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<pb facs="00057497_0001"/>
?hc 4:a0t (llarulumui<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.8<lb/>
Thursday, September 16, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation Ki.lHNi<lb/>
Police Arrest PCB Protestors<lb/>
AFTON, N.C. (UPI) ? Seventy-<lb/>
six people were arrested Wednesday<lb/>
in a futile effort to stop the dumping<lb/>
of the suspected cancer-causing<lb/>
chemical PCB in a state landfill.<lb/>
Protestors trying to get to the<lb/>
landfill were stopped by helmeted<lb/>
highway patrolmen, holding<lb/>
nightsticks and forming a barricade.<lb/>
There was some pushing and<lb/>
shoving at the landfill entrance but<lb/>
no iniuncs.<lb/>
About 60 to 7() highway<lb/>
patrolmen were on duty throughout<lb/>
the area about 20 miles south of the<lb/>
Virginia border as the state began<lb/>
picking up PCB-contaminated soil<lb/>
from along 210 miles of state road-<lb/>
ways. Oil containing the chemical,<lb/>
found to cause cancer in laboratory<lb/>
animals, was illegally dumped along<lb/>
the roadsides four years ago.<lb/>
Three New York men pleaded<lb/>
guilty to the dumping and the owner<lb/>
of a Raleigh company that used<lb/>
PCBs in the manufacture of elec-<lb/>
trical equipment was found guilty of<lb/>
participating in the dumping.<lb/>
Ten yellow dumptrucks contain-<lb/>
ing the first scrapings of dirt waited<lb/>
nearby as the highway patrolmen ar-<lb/>
rested the demonstrators, who had<lb/>
 owed to form a human blockade to<lb/>
stop the trucks. Although most of<lb/>
the demonstrators already were<lb/>
under arrest by the time the trucks<lb/>
began rolling to the site, two men<lb/>
did lay down in front of one truck,<lb/>
stopping it briefly.<lb/>
The 76 protestors arrested includ-<lb/>
ed 12 juveniles, whom officials said<lb/>
were not charged in the incident.<lb/>
The rest were accused of impeding<lb/>
the flow of traffic or trespassing.<lb/>
Most were released on their own<lb/>
recognizance, although some refus-<lb/>
ed and paid bail instead.<lb/>
Warren County residents, claim-<lb/>
ing they are the victims of "toxic ag-<lb/>
gression" by the state, say the land-<lb/>
fill poses a threat to water supplies<lb/>
in Warren County, the poorest<lb/>
county in the state. Blacks maintain<lb/>
the Alton area was picked for the<lb/>
landfill because the region is 75 per-<lb/>
cent black.<lb/>
At a news conference in Raleigh,<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. reaffirmed<lb/>
the state's position that the landfill<lb/>
is safe and is the only way federal<lb/>
officials have said the state could<lb/>
deal with the PCBs.<lb/>
led by civil rights leader Rev.<lb/>
I eon White and Ken Ferruccio,<lb/>
president of a Warren County<lb/>
citizens' group, about 100 people<lb/>
marched two miles ? as a National<lb/>
Guard helicopter hovered overhead<lb/>
? to the entrance of the landfill<lb/>
area.<lb/>
But 17 highway patrol troopers<lb/>
made sure the demonstrators never<lb/>
got closer than a half-mile to the ac-<lb/>
tual landfill, shifting to put<lb/>
themselves in front of the<lb/>
demonstrators.<lb/>
White, reading aloud from a red<lb/>
Bible, marched to the line of<lb/>
patrolmen and stood chest-to-chest<lb/>
against Ft. H.B. McKee. White said<lb/>
he wanted to go to the landfill but<lb/>
McKee replied the demonstrators<lb/>
were blocking traffic and would<lb/>
have to move off the highway.<lb/>
"When the spirit tells me to move<lb/>
then I'll move White replied.<lb/>
"I'm staying here until the spirit<lb/>
tells me to move<lb/>
McKee and White, surrounded by<lb/>
demonstrators and reporters, faced<lb/>
each other for about five minutes<lb/>
before McKee again warned the<lb/>
demonstrators they would have to<lb/>
move.<lb/>
"You are violating state law. You<lb/>
are impeding the normal flow of<lb/>
traffic on this roadway and I ask<lb/>
you to cease this unlawful act he<lb/>
said. "If you do not cease you will<lb/>
be arrested<lb/>
White and Ferruccio refused to<lb/>
move and McKee immediately put<lb/>
them under arrest, leading them to a<lb/>
white prison bus about 20 yards<lb/>
away in the direction of the landfill.<lb/>
Other protesters attempted to<lb/>
follow and a shoving match occur-<lb/>
red.<lb/>
Highway patrolmen, holding<lb/>
their nightsticks with both hands<lb/>
across their chest, forced the crowd<lb/>
back to the road. Protesters then sat<lb/>
down and the patrolmen began ar-<lb/>
resting them.<lb/>
As the arrests were being made,<lb/>
protesters chanted "Black and white<lb/>
together and "there ain't no stop-<lb/>
ping us now Demonstrators<lb/>
already on the bus clapped and<lb/>
shouted as other people were ar-<lb/>
rested.<lb/>
White, regional director of the<lb/>
United Church of Christ's Commis-<lb/>
sion for Racial Justice, said he plan-<lb/>
ned to remain in jail to dramatize<lb/>
the fight against PCBs.<lb/>
"As long as these trucks are roll-<lb/>
ing we are going to protest every<lb/>
day he said.<lb/>
White, interviewed in the yard of<lb/>
the Warren County Jail following<lb/>
his arrest, said he believes the<lb/>
demonstration made its point even<lb/>
though the dumping began. He said<lb/>
opponents will continue their ef-<lb/>
forts.<lb/>
Prep Queen Visits Greenville<lb/>
Lisa Bi rnbach. author of The Official Preppy He - . lev iurea<lb/>
potential preppies Monday in Hendrix Theatre. For more of the pink and<lb/>
green details see Style, Page 7.<lb/>
New Services Offered At Student Health Center<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff ?nw<lb/>
The 1 ast Carolina University Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center (SHC) has in-<lb/>
troduced a new "health education"<lb/>
program as part of its extensive<lb/>
structural and internal changes for<lb/>
.982-1983 academic year.<lb/>
The health education program is<lb/>
being coordinated by family nurse<lb/>
practitioner Jolene Jernigan. The<lb/>
program provides written literature<lb/>
on health related topics and an<lb/>
outreach program on contraception.<lb/>
"The literature display is now<lb/>
available said Jernigan.<lb/>
The literature display is located<lb/>
directly inside the entrance to the<lb/>
center "There's a wide range of in-<lb/>
formation out there. The display<lb/>
has a broad scope she continued.<lb/>
Pamphlets about many health<lb/>
related topics are available at no<lb/>
cost.<lb/>
The contraception outreach pro-<lb/>
gram is being coordinated by Jer-<lb/>
nigan, but she does have access to<lb/>
assistance when necessary. So far<lb/>
she has conducted the program for<lb/>
over 200 students in all 13 of the<lb/>
female and co-ed dorms. A program<lb/>
for the mens dorms is also being<lb/>
planned. "Women need to be<lb/>
responsible for their bodies (but) 1<lb/>
think the men shouldn't just force<lb/>
responsibility on the women<lb/>
either Jernigan said.<lb/>
Jernigan noted the high number<lb/>
of pregnancies among freeshmen as<lb/>
proof that this program is needed.<lb/>
"We're trying to cut the emphasis<lb/>
on abortions and put the emphasis<lb/>
on contraception where it really<lb/>
should be she added.<lb/>
"I think it's important to cut<lb/>
down on abortion said Jernigan.<lb/>
"It's a health hazard and an emo-<lb/>
tional hazard She feels that con-<lb/>
traception is the "responsible"<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"1 think the word ought to be out<lb/>
on contiaception Jernigan con-<lb/>
tinued. "1 have nofhad one person<lb/>
come in here for abortion counsel-<lb/>
ing who was happy about it. The<lb/>
emphasis should be put on preven-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The participation in the con-<lb/>
traception outreach program was<lb/>
"not as high as expected said Jer-<lb/>
nigan. "but we hope throughout the<lb/>
year more interest will be exhibited<lb/>
in the programs relating to health<lb/>
One-on-one contraception counsel-<lb/>
ing is also available at the center.<lb/>
Although she sees that "in the<lb/>
long run" a pregnancy will effect a<lb/>
woman more dramatically than a<lb/>
man, Jernigan believes that men<lb/>
should also act responsibly in their<lb/>
knowledge and use of birth control.<lb/>
"They (men) should be aware about<lb/>
how the other types of contrceptives<lb/>
work and the side effects of their<lb/>
use. They (men) should make sure it<lb/>
(pregnancy) doesn't happen she<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
Jernigan also believes that all<lb/>
students should be knowledgable<lb/>
about contraception, whether they<lb/>
are sexually active or not. "They all<lb/>
have an obligation to help their<lb/>
friends or roommates if they come<lb/>
to them with a problem she said.<lb/>
"It's important to get this informa-<lb/>
tion (on contraception)<lb/>
disseminated<lb/>
Jernigan also plans to take her<lb/>
contraceptive outreach program in-<lb/>
to the classroom this semester. She<lb/>
will be making presentations to<lb/>
courtship and marriage, family rela-<lb/>
tions and some health classes.<lb/>
Among the other changes that<lb/>
have come to the SHC is the dev lop-<lb/>
ment of a triage center, which is<lb/>
designed to screen patients and<lb/>
direct them to the appropriate<lb/>
health car provider. Says Jernigan,<lb/>
this program helps to decrease the<lb/>
"overall waiting time" of students<lb/>
who need care.<lb/>
A full-time pharmacist has been<lb/>
added to dispense medications at the<lb/>
SHC as well as instruct students<lb/>
concerning their medications and<lb/>
answer any questions they may<lb/>
have.<lb/>
Students also have a new<lb/>
"self-medication center" available<lb/>
"This is located just outside the<lb/>
pharmacy and is stocked with over-<lb/>
the-counter medications said Jer<lb/>
nigan. "The students may pick-up<lb/>
(these medications) to treat simple<lb/>
ailments such as colds, poison ivy,<lb/>
and simple di irrhea<lb/>
Two new full-time physicians,<lb/>
one male and one female, have<lb/>
recently been hired by the SHC.<lb/>
both specializing in family practice.<lb/>
Besides the new health education<lb/>
program, the SHC also otters four<lb/>
general areas o service. The first<lb/>
area is called "Well Care" which in-<lb/>
cludes physical exams required tor<lb/>
any university related activity,<lb/>
venereal disease screening. IB<lb/>
screening, and allergy vaccine injec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Illness c arc is the second area.<lb/>
This covers a broad scope from<lb/>
minor cold- and ?pra u kles to<lb/>
gynecologica more<lb/>
serious problems wh a even<lb/>
require h An in-<lb/>
patient fat '? for self-limiting il-<lb/>
lnesses .<lb/>
 V nta Health<lb/>
Services I <lb/>
ly psv ? pan<lb/>
time psj and<lb/>
psychial the<lb/>
med :a n.<lb/>
"The)  ippoint-<lb/>
ment basis len .  d 'These<lb/>
patients may b referred, refer-<lb/>
red bv jl si i or an out-<lb/>
side prol add d<lb/>
The last pi grar - t "Fertilitj<lb/>
C octroi" gram v fune-<lb/>
tions on at ?unmet" and<lb/>
prov idi sting, abor-<lb/>
tion counst aceptive<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Raising Drinking Age Studied<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Staff Wntrr<lb/>
Twenty states have raised their<lb/>
legal drinking age in the last few<lb/>
years. If North Carolina does the<lb/>
same Greenville would be par-<lb/>
ticularly affected.<lb/>
Although the legislature is not<lb/>
now in session, state Sen. Vernon<lb/>
White of Greenville admitted there<lb/>
has been talk concerning the drink-<lb/>
ing age and that he would not be<lb/>
surprised if a bill were introduced in<lb/>
the next session to raise it.<lb/>
According to the governor's of-<lb/>
fice a task force on drunken driving<lb/>
is making a study that will un-<lb/>
doubtedly include the drinking age<lb/>
question, and it should issue a<lb/>
report within a few weeks. The<lb/>
governor's office says it has remain-<lb/>
ed neutral on the subject so as not to<lb/>
influence the task force.<lb/>
"The governor did make a state<lb/>
ment at one time saying that he<lb/>
thought the idea (raising the drink-<lb/>
ing age) had some merit as far as<lb/>
saving lives, but he was not ready to<lb/>
commit himself on the issue until<lb/>
much more research had been done<lb/>
and he was more informed on all<lb/>
aspects of the issue said the gover-<lb/>
nor's press secretary.<lb/>
States are being pressured by the<lb/>
federal government and private ac-<lb/>
tion groups to reduce the yearly kill-<lb/>
ing of 26,000 people by drunken<lb/>
drivers. President Reagan has<lb/>
declared the campaign to stop<lb/>
drunken driving a national priority.<lb/>
Groups like MADD, Mothers<lb/>
Against Drunk Driving, and RID,<lb/>
Remove Intoxicated Drivers, have<lb/>
formed across the nation to lobby<lb/>
legislatures and pressure courts to<lb/>
crack down on drunken drivers.<lb/>
Sgt. Glen Swanson of the state<lb/>
highway patrol saiJ there is growing<lb/>
pressure across North Carolina to<lb/>
raise th drinking age to 21. "The<lb/>
push is stronger now than at any<lb/>
time im mv 2? years with the<lb/>
patrol he said.<lb/>
Swanson, who is in charge of<lb/>
local accident statistics, said Green-<lb/>
vile has a greater problem than most<lb/>
areas of the state because of th;e<lb/>
unusua'ly high percentage of voung<lb/>
people here. He said college<lb/>
underclassmen, who are often ex-<lb/>
periencing their first independence<lb/>
from home, usually have the most<lb/>
problems with drinking and driving.<lb/>
"Also, voung people tend to go<lb/>
out in groups he said. "Therefore<lb/>
if they do have a wreck, there's<lb/>
often a car full and more injuries<lb/>
See NEW, Page 3<lb/>
Damn! That Professor's Boring<lb/>
This cat attends one of the many boring lectures going on everyday on campus. He listens, though, because he<lb/>
knows someday he'll need this knowledge to achieve his goal ? make money.<lb/>
Governor Defies Court Order<lb/>
Women Announce Candidacy<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) -<lb/>
Alabama Gov. Fob James, turned<lb/>
away at the Supreme Court, called<lb/>
on state's teachers and students<lb/>
Wednesday to defy a federal court<lb/>
injunction banning prayer in public<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
James announced that he will ig-<lb/>
nore the court order against<lb/>
Alabama's 1982 voluntary school<lb/>
prayer law during a news conference<lb/>
in Washington, where he had hoped<lb/>
to file a petition for review of the<lb/>
ruling by the nation's high court.<lb/>
However, the Supreme Court<lb/>
clerk's office refused to file James'<lb/>
legal papers because state lawyers<lb/>
have not taken the appeal through<lb/>
the lower courts, as required by<lb/>
court procedures.<lb/>
The governor may still have a<lb/>
chance to get his petition before the<lb/>
justices. The clerk's office said he<lb/>
could file a special motion asking<lb/>
the high court to overlook the pro-<lb/>
cedural errors and consider his<lb/>
papers.<lb/>
James, a Demcorat, did not men-<lb/>
tion of his troubles at the clerk's of-<lb/>
fice at his news conference. He con-<lb/>
tended that school prayer is a state<lb/>
matter and that the Constitution<lb/>
does not give federal courts the right<lb/>
to interfere.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge W. Brevard<lb/>
Hand of Mobile, Ala issued a<lb/>
preliminary injunction last month<lb/>
prohibiting use of the prayer law un-<lb/>
til he can consider a case testing its<lb/>
constitutionality.<lb/>
or<lb/>
The Alabama law says teachers<lb/>
professors in public schools "may<lb/>
pray, may lead willing students in<lb/>
prayer, or may lead the willing<lb/>
students" in a prayer composed by<lb/>
Fob James III, the governor's<lb/>
?5-year-old lawyer son.<lb/>
By PATRICK ONEIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mariem House and Fredrica<lb/>
(Freddy) Jacobson announced their<lb/>
candidacy for the N.C. State Senate<lb/>
and House of Representatives dur-<lb/>
ing a 30 minute announcement<lb/>
ceremony on the steps of the Pitt<lb/>
County Court House on Tuesday at<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
Both women are residents of Pitt<lb/>
County and have had long time in-<lb/>
volvement in the Democratic Party<lb/>
and numerous other community ac-<lb/>
tivities. The two women are spon-<lb/>
sored by a local campaign organiza-<lb/>
tion formed after the failure of the<lb/>
N.C. General Assembly to ratify the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to<lb/>
the U.S. Constitution this summer.<lb/>
"I am running for a seat in the<lb/>
state senate because I believe that<lb/>
the time has come for more women<lb/>
to be involved in the legislative pro-<lb/>
cess. I believe that women can bring<lb/>
compassion, honesty, practicality,<lb/>
and a strong sense of justice to<lb/>
government said House during<lb/>
her opening statement.<lb/>
House is running for the ninth<lb/>
district senate seat which includes<lb/>
Pitt County, eastern Martin and<lb/>
southern Beaufort townships.<lb/>
Jacobson is also in the ninth district,<lb/>
but in the house this includes Pitt<lb/>
and Greene counties only.<lb/>
According to a supporter who<lb/>
was present at the announcement<lb/>
ceremony women were "Grossly<lb/>
misrepresented" by the North<lb/>
Carolina Senate members who<lb/>
voted to table ERA. "We're ex-<lb/>
tremely disappointed, we worked<lb/>
very hard for long hours trying to<lb/>
get ERA passed said Fran Par-<lb/>
rott. an ECU graduate student in<lb/>
special education.<lb/>
Parrott hopes that the House-<lb/>
Jacobson candidacy will draw more<lb/>
attention to women's issues.<lb/>
"Women are under-represented in<lb/>
the legislature she sid. Women<lb/>
currently account for 12.9 percent of<lb/>
the general assembly members.<lb/>
Parrott feels that women's issues<lb/>
include many elements of social<lb/>
change. She stressed reducing the<lb/>
arms race and alternative energy as<lb/>
issues that she is also concerned<lb/>
with. "This will show the people of<lb/>
North Carolina ? especially the<lb/>
legislature ? that women do make a<lb/>
difference concluded Parrott.<lb/>
"We're serious candidates (and)<lb/>
we're optomistic said House.<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0002"/><lb/>
THb EASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
SlPll-MBtR 16, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
it you or your organization<lb/>
would like to ave an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
?? and seno II to The Eas'<lb/>
Carol nijn m care Ot the produc<lb/>
' n manager<lb/>
A n n q u n c e m e n T forms are<lb/>
available at 'he East Carolinian<lb/>
Mice in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
vjeo paper cannot be ac<lb/>
i epted<lb/>
There s no charge tor an<lb/>
icements Do' space ? often<lb/>
Therefore we cannot<lb/>
ii an'ee 'hat your announce<lb/>
ent will run as long as Fou want<lb/>
? suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
1 this column tor publicity<lb/>
The deadline foi .? 'looncemen's<lb/>
s 3 p m vonoa tcr the Tuesday<lb/>
caper ana 3pm vVeanesaayy tor<lb/>
so,i paper NO an<lb/>
ementj rece veo at'er se<lb/>
?? - a be v 'ea<lb/>
. ? . it ind depart<lb/>
?e's<lb/>
NATIONAL LABOR<lb/>
RELATIONS BOARD<lb/>
a representative from nlRB<lb/>
A ist i Salem c be<lb/>
rsdav September ?3<lb/>
itei ? ndergraduate<lb/>
?pe ' ' aduate<lb/>
a  a'  ??? riours n one ot a<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Electric Rambow Radio<lb/>
Show is on WZMB Saturday from<lb/>
12 midnight to 4 a m and Sunday<lb/>
from 12 midnight to 3 a m Album<lb/>
specials will be played at 2 a m<lb/>
Th,s weeks Albums will be Led<lb/>
Zeppelms Zeppehn ill Satur<lb/>
oay and T he vVhos new album I ts<lb/>
Hard' on Sunday Jam out on<lb/>
Saturdays and Sundays with Keith<lb/>
Mitchell on 'he Jammmgest<lb/>
vVZMB<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
There will be a meeting ot the<lb/>
Sign Language Club Sunday Sept<lb/>
19 The meeting will Mart with a<lb/>
cover dish dinner a' 6 30 in the<lb/>
Multi purpose room ;n Menaenhall<lb/>
Studen' Center Anyone interested<lb/>
is more 'ha" .??? me to attend<lb/>
New Officers ?i m 'he 1982 1983<lb/>
? ? , r ,v a be eie ted<lb/>
NUTSHELL<lb/>
?. up<lb/>
new V.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
lion . ? ?,<lb/>
!? les ab v '<lb/>
iSSUOS ' ?-<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
? ? h .?<lb/>
fecting the<lb/>
lasn - a vj ?<lb/>
l pv ot me all<lb/>
?- . nagai ne I i ihi<lb/>
?nunt'y The Mth edi<lb/>
?- p ii ke :  ai<lb/>
: ?  ?" ?  S<lb/>
 example<lb/>
?, ?? . ? .ssion is at<lb/>
market enioy<lb/>
Se se ' IS .tod<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
ab ?<lb/>
en<lb/>
igi<lb/>
apply s<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ? et' ? g<lb/>
?? - nee<lb/>
popu'd'  ti ass ? ns such as<lb/>
Tht II icand I I' and ? ? ?<lb/>
?ii- ii . ? I. ii<lb/>
: esl v ? ?. ?? '<lb/>
The E ? ' ' ?"??K- ai "<lb/>
a lislributl v. ht in 'he<lb/>
? ?, ? v  -? suppi. Store<lb/>
?? idenhall S'uaen' Centet ana<lb/>
I ? ? ? . ? Vusic Building<lb/>
? - i 30 p m on<lb/>
Monday epten bet 20 l?82<lb/>
PUBLIC<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
Applications are nnw bemg<lb/>
n- ? ? ? pos '? nc o( Day S'u<lb/>
BRIDGE<lb/>
Bridge ' live in Concert This<lb/>
Fr iday night at 7 30. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Art Auditorium "Bridge a con<lb/>
tempory Christian band from<lb/>
Greensboro will be giving a free<lb/>
concert All are welcome to come<lb/>
and iom in on the music Spon<lb/>
sored by Faith Victory on Cam<lb/>
pus<lb/>
PHIKAPPATAU<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
There will be a mandatory<lb/>
meeting Sunday. September 19 at<lb/>
v 30<lb/>
TAOISTCIRCLE<lb/>
Taoism, the old yet timely and<lb/>
universal philosophy of China<lb/>
teaches inner and outer harmony,<lb/>
health peace and ioy The Taois'<lb/>
Circle will meet on Sunday,<lb/>
September 26 at 4 00 PM at the<lb/>
Kiwanis Shelter" located behind<lb/>
the Elm Street Gymnasium<lb/>
Visitors are most welcome, and<lb/>
refreshments will be served The<lb/>
location m case of ram will be at<lb/>
1113 South Evans Street For fur<lb/>
ther information call either<lb/>
758 1739 or 7S8 425S evenings be'<lb/>
ween 6 and 9 PM<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K is armg It is giving a<lb/>
part ot yourself to someone else<lb/>
It is an opportunity to commit<lb/>
?self to enriching the lives of<lb/>
many individuals, and at the same<lb/>
time enhancing your life, because<lb/>
you have chosen to care Circle K<lb/>
s the 'a'gest co ed collegiate ser<lb/>
'? organization in the world with<lb/>
vei 700 chapters in North<lb/>
America alone ECU'S chapter<lb/>
meets every Tuesday nigh' at 6 30<lb/>
in Mendenhail room 221 Come and<lb/>
be a par' of our group choose to<lb/>
?? i Legis<lb/>
Legisi ii ?<lb/>
Any tv ' '?<lb/>
: 0 upa is el<lb/>
rr ii . I<lb/>
n S'uden'<lb/>
Class Officers<lb/>
? lent will a<lb/>
a aa'es are<lb/>
j rtii ugh ihe r!<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
.?.<lb/>
best '<lb/>
? i<lb/>
i - - tooer 5 in 305<lb/>
-i' !??' ?- n<lb/>
PV Tht Strong<lb/>
P . v mt : . :?8 Me'<lb/>
? lent enter and ppu<lb/>
WORKERS NEEDED<lb/>
 ?? ee Jed ' lend p ! i<lb/>
 ? ? Sepi 29 A<lb/>
3 rups nterested<lb/>
Heg please coniaci <lb/>
 ?? it '5J Mil ? ? '?<lb/>
ECMUG<lb/>
? ? '<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
?. . irea terested<lb/>
. : ?. - ? ? . : ?<lb/>
 . ? : thi ? rtd T "l'Soh , I<lb/>
it 7:30 pm<lb/>
? ?? ???<lb/>
- . ?? . . Pi . ?? ?<lb/>
- j .<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
Ge' ready tor a fantastic year<lb/>
F no out everything you ever<lb/>
wanted lo know abou' Sport Clubs<lb/>
Currently Field Hockey Gym<lb/>
? s karate Rugby Soccer<lb/>
S rfing Team Handball and<lb/>
 tier Polo are adve Sport Clubs<lb/>
H . u and our friends wish <lb/>
begin a new dub attend 'he sport<lb/>
club informational mee'ing ALL<lb/>
bPOP' Ct "Bl VUST ATTEND<lb/>
"?-t FIRST MEETING WHICH<lb/>
A LL BE HEwD AEDNESDAY<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22 N MEMORIAL<lb/>
-v M ROOM 105BAT400pm<lb/>
?'? ' ve spor' nubs should rae<lb/>
. ? i itional meetings for the<lb/>
election of officers aa prepara<lb/>
it schedules prior to the IRS<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
GAY RUSH<lb/>
A nvite interested men ana<lb/>
a men 'o this semester's first<lb/>
?  ' the Las' Carolina Gay<lb/>
Community Our group now mee's<lb/>
??, first and third Monday ot each<lb/>
month at 7 00 p m at the Catholic<lb/>
Newman cen'er 9S3 E 10'h si <lb/>
A?- will aiscuss goals tor the year<lb/>
C i1 and give us support<lb/>
PHOENIX<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
SYMPOSIUM<lb/>
A Child at Risk Children of<lb/>
Incarcerated Mothers" - Anyone<lb/>
interested in volunteering with<lb/>
these children is invited to the<lb/>
symposium Thursday. September<lb/>
23 at the Bachelor Benedict Club.<lb/>
707 Wyatt Street Registration is<lb/>
free and will begin at 1 00 For<lb/>
more information contact the<lb/>
Social Work and Corrections<lb/>
department at 757 6961<lb/>
ACTING CLASS<lb/>
An acting class for beginners<lb/>
will be meeting for fen consecutive<lb/>
evenings starting Sept 21 at Pill<lb/>
Community College Registration<lb/>
for the class will occur at its initial<lb/>
session, the fee is $15 00 Stephen<lb/>
B Finnan, formerly of ECU'S<lb/>
Drama and Speech Department,<lb/>
will be the instructor In addition<lb/>
to ECU, Mr Finnan has taught<lb/>
and directed at Brooklyn College,<lb/>
Michigan State Univ and Pill<lb/>
Community College He also has<lb/>
professional acting and directing<lb/>
credits Since the class size is<lb/>
limited, those who are interested<lb/>
are advised to call Mr Finnan<lb/>
(757 3546, between 3 5) or Mr Jim<lb/>
Brown at PCC (756 3130, between<lb/>
9 5)<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone lo<lb/>
iom in with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday in the Biology<lb/>
Lecture Hall starting jt 12 30 and<lb/>
every Wednesday at 5 00 at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center located<lb/>
down a' the bottom ot College jm 111<lb/>
SIGMATHETATAU<lb/>
BETA NU<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau Beta Nu<lb/>
chapter will have its firs' business<lb/>
meeting Thursday, Sep' 16th at<lb/>
7 00 pm m room 203 of the nursing<lb/>
building<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Bothers and the Littles<lb/>
Sisters of the Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity would like to con<lb/>
gratulate the following new in<lb/>
ducted pledges of the Alpha Tau<lb/>
Pledge Class, Mike Smith, Rick<lb/>
Kradel, Steve Pendergraph, Jason<lb/>
Davis, Tim Irwin, John<lb/>
Charlebois, Jim Kepple. Greg<lb/>
Wyatt. Mark Meade, John<lb/>
Hamrick, Paul McArthur, Danny<lb/>
Wolfe. Greg Taylor. Steve Ed<lb/>
wards, Mark Hana Scott Smith,<lb/>
Rickie Jackson, Dwayne<lb/>
Wiseman, Mike Sanoba Chipper<lb/>
McDowell, Tony Harris, Dave<lb/>
Schuler, Trey West, Eddie<lb/>
Halstrom, Rich Orzol, Tony Mills,<lb/>
Howard Shreve, Steve Reavis<lb/>
Keith Parkham, Dave Sadlowski,<lb/>
Benpe Sherman, S'eve Deal and<lb/>
Tony Carrea<lb/>
We would like to also thank Don<lb/>
nie Parr for organizing a very sue<lb/>
cesful Fall Rush 33 Alpha Tau's is<lb/>
a good thing!<lb/>
!JS<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Sepl. 17 &amp; 18<lb/>
Room 15 Mendenhail<lb/>
9:00-11:00<lb/>
Those interested in performing<lb/>
please sign up at the Student<lb/>
Union Office, Mendenhail.<lb/>
sLl<lb/>
jppjsr<lb/>
h<lb/>
'A<lb/>
u- J'<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
;Tar Landing Seafood;<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
?-A<lb/>
i<lb/>
Cross G'een Street B dqi<lb/>
Taki l M a' ' ?' c m'1'<lb/>
Loca'eO one block down on It<lb/>
Mrport R:ad<lb/>
jreenv.lle. N:r:h Carolina<lb/>
SunThurs. ? 11-9 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. ?11-10<lb/>
MonThurs. ALL DAY<lb/>
Sat. ? Lunch 11-3<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
TROUT<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
REGULAR DAILY SPECIAL<lb/>
Flounder &amp; Shrimp Plate<lb/>
$2.89<lb/>
TAKE OUTS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
f<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
Meeting Thursday the 16th All<lb/>
members mus' be there Release<lb/>
forms must be signed Plans tor up<lb/>
coming party and contest will be<lb/>
talked about Dues need to be paid<lb/>
by Oct ? So bring them it you got<lb/>
them Election of officers next<lb/>
week Meeting a' Mendenhail<lb/>
PEACE COMMITTEE<lb/>
'We ave iT within our power to<lb/>
begin the world again "<lb/>
Thomas Paine<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Commit<lb/>
tee will be holding a meeting Fri<lb/>
day at 7 30 P M All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to a"ena at 610<lb/>
S Elm St phone 758 4906<lb/>
Everyone 'S welcome<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
PREPARATION<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering the following one hour<lb/>
sessions 'o help you prepare your<lb/>
own resume September 25 1982<lb/>
Weonesoa y 3 00pm<lb/>
September 79, 1982 weonesoa<lb/>
4 00 p m October 5 1982 Tues<lb/>
day 3 00 p m<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Our second fall semester group<lb/>
mee'mg will be held on Thursday<lb/>
Sept 16 m Mendenhali's Room 244<lb/>
Membership dues n the amount of<lb/>
WOO will be collected from an<lb/>
members interested persons are<lb/>
mvi'ed 'o attend<lb/>
ATTITUDES<lb/>
Your attitudes are a maior fac<lb/>
tor in determining whe'her you<lb/>
succeed or tail in achieving your<lb/>
goals, and your attitudes grea'ly<lb/>
affect how much you enioy life<lb/>
Man, people know this, but they<lb/>
do not agree on the best attitudes<lb/>
and how to get them in our hear<lb/>
We believe knowing God and his<lb/>
Word i Bible i and appiyng ii in<lb/>
your hfe 'S 'he oes' way 'o fine<lb/>
tune your a'ti'udes lo be your bes'<lb/>
(Roman 12 2i Come and check us<lb/>
ou' Thursday Sep' 16th, and<lb/>
Monday. Sept 20th. a' 7 30 pm in<lb/>
Rm 242 m Mendenhail S'uden'<lb/>
Center<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
MSC is sponsoring an ECU Stu<lb/>
dent's Misxed Doubles Bowling<lb/>
League The Monday Night<lb/>
League will have an organua<lb/>
tional meeting on<lb/>
September 27 at 5 00 pm In the<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center The Tues<lb/>
day night league will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday September 28 Play will<lb/>
begin directly following each<lb/>
organizational mee'mg Sign up<lb/>
your team of 2 men and 2 women<lb/>
on the bottom of the floor of<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center For<lb/>
further information, call 757 6611<lb/>
ext 260<lb/>
NEWS RELEASE<lb/>
The Governor s Advocac Coun<lb/>
cil tor Persons with Disabilities<lb/>
and Greenville parent's organna<lb/>
lions will sponser a public hearing<lb/>
Monday. Sept 20lh 'o discuss pro<lb/>
posed changes m Public Law<lb/>
94 142, me Federal regulation<lb/>
which guarantees appropriate<lb/>
public education tor all handicap<lb/>
ped children<lb/>
The public hearing will be a'<lb/>
7 30 P M Monday. September<lb/>
20th at The Tommie Willis<lb/>
Regional Development Center in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Proposed Federal changes<lb/>
would reduce the services present<lb/>
ly provided to physicall and men<lb/>
tally handicapped students, and<lb/>
reduce the role ol parents in the<lb/>
evaluation, placement or review<lb/>
of an individual educational Plan<lb/>
(lEP) for 'heir children<lb/>
The purpose of the Sept 20th<lb/>
meeting is to review the proposed<lb/>
changes and advise parents and<lb/>
interested persons how to send<lb/>
their comments to the Department<lb/>
of Education and their legislators<lb/>
Hal Shigiey of 'he Eastern<lb/>
TEACCH Center and Michael<lb/>
Ernes' ot 'he Eas' Carolina<lb/>
University Program tor Hear.ng<lb/>
Impaired Students will conduct<lb/>
the meeting This meeting will<lb/>
precede regional meetings to be<lb/>
held September 30'h<lb/>
STUDENT STORE<lb/>
The S'uden' Supply S'ore and<lb/>
Soda Shop Wr.gnt Building, will<lb/>
be open Saturday. September 18<lb/>
from 10 a m until 1 p m<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning ana Piare<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering these one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you m developing better m<lb/>
terviewing skills for use in your<lb/>
O0 search You may select a time<lb/>
from those listed below<lb/>
September 15 1982 Wednesda<lb/>
2 00 p m September 23 1982<lb/>
Thursda 3 00 p m<lb/>
September 28, 1982 Tijesaa<lb/>
4:00 p.m<lb/>
October 4 1982 Monday 3 00<lb/>
p m<lb/>
A film ana discussion ot inter<lb/>
viewing through 'he Career Piann<lb/>
mg and Placement Service will be<lb/>
shared<lb/>
OPTOMETRY<lb/>
RECRUITMENT<lb/>
CONFERENCE<lb/>
There will be an Optometr<lb/>
Recruitment Conference on<lb/>
Thursda. September 16. i982 a"<lb/>
3 00 pm at Menaenhaii S'uae-<lb/>
Center There will be speakers<lb/>
from all Contract Op'ne" <lb/>
Schools All interested persons are<lb/>
welcome to a'tend<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
The PRC club wilt noia ?,<lb/>
meeting on Tuesda. September<lb/>
21 at 7 00 m 'he MSC Mul'ipurpose<lb/>
Room All mteres'ed PRC maiors<lb/>
are invi'ed 'o attend<lb/>
SNOW SKI SNOWSHOE<lb/>
There wil' be a mee' "g tor a'i<lb/>
persons interested in snowsk "g<lb/>
on Thursda. at 4 00<lb/>
in Memorial Gym 108 Crr sas<lb/>
and spring break 'rips will be<lb/>
made on Snowsnoe Aes' J rgr a<lb/>
for PHYE credit or non credit A<lb/>
slide presentation wii be shown<lb/>
and information on sk packages<lb/>
including prices and accomoda<lb/>
lions will be distributed Space is<lb/>
limited tor each'r.p Reser.a'<lb/>
will be accepted a' this mee-<lb/>
For additional ntorma'ion con<lb/>
lac' Jo Saunders a' 757 6000<lb/>
Memorial Gym 205<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPME<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
N T<lb/>
Bast NAUi 0? PADi SCUBA<lb/>
Certit,ration Sep' 14 CK'<lb/>
Base Sailing Sep' 16 OC 2<lb/>
Beginn.ng Ballroom arc<lb/>
'ern-ediate Ballroom Sept<lb/>
17 Nov 19 Texas Couo'r, Dn' I<lb/>
Sept 18 Nov 20<lb/>
Darkroom Photograp' ? Sep'<lb/>
18 Nov 13 Yoga Sep 29 Oct 13<lb/>
Conversational German Sept 21<lb/>
Nov 23 Camera ? Sept 21<lb/>
OC 19 Ja:7 Exercise Sep' .<lb/>
Oct 21<lb/>
Gui'ar Sep' 21 N . ? ?<lb/>
Sep' 21 Nov 9 Aigebra Re em<lb/>
Sep' 22 OC 10 Ciogg I<lb/>
22 OC 27 Re'iremen' Plant<lb/>
Sept 23 OC 14<lb/>
For more infoi<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
Pauis Epscopai ' ' <lb/>
ne I ? '<lb/>
Dor <lb/>
pm with tne El<lb/>
me Rev E<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
ti-f De'a s g" ? ?<lb/>
 ? ? .<lb/>
198; pted .?<lb/>
Sean Ois ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
 . . .<lb/>
David Drive '? ?? ? ? ?<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
Would rou "? ' ? ' ?? a goo<lb/>
time?' Conn ?<lb/>
oe mf S M ???' ' ?<lb/>
nfan needs can oe me' a' the Bac<lb/>
' si S'uden' un<lb/>
Physical with home ? ?<lb/>
on Tuesda a' S?J pm lot<lb/>
? "5 Recr??ti( nal will<lb/>
par i pa 11 or - i? ?'<lb/>
Spiritual with a ? "<lb/>
Jt PAUit<lb/>
pm Emol ma with a tali<lb/>
on Liv "g as a Christian<lb/>
each Tuesoa? a- T Or .<lb/>
Socai a " ? : ? A<lb/>
-ake Can 752 4646 for any rttoi<lb/>
mat ion! Bob Clyde rr -<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
O- v jrwJav Septi 8 9 00<lb/>
p m r Her :? ? ? -<lb/>
Pfi and CADP a<lb/>
? - a- i ?<lb/>
UNC The tor; I rjiscussion w<lb/>
be a r Prevent - - ee ac ,<lb/>
mission 1 mmunity<lb/>
campus<lb/>
1 he La arolinian<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
 . - ,<lb/>
SuDscr.pt.on Bi'e i<lb/>
The East Carol.nun<lb/>
are totaled ?" 'he Oia Scc-<lb/>
Bu.id.ng on 'ht cj?i<lb/>
Gree"?e N C<lb/>
.<lb/>
Telephone '5" ?36? ?3?<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line Each letter, punc<lb/>
Tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad<lb/>
All ads must De prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
5c per line or traction ot a line.<lb/>
Please prim legible' Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters<lb/>
Return to THE EAS1 R()1 IMAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Iuesda before<lb/>
ednesda publications.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No. lines<lb/>
at 75 per line S.<lb/>
N ;nser:<lb/>
j 1i i .1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , ; ; , <lb/>
' ' '<lb/>
<lb/>
Mill<lb/>
J <lb/>
1<lb/>
(ill<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 1. II '<lb/>
Ybu can stick<lb/>
it in your<lb/>
when<lb/>
you win.<lb/>
Register now for a free "Walking Music"<lb/>
mini stereo cassette player to be<lb/>
given away. Register at the<lb/>
Bookstore during<lb/>
our special record<lb/>
sale - Sept. 20-24.<lb/>
Drawing will be held<lb/>
5:00 p.m. Sept. 24<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
i-<lb/>
? - - ? aggM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0003"/><lb/>
I HI EAST k?l INIAN<lb/>
StPU MBfk 16. 1982<lb/>
Wins<lb/>
l a s 1 Carolina's<lb/>
Rebel 82 was awarded<lb/>
firsi place and medalist<lb/>
ranking in the 59th Col-<lb/>
umbia I niversit<lb/>
Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association Contest<lb/>
last week<lb/>
1 h e literary-art<lb/>
ne was aw aided<lb/>
dace in the contest<lb/>
foi scoring 4 l out ot<lb/>
a possible 1 iHH points.<lb/>
1; was i-1 en t he<lb/>
medalist ranking based<lb/>
on intangible qualities<lb/>
e ident to the judges.<lb/>
Bill Rapp, eduoi ol<lb/>
the winning magazine,<lb/>
said "this is an exciting<lb/>
and proud event foi the<lb/>
Rebet and ECl 1 he<lb/>
au aid is a tribute to the<lb/>
tremendous talent here<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
ludges cited the<lb/>
m a ga z i ne foi its<lb/>
"outstanding eoncep<lb/>
uon and execution.<lb/>
1 he went on to call the<lb/>
magazine extraordinary<lb/>
siating that it was the<lb/>
best the reviewed SO<lb/>
tai this year in the<lb/>
literarv -art field.<lb/>
I he Rebet 82 with<lb/>
contributions t torn<lb/>
disciplines which in-<lb/>
clude biologj.<lb/>
psychology, computer<lb/>
science, art and<lb/>
business, was said to be<lb/>
"almost in a class by<lb/>
itself" for which the<lb/>
judges ottered "only<lb/>
the highest praise<lb/>
ECU has done well in<lb/>
past years but has never<lb/>
before received the first<lb/>
place and medalist<lb/>
ranking in the Colum-<lb/>
bia contest w h i c h<lb/>
judges college publica-<lb/>
tions from all over the<lb/>
country and is con-<lb/>
sidered one of the most<lb/>
prestigous competition<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
New Age Would Hurt Clubs<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
RCA RECORDING ARTIbl 5<lb/>
lUjckeC<lb/>
WFOOLSTAR<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT.<lb/>
SNOW<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 1<lb/>
l od v DiGiuliot,<lb/>
nanaget ! the New<lb/>
) idm ' ted that his<lb/>
ess would sutler it<lb/>
drinking age were<lb/>
lised  "We ha e<lb/>
? i ist omei s w ho<lb/>
older he said,<lb/>
a , do ? eh heav il<lb/>
. gc ti ade As<lb/>
estaui ant most ol<lb/>
ness is food,<lb/>
ke most places<lb/>
.? n we also de-<lb/>
ru sale ol beei<lb/>
a ne, especially<lb/>
apps houi<lb/>
lie Nightclub<lb/>
V , ?. on president.<lb/>
Kei  Brson. said<lb/>
a : nightclubs<lb/>
be sei ioush hurt<lb/>
 king age were<lb/>
? M si nightclubs<lb/>
. on beer sales<lb/>
charges tot<lb/>
tev enue "You'd see a<lb/>
lot ol clubs turn<lb/>
pro ate he said<lb/>
But Hiv son also said<lb/>
that a change in the law<lb/>
would cause more pro<lb/>
blenis than it would<lb/>
solve. "It would cut<lb/>
oui 40,000 jobs across<lb/>
the state he said,<lb/>
"and Sn million a yeai<lb/>
in siate taxes would be<lb/>
lost<lb/>
Hi v son said that a<lb/>
bootlegging industry<lb/>
would quicklv develop<lb/>
to fill the dr market,<lb/>
and a lot more kids<lb/>
would drive to Virginia<lb/>
to buv beer causing<lb/>
even more highway, ac<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
' 'Also the law w ould<lb/>
be extremely, difficult<lb/>
to enforce Bryson<lb/>
said. "An A IK office!<lb/>
admitted to me that<lb/>
thev wouldn't have the<lb/>
manpowei to enforce<lb/>
it<lb/>
Swanson agreed that<lb/>
it would be difficult to<lb/>
enforce a 21 drinking<lb/>
age "But I feel it<lb/>
would be similar to the<lb/>
55 mph speed limit<lb/>
he said, "Most people<lb/>
have respect for the law<lb/>
and voluntarily obey it,<lb/>
even if they know we<lb/>
can't always cat c h<lb/>
them. I think we'd see a<lb/>
positive outcome if the<lb/>
law were passed<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
WARNER BROlHERb<lb/>
RECORDING ART ISTS<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
10 off<lb/>
on the purchase of<lb/>
one of our lab coats!<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, ethoscopes, shoes<lb/>
and hose. Also - used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. 1 rade-ins allowed<lb/>
Located I 7 10 W. 6th St.<lb/>
oft Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Holloweil's Drug and old hospital<lb/>
30ZT<lb/>
PH. 752-7303<lb/>
Workers Installing<lb/>
Pipe Near Trailer<lb/>
c onstruction lor ad-<lb/>
ding water and waste<lb/>
lines to a near-by trailer<lb/>
is currently underway<lb/>
neat the biology<lb/>
building.<lb/>
1 he trailer is schedul-<lb/>
ed to be occupied bv<lb/>
the commupter center<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
V :ording 1 any<lb/>
S ivder, I Cl s plant<lb/>
engineer, the digging<lb/>
that is being done this<lb/>
week is for the purpose<lb/>
ol installing a drainage<lb/>
line tor a toilet in the<lb/>
trailer.<lb/>
The trailer has<lb/>
previously been used by<lb/>
the medical school and<lb/>
also as an extension for<lb/>
the Allied Health<lb/>
1 ibrarv.<lb/>
FAMILY EYE CARE<lb/>
ana<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
A ! ill an ' Pediatric vision care in a<lb/>
I and personal setting Full ron-<lb/>
lens strvi es Uin k accurati<lb/>
i veglass r r it ?<lb/>
DR PETER V HOLLIS<lb/>
oTOwmuc<lb/>
eCAA?C?HTCR<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
00<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
?? r ip1 '<lb/>
Eyeg i esOr<lb/>
Cop- 1 " I ? : "<lb/>
SSggB<lb/>
YmmtmOm<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET<lb/>
For Just3 5.9 5<lb/>
5:009:00 PM. Momdif Siftrtiy<lb/>
COUPON?<lb/>
WITH PURCHASE OF<lb/>
2 BUFFETS GET<lb/>
1 PITCHER OF BEER FREE<lb/>
Buffet Includes: Roast Beef. Chicken.<lb/>
Seafood, l.osagno, Ham, Salads. Meaibails.<lb/>
Vegetables. Bread A More! (toffee or Iced Tea Included!<lb/>
A Iso serv ing our fuIIIu itch menu from 11:30-2:30<lb/>
our full dinner menu from 5:00-10:00 MonM(. ? Closed SMti<lb/>
301 Evans St. Mall In the Minges Building ,?52 5476<lb/>
GRAND<lb/>
OPENINGS<lb/>
THURS.FRI. SAT. SUN.<lb/>
405E14THST.<lb/>
SEPT. 16, 17, 18 &amp; 19<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
Kash &amp; Karry<lb/>
CONVENIENCE STORE<lb/>
14TH ST &amp; CHARLES ST. GREENVILLE<lb/>
WE INVITE ALL ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS TO VISIT US<lb/>
Ned To University<lb/>
Seafood Market<lb/>
758-1900<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
GRAND OPENING SPECIALS<lb/>
-HOTROASTED-<lb/>
PEANUTS<lb/>
-HOTPOPCORN-<lb/>
-HOTCOFFEE-<lb/>
-ICESLUSHES-<lb/>
-HOT FRENCH FRIES-<lb/>
-HOT ONION RINGS-<lb/>
Regular Gasoline<lb/>
$-109-9<lb/>
S GAL.<lb/>
UNLEADED 1.15-9 GAL.<lb/>
Limit S20<lb/>
FREE BAG<lb/>
OF<lb/>
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TOPPINGS<lb/>
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A<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
!<lb/>
(Sift ?aat ?arolinfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, anm,<lb/>
Mikl Hughes, MMmaiw<lb/>
WaVERLY MERRITT, p.reaoro, 4v,?v, ClNDY PLEASANTS, Sports EOr<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ?,w? v,u?a( Ernest Conner, ?,??,<lb/>
JONl GUTHRIE, nr?mSmno. STEVE BaCHNER, EnmmmmEH?<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, ,???,??, Wa?ajrfr Mike Davis. ?,?,?.? m<lb/>
Septembci 16, I9S2<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Fall Elections<lb/>
One Vote Makes A Difference<lb/>
Hopefully, it comes as no surprise<lb/>
to any of us that 1982 is an election<lb/>
year. And in so being, this<lb/>
November will mark yet another<lb/>
polling day tilled with thousands<lb/>
upon thousands of excuses for<lb/>
"Why I didn't vote<lb/>
"I didn't have the time is a<lb/>
favorite; or "I forgot or "1 didn't<lb/>
like anybody on the ballot But<lb/>
probably the most overused and<lb/>
misconceived excuse is the old<lb/>
classic: "What difference would<lb/>
one vote make, anyway?"<lb/>
Perhaps, those who annually<lb/>
subscribe to this latter excuse have a<lb/>
valid point. Indeed, what difference<lb/>
could one vote make? Certainly,<lb/>
there's no possible way that one<lb/>
vote could change the shape of<lb/>
destiny. No, that's impossible.<lb/>
Well, if you're one to think along<lb/>
those lines, think again, because<lb/>
history has proven otherwise time<lb/>
and time again. But don't take my<lb/>
word for it; take a look yourself at<lb/>
what just one vote has done to<lb/>
change the world in the past:<lb/>
? In 1645, one vote gave Oliver<lb/>
Cromwell control of England, tak-<lb/>
ing it temporarily out of the hands<lb/>
of monarehs.<lb/>
? Four years later, in 1649, one<lb/>
vote cost Charles I of England his<lb/>
head.<lb/>
? In 1776, delegates from the 13<lb/>
colonies voted on a language for the<lb/>
formation of their new country.<lb/>
English won over German by a<lb/>
single vote.<lb/>
? Massachusetts Governor Marcus<lb/>
Morton took that office in 1839<lb/>
after winning the gubernatorial elec-<lb/>
tion by ? you guessed it ? a single<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
? Texas became a state as the result<lb/>
of a single-vote victory in<lb/>
Washington in 1845.<lb/>
? President Andrew Johnson and<lb/>
the United States were saved the em-<lb/>
barrassment of impeachment pro-<lb/>
ceedings in 1868 by one vote.<lb/>
? Rutherford B. Hayes won the<lb/>
presidency of the United States in<lb/>
1876 by one vote.<lb/>
? In that same year, one vote<lb/>
changed France from a monarchy to<lb/>
a republic.<lb/>
? And in 1923, one vote ? one<lb/>
vote ? gave Adolf Hitler leadership<lb/>
in the German Nazi Party.<lb/>
Now, think about these ?<lb/>
especially that last one. Imagine the<lb/>
ramifications a single vote has had<lb/>
in the past. Imagine what would<lb/>
have happened if one "aye" had<lb/>
gone the other way.<lb/>
Think of it; the Dallas Cowboys<lb/>
and Houston Oilers would have to<lb/>
play football in the Jalapeno<lb/>
League. We'd all spit on one<lb/>
another whenever we spoke. The<lb/>
world would be quite different, in-<lb/>
deed.<lb/>
Granted, the 1982 congressional<lb/>
elections are a month and a half<lb/>
away (Nov. 2). And most of us can't<lb/>
even plan a week in advance. But<lb/>
the history of national and interna-<lb/>
tional elections has shown the im-<lb/>
portance of citizen participation.<lb/>
And the earlier we can start making<lb/>
plans to vote (especially by in-<lb/>
vestigating the prospective can-<lb/>
didates) the better. Admittedly, one<lb/>
vote is almost immeasurable small<lb/>
compared to the total number of<lb/>
registered voters in the U.S the<lb/>
state or even on campus.<lb/>
And it is unlikely, if not impossi-<lb/>
ble, that one vote will change the<lb/>
face of American policy. But when<lb/>
you consider thaf only about one-<lb/>
third of the nation's eligible voters<lb/>
went to the polls in 1980 ? a<lb/>
presidential election year ? then<lb/>
you must admit that something is<lb/>
wrong, terribly wrong, with the<lb/>
American people. There certainly<lb/>
are a lot of "one-votes" out there.<lb/>
And the apathy of the American<lb/>
public ? what the media generally<lb/>
like to call 44low voter turnout" ?<lb/>
is not at all alien to the college cam-<lb/>
pus, either. In fact, statistics show<lb/>
that it's even worse here. Why, even<lb/>
in student government elections (in<lb/>
which most of us pass right by at<lb/>
least one polling place during the<lb/>
day), voter turnout is a mere joke.<lb/>
Fewer than 10 percent of the student<lb/>
body ? a lot fewer ? voted in last<lb/>
year's SGA general elections, a<lb/>
disgusting reflection of the apathy<lb/>
of those who are to become<lb/>
"America's leaders<lb/>
(Editor's Note: ECU elections for<lb/>
class offices, as well as those of<lb/>
representatives, will be held on<lb/>
Sept. 29.)<lb/>
Plans Will Uproot Solitude<lb/>
Building Woes<lb/>
By MIKK I1AMKR<lb/>
Every once in a while, we notice that<lb/>
something we treasure (for instance, a<lb/>
wooded area or a nostalgic building) is<lb/>
suddenly gone. It is then that we are forced<lb/>
to ask ourselves, "What do we consider<lb/>
beautiful?" and "What do we consider im-<lb/>
portant?"<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
First, consider the case at hand. The<lb/>
university has to expand ? there are only a<lb/>
finite number of directions in which it can<lb/>
expand. And so, then, it comes down to<lb/>
what comes first: a beautiful wooded area<lb/>
or a parking lot accompanied by a lot of<lb/>
legal hassles and a possible delay in the<lb/>
construction of the needed building. Of<lb/>
what value are wooded areas? Are they<lb/>
valuable only to those among us who have<lb/>
grown up in rural settings? Or are they on-<lb/>
ly valuable to those individuals who like to<lb/>
take solitary walks and watch the passing<lb/>
of the seasons? Is there any use in being a<lb/>
nature-loving individual in today's socie-<lb/>
ty? Now that James Watt is in charge of<lb/>
the national forests, are we to begin think-<lb/>
ing in his manner ? that trees are money<lb/>
in the pocket?<lb/>
Perhaps it comes down to this: Do the<lb/>
individuals on this campus value a natural<lb/>
area more than a new building? Or are new<lb/>
buildings and lesser walks the most impor-<lb/>
tant considerations? That a new building is<lb/>
needed cannot be denied. That money has<lb/>
already been spent in planning and the site<lb/>
has been decided cannot be denied. The<lb/>
question, then, becomes, "Which is the<lb/>
spot where one can walk on campus and be<lb/>
quiet and reflective?"<lb/>
The gazebo behind the biology building<lb/>
is certainly a secluded spot, but it won't be<lb/>
when the new building is erected ? it will<lb/>
be too close to that building.<lb/>
Chancellor Howell has offered the mall<lb/>
as an example of a natural area. But amid<lb/>
the frisbees and rock'n'roll, there isn't<lb/>
much solitude to be had.<lb/>
Where can one have a quiet area? Or do<lb/>
we even need one? These are questions<lb/>
which need to be addressed here and now,<lb/>
before it's too late ? before the influx of<lb/>
needed buildings prohibits the develop-<lb/>
ment of any kind of natural area.<lb/>
The East Carolinian urges its readers to<lb/>
respond, to suggest or to berate this whole<lb/>
idea, but let us, as a community, use this<lb/>
forum to voice our ideas.<lb/>
no<lb/>
"On the other hand, if we steal from the poor<lb/>
and give to the rich, we can reduce inflation<lb/>
while stimulating investment<lb/>
T<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
New Building Unnecessary<lb/>
ECU does not need a new classroom<lb/>
building. Brewster is not utilized to<lb/>
capacity, even in the daytime. It's<lb/>
ludicrous to see comment after comment<lb/>
directed towards saving some trees,<lb/>
when the real issue isn't addressed at all.<lb/>
The real issue is building usage (or, in<lb/>
fact, non-usage) and ECU's instructors'<lb/>
unwillingness to teach nights and Satur-<lb/>
days.<lb/>
In the late afternoon and early even-<lb/>
ing, Brewster is practically deserted. It is<lb/>
inefficient to lay out money for a new<lb/>
building, when what is in existence is not<lb/>
fully utilized (or, indeed, nearlv fully<lb/>
utilized).<lb/>
If ECU had a real night program for<lb/>
undergrads, enrollment would increase<lb/>
and the perceived need for a new<lb/>
building would evaporate with the mor-<lb/>
ning mist.<lb/>
Many colleges and universities have<lb/>
added Saturday to their schedules,<lb/>
thereby getting more building usage and<lb/>
increasing enrollment.<lb/>
The phony excuse for not having more<lb/>
night classes (and, for that matter,<lb/>
Saturday classes) is that the students<lb/>
wouldn't enroll in them. In fact, it is the<lb/>
teachers who are the impediment.<lb/>
ECU does not need a new classroom<lb/>
building. It needs more use of what it<lb/>
has and a real night program (note:<lb/>
languages are never taught at night on<lb/>
campus).<lb/>
William B. Veytruba<lb/>
Senior, Psvcholoev<lb/>
Our Error<lb/>
I ast Friday, Sept. 10, well betore the<lb/>
5 p.m. deadline on Monday, the<lb/>
Women's Soccer Club submitted two<lb/>
separate announcements to be printed in<lb/>
the following Tuesday's paper. Neither<lb/>
announcement was printed.<lb/>
You say you can't guarantee that an-<lb/>
nouncements will be printed and that<lb/>
clubs and organizations should not de-<lb/>
pend on The East Carolinian for publici-<lb/>
ty. It seems we can't even depend on The<lb/>
East Carolinian for intelligent reporting.<lb/>
If space is a problem, careful editing of<lb/>
the announcements would have shown<lb/>
that our organizational meeting to be<lb/>
held Sept. 15 well preceded meetings to<lb/>
be held on Sept. 21, 29 and even as far<lb/>
off as Oct. 15.<lb/>
Thank's for your continued service to<lb/>
the East Carolina campus community<lb/>
Vicki Marder<lb/>
Home Economics<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Thank you tor bring-<lb/>
ing this error to our attention W f-<lb/>
sincerely regret any inconvenience it has<lb/>
caused you or your club. Please unders-<lb/>
tand, however, that more than 65 an-<lb/>
nouncements were brought m before<lb/>
Tuesday's paper. They just won 7 alt tit.<lb/>
Sonetheless. be assured that those at<lb/>
fault have been dulv tloaned i<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes tetters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail -<lb/>
drop them by our ojjice tn the Old Sou<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all ler<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone numbt ?<lb/>
and signature of the authorts). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pc.<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. .41.<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity.<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
Is Pac Man On Da Mob's 'Hit List?'<lb/>
BvJA<lb/>
" an<lb/>
?MM??<lb/>
ON<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Is nothing sacred?<lb/>
Now we've learned that the Mob may be<lb/>
moving in on Pac Man.<lb/>
The justice department suspects that the<lb/>
crime syndicate may be counterfeiting<lb/>
those video-game quarter-eaters.<lb/>
Federal agents recently raided two<lb/>
video-game distributors in New Jersey.<lb/>
They seized $200,000 worth of bogus<lb/>
machines. Among the 60 confiscated<lb/>
games were Pac Man, Miss Pac Man,<lb/>
Frogger and Kongorilla.<lb/>
According to an affidavit, a salesman<lb/>
for one of the companies told an FBI<lb/>
undercover agent he had a big shipment of<lb/>
"hot" video games for sale. He said they<lb/>
had come from the Philippines through<lb/>
Kennedy Airport in New York.<lb/>
The FBI found that two large cartons<lb/>
had, in fact, arrived for the company from<lb/>
the Philippines. They contained circuit<lb/>
boards, which are the heart of the video-<lb/>
game machines.<lb/>
There is no evidence to link the two New<lb/>
Jersey companies to the Mob. But agents<lb/>
of the Organized Crime Division believe<lb/>
the Mob is implicated in the counterfeit<lb/>
racket. They know that wherever there's a<lb/>
fast illegal buck to be made, it's not long<lb/>
before the syndicate tries to take over.<lb/>
How do you tell a counterfeit machine?<lb/>
Sometimes they have no copyright notice<lb/>
or trademark stamped on the cabinet or<lb/>
the video screen. But occasionally these<lb/>
identifying marks are simply forged. In<lb/>
other words, it's not always easy to tell.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the legitimate manufac-<lb/>
turers ? the companies that hold the<lb/>
copyrights ? are up in arms. That's easy<lb/>
to understand. They lose money every time<lb/>
somebody sells a bogus machine or circuit<lb/>
board.<lb/>
SEPTEMBER SWAN SONG: Congress<lb/>
will be in a pell-mell rush to push through<lb/>
legislation in the next few weeks before<lb/>
heading home to seek re-election. The hec-<lb/>
tic wind-up gives industry and special-<lb/>
interest lobbyists their best shot to push<lb/>
through bills filled with goodies and<lb/>
loopholes.<lb/>
Two of the pro-Big Business measures<lb/>
which may slip through this year involve<lb/>
the giant auto and pharmaceutical in-<lb/>
dustries.<lb/>
Lobbyists for the carmakers are waging<lb/>
a major fight to relax regulations controll-<lb/>
ing auto emissions and to delay stronger<lb/>
safety-belt standards.<lb/>
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich is in the<lb/>
forefront of the clean-air fight and has the<lb/>
sympathy of administration officials. But<lb/>
the president's aides are reluctant to<lb/>
become too vocal on an issue that could<lb/>
stir up anti-Reagan votes in the coming<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
The drug companies are pushing for<lb/>
more time to market new products before<lb/>
they have to share their exclusive patent<lb/>
rights with competitors. An organization<lb/>
known as the National Alliance of Senior<lb/>
Citizens is supporting the proposal, but the<lb/>
name is a misnomer. It's a one-man opera-<lb/>
tion representing conservative views. On<lb/>
the other hand, the more representative<lb/>
National Council of Senior Citizens firmly<lb/>
opposes the legislation.<lb/>
SOVIET NETWORK: The town fathers<lb/>
of Glen Cove, N.Y have been in the news<lb/>
lately. They banned Soviet Embassy per-<lb/>
sonnel from the town's beaches because<lb/>
they heard that the Russians had made a<lb/>
spy's nest out of their diplomatic com-<lb/>
pound in Glen Cove.<lb/>
The town officials' suspicions were well-<lb/>
grounded, according to secret U.S. govern-<lb/>
ment files. Of the 2,000 diplomats in this<lb/>
country from Soviet-bloc countries, more<lb/>
than one-fourth ? 544, by actual count ?<lb/>
are known or suspected agents for<lb/>
Moscow's spy network.<lb/>
The Russians, Czechoslovakians, Roma-<lb/>
nians and East Germans are the most ac-<lb/>
tive. A top-secret intelligence report says<lb/>
that the Romanians are assigned the task<lb/>
of buttering up members of Congress to<lb/>
glean secrets. The Czechs are given the<lb/>
drab task of pouring over lengthy technical<lb/>
manuals available in the United States<lb/>
The tough spy work is reserved for the<lb/>
Russian KGB agents and their East Ger-<lb/>
man colleagues.<lb/>
WHAT'S NEXT?: Economic experts<lb/>
predict that the miseries of the auto in-<lb/>
dustry will become worse in the years<lb/>
ahead. They foresee that foreign manufac<lb/>
turers will move ahead faster and continue<lb/>
to pre-empt the field. The experts an<lb/>
ticipate that by the end of the 1980s, an<lb/>
American-made auto will cost $1,500 more<lb/>
than one manufactured abroad.<lb/>
. opvnghi. 198<lb/>
I nucv) Keaiurr Svndicate Iik<lb/>
ptcHgEsm<lb/>
IFRIADotY<lb/>
TO D0UBU-ftt?KiK3<lb/>
INfTfcNTcf THE-<lb/>
VCTiM'S HCU5L-<lb/>
V VK<lb/>
4Mfe<lb/>
 v- r<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROI INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 16. 1982<lb/>
rern-<lb/>
this<lb/>
ore<lb/>
for<lb/>
ma-<lb/>
tt ac-<lb/>
says<lb/>
task<lb/>
5S to<lb/>
the<lb/>
inical<lb/>
lates.<lb/>
the<lb/>
Kier-<lb/>
erts<lb/>
m-<lb/>
rcars<lb/>
ifac-<lb/>
inue<lb/>
an-<lb/>
. an<lb/>
nore<lb/>
Meeting Held On Hunger<lb/>
'This fall we want 10<lb/>
highlight the issue of<lb/>
domestic hunger said<lb/>
Candice Fair, staffper-<lb/>
son with a national<lb/>
Christian citizens lobby<lb/>
organization Bread for<lb/>
the World (BFW).<lb/>
Fair was in Green-<lb/>
Mile on Tuesday with<lb/>
the Rev Kent Outlaw,<lb/>
BFW's North Carolina<lb/>
state coordinator. Fair<lb/>
and Outlaw stopped in<lb/>
Greenville to meet with<lb/>
members of the ECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition as<lb/>
part of their N.C.<lb/>
field t n p which will<lb/>
culminate with a<lb/>
statewide conference in<lb/>
Raleigh this weekend.<lb/>
The spoke before a<lb/>
group 20 students.<lb/>
For the evening<lb/>
presentation BFW<lb/>
covers their series of<lb/>
lobbing techniques us-<lb/>
ed in their efforts to in-<lb/>
fluence Congress to<lb/>
take positive action on<lb/>
bills and resolutions<lb/>
which will benefit<lb/>
hungrv people.<lb/>
?lthough BFW nor-<lb/>
mall) focuses most of<lb/>
their attention on the<lb/>
hunger problems of<lb/>
developing countries.<lb/>
Fair noted that strong<lb/>
action was presently<lb/>
needed to counter<lb/>
Reagan administration<lb/>
efforts to make addi-<lb/>
tional cuts in preventive<lb/>
nutrition programs<lb/>
such as Food Stamps,<lb/>
the school lunch pro-<lb/>
gram. Women Infants<lb/>
and Children (WTC),<lb/>
and Aid for Families<lb/>
With Dependent<lb/>
Children (AFDC).<lb/>
"The churches and<lb/>
Congress are realizing<lb/>
that people are suffer-<lb/>
ing and the need is in-<lb/>
creasing for action<lb/>
said Fair, "and churchs<lb/>
alone can't keep up<lb/>
with the need<lb/>
In response to this<lb/>
problem BFW has<lb/>
lauched an "offering of<lb/>
letters campaign" titled<lb/>
"Preventing Hunger at<lb/>
Home<lb/>
"Preventing Hunger<lb/>
at Hone" is actually a<lb/>
drafted resolution<lb/>
which will be introduc-<lb/>
ed in the US Senate and<lb/>
House of Represen-<lb/>
tatives. BFW members<lb/>
will be asked to send<lb/>
letters to their represen-<lb/>
tatives asking them to<lb/>
co-sponsor the resolu-<lb/>
tion as well as giving<lb/>
their support to the<lb/>
measure. "A resolution<lb/>
is a statement of in-<lb/>
tent said Fair.<lb/>
Fair notes that the<lb/>
resolution will respond<lb/>
to three issues affecting<lb/>
the ability of food pro-<lb/>
grams to effectively<lb/>
protect people in the<lb/>
U.S. from hunger.<lb/>
The three issues of<lb/>
the resolution are the<lb/>
discontinuation of the<lb/>
budget cuts for preven-<lb/>
tive food programs,<lb/>
pointing out the rela-<lb/>
tionship between<lb/>
unemployment and in-<lb/>
flation, and calling on<lb/>
the federal government<lb/>
to be responsible for<lb/>
the successful applica-<lb/>
tion of all nutrition<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Typically the offer-<lb/>
ing of letters is con-<lb/>
ducted around the<lb/>
Thanksgiving season by<lb/>
church congregations,<lb/>
letters are prewritten<lb/>
and then placed in the<lb/>
collection basket as an<lb/>
offering. But any group<lb/>
or individual can con-<lb/>
duct a letter writing<lb/>
campaign at any time.<lb/>
BFW puts out a mon-<lb/>
thly newsletter that in-<lb/>
forms members of cur-<lb/>
rent bills that need<lb/>
hunger lobbying<lb/>
response.<lb/>
Membership in BFW<lb/>
has increased 31 per-<lb/>
cent in one year.<lb/>
Outlaw told the group.<lb/>
North Carolina cur-<lb/>
rently has 801<lb/>
members. National<lb/>
membership in BFW<lb/>
has grown by 13 per-<lb/>
cent. "1 sense a grow-<lb/>
ing awareness of the<lb/>
hunger issue said<lb/>
Outlaw. "Can you im-<lb/>
agine what kind of<lb/>
clout we'd have if we<lb/>
got 800 letters to our<lb/>
legislators?"<lb/>
Outlaw mentioned<lb/>
that his local BFW<lb/>
group got their con-<lb/>
gressman to come to<lb/>
their meetings. "He<lb/>
stays for the whole<lb/>
meeting and asks ques-<lb/>
tions BFW has local<lb/>
groups in Asheville,<lb/>
Charlotte, Davidson,<lb/>
Raleigh, Durham,<lb/>
Chapel Hill, Winston<lb/>
Salem, Bueys Creek<lb/>
and Hickory.<lb/>
Both Fair and<lb/>
Outlaw see education<lb/>
as BFW's first goal.<lb/>
"Action" is our second<lb/>
goal, said Fair. After<lb/>
people become inform-<lb/>
ed, which Fair says in-<lb/>
cludes understanding<lb/>
the relationship bet-<lb/>
ween public policy and1<lb/>
hunger, then she wants<lb/>
them to "participate in<lb/>
an effort with others<lb/>
Understanding the<lb/>
workings of Congress is<lb/>
an integral part of a<lb/>
BhW members work.<lb/>
"Eighty-five to 90 per-<lb/>
cent of the decisions in<lb/>
Congress are made in<lb/>
committees said Fair.<lb/>
To BFW this means<lb/>
lobbying for bills long<lb/>
before they reach the<lb/>
floor for a vote.<lb/>
On the international<lb/>
level Fair said that<lb/>
hunger is often a threat<lb/>
to security. "Poverty<lb/>
has led to unrest in<lb/>
many cases she said.<lb/>
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Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective thru<lb/>
Sat Sept 18. 1982<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057497_0006"/><lb/>
IHt I s CAROl IM <lb/>
si I'll MH1 k lh. I9KJ<lb/>
Gays To Speak On Lifestyle<lb/>
The Last Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community<lb/>
(ECGC) has announced<lb/>
plans to continue their<lb/>
"speakers bureau"<lb/>
during the 1982 1983<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
Members oi the<lb/>
group volunteer to take<lb/>
speaking assignments<lb/>
on the topic ot<lb/>
homosexuality, foi<lb/>
presentations to ECl<lb/>
classes and othei in-<lb/>
terested groups.<lb/>
' 1 h e s (i o a k e i s<lb/>
bureau is t lie best<lb/>
 i sibi 111 thai we<lb/>
have said 1 t. I com<lb/>
munity aits manage<lb/>
meni student Michelle<lb/>
Bennett. "People don't<lb/>
see us in any othei way<lb/>
all they look at is out<lb/>
gay lifestyles Bennett<lb/>
has been actie ith the<lb/>
bureau tor ovei a yeai<lb/>
and she has spoken to<lb/>
classes on five occas<lb/>
sions<lb/>
1 he . (iv hopes<lb/>
that b speaking to<lb/>
people "openly and<lb/>
honestly' about<lb/>
homosexualii . i hey<lb/>
will be able to dispel<lb/>
some ot the myths and<lb/>
stereotypical ideals<lb/>
often associated with<lb/>
gay people<lb/>
" 1 he reason I do the<lb/>
talks is because it I can<lb/>
make one person really<lb/>
understand thai I'm a<lb/>
human being, then I've<lb/>
performed a good set<lb/>
 ice said Mark urn<lb/>
bach, one ol E 'G( 's<lb/>
tou ndmg members.<lb/>
Zumbach claims thai<lb/>
mam people often pre<lb/>
judge a gas person on<lb/>
the basis ol iheir sexual<lb/>
preference withoul<lb/>
regards to all the othei<lb/>
qualities thai con<lb/>
tribute to that persons<lb/>
make-up.<lb/>
Zumbach belives that<lb/>
the talks also encourage<lb/>
people to think about<lb/>
homosexuality and<lb/>
reduces then pre<lb/>
indices. " I he talks can<lb/>
enlighten them a bit<lb/>
he adds.<lb/>
"Most people don't<lb/>
hae any direct real ex-<lb/>
pei i e n ces wit h<lb/>
homosexuals. 1 he talks<lb/>
give them some direct<lb/>
experience said Ben-<lb/>
nett.<lb/>
1 he E til also pro<lb/>
vides support to other<lb/>
gay students on campus<lb/>
through the club's hi<lb/>
monthly programs and<lb/>
through the speakers<lb/>
bureau "I he talks<lb/>
help other gay people<lb/>
on the audience) to<lb/>
know thai they're noi<lb/>
alone said Zumbach.<lb/>
In i he past the<lb/>
speakers bureau has<lb/>
primarily spoken to<lb/>
sociology and<lb/>
psychology classes, but<lb/>
othei classes or groups<lb/>
are welcome to request<lb/>
a speaker.<lb/>
The bureau asks that<lb/>
anyone who would like<lb/>
to request a speaker do<lb/>
so two weeks in ad<lb/>
vance of the speaking<lb/>
engagement They can<lb/>
be reached through per<lb/>
sonal contact with an<lb/>
ICCiC member or b<lb/>
calling the Catholic<lb/>
Newman Center at<lb/>
752-4216.<lb/>
'The biggest tear<lb/>
people have is the<lb/>
unknown said Zum-<lb/>
bach. " I hey don't<lb/>
know or understand<lb/>
homosexuality. I want<lb/>
to remove that tear<lb/>
when I speak<lb/>
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CREDIT<lb/>
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Salary ? $150.00 per month<lb/>
Apply at East Carolinian<lb/>
Office<lb/>
(Located in old South Building)<lb/>
OPENS IN SEPTEMBER AT SPECIALLY<lb/>
SELECTED THEATRES.<lb/>
Check newspapers for theatres.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0007"/><lb/>
V S I k I I I !<lb/>
I I' I I ' 1 Hi h<lb/>
Quick- Witted Birnbach<lb/>
Sartorially Impeccable<lb/>
she explaine ? ; ? k at n<lb/>
action. ne slide pictured i pre bach's lecture j<lb/>
i lothed in the tradh i .? Kh ik . het talk as not i<lb/>
button down shirt. To ind a ' "<lb/>
leathei ia kei He wa<lb/>
Sia) Phot" B( SlftNlf IFAHr<lb/>
. detail, in the life of today's ultra-prep delving into Iheir mx lives "<lb/>
B (.KH.um I KHIHII I<lb/>
rhe sell proclaimed monarch ol<lb/>
pr pdom idledresumably in )a.<lb/>
dy's plane) into Greenville on Mon<lb/>
tiav to lecture II s budding prop course the new pun!<lb/>
pies "ii the Mimes ot pink and Another ,lid ' i potenl<lb/>
n I isa Birnbach, author ol The investment bankei h ? I R<lb/>
Official Preppy Handbook, told a bach's ability to ad-lih I hi l<lb/>
crowd in Hendrix rheatn that the peared out of to<lb/>
I important thing to a prep is .nit. said ii a<lb/>
getting di unk Bn nbach gor deta<lb/>
Birnbach, decked out in official in the life of today' p. She,<lb/>
preppy pink lod and wrap-around to the amaemeni<lb/>
skirt, gave a funny and insightful delved into ih ?? ??<lb/>
look into the world of a preppv Het average prep,<lb/>
humor, although sometimes hard to everybody knows that thi<lb/>
understand, seemed to please both such thing as prep sex In ta<lb/>
preps and non preps put it. the term "prep -o"<lb/>
Hei show was in realm a multi tradiction Hei lescri f Mi<lb/>
media event with -hdes being use Prer rymg I<lb/>
to explain certain asp ol hei local Muttys wa ? ' -<lb/>
- In fact, some ol the funniei due mainly<lb/>
moment ol her<lb/>
show came when shin ac<lb/>
Old And New On Display In 'Ragtime'<lb/>
die;<lb/>
time think<lb/>
how t .<lb/>
k how sad<lb/>
 ?? ? ? ii ?<lb/>
H<lb/>
ejimtely i <lb/>
' W .1 .<lb/>
t w I<lb/>
most av ov<lb/>
(.<lb/>
1 heir<lb/>
ol it shown here,<lb/>
va- iusi as interesting as this film.<lb/>
; i tall about<lb/>
i led Floradora,<lb/>
i w as a beautiful<lb/>
a oman named Evelyn<lb/>
Stanford White, the most<lb/>
ful of New York architects at<lb/>
me, was enchanted with her In<lb/>
a i I velvet sw-<lb/>
 . ely n would ride<lb/>
and proceed to<lb/>
. . mging from<lb/>
ng I eds<lb/>
s hite<lb/>
U old<lb/>
I<lb/>
SI fel in love withhim.<lb/>
. a. in-<lb/>
11 I na not<lb/>
-<lb/>
Im<lb/>
<lb/>
V1 ?a<lb/>
M ?<lb/>
?dei<lb/>
w ho<lb/>
<lb/>
an<lb/>
remembei. this<lb/>
90 B vail it gets bettei<lb/>
I fell in love with Harry<lb/>
aw , a Pennsylvania<lb/>
 e He took 1 elyn and her<lb/>
tnd also showered<lb/>
pon her. But one night during<lb/>
a thunderstorm, whip in hand, he<lb/>
1; went to court, but<lb/>
Mthii ? i they were dating<lb/>
spite attention trom<lb/>
: w ? ??; . elyn married<lb/>
ibout her roll in<lb/>
the hay with White, and Thaw<lb/>
ild get very excited by the story.<lb/>
He especially liked the stones about<lb/>
the swing, and as Evelyn told him he<lb/>
would ring his hands and shout,<lb/>
'? I he beast' 1 he tilths beast<lb/>
I her -?:? lune 25, 1906, Harry K.<lb/>
I haw si ' Stanford White and kill-<lb/>
ed h m at a concert. It went to court.<lb/>
and the whole scandal broke. It was<lb/>
the talk ol New York tor months.<lb/>
1 haw's rationalization was that he<lb/>
killed White for sleeping with his perversions and<lb/>
wife when she was but 16. He was ties<lb/>
declared not guilty by reason ol in- Kagame boas- some impressivce<lb/>
sanity. Evelyn starred in some silent acting talent 1 already mentioned<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ami<lb/>
i<lb/>
ated <lb/>
Mary'?<lb/>
i ? <lb/>
 cholson in Goin South Ii<lb/>
ly, it was N<lb/>
her. She i e all tl<lb/>
iv tha ? gal '<lb/>
w a ?<lb/>
. :<lb/>
?<lb/>
from V<lb/>
<lb/>
Sleenburgen: "I'm noi too good in he inn I'm just as true as I can be.<lb/>
tilms and<lb/>
Thaw got<lb/>
died, during<lb/>
arrested a<lb/>
died di<lb/>
he<lb/>
? ties<lb/>
lot foi his<lb/>
rinu the foi<lb/>
( agney, but some ot the best act<lb/>
nes from relative unknow<lb/>
Howard 1 Rolhns. as Coalho<lb/>
Walker, gies what is probably<lb/>
ing<lb/>
ns.<lb/>
use<lb/>
the<lb/>
u u ess, but tor two yea<lb/>
a waiti md b<lb/>
was i ent<lb/>
fot doin' South, tl<lb/>
w anted<lb/>
However, iw her,<lb/>
her. and decided ght<lb/>
?<lb/>
, Timi 1<lb/>
Tinu he 1 with M<lb/>
McDowe<lb/>
him She won a ? ' v ??<lb/>
hei next film. Xtelvin ami<lb/>
Howard as supporting at tress<lb/>
Since then sin. has be ei Rag ??<lb/>
and played i opposite V dy <lb/>
1 Midsummer Sight's Sexon<lb/>
Sht u dei ?<lb/>
about her success, but maybe<lb/>
sad. too<lb/>
"To suddenly have a dream ac-<lb/>
tually happen - there's a little e<lb/>
that goes with it, because y<lb/>
to take everybody ?? i and<lb/>
yne. eff ?<lb/>
them arc fruitless<lb/>
Is Mary the i I gn<lb/>
he is? "I k sht says<lb/>
" I'm a mess likt ne else <lb/>
know Cone M ith (he M<lb/>
always related ro Sea<lb/>
Melanie<lb/>
?n final thoughts' "I'm noi<lb/>
good to be 11 ue. I'm just .is true as 1<lb/>
can be<lb/>
'?<lb/>
Earlier Thar<lb/>
Same Evening<lb/>
Lisa B " 1 in a <lb/>
vork w<lb/>
sal ?? ' a I<lb/>
Monda . night. She w<lb/>
- i<lb/>
B  Of<lb/>
ficial Preppy Handbook .<lb/>
wordsthe foremost aui<lb/>
v to 1<lb/>
?w<lb/>
"Prep is hen stay a<lb/>
course, ts beei ?<lb/>
? nmdim<lb/>
school, Boston I atin she sa<lb/>
f,repp. now. is a b<lb/>
Birnbach explained that manul<lb/>
ers ol prep mei<lb/>
ing then biggest  ; ei s'<lb/>
cash inj<lb/>
Her book was pu<lb/>
. ? . ?.<lb/>
v 8 ie I nivei I ?<lb/>
Sort! Dakota at (irand ??? k-<lb/>
'AU definition o? preppy<lb/>
bach explained, "is someb d<lb/>
See SGI I Ml KN. Page 9<lb/>
The Pope &amp; I<lb/>
Will '60 Minutes' Call Again?<lb/>
 ditor'<lb/>
i <lb/>
So,I,<lb/>
Publishes<lb/>
rrnn 1<lb/>
, , erview, reprinted from<lb/>
Dftonesbury, is (he only extensive inter<lb/>
H Trudeau Permission to use the<lb/>
inted ' by Vf; Trudeau and<lb/>
i njunt fion with the an<lb/>
 eave oj absent ?? trom the<lb/>
nebur (set Sept 14 edition oj this<lb/>
evera veai ?. the editors<lb/>
pet uadi i artoomst G H<lb/>
? ,?  ?: ? m e thoughts about<lb/>
. v- . xhi arating eek before<lb/>
Trudeau was believed to have<lb/>
, , ?, h( we et 'till not blossom<lb/>
?? following interne was<lb/>
under (he false understanding it<lb/>
? , : , ! rem h film magazine<lb/>
? ? final transi ript was, certain oj<lb/>
? ? tut fot i lanjh atton or ad<lb/>
?. ason, his ren 5 hae been<lb/>
d<lb/>
11<lb/>
i<lb/>
you've had, why have<lb/>
pi i tuuitie's<lb/>
? . hesi man's yeai<lb/>
aj, in Pet haps because it re<lb/>
? an I'd like It you're serious<lb/>
i publk image, unlike building a<lb/>
? something you can do in the privacy<lb/>
i living room It's not just that tame is cor<lb/>
.nsuming You're always bus trying<lb/>
your latest version o! yourseli (For<lb/>
? on, iv<lb/>
Trudeau, sa is anonymity. He once hid in his bathroom<lb/>
for three hours to avoid a reporter trom the Baltimore<lb/>
Sun i<lb/>
Q Aren't we all?<lb/>
1 Yes, but it's nice not to have to shave beforehand.<lb/>
Listen, some years ago I did a talk show in Boston 1<lb/>
was 22, and I'd been doing the strip foi about six mon<lb/>
ths. Atter a brief introduction, the hostess turned to me<lb/>
and asked what it was like to he rich, famous and eligi<lb/>
ble. 1 hadn't the faintest idea what she was talking<lb/>
about. Atter staring at her in dumb panii foi about five<lb/>
seconds, I finally iust rolled my eyes I he hostess look<lb/>
ed very pleased and cut to a commercial I nevei did<lb/>
another television show (Not entirely true He did ap<lb/>
pear on To Tell the Truth, where only one oj the tout<lb/>
panelists chose him over the two impostors Trudeau<lb/>
walked away with 56" and a pair of fade cujjlinks i<lb/>
Q You must have been tempted, though. I read<lb/>
somewhere that you and Pope John Paul are the only<lb/>
two people ever to have tinned down an interview with<lb/>
611 finutes.<lb/>
4: Well, 1 don't think too much should be made ol<lb/>
that. With the Pope, there was a scheduling conflict.<lb/>
I hey tried to book him on Easter, which is pretty ai<lb/>
rogant if sou think about it In my ease. I missed the<lb/>
message on m answering service l nless you've been<lb/>
detrauding widows out ol their life savings, f0 Minutes<lb/>
doesn't call twice. (Trudeau's answering sen n e, I IP oj<lb/>
New Haven, played a continuing role in the cartoonist's<lb/>
isolation from the outside world at least it did until a<lb/>
See TRUDEA1 . Page X<lb/>
c 1976 b OB Trudeau<lb/>
lhe Donnesbun bunch: Waiting breatblissis for another call trom Mike. Harrv. or Morley<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0008"/><lb/>
fHE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SfcPll MM R 16. 1982<lb/>
Trudeau Blew Pulitzer Cash On Bills<lb/>
C ontinued From Page 7<lb/>
crate of orginal strips belonging to<lb/>
Trudeau was removed Jrom its of-<lb/>
fice only to be recovered in a police<lb/>
raid on the Sunshine Girls Escort<lb/>
Service in Hamden, Conn. Sun-<lb/>
shine's unlucky social director was<lb/>
subsequently convicted oj Jirst-<lb/>
degree larceny, partly on the<lb/>
strength of Trudeau s ability to<lb/>
recognize his own work in court.)<lb/>
O. That sounds a shade in-<lb/>
genuous, but let's go on. . . You<lb/>
are reported to go to some lengths<lb/>
when you are preparing a sequence<lb/>
in the strip. How much research do<lb/>
you really do?<lb/>
A As little as I can possibly get<lb/>
away with. It is for this quality<lb/>
above all others, 1 think, that I am<lb/>
so admired by undergraduates; I<lb/>
know just enough to create the im-<lb/>
pression 1 know a lot. And, of<lb/>
course, being a cartoonist helps. It it<lb/>
vseren't for the hopelessly low ex-<lb/>
pectations vMth which people turn to<lb/>
my section of the newspaper, I'm<lb/>
sure I would have been exposed<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
O: You know, it you're going to<lb/>
continue being self-effacing, we<lb/>
might as well forget the whole thing.<lb/>
Frankly, it's not very interesting.<lb/>
Don't you feel good about yourself?<lb/>
4: Of course I feel good about<lb/>
myself. You don't think I've got<lb/>
reason to? What's the Pulitzer<lb/>
Prize, chopped liver? (When<lb/>
Trudeau, m 1975, became the Jirst<lb/>
comic-strip artist to win the Pulitzer<lb/>
Prize for Editorial Cartooning, the<lb/>
Editorial Cartoonists' Society pro<lb/>
posed a resolution condemning the<lb/>
Pulitzer committee. Trudeau, once<lb/>
assured the award was irrevocable,<lb/>
supported the resolution.)<lb/>
Q. Okay, okay. Tell us about the<lb/>
prize.<lb/>
A. What's to tell. . . .It's the<lb/>
classiest award in America. No din-<lb/>
ner, no acceptance speeches, no TV<lb/>
show. They just call you up and say,<lb/>
"Good going, the check is in the<lb/>
mail Everybody in my<lb/>
neighborhood was very proud of<lb/>
me. My grocer asked me what I was<lb/>
going to do with the two hundred<lb/>
thousand dollars. I think he thought<lb/>
I won the Pulitzer on a quiz show.<lb/>
(The award was actually in the<lb/>
amount oj $2,000. Trudeau blew<lb/>
most oj it on household bills and<lb/>
some unnecessary minor surgery.)<lb/>
Q: Speaking of easy money, why<lb/>
haven't you gotten into product<lb/>
licensing? The annual gross of the<lb/>
Peanuts empire is said to exceed the<lb/>
GNP of your average emerging na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
A: Well, Sparky Schultz simply<lb/>
takes the position that the spin-offs<lb/>
make people happy. I have no pro-<lb/>
blem with that position, but with the<lb/>
exception of the books, I prefer to<lb/>
keep my characters on the reserva-<lb/>
tion. Perhaps it's because there's no<lb/>
logical connection between my<lb/>
characters and a lunch box . . .<lb/>
unless, of course, you find the logic<lb/>
of the profit motive irresistible.<lb/>
Q: May we assume you'd loan<lb/>
your characters out for charity?<lb/>
(ihe inteniewer's facetiousness was<lb/>
unwarranted. Trudeau had in fact<lb/>
once used several oj his characters<lb/>
to promote a Connecticut Red Cross<lb/>
blood drive.)<lb/>
4: You're missing the point. It's a<lb/>
matter of artistic pride. I think the<lb/>
case against merchandising was best<lb/>
made by the nine-year-old boy who<lb/>
once wrote to inquire why I wasn't<lb/>
selling any Poonsebury<lb/>
"by-products<lb/>
Q. You seem to be preoccupied<lb/>
with the idea of purity in your work.<lb/>
A: Somebody has to be. If you<lb/>
have a good editor, as I had for 10<lb/>
years in Jim Andrews, you come to<lb/>
realize that the inner life of a comic<lb/>
strip is a very fragile ecosystem.<lb/>
(Andrews realized Trudeau's limita-<lb/>
tions. He once described the car-<lb/>
toonist as "a thoughtJul, creative,<lb/>
and highly concerned young man<lb/>
who is out to make a fast buck. ").<lb/>
has its own rules, its own time<lb/>
frames, its own internal logic. That<lb/>
logic may be completely askew, but<lb/>
if you tinker with it, the chances are<lb/>
pretty good the whole thing will col-<lb/>
lapse.<lb/>
Q: Could you elaborate?<lb/>
A: Yes, but I'd rather not. I only<lb/>
put in that last bit for people who<lb/>
might be working on dissertations.<lb/>
Q: That's very thoughtful, but . .<lb/>
A: Look, E.B. White once com-<lb/>
pared the analysis of humor to<lb/>
dissecting a frog; that is, it can be<lb/>
done, but the frog tends to die in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Q. Where do you see satire going<lb/>
in the decade ahead?<lb/>
A: You're asking me to predict a<lb/>
trend? You must be mad. 1 only do<lb/>
postmortems.<lb/>
Q. All right, where has satire<lb/>
been? What about Saturday Sight<lb/>
Live!<lb/>
A: A magnificent missed oppor-<lb/>
tunity. The reason why SNL<lb/>
ultimately doesn't matter is that the<lb/>
show never developed a point of<lb/>
view. Originally, the program pro-<lb/>
duced some pretty good guerrilla<lb/>
theater, but with its success, it<lb/>
quickly evolved into a smug exercise<lb/>
in slash-and-burn humor ? anarchy<lb/>
for its own sake. Nothing of value<lb/>
was ever left standing. This was a<lb/>
major failing, I think, because great<lb/>
satire has always had some sort of<lb/>
moral underpinnings ? just ask<lb/>
Richard Pryor or Lily Tomlin.<lb/>
ARC ADt VARIETY<lb/>
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E.C. BODY WORKS<lb/>
Discount to ECU Students,<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Also Retirees<lb/>
305 Airport Rd.<lb/>
752-4470<lb/>
Mike Propst, Owner<lb/>
9-5 Monday-Friday<lb/>
?,<lb/>
 f The best Pizza<lb/>
J in Town ? Honest Vj<lb/>
LUNCH BUFFET Mon thru Fri H-2 only 2.89<lb/>
p? EVENING BUFFET Mon and Tue$ 5 30 8pm only 2.99<lb/>
m??SPAGHETTI Wed alt vou can eat Compare at only 2.25?<lb/>
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v1<lb/>
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Enjoy the SOAPS with lunch or<lb/>
CURRENT MOVIES(PG) Sat 7pm 9pm<lb/>
Open Mon Thurs. 11:30 a.m. 11 p.m.<lb/>
Fri and Sat? 11 30 a.m. 12 p. m<lb/>
300 E 10th St<lb/>
Lis. 7586121 L9i<lb/>
S<lb/>
Q: Or Garry Trudeau?<lb/>
A: Yes, but don't look for convic-<lb/>
tion. I'm like Don Corleone. I've<lb/>
got a business to run.<lb/>
Q: That's how you justify cuffing<lb/>
people for a living?<lb/>
A: Absolutely. It's my job. I'm a<lb/>
form of social control. I make no<lb/>
apologies.<lb/>
Q: Perhaps you should. One of<lb/>
the things that troubles some people<lb/>
about Doonesbury is that it's hard<lb/>
to know when you're reporting and<lb/>
when you're making things up. For<lb/>
instance, did Jerry Brown really<lb/>
solicit a political contribution from<lb/>
Sidney Korshak, the alleged<lb/>
organized-crime figure, as you<lb/>
charged in one series?<lb/>
A: Yes, actually Brown doesn't<lb/>
deny this. (When asked by NBC<lb/>
reporter Brian Ross, who originally<lb/>
broke (he story, why he had<lb/>
solicited a contribution Jrom a man<lb/>
chronically under Jederal investiga-<lb/>
tion, Brown replied, "Even Jane<lb/>
Eonda was once investigated by (he<lb/>
FBI Later, he described other<lb/>
charges made in the strip as "Jalse<lb/>
and libelous, " but declined to press<lb/>
the issue on the novel grounds that<lb/>
"the First Amendment allows libel<lb/>
by the press. ") But most California<lb/>
papers killed the strips on the<lb/>
grounds that I had trampled the<lb/>
rights of a man the FBI had called<lb/>
one of the most influential mobsters<lb/>
in the country. Whimsically enough,<lb/>
the only two papers outside of<lb/>
Brown's home state to share this<lb/>
concern were located in ? you<lb/>
guessed it ? Reno and I.as Vegas.<lb/>
O: Do vou know Brown personal-<lb/>
ly?<lb/>
A: Nope. I once met Linda,<lb/>
which, of course, I recognize as not<lb/>
being the same thing.<lb/>
Q: Some of Brown's admirers<lb/>
charge you've been uncommonly<lb/>
tough on him. (Tom Havden,<lb/>
among other disinterested<lb/>
observers, wrote that Trudeau's<lb/>
view oj Brown was "bigoted)<lb/>
Perhaps if you got to know him,<lb/>
you'd feel differently about him.<lb/>
4: Fxactly. Which is as good an<lb/>
excuse as any to pass. One of the<lb/>
reasons why public figures get to be<lb/>
public figures in the first place is<lb/>
that they are not without charm. In-<lb/>
sisting, as a Geroge Will does, that<lb/>
one must get in close to make those<lb/>
lovely, nuanced judgement calls is<lb/>
utter nonsense. I'm not interested in<lb/>
private assurances or endearments,<lb/>
the insider's "access I'm in-<lb/>
terested in what the outsider sees ?<lb/>
the public face the politician<lb/>
chooses to be judged on. Nothing<lb/>
could be fairer. He's setting the<lb/>
agenda; I'm merely reacting.<lb/>
Q: You're all heart.<lb/>
A. Actually, I'm all bov It you<lb/>
think this business is tun. vou're<lb/>
right. . . .<lb/>
IPrI&amp;kw <lb/>
Tickets Co<lb/>
On Sale<lb/>
Season tickets h<lb/>
gone on sale tor the<lb/>
ECU Plavhousc season<lb/>
ot musicals, Jran<lb/>
and dance concerts<lb/>
be presented in the<lb/>
newly-renovated<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
AceordiUK<lb/>
Playhouse General<lb/>
Manager Scott Park'<lb/>
the 1982-83 season, rhe<lb/>
firsl full season ol<lb/>
shows to be produced<lb/>
in the John D Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts C enter,<lb/>
?"is gome t be a season<lb/>
ot tremendous anc<lb/>
tv<lb/>
" e'll be producing<lb/>
everything from comic<lb/>
operetta to contem<lb/>
porary drain a <lb/>
modern dance, using<lb/>
some ot the m<lb/>
sophisticated theatre<lb/>
equipment available,1'<lb/>
he said<lb/>
S ited I open the<lb/>
sea-on Oct. 28 $0 i<lb/>
No i and ; is I he<lb/>
Mikado, to he prodtu<lb/>
See 'MIKADO, P?? '<lb/>
t<lb/>
 'n<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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$1.00 Off<lb/>
Any Plate ? With Coupon<lb/>
Fri. or Sat. Only - 4:30 p.m9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Cliff's Seafood House &amp;<lb/>
Oyster Bar<lb/>
W?ih.ngton Highway (N C 33 E?tGreenville- Phone 753 3172<lb/>
OXE COUPON PER PERSON<lb/>
USED BOOKS &amp;<lb/>
MAGAZINE SALE<lb/>
Sheppard Memorial Library<lb/>
Saturday, September 18,1982<lb/>
9:00 A.M200 P.M.<lb/>
Main Library Lawn<lb/>
530 Evans St Greenville<lb/>
MWJtWP<lb/>
Angel Flight is an honorary, professional, service<lb/>
organization of dedicated individuals from leading<lb/>
colleges across the nation It is an organization that<lb/>
works closely with Air Force ROTC, however<lb/>
membership in Angel Flight requires no military<lb/>
obligation. Fun activities are socials Military 6-<lb/>
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rewarding service projects, too, that make you feel<lb/>
good about yourself. If you're interested in having<lb/>
fun, Angel Flight is for you!<lb/>
RUSH DATES TO REMEMBER<lb/>
Attend 2 out of 3<lb/>
Tues Sept. 20th, 7:00, Wright Annex, Rm. 201<lb/>
 SUBMARINE PARTY<lb/>
Wed Sept. 21, 7:00, Wright Annex, "Rm 201<lb/>
ICE CREAM PARTY<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 22, 7:00, Elm St. Park COOK OUT<lb/>
I<lb/>
T3<lb/>
HE<lb/>
Karate Instructions<lb/>
Free<lb/>
For ECU Students Only<lb/>
Male &amp; Female Classes<lb/>
Information &amp; Registration ? Thurs. 16th<lb/>
Memorial Gym ? Dance Room<lb/>
Head Instructor ? Bill McDonald<lb/>
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Will be present to answer all questions.<lb/>
a<lb/>
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Good till kick-off ? Sat. 18th<lb/>
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ST. JAMES<lb/>
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PICK-UP SCHEDULE<lb/>
Students who wish to attend Sunday morning worship ser<lb/>
vices, but do not hae a ride, may attend the worship ser<lb/>
vice at St. James United Methodist Church by observing<lb/>
the following schedule. The church van will be used to<lb/>
transport students to and from the church.<lb/>
10:10<lb/>
Methodist Student Center<lb/>
10:12<lb/>
Garrett Resident Hall<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
Jarvis Resident Hall<lb/>
10:17<lb/>
Fleming Resident Hall<lb/>
10:20<lb/>
Cotton Resident Hall<lb/>
10:25<lb/>
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10:27<lb/>
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10:30<lb/>
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10:40<lb/>
St. James United<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0009"/><lb/>
'Mikado' A Salute To Southern Preps Neater<lb/>
ECTC Of Early 1900s<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 16. 1982<lb/>
( oniinued Krom Page 8<lb/>
ed in conjunction with<lb/>
the ECU School of<lb/>
Music One of the most<lb/>
be 1 o v e d m usical<lb/>
frivolities in the hnglish<lb/>
language and written<lb/>
bs the legendary team<lb/>
of Cnibert and Sullivan.<lb/>
The Mikado is the<lb/>
lyrical and comic tale<lb/>
ol Fantastic happenings<lb/>
in a mythical Japanese<lb/>
illage of Titipu.<lb/>
The fikado is<lb/>
scheduled intentionally<lb/>
tor ECU's "5th an-<lb/>
niversary year, as a<lb/>
salute to successful<lb/>
Mikado productions at<lb/>
 ast Carolina Teachers<lb/>
Training School in 1913<lb/>
and I915. This will bo<lb/>
i h e fourth Fast<lb/>
Carolina production of<lb/>
this perenially popular<lb/>
favorite; it was also<lb/>
presented b the Ed<lb/>
summer Theatre in<lb/>
967<lb/>
The Shadow H(<lb/>
illows as the mext<lb/>
ain stage production<lb/>
on Dec. 2-6. This<lb/>
highly-acclaimed and<lb/>
werful drama ac-<lb/>
complished the rare<lb/>
teat of winning both<lb/>
the Pulitzer Prize and<lb/>
the Tony Award. It is<lb/>
set in a California cot-<lb/>
tage, where three peo-<lb/>
ple Use in a controver-<lb/>
sial experimental health<lb/>
center presided over bv<lb/>
an omniscient inter-<lb/>
viewer.<lb/>
Modern dance, ballet<lb/>
and jazz dance will be<lb/>
performed bv students<lb/>
in ECU's<lb/>
professionally-oriented<lb/>
dance programs in an<lb/>
EC Dance Theatre<lb/>
program Jan. 27-29.<lb/>
The Playhouse will<lb/>
present the North<lb/>
Carolina premiere pro-<lb/>
duction of Robert ln-<lb/>
gham's Luster Feb.<lb/>
17-22. This riveting<lb/>
drama recounts the<lb/>
famed battle ot Little<lb/>
Big Horn - what really<lb/>
happened on that<lb/>
fateful day and who<lb/>
was to blame for the<lb/>
bloody massacre the<lb/>
nation will never<lb/>
forget.<lb/>
Rounding out the<lb/>
Playhouse season will<lb/>
be Our Town, to be<lb/>
presented April 14-19.<lb/>
One of the most<lb/>
cherished and popular<lb/>
plays in the history of<lb/>
the American stage,<lb/>
Our Town is Thorton<lb/>
Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-<lb/>
winning chronicle of<lb/>
the way life was lived in<lb/>
a typical fictitious little<lb/>
New Hampshire town<lb/>
in the early years of this<lb/>
century.<lb/>
"With all the<lb/>
sophisticatd new equip-<lb/>
ment now installed in<lb/>
the theatre, we're going<lb/>
to produce some<lb/>
technically complex<lb/>
shows that were never<lb/>
possible for us to do<lb/>
before said General<lb/>
Manager Parker.<lb/>
All five productions<lb/>
will be directed, design-<lb/>
ed and choreographed<lb/>
by the professional<lb/>
theatre members of<lb/>
ECU's drama faculty.<lb/>
Season tickets may<lb/>
be purchased in the<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts<lb/>
Center each weekday<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 4<lb/>
p.m or ordered<lb/>
through the mail. Mail<lb/>
orders should be ad-<lb/>
dressed to ECU<lb/>
Playhouse, Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
believes that animals belong on<lb/>
clothing and not in nature<lb/>
Most preppies assume that prep is<lb/>
the same across the nation, and<lb/>
everbody conforms to the same<lb/>
standards. Not so says Birnbach.<lb/>
"Southern preps are much more<lb/>
into pink and green, are much<lb/>
neater than preps elsewhere. The<lb/>
men tend to starch their shirts or<lb/>
have them starched for them.<lb/>
"In the Northeast, it's much slop-<lb/>
pier; it's much more layered; it's<lb/>
much more casual; it's older clothes<lb/>
with holes and things Birnbach<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
California preppies, she said,<lb/>
were in a class by themselves. Their<lb/>
prep is much shieker and more a<lb/>
part of a costume.<lb/>
"In Texas Birnbach said, "it's<lb/>
all Ralph Lauren<lb/>
Being a preppy used to mean go-<lb/>
ing to expensive boarding schools<lb/>
and the most prestigous Ivy League<lb/>
colleges. It used to mean money.<lb/>
Now, says Birnbach, prep is all<lb/>
it's<lb/>
has<lb/>
very<lb/>
gone<lb/>
classes. She thinks<lb/>
radical" that prep<lb/>
southern.<lb/>
Preppy also cuts across political<lb/>
lines. Birnbach said prominent<lb/>
preps include Teddy Kennedy as<lb/>
well as William Buckley Jr. She<lb/>
says, breaking into a preppy form of<lb/>
French, "It's very 'egalite "<lb/>
"I recently saw a sanitation<lb/>
worker wearing a jumpsuit and<lb/>
Topsiders, and it was really a<lb/>
fabulous look she said.<lb/>
Preps can expect more upper-<lb/>
crust reading material from Birn-<lb/>
bach. She is currently working on a<lb/>
book titled Etiquette For the Pref-<lb/>
fered Lifestyle, and writing a<lb/>
screenplay which she describes as<lb/>
"deep and yet very shallow<lb/>
Birnbach also plans to write a<lb/>
book about her experiences while<lb/>
lecturing.<lb/>
As she got up off the table, and<lb/>
got ready to go on stage, she shared<lb/>
one final secret, "Are there<lb/>
alligators on my undergarments?<lb/>
Let me say this, no unnatural fiber<lb/>
has ever touched my body<lb/>
Godfather's<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Dishes and Over 700 DiMerent<lb/>
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Boots S3? ?5<lb/>
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ARCADE VARIETY<lb/>
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Cigarettes<lb/>
King's 52C<lb/>
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Breakfast,<lb/>
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6 oz. Rib-Eye<lb/>
Baked Potato and trip to salad bar<lb/>
also a complimentary aass of wine ?<lb/>
$6.50<lb/>
all for only<lb/>
NEW AND<lb/>
USED BOOKS<lb/>
1 Evans St. Mall 752 3333<lb/>
Open 7 days a week ? 9:00a.m. 6.00 p.m<lb/>
1000's of<lb/>
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We BUY &amp; sell<lb/>
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SHIVER SURPLUS<lb/>
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NEXT TO COSARTSAUTO SUPPLY<lb/>
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CALENDAR!<lb/>
WTJ<lb/>
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IIIMMI I.II .11.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
All New<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
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70 All Night<lb/>
Admission $1.00<lb/>
fs There's nothing academic about<lb/>
Ip among the first in your school to order the<lb/>
s 1?3 Campuf Calendar featuring 1 2 of the<lb/>
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f puses this year These gorgeous honevs<lb/>
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yours fill out the coupon below enclose a<lb/>
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you the 13" 15" color J<lb/>
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f f We II also tell vou how<lb/>
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N. luxurys 000 Spring<lb/>
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Friday<lb/>
End of the Week Party<lb/>
3:30-7:30 ? Free Adm. for all ECU ?udents<lb/>
3.30-4:30 ?All Ponies 30C<lb/>
4:30-7.30 ? All Cans 65C<lb/>
Friday 9-11 ? All Cans 65c All Ladies'<lb/>
w Happy Hour Stamp Admitted FREE<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
Sunday ? Ladies' Nite ? Free Admission for Ladies'<lb/>
&amp; 5c Draft while it lasts.<lb/>
758-4591 417 Cotanche St. (Downtown)<lb/>
??????-?-?-?-?-?-? ? ????-?-?-?-?-?-???-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-???-?????-???-?????-???WW n nnnn ??m<lb/>
European Trained Hairstylists<lb/>
GBiem<lb/>
TREBE<lb/>
V ECU'S Literary-Art Magazine<lb/>
"Columbia Scholastic Press Associations<lb/>
First Place ? Medalist in 1982"<lb/>
 CONTEST SERIES<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Entry date ? November 5, 1982.<lb/>
Seven Categories, each offering $50.00 First Prize<lb/>
$150.00 ? Best in Show.<lb/>
Prose<lb/>
Deadline ? November 1, 1982.<lb/>
All genres. $125.00, First Prize. $100.00,<lb/>
Second Prize. $75.00, Third Prize.<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
Deadline ? November 1, 1982.<lb/>
$90.00 First Prize, $70.00 Second Prize,<lb/>
$40.00 Third Prize.<lb/>
AII prize money provided by the A TTK and Budneiser.<lb/>
V't<lb/>
  ???!? 7bL. it<lb/>
We have the latest European hairstyles on<lb/>
videotape. Call ahead or come by today to<lb/>
select the new fall hairstyle for you.<lb/>
Mon. Sat. 9 6 756 6200<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
Modern Laundramats<lb/>
Close to Campus<lb/>
10th St.Across from Krispy Kreme (752-6117)<lb/>
14th St. 1 Block from the "Hill" (752-9636)<lb/>
?Large capacity washers<lb/>
? Lots Dryer<lb/>
?Color TV's with cable<lb/>
?Video Games<lb/>
? FluffFold Service<lb/>
?10th St. ? Open 24 hrs<lb/>
?Attendants<lb/>
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315 Stantonburg Road<lb/>
Take Out Service &amp;<lb/>
Banquet Facilities<lb/>
758-4600<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
sf PTEMBER 16. 192<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
<lb/>
Emory: Best Team Did Not Win<lb/>
After having time to evaluate last<lb/>
Saturday night's game against N.C.<lb/>
State, head football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory believes N.C. State's Monte<lb/>
Kiffin should be congratulated.<lb/>
"1 do want to say that Monte Kif-<lb/>
fin ought to be congratulated<lb/>
because he won a game that he<lb/>
shouldn't have won. He beat a team<lb/>
that was better than N.C. State and<lb/>
I really believe that. Anytime you do<lb/>
that, it's a great coaching job<lb/>
Emory said at the Greenville<lb/>
Athletic Club on Tuesday.<lb/>
After studying game film, Emory<lb/>
not only saw mistakes by the players<lb/>
but also by the officials.<lb/>
Emory, however, does not blame<lb/>
the officials for the loss. "Penalties<lb/>
hurt us, but the officials did not cost<lb/>
us the ballgame he said. "We cost<lb/>
ourselves the ballgame by making<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
But although the head coach said<lb/>
the ACC officials didn't beat the<lb/>
Pirates, he phrased it as being an<lb/>
"odd-officiated" game.<lb/>
For example, ECU's Jeff Heath<lb/>
appeared to have kicked a good<lb/>
field goal but the officials didn't<lb/>
think so. "A lot of people have ask-<lb/>
ed me what was wrong with thte<lb/>
third field goal Jeff Heath tried<lb/>
Emory said. "The only thing I can<lb/>
tell you people is that it must have<lb/>
been too high. I thought it was good<lb/>
and all our people on the field<lb/>
thought it was good<lb/>
During tiie second half of the<lb/>
game, officials called a time-out<lb/>
because o the noise of the crowd ?<lb/>
something Emory has never seen<lb/>
done before. "I've never seen of-<lb/>
ficials call time-out to quiet the<lb/>
home crowd he said, which occur-<lb/>
red when State was on ECU's one-<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
The most puzzling call came when<lb/>
the Pirates switched from the<lb/>
1-formation into the shotgun. An<lb/>
official fell down and called a time-<lb/>
out, thus eliminating any element of<lb/>
surprise. "Maybe we surprised him<lb/>
(the official) so much going to the<lb/>
shotgun, I don't know Emory<lb/>
said. "But that gave State time to<lb/>
make two substitutions, so we went<lb/>
back to the l-formation on a fourth<lb/>
and one<lb/>
Because of so many questionable<lb/>
calls, Emory said he thinks ECU<lb/>
should have been able to bring along<lb/>
a few officials. "We should have a<lb/>
split crew when we play at N.C.<lb/>
State or any university he said.<lb/>
"We should have that courtesy and<lb/>
our kids should have that oppor-<lb/>
tunity. I promise you if N.C. State<lb/>
goesanywhere else to play they play<lb/>
with a split crew<lb/>
Despite the officiating, Emory<lb/>
said he was really pleased with the<lb/>
offensive team. "N.C. State has<lb/>
one of the best coached teams in the<lb/>
country he said. "Monte Kiffin<lb/>
and his coach are outstanding<lb/>
defensive coaches. They make you<lb/>
come the hard way. Anytime you<lb/>
get 366 yards and 21 first downs,<lb/>
you've done a good job<lb/>
The Pirates tried to make a com-<lb/>
eback in the fourth quarter but end-<lb/>
ed up just seven points short. "The<lb/>
reason our kids didn't give up when<lb/>
they were 14 points down with three<lb/>
minutes to go is because they have<lb/>
so much invested Emory said.<lb/>
"The more you have invested in a<lb/>
program, the more you're going to<lb/>
fight for it<lb/>
Revenge To Be Big<lb/>
Factor On Saturday<lb/>
The Pirates will face East Ten-<lb/>
nessee State this Saturday night at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, and there's no<lb/>
doubt that East Tennessee's main<lb/>
motive will be revenge.<lb/>
In last year's homecoming game,<lb/>
the Pirates ran up its highest point<lb/>
total since 1959, beating the Buc-<lb/>
caneers, 66-23. Nine different<lb/>
Pirates scored and a defensive team<lb/>
led by Jody Schulz, Mike Grant and<lb/>
Clint Harris held East Tennessee to<lb/>
125 yards rushing.<lb/>
During an interview with East<lb/>
Tennessee's head coach Jack Carli-<lb/>
sle this summer, he said the Bucs<lb/>
would like to win, of course, or at<lb/>
least not get embarrassed again as in<lb/>
last year's game.<lb/>
"One thing's for sure Carlisle<lb/>
said. "We'll try not to get beaten as<lb/>
badly this year<lb/>
The Buccaneers now have a 0-2-0<lb/>
record so far this season after losing<lb/>
to Tennessee Tech, 14-0, and VMI,<lb/>
21-3.<lb/>
In the Tennessee Tech game, East<lb/>
Tennessee's new quarterback Walt<lb/>
Bowlin set a record for most passes<lb/>
attempted in a single game and tied<lb/>
for second for most passes com-<lb/>
pleted. Bowlin, a 6-2, 199-pound<lb/>
sophomore, completed 23 of 42<lb/>
passes for 207 yards. Paul Rose, a<lb/>
5-11, 176-pound wide receiver,<lb/>
caught nine passes for 120 yards to<lb/>
break the Bucs' previous record.<lb/>
Carlisle said the primary reason<lb/>
the Bucs lost the game was because<lb/>
they were unable to mount any<lb/>
ground offense.<lb/>
Now in his fifth season at East<lb/>
Tennessee, Carlisle has had winning<lb/>
seasons in two of the last three<lb/>
years. He reported having a good<lb/>
recuiting year, including the addi-<lb/>
tion of some blue chip prospects.<lb/>
Carlisle's staff recruited all over the<lb/>
United States, signing players from<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Respect Does Not Come<lb/>
Easily For ECU Coach<lb/>
Tennessee, Virginia, Pennsylvania,<lb/>
Georgia, Florida. Ohio and<lb/>
Mississippi.<lb/>
Emory is also aware of Carlisle's<lb/>
recruiting success. "They've got<lb/>
some good talent he said. "We<lb/>
recruited a lot of the same players<lb/>
they did<lb/>
With only five seniors on the<lb/>
team, East Tennessee will have a<lb/>
very young team. 31 lettermen and<lb/>
14 starters have returned this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
As for what his strategy will be in<lb/>
the upcoming game, Carlisle said<lb/>
he'll have to look at the tapes of<lb/>
ECU's game against N.C. State<lb/>
before he'll know. "We do know<lb/>
ECU is going to have a new offen-<lb/>
sive formation so we'll just have to<lb/>
wait and see<lb/>
Carlisle praised the Pirates<lb/>
highly. "East Carolina is complete-<lb/>
ly out of our class he said. "Heck,<lb/>
most of our players have never been<lb/>
to Greenville but they know what<lb/>
kind of team ECU has got<lb/>
Carlisle said his team will lack ex-<lb/>
perience against a high level of com-<lb/>
petition ? something ECU has<lb/>
established. Tougher schedules, a<lb/>
different division and scholarships<lb/>
are three areas Carlisle cited for the<lb/>
contrast in ECU and ETSU.<lb/>
"Some 15 years ago we were<lb/>
about the same he said, "but<lb/>
things have changed. A school like<lb/>
ours may come along and beat ECU<lb/>
once every couple of years, but<lb/>
that's about it<lb/>
Despite last year's game, Emory<lb/>
won't be taking the Saturday's game<lb/>
lightly. "It would have been easier<lb/>
for us to play next week if we had<lb/>
won (against State) he said, "but<lb/>
I'm sure they'll come in here with<lb/>
lots of pride after licking their<lb/>
wounds<lb/>
While speaking at the Greenville<lb/>
Athletic Club this pat Tuesday,<lb/>
ECU football coach Ed Emory said<lb/>
he knew exactly how Rodney<lb/>
Dangerfield feels about not getting<lb/>
any respect.<lb/>
"1 didn't get any from Monte or<lb/>
the N.C. State team he said.<lb/>
"After the ballgame the press comes<lb/>
and get you. Instead of getting me<lb/>
in the dressing room. I had to go<lb/>
back through all the East Carolina<lb/>
fans to the edge of the field<lb/>
"So I turned by back to the field<lb/>
and was standing there and John<lb/>
Castlebury (WITN-TV.<lb/>
Washington) was going to interview<lb/>
me. He had me all the way under<lb/>
the goalpost. 1 just moved my right<lb/>
foot back and I stepped on the<lb/>
field<lb/>
"Then a guy in a red jacket said,<lb/>
'Hey buddy, get your foot off the<lb/>
field He was just doing his job.<lb/>
They've got a lot of pride in their<lb/>
field. Of course, it made by water<lb/>
get a little hot<lb/>
But then Emory got into more<lb/>
trouble ? with his mother. "She's<lb/>
73 years old and, bless her heart, I<lb/>
love her to death. But. here she<lb/>
comes and 1 didn't know what she<lb/>
wanted. She comes up and says,<lb/>
"Edward I'm on TV now,<lb/>
?Where's my tickets? I didn't get my<lb/>
tickets<lb/>
"I said, 'Mother. I mailed them<lb/>
to you She said, 'Well. I didn't get<lb/>
them<lb/>
"I didn't get much respect<lb/>
Emory said, "so it's been a tough,<lb/>
tough time since Saturday night<lb/>
ptw'c ?' DAVE HLUAMS<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed Emory, above left, makes an important point in the<lb/>
N.C. Male game; Beloved Pirate. ahoe. oerpoers Wolfpack Mascot.<lb/>
Sports Hall To Induct Four<lb/>
PMtl ?y OAHY PATTERSON<lb/>
The ECU soccer team is scheduled to play<lb/>
William &amp; Mary this weekend.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC ? Four new<lb/>
members will be inducted into the<lb/>
East Carolina University's Sports<lb/>
Hall o Fame at halftime of the first<lb/>
home football game, Sept. 18 at<lb/>
7:00 PM.<lb/>
Those to be inducted include the<lb/>
school's first AIl-American in foot-<lb/>
ball, Lou Hallow; The Southern<lb/>
Conference basketball co-Player of<lb/>
the Year in 1970-71, Jim Gregory;<lb/>
the Southern Conference Athlete of<lb/>
the Year in 1973, Carl Summerell;<lb/>
and East Carolina's most successful<lb/>
wrestling coach, John Welborn.<lb/>
Louis John Hallow was named a<lb/>
Little A11 - Amer ican by the<lb/>
Associated Press at the conclusion<lb/>
of his senior year in 1955. It marked<lb/>
a first for then East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege, having had only honorable All-<lb/>
Americas before.<lb/>
The Goldsboro native came to<lb/>
East Carolina in 1953 as a<lb/>
sophomore, having transferred<lb/>
from Wake Forest. Playing both<lb/>
ways, center and linebacker. Hallow<lb/>
was named all-North State Con-<lb/>
ference each of his three seasons<lb/>
with the Pirates. He was also tabbed<lb/>
all-state by the Greensboro Daily<lb/>
News in 1954 and 1955.<lb/>
The Pirates captured two North<lb/>
State Conference titles, 1953, and<lb/>
1954, during Hallow's era. His play<lb/>
earned him the Lanche Blocking<lb/>
Trophy in 1954 and 1955; the<lb/>
Defensive Award in 1953, 1954,<lb/>
1955; and the team's Most Valuable<lb/>
Player award in 1955.<lb/>
The 1955 ECU media guide noted<lb/>
that Hallow was the "reputed best<lb/>
linebacker in the state The Los<lb/>
Angeles Rams thought highly also,<lb/>
drafting Hallow, where he played<lb/>
the exhibition season in 1955, but<lb/>
was drafted before the regular<lb/>
season began. In 1958, Hallow<lb/>
returned to the Rams, played seven<lb/>
games, was traded to Washington,<lb/>
but never completed contract<lb/>
negotiations and retired from pro<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
Hallow played service ball with<lb/>
the Marine Corps, being named to<lb/>
the all-service team and the outstan-<lb/>
ding lineman in the Marine Corps in<lb/>
1956.<lb/>
Today, East Carolina University<lb/>
athletes know the Greenville resi-<lb/>
dent well for his avid support of<lb/>
Pirate teams, as well as, for the con-<lb/>
tribution of a major weight room<lb/>
facility three years ago.<lb/>
A decade after Hallow, James<lb/>
Martin Gregory came to East<lb/>
Carolina University from small<lb/>
Elbert. WV, only to become one of<lb/>
the Pirates' greatest basketball<lb/>
players ever.<lb/>
After htJ senior year, Gregory<lb/>
was named the co-player of the year<lb/>
in the Southern Conference, the on-<lb/>
ly time an ECU basketball player<lb/>
won that honor. He also made first<lb/>
team all-Southern Conference and<lb/>
was named the Team's Most<lb/>
Valuable Player in 1970-71.<lb/>
The current Charlotte resident is<lb/>
still tied for the school record tor<lb/>
highest career rebounding average<lb/>
with 11.1 rebounds per game. But<lb/>
scoring may have been his forte,<lb/>
currently ranked fifth on the Pirate<lb/>
all-time scoring list with 1,193<lb/>
career points.<lb/>
Honors came Gregory's way each<lb/>
of his four years with the Pirates,<lb/>
being named Most Valuable Player<lb/>
on the freshman team in 196-68<lb/>
with 25.2 points and 15.3 rebounds<lb/>
per game; Most Valuable Player<lb/>
again as a sophomore in 1968-69;<lb/>
and all-Southern Conference<lb/>
honorable mention as a junior in<lb/>
1969-70.<lb/>
Just as Gregory was finishing his<lb/>
ECU career, Virginia Beach native<lb/>
Carl Leigh Summerell was just<lb/>
beginning an illustrious career in<lb/>
football and baseball for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Twice named honorable mention<lb/>
all-America in football, Summerell<lb/>
quarterbacked two Southern Con-<lb/>
ference championship, was Player<lb/>
of the Year, and also the Southern<lb/>
Conference Athlete of the Year in<lb/>
1973-74, the only time an ECU<lb/>
athlete won the latter honor.<lb/>
In December 1973, Summerell<lb/>
was tabbed the starting quarterback<lb/>
for the gray team in the annual<lb/>
Blue-Gray Clasic. This marked the<lb/>
first time ever an ECU player has<lb/>
been selected for this post-season<lb/>
all-star game.<lb/>
Summerell was also honored by<lb/>
his home state of Virginia with the<lb/>
MacArthur Award, given to the<lb/>
Virginia athlete who excels at an<lb/>
out-of-state university. The<lb/>
Greensboro Daily News named<lb/>
Summerell all-state twice in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Most Valuable honors were given<lb/>
Summerell for his freshman year<lb/>
play in 1970, and again in 1972 and<lb/>
1973 with the varsity. The record<lb/>
books of ECU reflect why these<lb/>
honors were given.<lb/>
The current Virginia Beach resi-<lb/>
dent still holds the school mark for<lb/>
most career completions with 198;<lb/>
most career yards passing. 2.859;<lb/>
longest scoring pass play, 83-yards<lb/>
to Tim Dameron vs VMI in 192; se-<lb/>
cond in career net yards. 3,644; se-<lb/>
cond in season net yards. POO in<lb/>
192; and second and third in<lb/>
season passing vards, 1275 in 192<lb/>
and 1222 in 1973.<lb/>
In addition to football. Sum-<lb/>
merell was all-Southern Conference<lb/>
in baseball with the team's leading<lb/>
hitting average of .336.<lb/>
Statistics told a story for Sum-<lb/>
merell. but statistics for John<lb/>
Walter Welborn as wrestling coach<lb/>
for East Carolina Lnivrsity are<lb/>
simply astounding.<lb/>
For ten years. 196 . the Boone<lb/>
native coached East Carolina<lb/>
wrestlers to a combined 94-14-3<lb/>
record ? an 8percent winning<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
Welborn took over a struggling<lb/>
program at ECU after a brief stay at<lb/>
his alma mater, Appalachian State.<lb/>
as assistant coach. Within four<lb/>
years Welborn's teams became the<lb/>
dominate power in the Southern<lb/>
Conference and of all colleges in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
With Southern Conference titles<lb/>
in 1971-1976, East Carolina was,<lb/>
and still is, the only school to cap-<lb/>
ture five consecutive conference<lb/>
championships. In the other five<lb/>
years Welborn coached his club to<lb/>
four second-place Finishes and one Saturday<lb/>
third-place finish. The league gave<lb/>
out coach oi the ear honors<lb/>
from 1973-76, and Wdborn <lb/>
tured all three.<lb/>
During his ten-year tenure. Pii<lb/>
teams lost but one match to in-state<lb/>
competition, and never did I<lb/>
Carolina lose to rival North<lb/>
Carolina on the mats under<lb/>
Welborn.<lb/>
Welborn. now a-iar athletic<lb/>
director for Eat Carolina, coached<lb/>
44 individual champions and the<lb/>
lv all-America ever for ECl wrestl-<lb/>
ing. Bill Hi placed fifth in the<lb/>
NC A in 1974 to win the all-<lb/>
America honors<lb/>
While coaching wrestling.<lb/>
Welborn also hurded the goit pro-<lb/>
gram at East Carolina from<lb/>
1968-73, coaching two conference<lb/>
championship teams, three second<lb/>
place teams and one third-place<lb/>
team.<lb/>
The four 1982 inductees join <lb/>
members of the Sports Hall of Fame<lb/>
that have been inducted since the in-<lb/>
ception of the Hall in 194.<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell. Chancellor<lb/>
of East Carolina University, will<lb/>
honor the new inductees vith a din-<lb/>
ner at his home Friday night wit!<lb/>
former members of the Hal;<lb/>
Fame invited to attend. Induction<lb/>
ceremonies will follow at halftime<lb/>
of the opening game against East<lb/>
Tennessee State University on<lb/>
Bs P<lb/>
Parti<lb/>
word<lb/>
East<lb/>
I n t :<lb/>
E)<lb/>
:<lb/>
-<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
- - -<lb/>
i<lb/>
v sd<lb/>
I n ftm ?<lb/>
Pirate player goes after loose ball in last year's action with East<lb/>
Tennessee State<lb/>
d<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0011"/><lb/>
! Mi I sl<lb/>
c kl isus SI I'll MB1-R 16 ?2<lb/>
11<lb/>
M Starts Aerobics Class<lb/>
H PATRICK O'NEII<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
this<lb/>
will<lb/>
Participation is a key<lb/>
word tor the staff ot<lb/>
last Carolina's<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
Pi ogram last yeai<lb/>
65 2 peicent ot the men<lb/>
and 2 s 1 pet cent ot the<lb/>
women enrolled at<lb/>
 C participated in<lb/>
structured Intramural<lb/>
activities Another "<lb/>
women were involved<lb/>
in last years aerobic<lb/>
fitness and exec i se<lb/>
classes Hundreds ot<lb/>
othei students took<lb/>
ir! in the numerous<lb/>
unsti uctured free-play<lb/>
acttv ities.<lb/>
ccording to<lb/>
i r director<lb/>
 a ne Edwards<lb/>
vea r s activities<lb/>
have even greater pat<lb/>
pat ion. "We have<lb/>
done surveys, ques-<lb/>
? onaires; and gotten<lb/>
feedback from in-<lb/>
i mural represen-<lb/>
ta ves, resident halls,<lb/>
fraternities ? and<lb/>
i es Edwards<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Ihev have conducted<lb/>
these studies to better<lb/>
nine the wants<lb/>
d needs o the stu-<lb/>
dent bodv. "We fee! as<lb/>
gh we could have<lb/>
pat - pation of<lb/>
a omen in o u t ac-<lb/>
lies added Ed-<lb/>
 ai ds<lb/>
1 he addition oi<lb/>
terobk I itness and ex-<lb/>
? ?:  ass e s has<lb/>
itica.ll increased<lb/>
the participation ol<lb/>
, men ! his year, the<lb/>
.  will be offe<lb/>
? fteen different<lb/>
many are in<lb/>
idem dorms.<lb/>
?? e'i ' to<lb/>
vvuh these<lb/>
i d I dwai :<lb/>
??? ierobics)<lb/>
Program" has offered<lb/>
a scries of activities tor<lb/>
students. "We are very<lb/>
proud ol this program<lb/>
because it offered a<lb/>
series of activities tor<lb/>
students who are often<lb/>
neglected in recrea-<lb/>
tional opportunities<lb/>
said Mie.<lb/>
Disabled students<lb/>
have been able to par-<lb/>
ticipate in various ac-<lb/>
tivities such as<lb/>
horseback riding,<lb/>
canoe tups, bowling,<lb/>
and aquatic events.<lb/>
"You know it has to<lb/>
be a prettv good pro-<lb/>
gram when a young<lb/>
man (Rick) Creech),<lb/>
who has to drive a<lb/>
wheelchair with his<lb/>
head, can swim laps<lb/>
arond a pool said<lb/>
Rick Burke, an ECU<lb/>
graduate student who<lb/>
aKo uses a wheelchair<lb/>
foi mobility.<lb/>
Burke praised the<lb/>
work of Edwards say-<lb/>
ing "he (Edwards) goes<lb/>
out of his way" to meet<lb/>
the needs ot disabled<lb/>
students. "1 wish more<lb/>
students handicapped<lb/>
and non handicapped -<lb/>
got involved in it<lb/>
(intramurals), because<lb/>
they have a lot to ot-<lb/>
ter continued Burke.<lb/>
Other programs have<lb/>
been provided tor blind<lb/>
students as well as hear-<lb/>
ing impaired students.<lb/>
Most of these han-<lb/>
dicapped activities are<lb/>
conducted by<lb/>
volunteers. According<lb/>
to Ed w a r ds, more<lb/>
volunteers are needed.<lb/>
Anyone interested may<lb/>
contact the Intramural<lb/>
office at 757-6562.<lb/>
Edwards credits<lb/>
much of the success of<lb/>
his program to the<lb/>
?'student advisory<lb/>
council which makes<lb/>
recommendations and<lb/>
suggestions to his staff.<lb/>
"The council is com-<lb/>
posed of a represen-<lb/>
tative from each of the<lb/>
participating organiza-<lb/>
tional divisions said<lb/>
Edwards.<lb/>
The representatives<lb/>
come together for mon<lb/>
thly meetings "or as<lb/>
often as necessary<lb/>
Each representative has<lb/>
a mailbox in Memorial<lb/>
Gym which keeps them<lb/>
up to date on all in-<lb/>
tramural events, pro-<lb/>
grams and activities.<lb/>
"They are an advisory<lb/>
committee to us from a<lb/>
standpoint said Ed-<lb/>
wards. "Their input is<lb/>
for our benefit<lb/>
Edwards also<lb/>
welcomes input from<lb/>
all other students. The<lb/>
program even provides<lb/>
a hot-line telephone<lb/>
number call<lb/>
ed"Intra Action" for<lb/>
any information con-<lb/>
cerning an aspect ot<lb/>
the Intramural-<lb/>
Reereational Program.<lb/>
(757-6562)<lb/>
"What we're trying<lb/>
to do is to offer a wide<lb/>
varietv ot services that<lb/>
will appeal to the in-<lb/>
terests of everybody<lb/>
concluded Edwards.<lb/>
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Send money or cheek to:<lb/>
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East Carolina University. Greenvilk, N. C. 27834<lb/>
(or bring subscription form by office)<lb/>
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Rates: Individual $20<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
1 HI HAST t ARCH IN I AN<lb/>
SEPTMB1 R 16. m<lb/>
Heath "Kicks Off" Season Well<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
-East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity has been very for-<lb/>
tunate in recruiting out<lb/>
of Virginia's Tidewater<lb/>
area. The list of starters<lb/>
and reserves includes:<lb/>
flanker Carlton "The<lb/>
Snake" Nelson, split<lb/>
end Ricky Nichols, free<lb/>
safety Clint Harris,<lb/>
right guard Tom<lb/>
Carnes, right tackle<lb/>
Mac Powers and<lb/>
freshman kicker ex-<lb/>
traordinaire Jeff<lb/>
Heath.<lb/>
Jeff Heath, who<lb/>
kicked a Virginia high<lb/>
school record 58-yard<lb/>
field goal, won all-<lb/>
state, all-Tidewater and<lb/>
all-Beach district,<lb/>
opened as kicker with<lb/>
the Pirates against NC<lb/>
State last Saturday<lb/>
night and had an<lb/>
outstanding perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
Out of Heath's six<lb/>
kickoffs, three were not<lb/>
returned and one was a<lb/>
successful on-side kick.<lb/>
He also put the first six<lb/>
of the Pirates' 26 points<lb/>
on the scoreboard.<lb/>
Heath remembers the<lb/>
opening kickoff well.<lb/>
"The kickoff was<lb/>
vorse on my nerves<lb/>
than the first field goal.<lb/>
We had come out at<lb/>
five o'clock before the<lb/>
game, and my<lb/>
adrenaline was flowing<lb/>
from then until the<lb/>
kickoff.<lb/>
"After the first<lb/>
kickoff, it wasn't too<lb/>
bad at all; 1 could block<lb/>
out the noise. The big-<lb/>
gest crowd 1 had eer<lb/>
played in front of<lb/>
before was 12.(XX). and<lb/>
there were 55,(XX) there.<lb/>
It's a big difference<lb/>
Kicking coach<lb/>
Charles Elmquist feels<lb/>
that Heath did an ex-<lb/>
cellent kicking job.<lb/>
"Jeff performed ad-<lb/>
mirably Elmquisl<lb/>
said. "We were pleased<lb/>
with the length of his<lb/>
kickoffs and his first<lb/>
two field goals.<lb/>
"Jeff Heath, bar in-<lb/>
jury, has as much<lb/>
potential as any kicker<lb/>
I've worked with in the<lb/>
past. The biggest thing<lb/>
to do this year is to get<lb/>
him through the first<lb/>
games; the rest will be<lb/>
easier. It will be tough<lb/>
on him this weekend<lb/>
with the Pirates' home<lb/>
opener<lb/>
One of the most ex-<lb/>
citing moments in<lb/>
ECU'S game against<lb/>
NC State took place at<lb/>
the end of the fourth<lb/>
quarter when the<lb/>
Prirates successfully<lb/>
recovered an onside<lb/>
kick.<lb/>
"That style of kick is<lb/>
called the Barn-Bam<lb/>
explains Heath. "We<lb/>
got it from a team who<lb/>
did it against us a cou-<lb/>
ple of years ago<lb/>
"1 did recover, but<lb/>
there was a lot of con-<lb/>
fusion and a big pile.<lb/>
Even though I didn't<lb/>
get touched, nobody<lb/>
could tell it was me<lb/>
with the ball<lb/>
Heath explains the<lb/>
changes he has gone<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium now has two student gates, located on either side<lb/>
of the North Stands (illustrated above, across from the press box).<lb/>
The additional gate was built last year hut was not used. The gate is<lb/>
labeled number six and is located just left of the scoreboard. It is<lb/>
intended to enable students to enter the stadium at a quicker pace.<lb/>
The new gate will be open for Saturdays game against East Ten-<lb/>
nessee State.<lb/>
ARCADE VARIETY<lb/>
;it l 5lh ind Kcadc rele<lb/>
Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Coke,<lb/>
Mello Velio, Tab, Dr. Pepper, 7-1 p<lb/>
lliters 89C<lb/>
GET<lb/>
RESPONSIBILITY<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
WE OFFER<lb/>
? Starting saury trom JIB.0O0 J22 SOO with increases to<lb/>
158 000 440 00C ? in tour years<lb/>
? 30 days paid vacation annually<lb/>
? Fully financed graduate programs<lb/>
?Superior family health plan<lb/>
? More responsibility and leadership opportunities<lb/>
? World travel and adventure<lb/>
?Prestige and personal growth potential<lb/>
CUB BENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
?Nuclear Engineering<lb/>
?Business Managemen<lb/>
?Aviation ?Intelligence<lb/>
?Nursing Ci vil Engineering<lb/>
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COLLEGE GRADUATES<lb/>
U.S. Citizens less than 35 years of age<lb/>
interested in holding challenging<lb/>
managerial positions.<lb/>
Send resume to:<lb/>
NAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh. N.C. 27609<lb/>
or call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
with<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Nov. 24-Nov. 28,1982<lb/>
Spend your Thanksgiving holiday in style on Broadway,<lb/>
at Macy's Parade, shopping, &amp; touring the city. Space is<lb/>
limited &amp; time is drawing near. For more info, contact<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Ihe onduiich game<lb/>
a new place<lb/>
lo call home<lb/>
Adventurous Eating<lb/>
High Powered Video Games<lb/>
High Class Sandwiches<lb/>
2 Free Game Tokens with<lb/>
Every sandwich<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
Supervised Games<lb/>
Extra<lb/>
Tokens<lb/>
With the purchase of any single<lb/>
sandwich and this ad.<lb/>
"756-9219<lb/>
South Park Shopping Center ? Greenville<lb/>
One Coupon per visit<lb/>
through in his kicking<lb/>
game since coming to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"I was told not to try<lb/>
to change my method<lb/>
states Heath who kicks<lb/>
soccer style. "In high<lb/>
school, I kicked trom<lb/>
the middle of the field,<lb/>
and now I kick from<lb/>
the left hash mark. I'm<lb/>
working on speed and<lb/>
getting better with what<lb/>
comes naturally to<lb/>
me<lb/>
Former ECU coach<lb/>
Jack Boone describes<lb/>
Heath's possiblities<lb/>
with the Pirates.<lb/>
"Jeff has got a lot of<lb/>
potential and will cer-<lb/>
tainly help the ECU<lb/>
football team. He is a<lb/>
real good worker, easy<lb/>
to coach and will im-<lb/>
prove all along'<lb/>
Volleyball Team<lb/>
Suffers Setback<lb/>
The , ECU Lady<lb/>
Pirates opened the<lb/>
volleyball season with a<lb/>
loss to N.C. State Tues-<lb/>
day night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The match<lb/>
was won by the Lady<lb/>
Wolfpack in three<lb/>
straight games, 15-5,<lb/>
15-7, 15-3.<lb/>
According to head<lb/>
coach Lynn Davidson,<lb/>
there was a positive side<lb/>
to the loss. "I saw a lot<lb/>
of good things she<lb/>
said. "Our passing was<lb/>
good; our serving was<lb/>
good and the fun-<lb/>
damentals were there<lb/>
As Davidson puts it,<lb/>
some of the problems<lb/>
were caused by the fact<lb/>
that this was the first<lb/>
match of the year. "It<lb/>
was too early for us to<lb/>
play a team of State's<lb/>
caliber stated Daid-<lb/>
son. "We just weren't<lb/>
ready<lb/>
Davidson mentioned<lb/>
the play of Sandy Gi-<lb/>
deons and Johanna Fry<lb/>
as highlights for the<lb/>
ECU cause. "Sandv<lb/>
came off the bench and<lb/>
did a great job on the<lb/>
back row she said.<lb/>
"Johanna had several<lb/>
serving aces. She's go-<lb/>
ing to be one of the<lb/>
keystones for our<lb/>
team<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DOUG COBB ?? GA) call "t<lb/>
4S4P Clwmnlry Mary T 7SJ M35<lb/>
MEE HEE Congratulations you<lb/>
did it m more ?ay ttian one<lb/>
You done V) good' You got tn?<lb/>
wings you deserve Your heart is<lb/>
airborne' PEE WEE<lb/>
DID WE HAVE tun in RaleigK or<lb/>
who?Let s go to the Holiday Inn<lb/>
Did we go to the Holiday mn'Some<lb/>
cars do have power brakes Pew<lb/>
D D did it' Have you ever been<lb/>
le?? at TELLER ll before'Well we<lb/>
can bench 120 pounds too' Pleas<lb/>
dance with me no no no you<lb/>
know she s no good Had a helluva<lb/>
time m Raleigh let s do it agam<lb/>
or who THE GOOD EGGS<lb/>
GREG H Happy B-day and I love<lb/>
you Your Carolina Girl<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES needed<lb/>
4 bedroom house 3 blocks trom<lb/>
campus J75 per month Can Bun<lb/>
Chadw.ck 7S2 4961 309 E 13th S'<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE JVC JAS 23 Stereo<lb/>
Amp ?5 wattsc t!S0 or best otter<lb/>
7 52 049<lb/>
FREE KITTENS NEED A good<lb/>
home call ?S 6402 ask tor Chris<lb/>
FOR SALE glasses dishes and<lb/>
hot plate Can Pam at 7S6 ?S?S<lb/>
PRESCHOOL Elementary educa<lb/>
tion maiors Need resource<lb/>
materials' Former teacher has<lb/>
books on tmger plavS ar' ideas<lb/>
science experiments math pro<lb/>
jlt.ll kid s stuff and holidays<lb/>
Can Pam at 7S4 495<lb/>
CAMARO 12 Z 28 Dark Metallic<lb/>
All options T top CFi priced to sen<lb/>
fast 7S2 39<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home Reasonable 'ales<lb/>
?i? 3444)<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL T,ping service<lb/>
experience quality work BM<lb/>
typewriter Can Lanie SKe<lb/>
7S? S?l or Gail Joiner 7S4 04:<lb/>
TYPING TERM papers resumes<lb/>
thesis etc Can 7J2 4733<lb/>
TEN YEARS Protessiona' ping<lb/>
e.penence reasonable tes<lb/>
spelling punctuation and 9' "<lb/>
maticai corrections mad A<lb/>
work prootread Can C "Or ? 4 rr<lb/>
9pm US 244<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
Lost l? FOUR SEASONS<lb/>
restaurant Ladv s ?eiiow gc?c<lb/>
Bulova watch engraved or bai ?<lb/>
Great sent,mental value Rewa'C<lb/>
Call 7S 7903 and ask c S<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
BASS Player wanted 'c Par"<lb/>
time contemporarr Coun'r HOct<lb/>
Band Band has numerous book<lb/>
,ngs and "45 4; s 9" -<lb/>
air piav Ser ous cempe'en- ?<lb/>
cans only CaM S? sTO ??<lb/>
p m<lb/>
wanted v a- age' ???<lb/>
photographers to wc? pa<lb/>
? Ik ECU groups v<lb/>
mm came'a and three years e?<lb/>
per.ence Earn M to S C BSJ nour<lb/>
Send resume a"d reef'<lb/>
photograph '0 C Wood a"C S-<lb/>
Morganton NC 28455<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
NEED A RIDE to Richmond .a<lb/>
Thursda? Sept 23 Leaving a<lb/>
: X p m Please can Laura<lb/>
7J2 97M<lb/>
WIN atl Atari Video System<lb/>
If 111 llll (PAC MAN CAME CARTRIDGE INC 1 11)1 I)<lb/>
iD Mgs Grand re-Opemng<lb/>
Sweepstakes<lb/>
PLUS dozens of other prizes<lb/>
?Table-top Pac Man gain'<lb/>
?3 ECU Season Tickets<lb/>
?10 Pac Man T Shirts<lb/>
?15 Free Dinner Passes<lb/>
HURRY! SWEEPSTAKES CLOSES SEPTEMBER 24 1982<lb/>
No Purchase Necessary.<lb/>
Enter as often as you like.<lb/>
GlftSS?S<lb/>
only<lb/>
?? ?A when you buy o medium<lb/>
U Jr T soft drink at regular price!<lb/>
Hurry! Offer good while supplies last at participating Arbys.<lb/>
Gobble 'em up!<lb/>
- -<lb/>
1 A Crbys<lb/>
We're located in<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
708 E. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Enjoy these Grand Re-Opening Specials<lb/>
2<lb/>
Regular Roast<lb/>
Beef Sandwiches<lb/>
EC<lb/>
2.25<lb/>
Expires Oct. 2. 1982<lb/>
Not valid witk other<lb/>
i or discount<lb/>
ft<lb/>
m<lb/>
r7c"<lb/>
I All-you-can-eat Salad Bar<lb/>
I and medium drink for<lb/>
 Expires Oct 2. 1982<lb/>
? Not valid wtth other<lb/>
offer or disc ou nt<lb/>
?? m ea ????!<lb/>
2.25<lb/>
EC<lb/>
35011<lb/>
any sandwich, potatoes<lb/>
and medium drink<lb/>
Does not M?ch?de Junior<lb/>
or child' steal Expire<lb/>
Oct 2. 1982. Not<lb/>
vatM with otnet coupon<lb/>
or discount<lb/>
tt<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-I<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057497_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>