<?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">
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<pb facs="00057493_0001"/>
She<lb/>
(?amltiitaii<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.4<lb/>
Thursday, September 2, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Registration Linked<lb/>
To Financial Aid<lb/>
B CORDON IPO K<lb/>
Mull Urn.<lb/>
I ncle Sam is gearing up to hit<lb/>
militar registration resisters where<lb/>
u hurts; in the wallet.<lb/>
1 egislation has been passed by<lb/>
(. ongress that will deny all federal<lb/>
educational assistance to male<lb/>
students tailing to register with the<lb/>
Military Selective Service.<lb/>
The measure, originally introduc<lb/>
ed bv rhomas Hart net I (K SC), vvas<lb/>
adopted by a joint House and<lb/>
Senate committee a an amendment<lb/>
to the "Enforcement ol Military<lb/>
Selective Service Act<lb/>
I he measure essentially states:<lb/>
"Any person who in required to<lb/>
present himself for and submit to<lb/>
strationand fails to .io so shall<lb/>
be ineligible for any form ot<lb/>
assistance oi benefit provided undei<lb/>
title 1 of the Higher Education c<lb/>
ot 1965<lb/>
Assistance and benefits are<lb/>
described mi the legislation as<lb/>
"loans, grants, or work assistance<lb/>
The amended act is a part ot the<lb/>
Defense Authorization Bill, which<lb/>
has passed both ho s - ol congress<lb/>
and need only the president's<lb/>
signature to become law.<lb/>
Fifth District Congi essman<lb/>
Walter B. Jones voted tot the bill<lb/>
jnd supported the measure linking<lb/>
financial aid to registration.<lb/>
tones said, "If one is going to<lb/>
make use ot government programs,<lb/>
he should think enough of that<lb/>
government to list his name with the<lb/>
selective serv ice<lb/>
I he wording of the bill hints that<lb/>
institutions oi higher education may<lb/>
be required to help enforce the act,<lb/>
au that specific regulations<lb/>
necessary tor its enforcement will be<lb/>
issued, by the Secretary oi Educa-<lb/>
tion, later.<lb/>
Robert M. Boudreaux, ECU<lb/>
directot oi student financial aid,<lb/>
said that his office was neutral con-<lb/>
cerning dratt registration, but said<lb/>
lie was opposed to this bill because it<lb/>
would likely place the burden of<lb/>
prool on the institutions.<lb/>
" 1 his could open up a whole new<lb/>
in ot worms tor us he said, ex-<lb/>
plaining the red tape that might be<lb/>
required. "It this doesn't stop soon,<lb/>
the financial aid staff required to<lb/>
process the work could become<lb/>
enot mous<lb/>
Boudreaux also said the proposed<lb/>
law would discriminate against male<lb/>
students seeking financial aid, and<lb/>
would hkelv slow the processing of<lb/>
aid to all students.<lb/>
I he law is scheduled to go into ef-<lb/>
fect July 1. 1983.<lb/>
Job Opportunities<lb/>
Scarce For Grads<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSEN<lb/>
Vm Cool<lb/>
A youngster models the latest in designer shades. A future engineer? A<lb/>
future writer? Who knows. But obviously, by his flashy style, a future ECU<lb/>
student.<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUl<lb/>
College graduates around the<lb/>
country are finding that the job<lb/>
market is not good, and it may get<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
This is the prognosis being of-<lb/>
fered by placement and employment<lb/>
experts across the United States.<lb/>
They say that even the so called<lb/>
"hot majors" ? engineering and<lb/>
computer science ? are getting<lb/>
fewer job offers.<lb/>
Furney James, director of career<lb/>
planning and placement at ECU,<lb/>
agrees that it's been a difficult year<lb/>
for last year's graduates. He said<lb/>
that in a survey being conducted by<lb/>
his office one oi every three degree-<lb/>
earners are without jobs.<lb/>
I he College Placement Council, a<lb/>
trade association of campus place-<lb/>
ment offices, reports job otters to<lb/>
June grads declined for the first<lb/>
time in six years<lb/>
James echoed this fact. He has<lb/>
found that fewer jobs are being of-<lb/>
fered, but he stressed that some ma-<lb/>
jors are still being sought after.<lb/>
"Nursing, physical therapy and<lb/>
medical technology people tmd<lb/>
jobs he said.<lb/>
William Heartwell, executive<lb/>
vice-president oi the Interstate Con-<lb/>
ference Ol Employment Securities<lb/>
Agencies, has found that most com-<lb/>
panies have curtailed the hiring ol<lb/>
new employees.<lb/>
Linda Pengillv, ot the College<lb/>
Placement Council, said that<lb/>
employers are being more cautious<lb/>
this year because of the economv<lb/>
Some companies, such as Sperrv-<lb/>
Uni vac's mini computer division,<lb/>
aren't hiring at all. And Exxon,<lb/>
traditionally a major college<lb/>
recruiter, is only doing so at selected<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
James said that Exxon hired two<lb/>
ECU grads last year, but the had<lb/>
both completed master degree pi<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
With the iob market dim for high-<lb/>
tech majors, the outlook tor those<lb/>
with liberal arts degrees should be<lb/>
completely dark.<lb/>
No; so according to James. "It a<lb/>
liberal arts major is very articulate.<lb/>
has a high G.P.A active, gets<lb/>
along with others and com-<lb/>
municates well, he has a good<lb/>
chance<lb/>
The outlook, according to m<lb/>
placement officials, in general, is<lb/>
not good tor liberal arts majors.<lb/>
One official cited that the earning<lb/>
power of these degrees has decreas-<lb/>
ed in the last 10 vears.<lb/>
Students Complain About 'Open Gym' Policy<lb/>
Ho PA IRK KOMil 1<lb/>
Stafl VV rn r<lb/>
"Th?re's 14,000 people inthis<lb/>
schooland there's n ibut one pace<lb/>
to pia bail.s.llli!I dri. ers<lb/>
ed ucai.dent Cornell Speas<lb/>
Sthree other stud;nts<lb/>
' C '?igh<lb/>
? bein pi o dedloi<lb/>
use olthebasketb;ill courtsm<lb/>
Minges. j 1gymnastums.<lb/>
" 0sched .kfor open l:v m<lb/>
at Mil" ?ut50 pet ol<lb/>
the tiine it closed said; '<lb/>
Sr ???a um?puter s leice.<lb/>
Acc?rdingo ECldireci iin-<lb/>
tramurals, l)rWayt ti d a aids 1!<lb/>
?here"sll t: ic ientn umbets<lb/>
? ? iderts canhave tin? gym.<lb/>
all nigu it thev vto 1 aw- ' N<lb/>
and hiassistant Mr.Palox siaim<lb/>
?hat wlen the"open gm" program<lb/>
? T'TJ<lb/>
? H<lb/>
was available at Minges in past years<lb/>
very tew students took advantage of<lb/>
the opportunity. "What we have<lb/>
found was an average of say, three<lb/>
or four, maybe six students using<lb/>
the gym (at Minges) said Cox.<lb/>
" I uition went up and they're tak-<lb/>
ing away services and programs<lb/>
ed Mark Willis, another ECU<lb/>
putei science major. "1 unders-<lb/>
tand thai East Carolina has limited<lb/>
facilities, but we're just asking that<lb/>
we be able to use Minges and<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Cornell Speas claims that he and<lb/>
others were asked to leave Minges<lb/>
gym by last Carolina Physical<lb/>
1 ducation professor Dr. William<lb/>
 ain.<lb/>
Cain is responsible; for the<lb/>
scheduling oi activities of Minges.<lb/>
there wouldn't be any more tree<lb/>
time at Minges gym.<lb/>
The students were using the<lb/>
basketball courts at the time, Cain<lb/>
told the East Carolinian that these<lb/>
students were using the facilities<lb/>
without official intramural supervi-<lb/>
sion. This supervision is required bv<lb/>
the athletic departments policy,<lb/>
because ot various security, safety,<lb/>
and health reasons.<lb/>
"Abuse of the building has oc-<lb/>
cured said Cain. He noted the oc-<lb/>
curance oi some vandalism, many<lb/>
larcenies from lockers and other<lb/>
related problems. Cain added that<lb/>
these problems are often created by<lb/>
"local residents" who are not ECU<lb/>
students. "There has to be<lb/>
somebody there to check ID cards it<lb/>
that door's open<lb/>
Minges gym facilities are current-<lb/>
ly not being used for recreational<lb/>
basketball because of the limited de-<lb/>
mand, at this time oi the year, for<lb/>
indoor sports, said Edwards.<lb/>
"What we also run into, is that<lb/>
we can never have a consistent<lb/>
schedule tor Minges he added.<lb/>
1 his is because the ECU mens and<lb/>
womens varsity basketball teams<lb/>
and the womens volleyball team<lb/>
have priority use of Minges tor their<lb/>
practices and games, he continued.<lb/>
Memorial Com is open seven days<lb/>
a week tor the students recreational<lb/>
use according to schedules publish-<lb/>
ed by the Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services Department in its 1982-83<lb/>
student handbook and monthly<lb/>
newsletter "Tidbits<lb/>
It (Memorial Gym) is only open<lb/>
18 hours for a whole week said<lb/>
Cornell Speas. He added that there<lb/>
are other hours when Memorial gym<lb/>
may be open, based on availabili-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
"It so uncertain, you have to go<lb/>
there (Memorial) and take a<lb/>
chance said a fourth student. Id<lb/>
1 ash, a sophmore in commercial<lb/>
art. "When Memorial is<lb/>
unavailable, Minges should be open<lb/>
as an alternate facility "<lb/>
1 ash and the ot tiers claim that<lb/>
Memorial is sometimes "so crowded<lb/>
you can't gel a game I hev added<lb/>
ihat they may often have to waitl<lb/>
over an houi to get in a game.<lb/>
Edwards agreed that this may<lb/>
sometimes be the case in December<lb/>
or other winter months, but not uir-<lb/>
rentlv "Wintei time is the problem<lb/>
Right now we'te in very good shape.<lb/>
Since Monday this gym (Memorial)<lb/>
has not been to capacity added<lb/>
Edwards.<lb/>
"If we pay tees here then we<lb/>
should get the activities said I ash<lb/>
"We shouldn't go up there everyday<lb/>
and get turned away <lb/>
Edwards said that he trys ?"not to<lb/>
spend money unnecessarily when<lb/>
the facility is not being used He<lb/>
added that Memorial is presently<lb/>
open 39 hours a week for "open<lb/>
basketball use" until intramural<lb/>
tournaments begin later in the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
The intramural basketball pro-<lb/>
gram is open to all students and in-<lb/>
cludes over 150 teams. Ga les won'<lb/>
start until 5 p.m. said Edwards so<lb/>
that there will still be two hour- I<lb/>
"open gym" in Memorial before the<lb/>
team games.<lb/>
The four students also complain-<lb/>
ed thai Campus Security sometimes<lb/>
closes Minges" tor no apparent<lb/>
son " Edwards and Cain both<lb/>
said that it the gym isn't supervisee<lb/>
bv intramural department<lb/>
employees then it can't be used.<lb/>
"People are going into the lockers<lb/>
stealing, breaking doors, and tear-<lb/>
ing the place up said Cain The<lb/>
students also hoped that a regular<lb/>
weekly schedule of "open gym"<lb/>
hours could be published in the East<lb/>
Carolinian. "We certainly have an<lb/>
adequate budget. There's no crisis<lb/>
said Edwards who often hires<lb/>
students for the supervisory work<lb/>
needed for "open gym" activities<lb/>
"1 try to safeguard student money<lb/>
as wisely as 1 can continued Ed-<lb/>
wards. He invited any students with<lb/>
any requests, questions, or pro-<lb/>
blems to feel free to approach him<lb/>
or Cox for assistance.<lb/>
Solidarity Demonstrates<lb/>
who has been held in custody since The C.S. State Department in a<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSEN<lb/>
Let's Play Follow The Leader<lb/>
Students engage in an age-old custom before attending class. The "Follow the Leader"club meets daily in front of<lb/>
the student supply store. Admission to the festivities is by ID and activity card.<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SMR Writer<lb/>
Demonstrations laced with<lb/>
violence took place in Poland on<lb/>
Tuesday as thousands of Polish<lb/>
citizens took to the streets to com-<lb/>
memorate the second anniversary of<lb/>
the existence of the independent<lb/>
Solidarity union.<lb/>
Two people were killed when<lb/>
police and regular army troops<lb/>
opened fire at one point in the pro-<lb/>
test. As many as 1,500 people have<lb/>
been arrested for "crimes against<lb/>
the state<lb/>
Demonstrations took place in<lb/>
nine cities to show support for the<lb/>
suspended union and demand<lb/>
freedom for its leader, Lech Walesa,<lb/>
December 13, the day martial law<lb/>
began.<lb/>
Polish police and military soldiers<lb/>
used tear gas, concussion grenades<lb/>
and water cannons to battle the<lb/>
crowds which were often chanting<lb/>
"Free Lech Walesa" and a steady<lb/>
call of "Solidarity, Solidarity,<lb/>
Solidarity<lb/>
The demonstrations were organiz-<lb/>
ed by fugitive union leaders in de-<lb/>
fiance of stern warnings from Polish<lb/>
officials to citizens to not par-<lb/>
ticipate in the action.<lb/>
The gatherings seemed to indicate<lb/>
that the spirit of the resisience<lb/>
movement in Poland remains<lb/>
strong.<lb/>
formal statement said the<lb/>
demonstrations "show once again<lb/>
that repression will not solve<lb/>
Poland's problems and called for<lb/>
reconciliation.<lb/>
The Soviet Union released a state-<lb/>
ment from Moscow through their<lb/>
press agency, TASS, saying that<lb/>
"foreign subversive centers" were<lb/>
coordinating the demonstration to<lb/>
increase the tension in Poland.<lb/>
The largest gathering took place<lb/>
in Warsaw where 10,000<lb/>
demonstraters defied martial law to<lb/>
march in the streets toward the com-<lb/>
munist party headquarters. Security<lb/>
forces turned back the marchers as<lb/>
they came within a mile of the head-<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
Alumni Association Sets Record Rescuer Crushed By Train<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
Despite the current economic-<lb/>
recession, the East Carolina Alumni<lb/>
Associaton and the ECU Founda-<lb/>
tion set a record for fund raising in<lb/>
1981-82 and is expecting to do so<lb/>
again this year.<lb/>
The foundation and association<lb/>
work closely together as a principle<lb/>
means of gathering private funds<lb/>
for the university.<lb/>
The alumni association was<lb/>
recently selected as a finalist for the<lb/>
U.S. SteelCouncil for Advance-<lb/>
ment and Support of Education<lb/>
Award, making it one of the top<lb/>
four associations in the country for<lb/>
this size university. They have won<lb/>
the award twice in the last five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The association and foundation<lb/>
excelled both in the number of<lb/>
alumni who give to the university<lb/>
and in the total amount of money<lb/>
contributed. In 1981-82, private<lb/>
gifts to the ECU Foundation<lb/>
amounted to $888,000.<lb/>
Dr. F. Douglas Moore, vice<lb/>
chancellor for alumni relations,<lb/>
cites the record number of alumni<lb/>
meetings as well as a friendly ap-<lb/>
proach to fund raising as reasons<lb/>
for success.<lb/>
"We were up last year in every<lb/>
area of fundraising said Moore,<lb/>
including corporate, alumni, foun-<lb/>
dation and special gift contribu-<lb/>
tions. He added that "we've had a<lb/>
good start to date this year" and<lb/>
that he expects even more growth.<lb/>
"We're not at our potential he<lb/>
insisted in reference to scholarship<lb/>
funds, "but we're heading in that<lb/>
direction Moore noted that the<lb/>
BB&amp;T gift to the business school is<lb/>
"really an endorsement of the<lb/>
university" and that he expects to<lb/>
expand the scholarship through<lb/>
more corporate and alumni con-<lb/>
tributions.<lb/>
BOSTON (UP1) ? A newlywed<lb/>
who jumped onto subway tracks to<lb/>
irescue a drunken man from an on-<lb/>
coming train could not scramble out<lb/>
bf the train's path in time and was<lb/>
crushed to death.<lb/>
Although he heard a train com-<lb/>
ing, David McNeice, 22, of<lb/>
Hingham tried to save the drunk,<lb/>
said his co-worker, Michael Mad-<lb/>
digan, who jumped off the subway<lb/>
platform to help McNeice but<lb/>
managed to get off the track just in<lb/>
(time.<lb/>
The drunken man, lying in the<lb/>
middle of the tracks, suffered a<lb/>
severe leg injury.<lb/>
"He (McNeice) was yelling, 'Get<lb/>
up, get up but the man couldn't<lb/>
Maddigan, 24, said after the acci-<lb/>
dent late Tuesday.<lb/>
"I managed to get out of the way<lb/>
by climbing a ladder but David was<lb/>
crushed between the train and the<lb/>
platform and the man was<lb/>
underneath the train screaming. It<lb/>
was an incredible nightmare<lb/>
McNeice, who had just gotten<lb/>
married this summer, was pro-<lb/>
nounced dead at Boston City-<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
The 26-year-old drunken man was<lb/>
run over but was in guarded condi-<lb/>
tion at the hospital after surgery for<lb/>
severe trauma to his left leg.<lb/>
"There's a question with whether<lb/>
his leg can be saved said a hospital<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
Massachusetts Bay Transporta-<lb/>
tion Authority spokesman William<lb/>
Couglin said the motorman on the<lb/>
southbound train packed with<lb/>
Boston Red Sox fans returning from<lb/>
a game reacted properly.<lb/>
"The second he saw the men he<lb/>
slammed on the brakes and in facl<lb/>
he was going slower than the 10 mph<lb/>
approach limit Couglin said. ,<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0002"/><lb/>
rHE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 2 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
? .v v. i i 'd i tal<lb/>
-<lb/>
OUTDOOR<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
?<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
WANT ED<lb/>
? .?<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
. ? - ?<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
 ? ? ' M<lb/>
is f- ? . .<lb/>
;<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLUB<lb/>
? -1 ' . ?  ? enterluage skills<lb/>
PRESS RELEASE<lb/>
<lb/>
 " t , ?? ???;?'? ? ? ? ? brai , ?<lb/>
?, v ???? toft a I ? u , ri f ? ? . f.<lb/>
?. ? .brocl re! i ?<lb/>
OFFICIALS NEEDED<lb/>
 i oo ?r M on a a y s " - ?t<lb/>
A'ecf n ? rxoer ipnte s<lb/>
tecessary training clinics are<lb/>
required and rie first clinic ?s on<lb/>
Thursday Sep tembei 2. n<lb/>
Memorial 'r Room (03 si DO<lb/>
p m Plea-ie br.rig wy.u r-j s ? r,<lb/>
' i taros ar. d Class<lb/>
APPLY NOW<lb/>
itudenfs fxi .mend 'o jiii . 'o<lb/>
major m Social Work or Correc<lb/>
ticms in the (-all of 1982 snouid re<lb/>
ones' an application and an ap<lb/>
pomttncnt tor an interview from<lb/>
KM Department Office. 312 farol<lb/>
Belk. (Aiiiert Heattti 8ui"linij-<lb/>
I ? mwp intormal'on call Mrs<lb/>
Joyner. 75? ?9 I E ?t 218<lb/>
Dead! 'ie tor tall applications<lb/>
S e p' e Ti o e r<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
I i i Bi otttei s a d I "?? 5 stei s<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
A pre registration i. t . t,<lb/>
ai hi edui ationrfl ,<lb/>
ties 'i eiet ti unn s and<lb/>
t ? ?. ac ? a'?<lb/>
. ISA ?<lb/>
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SCEC<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
1 ' . Campus " itH ' and Or ug<lb/>
h i ? I - ? ?<lb/>
? . eptetnber (,?<lb/>
l 30 p n . ? 't-i( ? at oi<lb/>
ten ? f Erwii tiatl Any<lb/>
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i tti luted toward the<lb/>
 il sub! tam ia is en<lb/>
i age It attend ? nori<lb/>
nal ill 757 6793 oi '57 4649<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
MODEL UNITED<lb/>
NATIONS CLUB<lb/>
11 wi ?? ted i'<lb/>
t hold aft ?' gamzat eting<lb/>
on Septernbt r I9P.<lb/>
Aii t? held in ? i l<lb/>
Ar.? leresti tti<lb/>
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HOME ECONOMICS<lb/>
GOD<lb/>
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CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
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SUPERVISOR WANTED<lb/>
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RESUME<lb/>
PREPARATION<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGVA<lb/>
A T Tt? NTION<lb/>
KARATE<lb/>
EVANGEL 1ST<lb/>
tn i ? a ? .<lb/>
HONOR STUDENTS<lb/>
SUGGEST<lb/>
SEMINAR TOPICS<lb/>
AHEA YH ?<lb/>
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HOME EC STUDENTS<lb/>
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SELECTION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
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le spring j<lb/>
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'ECUSURFCiUBN ' - '? SK  - -<lb/>
PSI CHI CRiMINALJUSTlCE SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
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SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLUB<lb/>
RESIDENCE HALL<lb/>
CHORUS<lb/>
BETA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
?.<lb/>
alpha phi big<lb/>
brothers<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ' . - :<lb/>
? ? ' A "? ? . . r ? . J, <lb/>
? A<lb/>
? . ti 103 ol<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
? ? ? i<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Frater-<lb/>
nity located at 700 E. 10th<lb/>
Street across from<lb/>
Umstead Dorm would like<lb/>
students of hCU to get<lb/>
ready for the Fall Rush,<lb/>
which will begin next week<lb/>
Monday, Sept 6, LABOR<lb/>
PAINS PAR1Y, Beer Blast;<lb/>
Tuesday, Sept. 7, BLUE<lb/>
HAWAIAN LUAU;<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept 8, The<lb/>
Original LAS VEGAS<lb/>
PLAYBOY BUNNY<lb/>
NIGHT"<lb/>
For additional informa-<lb/>
tion call 752-5543. Rides<lb/>
are available<lb/>
THE MOST<lb/>
MAN IN THE<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
8:30 p.m. ? (ea. night)<lb/>
"SPECIAL GOLD SALE<lb/>
$10 oft all 10K Traditional Rings<lb/>
$15 off all 1 OK Fashion Rings<lb/>
$25 off all 14K Rings<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Tar Landing SeafoodMoa.Thurs ALL DAY<lb/>
Sat. ? Lunch 11-3<lb/>
Restaura<lb/>
M<lb/>
Ck.s Greei S'r. i ' fi- "11-<lb/>
rake left at I i ?<lb/>
Located ?nt block down on left<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
TROUT<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$<lb/>
4.99<lb/>
A;rpcr- PaJ.<lb/>
Sree&amp;vilU Sorth Car:na<lb/>
SunThurs. ? 11 9p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. ? 11 10<lb/>
REGULAR DAILY SPECIAL<lb/>
Flounder &amp; Shrimp Plate<lb/>
$2.89<lb/>
TAKEOUTS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
You're ready! For the biggest and<lb/>
the best that life has to offer And for<lb/>
the college ring that will speak vo1<lb/>
umes about you?and your achieve-<lb/>
ments?for years to come.<lb/>
What's more?you can afford it1<lb/>
Because now, for a limited time you<lb/>
can order from the entire ArtCarved<lb/>
collection of 14K gold college rings<lb/>
and save $25. Come and see the<lb/>
exquisitely crafted styles?from the<lb/>
classic to the contemporary And<lb/>
choose the ring and custom options<lb/>
that most eloquently express you<lb/>
Now is your time to get what you<lb/>
deserve And remember?nothing<lb/>
else feels like real gold.<lb/>
IRIvTIRVED<lb/>
 i ASS RINGS (NIC<lb/>
Date: Time: Place:<lb/>
Sept. 8 10, 9am 4pm Student Supply Store<lb/>
13 &amp; 14 Lobby<lb/>
'Deposit Required MasterCard or Visa Accepted is&amp;? MCwvm ass Rings mc<lb/>
.7iiT?TmT?T?TwT?iT??T?T?Ti.T??T??Ti"?i,TiT?TiiV.i7.iT7,iT7T?TT(.T,<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0003"/><lb/>
Ml I AS I CAROI IMAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 2, 182<lb/>
inc<lb/>
Flu Protection Found<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPl) With the an-<lb/>
nual flu season ap-<lb/>
proaching, a govern-<lb/>
ment research institute<lb/>
reported Wednesday<lb/>
that a Vermont study<lb/>
shows two related<lb/>
drugs can protect most<lb/>
people against the most<lb/>
common kind of in-<lb/>
fluenza.<lb/>
"It virtually erases<lb/>
anv question people<lb/>
had about the utility of<lb/>
these drugs, either one<lb/>
of them said Dr.<lb/>
John I aMontagne, in-<lb/>
fluenza program of-<lb/>
ficer at the National In-<lb/>
stitute of Allergy and<lb/>
Infectious Diseases.<lb/>
The drugs are aman-<lb/>
tadine. which is sold<lb/>
under the brand name<lb/>
of Symmetrel, and<lb/>
rimantadine, still an ex-<lb/>
perimental anti-viral<lb/>
agent. Both were tested<lb/>
during a flu outbreak<lb/>
last winter in Burl-<lb/>
ington, Vt in 450<lb/>
healthy volunteers bet-<lb/>
ween the ages of 18 to<lb/>
45.<lb/>
The study, con-<lb/>
ducted by scientists at<lb/>
the University of Ver-<lb/>
mont and reported in<lb/>
the New England Jour-<lb/>
nal o Medicine, found<lb/>
the drugs effective in<lb/>
preventing infection<lb/>
from the A type of in-<lb/>
fluenza. That includes<lb/>
the current Hong Kong<lb/>
and the Russian flu<lb/>
varieties and produces<lb/>
the most s e v e r e<lb/>
epidemics.<lb/>
The volunteers were<lb/>
divided into three<lb/>
groups ? one group<lb/>
taking amantadine<lb/>
tablets twice a day for<lb/>
six weeks, one taking<lb/>
rimantadine and<lb/>
another receiving an in-<lb/>
active dummy drug.<lb/>
When compared with<lb/>
the group taking the<lb/>
take pills, rimantadine<lb/>
reduced the rate of<lb/>
influenza-like illness by<lb/>
65 percent and aman-<lb/>
tadine cut the illness<lb/>
rate by 78 percent.<lb/>
"The effects were<lb/>
even more striking<lb/>
when the investigators<lb/>
analyzed reductions of<lb/>
rates of laboratory-<lb/>
confirmed influenza A<lb/>
illness the institute<lb/>
said in announcing the<lb/>
findings. Rimantadine<lb/>
reduced this rate by 85<lb/>
percent and aman-<lb/>
tadine was 91 percent<lb/>
effective.<lb/>
However, riman-<lb/>
tadine produced fewer<lb/>
side effects such as in-<lb/>
somnia, jitteriness and<lb/>
difficulty in concen-<lb/>
trating than did aman-<lb/>
tadine. LaMontagne<lb/>
said that as far as side<lb/>
effects were concerned,<lb/>
rimantadine was almost<lb/>
the same as the fake<lb/>
pills.<lb/>
He said despite its<lb/>
availability, aman-<lb/>
tadine has not been<lb/>
widely used, probably<lb/>
because doctors were<lb/>
concerned about side<lb/>
effects.<lb/>
The infectious<lb/>
diseases institute, a part<lb/>
of the federal National<lb/>
Institutes of Health,<lb/>
said the low number of<lb/>
side effects from<lb/>
rimantadine found in<lb/>
the Vermont study sug-<lb/>
gests rimantadine<lb/>
should be "the drug of<lb/>
choice" in preventing<lb/>
influenza A.<lb/>
Rimantadine has<lb/>
been used abroad, par-<lb/>
ticularly in the Soviet<lb/>
Union, but has not yet<lb/>
been approved by the<lb/>
Food and Drug Ad-<lb/>
ministration for general<lb/>
use in the United<lb/>
States, because it had<lb/>
not been widely tested.<lb/>
LaMontagne said ad-<lb/>
ditional studies of<lb/>
rimantadine are plann-<lb/>
ed this winter when<lb/>
more type A flu out-<lb/>
breaks are expected.<lb/>
Both amantadine<lb/>
and rimantadine are<lb/>
manufactured by Endo<lb/>
Pharmaceuticals, Inc<lb/>
a subsidiary of the Du-<lb/>
Pont Copany.<lb/>
Reception Slated<lb/>
U (,RK. RIDEOl I<lb/>
1 CT Students will be<lb/>
given the opportunity<lb/>
to meet Chancellor<lb/>
lohn 1. Howell at a<lb/>
reception on Sepi. 7.<lb/>
1 he e eni is spon-<lb/>
sored b the Depart-<lb/>
ment ol University<lb/>
I nion and is scheduled<lb/>
begin at 7 P.M. It is<lb/>
designed to give each<lb/>
idem a chance to<lb/>
meet informally, with<lb/>
D and Mrs. Howell.<lb/>
Rudy Alexander,<lb/>
direct oi ot university<lb/>
union, said that this is a<lb/>
? ,t i'oi the a erage stu-<lb/>
show support<lb/>
t lew administra-<lb/>
n.<lb/>
How oil was elected<lb/>
?e eighth chancellor in<lb/>
he university "s "5 year<lb/>
- : in May 14<lb/>
 exander aid that<lb/>
the dress code would be<lb/>
informal, and no stu-<lb/>
dent would be turned<lb/>
aw av.<lb/>
"Just come he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
1 he university union<lb/>
depai tment arranges<lb/>
the different programs<lb/>
the univesitj does each<lb/>
vear. It consists ol a<lb/>
proffesional stafl and<lb/>
student organizations.<lb/>
I he stafl members ad-<lb/>
 ise the various student<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
Retreshments will be<lb/>
served. Tins includes<lb/>
deli snacks, fruits, soft<lb/>
drinks, and beer.<lb/>
Klexa ndei also<lb/>
ed out thai enter-<lb/>
tainment will be pro-<lb/>
 Jed. Ron Maxwell, a<lb/>
formei president of the<lb/>
student union, will plav<lb/>
the piano.<lb/>
"It's going to be a<lb/>
real nice affair, and<lb/>
everyone should come<lb/>
on out he explained.<lb/>
FRIDAY ONLY<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT!<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
INCLUDES FRENCH FRIES. COLE SLAW. TARTAR<lb/>
SAUCE &amp; HUSHPUPPIES<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
S369<lb/>
264 By-Pass<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
items and Pnces<lb/>
E"ective th'u Sat<lb/>
Sept 4 1962<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold To Dealers<lb/>
on<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9am to 9 p m<lb/>
?, ?-?. jn<lb/>
aanjun civs mu<lb/>
Si? ? ??-<lb/>
 i<lb/>
CRISP N TASTY<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
 Pico<lb/>
KROGEH<lb/>
Peanut Butter<lb/>
U.S. NO. 1 B-fcU?<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
Gold Apples<lb/>
5H49<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
J KROGER ALL MEAT<lb/>
 Chunk<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
$118<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Breyer's<lb/>
Yogurt <lb/>
3$-i09??<lb/>
a-Oz ? <lb/>
Cups ? I<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Breyer's<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
$<lb/>
1-Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
219<lb/>
A HOP IIONSUC '<lb/>
2th WtfcKOF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABOUT IONS FROM I 3 16<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT HjKIHtK EXPENSE<lb/>
UBS 00 Pnqnancy Test. Birin<lb/>
Control and Problem Pieqnn<lb/>
i V Counseimq I or tui fher intui<lb/>
?nation call 832 OSJS (Toll Fr<lb/>
Number 800 271 2S68' between I<lb/>
AM and S P M Weekday<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan S'<lb/>
Raleigh N C<lb/>
Not all clinics are the same.<lb/>
ABORTION is a difficult decision that's<lb/>
made easier bv the women of the Fleming<lb/>
Center. Counselors are aailable day and<lb/>
night to support and understand you. Corn-<lb/>
tort, safety, privacy, and a friendly staff . .<lb/>
that's what the Meming Center is all about.<lb/>
Immn tctpltd Fm prejtnano testing<lb/>
Ml iiu liiMtr tees Saturday appointments<lb/>
I p lit 1H wet-kv V?fj earl prejnano tests<lb/>
Call 7X1-5550 da or night.<lb/>
I he I- U-nimuenter makes, the difference.<lb/>
3<lb/>
NEW BUS ROUTE<lb/>
The SGA Transit would like to announce the start of a new<lb/>
bus route. The Brown Route will operate between the hours of<lb/>
7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday.<lb/>
Maps &amp; time-schedules of all bus routes can be picked up at<lb/>
the Student Store and Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
BROWN SCHEDULE<lb/>
(7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.)<lb/>
PLACE DEPARTS<lb/>
Speighton the hour<lb/>
Oak and 1 st St3 after hour<lb/>
Elm Street 5 after hour<lb/>
Willow &amp; Woodlawn 8 after hour<lb/>
Avery &amp; Holly10 after hour<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth15 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall20 after hour<lb/>
Speighton half hour<lb/>
Oak and 1st St27 till hour<lb/>
Elm Street25 till hour<lb/>
Willow &amp; Woodlawn22 till hour<lb/>
Avery &amp; Holly20 till hour<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth 15 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall10 till hour<lb/>
? ATTENTION: This bus route must be utilized by the<lb/>
students living on the route or it will be cancelled after the fall<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY<lb/>
ANNOUNCES ITS<lb/>
ANNUAL FALL RUSH<lb/>
803 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
Come out and party with m by the Lake ?<lb/>
Sept. 6-9 ? All party's begin at 8:30<lb/>
Come out and feel the excitement!<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Oil!? East (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
WAVERI v MlKKII l<lb/>
Robert Rucks, a<lb/>
Pun t ip Mam ss. , ?<lb/>
Chris l u hok, . <lb/>
Joni Gi ruRii. <lb/>
FlU DING Mill LR, ???, Vmvgn<lb/>
Miki Hughes, ttowmo.<lb/>
ow, . .?? idwmm-g Cindy Pleasants, s?<lb/>
? ???? Ernest Conner, s ?,<lb/>
Ui Ui? Sll L: BACHNER, Emenammtni <lb/>
. ?, lf?i, CORNE1 1 Ml 1)1 OCK, v <lb/>
. ?? Mire Davis. ???? uemei<lb/>
Sentcmbei<lb/>
ns:<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Solidarity<lb/>
Dilemma Of A Proud Nation<lb/>
This week marks the second an-<lb/>
niversary of the founding of<lb/>
Solidarity, the labor union which ?<lb/>
more than anything else ? has<lb/>
changed the face of communist<lb/>
Poland.<lb/>
Unfortunately, this week will also<lb/>
be remembered as yet another<lb/>
episode in the continuing turbulence<lb/>
which has characterized the east-<lb/>
European nation in recent years and<lb/>
especially in recent months.<lb/>
As thousands of Poles gathered<lb/>
to demonstrate in Warsaw, Gdansk<lb/>
and Wroklaw on Tuesday, police<lb/>
tired tear gas. water cannons and<lb/>
concussion grenades into the<lb/>
crowds, once again showing the<lb/>
martial-law government's in-<lb/>
capability of dealing with the needs<lb/>
of its people.<lb/>
The demonstrations were called<lb/>
for by Solidarity leaders as a means<lb/>
of testing the loyalty and determina-<lb/>
tion of union members. They hae<lb/>
not demonstrated even in any semi-<lb/>
official form since martial law was<lb/>
first imposed last Dec. 13.<lb/>
But on Tuesday, crowds in the<lb/>
Baltic port city ot Gdansk, where<lb/>
the union was born, gathered at the<lb/>
central railway station there and<lb/>
chanted "Freedom and "We<lb/>
Shall Win possibly as some sort<lb/>
of preface for what may come.<lb/>
So, once again, military suppres-<lb/>
sion has failed to quell the underly-<lb/>
ing spirit and determination of a<lb/>
downtrodden people. Once again,<lb/>
martial law has been proven an in-<lb/>
viable means of repression.<lb/>
All reports coming out of Poland<lb/>
indicate that the widespread pro-<lb/>
tests and demonstrations arc quite<lb/>
peaceful. In fact, no incidents of<lb/>
violence have yet occurred to our<lb/>
knowledge.<lb/>
That is, none had occurred until<lb/>
the unprovoked retaliation of the<lb/>
Polish military police on the<lb/>
demonstrators. I sing their<lb/>
"humane riot-type weapons, the<lb/>
police have had relative success in<lb/>
dispersing the crowds on a more-or-<lb/>
less regular basis over the past few<lb/>
days, despite the chants and cheers<lb/>
that ring out in support of basic<lb/>
human rights, rights we Americans<lb/>
all-too-often take for granted.<lb/>
But try as the martial-law govern-<lb/>
ment may, it cannot consume the<lb/>
proverbial fire burning in the hearts<lb/>
of Solidarity's members. The Polish<lb/>
people have been through .too much<lb/>
in the past to quit now. Perhaps,<lb/>
some day, they shall win.<lb/>
Campus Forum"<lb/>
A Lonely Prisoner<lb/>
In my late 2K and having been in-<lb/>
carcerated foi the past few vears with<lb/>
one ear remaining, I am finding myself<lb/>
becoming more alienated with society as<lb/>
a whole. With newspapers and a radio to<lb/>
listen to, 1 am not totally isolated from<lb/>
Ihe outside world, but there is something<lb/>
missing ? the lack of sharing with<lb/>
everyday people.<lb/>
though most inmates are everyday<lb/>
people who can relate to each other, they<lb/>
are a different class ot people in<lb/>
themselves with limited forms of expres-<lb/>
sion and tor the most part share only the<lb/>
repetitious days of prison life as a whole.<lb/>
I seek to remedy this condition by<lb/>
reaching out to the students reading this<lb/>
and ask that they take the initiative to<lb/>
respond by corresponding with myself to<lb/>
share an equal and honest basis of<lb/>
friendship.<lb/>
! am an intelligent individual with<lb/>
humane interests and a good sense of<lb/>
humor so that I can converse on most<lb/>
subjects, physical or spiritual.<lb/>
Some letters and pictures from the<lb/>
outside would definitely brighten up my<lb/>
davs and add a bit more meaning to my<lb/>
life, and I will answer all letters received.<lb/>
Thank for your time and caring.<lb/>
Stephen Shield. 83609<lb/>
P.O. Bob 100<lb/>
Somers, Conn. 06071<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our ofice in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across Jrom Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
1 wagNT aLWaY&amp; LiKe "faiS.<lb/>
I VJa&amp; a U.?. SeNaToR! THeK I<lb/>
6?T cau6HT wlfil a CPMGRe&amp;SiotfaL<lb/>
paGe. ONe PeRveRSioN uoib<lb/>
aNoTHeR aNP aNOTMeR until?<lb/>
UNTiL?&amp;OB!?I VoTeD lb Rai&amp;e<lb/>
Taxe&amp; n an eiecfioM YeaR!<lb/>
ffl:<lb/>
mm<lb/>
't'<lb/>
BOCHY mtn M?.Wg-NE?<lb/>
133<lb/>
"Kxcuse me, is this ? Introduction to Metaphysics?"<lb/>
Slim Whitman Never Had It So Good<lb/>
The TV Salesman Thrives<lb/>
"Now you ? YHS YOU ? can have this<lb/>
beautiful, stainless-steel, two-tone (black<lb/>
and white) medalian engraved with the<lb/>
silhouette of your very favorite performer<lb/>
and sent to you on this fabulous gold-<lb/>
colored Strrrrretch chain Be the first on<lb/>
your block to own your very own com<lb/>
memorative necklace, featuring the noses,<lb/>
chins and hairlines of the singers you love:<lb/>
Slim Whitman Boxcar Willie Floyd<lb/>
Cramer Ace CannonAnd if you act<lb/>
now we'll send you ? Absolutely Free ?<lb/>
this matching two-piece oral rec-<lb/>
tal pot roast thermometer with vinyl ac-<lb/>
cessory case. Yes, you'll be the envy ol all<lb/>
your friends and enemies, and for the<lb/>
amazingly low price of only $19.95! Here's<lb/>
how to order<lb/>
Sound familiar? Well, maybe not exact-<lb/>
ly, but it you (or someone you love) have<lb/>
ever watched television between the hours<lb/>
oi noon and midnight, you're at least<lb/>
somewhat familiar with this multi-million<lb/>
dollar industry boasting 1.001 products<lb/>
you "absolutely must have<lb/>
My only gripe about them is that they're<lb/>
"not sold in any store?"<lb/>
1 mean, how did we evei get along<lb/>
without a steak knife that doubles as a tree<lb/>
saw? Or without a watch that tells the ex-<lb/>
act time in all the countries oi the tree<lb/>
world and even Canada? It's hard to<lb/>
believe we actually made it without these<lb/>
tine products.<lb/>
And how many times have you woken<lb/>
up in the middle of the night craving a<lb/>
scrambled egg? But not just any egg will<lb/>
do. You're craving one that's scrambled<lb/>
from inside the shell. Boy. wouldn't your<lb/>
life be just dismal without the "Ronco E:gg<lb/>
Scrambler A steal at only $19.95!<lb/>
And did you ever consider why<lb/>
everything always costs "only S19.95?"<lb/>
Simple. The American public has been<lb/>
onditioned to believe that $20 is a lot of<lb/>
money But anything less than that is<lb/>
quite a bargain!<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Wa It fa<lb/>
"Hey, don't throw away that month-old<lb/>
tuna sandwich Just because the gangrenous<lb/>
pumpernickel is making you nauseous;<lb/>
steam it fresh with the new Oriental Bam-<lb/>
boo Steamer. And enjoy that nutritious-<lb/>
vet-economical meal while listening to<lb/>
these genuine Chinese wind chimes, ship-<lb/>
ped directly to you from our warehouse in<lb/>
Idaho<lb/>
And what party would be complete<lb/>
without the tun-filled adventures of Mr.<lb/>
Microphone' 1 know 1 can't think of any.<lb/>
One more thing. Did you ever notice the<lb/>
songs that those mulii-gadgeted<lb/>
chronometer watches play? They're the<lb/>
computer II versions of the same songs<lb/>
Slim Whitman sings on his hit album. But.<lb/>
then again. I guess no one should have to<lb/>
go without the fabulous sound R I<lb/>
River Valley' for more than an ho<lb/>
time.<lb/>
And what man can call hum<lb/>
angler without owning the mini "P<lb/>
Fisherman (Obviously invented to<lb/>
those slow davs at the office 1<lb/>
just isn't right.)<lb/>
But doesn't it just figure that<lb/>
come out with the ' Uenuine One-P<lb/>
Diamond Ring" only weeks after I blew <lb/>
bucks on a cheap imitation?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Believe it or not these rv c<lb/>
their night-club announcers do<lb/>
business - an outstanding b i<lb/>
year after year, thanks io the t<lb/>
public, a society o suckers and hoai<lb/>
of "collectible unique ' And I do m?<lb/>
junk'<lb/>
Just stop and thmk foi a second f<lb/>
really ? honestly tre which soi .<lb/>
touched Burl Ives' heart ovei th<lb/>
course you don't No one does<lb/>
And do you reallv think five mill<lb/>
pie actually needed the " ondei w<lb/>
1 doubt it. But as long as the demand<lb/>
these "limited -time-only or<lb/>
tinues. K-Tel and Ronco will fail<lb/>
oblige with more of the same.<lb/>
I can see it now; the new gadgt<lb/>
buvers in 1982 ? the Cathv Rigby Na -<lb/>
Holder0<lb/>
Editor's note: Mike Hughes is a set<lb/>
year senior from Lizard Lick, N.C .<lb/>
enjoys listening to Burl fves ami i<lb/>
cooking with his Ronco Egg Scrambh ?<lb/>
Situation In U.S. Prisons Desperately<lb/>
Inconducive To Criminal Rehabilitation<lb/>
B PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
We've all seen the movie depictions.<lb/>
read I he news accounts or heard someone's<lb/>
personal story of what life is like within the<lb/>
confines oi a prison or jail. Believe me:<lb/>
these stories, accounts and depictions are<lb/>
true. My summer experience ol having<lb/>
been incarcerated in two North Carolina<lb/>
county jails and four U.S. federal prisons<lb/>
confirmed every evil belief 1 had oi the<lb/>
horrors of prison existence.<lb/>
"Never in my life have I seen so main<lb/>
lonely, helpless and hopeless people I<lb/>
wrote those words many times in my letters<lb/>
10 friends describing the sadness 1 observed<lb/>
among mv fellow inmates. These<lb/>
psychological aspects oi confinement are<lb/>
perhaps more deliberating even than the<lb/>
physically meager and medically limited<lb/>
aspects.<lb/>
During the reign oi the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration, there has been a dramatic in-<lb/>
crease in the number of prisoners in U.S.<lb/>
facilities. (This increase may reach 25 per-<lb/>
cent by the end of this year.) The connec-<lb/>
tions are obvious: firstly, as the economy<lb/>
declines and more social services are cut,<lb/>
more people turn to crime as a solution to<lb/>
their economic woes.<lb/>
Secondly, Reagan's hard line on crime is<lb/>
influencing the beliefs of the American<lb/>
people convicted of crimes. This usually<lb/>
means longer sentences for offenders and<lb/>
will ultimately mean the construction of<lb/>
many more prisons.<lb/>
The obvious question that is not being<lb/>
asked is: "Do prisons actually help solve<lb/>
the problem of crime? From what I've seen<lb/>
this summer, the direct opposite is true.<lb/>
"Prisons may be the number-one cause of<lb/>
crime<lb/>
Incarceration seems to be society's<lb/>
response to the great fundamental evils of<lb/>
poverty, racism and social inequality.<lb/>
Instead of addressing these major<lb/>
wrongs, we build more prisons to segregate<lb/>
these victims who are invariably the poor<lb/>
and minority elements of our society.<lb/>
Every prison I was kepi in this summer<lb/>
had a disproportionately high number of<lb/>
black and minority persons in their inmate<lb/>
populations. (In N.C, more than 50 per-<lb/>
ceni ol the state's inmates are minorities.<lb/>
despite the tact that minorities make up<lb/>
only 24 percent of North Carolina's<lb/>
population.)<lb/>
These figures show the continued ex-<lb/>
istence of racism m our nation. It's easier<lb/>
to imprison the poor, the blacks and the<lb/>
outcasts ol our society than to provide<lb/>
them with the basic necessities of life, such<lb/>
as jobs, fair housing, good educational ser-<lb/>
vices and health care.<lb/>
And worst of all, "Prisons don't work<lb/>
Fhey lust temporarily remove a person<lb/>
from society. In a few years he's back out<lb/>
on the street again, but this time much<lb/>
worse off. He still has no job, possibly no<lb/>
tamilv left for support, and now he's an<lb/>
"ex-con with few prospects for survival.<lb/>
 hen 1 was released from prison, I was<lb/>
given a set of clothes, a bus ticket and $50<lb/>
"rehabilitation money That's it! Not<lb/>
even any pre-releasc counseling. This pro-<lb/>
cedure is the same for any inmate ?<lb/>
regardless of the crime, regardless of the<lb/>
sentence.<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
What hope do these people have? V<lb/>
can they go? Ho do thev cope with then<lb/>
anger? Psychological problems?<lb/>
loneliness' Finally, how do thev s<lb/>
without having to return lo crim<lb/>
behavior?<lb/>
I'm not advocating letting rapists a<lb/>
murderers run loose in the streets; I'm<lb/>
referring to the "77 percent" ot the<lb/>
mates who have been incarcratcd w<lb/>
"non-violent" crimes.<lb/>
These people stand nothing to gain froii<lb/>
a prison experience. It can only mak<lb/>
"better" criminals or completely ruin<lb/>
lives ? and ultimately, it may rum ours.<lb/>
because. wv too are the victims ol ilm<lb/>
visdous, vengeful cycle<lb/>
It's time thai thi. age old tradition ol<lb/>
keeping people in cages, tor breaking laws,<lb/>
be re-evaluated. The need for crcatiu<lb/>
alternatives to incarceration is grea .<lb/>
right now, before President Reagan a<lb/>
other state officials start approving<lb/>
funding the construction ot many more<lb/>
jails and prisons<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
since<lb/>
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Illl I Wit AKOI IN! <lb/>
si rn MBI k 2. i?:<lb/>
Trudeau<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
P4 . pw<lb/>
<lb/>
Lebanon Still Has Problems<lb/>
B KFITH BRITTA!N tighting clans, Chris-<lb/>
tians versus Moslems<lb/>
With the evacuation still exists<lb/>
?I the Palestine 1 ibera- She also described<lb/>
tion Organization from the government ol<lb/>
I ebanon's pro I ebanon as having to<lb/>
n s are b no means "walk a tightrope<lb/>
ei. between the Christian<lb/>
' ns belie! was av,1 Moslem factions<lb/>
? b Di Sai tlra Behind the excite-<lb/>
V i - H o u g h . men 0Ne, ,he<lb/>
H professoi ol withdrawal of the PLO<lb/>
in a hosl of problems<lb/>
are ol concern to<lb/>
tbanon and the<lb/>
led States.<lb/>
? jd thai i  ?<lb/>
lems vill . ? .d <lb/>
hi  ta ion o! i<lb/>
pi n - i . ? ? ? ?<lb/>
?1 e m<lb/>
1 oicign aimies still<lb/>
i. np much o! the<lb/>
Wilson Drug Bust<lb/>
Xets 45 Offenders<lb/>
W II st)<lb/>
N .<lb/>
II<lb/>
I . ilson police<lb/>
Wednesday 4<lb/>
people h a e b e e n<lb/>
.i t i e month<lb/>
operai n reported to<lb/>
be the largest under-<lb/>
cover drug investiga-<lb/>
t he city's<lb/>
ory.<lb/>
Police officers and<lb/>
iv hol 1 aw 1 n<lb/>
ccmeni agents began<lb/>
esting those charged<lb/>
h ui ; .t m total ol<lb/>
"I people had been<lb/>
;ked up b late<lb/>
a dnesdav mornine<lb/>
I he airs<lb/>
endt<lb/>
aid<lb/>
mas<lb/>
?? er<lb/>
the<lb/>
five-month undercovei<lb/>
p olice and<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
id<lb/>
 ounce.<lb/>
' e believ e l<lb/>
"i ounce .aid "We m<lb/>
v sellers.<lb/>
v aftei w hai<lb/>
he run-<lb/>
Warrants .harging<lb/>
I slate<lb/>
drug laws were issued<lb/>
against the 45 people.<lb/>
Younce said one war-<lb/>
rant vas for drug<lb/>
possession and the<lb/>
others were for sale or<lb/>
conspiracy to sell<lb/>
di ugs.<lb/>
He said the drugs in-<lb/>
voked include mari-<lb/>
juana, Q u aa1u d es,<lb/>
I SD, barbituates, am-<lb/>
phetamines and heroin.<lb/>
Undercover agents<lb/>
made at least two buys<lb/>
from most of the alleg-<lb/>
ed dealers, Younce<lb/>
said. He declined to sa<lb/>
exacth how many of-<lb/>
ficers participated in<lb/>
the investigation, but<lb/>
said more than one<lb/>
ian vas inolved.<lb/>
Police also plan to<lb/>
ze eight ars used b<lb/>
accused drug dealers,<lb/>
he said, dnd Al L- of-<lb/>
ficials were c o n<lb/>
m plating action<lb/>
against five taverns<lb/>
where drug sales or li-<lb/>
quor law violation<lb/>
allegedly occurred.<lb/>
country ? 60,000<lb/>
Isrealis in the South.<lb/>
30,(XX) Syrians in the<lb/>
Bekau alley.<lb/>
rhere are also 75<lb/>
s m all g r oups ol<lb/>
militants roaming the<lb/>
streets ol Beirut.<lb/>
1 he 1 ebanese ai rm<lb/>
it sell has many<lb/>
obstacles to overcome.<lb/>
It is presently too small<lb/>
and ill-equipped to take<lb/>
care ol it's internal and<lb/>
extei nal problems.<lb/>
1 v en t hough t he<lb/>
7,100 PI O lighters and<lb/>
5.200 Syrian troops are<lb/>
Is e i n g e v a c u a ted,<lb/>
500.000 Palestines are<lb/>
left who still seek a<lb/>
homeland General<lb/>
Sharon, Israel's<lb/>
deter.se minister and<lb/>
architect of the June 6<lb/>
i asion, maintains<lb/>
that. "The Palestines<lb/>
have a homeland, and<lb/>
n is Jordan 1 nis v tew<lb/>
is not necessarily<lb/>
shared bv the Palestines<lb/>
and others involved in<lb/>
the conflict.<lb/>
Christian Phalangtst<lb/>
I e a d e r, B u s h i I<lb/>
Gemayel, was elected<lb/>
president. Gumeyel is<lb/>
known to be pro-Israel;<lb/>
thus it is believed that<lb/>
he may bung peace to<lb/>
the vvar-torn region.<lb/>
 ui ili-Hough stated<lb/>
that Gemayel might be<lb/>
important to the region<lb/>
in that his pro-Israel<lb/>
stance could enlist<lb/>
military assi st an c e<lb/>
from that country.<lb/>
she also stated that<lb/>
the new president is in a<lb/>
touchy situation.<lb/>
??Because ol his ties<lb/>
with the West he must<lb/>
be careful not to<lb/>
alienate his ow n people<lb/>
(the Arabs)<lb/>
There are tears in tlie-<lb/>
Arab world, however,<lb/>
that Lebanon may-<lb/>
become an Israeli<lb/>
satelite. The Israelis<lb/>
deny this and maintain<lb/>
they are strong ad-<lb/>
vocates ol Gemayel on-<lb/>
ly because ot their<lb/>
belief thai he can bung<lb/>
stability io the region.<lb/>
Stability is the long-<lb/>
range plan of the U.S.<lb/>
and Israeli govern-<lb/>
ments. Both govern-<lb/>
ments, though, are very<lb/>
concerned over the<lb/>
M),000 Syrians in the<lb/>
northern Bckuu Valley.<lb/>
Israel will not permit<lb/>
Svna troops so close to<lb/>
u border. Unless the<lb/>
problem is alleviated<lb/>
1 ebanon w ill soon<lb/>
again be in the midst of<lb/>
intense lighting<lb/>
Rebuilding the<lb/>
destruction left bv the<lb/>
war is estimated to run<lb/>
into the billions ol<lb/>
dollars. Wealthy Arab<lb/>
nations have already<lb/>
pledged two billion<lb/>
dollars m reconstruc-<lb/>
tion funds.<lb/>
With the PI O leav-<lb/>
ing Beirut, firing its<lb/>
Russian made Ak -47<lb/>
assault titles in celebra-<lb/>
tion vollies, the Habib<lb/>
peace plan apparently<lb/>
worked. A final pro-<lb/>
b 1 e m that worries<lb/>
Wshington is that some<lb/>
PI () members have<lb/>
said they vvill denv<lb/>
Arafat's ordeis to leave<lb/>
Beirut.<lb/>
Israel has vowed to<lb/>
drive any P1 ()<lb/>
members left in Beirut<lb/>
out bv force.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ALL DANCE<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
V 4 i<lb/>
THE COLLEGE STUDENTS'<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
FOR ALL DANCEWEAR<lb/>
J<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Sept. 17 &amp; 18<lb/>
Room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
9:00-11:00<lb/>
Those interested in performing<lb/>
please sign up at the Student<lb/>
Union Office, Mendenhall.<lb/>
VSfcA<lb/>
'V<lb/>
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vj<lb/>
m<lb/>
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CAPEZIO<lb/>
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We have o<lb/>
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anrt lap,<lb/>
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in a spectrum<lb/>
ot colors'<lb/>
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"Home of Greenville's Best Meats'<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
Coupon Expires 9482<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
 Address<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I.????<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 2-4<lb/>
Fryer Leg<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
59 C<lb/>
Drumsticks<lb/>
69c<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
Breast Quarters<lb/>
79C<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle - No Limit<lb/>
PEPSI OR COKE<lb/>
98C<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
MOUNTAIN DEW<lb/>
89 C<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle w<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
2"<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
2"<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
6 Pack<lb/>
12 Ox. Cans<lb/>
$T19<lb/>
2<lb/>
Chicken of the Sea<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
6'2 Oz. Can<lb/>
In Oil or Water<lb/>
68C<lb/>
DA 1R V FRESH SPFA IA IS<lb/>
Fresh, Whole<lb/>
Maola Milk<lb/>
' 7 Gallon<lb/>
Paper Carton<lb/>
98C<lb/>
Old South Fresh<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
12 Gallon<lb/>
Paper Carton<lb/>
98<lb/>
Mod a Best Grade<lb/>
All Flavors<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
12 Gallon<lb/>
$159<lb/>
1<lb/>
Nehi Soft Drinks<lb/>
6 Pack - 12 Ox. Cans QQ?<lb/>
Your Choice? jr jr V<lb/>
Orange, Grape or RC Cola<lb/>
Nehi 2 Liter<lb/>
Soft Drinks 58C<lb/>
Fruit Flavors<lb/>
Cottonelle<lb/>
Toilet<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 Roll Pkg<lb/>
98C<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 Or Jor<lb/>
1<lb/>
Each<lb/>
10C<lb/>
Garner Apple or<lb/>
Grape Jelly<lb/>
68 <lb/>
I6O1 Jot<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER2. 1982<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
 Chariots' To<lb/>
Set Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre Ablaze<lb/>
This Thursday, Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night at 5, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m<lb/>
the Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
will screen 1981 's Academy Award<lb/>
winner for best picture, the inspira-<lb/>
tional Chariots of tire.<lb/>
The film will be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre and admission for<lb/>
students is by ID and activity card.<lb/>
Faculty and staff will be admitted<lb/>
by current MSC membership.<lb/>
Starring Ben Cross and Ian<lb/>
Charleson, Chariots of Fire is a<lb/>
story of struggle, courage, deter-<lb/>
mination and ultimate triumph of<lb/>
men driven by the passion of com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
Set in Britain in the early 1920s,<lb/>
Chariots explores the realm of com-<lb/>
petition on several levels, most<lb/>
notably the inherent desire to win<lb/>
felt by two young athletes of distinct<lb/>
backgrounds.<lb/>
Although Chariots is entirely<lb/>
entertaining simply as a film about<lb/>
the trauma of Olympic training, the<lb/>
juxtaposition of athletics and<lb/>
religion is dominant throughout the<lb/>
movie, even to the point of becom-<lb/>
ing its driving force. But a close<lb/>
look at the religious backgrounds of<lb/>
the two reveals completely different<lb/>
reasons for the quest for victory.<lb/>
Charleson studied acting in Lon-<lb/>
don, appearing in that city's West<lb/>
End in plays such as Otherwise<lb/>
Engaged, and, as a member of the<lb/>
National Theatre Company, he ap-<lb/>
peared in productions of Julius<lb/>
Caesar, Volpone and The Hun-<lb/>
chback of Mot re Dame. For the past<lb/>
two years, Charleson was with the<lb/>
Poyal Shakespeare Company, and<lb/>
his credits include The Taming of<lb/>
the Shrew, Piaf and Once in a<lb/>
Lifetime. Chariots of Fire is his first<lb/>
film.<lb/>
Ben Cross studied at the Royal<lb/>
Academy of Dramatic Art and has<lb/>
appeared in Shakespeare with the<lb/>
Prospect Theatre Company. Cross<lb/>
played in Joseph and the Amazing<lb/>
Technicolor Dreamcoat, Equus, a<lb/>
revival of Irma La Douce, Privates<lb/>
on Parade and the leading role in<lb/>
Chicago in London's West End. His<lb/>
television credits include The<lb/>
Minkier and Strangers.<lb/>
Hugh Hudson, director of the<lb/>
film, has won most of the major<lb/>
awards in his field. Chariots of Fire<lb/>
is his first theatrical film assign-<lb/>
ment. A talented and successful pro-<lb/>
ducer and director of documen-<lb/>
taries, Hudson began his career in<lb/>
the cutting rooms producing and<lb/>
directing 10 documentaries.<lb/>
Ian Charleson in a scene from the 1981 Academy Award winner for Best Picture, Chariots of Fire, on campus this weekend.<lb/>
Dolly Parton Right At Home In 'Whorehouse'<lb/>
ByCIIFFJAHR<lb/>
I adirs Htwne Journal<lb/>
NEW YORK ? Mention her name and people smile.<lb/>
They think of a sunny little woman teetering on high<lb/>
heels, the hourglass figure spilling out of her dress, her<lb/>
pretty face framed in a cloud of wiggy blondness made<lb/>
radiant by a smile that sometimes appears sweet and<lb/>
sometimes sassy.<lb/>
Dolly Parton is an original and, to intimate friends,<lb/>
the woman inside is even more complex than her<lb/>
evocative image. This complexity was heightened during<lb/>
the recent filming of The Best Little Whorehouse in<lb/>
Texas, in which she co-stars with Burt Reynolds. (The<lb/>
film is held over at Greenville's Plaza Cinema.) Making<lb/>
the movie. Miss Parton claims she faced "more pro-<lb/>
blems, sorrows and enlightenment" than ever before in<lb/>
her life.<lb/>
"On the movie, we've gone through so much bit-<lb/>
terness she says, "tension, quarrels, hurt feelings 1<lb/>
threatened to quit so many times. Oh, 1 don't ever want<lb/>
to work that hard again. Or need to. There is a tiny<lb/>
voice in me that keeps saying, 'This is the last movie thai<lb/>
you will ever make "<lb/>
Burt Reynolds was finishing his last two days of work<lb/>
on the film when I arrived. Even,one seemed to heave a<lb/>
sigh of relief as he departed, for Reynolds had grown<lb/>
difficult. America's No. 1 male box-office star was<lb/>
under the gun after his last three movies had grossed less<lb/>
than expected ? and a fourth looked shaky.<lb/>
But also, he knew what people at the studio were say-<lb/>
ing ? that Miss Parton's irresistible glow would walk<lb/>
off with the picture. She plays Miss Mona, a brothel<lb/>
madam with a heart of gold. When the role was offered<lb/>
to Miss Parton, she knew she was born to play it.<lb/>
Nonetheless, she accepted only after some prayer and<lb/>
soul-searching because of her concern about the film's<lb/>
T.S. Carp's World Comes To Creenville, At Last<lb/>
Carp author John Irving, at left as the referee, and comic Robin Williams, center, in a scene from The<lb/>
World According to Carp, now playing at Greenville's Plaza Cinema along with The Best Little<lb/>
Whorehouse in Texas (see Dolly Parton story) and Zapped The Buccaneer Theatre has An Officer and a<lb/>
Gentleman, Slight Shift and The Beastmaster. At the Plitt Entertainment Center, Carolina East Conve-<lb/>
nience Complex, are E. T Young Doctors in Love, Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Friday the 13th<lb/>
Part 3 in 3-D. The Park Theatre, downtown Greenville, has the re-released Star Wars (coming to campus<lb/>
later this fall) with a weekend late show of The Return of Bruce Lee. The Tice Drive-In, located on<lb/>
Highway 11, is showing the musical extravaganza Annie and the 264 Playhouse, Highway 264 West, is<lb/>
running the steamy triple-X rated Peaches and Cream.<lb/>
frankness.<lb/>
"I am not trving to glorify prostitution she says,<lb/>
"but if I do, may God forgive me. Not everyone is so<lb/>
lucky as me to get a chance to portray a whore instead<lb/>
of having to be one. But I kinda wanted to make a state-<lb/>
ment with this picture. It points a finger at a lot of peo-<lb/>
ple, and some of 'em ain't whores. Like people who get<lb/>
fake religion. It's a shame the title sounds so risque,<lb/>
because certain people in the Moral Majority who<lb/>
should see it may be turned off.<lb/>
"There are many wonderful people in this world, but<lb/>
there are many more people who just think they're<lb/>
wonderful. In fact, they are self-righteous hypocrites,<lb/>
sinners because they commit crimes like judging thy<lb/>
neighbor. The truly religious forgive. I have been judg-<lb/>
ed a bad woman by some of these people just because I<lb/>
am too open and free and honest.<lb/>
"Prostitutes, I will tell you, are some of the sweetest,<lb/>
most caring people I've known because they've been<lb/>
through everything. I've met them at parties, and I've<lb/>
talked with them. Usually they're people with broken<lb/>
dreams who never had a chance in life or were sexually<lb/>
abused or ignored as children. A lot sell themselves to<lb/>
get some kind of feeling of being loved. The movie will<lb/>
show these women have feelings. You're gonna cry your<lb/>
eyes out<lb/>
Miss Parton's own storv would make quite a movie as<lb/>
well. A former country-music queen, vhe gained na-<lb/>
tional attention five years ago with a hit recording<lb/>
("Here You Come Again") and with her television ap-<lb/>
pearance with Johnny Carbon on The Tonight Shon<lb/>
Then she scored an enormous hit in her first movie he-<lb/>
she outshone her more experienced co-sias, Jane Fonda<lb/>
and Lily Tomlm, in .ine to Five.<lb/>
Miss Parton wa born the fourth of 12 children to a<lb/>
poor farmer and his wife who lived in a two-bedroom<lb/>
log cabin that had no electricity. The house was nestled<lb/>
by the Little Pigeon River near Sevierville in the Great<lb/>
Smoky Mountains of Tennessee.<lb/>
By guitar picking, she discovered earlv her talent for<lb/>
music. At age 10. her Mnging an d songwriting led to<lb/>
local television appearances and. b age 12. I 3 a debut<lb/>
at the Grand Ole Opry. And she proudly admits that the<lb/>
way she looks today owes a lot to prostitutes she saw as<lb/>
a child.<lb/>
"I always liked the look of our hookers back home<lb/>
she says. "Their hairdos and makeup made them look<lb/>
more. When people say that less is more. I say more is<lb/>
more. Less is less. I go for more<lb/>
Therefore, Miss Parton built overstatement into what<lb/>
See F FR BOD . Page 7<lb/>
Charlie Daniels<lb/>
Homespun Rocker A Politico<lb/>
By STEVE MORSE<lb/>
Bul?a ?.h?hr<lb/>
NASHVILLE,Tenn. ? For years, Charlie Daniels<lb/>
was viewed as just another hell-raising good ol' boy<lb/>
from North Carolina. But in the past year, he has releas-<lb/>
ed two hard-hitting topical songs that have changed his<lb/>
image and brought him national attention.<lb/>
Leaving behind the humor of his previously best-<lb/>
known song, "The Devil Went Down To Georgia the<lb/>
tobacco-chewing Daniels has come out with the<lb/>
patriotic anthem "In America a No. 1 country hit last<lb/>
year, and the controversial "Still In Saigon about a<lb/>
returning soldier's plight that has recently become a ma-<lb/>
jor pop hit.<lb/>
The two songs have pushed Daniels from the music<lb/>
pages to the news pages of many papers.<lb/>
"I'm just strictly speaking for myself Daniels says.<lb/>
"And I'm only speaking from a human point of view,<lb/>
rather than from someone who knows, or even cares, a<lb/>
lot about politics<lb/>
Instead of being on a political crusade, Daniels, 46, is<lb/>
speaking his mind in the tradition of people he admires<lb/>
? country philosophers, rodeo cowboys and self-reliant<lb/>
ramblers. "They were people who weren't afraid. Life<lb/>
didn't intimidate them he says.<lb/>
Daniels began making waves last year with "In<lb/>
America a song he wrote to quell national cynicism.<lb/>
Seeming like a pep talk, the lyrics read:<lb/>
"This lady may have stumbledBut she ain't never<lb/>
fell,And if the Russians don't believe thatThey can all<lb/>
go straight to hell<lb/>
And then came "Still in Saigon written by New<lb/>
York songwriter Dan Daley. More of a straight rock<lb/>
song compared to the Southern-rock Daniels usually<lb/>
favors, it is a vivid portrait of a Vietnam War veteran<lb/>
who suffers flashbacks from a jungle war he never<lb/>
understood:<lb/>
"AH the sounds of long agoWill be forever in my<lb/>
headMingled with the wounded's criesAnd the silence<lb/>
of the dead<lb/>
The song has thrust Daniels into the role of a<lb/>
spokesman for the Vietnam veterans.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
"Looking back 10 years later on that war. I think<lb/>
everybody kind of thinks. "Those guys got a raw deal<lb/>
he says. "It was a poor man's war. The people who<lb/>
had to go didn't know a senator and didn't have any<lb/>
political clout. They were boys off the street ? and<lb/>
farm boys ? who were just used as cannon fodder<lb/>
The song has drawn wide acclaim for its sentiments,<lb/>
though not from everyone.<lb/>
"I've had stupid criticism of it from some people who<lb/>
were very much out of touch Daniels says.<lb/>
"Like there was a guy with a little paper in Johnson<lb/>
City, Tenn who said that it was an insult to all Viet-<lb/>
nam veterans, and an insult to all American citizens that<lb/>
it took nine years for my Skoal-infested brain to realize<lb/>
there was a problem. Well, that's downright stupid,<lb/>
because I was doing benefits for Vietnam Veterans of<lb/>
America before I ever heard 'Still In Saigon<lb/>
"I recorded it first of all because I thought it was<lb/>
good music. I thought it was an excellent song,<lb/>
regardless of what the subject matter had been. It did<lb/>
happen to go along with something 1 felt very strongly<lb/>
about, but first and foremost and always, I record a<lb/>
song because it's good music<lb/>
"In America" was adopted as a conservative redneck<lb/>
anthem. Ironically, it has been just the other way<lb/>
around with "Still in Saigon which has been inter-<lb/>
preted as a liberal protest song.<lb/>
"I don't really see the two songs as being at odds with<lb/>
each other Daniels says. "We don't fit any molds or<lb/>
bags or anything. Everytime somebody thinks they got<lb/>
us pinned down, we jump out from under 'em<lb/>
See N.C. NATIVE, Page 7<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
( ofli<lb/>
-<lb/>
N<lb/>
Ol<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
r<lb/>
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V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0007"/><lb/>
THi FASTC AROl INIAN<lb/>
SFPTFMBfR 2. 1982<lb/>
?<lb/>
!hink<lb/>
leal<lb/>
and<lb/>
<lb/>
tnson<lb/>
s that<lb/>
ealie<lb/>
njpid,<lb/>
?<lb/>
n was<lb/>
song.<lb/>
It did<lb/>
Krongiy<lb/>
scord a<lb/>
redneck<lb/>
ier way<lb/>
in inter-<lb/>
im with<lb/>
lolds or<lb/>
 ey got<lb/>
Dolly<lb/>
Continued From Page o<lb/>
she calls her gimmick<lb/>
that is, looking trashily<lb/>
sew on the surface<lb/>
while being sweet,<lb/>
vsatm and down to<lb/>
earth in the inside. "I<lb/>
look one was and am<lb/>
another she says. "It<lb/>
makes tor a good com-<lb/>
bination 1 always think<lb/>
ot 'her' the Dolls im-<lb/>
age, like a sentnloquist<lb/>
does his dummy. I hase<lb/>
tun with it. I think,<lb/>
what will 1 do with her<lb/>
this sear to surprise<lb/>
people'1 What'11 she<lb/>
wear? What'II she say?<lb/>
" ou know she<lb/>
sas sighing, 'I'm<lb/>
careful never to get<lb/>
caught up in the Dolls<lb/>
image, other than to<lb/>
develop and protect it.<lb/>
because it you start<lb/>
believing the public<lb/>
persona is sou. sou get<lb/>
trustrated and mixed<lb/>
up I ike, 1 suppose 1<lb/>
am a sex ssmbol, but<lb/>
that idea is tunns to me<lb/>
because 1 see Dolls as a<lb/>
cartoon.<lb/>
"She's tat. wear a<lb/>
wig and so on. Oh.<lb/>
sure. 1 feel sexs. and to<lb/>
some people I come<lb/>
across as extremely<lb/>
sexs, but Dolly's as big<lb/>
a joke to me as she is to<lb/>
others<lb/>
She remembers<lb/>
something and grins<lb/>
slyly. "M husband<lb/>
Carl alssays said to me,<lb/>
'Angel Cakes, sou<lb/>
know whs sou are just<lb/>
so beautiful to me? It's<lb/>
the way sou make<lb/>
yourself more than<lb/>
what sou actualls are<lb/>
Because sou just lack<lb/>
about a halt-a-inch of<lb/>
being ugly as hell<lb/>
She squeals with<lb/>
laughter.<lb/>
Clearly, Miss Parton<lb/>
doesn't take herself or<lb/>
her image too senousls<lb/>
unlike het co-star.<lb/>
some sas. Insiders<lb/>
mo a n abou I Burl<lb/>
Reynold's odd<lb/>
behavior during<lb/>
H horehouse, complan-<lb/>
ing that he's starting to<lb/>
believe his image ?<lb/>
stepping on people,<lb/>
blowing up and making<lb/>
snarling demands<lb/>
Miss Parton won't<lb/>
criticize Reynolds,<lb/>
though she admits there<lb/>
ssere "sensitise times<lb/>
when things ssere said<lb/>
? not meaning to ?<lb/>
that brought tears to<lb/>
his or mv eves.<lb/>
"He's had a very<lb/>
hard time she ex-<lb/>
plains "His broken<lb/>
heart with Sally Field,<lb/>
broken plans, working<lb/>
too hard, all those<lb/>
things can cause him to<lb/>
overreact in a lot of<lb/>
situations, especially<lb/>
being as sensitive as he<lb/>
is. But I do beliese that<lb/>
inside him there's a<lb/>
wonderful, wonderful<lb/>
man. And I think we<lb/>
hase screen magic<lb/>
What thes had off<lb/>
screen was "even<lb/>
sweeter than a lose af-<lb/>
fair she declares. But<lb/>
there was talk at one<lb/>
point that their rela-<lb/>
tionship was exactly<lb/>
that sweet. Reynolds<lb/>
reportedly spent several<lb/>
nights with Miss Parton<lb/>
during her 1 as Vegas<lb/>
debut. She is not talk-<lb/>
ing. "I ain't saying yea<lb/>
Ol nay she drawls,<lb/>
holding back a grin,<lb/>
and repeats, "Just<lb/>
sweeter than a lose at-<lb/>
tair<lb/>
But Miss Parton's<lb/>
lite recently hasn't been<lb/>
all weekends with<lb/>
handsome Burt. In<lb/>
fact, she has noticed a<lb/>
major turnaround in<lb/>
her lite every sesen<lb/>
years. In 1974 came the<lb/>
wrenching split from<lb/>
Porter Wagoner, the<lb/>
country star who<lb/>
discovered her; and in<lb/>
1981 the year she turn-<lb/>
ed 35, she says she suf-<lb/>
fered more, experienc-<lb/>
ed more and realized<lb/>
more than ever in her<lb/>
life.<lb/>
"My heart was shat-<lb/>
tered in the beginning<lb/>
of the year, not by a<lb/>
romance, but by an af-<lb/>
fair of the heart. And it<lb/>
about killed me She<lb/>
won't elaborate. "1 do<lb/>
have a right to some<lb/>
secret spots she says.<lb/>
Seeming somewhat<lb/>
apart from Miss Par-<lb/>
ton's ups and downs is<lb/>
her husband of 17<lb/>
years, Carl Dean. Dean<lb/>
has become to her fans<lb/>
an intriguing shadow<lb/>
figure, always the<lb/>
mystery ma m the<lb/>
other room. He almost<lb/>
never speaks to<lb/>
reporters and has been<lb/>
photographed only,<lb/>
once, five years ago,<lb/>
w hen a spy cameraman<lb/>
caught him speeding<lb/>
away in a truck. Yet,<lb/>
the next day, when I am<lb/>
on the set, 1 am surpris-<lb/>
ed when Miss Parton<lb/>
sidles up to me and<lb/>
says, "C'mon, you got-<lb/>
ta meet Carl<lb/>
Nobody much<lb/>
notices the goodlook-<lb/>
mg guy in plaid shirt<lb/>
and buckskin boots<lb/>
who sits nonchalantly<lb/>
on the set, on the<lb/>
whorehouse's front<lb/>
porch. He has big<lb/>
rough hands and soft<lb/>
brown eyes and no one<lb/>
can miss what Miss<lb/>
Parton must see in him.<lb/>
His fine features and<lb/>
short chestnut hair<lb/>
combine with about 6<lb/>
feet and 3 inches of<lb/>
sinewy muscle to pro-<lb/>
ject, at 38, an image of<lb/>
sexy boyishness. His<lb/>
well-lined skin is a<lb/>
result, no doubt, of so<lb/>
many hours working in<lb/>
the sun.<lb/>
He often visits,<lb/>
unrecognized like this,<lb/>
"just to do nothin<lb/>
when Miss Parton is<lb/>
working away from<lb/>
home for long periods,<lb/>
in this case, a nine week<lb/>
absence. No longer an<lb/>
asphalt contractor, he<lb/>
still "hoists and<lb/>
hauls especially in<lb/>
the running of their big<lb/>
house near Nashville.<lb/>
He prefers anonymi-<lb/>
ty because he has "no<lb/>
meone is with an open<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
"Carl 'n' 1 are good<lb/>
friends Miss Parton<lb/>
explains. "We have a<lb/>
real special relation<lb/>
ship, and they'll hase<lb/>
to wait a long, long<lb/>
time for our divorce.<lb/>
We're so totally open<lb/>
and free that whateer<lb/>
happens, happens<lb/>
Though they may be<lb/>
"Daddy" and<lb/>
"Mama" to eacn<lb/>
other, the Deans decid-<lb/>
ed against having<lb/>
children, partly because<lb/>
they helped raise so<lb/>
many relations to<lb/>
whom thes are known<lb/>
as Aunt Granny and<lb/>
Uncle Pee Paw. The)<lb/>
have a big white planta-<lb/>
tion house, an exact<lb/>
copy ot Tara in Gone<lb/>
With the H ind which<lb/>
stands unseen behind<lb/>
high gates on 65 wood-<lb/>
ed acres outside<lb/>
Nashsille, Tenn Fur-<lb/>
nished "real gorgeous"<lb/>
by a top I os Angeles<lb/>
decorator, their work<lb/>
areas are in seperate<lb/>
wings, with a decor ac<lb/>
cent on durability.<lb/>
His rustic den has<lb/>
hardwood floors to<lb/>
repel an outdoorsman's<lb/>
muddv bo ots. and<lb/>
Miss Parton's blue and<lb/>
gold music room is<lb/>
finished in washable<lb/>
fabrics because,<lb/>
"When I write songs, I<lb/>
live oser there, and I<lb/>
want to be able to spill<lb/>
Kool Aid or Jello or<lb/>
peanut butter she<lb/>
says. "It's real plush,<lb/>
though. When you pull<lb/>
the eiirtains up. they're<lb/>
all puffy. Of course,<lb/>
our bedioom belongs<lb/>
to both of us<lb/>
Preferring privacy,<lb/>
they mostly do their<lb/>
own housework,<lb/>
thereby being free to<lb/>
run naked between hot<lb/>
tub. swimming pool<lb/>
and a small private<lb/>
lake That's about the<lb/>
extent of Miss Parton's<lb/>
exercising, though she<lb/>
will briefly fast or occa-<lb/>
sionally diet to get her<lb/>
weight down<lb/>
"1 look better fat,<lb/>
though, don't you<lb/>
think?" she asks<lb/>
"Skinny, mv face looks<lb/>
too long. I'm just vers<lb/>
hefty People are<lb/>
always telling me to<lb/>
lose weight, but being<lb/>
oserweight has certain-<lb/>
ly never made me less<lb/>
money or hurt my<lb/>
career . Besides,<lb/>
evervbodv loses a tat<lb/>
girl<lb/>
N.C. Native Daniels<lb/>
Old Cowboys, Young<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
Daniels, son of a Wilmington. N.C, lumber-<lb/>
. has parsed out a special niche in the music<lb/>
 He has escaped from that curious limbo<lb/>
the cliche coe, his music is too country<lb/>
rock stations, and too rock for country, sta-<lb/>
He has succeeded despite those limitations.<lb/>
. because of rigorous touring and b the<lb/>
force of personalits.<lb/>
Daniels has built an audience devoted to his<lb/>
ry songs whether they're about Vietnam<lb/>
eterans, old cowboys, fast women, young<lb/>
iwdics, angrs Cajuns, dreamers, mavericks oi<lb/>
? hobos! Amid accompaniment ranging<lb/>
legrass tiddle to hard rock guitar, the<lb/>
 oi self-reliant, rugged individualists.<lb/>
Daniels includes himself in that category. He<lb/>
ks h wn tood on his 250-acre Tennessee<lb/>
and his favorite sports are steer-roping<lb/>
: ig cutting horses. He hunts and fishes<lb/>
Sings Songs About<lb/>
Rowdies, Etc Etc.<lb/>
when he can. attending to his own needs rather<lb/>
than leading a pampered existence.<lb/>
?'People just ain't tough anymore he says.<lb/>
"Everybody is more concerned with 'When is my<lb/>
vacation coming? What time am I getting off<lb/>
work? When do 1 hase to be at work in the morn-<lb/>
ing'1 How main sick days can 1 take out? And<lb/>
what is the union going to do for me?'<lb/>
His voice rising. Daniels elaborates on a recent<lb/>
song he recorded, "Ain't No Ramblers<lb/>
Anymore which sums up his philosophy as well<lb/>
as any tune he's done.<lb/>
"It's about a vanishing breed of people ? peo-<lb/>
ple like k C . Tibbs who beat around rodeos all<lb/>
his life and traveled the country Daniels says.<lb/>
"He wears the name oi being the best saddle<lb/>
hi oik ndet that ever lived. I met him a few years<lb/>
ago He's the only rodeo cowboy who has eser<lb/>
been on the cover of I itc magazine. He was that<lb/>
hot at one lime. But he was just an old hell-<lb/>
raiser. He loved to dnnk and carouse. That kind<lb/>
ol person is what I'm talking about<lb/>
ambition in show<lb/>
business Miss Parton<lb/>
says. "Soon as you<lb/>
pose for 'just one pic-<lb/>
ture well, how do you<lb/>
say no to the next?"<lb/>
It is clear that he<lb/>
loses "Mama"<lb/>
(meaning Dolly) and<lb/>
sice versa, despite what<lb/>
is often rumored in the<lb/>
tabloids about the<lb/>
"openness" of their<lb/>
marriage. Dean doesn't<lb/>
hide his half-serious<lb/>
flirting with showgirls,<lb/>
and Miss Parton lightly<lb/>
kids about it. esen eggs<lb/>
him on. Anyway, she<lb/>
likes to mimic Daisy<lb/>
Mae flirtations with the<lb/>
guys herself ? mostly<lb/>
for laughs. After all<lb/>
these years of a tsso-<lb/>
career marriage, they<lb/>
seem a happy example<lb/>
of the adage that the<lb/>
tightest hold on so-<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
ruSfTphTkappa TAU<lb/>
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Everything 10 Off<lb/>
Tell them Terry sent you.<lb/>
2500 S. Charles St. Extention Phone 756 3344<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
2nd Annual All-Campus<lb/>
TOGA PARTY<lb/>
Sept. 2 ? 9-1 p.m. at TkO House ? 803 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
featuring GOLDRLSH Band<lb/>
Toga required for admission.<lb/>
FREE beverages while it lasts ?<lb/>
then bring your own.<lb/>
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Assistant News Director<lb/>
Newscasters Reporters<lb/>
Be sure to tune in for our sports<lb/>
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beginning next week<lb/>
Apply in person to News Director,<lb/>
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24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057493_0008"/><lb/>
Jones To Continue Education<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
sin imbik: is?k: Pa?? I<lb/>
K<lb/>
Olympic-Bound Star To Return To ECU<lb/>
B (INin PI E ASA MS<lb/>
Sports I- i1Uor<lb/>
Former ECU basketball great<lb/>
Sam Jones has acquired a new title<lb/>
these days around Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
I lie previous Pirate all-America<lb/>
performei is now being called<lb/>
"Coach l eora Jones She. along<lb/>
with last ear teammate. Lillion<lb/>
Barnes, have both been named as<lb/>
assistants on Coach Cathy Andru-<lb/>
i's team.<lb/>
Having played with main ot the<lb/>
returning basketball players, Jones<lb/>
admits that coaching her fellow<lb/>
teammates is difficult. "We use to<lb/>
clown around a lot together, " she<lb/>
said, "hut this is totally serious,<lb/>
lones said that there is a mutual<lb/>
respect between she and the players,<lb/>
which helps to make her job a little<lb/>
easiei<lb/>
.lone who just recently returned<lb/>
from a European trip with the U.S.<lb/>
National Handball team, was living<lb/>
in New Jersev to begin training for<lb/>
the '84 Olympic games and the world<lb/>
games in Hungaria. She decided.<lb/>
however, to return to ECU and ob-<lb/>
tain a degree in Special Education.<lb/>
Hei decision was not a hastv one<lb/>
either, according to Jones.<lb/>
"I did a lot of thinking while I<lb/>
a as in Denmark she said, "And I<lb/>
decided that I wanted to finish mv<lb/>
studies. I owe it to myself to finish<lb/>
school<lb/>
rhe 14 members o the U.S.<lb/>
Handball team live in New Jersey<lb/>
together and must support<lb/>
themselves during the two-year<lb/>
training period. Because the team is<lb/>
evaluated every six months, Jones<lb/>
said there was a chance that she may<lb/>
have been cut before the Olympics<lb/>
and has decided to wait and try out<lb/>
again next year.<lb/>
But Jones is not olympic-bound<lb/>
vet. "Right now, the Olympics is not<lb/>
mv goal she said. "1 have to make<lb/>
the team first, and then I'll start<lb/>
worrying about the Olympics<lb/>
Jones, herself, is still a little<lb/>
shocked about her discovery of the<lb/>
sport o handball and what it has<lb/>
brought her thus far. She has<lb/>
travelled to Paris, East Germany,<lb/>
Denmark and Ireland and has ex-<lb/>
perienced more than she ever<lb/>
thought possible. "It was like a<lb/>
dream she said. "1 never thought<lb/>
1 would be seeing Europe, especially<lb/>
bv playing handball<lb/>
The first time Jones had ever<lb/>
played in an official handball game<lb/>
was when she tried out for the na-<lb/>
tional team in June. Two weeks<lb/>
later, she was on a jet to Europe<lb/>
with 13 other handball players.<lb/>
Because of Jones' exceptional<lb/>
athletic ability, she was able to make<lb/>
the transistion from basketball to<lb/>
handball, but there were some ma-<lb/>
jor differences to overcome. Unlike<lb/>
basketball, a handball player can<lb/>
take three steps after picking up a<lb/>
dribble.<lb/>
Although handball and basketball<lb/>
do have main similarities. Jones<lb/>
believes they are different in many<lb/>
wavs. "You can net awav with a lot<lb/>
in basketball she said. "In hand-<lb/>
ball, a call is made by the referee<lb/>
and play begins right away. There's<lb/>
no time to complain about a call<lb/>
Jones described handball as being<lb/>
a combination of sports. "You have<lb/>
to throw the ball like you're throw-<lb/>
ing a softball, you have to know<lb/>
how to dive like in soccer, and you<lb/>
have to be able to explode just like<lb/>
in football<lb/>
As far as the physical demands<lb/>
go, Jones said only those players<lb/>
that are not hotheaded can plav the<lb/>
sport. "You can't plav handball it<lb/>
you have a bad attitude she said.<lb/>
"There's always someone hanging<lb/>
on you. And it you sore. you<lb/>
almost always get hit Jones. ,ts<lb/>
well as the rest of the players, were<lb/>
t<lb/>
Jones handles the hall during ECU basketball action<lb/>
not allowed to wear anv tvpe ot ;<lb/>
lection except tot knee pads<lb/>
As a iadv Pirate. Jones I<lb/>
sidered a superstar, but ?. <lb/>
the ase in handball. "1 ou I I<lb/>
one star in handball,1 she sj.j<lb/>
"Everybody is a threat Jone<lb/>
plained that everv plaver on<lb/>
court can sore from her p<lb/>
At the National Sports Festival in<lb/>
Indianapolis, lnd Jones scored a<lb/>
goal in everv game, including three<lb/>
m a row in the championship game<lb/>
Jones, who plavcd the wing<lb/>
right back positions, was a met'<lb/>
ot the Sot. ? :h won<lb/>
gold medal.<lb/>
Now that the vet ? a<lb/>
played two sports at a highlv c<lb/>
pel live level, which<lb/>
prefer? 'Nothing can take the p<lb/>
ot basketball she -aid. "But M I<lb/>
had started (playing handl<lb/>
age ot five or six, 1<lb/>
know<lb/>
Vs tor next year, J<lb/>
she will have to be at her<lb/>
order to make the future olyn<lb/>
team. "It will be hardei n<lb/>
team next vear because the t i<lb/>
getting more popular she sa<lb/>
"People are beginning<lb/>
game and are finding<lb/>
exciting it is to watch<lb/>
But hopefully, h<lb/>
enable Jon<lb/>
tins time to I os Angeles<lb/>
put mv heart into it. I feel like !<lb/>
be there in '84 l e iaid v. ?<lb/>
make up nn n I do<lb/>
Frosh To Make Big Splash On Swim Team<lb/>
B KEN BOLTON<lb/>
tssfetaol sports f Ultor<lb/>
With freshmen making up 75 per-<lb/>
cent of last year's ECU men and<lb/>
women's swimming and diving<lb/>
team, this vear's team will be young<lb/>
but strong.<lb/>
Out of 29 men on the team this<lb/>
vear, 22 are freshmen or<lb/>
sophomores. On the women's side,<lb/>
19 out of 22 are freshmen or<lb/>
sophomores, with no seniors.<lb/>
v ith all of the young members on<lb/>
the team, one might ??xpect this<lb/>
year's team to be questionable. But<lb/>
thai s not so according to head<lb/>
coach Rick Kobe. "Last year's team<lb/>
had the most talented freshman<lb/>
class ever he said. "The potential<lb/>
is there this year for the best swim<lb/>
team ever at ECU<lb/>
This will be Kobe's first year as<lb/>
head coach after serving the last two<lb/>
years as assistant coach. Last vear's<lb/>
squad finished with a record of 6-5<lb/>
for the women and 5-6 for the men.<lb/>
According to Kobe, the swimm-<lb/>
ing program at ECU is on an upsw-<lb/>
ing now. Last year's women's team<lb/>
finished 16th in the Division-Il na-<lb/>
tionals. The men's team finished<lb/>
fifth at the Eastern Championships.<lb/>
With all of the talent in last year's<lb/>
freshman class, it would be hard to<lb/>
believe that this vear's group could<lb/>
be even better. But it'sftrue. "Our<lb/>
freshmen this year are already ahead<lb/>
of the group that we had last year<lb/>
said Kobe. "There will be no weak<lb/>
spots on this year's team<lb/>
The incoming freshman class will<lb/>
be expected to step right in and<lb/>
Sherman Confronts Challenge<lb/>
B CINDY PEEASANTS<lb/>
spurts Kdilwr<lb/>
First-year tennis coach Patricia<lb/>
Sherman has met challenges before,<lb/>
and this year she will have the<lb/>
chance to confront another one.<lb/>
The Minnesota native is now in<lb/>
the process of selecting members for<lb/>
the ECU men and women's tennis<lb/>
teams. And with a total of twelve<lb/>
players returning, Sherman's main<lb/>
concern is building a team that will<lb/>
be competitive at the Division I<lb/>
level.<lb/>
Five female players will be com-<lb/>
ing back this season. At the top of<lb/>
the list is Katherine Tolson, ECU's<lb/>
first female tennis player to ever<lb/>
ieach the regionals in national com-<lb/>
petition. Tolson won the consola-<lb/>
tion bracket. Another top seed,<lb/>
Debbie Christine, will be returning<lb/>
along with Janet Russell, Kim Har-<lb/>
rison and Laura Redford. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Sherman, five walk-ons are<lb/>
trving out<lb/>
"I think for the women at this<lb/>
point, we have five strong players<lb/>
she said. "But we do lack depth<lb/>
Sherman added that she is still<lb/>
looking for prospective players for<lb/>
the spring and fall season.<lb/>
During the fall, the women will<lb/>
compete in two home matches. The<lb/>
Pirates will play Duke Tennis Club<lb/>
on Saturday, October 9 at 12 p.m<lb/>
Peace College on Thursday, Oc-<lb/>
tober 14 at 3 p.m. and travel to N.C.<lb/>
State on October 20 for the only<lb/>
NCAA match. The Bucs will play<lb/>
the Wolfpack at 2 p.m.<lb/>
At the present time, Sherman<lb/>
holds three tennis practices each day<lb/>
in order to evaluate potential<lb/>
players. Having lost three top-seed<lb/>
players on the men's tennis team,<lb/>
Sherman has a total of 27 men vying<lb/>
for one of the ten positions on the<lb/>
squad. Sherman said seven men<lb/>
from last year's team will be return-<lb/>
ing, however, and will probably not<lb/>
need to fill too many positions.<lb/>
ECU tennis player hits forehand return<lb/>
"I think we have some good<lb/>
strength on the men's team she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Assisting Sherman will be two<lb/>
graduate assistants, Alan Farfour<lb/>
and Andrew Sledge. Farfour<lb/>
primarily worked with the men's<lb/>
team last year. Sherman, who has<lb/>
never coached two teams at the<lb/>
same time, is looking forward to<lb/>
directing both teams this season. "I<lb/>
enjoy working with both she said.<lb/>
"The time is limited but with my<lb/>
assistants' help, I think we'll im-<lb/>
prove rather quickly<lb/>
The men's team will also play<lb/>
three games this fall. On October<lb/>
19, the Pirates will go up against<lb/>
Campbell University and will then<lb/>
face the University of Richmond on<lb/>
October 25 at 3 p.m. On October<lb/>
28, the Bucs will play their only<lb/>
away match at Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Sherman said the fall season will<lb/>
give her a chance to see the level of<lb/>
competition and also give the<lb/>
players an opportunity to work on<lb/>
their games.<lb/>
Although Sherman has a young<lb/>
team as far as experience goes, she<lb/>
has high expectations for the '82<lb/>
season. In fact, Sherman has always<lb/>
found a way to achieve what she has<lb/>
wanted. For instance, in 1973 the<lb/>
Iowa State graduate student under-<lb/>
went elbow surgery for tendonitis.<lb/>
Unable to play right-handed, she<lb/>
switched her grip to her left hand<lb/>
and has been winning tournaments<lb/>
ever since.<lb/>
She's a coach that expects and<lb/>
demands the most from her players.<lb/>
"If I'm out there giving 100 per-<lb/>
cent she said, "I expect the same<lb/>
out of them Sherman believes<lb/>
that making the most of each player<lb/>
and having good communication is<lb/>
the key to any successful team.<lb/>
Because Sherman is still selecting<lb/>
tennis players, she has not set any<lb/>
goals with the team yet. But the<lb/>
head coach said she has heard some<lb/>
of the players' individual goals<lb/>
wJich match her own. "We would<lb/>
like as many of our players as possi-<lb/>
ble to go to the nationals she said.<lb/>
"We are shooting high<lb/>
challenge some of the existing lime<lb/>
records at ECU.<lb/>
Heading the list o the male<lb/>
recruits will be Dan Booth. Kobe ex-<lb/>
perts Booth to break the freshman<lb/>
100 and 200 meter breast-stroke<lb/>
records.<lb/>
"ATNtre fffMejrr?v"rrnmer will<lb/>
b'JEnC 3ebtaick.il transfer from Ap-<lb/>
palachian State University. ECU<lb/>
was fortunate to pick up Sebnick<lb/>
when Appalachian State dropped<lb/>
their swimming program. Sebnick.<lb/>
who is the reigning Southern Con-<lb/>
ference breast-stroke champion, will<lb/>
have a good chance ot breaking the<lb/>
varsity breast-stroke record.<lb/>
Other freshmen expected to have<lb/>
an immediate impact are Chris Pit-<lb/>
telli and Marty Ross. Pittelh will<lb/>
have a good shot at the freshman<lb/>
sprint free-style records and Ross is<lb/>
expected to be the top freshman<lb/>
distance swimmer.<lb/>
Besides the men, the Pirates have<lb/>
also landed some excellent women<lb/>
recruits. Leading the list will be<lb/>
Michelle Joyner, who has already<lb/>
recorded times taster than five varsi-<lb/>
ty records.<lb/>
Joanne McMulley will have a<lb/>
chance to set three v arsity records in<lb/>
the breast-stroke. Sandy Schneider<lb/>
is another recruit who, like Joyner,<lb/>
has already recorded times that<lb/>
would break at least five varsitv<lb/>
records this vear.<lb/>
1 he incoming recruits will have to<lb/>
really be impressive this year it thev<lb/>
are going to match last vear's per-<lb/>
formance by the treshman clasv<lb/>
There were a total oi 19 freshmen<lb/>
records set last vear. 10 bv the<lb/>
w ' rWtUWdi-W-bv u" men<lb/>
?Vccordirig Io coa'eh Kobe, the<lb/>
most important point that he could<lb/>
stress to his swimmers would be to<lb/>
think positive and to set a goal. "If<lb/>
vou have a positive attitude and<lb/>
a reasonable goal, then vou will be<lb/>
successful in life no matter what vou<lb/>
do he sa<lb/>
last vear was the first vear that<lb/>
ECU has had a diving team U <lb/>
along with the swimming team. The<lb/>
diving team is a valuable asset to the<lb/>
Pirates, and diving coach Jon Rose<lb/>
has done a great job. according to<lb/>
Kobe. I eading diver Scott Eagle will<lb/>
be expected to score well at the<lb/>
Eastern Championships this vear.<lb/>
I he main goal that Kobe would<lb/>
like to achieve this year is to have a<lb/>
winning season for both the women<lb/>
and men. In the past, there were<lb/>
some seperate meets for the women<lb/>
and men. but now thev will all be<lb/>
dual meets.<lb/>
This vear's team will be the<lb/>
largest ever at ECU with 51 team<lb/>
members, including 12 returning<lb/>
men lettermen and 5 returning<lb/>
women lettermen. The previous<lb/>
rd of team members was J8<lb/>
which was set last vear.<lb/>
This vear's schedule wil b .eh<lb/>
and will feature some of the top<lb/>
teams in the South. The Pirates<lb/>
sometimes have trouble getting<lb/>
reams ro-compere against because Of<lb/>
ECU's historv o upsetting favored<lb/>
teams Some of the teams included<lb/>
on this year's schedule are N.C<lb/>
 North Carolina. Old Don<lb/>
nion, and Villanova.<lb/>
According to Kobe, swimmers are<lb/>
a different kind ol people The<lb/>
kidv put in 10.OX) vards in the poo.<lb/>
a da, along with lifting we:g ?<lb/>
three times a week With the swim-<lb/>
ming season lasting from the start of<lb/>
school until the second week in<lb/>
March, the swimmers have to re<lb/>
dedicated. For example, the da<lb/>
after Christmas the ECU swimmers<lb/>
will again resume training for the<lb/>
spring season.<lb/>
As Kobe puts  swimming is dif-<lb/>
terent from anv other kind of sport.<lb/>
The most important thing in swim-<lb/>
ming is for each swimmer to work<lb/>
up to their best time at the verv end<lb/>
of the vear<lb/>
The first meet is scheduled for<lb/>
Nov. 13 against Old Dominion<lb/>
Kobe hopes to see a lot of spectators<lb/>
at all the meets this vear. "There's<lb/>
nothing more exciting than a college<lb/>
swim meet Kobe said.<lb/>
Ww Wf iJ WP fWW ? B v P Tilp<lb/>
ww4r' ?WHp JwpP' ? WW&amp;- 909 w&amp;&amp; mm wP<lb/>
?<lb/>
U4 44 i a a UX -44. fj iU<lb/>
ii'w:mrm:4<lb/>
Ifm: 4U <lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
wmf 4<lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
 - ?,<lb/>
Or i<lb/>
A<lb/>
Be<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
N<lb/>
Ge i<lb/>
He-<lb/>
<lb/>
C<lb/>
.?<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
be co<lb/>
N :i<lb/>
-<lb/>
" v,<lb/>
ECU swimmer races against time<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057493_0009"/><lb/>
I HI IASK K) IMAN<lb/>
M M I MBI-k<lb/>
L-<lb/>
-A<lb/>
.<lb/>
tfwg ipse ? Opening Round<lb/>
I ?t ii M U DISPAIv HIS<lb/>
The regal might that<lb/>
carried Bilhe Jean King<lb/>
to the semifinals at<lb/>
Wimbledon failed her<lb/>
dismall) Tuesday when<lb/>
he vsas upset on the<lb/>
opening day of the U.S.<lb/>
Tennis Cham-<lb/>
pionships b a teen 20<lb/>
years her junior.<lb/>
  e r sleeping<lb/>
through the first three<lb/>
games. King suddenly<lb/>
lost her touch and<lb/>
dropped the next seven<lb/>
games as she lost to<lb/>
18-year-old Susan<lb/>
Mascarin 6-3, 6-2.<lb/>
Ivan Lendi, who has<lb/>
won just about<lb/>
everything in tennis, ex-<lb/>
cept win a major cham-<lb/>
pionship, overcame a<lb/>
nervous start to beat<lb/>
Ramesh Krishman of<lb/>
India. 6-4, 7-6, 6-1 in<lb/>
an opening round<lb/>
match.<lb/>
Fourth seed Guiller-<lb/>
mo Vitas, the 1977<lb/>
champion, defeated<lb/>
Chris Dunk. 6-4 (3-7),<lb/>
6-3. 6-4. 6-2.<lb/>
Mats Wilander, the<lb/>
17-year-old French<lb/>
champion from<lb/>
Sweden, seeded 11th<lb/>
here, made his Open<lb/>
debut with a 6-4, 6-3,<lb/>
6-1 victory over Bill<lb/>
Scanlon; No. 14 Brian<lb/>
Teacher disposed of<lb/>
former N.C. State star<lb/>
John Sadri, 6-3, 6-2,<lb/>
6-2. and No. 15 Raul<lb/>
Ramirez of Mecico beat<lb/>
Eddie Edwards, 6-3,<lb/>
6-3, 6-1.<lb/>
King, seeded 12th,<lb/>
was the first seed to be<lb/>
knocked out of the<lb/>
Open. A ihree-time<lb/>
Open champion. King<lb/>
didn't play here the<lb/>
past three years.<lb/>
Mascarin, a one-year<lb/>
pro from Grosse Point<lb/>
Shores, Mich is rank-<lb/>
ed 51st by the com-<lb/>
puter, while King is No.<lb/>
13.<lb/>
King, who said she<lb/>
wasn't bothered by her<lb/>
toublesome knee, made<lb/>
one last bid to get back<lb/>
into the match when<lb/>
she broke in the fifth<lb/>
game of the second set<lb/>
for 2-3, but Mascarin<lb/>
won the final games.<lb/>
"Susan just played<lb/>
too well tor mc King<lb/>
said. "1 gave her easy<lb/>
volleys and 1 lost<lb/>
because of that. 1 guess<lb/>
I'm a little disheartened<lb/>
by losing in the first<lb/>
round. I thought I'd<lb/>
last longer. I never ex-<lb/>
pected to go all the<lb/>
way, but I expected<lb/>
more than this "<lb/>
Mascarin said she<lb/>
took advantage ol poor<lb/>
volleys bv King and ad-<lb/>
ded that the 38-year-old<lb/>
veteran appeared to be<lb/>
playing tired.<lb/>
"1 got psyched when<lb/>
I learned I was plaving<lb/>
her, and I think that<lb/>
helped me a lot<lb/>
Mascarin said<lb/>
tR?cr?Mc-H?3<lb/>
Tidbits<lb/>
The fall semester groups should be in at<lb/>
organizational meeting tendance ai this impor-<lb/>
t r all intramural tani meeting.<lb/>
representatives will be ??<lb/>
he id on rhursday,<lb/>
Sept. 2 at 4 p.m. in Anyone interested in<lb/>
Brewster B-102. IM being a manager or tr<lb/>
representatives tor all ing out tor<lb/>
residence halls, trater<lb/>
nilies, sororities, clubs,<lb/>
departmental orgama<lb/>
ions and independent<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
;eam. please contact<lb/>
( oach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
ai 757 <lb/>
A CC Season<lb/>
Begins Saturday<lb/>
I ' c<lb/>
1982 Atlantic<lb/>
( oast Conference foot-<lb/>
ball season begins this<lb/>
. id with North<lb/>
( aroiina S;ate and<lb/>
v ake Forest hoping to<lb/>
3tne back from dismal<lb/>
81 performances and<lb/>
ke trying to continue<lb/>
 t a inning ways.<lb/>
 d, on Monday,<lb/>
. ems ? will try to<lb/>
asi year's na-<lb/>
i nampionship<lb/>
a asn' i a fluke.<lb/>
N ? " Carolina State<lb/>
I urman, Vk ake<lb/>
? sts Western<lb/>
: a and Duke<lb/>
Tennessee Satur-<lb/>
Monday night,<lb/>
 -cd Clemson<lb/>
71h-ranked<lb/>
i i in a nationally<lb/>
has been writ-<lb/>
it the loss of<lb/>
e back<lb/>
;c he 1 Walker<lb/>
a ise ' a broken<lb/>
-  Clemson<lb/>
Danny Ford is<lb/>
: e of it.<lb/>
re expecting<lb/>
play Ford<lb/>
v- e I n'l need<lb/>
? ? fv s e don't<lb/>
H down there<lb/>
him trot out<lb/>
? eld, pull otf<lb/>
ersey and have<lb/>
l .i n 0 n<lb/>
it That's<lb/>
He's the<lb/>
I .?: e -e- seen<lb/>
 ? be smooth<lb/>
i the Tigers if<lb/>
manage to get by<lb/>
g a They should<lb/>
n iered favorites<lb/>
e Nov. 6 game<lb/>
t g a n 61 h - r a n k e d<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
B " North Carolina<lb/>
State and Wake Forest<lb/>
are attempting to come<lb/>
back from 4-7 1981<lb/>
records.<lb/>
The Wolfpack lost its<lb/>
,jn: six games, unable<lb/>
to .ome up with a con-<lb/>
tent offense despite<lb/>
presence of<lb/>
freshman sensation Joe<lb/>
McKintosh, who led<lb/>
the ACC in rushing<lb/>
h 1,190 yards.<lb/>
Although an ACC<lb/>
team is usually con-<lb/>
sidered the favorite<lb/>
anytime it goes up<lb/>
against a Southern<lb/>
Conference foe, Fur-<lb/>
man has the edge in its<lb/>
series against North<lb/>
Carolina State at 6-3-4.<lb/>
The Paladins. 8-3 last<lb/>
year, won the last<lb/>
meeting in 1976.<lb/>
The hopes of Vvake<lb/>
Forest rest on junior<lb/>
quarterback Gary<lb/>
Schofield. Last year.<lb/>
Schofield led the ACC<lb/>
with 2.572 yards pass-<lb/>
ing. He hit tor 18<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Wake Forest Coach<lb/>
 Groh has predicted<lb/>
Schofield will be one of<lb/>
the nation's top two or<lb/>
three college quarter-<lb/>
backs by his senior<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
was 4-7-1 in 1981, win-<lb/>
ning four of its last six<lb/>
games. Ronnie Mixon<lb/>
is scheduled to start at<lb/>
quarterback after pass-<lb/>
ing for more than 3,000<lb/>
yards in the past two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
Duke is coming off a<lb/>
6-5 year, its first winn-<lb/>
ing season in seven<lb/>
vears. Tennessee was<lb/>
8-4 last vear.<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All type- o uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices, loo coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also - used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
Pepsi and the Pirates<lb/>
a winning combination<lb/>
mmbbbmop<lb/>
NXXNVNXNNX<lb/>
VVNVXVVXVXXN.X'XX VX V X <lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
National Service Sorority<lb/>
WHFVSept.7,8,9 6:30 p.m. each night<lb/>
WHERE Coffeehouse (located in Mendenhall, bottom floor)<lb/>
WHAT: Ice (ream Part, Service Project, Cookout (respectively)<lb/>
H E MAKE THE DIFFERENCE BECA USE<lb/>
H FARE THE DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
For more info call: 758-8702 ? ask for Terry<lb/>
"There are several<lb/>
things about Tennessee<lb/>
that have us worried<lb/>
said Duke Coach Red<lb/>
Wilson. They have<lb/>
outstanding team<lb/>
speed. I'm not sure if<lb/>
there is any team in the<lb/>
country that has wide<lb/>
receivers as fast as<lb/>
(Willie) Gault and<lb/>
(Mike) Miller. They<lb/>
also have an excellent<lb/>
offensive line and a<lb/>
very fine defensive<lb/>
line<lb/>
Wilson said his team<lb/>
is in good physical con-<lb/>
dition.<lb/>
"We've been coming<lb/>
along quite well he<lb/>
said. "Everyone<lb/>
reported in good shape<lb/>
and we are relatively in-<lb/>
jury free<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
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Welcome Back E. C. U.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
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24 HOURS<lb/>
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INTRODUCING OUR All You Can Eat<lb/>
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Mon. Thru Sat. ? for only S5.95<lb/>
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Buffet will include:<lb/>
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?Lasagna<lb/>
?Seafood<lb/>
?Ham<lb/>
?Vegetables<lb/>
?Meatballs<lb/>
?Roast Beef<lb/>
?Salad<lb/>
?Dessert<lb/>
?Iced tea or coffee<lb/>
Sijn Up forHlush beteim<lb/>
Aujfust 31st and September h<lb/>
Croatan and Bookstore<lb/>
Convocation: September 9th ? 5:30<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Rush Week: September 13th- 17th<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/>
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Good between 5 7 p.m. Exp?res Sept 26, 182<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057493_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 2. 1982<lb/>
Won't Be The Same Without Walker<lb/>
ATHENS, Ga. (UP1)<lb/>
Georgia All-America<lb/>
tailback Herschel<lb/>
Walker will have his<lb/>
broken right thumb ex-<lb/>
amined again Saturday,<lb/>
but Coach Vince<lb/>
Dooley said Wednes-<lb/>
day he still feels Walker<lb/>
will not play in Monday<lb/>
night's nationally<lb/>
televised battle against<lb/>
Clemson.<lb/>
"It all hinges on the<lb/>
doctor said Dooley.<lb/>
"If he says, 'Okay, he<lb/>
can play, but these are<lb/>
the risks then I have a<lb/>
decision to make<lb/>
Bui Doole stressed<lb/>
that Dr. William<lb/>
Niulherin had told him<lb/>
earlier it would take a<lb/>
minimum of three<lb/>
weeks before Walker<lb/>
could play and the<lb/>
three weeks will not be<lb/>
up until Sept. 11 when<lb/>
the 7th-ranked<lb/>
Bulldogs face<lb/>
Brighman Young in<lb/>
their second game.<lb/>
"All these things add<lb/>
up to me that he's not<lb/>
going to play said<lb/>
Dooley.<lb/>
Walker, who worked<lb/>
out Tuesday for the<lb/>
first time since his in-<lb/>
jury with a thick pad on<lb/>
his thumb, said he<lb/>
might not know until<lb/>
Monday if he can play.<lb/>
"I'm going to take<lb/>
what the doctor says<lb/>
and I think he's going<lb/>
to take what I say,<lb/>
too said Walker.<lb/>
"He really can't see<lb/>
much even from the<lb/>
X-ray about how it has<lb/>
healed. I'm going to<lb/>
listen to him and see<lb/>
what the odds are that 1<lb/>
would hurt it if I play. 1<lb/>
would like to play<lb/>
Dooley said he<lb/>
understood the skep-<lb/>
ticism expressed by<lb/>
Clemson coaches and<lb/>
players over whether<lb/>
Walker would not be<lb/>
available.<lb/>
"I don't blame them<lb/>
(for being skeptical)<lb/>
Dooley said. "It's a<lb/>
natural attitude. I also<lb/>
feel our fans are sitting<lb/>
there hoping that what<lb/>
they hear is not true<lb/>
Walker said he<lb/>
thinks the Bulldogs can<lb/>
beat the defending na-<lb/>
tional champion Tigers<lb/>
without him.<lb/>
"I would like to play<lb/>
but if the doctor and<lb/>
everyone says I can't, I<lb/>
won't beg Walker<lb/>
said. "But if they say<lb/>
it's up to me, I will<lb/>
Play<lb/>
Asked if he was<lb/>
afraid of reinjuring his<lb/>
thumb if he played,<lb/>
Walker replied, "There<lb/>
is a risk involved in<lb/>
everything<lb/>
Dooley said Walker<lb/>
would be replaced by<lb/>
senior Carnie Norris.<lb/>
"He is a good, solid<lb/>
performer who has<lb/>
answered the bell on a<lb/>
couple of occasions for<lb/>
us, but he is no;<lb/>
Herschel Walker said<lb/>
Dooley.<lb/>
Dooley said there<lb/>
will be more pressure<lb/>
on little-used junior<lb/>
quarterback John<lb/>
Lastinger, who will<lb/>
make his starting debut<lb/>
against the 9th-ranked<lb/>
Tigers.<lb/>
"He will have more<lb/>
pressure than he would<lb/>
have if Herschel was<lb/>
playing said Dooley.<lb/>
"Now he becomes the<lb/>
focal point. All eyes<lb/>
will be on him ? that<lb/>
is, all Clemson eyes.<lb/>
It's a tough way for a<lb/>
young quarterback to<lb/>
begin his career<lb/>
Dooley said Norns, a<lb/>
5-9, 190-pound senior,<lb/>
is "all banged up" and<lb/>
needs to take things<lb/>
easy until Monday. He<lb/>
said Norris will be<lb/>
spelled by freshman<lb/>
Tron Jackson and<lb/>
Keith Montgomery.<lb/>
"How good are ure<lb/>
without Herschel<lb/>
Walker?" Doole mus-<lb/>
ed. "I don't know. 1<lb/>
know there is a big<lb/>
dropoff.<lb/>
"Where we will miss<lb/>
Herschel is on the 3rd<lb/>
and I, 3rd and 2, and<lb/>
4th and 1. where we<lb/>
don't make it and have<lb/>
to gie up the ball. That<lb/>
takes a toll on morale.<lb/>
"It wouldn't be SO<lb/>
bad if we weren't play-<lb/>
ing the No. 1 team in<lb/>
the country, and that's<lb/>
exactly who e are<lb/>
playing said Doofej<lb/>
"Clemson is er<lb/>
good added Doole.<lb/>
"They won them all<lb/>
last year against some<lb/>
big-time opponent and<lb/>
the have most of their<lb/>
plavers back<lb/>
"It's a acckttva<lb/>
challenge and we've goi<lb/>
to face that challenge<lb/>
without the best foot-<lb/>
ball plaver on our<lb/>
team<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED I or 7 temale pro shop<lb/>
helpers on part time basis E?<lb/>
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PAKT TIME soccer coaches need<lb/>
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a a phone collector MUST HAVE<lb/>
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Phillip at ?S' 1330 alter 1 00<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
3 ROOMMATES needed<lb/>
?j r. cir torn house. 2 blocks from<lb/>
campus S'S per month Call Bun<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
COTTAGE FOR rent at N Myrtle<lb/>
BEach Labor Day weekend ??00<lb/>
tor 3 nights Sleeps 6 Call 751 707<lb/>
Rebecca<lb/>
FOR SALE Cabinet built lor<lb/>
dorm room Holds small rel.<lb/>
briqht yellow with white lormica<lb/>
top Price negotiable. Call<lb/>
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FOR SALE JVC JAS 22 Stereo<lb/>
Amp 45 wattsc tISO or best oiler.<lb/>
7 52 0469.<lb/>
FOR SALE One Schwinn varsity<lb/>
10 speed bicycle, one large desk.<lb/>
one chifterobe Call 752 4287, Mrs<lb/>
S H Skinner, 615 Maple St<lb/>
FOR SALE: Couch chair, end<lb/>
table and wall hanging 752 9231<lb/>
alter 6pm<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home Reasonable rales.<lb/>
7 56 3660<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typing service<lb/>
enperience. quality work. IBM<lb/>
typewriter Call Lanie Shive<lb/>
758 S301 or Gail Joiner 756 1062<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
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Lost m FOUR SEASONS<lb/>
restaurant Lady s yellow gold<lb/>
Bulova watch engraved on back.<lb/>
Great sentimental value Reward<lb/>
Call 7S? 7903 and ask lor Shern.<lb/>
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Area)<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
Prices In Town!<lb/>
Fellowship of<lb/>
Christian A thletes<lb/>
Student Athletic Board<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Get the SPIRIT moving to the lobby ot Student<lb/>
Supply Store tor "Meet the Coaches Day<lb/>
Many of the coaches will be there from 10:00<lb/>
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on Wednesday, September 8,<lb/>
1982, so come on over and join in.<lb/>
The Pep Band, Cheerleaders, Student Athletic<lb/>
Board, and the ECU helmet will be there to help<lb/>
start the fall sports season off right. To make<lb/>
this occasion complete, all we need is you!<lb/>
TELE RENT TV<lb/>
1 Phone: 756-9100<lb/>
2905 East 10th Street in Greenville<lb/>
b<lb/>
Oscar and Linda Roan<lb/>
Former Professional Football Player<lb/>
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All American WR from SMU<lb/>
FCA-SAB STUDENT RALLY<lb/>
Oscar will share his testimony ?<lb/>
Linda will share in song.<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Tonight<lb/>
Student body invited ?<lb/>
No Admission<lb/>
A Time of Sharing &amp; Fellowship<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned &amp; operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
Winners of Student Supply Store Drawing<lb/>
550.00 ? Rence Walden 222 White Dorm 801<lb/>
$30.00 ? Steven Perry 113-C Scott<lb/>
$15.00 ? Wanda Dove 710 Green Mead Dr.<lb/>
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? 120 E. 5th St. ?<lb/>
758-2127 ? 10-5<lb/>
TuesSat.<lb/>
Bring this ad for 20<lb/>
off 14K chain repairs.<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
Modern Laundramats Close to Campus<lb/>
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?Large capacity washers<lb/>
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? Coupon expires Sept. 9,1982 <lb/>
This calculator thinks business.<lb/>
TheTl Student Business Analyst<lb/>
If there's, one thing undergrad<lb/>
business students have always<lb/>
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business-oriented calculator<lb/>
The Student Business Analyst<lb/>
Its built-in business tbrmulas<lb/>
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statistical functions-the ones<lb/>
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It all means mi spend less<lb/>
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A powerful combination.<lb/>
Think business.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057493_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>