/>
but think like profes-<lb/>
sionals. Th.it's<lb/>
dangerous ? they<lb/>
might understand E.T.<lb/>
biologically and scien-<lb/>
tifically, but they'd<lb/>
never ever understand<lb/>
that he had a heart<lb/>
A similar message<lb/>
has long been a favorite<lb/>
theme in children's<lb/>
literature ? from J.M.<lb/>
Barries Peter Pan to<lb/>
Antoine de Saint -<lb/>
Exupery's The little<lb/>
Prince ? and E. T. is<lb/>
filled with references to<lb/>
well-known books and<lb/>
films. During one<lb/>
scene. John Williams'<lb/>
score recalls the music<lb/>
used in The H izard Of<lb/>
(z to accompany the<lb/>
Wicked Witch. Miss<lb/>
Ciulch; and in the<lb/>
movie's penultimate<lb/>
scene, Elliott and his<lb/>
Inends soar into the<lb/>
skv on their bicycles, in<lb/>
much the same way<lb/>
that Peter Pan and<lb/>
Wend) flew off to<lb/>
Never Never 1 and.<lb/>
Most of Spielberg's<lb/>
movies have featured<lb/>
children in important<lb/>
or ensemblematic roles.<lb/>
Sugarland. lose En-<lb/>
counters and<lb/>
Poltergeist all involve<lb/>
the attempt of a mother<lb/>
to regain custody of her<lb/>
child. And in both<lb/>
C lose Encounters and<lb/>
E. 7 it is a child ? and<lb/>
those adults who main-<lb/>
tain a childlike in-<lb/>
nocence and openness<lb/>
to the possibility of<lb/>
miracles ? who is<lb/>
granted communion<lb/>
with these visitors from<lb/>
outer space and a vision<lb/>
of a more lovely world.<lb/>
I've always wanted<lb/>
to do something about<lb/>
kids because I'm still a<lb/>
kid says Spielberg,<lb/>
who at 34 atill radiates<lb/>
a boyish enthusiasm<lb/>
and ingenious charm.<lb/>
"I'm still waiting to get<lb/>
out of my Peter Pan<lb/>
shoes and into my<lb/>
loafers. I thing it's<lb/>
easier for me to have a<lb/>
complete conversation<lb/>
from Pac-Man to ex-<lb/>
obiology with an<lb/>
11-year-old than it is to<lb/>
sit down with an adult<lb/>
and discuss Nietzsche<lb/>
and the Falklands.<lb/>
Why? 1 guess because<lb/>
I'm probably socially<lb/>
irresponsible and way<lb/>
down deep I don't want<lb/>
to look the world in the<lb/>
eye. Actually. I don't<lb/>
mind looking the world<lb/>
in the eye, as long as<lb/>
there's a movie camera<lb/>
between us<lb/>
That is exactly what<lb/>
Spielberg has been do-<lb/>
ing since he made his<lb/>
first home movie at the<lb/>
age of 12. The son of a<lb/>
computer specialist and<lb/>
a concert-pianist<lb/>
mother who were<lb/>
divorced when he was a<lb/>
teenager. Spielberg says<lb/>
he was an awkward<lb/>
child ? "the weird,<lb/>
skinny kid with the<lb/>
acne" ? who didn't<lb/>
have a lot of friends.<lb/>
His parents moved<lb/>
several times, from<lb/>
Ohio to New Jersey to<lb/>
Arizona to California,<lb/>
uprooting Steven and<lb/>
his three younger<lb/>
sisters, and leaving him<lb/>
with a lasting sense of<lb/>
dislocation.<lb/>
Movies, the young<lb/>
boy discovered, opened<lb/>
up a new world of<lb/>
possibilities ? an ex-<lb/>
citing world wonderful-<lb/>
lv different from the<lb/>
suburbs his parents<lb/>
always lived in ? and<lb/>
he soon learned that he<lb/>
could express himself<lb/>
more easily with a<lb/>
movie camera than by<lb/>
talking in school or<lb/>
writing papers or hav-<lb/>
ing grown-up conversa-<lb/>
tions with his parents.<lb/>
"Movies took the<lb/>
place of crayons and<lb/>
charcoal he says,<lb/>
"and 1 was able to<lb/>
represent my life at 24<lb/>
frames a second At<lb/>
12, he filmed a collision<lb/>
between his Lionel<lb/>
train sets. At 13, he<lb/>
earned a Bov Scout<lb/>
merit badge by making<lb/>
a three-minute 8mm<lb/>
film that featured one<lb/>
of his friends robbing a<lb/>
stagecoach and coun-<lb/>
ting the money. And at<lb/>
16, he made<lb/>
"Firelight a2'z-hour<lb/>
science fiction movie<lb/>
that anticipated Close<lb/>
Encounters.<lb/>
While enrolled at<lb/>
California State Col-<lb/>
lege in I ong Beach,<lb/>
Spielberg spent most of<lb/>
his free time sneaking<lb/>
onto the Universal lot<lb/>
and making his own<lb/>
16mm films. In 1969,<lb/>
he made Amhlin a<lb/>
24-minute short about<lb/>
a pair of hitchhikers,<lb/>
which won awards at<lb/>
the Venice and Atlanta<lb/>
film festivals.<lb/>
That led to a contract<lb/>
with Universal, and<lb/>
Spielberg was soon<lb/>
directing television<lb/>
episodes of Mght<lb/>
Gallery, Marcus Helhy<lb/>
and Colombo. Duel, a<lb/>
television movie about<lb/>
a motorist pursued by a<lb/>
malevolent, phantom<lb/>
truck, won him critical<lb/>
acclaim, and. at 25,<lb/>
Spielberg was directing<lb/>
his first feature film,<lb/>
The Sugarland Express.<lb/>
He never believed in<lb/>
anything, Spielberg<lb/>
once said, until he<lb/>
discovered film, and it<lb/>
is onlv recently that ex-<lb/>
posure to friends out-<lb/>
side the business has<lb/>
made him realize that<lb/>
all those hours spent in<lb/>
dark theaters as a kid<lb/>
left certain "emotional<lb/>
and intellectual gaps<lb/>
"I'm still filling them<lb/>
in he says now. "But<lb/>
you can't just pick up<lb/>
20 years of lost<lb/>
weekends. Movies are<lb/>
my life, but I see now<lb/>
that for some people<lb/>
movies arc only a twice-<lb/>
a-year experience and<lb/>
that in the rest of their<lb/>
lives, there are great<lb/>
desisions to be made:<lb/>
when to have children,<lb/>
where to send them to<lb/>
school, are they grow-<lb/>
ing up OK, and how to<lb/>
make enough money to<lb/>
provide for everyone.<lb/>
It's sort of made me<lb/>
realize that there's<lb/>
more to life than mak-<lb/>
ing movies ? though<lb/>
it's still easier to say<lb/>
than to demonstrate<lb/>
his fear of the cynical<lb/>
and sinister bureaucrats<lb/>
and security agents who<lb/>
threaten him with dire<lb/>
consequences if he<lb/>
doesn't do the smear<lb/>
job on Maciek.<lb/>
"Using flashbacks to<lb/>
the abortive uprisings<lb/>
of 1968 and 1970, cut-<lb/>
ting into his story with<lb/>
actual footage of those<lb/>
violent clashes and the<lb/>
euthoric events of 1980,<lb/>
Wajda creates an ex-<lb/>
cititng juggernaut of a<lb/>
film. Binding the real<lb/>
and fictional elements<lb/>
together is the figure of<lb/>
 Solidarity leader Lech<lb/>
Walesa, who appears in<lb/>
both of them. The<lb/>
presence of the Roman<lb/>
Catholic Church as a<lb/>
? social force is deftly<lb/>
 conveyed: in one scene<lb/>
; strikers confer, while in<lb/>
the background priests<lb/>
robe themselves for<lb/>
Mass.<lb/>
"The key relation-<lb/>
ship is that betwen<lb/>
Maciek, the man of<lb/>
iron, and his father,<lb/>
Birkut, the title<lb/>
character of Wajda's<lb/>
previous film Man of<lb/>
Marble, a worker<lb/>
honored by the state<lb/>
for heroic labor and<lb/>
then shot down in the<lb/>
street in 1970. Father<lb/>
and son are played<lb/>
powerfully by the same<lb/>
actor, J e r . y R a d -<lb/>
ziwilowicz. The film<lb/>
titles are not just<lb/>
slogans: marble refers<lb/>
sardonically to the<lb/>
awful statues of Birkut<lb/>
made when he was a<lb/>
"hero" of communist<lb/>
labor; iron symbolizes<lb/>
the forging of his own<lb/>
character that Maciek<lb/>
had to accomplish to<lb/>
stand against the lies<lb/>
and violence of the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
"The courage and<lb/>
strength it took for Wa-<lb/>
jda to make these<lb/>
points border on the in<lb/>
credible: Man of Iron<lb/>
must be the strongest<lb/>
overtly critical film evet<lb/>
made in an Iron Cur<lb/>
tain country. Made<lb/>
under extreme<lb/>
pressures of time and<lb/>
circumstance, the film<lb/>
is no agitprop exercise<lb/>
that happens to be on<lb/>
the right side. It is<lb/>
masterly in execution<lb/>
and rousing in its in<lb/>
spirational force. Wa-<lb/>
jda doesn't neglect even<lb/>
the comic side ot his<lb/>
lull human spectrum:<lb/>
Winkiel is a wonderful<lb/>
ly ironic figure as<lb/>
played bv Marian<lb/>
Opania ? a jitierv,<lb/>
sweaty, boozy little guy<lb/>
huffing along with his<lb/>
tape recorder and<lb/>
totebag dragging down<lb/>
his shoulder, smoking<lb/>
endless cigarettes and<lb/>
looking for a drink in<lb/>
Gdansk. (I iquor has<lb/>
been locked up b<lb/>
order of the austeu<lb/>
I a<lb/>
hi?<lb/>
h<lb/>
in<lb/>
Sohuai strik rs ho<lb/>
want cleat ' lish I eads<lb/>
for theii re1 olution ,i t.<lb/>
one memorable - nt<lb/>
Winkiel gets hold<lb/>
bottle of vodka<lb/>
he drops it n<lb/>
bathroom flooi<lb/>
dives to hi Iti<lb/>
anguisl oaking ;<lb/>
booze  ith a towel md<lb/>
wringing it <lb/>
"With W inkiel, Wa-<lb/>
jda md even be rcferi<lb/>
ing to elements ol ??? I<lb/>
conscience in his ov n<lb/>
charactei '1 am no<lb/>
more innoceni<lb/>
anyone else<lb/>
said, i - to an<lb/>
early I Uinisi p o<lb/>
paganda fil orfc<lb/>
cd on as i<lb/>
tant di<lb/>
gene i<lb/>
c learlj ' land<lb/>
tists and ;<lb/>
h m Wajda icgards<lb/>
with a jaundi ed se In<lb/>
ent :onversatkn in<lb/>
-v w ? ork be said,<lb/>
I i than once I<lb/>
thought I knew where<lb/>
? ,i . ing, but 1<lb/>
v as vi ong. I In.<lb/>
? i i.r e more im-<lb/>
It was a<lb/>
-  a) the Gdansk<lb/>
?. ho gave his<lb/>
n? ? Film its title when<lb/>
asked Wajda:<lb/>
  ?? ire ?? u going to<lb/>
ki<lb/>
men<lb/>
mu I<lb/>
can I<lb/>
t'oi<lb/>
assis<lb/>
More<lb/>
n k i ;<lb/>
film about us<lb/>
??" 'Artists<lb/>
humble' said<lb/>
'V e arc in<lb/>
,ei vice It we<lb/>
up society we<lb/>
naV e such<lb/>
.I films<lb/>
uch sentiments<lb/>
live Western<lb/>
ier? a tough<lb/>
ss in Waida<lb/>
that comes out at the<lb/>
end of Man of Iron<lb/>
when a politico tells<lb/>
Winkiel that the agree-<lb/>
ment between Solidan-<lb/>
t and the government<lb/>
isn't worth the paper<lb/>
it's printed on 'We're<lb/>
not here to share<lb/>
power says a govern-<lb/>
ment official.<lb/>
Wherever Wajda is<lb/>
now in Poland, he may<lb/>
already be planning a<lb/>
sequel to his men of<lb/>
marble and iron ?<lb/>
perhaps the ultimate<lb/>
substance of history,<lb/>
flesh and blood<lb/>
uJUUXDX<lb/>
Greenville s tiest Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
m deliver) ?iias lack in<lb/>
i ue quality and have'hidden5<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM?<lb/>
NEED INFORMATION<lb/>
<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention,<lb/>
24 HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
 y<lb/>
Mt.M tkisis mm<lb/>
758 HELP<lb/>
31 2 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
<lb/>
costs i?i the price ?<lb/>
Ua. hanged all that!<lb/>
u e stil our delivery<lb/>
at Menu Prices!<lb/>
ur harge. We also<lb/>
give U(KE Drinks with<lb/>
out large and giant<lb/>
pizzas TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CA<lb/>
a bib<lb/>
6 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for<lb/>
sale in each Kroger Sav on. ecept<lb/>
as specifically noted in this ad If we<lb/>
do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available, reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a ralncheck which<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
GrePf ?<lb/>
J<lb/>
W<lb/>
TIffT<lb/>
IX<lb/>
Open 8 a m. to Midnight<lb/>
- j i to 9 p m<lb/>
 ,or<lb/>
NMr<lb/>
A?fN<lb/>
MN<lb/>
US<lb/>
gOBlN<lb/>
H?<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
rUjAMS<lb/>
ii<lb/>
?N?t<lb/>
? GEORGE RO HILL lft ROBIN TOJJAMS<lb/>
THI ?ORLI AG ORDING TO GARf MARY BETH HI RT GLENN CLOSE JOHN UTHGOW<lb/>
?, pro PATRICK KELl?Y b? ?? SIEVE TESK.H M m fa l t JOHN IRVING<lb/>
?? GEORGE ROY HILL  ROBERT L CRAUTORI) ?rtt, GEORGE ROY Hill<lb/>
RJP'JS'91 4Bk. ?i ? ?m ? ww ? fttejM rn 5<lb/>
-JTX'SS" SffsfiwirnarTraol <lb/>
-?v-<lb/>
LOOK FOR GARP at a theatre near campus.<lb/>
. right '96?<lb/>
ge Sa. on<lb/>
3 it RiafMs Seservea<lb/>
None Soid o Dealers<lb/>
on<lb/>
?V<lb/>
?s:<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
66<lb/>
!RASEABLE<lb/>
NK PEN<lb/>
Eraser Mate 2<lb/>
 $<lb/>
For<lb/>
1<lb/>
L'SNOI<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
f nail hajj<lb/>
Gold Apples<lb/>
5 $4 49<lb/>
4SS0BTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Breyer's<lb/>
Yogurt<lb/>
1<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Breyer's<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Vi Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
2<lb/>
19<lb/>
V<lb/>
Jl<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0012"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
AUGUST31.1W2 Page 12<lb/>
Goals Set By<lb/>
Soccer Team<lb/>
B KKN BOl TON<lb/>
visUnl sporu l- ditor<lb/>
After the first week of practice,<lb/>
the LCI' soccer team has shown<lb/>
great improvement according to<lb/>
new head coach Robbie Church.<lb/>
But there is still a lot of work that<lb/>
needs to be done before the season<lb/>
opener against Christopher<lb/>
Newport on Sept. 12.<lb/>
In the past, ECU has relied on a<lb/>
gambling type of soccer that<lb/>
featured many long-range shots.<lb/>
With coach Church calling the<lb/>
shots, however, this year's team will<lb/>
employ a system of short passes and<lb/>
ball-control with an emphasis on<lb/>
controlling the tempo oi the game.<lb/>
As Church stated, it takes a lot of<lb/>
creativity to play soccer. "During<lb/>
an average game, a player will only<lb/>
have control of the ball for about<lb/>
three minutes out of a 90-minute<lb/>
game he said. "So it takes a lot of<lb/>
creative ball-control<lb/>
This year's squad will have it's<lb/>
share of versatile players. According<lb/>
to Church, the defensive position<lb/>
has looked strong so far. The<lb/>
leading defenders are Steve Brody,<lb/>
Dennis Elwell, Tom 1 awrence, and<lb/>
Dwavne Degaetano.<lb/>
Church said the defense should<lb/>
also get a lot of help this year from<lb/>
three freshmen. Mike Shytle, Jamie<lb/>
Reibel and David Fiore will all be<lb/>
pushing the starters.<lb/>
The midfield position is usuallv<lb/>
considered to be the place where the<lb/>
game is won or lost. Church said.<lb/>
I he Pirates will be relying heavily<lb/>
-<lb/>
on Bill Merwin, who Church calls<lb/>
his "field general Other mid-<lb/>
fielders that will be counted on are<lb/>
Chip Baker, Stan Griff. Danny<lb/>
Whelm, Ted Melton and freshman<lb/>
Jav Berger.<lb/>
Up front, the forwards will be<lb/>
depended on to do a lot of scoring.<lb/>
This group will include Mike Swain,<lb/>
the fastest player on the team and a<lb/>
very dangerous threat on the wing.<lb/>
Other forwards are Mike Hardy,<lb/>
Brian Winchell, Doug Kelly, Kyle<lb/>
Milko and freshman David Skeff-<lb/>
ington.<lb/>
With the defender, midfield and<lb/>
forward positions shaping up, the<lb/>
toughest position to fill will be<lb/>
goalie. With all-star Steve Brown<lb/>
having graduated, the goalie will be<lb/>
a big question mark for the Pirates<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
At this point, the leading con-<lb/>
tender is freshman Tony Rechner<lb/>
from New Jersey. "It will be tough<lb/>
for him to step in and play as a<lb/>
freshman Church said. "But he<lb/>
has done a very good job for us so<lb/>
far<lb/>
With one of the toughest schedul-<lb/>
ed in the South, the Pirates will have<lb/>
to work very hard to come up with a<lb/>
successful team.<lb/>
Church's main goals for this year<lb/>
will be to:<lb/>
put together a winning team and to<lb/>
be physically and mentally prepared<lb/>
to play every game. "We will try to<lb/>
do as good as any team at ECU has<lb/>
ever done he said. "The talent is<lb/>
there, but it will take a lot of hard<lb/>
work<lb/>
As a player, Church was an often-<lb/>
Holt A True<lb/>
Supporter Of<lb/>
Pirate Sports<lb/>
B CINDY PI FAS A NTS<lb/>
sports t-ditm<lb/>
There's no doubt that the East<lb/>
Carolina athletic programs can use<lb/>
all the support and promotional<lb/>
help it can get.<lb/>
And Pamela Holt, assistant<lb/>
athletic director of student life, is<lb/>
determined to drum up as much en-<lb/>
thusiasm in the student body as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
How is she going to do this? By<lb/>
building a program called the Stu-<lb/>
dent Athletic Board (SAB).<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
SSP I ok Inside<lb/>
Pirate Soccer Coach Robbie Church says EC Is soccer team has shown<lb/>
great improvement. <lb/>
sive specialist. As a coach, he will<lb/>
use an offensive-minded philosophy<lb/>
and his plan will call for a wide-<lb/>
open, entertaining game.<lb/>
Offensively, the Pirates showed<lb/>
their capabilities last week in a<lb/>
scrimmage game against a team ot<lb/>
Marines from Jacksonville. They<lb/>
won that name 11-0 and have<lb/>
another scrimmage set for next<lb/>
Wednesday against Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian College.<lb/>
With the tough schedule, the<lb/>
Pirates will need a lot oi support<lb/>
from the fans. As Church puts it.<lb/>
"We invite everyone to come out to<lb/>
the game and support the players<lb/>
that have been working very hard<lb/>
According to Holt, the SAB is<lb/>
made up ot students who are in-<lb/>
terested in staging athletic events,<lb/>
meeting athletes and coaches and<lb/>
promoting the ECU program bv<lb/>
recognizing athletes and boosting<lb/>
school spirit.<lb/>
I ast year, the SAB had approx-<lb/>
miatelv 50 members, but Holt<lb/>
would like to see at least 1(H) SAB<lb/>
members this year. Holt is also<lb/>
looking for those students who can<lb/>
serve a- leaders.<lb/>
During the 1981 -eason, the SAB<lb/>
only worked with the football team<lb/>
and the women's and men's basket-<lb/>
ball teams. But SAB president Kity<lb/>
Kinane is hoping that an increased<lb/>
membership will enable the board to<lb/>
assist all athletic programs.<lb/>
The SAB, which is similar to that<lb/>
of a high school Pep club, organizes<lb/>
several projects to carry out through<lb/>
the year. For example, the athletic<lb/>
board will once again sponsor a<lb/>
Poster Banner contest during the<lb/>
football season. The winner of the<lb/>
contest will receive a free keg ot beer<lb/>
at each home game, which will be<lb/>
provided by a local Anheuser-Bush<lb/>
distributor. Points are awarded in<lb/>
the categories of visibility, theme<lb/>
and creativity. To compete in the<lb/>
contest, each organization must<lb/>
come bv the athletic director's office<lb/>
and pick up the rules for the contest.<lb/>
Holt, who was here during the<lb/>
Pat Dve era. said she has seen a dif-<lb/>
ferent attitude in the student bodv<lb/>
this vear. "At one point, it was at a<lb/>
real low she said. "But the kids<lb/>
seem to be more excited now than<lb/>
ever before"<lb/>
Holt is a true believer in promo-<lb/>
tions and believes that the students<lb/>
should show their support. "The<lb/>
kids need to get involved more she<lb/>
said, "and it's a lot of fun too<lb/>
The athletic director has high<lb/>
hopes tor the SAB and expects the<lb/>
program to be a verv successful one<lb/>
in about five years. "1 know it will<lb/>
take time to build a tirsi-rate pro-<lb/>
gram she said.<lb/>
The first meeting of the SAB will<lb/>
be Wednesday. Sept. 1 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
room 244 at the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
?<lb/>
JiMfft,<lb/>
?ftF1<lb/>
Television Kicks Off '82 College Football<lb/>
Year With National Live-Coverage Games<lb/>
(AP) With 41 fewer "major"<lb/>
teams but two additional television<lb/>
networks, the 1982 college football<lb/>
season gets underway this week.<lb/>
The National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association had a busy off-season,<lb/>
trimming Division I-A from 137 to<lb/>
96 teams and giving a piece of the<lb/>
live TV action, which had been<lb/>
ABC's exclusive property for 16<lb/>
years to CBS and the Turner Broad-<lb/>
casting system. The price was a<lb/>
whopping $281.1 million ? $263.5<lb/>
million from ABC and CBS for the<lb/>
next four vears and $17.6 million<lb/>
from TBS for a two-year sup-<lb/>
plemental package of prime-time<lb/>
night games.<lb/>
The traditional powers, of course,<lb/>
are still in Division I-A, but leagues<lb/>
like the Mid-American, Missouri<lb/>
Valley, Southern and Southland<lb/>
conferences and the Ivies have been<lb/>
bumped to Division 1-AA.<lb/>
Most of them are happy about it<lb/>
because the Division I-A A playotfs<lb/>
have been expanded, giving them a<lb/>
chance at a national championship<lb/>
which they would not have in Divi-<lb/>
sion 1-A, where the champion is<lb/>
determined bv the Associated Press<lb/>
poll.<lb/>
ABC and CBS each will televise<lb/>
14 "exposures or live games ?<lb/>
either national or regionaltelecast<lb/>
into each market on the network.<lb/>
Within its 14 "exposures<lb/>
however, each network must present<lb/>
a minimum of 35 games. In addi-<lb/>
tion, TBS will show 19 night<lb/>
games-14 Saturdays. tour<lb/>
Thursdays and one Sunday.<lb/>
TBS actually will get a jump on<lb/>
the others and kick off college foot-<lb/>
ball's 114th season bv airing the<lb/>
Bngham Young-Nevada-I as Vegas<lb/>
game Thursday night. ABC in-<lb/>
augurates its schedule Monday<lb/>
night, Sept. 6. with Clemson at<lb/>
Georgia ? a matchup of the 1981<lb/>
and 1980 national champions ?<lb/>
while CBS kicks off its series Thurs-<lb/>
day night. Sept. 9, with North<lb/>
Carolina at Pitt.<lb/>
The list of 96 Division I-A teams<lb/>
includes the top seven conferences<lb/>
? Atlantic Coast. Big Eight, Big<lb/>
Ten, Pacific 10, Southeastern,<lb/>
Southwest and Western Athletic ?<lb/>
the seven-member Pacific Coast<lb/>
Athletic Association; Central<lb/>
Michigan and Toledo o the MAC;<lb/>
New Mexico State. 1 uUa and<lb/>
W ichita State ot the MVC and 20 in-<lb/>
dependents.<lb/>
There will be 16 major college bowl<lb/>
games, the same number as last<lb/>
vear. I he C.arden State Bowl drop-<lb/>
ped out. but a new kid on the block<lb/>
is the Aloha Bowl in Honolulu.<lb/>
Rule changes tor 1982 are negligi-<lb/>
ble, although the penaltv was chang-<lb/>
ed to five yards for incidental grasp-<lb/>
ing of a face mask and 15 vards tor<lb/>
twisting, turning or pulling on it.<lb/>
Former Football Pro<lb/>
To Speak Thursday<lb/>
ECl tennis squad started practice this week under the guidance of head<lb/>
coach Patricia Sherman. Sherman encourages anyone interested in trying<lb/>
out to contact her.<lb/>
Injuries Plaguing<lb/>
Pre-Season Pirates<lb/>
Despite hampering injuries and<lb/>
the temporary loss of a few starting<lb/>
players, the ECU football team is<lb/>
intensely preparing for its first con-<lb/>
frontation of the season against N.<lb/>
C. State.<lb/>
In preseason practices, four out<lb/>
of five starting linebackers and four<lb/>
top tailbacks have been injured.<lb/>
Tailback Jimmy Walden, who<lb/>
was diagnosed as having a strained<lb/>
ligament, will be weai ng a cast until<lb/>
the end of the week. Junior tailback<lb/>
Milton Corsey has missed contact<lb/>
practice because of a pulled muscle.<lb/>
Receiver Carlton Frazier has also<lb/>
been unable to practice due to a ten-<lb/>
don injury.<lb/>
On the defensive end, linebacker<lb/>
Gerry Rogers broke his hand and<lb/>
will be out of commission for six to<lb/>
eight weeks. Amos Twitty, another<lb/>
starting linebacker, has been sidelin-<lb/>
ed with a mild shoulder separation.<lb/>
John Columbia, who serves as a<lb/>
back-up for Rogers, will undergo<lb/>
knee surgery and is out for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
ECU flanker Stuart Ramirez has<lb/>
been having problems with his<lb/>
ankle, and sophomore flanker<lb/>
Stefon Adams has a shoulder<lb/>
separation.<lb/>
Centers John Floyd and Tim Mit-<lb/>
chell have also experienced ankle<lb/>
and knee problems.<lb/>
Because of injuries, many of the<lb/>
players have been changing posi-<lb/>
tions in pre-season practices. For<lb/>
instance, cornerback Bernard Wynn<lb/>
has been moved to the offensive side<lb/>
during practices.<lb/>
Although some of the injuries<lb/>
have proven to be more serious than<lb/>
others, most of the players are ex-<lb/>
pected to recuperate before Sept.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
Quarterback Greg Stewart has avoided pre-season injury and is expected<lb/>
play in ECU's opener against N.C. State on Sept. 11.<lb/>
former professional football<lb/>
athlete Oscar Roan and his wife.<lb/>
Linda, will be visiting East Carolina<lb/>
University on Thursday, Sept. 2 at<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
The Roans, who are both Dallas<lb/>
natives and graduates from South<lb/>
Oak High School, will hold a pro-<lb/>
gram at Jenkins Auditorium at 8<lb/>
p.m. for all ECl students.<lb/>
The Roans have been working as<lb/>
vouth evangelists ever since Oscar<lb/>
retired from the Cleveland Browns<lb/>
in 1978.<lb/>
In high school, Oscar was an<lb/>
outstanding pcrtormcr in football,<lb/>
baseball, track and basketball. Dur-<lb/>
ing his senior year, he was all-<lb/>
distnct in the four sports.<lb/>
After graduating in 19"0. Oscar<lb/>
received a football scholarship to<lb/>
U.C.L.A. and played freshman<lb/>
football and basketball there before<lb/>
returning to Dallas in 19" 1.<lb/>
Completing his Associate Arts<lb/>
degree at El Centro College. Oscar<lb/>
enrolled in Southern Methodist<lb/>
University and graduated in 1974<lb/>
with a business degree, specializing<lb/>
in accounting and finance. At<lb/>
SMU, Oscar earned all southwest<lb/>
conference honors in both basket-<lb/>
ball and football. During his senior<lb/>
year, he made the Time magazine's<lb/>
1974 All America football team as a<lb/>
tight end.<lb/>
Oscar participated in three post-<lb/>
season football games his senior<lb/>
year; the East-W est Shrine game in<lb/>
San Francisco, the All-America<lb/>
game in I ubbock and the Hula<lb/>
Bowl in Hawaii. In the Hula Bowl,<lb/>
Oscar established three records:<lb/>
most yardage by a pass receiver (205<lb/>
yards), most touchdowns scored (3)<lb/>
and longest touchdown pass (98<lb/>
yards).<lb/>
to Drafted in the third round by the<lb/>
Cleveland Browns in 1975, Oscar<lb/>
caught 41 passes for 463 yards and<lb/>
three touchdowns during his rookie<lb/>
year. He was named the fourth<lb/>
runner-up for the rookie-of-the-vear<lb/>
award.<lb/>
The 6-6 tightend played for the<lb/>
Browns for four years before retir-<lb/>
ing. The Roans now work full-time<lb/>
as evangelists and travel around the<lb/>
country to share their personal<lb/>
testimonies.<lb/>
Linda, a graduate of East Texas<lb/>
State University, has been singing<lb/>
pubhclv sinse 194. The coupie has<lb/>
two sons, Mario and Quincv. and<lb/>
reside in De Soto. Texas.<lb/>
The program is being sponsored<lb/>
bv the Student Athletic Board and<lb/>
the ECU Fellowship of Christian<lb/>
Athletes.<lb/>
Grid Tickets<lb/>
On Sale Now<lb/>
For Opener<lb/>
Football tickets for the ECU ?<lb/>
N.C. State game will be on sale<lb/>
through Thursday only at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The ticket office will be open<lb/>
from 8 am until 5 p.m. each day.<lb/>
After Thursday, Sept. 2, no tickets<lb/>
will be on sale.<lb/>
Because of previous confusion<lb/>
about the selling of the tickets, the<lb/>
N. C. State and ECU athletic<lb/>
departments have decided to extend<lb/>
the time in order for ECU students<lb/>
to purchase the remaining tickets.<lb/>
The Pirates will play N.C. State on<lb/>
Sept. 11 at Carter Stadium in<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
C<lb/>
?<lb/>
Cr<lb/>
D:<lb/>
I -<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
v .<lb/>
V<lb/>
H<lb/>
Br<lb/>
1 id)<lb/>
Oak<lb/>
TN<lb/>
?<lb/>
son.<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
cher<lb/>
unsu.<lb/>
him<lb/>
Hi j<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
Hel<lb/>
 rst<lb/>
R<lb/>
V<lb/>
w a<lb/>
Herdl<lb/>
stea<lb/>
I<lb/>
his i<lb/>
T<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 31. 1982<lb/>
13<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
ale<lb/>
hnges<lb/>
pckets<lb/>
usion<lb/>
I, the<lb/>
thletic<lb/>
Extend<lb/>
uiem<lb/>
Ikets.<lb/>
'e on<lb/>
m in<lb/>
Y'<lb/>
<lb/>
TIV<lb/>
? ? vf fi?j.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
Mb<lb/>
California Concept<lb/>
Hair Design Center<lb/>
Easily within walking<lb/>
distance of ECU<lb/>
Across from Biscuit Towne<lb/>
Easy Care Hair Designs<lb/>
at affordable prices.<lb/>
752-2967<lb/>
Appointment<lb/>
please.<lb/>
The Pirates go info action in Raleigh against the Wolfpack on Sept. 11.<lb/>
Chuck Muncie To Rejoin Chargers<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
SAN DIEGO (AP)<lb/>
Running back<lb/>
Chuck Muncie will pro-<lb/>
bably rejoin the San<lb/>
Diego Chargers within<lb/>
a ueek after undergo-<lb/>
ing drug treatment for<lb/>
2! davs. his business<lb/>
advisor uas quoted<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Muncie reportedlv<lb/>
as been at Camelback<lb/>
Hospital in Scottsdale.<lb/>
Arizona.<lb/>
Muncie "never had a<lb/>
problem agreeing that telephone interview Muncie returned to been burglarized twice,<lb/>
he should receive treat trom New Orleans, ad- his home in Kenner, San Diego opens the<lb/>
ment he was just ding "he's fine and 1 la to be with his preg- regular season of the<lb/>
against three weeks of think he will be back nant wife, Robyn, for National Football<lb/>
it advisor Allen with the Chargers next two days this week League in a game Sept.<lb/>
Werner said. week after their home had 12 at Denver.<lb/>
That hurt his pride<lb/>
because he didn't have<lb/>
any detoxing to go<lb/>
through. But he did<lb/>
need an education and<lb/>
an explaining.<lb/>
"The teatment really<lb/>
has been very good for<lb/>
him Weiner said in a<lb/>
Henderson Steals<lb/>
Brock's Record<lb/>
In the third inning of<lb/>
Friday n i g h t' s<lb/>
Oakland-Milwaukee<lb/>
game, there was no<lb/>
re and Oakland had<lb/>
a man on first base.<lb/>
The thing that made<lb/>
this situation unusual<lb/>
was that the man on<lb/>
first was Ricky Hender-<lb/>
son, and he was about<lb/>
to attempt to break<lb/>
Lou Brock's major<lb/>
league record of 118<lb/>
stolen bases.<lb/>
After Milwaukee pit-<lb/>
cher Doc Medich tried<lb/>
unsuccessfully to pick<lb/>
him off four times,<lb/>
Henderson broke for<lb/>
second on the first<lb/>
pitch to the plate.<lb/>
Catcher Ted Sim-<lb/>
mons' throw was slight-<lb/>
ly off to the right, and<lb/>
Henderson slid head-<lb/>
first under the attemp-<lb/>
ted tag of shortstop<lb/>
Robin Yount.<lb/>
As if that effort<lb/>
wasn't enough,<lb/>
Henderson went on to<lb/>
steal three more bases<lb/>
in that game to bring<lb/>
his record total to 122.<lb/>
That was the third time<lb/>
this season that he had<lb/>
stolen four bases in one<lb/>
game.<lb/>
After realizing that<lb/>
he was safe at second.<lb/>
Henderson sprang to<lb/>
his feet among the<lb/>
cheers of 41,600 par-<lb/>
tisan Brewer fans. He<lb/>
then proceeded to pull<lb/>
the bag from it's moor-<lb/>
ings and raise it above<lb/>
his head in triumph.<lb/>
Henderson's success<lb/>
has something to do<lb/>
with his unique ap-<lb/>
proach to the art of<lb/>
base-stealing. Instead<lb/>
of taking as large a lead<lb/>
as possible at first,<lb/>
Henderson prefers to<lb/>
take a smaller lead that<lb/>
enables him to keep his<lb/>
momentum going<lb/>
towards second base.<lb/>
Even with the record<lb/>
and the publicity,<lb/>
Henderson still isn't<lb/>
satisfied. "I can steal<lb/>
162 bases if things go<lb/>
right he said after the<lb/>
game. "If I can help<lb/>
the team by keeping on<lb/>
running, there's no tell-<lb/>
ing how manv I can<lb/>
get<lb/>
f<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
752-4156<lb/>
rTar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
S: I<lb/>
A"<lb/>
?<lb/>
218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
Cross Green Slree' B' 'dq<lb/>
Take left a' 1st Lit)<lb/>
Located one block don on i?<lb/>
MonThurs. ALL DAY<lb/>
Sat. ? Lunch 11-3<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
TROUT<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
clearance sale<lb/>
All Men's Swimsuits<lb/>
25 off<lb/>
All Men's Tennis Shorts<lb/>
by Court Casual &amp; O.P.<lb/>
25 off<lb/>
All Ladies' Tennis Shorts &amp; Shirts<lb/>
25 off<lb/>
Greek Jerseys &amp;<lb/>
Sweat Shirts,<lb/>
Pants &amp; Jackets<lb/>
are now in stock!<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All typ of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices, lud coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
$<lb/>
4.99<lb/>
k<lb/>
Airpart ?i:<lb/>
:ec;ri?. forth CwoliM<lb/>
REGULAR DAILY SPECIAL<lb/>
Flounder &amp; Shrimp Plate<lb/>
$2.89<lb/>
TAKE OUTS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
.GREENVILLE ATHLETIC CLUB<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
ACTIVITY<lb/>
<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
mznnzzEBnnnnzzzznnzzm<lb/>
<lb/>
rruloaacatV<lb/>
This Wed. &amp; Thurs. only<lb/>
? Avg. $12 per roll ?<lb/>
Great for dorms, apts bedrooms, etc.<lb/>
KIMERY'S<lb/>
FURNITURE<lb/>
924 Dickinson Ave. 10th &amp; Railroad Crossing<lb/>
nnnnnnm<lb/>
DON'T GET FAT &amp; LAZY BECAUSE<lb/>
YOU'RE BACK IN SCHOOIKEEP<lb/>
THAT BIKINI FIGURE AND GOLDEN TAN!<lb/>
COME H ORK OUT A T THE GREENVILLE A THLETIC CLUB<lb/>
YOUR STUDENT IDAAAKESYOU ELIGIBLE FOR OUR<lb/>
SPECIAL STUDENT MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
THERE'S NO INITIATION FEE &amp;<lb/>
ONLY $40.00MONTH -<lb/>
- THAT'S JUST $1.35 A DAY<lb/>
AND FOR THAT $1.35 YOU GET:<lb/>
?8RACQUETBALLCOURTS<lb/>
? OUTDOOR SWIMMING POOL<lb/>
(25 METERS)<lb/>
? NAUTILUS WEIGHT MACHINES &amp;<lb/>
FREE WEIGHTS<lb/>
? BODY MAINTENANCE (CO-ED<lb/>
AEROBIC EXERCISE CLASSES) ?<lb/>
WILD&amp;CRAZY<lb/>
? INDOOR RUNNING TRACK<lb/>
? STEAM ROOMS, SAUNAS, HOT TUBS, AND LOCKER<lb/>
FACILITIES<lb/>
? PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION IN ALL ACTIVITIES AND<lb/>
IN INDIVIDUAL DIET AND EXERCISE COUNSELING<lb/>
SPECIAL STUDENT HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday: 6:00a.m12:00noon<lb/>
2:00 p.m4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. &amp; Sun 8:00a.m2:30p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
SPECIAL SEMESTER RATES:<lb/>
4MONTHS (SEPTEMBER-DECEMBER)<lb/>
130<lb/>
00<lb/>
SAVE $30.00<lb/>
THIS AD ENTITLES YOU TO ONE FREE VISIT<lb/>
DURING OUR STUDENT HOURS ?<lb/>
EXPIRES SEPT. IS, 1982<lb/>
COME IN AND JOIN TOD A YH<lb/>
<lb/>
??r,if?. Ma<lb/>
2'<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 31, 1982<lb/>
Pitt Number One In AP Poll<lb/>
(AP) ? The Univer-<lb/>
sity of Pittsburgh, com-<lb/>
ing off three con-<lb/>
secutive 11-1 seasons<lb/>
but sporting it's third<lb/>
head coach in seven<lb/>
years, has been picked<lb/>
to win the 1982 na-<lb/>
tional championship in<lb/>
the Associated Press<lb/>
preseason college foot-<lb/>
hall poll with defending<lb/>
champion Clemson in<lb/>
the no. 11 spot.<lb/>
The Pitt Panthers<lb/>
received 36 first-place<lb/>
votes and 1,092 of a<lb/>
possible 1,200 points<lb/>
from a nationwide<lb/>
panel of 59 sports<lb/>
enters and broad-<lb/>
casters. The<lb/>
Washington Huskies<lb/>
were second with 15<lb/>
first-place votes and<lb/>
1,064 points, followed<lb/>
b Alabama,<lb/>
Nebraska, and North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The last team to win<lb/>
ihe AP national cham-<lb/>
pionship after being<lb/>
ranked no. 1 in the<lb/>
preseason poll was<lb/>
?Mabama in 1978. Pitt<lb/>
won it's last title in<lb/>
19-6 after starting out<lb/>
no. 9.<lb/>
That was Johnny<lb/>
Major's last year as<lb/>
Pitt's head coach.<lb/>
Jackie Sherrill coached<lb/>
the Panthers to four<lb/>
Top Ten finishes the<lb/>
last five years, in-<lb/>
cluding the runnerup<lb/>
spot behind Georgia in<lb/>
1980 and fourth place a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
However, Sherrill<lb/>
left Pitt last January<lb/>
for Texas A'M. His<lb/>
succesor, former defen-<lb/>
sive coordinator<lb/>
Serafino "Foge"<lb/>
Fazio, finds himself in<lb/>
the unique position of<lb/>
being ranked number<lb/>
one before his debut as<lb/>
a college coach.<lb/>
Rounding out the<lb/>
preseason Top Ten<lb/>
behind fifth-rated<lb/>
North Carolina ?<lb/>
which, by the way, is<lb/>
Pitt's opening-game<lb/>
opponent on national<lb/>
television the night of<lb/>
Sept. 9 ? are Southern<lb/>
Methodist, Georgia,<lb/>
Penn State, Oklahoma,<lb/>
and Southern Cal.<lb/>
Third-ranked<lb/>
Alabama received three<lb/>
first-place votes and<lb/>
966 points, Nebraska<lb/>
had two firs' and 949<lb/>
points and North<lb/>
Carolina also had two<lb/>
no. 1 votes and 863<lb/>
points. Then comes<lb/>
SMU with 743 points,<lb/>
Georgia 698, Penn<lb/>
State 682, Oklahoma<lb/>
638 and Southern Cal<lb/>
624.<lb/>
The remaining first-<lb/>
place vote went to<lb/>
Clemson, but the 1981<lb/>
kings, the only<lb/>
unbeaten team in the<lb/>
nation a year ago,<lb/>
totaled just 561 points<lb/>
for 11th place. Last<lb/>
year, the Tigers were<lb/>
not even in the<lb/>
preseason Top Twenty<lb/>
but stormed to their<lb/>
first national chain<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
Besides Clemson, the<lb/>
preseason Second Ten<lb/>
consists of Michigan,<lb/>
Arkansas, Ohio State,<lb/>
Miami, Florida, Texas,<lb/>
Notre Dame, Arizona<lb/>
State and UCLA.<lb/>
Michigan was no. 1 in<lb/>
the 1981 preseason<lb/>
poll.<lb/>
The final 1981 Top<lb/>
Ten consisted of Clem-<lb/>
son, Texas, Penn State,<lb/>
Pitt, SMU, Georgia,<lb/>
Alabama, Miami,<lb/>
North Carolina and<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
The Second Ten had<lb/>
Nebraska, Michigan,<lb/>
Brigham Young,<lb/>
Southern Cal, Ohio<lb/>
State,Arizona State,<lb/>
West Virginia, Iowa,<lb/>
Missouri and<lb/>
Oklahoma.<lb/>
The ECU volleyball team starts its season off against N.C. State on Sept.<lb/>
14. (.arm- time is 7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS WRITERS NEEDED<lb/>
Applv in person at The Fast Carolinian office. Old<lb/>
South Building, across f rom ,o nef 1 ibrarv. Experience<lb/>
preferred but not necessarv. Must be dependable and<lb/>
willing to learn.<lb/>
fH1??Ht1tHKt:1L1L1L1LLlL1LlWtLlL1Lim<lb/>
1982 U.S. Open<lb/>
Begins Today<lb/>
!<lb/>
A'<lb/>
m<lb/>
DELI KITCHEN<lb/>
CPv Home Cooked Food <lb/>
NEW VORK(AP) ?<lb/>
He fending U.S. Open<lb/>
champions John<lb/>
McEnroe and Tracy<lb/>
Austin will play their<lb/>
first matches at the Na-<lb/>
takes on Bill Scanlon.<lb/>
Also playing on<lb/>
Tuesday will be Ivan<lb/>
Lendl of<lb/>
Czechoslovakia, the<lb/>
number three seed, and<lb/>
LmSJ-<lb/>
Meat&amp;2Veg Bread, Bc<lb/>
$ '10 0 Free re f ill i on<lb/>
? coffee X 'fa.<lb/>
Breakfast Served 6:30 a. m. -10:30 a. m.<lb/>
Sausage &amp; Ham Biscuits ? 5(K<lb/>
Lunch Served from 11:00-7:30<lb/>
Homemade Biscuits &amp; Desserts<lb/>
Eat In or Take Out<lb/>
103 Raleigh &amp; Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
752-5339<lb/>
H hy eat anywhere else when you can<lb/>
eat at the Deli Kitchen<lb/>
c<lb/>
:<lb/>
BaBMMBMBBBBBM?iBaBBHHaBBHBHMaMWMW?anHMMMW??BMHWMW<lb/>
301 Evans St. Mall In the Minges Building 752 5476<lb/>
INTRODUCING OUR All You Can Eat<lb/>
BUFFET from 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
Mon. Thru Sat. ? for only $5.95<lb/>
 ?.<lb/>
Eional Tennis Center former champion Billie<lb/>
Tuesday as the 1982 Jean King,<lb/>
championships get<lb/>
under vay.<lb/>
Austin will play the<lb/>
tirst match on the<lb/>
stadium court at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. against Catherine<lb/>
Tanvier of France,<lb/>
while McEnroe will<lb/>
follow against Tim<lb/>
Ciullikson.<lb/>
Mats Wilander of<lb/>
Sweden, the French<lb/>
Open champion, will<lb/>
hegin the two-week<lb/>
tournament at 11 a.m.<lb/>
EDT, Tuesday when he<lb/>
Two women players<lb/>
have withdrawn from<lb/>
the main draw singles,<lb/>
the U.S. Tennis<lb/>
Association announc-<lb/>
ed. Sue Barker of Great<lb/>
Britain and Petra<lb/>
Delhees of Switzerland<lb/>
have been replaced by-<lb/>
Amanda Tobin of<lb/>
Australia and Lilian<lb/>
Drescher of<lb/>
Switzerland. No reason<lb/>
for the withdrawals<lb/>
were announced.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
I 2'h WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 l<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSl<lb/>
8. 90 qnancv Te??, B<lb/>
uiItw  0 Pronirnt Pregr<lb/>
,ttiq ?' 'u'lher in-<lb/>
tall 83 ' ? (Toll F<lb/>
dOO 2. ? i?B bet wet<lb/>
A M and tPM Weekdays<lb/>
i<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for Men &amp; Women<lb/>
Open Under<lb/>
New<lb/>
Management<lb/>
. . Co.<lb/>
fna?'0<lb/>
Numbi<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh. N C.<lb/>
RECENTLY REMODELED It's that time again to<lb/>
get back into shape. Nautilus is located on E:ans<lb/>
Street, within walking distance from campus. Featur-<lb/>
ing a full line of Nautilus equipment, Olympic free<lb/>
weights, sauna, whirlpool and locker room.<lb/>
Call and ask about our ?- rated s. mien i rates and<lb/>
group rate. un(1 scfW(Jue a<lb/>
jree introductory workout.<lb/>
HOURSOF OPERATION<lb/>
MonThurs. ? 10 am 9pm Friday ? 10 am -8 pm<lb/>
Saturday ? 10a.m5p.rn Sunday ? I p.m5pm.<lb/>
Buffet will include:<lb/>
?Chicken<lb/>
?Lasagna<lb/>
?Seafood<lb/>
?Ham<lb/>
?Vegetables<lb/>
?Meatballs<lb/>
?Roast Beef<lb/>
?Salad<lb/>
?Dessert<lb/>
? Iced tea or coffee<lb/>
Also offering our full lunch menu<lb/>
from 11:30-2:30<lb/>
our full dinner menu<lb/>
from 5:00-10:00 MonSat.<lb/>
CLOSED SUNDAY<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I.<lb/>
$1.00 off Buffet<lb/>
One coupon per person only.<lb/>
Good between 5 7 p.m. Expires Sept 26. 1982<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
Sorority lush<lb/>
zfzacn ins iJ aak . . .<lb/>
JVC 29<lb/>
95<lb/>
Hi-Fi Stylistic System<lb/>
9<lb/>
30 watts<lb/>
perch.<lb/>
$<lb/>
TC-FX2<lb/>
159<lb/>
95<lb/>
behy<lb/>
Sign Up for,<lb/>
August 31st and September th<lb/>
Croatan and Bookstore<lb/>
Convocation: September 9th ? 5:30<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Rush Week: September 13th17th<lb/>
TWO MOTOR STEREO CASSETTE DECK<lb/>
B3Mjjg8i)(pfr?<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
vTX STEREO FOR YOUR CAR<lb/>
DIN SIZE<lb/>
? W are music.<lb/>
KRC-11 2 AM FM Cassette<lb/>
with Auto Reverse<lb/>
LOUDNESS LOCKING FAST FOR REV<lb/>
169<lb/>
FREE T-SHIRT WITH THIS AD<lb/>
Financing<lb/>
Available<lb/>
T<lb/>
ii<lb/>
11 a ;i <lb/>
9 AM. Th.<lb/>
9-8 Fri.<lb/>
9-5 Sat<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
r -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
may iy. l-ao<lb/>
15<lb/>
ECU IRS To Offer<lb/>
Fall Whitewater Trip<lb/>
Did you ever wanl to<lb/>
take a thrilling ratting<lb/>
:np "on cold, cleat<lb/>
watei tin ouuh a<lb/>
ful gorge offer-<lb/>
e a variety oi scenic<lb/>
l w s.<lb/>
We . now you're in<lb/>
le ECl Depart-<lb/>
oi Inti amui al-<lb/>
i ci ices Is-<lb/>
 ofl m such<lb/>
ip to the Nantahala<lb/>
Ri ei (in wester n<lb/>
N.C.).<lb/>
1 his trip oi fei s a<lb/>
ting experience"<lb/>
foi novices and<lb/>
enced raftei s.<lb/>
' . caravan will<lb/>
part Greenville<lb/>
? ton of Friday,<lb/>
10, arriving in<lb/>
Bryson City (a<lb/>
15 mmutc drive from<lb/>
the ner) that night.<lb/>
The river trip begins<lb/>
the next morning at 10.<lb/>
The eight-mile trek<lb/>
takes about 3 hours,<lb/>
although additional<lb/>
time will be spent in in-<lb/>
struction and shuttle<lb/>
bus transportation.<lb/>
Participants will<lb/>
dej the river center<lb/>
at approximate!) 3<lb/>
p.m. Saturday and<lb/>
return to Greenville late<lb/>
that night.<lb/>
Reservations can be<lb/>
made through the out-<lb/>
door recreation center.<lb/>
Room 113 Memorial<lb/>
Gym (757-6911), b<lb/>
noon on 1 riday, Sept.<lb/>
Exercise Classes<lb/>
A vailable In Fall<lb/>
3. limited space is<lb/>
available, and reserva-<lb/>
tions will be taken on a I<lb/>
first-come-first-served<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
The total cost for the <lb/>
trip, including registra- j<lb/>
tion, transportation,<lb/>
lodging and the river<lb/>
trip is $35. However, j<lb/>
arrangements may be<lb/>
made at the outdoor<lb/>
recreation center tor :<lb/>
those who wish to pro-<lb/>
vide their own<lb/>
transportation and<lb/>
lodging.<lb/>
A pre-trip meeting<lb/>
will be held in Room<lb/>
11)2 Memorial Gym at 7<lb/>
p.m. on Tuesday, Sept.<lb/>
7. Additional informa-<lb/>
tion will be available at<lb/>
that time.<lb/>
The ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services is<lb/>
now offering classes in<lb/>
physical fitness.<lb/>
Included are both<lb/>
aerobic fitness and ex-<lb/>
ercise fitness classes.<lb/>
They will be offered at<lb/>
many times during the<lb/>
week. All classes begin<lb/>
the week of Sept. 27<lb/>
and last eight weeks.<lb/>
The exercise classes<lb/>
are being offered at 13<lb/>
different locations<lb/>
around campus, and<lb/>
students can register in<lb/>
Room 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym between now and<lb/>
Sept. 27 for the class of<lb/>
their choice.<lb/>
Also, the IRS<lb/>
reminds students o. -jp-<lb/>
coming intramural<lb/>
events:<lb/>
A bicycle race will be<lb/>
held on Sept. 8, with<lb/>
registration from now<lb/>
until Sept. 6.<lb/>
Play begins on Sept.<lb/>
13 for intramural flag<lb/>
football. Entry dates<lb/>
are Sept, 6, 7 and 8.<lb/>
And students in-<lb/>
terested in intramural<lb/>
co-recreational slow-<lb/>
pitch softball can<lb/>
register at Memorial<lb/>
from Sept. 13 to Sept.<lb/>
15. Play begins on<lb/>
Sept. 20.<lb/>
WED fltiC Att.<lb/>
j J 00 r. 7 H<lb/>
7<lb/>
Was<lb/>
a<lb/>
Great<lb/>
Success<lb/>
<lb/>
4;<lb/>
w<lb/>
Vv- - .<lb/>
?? 3<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
?<lb/>
basis<lb/>
but<lb/>
- ? Auq<lb/>
.1 7 p m or call 7i1 1378<lb/>
SANTEO Bass player with<lb/>
vocals for v.orkinq part tmt? rock<lb/>
band 'SA 4972<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
COTTAGE FOR rent at N Myrtle<lb/>
BEach Labor Day weekend ?200<lb/>
tor 3 niqnt Sleeps 6 Call 7S8 707<lb/>
Rebecca<lb/>
FOR SALE Cabinet built tor<lb/>
dorm room Molds small ret<lb/>
brtqht vellow with white formica<lb/>
p P'ice negotiable Call<lb/>
- "a38<lb/>
FOR SALE JVC JAS 22 Stereo<lb/>
Amp 45 watlsc 1S0 or best otter<lb/>
'52 0469<lb/>
FOR SALE One Schwmn varsity<lb/>
10 speed bicvcu: one large desk<lb/>
rhifferobe Call '52-4287 Mrs<lb/>
S H Skinner 615 Maple St<lb/>
FOR SALE Couch chair end<lb/>
fable and wall hanging 752 ?231<lb/>
?6pm<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES needed<lb/>
4 bedroom house. 2 blocks from<lb/>
campus 75 per month Call Bun<lb/>
Chadwick 7S2 4941 309 E 13th St<lb/>
ROOMMATE needed tor nicely<lb/>
furnished apartment Call 758 3894<lb/>
for more into<lb/>
ROOMMATE wanted tor partial<lb/>
ly furnished apt at Stratford<lb/>
Arms Call 75 690<lb/>
FEMALE roommate wanted Nice<lb/>
furnished duplen near campus<lb/>
Two bedroom air and carpet<lb/>
SIO0 month no deposit Ready<lb/>
Sept 1 Call 758 9127 Susan<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home Reasonable rates<lb/>
7 56 360<lb/>
-J<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALLGOLD&amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
sa CHINA&amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
j 8l RING i<lb/>
-0p ?Y SAIES CO ,?c<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. open 930530MON sat.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 7523866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER.<lb/>
R<lb/>
0<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Sizzlin<lb/>
<lb/>
Th<lb/>
ri.<lb/>
irit<lb/>
Free Small Salad<lb/>
with purchase of any meal<lb/>
Expires Sept. 30, 1982<lb/>
FREE DRINK with any meal<lb/>
Expires Sept. 30th<lb/>
Lunch Special MonSat.<lb/>
4-Oz. U.S.D.A. Sirloin served<lb/>
with Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries ? $1.99<lb/>
with Salad Bar - $2.99<lb/>
Offer good MonSat. 11-2<lb/>
Two current locations to serve you better!<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
phone 758-2712<lb/>
264 By-Pass<lb/>
756-0040<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEMS<lb/>
DRUGS?<lb/>
with<lb/>
ALCOHOL? FAMILY?<lb/>
SCHOOL?<lb/>
We Can Help<lb/>
Students helping Students<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL &amp; DRUG PROGRAM<lb/>
301-303 Erwin Bldg<lb/>
757-6793<lb/>
tSSEQSK3 MIIH<lb/>
aswow<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef loin<lb/>
LFPIHCSCVA6A<lb/>
Tkoit fttt good thru<lb/>
Saturday, S?ptbe 4. 1982<lb/>
I Lk t??i $??? f r<lb/>
J<lb/>
rRMOUK<lb/>
HAW<lb/>
UJDA Cfc.lu ( Un<lb/>
:r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
 .t '?? Sl4.lll<lb/>
 <lb/>
F r.rt u<lb/>
Sptrtribs<lb/>
UJ0A tk.tt 8??f Uta t?ea<lb/>
M68 Powerboat. Steak u 288<lb/>
is, '<lb/>
Pk. if 11 Oi. Cut<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
1 S litir Rkiankiilir fi: ? !i i<lb/>
P.ikCkiklu Ep.i ? Ckikln<lb/>
riltll ?' 11 11 0: tfi<lb/>
Pabst<lb/>
Beer.<lb/>
99?<lb/>
1 l'??r IP f<lb/>
Pepsi pscoj<lb/>
W Cola ty<lb/>
It OlMt<lb/>
lit Oi. f .M T.w<lb/>
p? Macaroni<lb/>
&amp; Cheese<lb/>
?k, PiT '1 09<lb/>
? k, Ply 16 1-<lb/>
9<lb/>
12 Omii<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Catsup<lb/>
Wkt Plf '1 19<lb/>
32.<lb/>
mskMtt in<lb/>
SODW<lb/>
J<lb/>
i p?, $??<lb/>
S89<lb/>
1 Ik Mtrtrl?( QMrtir<lb/>
Shell's Spread<lb/>
69<lb/>
4 Rtll Pitk 1 Pi.<lb/>
Page Toilet Tissue<lb/>
48 9<lb/>
) Own Ukkf i<lb/>
Potted Meat<lb/>
a89<lb/>
?? fed Urn Hkt<lb/>
Hof D09 Buns<lb/>
I Put F?M Urn HimUnti t<lb/>
399<lb/>
Qktrl<lb/>
10.1 Ohii<lb/>
JF? Mayonniass Qf Texas Pete Chill<lb/>
$279<lb/>
?ki( ??!? 10 0"<lb/>
Uquid Wisk<lb/>
$25<lb/>
?? l Alt! Ill<lb/>
Apple ice<lb/>
Half U ?? Wki.k ????<lb/>
49 Oi Nitk $?(!????<lb/>
21<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
? , Pi, 1 19<lb/>
II 0i. It OH<lb/>
Wesson<lb/>
m<lb/>
Mk, Pi, 1 09<lb/>
wesson<lb/>
-?5. Jl"<lb/>
ieno's<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Vk, Pi, M 19<lb/>
T1<lb/>
Prieoi ?oo? et 6r????ill? Food To?? Store oely<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0016"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
?m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
, . WELCOMES ALL ECU STUDENTS BACK<lb/>
FOR FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
STARTING TOMORROW<lb/>
AT 6 A.M.<lb/>
WZMB KICKS OFF THE FALL 7r7 <lb/>
WITH "ALL REQUESTS" DAY 'J ' "ODJD<lb/>
AND WE'LL DO OUR BEST<lb/>
TO GET IT ON FOR YOU.<lb/>
PROGRAM SCHEDULE FALL 1982<lb/>
REQ UES T LINES ARE ALWAYS OPEN.<lb/>
" 97.3 FOR YOUR FA VORITE SONG DIAL 757-6657<lb/>
FOR NEWS AND INFORMATION, LISTEN FOR NEWS 91. HEARD 8 TIMES MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY . . . 4 NEWSCASTS ON WEEKENDS<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
9 p.m.<lb/>
9 p.m.<lb/>
11 p.m<lb/>
11 p.m<lb/>
2a.m.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
z<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Z<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Z<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
z<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Z<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Z<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
MORNING ROCK<lb/>
MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY <lb/>
THE SOFTER SIDE OF YOUR FAVORITE ROCK ARTISTS.<lb/>
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY AT 9 AND 10<lb/>
WZMB PRESENTS CLASSIC MUSIC FROM THE PAST<lb/>
WITH OUR FEATURE ARTIST SERIES<lb/>
MORNING ROCK<lb/>
LIGHT'N UP<lb/>
9 a.m10 a.m<lb/>
THE BEST IN ALBUM ORIENTED ROCK<lb/>
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY  NO HOLDS BARRED ROCK<lb/>
AND ROLL TILL 6 P.M. THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON  .<lb/>
LISTEN FOR 'TIME PASSAGES'<lb/>
20 MINUTES OF UNINTERRUPTED MUSIC FROM A FAVORITE<lb/>
ROCK ARTIST<lb/>
NAT'L LAMPOON 5:30<lb/>
FROM NOON TILL<lb/>
THE EVENING .<lb/>
RELAX AND ENJOY THE<lb/>
CLASSICS<lb/>
EVERY SATURDAY<lb/>
ANDSUNDAY<lb/>
JAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZJAZZ<lb/>
V<lb/>
v<lb/>
$<lb/>
a3<lb/>
aK<lb/>
UNSUNG<lb/>
HEROES<lb/>
NEW WAVE<lb/>
PERMANENT<lb/>
WAVE<lb/>
0<lb/>
fr<lb/>
$<lb/>
3?<lb/>
S<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
UNSUNG<lb/>
HEROES<lb/>
NEWWAVE<lb/>
PERMANENT<lb/>
WAVE<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
C<lb/>
WZMB IS NOW R OCKING<lb/>
TILL 2 A.M.<lb/>
MONDA Y THROUGHFRIDA Y<lb/>
SERVING THE ECU CAMPUS AND GREENVILLE AREA . . .<lb/>
MM<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057492_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>