<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057498_0001"/>
?Ut? lEaHt Ulnriilintnn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.9<lb/>
Iuesda, September 21, 1982<lb/>
Creenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
( iri-ulaiion 10.IMM)<lb/>
SGA Registration<lb/>
Deadline Extended<lb/>
B BOB MORGAN<lb/>
siatt V rtler<lb/>
Ihe deadline for candidate<lb/>
registration in the Sept. 2 SGA<lb/>
. ection has been extended from to-<lb/>
day until 5 p.m. Wednesday, Sept.<lb/>
?s oi 1 p.m. Monday, 56 students<lb/>
had filed notice ol their candidacy.<lb/>
Joyce VA 1111 a m s, elections<lb/>
airperson, said there has been a<lb/>
blem in getting people to run tor<lb/>
fl ce. She cited a common lack ol<lb/>
?wledge about the legislature as<lb/>
one reason.<lb/>
W ilkens ; -  that main<lb/>
candidates were hesitant to make a<lb/>
dev ision uni I he ? ere given more<lb/>
i ? rmai about the respon-<lb/>
sib ties nvoh ed<lb/>
SGA president Eric Henderson<lb/>
ned the election delay as a<lb/>
. information to the<lb/>
"The co mcil wanted some<lb/>
. . ra ' evei yone know just<lb/>
nportani these elections can<lb/>
Hei dei son said.<lb/>
I t parliamentary body is made<lb/>
2 day representatives, one<lb/>
esentative iron each dorm with<lb/>
s than 350 students and two<lb/>
tatives from dorms with<lb/>
: than 350 students.<lb/>
. nning in October, the<lb/>
iture will meet ever) Monday<lb/>
its duties will include the<lb/>
ation ol student tunds,<lb/>
. ol all executive appoint-<lb/>
ments to the judiciary and approval<lb/>
ol constitutions oi organizations<lb/>
recognized by the SGA.<lb/>
According to Henderson and<lb/>
othei student leaders, an issue likely<lb/>
to be handled by the legislature will<lb/>
be Mt attempt to revise current rules<lb/>
for the election ol executive of-<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
Class officers, along with ex-<lb/>
ecutive officers, comprise the Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Council. Responsibilities o<lb/>
the council are to make appoint-<lb/>
ments to judicial boards and be<lb/>
responsible foi the employ mem of<lb/>
SGA employees.<lb/>
The constitution provides for a<lb/>
president and vice president foi the<lb/>
freshmen, sophomore, junioi and<lb/>
graduate classes and a president,<lb/>
vice president, and secretary-<lb/>
treasurer lor the senior class.<lb/>
The presidents ol each class have<lb/>
voting priveleges in the legislature.<lb/>
YA ilkens said thai any students in-<lb/>
terested in running tor any position<lb/>
must go b room 228 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and register bet ore 5<lb/>
p.m. Wednesday.<lb/>
"As ol now said Wilkens, "we<lb/>
still have no candidates from<lb/>
Umstead, White. Green and Tyier<lb/>
and only 2d candidates tor day<lb/>
representatives. We also still need<lb/>
candidates tor graduate vice presi-<lb/>
dent and senior class secretary-<lb/>
treasurer<lb/>
Remodeled Darryl's<lb/>
Bars Wheelchairs<lb/>
Ptoto By STANLEY LEARY<lb/>
Equestrian Victory<lb/>
Ihe Pirates rode Carllon Nelson's two touchdown receptions to<lb/>
victory Saturday niyht, trampling East Tennessee state 30-0. This<lb/>
evened the Pirates record to 1-1. For more information see Spurts,<lb/>
paye 10.<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEIl I<lb/>
Slaff Wnirr<lb/>
Some of East Carolina's han-<lb/>
dicapped students were disap-<lb/>
pointed when they discovered that a<lb/>
new dining area at Darryl's<lb/>
Restaurant would not be accessible<lb/>
to wheelchairs.<lb/>
Darryl's, located on 10th Street.<lb/>
is the closest restaurant to Slay Dor-<lb/>
mitory where most of ECU'S ap-<lb/>
proximately one doen wheelchair<lb/>
students reside.<lb/>
"I felt shafted said Brian<lb/>
Rangeley, "especially since they<lb/>
said we would be able to get in<lb/>
there<lb/>
Rangeley, an English major,<lb/>
relies on a wheelchair for mobility.<lb/>
He claims that a new section, "the<lb/>
sunroomwhich was added to the<lb/>
restaurant, has no access ramps tor<lb/>
wheelchairs. From conversations he<lb/>
and other students had with Dar-<lb/>
ryl's employees before the renova-<lb/>
tion began, they were led to believe<lb/>
that the new room would be accessi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Another room in the restaurant<lb/>
is, and always has been accessible to<lb/>
wheelchairs, but since the renova-<lb/>
tion, use of this room has increased<lb/>
considerably. Rangeley noted that<lb/>
before the renovation this was a lit-<lb/>
tle used area of the restaurant, but<lb/>
since the renovation it has become a<lb/>
popular section.<lb/>
"What would have been the tair<lb/>
thing to do was to have made the<lb/>
new room accessible while the<lb/>
building was still under construe<lb/>
lion Rangeley said "Theychoose<lb/>
not to do that, and as a result, the<lb/>
seating that is accessible is now hard<lb/>
to get<lb/>
"I was not aware that the new<lb/>
sunroom wasn't accessible said<lb/>
George Burkhardt. vte president in<lb/>
administration tor the Creative Din-<lb/>
ing Corporation, which owns and<lb/>
operates the Darrvl's Restaurant<lb/>
chain. He did say that there were<lb/>
still as many tables and as many<lb/>
ieats available as were available<lb/>
before the renovation began<lb/>
"However, a smaller percentage of<lb/>
the total seating is now handicap ac-<lb/>
cessible he added.<lb/>
Burkhardt said that he would<lb/>
look into the possibility ol making<lb/>
the sunroom accessible He said he<lb/>
would see it the problem could be<lb/>
solved. "I can not promise, but we<lb/>
will make every effort to determine<lb/>
Buckhardt mentioned tha the<lb/>
possibility ol a ramp being installed<lb/>
to a side door could be considered.<lb/>
"We will undertake efforts io cor-<lb/>
rect the situation he concluded<lb/>
Editor's nore:ln a later phone call<lb/>
to our office, Burkhardt explained<lb/>
that the failure to in.?U a ramp<lb/>
making the tnroom accessible was<lb/>
actual ? done in error "We have<lb/>
already begun to correct the situa-<lb/>
tion he explained, adding that a<lb/>
ramp should be installed in the next<lb/>
three to tour weeks.<lb/>
Student Political Action Group Targets Philly Congressman<lb/>
PHII ADM PH1A. (CPS) A<lb/>
ab foi a political experiment.<lb/>
;ightl . ressional district in<lb/>
rban Philadelphia encompasses<lb/>
no less than three campuses ?<lb/>
inty Community College.<lb/>
 alley College and<lb/>
. B e College ? boasts<lb/>
e b aesi student-aged population<lb/>
? tte, and abuts the University<lb/>
Pel ana. which is the<lb/>
t's larj esl employer<lb/>
 ? .  dei tally. the eighth, will<lb/>
? he cei i major test of stu-<lb/>
dent political powet this fall.<lb/>
The test has a new political<lb/>
creature ? a student political action<lb/>
committee ? trying to unseat an in-<lb/>
cumbant congressman who voted<lb/>
f : cuts nt student aid programs.<lb/>
The incumbant, Rep. .lames<lb/>
. oyne, discounts being made into a<lb/>
target bv the National Student<lb/>
Political Action Committee<lb/>
(NSPAC), which is also trying to<lb/>
unseal five other "anti-student"<lb/>
legislators around the country, and<lb/>
trying to elect nine "friends<lb/>
"We can't be worried about every<lb/>
group that opposes us says Hugh<lb/>
( offman, Coyne's spokesman.<lb/>
In comparison to other Coyne<lb/>
enemies. NSPAC isn't worth worry-<lb/>
ing about, he says "These guys<lb/>
aren't in the big leagues. They're<lb/>
engaged m tomfoolery<lb/>
But Democrat Peter kostmeyer.<lb/>
Coyne's opponent, thinks NSPAC<lb/>
can make a difference in the race,<lb/>
which in 19N0, was decided by some<lb/>
4000 votes.<lb/>
"Very, very heavy use ol student<lb/>
volunteers says Kostmeyer aide<lb/>
John Seager, "that's how this elec-<lb/>
tion will be won<lb/>
"Students constitute the single<lb/>
biggest manpower pool for these<lb/>
campaigns agrees Dr. Oliver<lb/>
Williams, a political science pro-<lb/>
fessor specializing in state politics at<lb/>
Penn. "In a campaign this close, go-<lb/>
ing to the students could be pretty<lb/>
smart<lb/>
Such talk warms the heart of Joe<lb/>
Sweeney, NSPAC's treasurer, who<lb/>
helped the U.S. Student Association<lb/>
(USSA) organize the PAC to give<lb/>
more muscle to the lobbying efforts<lb/>
against President Reagan's propos-<lb/>
ed halving of federal student aid<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
At the same time, the Coalition of<lb/>
Private College and University<lb/>
Students (referred to as COPUS)<lb/>
formed a student PAC, declaring<lb/>
"war" on politicians who supported<lb/>
the president's budget proposals<lb/>
and threatening them with defeat<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
"Students traditionally don't<lb/>
have money, and we can't expect<lb/>
them to give it says COPE'S Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Director Miriam Rosenberg.<lb/>
"What they do have is time, and we<lb/>
want to utilize that rather than<lb/>
dollars<lb/>
The emphasis, she says, will be on<lb/>
"in-kind" services like staffing<lb/>
voter registration drives, phone<lb/>
banks and mailing in the targeted<lb/>
districts.<lb/>
NSPAC's Sweenev nevertheless<lb/>
hopes to raise $30,000 tor expenses,<lb/>
though as of July the Federal Elec-<lb/>
tion Commission shows NSPAC's<lb/>
balance at $1040<lb/>
By contrast, conservative PACs<lb/>
are estimated to have some SI45<lb/>
million to spend for right-wing can-<lb/>
didates this fall.<lb/>
Both the National Education<lb/>
Associaton and the American<lb/>
Federation of Teachers will concen-<lb/>
trate on many of NSPAC's target-<lb/>
ted races. Their budgets are a com-<lb/>
bined $1.25 million. They scare<lb/>
Rep. Coyne, for one, a lot more<lb/>
than NSPAC does.<lb/>
"Out of three guys in the alley<lb/>
Coffman asks, "which do you<lb/>
worry about first ? the two gor-<lb/>
rillas or the skinny kid?"<lb/>
Sweeney hopes to enhance the<lb/>
skinny kid's effectiveness by choos-<lb/>
ing narrow alleys like Penn-<lb/>
sylvania's eighth district.<lb/>
"We were looking for districts<lb/>
where the student population was<lb/>
greater than the incumbant's margin<lb/>
of victory in the last election he<lb/>
explains. "We found approximately<lb/>
100 districts where students could be<lb/>
a significant factor<lb/>
NSPAC windowed them down to<lb/>
supporting senators Robert Staf-<lb/>
ford, R-Vt and Paul Sarbanes.<lb/>
D-Md and representatives<lb/>
Claudine Schneider, R-R.l , Barney<lb/>
Frank, D-Ma Peter Peyser,<lb/>
D-N.Y Robert Edgar. D-Pa and<lb/>
Paul Simon, R-ll.<lb/>
NSPAC wants to defeat<lb/>
represesentames Marcaret Heckler.<lb/>
R Ma Ben Oilman. R-N V .<lb/>
Coyne, Cooper Evans. R-la . Bobbi<lb/>
Fiedler, R-Ca and Frank Wolff,<lb/>
R-a.<lb/>
It's also actively working tor<lb/>
Lynn Cutler, who is challenging<lb/>
Ivans in Iowa. Ira Lechner,<lb/>
challenging Wolfl in Virginia, and<lb/>
Kostmeyer.<lb/>
COPUS will announce its targes<lb/>
later this month.<lb/>
T he American Student<lb/>
ssociaton, a third student lobbying<lb/>
group in Washington. D.C will<lb/>
disburse information to voters on<lb/>
certain, as-yet unnamed candidates,<lb/>
savs director Tim Fuckey.<lb/>
The candidate choices have<lb/>
already caused some outrage. A<lb/>
newly-formed coalition of conser<lb/>
vative student groups called Fhe<lb/>
Student Coalition for Truth<lb/>
dismisses NSPAC as a political tool<lb/>
of "far left" groups "such as<lb/>
USSA<lb/>
Rosen Meyei ol Rep. Cooper<lb/>
Evans1 Washington office says<lb/>
NSPAC's tendency toward<lb/>
Democratic candidates discredits<lb/>
the group. "It comes down to a par-<lb/>
tisan standoff<lb/>
See PAC. Page 5<lb/>
Big Item Purchases Slumping<lb/>
Photo By STANLEY LEARY<lb/>
Steppin' Out<lb/>
1 hese AKA sisters strut their stuff in front of the Student Supply Store. An annual ritual of Ihe AKA<lb/>
sorority, they flamboyantly show their eohesieness in ecstatic displays across campus.<lb/>
Protests, Dumping Continues<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Protests continued throughout<lb/>
the weekend at the new PCB landfill<lb/>
dump site in rural Warren County.<lb/>
More than 100 people were ar-<lb/>
rested Monday bringing to 200 the<lb/>
total number of people arrested for<lb/>
attempting to block trucks filled<lb/>
with PCB-contaminated dirt from<lb/>
entering the site.<lb/>
Among those arrested on Monday<lb/>
was Rev. Joseph Lowery, national<lb/>
president of the Southern Christian<lb/>
Leadership Conference.<lb/>
Lowery led a group of more than<lb/>
325 demonstrators on a two and one<lb/>
half mile march to the PCB landfill.<lb/>
When the first of the two groups of<lb/>
demonstrators reached a line of<lb/>
helmeted N.C. state highway<lb/>
patrolmen, they were told to clear<lb/>
the way. Lowery responded by say-<lb/>
ing he wanted to pray. "I'm going<lb/>
to pray right here the minister<lb/>
said, kneeling. "I've got a right to<lb/>
pray<lb/>
Lowery then began reciting the<lb/>
Lord's Prayer and was promptly ar-<lb/>
rested by police. About 50 other<lb/>
followed his lead and were also<lb/>
carted off to waiting police vehicles.<lb/>
The day's confrontation appeared<lb/>
over after that, but demostrators<lb/>
then regrouped at a nearby house<lb/>
and again marched to the dump.<lb/>
As two empty dump trucks came<lb/>
out of the landfill, the<lb/>
demonstrators sat down in the road<lb/>
about 300 yards away, forcing<lb/>
highway patrolmen to jog to them.<lb/>
The second group of demonstrators<lb/>
was also arrested for refusing to<lb/>
leave the road.<lb/>
Local residents with support of<lb/>
outside civil rights leaders have<lb/>
formed human blockades to protest<lb/>
what they call a racist decision to<lb/>
use the 59.5-percent black county<lb/>
for the dumping of the<lb/>
polychlorinated biphenyls, which<lb/>
was mistakenly dumped along 210<lb/>
miles of North Carolina highways in<lb/>
14 counties.<lb/>
Local resident and organizer of<lb/>
the Warren County Citizens Con-<lb/>
cerned about PCB, Ken Ferruchio<lb/>
said that the human rights issue and<lb/>
the environmental issue have always<lb/>
been inseparable.<lb/>
Ferruchio has begun a hunger<lb/>
strike in response to the dumping.<lb/>
"We can't afford to fail right now.<lb/>
Don't be scared of that jail, added<lb/>
White who has been arrested before<lb/>
in the incident.<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? Con-<lb/>
sumers who have the discretionary<lb/>
income to lead the economy out of<lb/>
recession are holding off buying big<lb/>
ticket items waiting for prices to<lb/>
come down further, a leading con-<lb/>
sumer survey shows.<lb/>
"A large percentage of the na-<lb/>
tion's more affluent households are<lb/>
postponing purchases of big ticket<lb/>
items, including cars, on speculation<lb/>
that prices will come down said<lb/>
Albert E. Sindlinger, who heads a<lb/>
widely followed consumer research<lb/>
firm based in Media, Pa.<lb/>
"This new trend that we call<lb/>
'reverse hedging' has come out of<lb/>
nowhere Sindlinger said. "And it<lb/>
will keep a lid on any hopes for an<lb/>
economic recovery<lb/>
Sindlinger's confidence surveys,<lb/>
which base the replies on actual li-<lb/>
quidity and job security, break the<lb/>
population into two segments he<lb/>
calls stockholders, those who own<lb/>
some stock, and non-stockholders.<lb/>
There is wide disparity between<lb/>
them.<lb/>
More than 68 percent of the<lb/>
stockholders are confident about<lb/>
the economy and their own futures,<lb/>
compared to less than 20 percent of<lb/>
the non-stockholder group.<lb/>
The non-stockholders, roughly<lb/>
two-thirds of the households in the<lb/>
country, are hurting badly. They've<lb/>
absorbed the bulk of unemployment<lb/>
and there are tremendous teats<lb/>
among this group that more jobs<lb/>
will be lost, he said.<lb/>
Despite government figures on in-<lb/>
flation, they still feel the infla-<lb/>
tionary bite, he said. "Prices on<lb/>
necessities in the consumer price in-<lb/>
dex ? utilities, rent, services and<lb/>
medical care, for example ? still are<lb/>
going up.<lb/>
"Taxes haven't abated. Social<lb/>
Security and state and local taxes,<lb/>
especially property taxes, have gone<lb/>
through the roof he said, putting<lb/>
this group, largely lower-income<lb/>
and blue-collar workers, "in a real<lb/>
squeeze<lb/>
The stockholder group, on the<lb/>
other hand, comprised of the other<lb/>
one-third of households, is "a very<lb/>
distinct group. Not all are wealthy,<lb/>
but by and large it's an affluent,<lb/>
sophisticated, educated group, and<lb/>
generally includes the upper-income<lb/>
segment of the population he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
These consumers have been<lb/>
relatively unscathed by the bad<lb/>
economy. "Most are keeping their<lb/>
lobs, and they're ebullient now<lb/>
because they've got profits ? both<lb/>
on paper and in actual dollars ? in<lb/>
the stock market rally Sindlinger<lb/>
said. They also have been keeping<lb/>
ahead of inflation through interest-<lb/>
bearing investments.<lb/>
"They're the only ones that have<lb/>
money to spend and if there is to be<lb/>
any consumer-led recovery it's go-<lb/>
ing to come from this group he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"But they're telling us that, con-<lb/>
trary to the 70's when they bought<lb/>
to beat price increases, whether or<lb/>
not 'hey needed an item, they're<lb/>
now postponing purchases waiting<lb/>
for prices to come down<lb/>
Even the discounts offered by the<lb/>
automakers are having a backlash<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
"The stockholder group, which is<lb/>
in a position to buy cars, is saying 'if<lb/>
the automakers have come down<lb/>
through the discounts, they will<lb/>
come down further and maybe even<lb/>
actually cut base prices Sindl-<lb/>
inger said.<lb/>
"They're playing a real waiting<lb/>
f.ame, and it's going to prolong the<lb/>
slump at the retail level<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0002"/><lb/>
THL EASTCAROl IN1AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 21, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column.<lb/>
please type it on ar announcement<lb/>
form ana send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care Of the produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sized paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
Tere s nc charge tor a"<lb/>
n&amp;uncements but space is often<lb/>
limited Tneretore, we tannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
iueni will run as long as vou ?anl<lb/>
and sugges' fnal v u do n ' rely<lb/>
solely - ifiiscolurni ? i publicity<lb/>
Tn? deadline lew announcements<lb/>
is 3 p m VoniJdi lot the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3 p m Aeonesdayy for<lb/>
the Thursday pape' No an<lb/>
uncements received after these<lb/>
deadlines wii be printed<lb/>
This space is available ' all<lb/>
campus fcj.i' zal ns .ind depart<lb/>
men's<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
Wn en career ' is .<lb/>
Career By t' ice Not C. ci<lb/>
a ? part - .?- sit . s   ? it<lb/>
N C St by ' ? yersityv . ISC<lb/>
ing Centei 'is<lb/>
?'?.lei 4 i<lb/>
. ? ?  ii and ' : ?5 ? K)5<lb/>
A ? ; ? A ?? rS7 ,Vm-   3 00<lb/>
p V . ? -S ' ? ? Q<lb/>
Campbei . ? ?'erest m<lb/>
ven tor .?. be Idn ??fered n<lb/>
?' i l rs' "i ? ' ic, Nad .i ce<lb/>
reg strat s ni essai <lb/>
BRIDGE<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
Delta Zeta wants to con<lb/>
gratulate every one of our 23 new<lb/>
pledges Welcome to our<lb/>
sisterhood<lb/>
TKE RUSH<lb/>
TKE Lil Sis RUSH Sept 22 and<lb/>
23 9 12 00 For info call 758 7699 or<lb/>
758 9802<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Personal Development Courses<lb/>
begin<lb/>
Sept 21 Conversational Ger<lb/>
man. Camera I. Jazz. Guitar, Ban<lb/>
io Sept 22 Algebra Review<lb/>
Clogging Sep' 23 Retirement<lb/>
P'anning Sept 25 introduction to<lb/>
Small Computer Oct 18 Getting<lb/>
Organized Oct 21 Real Esta'e<lb/>
Finance Commodity Hedging<lb/>
Ort 26 Aerobic Exercise Nov 17<lb/>
Real Estate Appraisal<lb/>
Sept 29 Mime Sept 30 m<lb/>
vesting in the 80 s Oct 5 Basket<lb/>
ban Officiating Oct 12 Coping<lb/>
wi'h Stress Philosophy and<lb/>
Retirement For information call<lb/>
'57 6143<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The King Youth Fellowship will<lb/>
hold its next meeting on Sept 23<lb/>
The room number is 247 in the<lb/>
MSC at 8 pm The topics of discus<lb/>
sion will include the coming of our<lb/>
Lora Jesus Christ. Elections will<lb/>
be held and refreshments will be<lb/>
served at the conclusion of this<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
CHI BETA PHI<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity invites you to become a<lb/>
member of the Alpha Gamma<lb/>
Chapter at ECU Membership is<lb/>
open to students in the natural<lb/>
sciences and mathematics We<lb/>
look forward to seeing-you at 6 30<lb/>
m Biology 103on Wednesday. Sept<lb/>
22. 1982<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday Sept 21 in<lb/>
the chapel of St Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church. 406 4th street (one block<lb/>
from Garrett Dorm) The service<lb/>
will be at 5 30 pm with the<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev Bill<lb/>
Hadden celebrating<lb/>
Bridge live 1 C icert This<lb/>
Friday nigm at 7 JO in the Jenkins<lb/>
Art Aud't. rium Bridae a con<lb/>
lempcry Cnnsfian band from<lb/>
Gre ? iO a 11 be giving a tree<lb/>
1 ri eri A are wel ome ' come<lb/>
 ? n  1 ? rhe musk Sp n<lb/>
sored by Faith Victory ? Cam<lb/>
TAOIST CIRCLE<lb/>
the 1 id ?? ' mei ? and<lb/>
s ,1 ptii losopny ? c ? ,l<lb/>
es mner aoc utei ' a- m<lb/>
' ceac e and<lb/>
r Ta st<lb/>
???? nber .6 at j 30 p" at rne<lb/>
K wants S' 1 '? ? ' itefl ? ?? ' nd<lb/>
- -  Eirr Street rymnas<lb/>
y is rs ar. rtn st ???? e a"C<lb/>
? efreshment a ? ? served<lb/>
)?"? - . is 1 ? .1 a CM ?<lb/>
? ? ? .)? ai' ei'her<lb/>
758 ")v 1 "sn ?25! ? ? sjs bet<lb/>
a ? 6 and y PV<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Piarng anaPlace<lb/>
? rv ? " ? 6 ?' "H<lb/>
s  1 ?? ?  ne hour si?ss s<lb/>
? a c . devel 1 ng beer n<lb/>
'ervieAiny Skills for use 1n your<lb/>
10b search You may selec1a 'ime<lb/>
Hrc " ' ? ??'? 1 w.<lb/>
b. r '? mber 15. 1982 Wed"PSOfly<lb/>
2 00 p t September 231962<lb/>
Thursday 3 00 p m<lb/>
September 28 8:uesday<lb/>
4 00 C m<lb/>
Oct bet 4. i"82 v. ?-?aa3 00<lb/>
P m<lb/>
0 ? Im anc 3'Sr-ssn'er<lb/>
.  ng Trirr.ug" the CareetP.anr<lb/>
g ?nd Placemen- Set . e<lb/>
shared<lb/>
fCMUG<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
During Spring Semester 1983 the<lb/>
Medieval and Renaissance Studies<lb/>
Program will otter the inter<lb/>
disciplinary seminar ASMR 5000.<lb/>
Hi 'he opc The Flesh in the Mid<lb/>
die Ages and Renaissance Te<lb/>
seminar will mee- on Thursdays<lb/>
from 6 Jt'9 JO pm in Brewster<lb/>
D 313 and will be directed by Dr<lb/>
Gregory Ross of the Philosophy<lb/>
Department The seminar is open<lb/>
to all students interested in<lb/>
medieval and Renaissance<lb/>
Studies For further into, see Dr<lb/>
Ross 1 Brewster A 333' or Dr<lb/>
Bassman iForeign Languages ana<lb/>
L teratures Brewster A 424i it<lb/>
you are .nterested in the Medieval<lb/>
ana Renaissance Studies Program<lb/>
or if you need special permission<lb/>
to pre register tor 'he semma'<lb/>
see Dr McMHan program coor<lb/>
dinatOT Dep' of English Austin<lb/>
315)<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
The Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program will have a meeting on<lb/>
Thursday Sep' 21 a- 5 00 pm .n<lb/>
'he second floor conference room<lb/>
;f Erw" Han Any student in<lb/>
teres'ec in furthering responsible<lb/>
attitudes toward tie use t<lb/>
chemical substances is encourag<lb/>
ed to attend For more into call<lb/>
757 6793 or 757 6649<lb/>
NATIONAL LABOR<lb/>
RELATIONS BOARD<lb/>
A representative from NLRB<lb/>
Wmston Saiem. NC will be on<lb/>
campus Thursday. September 23<lb/>
to interview underqradua 'e<lb/>
??'uden's who expec' 'c gradua'e<lb/>
tf at least 24 hours r one or a<lb/>
combination of subiects sue as<lb/>
Labor Relations, industrial Reia<lb/>
t i o n s Labor Law Labor<lb/>
Economics. Political Science.<lb/>
Economics. Business Aomimstra<lb/>
tion. Personnel Managemen Ac<lb/>
coun.mg or ta S'uaen's mus'<lb/>
r-ave a 3 0 grade point average rr<lb/>
be"er Dead! ne fc app;y s<lb/>
Septempe' 17 1982<lb/>
East Carolina Microcomputer<lb/>
users Group is a new club tormed<lb/>
last January open to an people in<lb/>
? ne Greenv ? irea n'eres'ec in<lb/>
micrr.c jmputerS The UD '<lb/>
r e'ings t' e sec .no Thursday of<lb/>
- - ? ?? a' 7 30 pm in<lb/>
Ml ? del ? .T For further 1<lb/>
&amp; . A they President a'<lb/>
? v. B793<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
A student episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated en Tuesday .<lb/>
September 21 in the chapel of St<lb/>
Paul s Episcopal Church. 406 ?th<lb/>
Street ; nne block from Garret'<lb/>
Dorm : The service will be a' 5 30<lb/>
p m wn fhe Episcopal Chaplain.<lb/>
the Rev BiH Madden celebrating<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOENT UNION<lb/>
lV '?t.Jl JHIVOVTV<lb/>
ITALIAN N1TE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
AND<lb/>
ISPAGHETTII<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
Plus Garlic Bread CQQ<lb/>
-li-V-l<lb/>
s&amp;T<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
MSC is offering a va'iety of<lb/>
crafts workshops for Fall<lb/>
Semester, 1982. and are available<lb/>
tor enrollment immediately The<lb/>
workshops are tree 10 an members<lb/>
of the Crafts Center Each<lb/>
member may enroll m one (I)<lb/>
workshop The cost of a Cralts<lb/>
Center Membership is $10 00 per<lb/>
semester which includes the use ol<lb/>
the facilities tool check out, use ol<lb/>
library materials and aid of ex<lb/>
perienced supervisors<lb/>
AM faculty and staff, their<lb/>
spouses and dependents who are<lb/>
MendenhaU Student Center<lb/>
members may 10m the Crafts<lb/>
Center Dependents must be eigh<lb/>
teen years ot age or older to be<lb/>
elegibie to 10m<lb/>
Crafts Center Memberships arc<lb/>
available during regular<lb/>
operating hours 3 00 PM until<lb/>
10 00 PM. Monday through Fri<lb/>
day, and 12 00 Noon until 5 00 PM<lb/>
Saturday Following is a dst ot<lb/>
available workshops Floor Loom<lb/>
Weaving Thursdays (September<lb/>
30 October 28) 6 9 PM Pottery<lb/>
Mondays (September 27<lb/>
November 1) 6 9 PM Basketry<lb/>
Wednesdays (September 29<lb/>
November 31 6 9 PM Photography<lb/>
Thursdays 1 September 30 Nov<lb/>
417 10 PM JewelrvMetals Mon<lb/>
days v November 8 December 61<lb/>
6 9 PM Darkroom Techniques<lb/>
Mondays (September 27<lb/>
November 1 i 6 30 9 30 PW<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Basic NAU! Of PAD' SCUBA<lb/>
Certification Sep' 14 OC 7<lb/>
Basic Sailing Sept 16 Oct 2<lb/>
Beginning Ballroom and In<lb/>
fermediate Ballroom Sep'<lb/>
17 Nov 19 Texas Country Dance<lb/>
Sept 18 Nov 20<lb/>
Da'kroom Photography I Sep'<lb/>
18 Nov 13 Yoga Sep 29 Oct 13<lb/>
Conversational German Sept 2'<lb/>
Nov 23 Camera 1 Sept 21<lb/>
OC 19 JaJl Exercise Sept 21<lb/>
OC 2i<lb/>
Guitar Sept 21 Nov 9 Bant<lb/>
Sept 21 Nov 9 Algebra Review<lb/>
Sept 22 OC 10 Clogging 1 Sept<lb/>
22 OC 27 Retirement Planning<lb/>
Sept 23 OC 14<lb/>
For more information can<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
EAST UXOUMA UHVEISITT<lb/>
AEROBICS AND DANCE<lb/>
Noontime classe in Aerobics<lb/>
(already in progress but<lb/>
newcomers welcome) tor faculty<lb/>
and staff are held on Monday<lb/>
Wednesday and Friday in Room<lb/>
112 Memorial Gym Noontime<lb/>
classes m Ballroom dancing (start<lb/>
October 71 lor Faculty and Stall<lb/>
will be held on Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays Both of these classes<lb/>
are free and you may call Jo<lb/>
Saunders 757 6000 tor further in<lb/>
formation<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up in the Buccaneer office<lb/>
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from<lb/>
2 00 p m. till 5 00 p m The Buc<lb/>
caneer Office is located on the se<lb/>
cond floor of the Publications<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
NEWS RELEASE<lb/>
The Governor s Advocacy Coun<lb/>
cm for Persons win Disabilities<lb/>
and Greenville parent s organiza<lb/>
? ns w,ii sponger a public hearing<lb/>
Mondav Sept Oth to discuss pro<lb/>
Pcsea changes m Public Law<lb/>
94 142 the Federal regulation<lb/>
a' ch guarantees appropriate<lb/>
pubK education tor an handicap<lb/>
p?ci c hildren<lb/>
Tie public hearing will oe a'<lb/>
7 30 P V Monday. September<lb/>
20-n ai The Tommie W'HiS<lb/>
Regional Developmen' Cen'er m<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Proposed Federal changes<lb/>
would reduce the services present<lb/>
11 provided to physically and men<lb/>
?ally nandicappeo s'udents and<lb/>
reduce the role ot parents in the<lb/>
evaluation placemen: r 'eview<lb/>
ot ao .noividuai educationa p j<lb/>
1 iEp 1 ' ?? ? ? ' dren<lb/>
The pulp, se t fe Sep'<lb/>
meepg ,s  renew 'he prop sed<lb/>
( ? anges aa advise pare's a"d<lb/>
? n'eres'ed persons how ' Senc<lb/>
tit r ;ommen's to the Deoan-e1'<lb/>
tEa.irf' and their legislators<lb/>
Hai v q ? . the E as-9<lb/>
TEacCh center aa Michael<lb/>
Ernes' ' 'ne Eas' Carolina<lb/>
University Pr Bran I ji ear "g<lb/>
impai'eo S'uden's wilt conduct<lb/>
the mtefing This meeting will<lb/>
preceo reg na mee'mgs '0 be<lb/>
heWSeptr- rje- 30th<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Basic NAU :r PAD' SCOBA<lb/>
Certification Sep' 14 OC 7<lb/>
Basic Sa i.ng Sep- 16 OC 2<lb/>
Beg.nnmg Baiirccm and In<lb/>
termed'a'e Bai'r c"n Sec'<lb/>
17 Nov 19 Texas Ccun Dance<lb/>
Sep' 18 Nov 20<lb/>
Darkroom Photography Sep'<lb/>
18 Nov 13 Yoga Sep" 29 OC 13<lb/>
Ccnversacnai German Sept 21<lb/>
 . 23 Camera I Sept 21<lb/>
OC 19 iail Exercise Sept 2'<lb/>
OC 21<lb/>
Gui'ar Sep' 21 Nov 9 Ban;G<lb/>
Sept 21 Nov 9 Algebra Revie<lb/>
Sept 22 OC 10 Clogging 1 Sep'<lb/>
22 OC 27 Retirement Planning<lb/>
Sept 23 OC 14<lb/>
For more<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
torn m with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday m the Biology<lb/>
Lecture Hal' starting a' 12 30 and<lb/>
every Wednesday a' 5 00 at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center located<lb/>
down a? ?he bottom of College Hill<lb/>
ALPHA BETA ALPHA<lb/>
The Alpha Beta Alpha iABAi<lb/>
Library Science Fraternity will<lb/>
hold its pledging ceremony for<lb/>
perspective members Member<lb/>
ship is open to all library soene<lb/>
maiors, faculty members and<lb/>
those interested in the library or<lb/>
the library profession The piedg<lb/>
ing ceremony will be held on<lb/>
September 28 a'5 3C n room 219 of<lb/>
the L'brar r Scier: e building it m<lb/>
terested please t ome -i the library<lb/>
science departmen' uitce lor<lb/>
more mforma' W All presen<lb/>
members are requirec 'o attend<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
Need some light reading' The<lb/>
A C S S A is taking orders tor the<lb/>
CRC Handbook of Chemistry and<lb/>
Physics and the CRC Handbook of<lb/>
Tables for Organic Compound<lb/>
Identification for J25 00 and $20 00<lb/>
respectively A reference must tor<lb/>
any science maior! Place orders<lb/>
in the Chemistry office located m<lb/>
Flanagan between the hours ot<lb/>
10 00 and 12 00 Sept 20 through<lb/>
Oct 8 Place your orders now<lb/>
Payment due when order ,s plac<lb/>
ed<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
Attention ECU ambassadors<lb/>
Don't forget the important<lb/>
meeting this Wednesday Sept 22<lb/>
at S 00 pm m the Menoenhau<lb/>
Multipurpose Room The member<lb/>
ship drive was a great success ar3<lb/>
with your help the telephone cam<lb/>
paign will be great too We have<lb/>
alot ot surprises you'll be very<lb/>
nappy to rear about at this<lb/>
meeting, so please make plans to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
information cail<lb/>
ACTING CLASS<lb/>
An acting class for beginners<lb/>
will be meeting lor ten consecutive<lb/>
evenmgs starting Sept 21 at Pitt<lb/>
Community College Registration<lb/>
lor the class will occur at its initial<lb/>
session, the tee is $U 00 Stephen<lb/>
B Finnan, formerly of ECU s<lb/>
Drama and Speech Department.<lb/>
will be the instructor In addition<lb/>
to ECU Mr Fmnan has 'aught<lb/>
and directed a' Brooklyn c.uege<lb/>
Michigan State Univ and Piti<lb/>
Community College He also ns$<lb/>
professional ac'ng and directing<lb/>
credits Since the class sije s<lb/>
limited, those who are interested<lb/>
are advised 10 can Mr Finnan<lb/>
(757 3546. between 3 5) or Mr jm<lb/>
Brown at PCC (7S4 31JO between<lb/>
? 5)<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
On Monday September 27 8 9 00<lb/>
p m m Hendnx theatre P Kappa<lb/>
Phi and CADP will sponsor welt<lb/>
known Dr Kenneth Mills from<lb/>
UNC The topic ot discussion will<lb/>
be "Alcohol Prevention Free ad<lb/>
mission to community and entire<lb/>
campus<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Come and see what cea'ures go<lb/>
bump n the ECU tcrest You can<lb/>
fma cut firs' hand at the Psi Chi<lb/>
cookout party to be neid<lb/>
September 29 iremdate Sep' 30'<lb/>
from 4 30 to 7 pm The frolick Will<lb/>
be held n the deli be'ween iQfh<lb/>
street and Biology Greenhouse<lb/>
Reserve your fun and buy a ticket<lb/>
at the Psi Chi library lor $2 00 or at<lb/>
the cookout for $2 50 pays tor<lb/>
food, soda and oeer) You will<lb/>
never know who you will meet<lb/>
unless you come<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
Phi Alpha Thefa and the ECU<lb/>
History Department are sponsor<lb/>
?ng a bake sale Thursday Sept 23<lb/>
from ? 00 am to 2 00 pm Cakes<lb/>
brownies and other good es will be<lb/>
sold 1 Brewster A 317<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
ECU s own student organnation<lb/>
for future profess onais in "he t'eid<lb/>
of socai work and correctional<lb/>
service will be meeng Monday<lb/>
Sept 27 at 5 30 pm .n Room 101<lb/>
All maiors and m'ended maiors<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
TOMORROW<lb/>
There s a mandatory mee g<lb/>
for all persons "0 ae fled tor<lb/>
SGA posi'ons in Menoen-a 221 a<lb/>
7 X pm Wednesday Ml persons<lb/>
not able to atfena this me' -s<lb/>
tomorrow mus' senc a 'epresen<lb/>
tatve<lb/>
ELECTIONS<lb/>
The follow ng c:sns are Stll<lb/>
available m 'he Sec' 29 SO? e M<lb/>
'?ons ot 'he S&amp;A ieg s Sture ano<lb/>
ciass Officers T"e are ' .e Ja<lb/>
represen'a' ves represe'a" <lb/>
from ?Vh!te Greene un-s'eaaanc<lb/>
yier Graoua'e vce presden-<lb/>
and sfr c ass sa<lb/>
'reasurer Tne cteae ne I hie to<lb/>
candidacy is Aeanesaa. Sec <lb/>
in R-Km 228 Df Ve"hen-ai S'u<lb/>
dent Cer'e-<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
The PRC I Jb w ii oic iU<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday Septebe'<lb/>
21 at 7 00 m the MSC Multipurpose<lb/>
Rou" An interested PRc IN<lb/>
are nv.ted to a'tend<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
There w 11 be a BiOtegy Club<lb/>
? eeng HI Monday Sep'emt<lb/>
at 7 30 p m An nea' Prep'Ces<lb/>
sionai Evaluation Ccn -<lb/>
Members w.1. speak arc answr-<lb/>
ques'iors An?cme r ? r v p a<lb/>
professional health caree-s a-e Hi<lb/>
courages 'c attend Retresme- s<lb/>
wi'l be served<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
? . ? '<lb/>
?<lb/>
.eague <lb/>
Sef ??"  ? ?<lb/>
VSC Bowi-nc<lb/>
tan<lb/>
.<lb/>
ceg ' '<lb/>
.<lb/>
your 'ea"<lb/>
KM<lb/>
 ?- '<lb/>
I. ' 260<lb/>
ARTS<lb/>
ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
An Arts Asm n s'ra' '?' I<lb/>
and an, mer?ic ors "s<lb/>
spec' we nr?4?On ae -? "eo<lb/>
?ena Ihe I rs ee' - -ear<lb/>
on yvecnescar Sep' 22 a'5 Xp"<lb/>
n ysi ? Ga e . Jen W ?"?<lb/>
Bu-d "C For more ml<lb/>
-58 9936 a'te' 5 pn<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
The Pv E'a S gma Fr<lb/>
Honor Sociehy arill mee' on Sec '<lb/>
a' 5 00 pm in Room 212 a'<lb/>
Menaenhaii Stude' Cfr-<lb/>
members are urgec 'o at'e 1<lb/>
'he pia"S ior 'he OCcCe' a . I ?<lb/>
?zar' be scheduled<lb/>
I<lb/>
The ha-l aroliman<lb/>
-<lb/>
Bper?ec a<lb/>
.?<lb/>
Si.bsc- ipon Ra'e UWyea ?<lb/>
The Eas' Ca " -<lb/>
are loca'ea "  O c<lb/>
Buiid.ng on NM ci<lb/>
Green, ne N C<lb/>
POS' '?'<lb/>
-<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
U.S. NAVY<lb/>
INTERVIEWS<lb/>
The Career Piann.g a"d Place<lb/>
men' Service n 'he Bloxton House<lb/>
i have representatives Irom e<lb/>
u S Navy Reciting Ottice "ere<lb/>
eo'er'?oe 29 oe'wee- 9am<lb/>
aPd 4pm tc talk wi"i Seniors A<lb/>
shea .s ava'ace lor 'hose<lb/>
'es s'e'ec with us '0 sign up tor an<lb/>
inter, eyy All maiors are<lb/>
welcome the mus'demand will oe<lb/>
for tnrse in the Health ana<lb/>
tecn cai I eias j mus' s.gn up<lb/>
on or before Sep'ember 28<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
Ail studen's who plan to oe'ia'e<lb/>
physical educa'ion as a maior dur<lb/>
ng change of rr'aior week tor me<lb/>
Fan Semes'er should repor' 'c<lb/>
Mmges Cc.seL from I 00 3 00<lb/>
0 m on Aed"esday Sep'ember 29<lb/>
tor a mo'cr and physica' fi'ness<lb/>
'es' Sa'istacory performance en<lb/>
this 'es' s 'equred as a prere<lb/>
a s'e loi ctt-c at aoca"ce to<lb/>
?r-e physical education maic pro<lb/>
gram Mee detailed information<lb/>
concerning the tes' is available by<lb/>
calling 757 6441 or 6442<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K is caring it is giving a<lb/>
oart of yourse't to someone else<lb/>
I' is an opportunity to commit<lb/>
yourself to enriching tne lives of<lb/>
many individuals and a'he same<lb/>
time enhancing your lite because<lb/>
ycu iave chosen to care Circle K<lb/>
is "e larges" co ed collegia'e ser<lb/>
vice organization in 'he world with<lb/>
over 700 Cap'ers in North<lb/>
America alone ECU s chapter<lb/>
mee's every Tuesday n.gnt at 6 30<lb/>
in MendenhaU room 221 Come and<lb/>
be a part cf our group choose to<lb/>
care'<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
On Monday September 27. 8 9 00<lb/>
p m m Hendrix theatre Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi and CADP will sponsor well<lb/>
known Dr Kenneth Mills from<lb/>
UNC The topic ot discussion will<lb/>
be "Alcohol Prevention" Free ad<lb/>
mission to community and entire<lb/>
campus<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 be prepaid. Inclose<lb/>
75? per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibU! Use capital and<lb/>
Iowa vase letters.<lb/>
Return to THE EAST C AROITMAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Tuesda before<lb/>
Vednesda publications<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No. lines<lb/>
. at 5? pe:<lb/>
. N<lb/>
I r<lb/>
-U-H-H -<lb/>
- <lb/>
T-t<lb/>
-r??<lb/>
- - "<lb/>
- ' -<lb/>
4 J.<lb/>
' <lb/>
?<lb/>
?-<lb/>
m<lb/>
? -<lb/>
hi<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
-M-<lb/>
 -<lb/>
11<lb/>
DISNEY WORLD<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
Wait Dsney Ac'd s Mag c<lb/>
Kingdom Coliege lrtemsnip Pre<lb/>
gram will be interview ng c rar"<lb/>
pus OC 15 1982 Irom 3 3C 5 OOP<lb/>
lor tneir spring ano su"me- in<lb/>
terns Students nrill work 30 hours<lb/>
per week and earn approximately<lb/>
S4 00 per hour tor IG weeks Special<lb/>
trarjrig sem ra,s ne a weekly<lb/>
Stude'fs w H d? p.acea according<lb/>
to tne maiors Any in'erestec<lb/>
s'udents should contac 'e Cc op<lb/>
ffiee m 3.3 Rawi or can ex' 6979<lb/>
PRE PHYSICAL<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Deadline for '983 aom.ssion t0<lb/>
professional phase is October is.<lb/>
'982 All general college and<lb/>
physical therapy creaits mus' be<lb/>
completed Oy end ot Spring 1983<lb/>
Allied Health Professions Admis<lb/>
sions Test must be taken m<lb/>
November ;appiy prior to October<lb/>
3! Application ana interview ap<lb/>
pomtments are tc be made by<lb/>
Sep'ember 24 1982 n departmen<lb/>
ta' office iBelk Building Annex 3.<lb/>
757 6961 ext 261'<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
Ge' ready tor a fantastic year<lb/>
Fine out everything you ever<lb/>
wan'ed to know about Sport Clubs<lb/>
Currently Feid Hockey Gym<lb/>
nas'es. Karate, Rugby. Soccer.<lb/>
Surfing. Team Handball ara<lb/>
Wafer Polo are active Sport Clubs<lb/>
It you ana your friends wish to<lb/>
begn a new club attend the sport<lb/>
club informational meeting ALL<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS MUST ATTEND<lb/>
THE FIRST MEETING WHICH<lb/>
WILL BE HELD WEDNESDAY.<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 22 IN MEMORIAL<lb/>
GYM ROOM 105 8 AT 4 00 P m<lb/>
Active sport clubs should rave<lb/>
organuational meetings for the<lb/>
election of officers ara prepara<lb/>
tion of schedules prior to tt?e IRS<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
POLITICAL<lb/>
CANDIDATES<lb/>
The upcoming student elections will<lb/>
be a valuable experience for you in<lb/>
your college life. Be a winner and<lb/>
advertise your campaign in The East<lb/>
Carolinian ? a proven winner. To<lb/>
join the winning team ? call<lb/>
757-6366 and ask for Geep Johnson<lb/>
? Ad Representative.<lb/>
-<lb/>
LU<lb/>
5<lb/>
CO<lb/>
Q<lb/>
IT'S HOT! IT'S WILD!<lb/>
IT'S THE CAMPUS<lb/>
CALENDAR!<lb/>
There s nothing academic about it' Be<lb/>
among the first in your school to order the<lb/>
19?3 Campus Calendar featuring 12 of the<lb/>
sexiest men you II see on A.mencan cam-<lb/>
puses this year These gorgeous honeys<lb/>
vsill hang with you all year long To receive<lb/>
yours fill out the coupon below, enc lose a<lb/>
check or money order for $10 and send<lb/>
to Campus Calendar, P.O. Box B, <lb/>
May wood, New )ersey 07607. In<lb/>
6 8 weeks and in time for<lb/>
the holidays we'll send<lb/>
you the 1 J" x 1 5" color<lb/>
planner calendar<lb/>
We II also tell you how<lb/>
to enter your honey<lb/>
in our 1984 National<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Contest to win a<lb/>
uxury SV000 Spring <lb/>
fling Vacation for j<lb/>
both of you ou mus<lb/>
be 19 years or older to<lb/>
rjua'ifv<lb/>
Bookstore inquiries<lb/>
welcomed I<lb/>
Yes' Please send me<lb/>
Enclosed is my Check or M O for$<lb/>
f it print<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
P<lb/>
P<lb/>
K<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
"A<lb/>
OSS<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
"Original Ladies' Lockout"<lb/>
Thursday ? Appearing ?<lb/>
The Original Drifters<lb/>
Happy Hour ? 7:30-9:00<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
The Best In Dance<lb/>
Open 8:30<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Beach Night<lb/>
with John Moore<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Lambda Chi Pony Night<lb/>
For Members &amp; Their Guests Only<lb/>
River<lb/>
Bluff Ra<lb/>
Behind<lb/>
Putt Pun<lb/>
?<lb/>
Tm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0003"/><lb/>
T HI I SI I AKOl IMW<lb/>
stpn MHt K<lb/>
Student Health Concerns<lb/>
Mono Explained<lb/>
The Student Health Service m-<lb/>
tially wanted this to be a question<lb/>
and answer column, but due to<lb/>
the lack of questions sent in after<lb/>
the article on herpes, we decided<lb/>
to continue with an informative<lb/>
column. When sufficient ques-<lb/>
tions arise we will continue the<lb/>
question and answer column.<lb/>
W e would like to remind all of<lb/>
you this is for you and if you<lb/>
tune am questions relating to<lb/>
health and would like them<lb/>
answered in this paper, send your<lb/>
questions to the East Carolinian.<lb/>
1 his week's topic is Infectious<lb/>
Mononucleosis, a iral infection,<lb/>
which generalh affects Kmphatic<lb/>
tissue. Lmph node enlargement<lb/>
is typical and may or ma not be<lb/>
iccompanied by malaise, fever.<lb/>
sore throat, headache, enlarge-<lb/>
ment of the spleen and even jaun-<lb/>
dice (yellow mg ot the white of the<lb/>
eye and skin).<lb/>
Other abnormalities ma occur<lb/>
in infectious mononucleosis but<lb/>
are less common.<lb/>
I he diagnosis of infectious<lb/>
mononucleosis is made b a<lb/>
positive blood test, along wnh a<lb/>
physical exam<lb/>
The cause of the disease is<lb/>
: to be a Mr us known as<lb/>
he 1 pstein-Barr irus. Infectious<lb/>
? mucleosis occurs most com-<lb/>
. among young adults 15-25<lb/>
. s ? though no age group is<lb/>
ime "kissing disease" is<lb/>
ill used as a synonym<lb/>
ous mononucleosis.<lb/>
Ban irus may be<lb/>
aliva of infected per-<lb/>
sons a . thereby ma he<lb/>
, by kissing, although<lb/>
not the only means of<lb/>
an mission.<lb/>
Besides kissing, there are other<lb/>
ol rapid indirect oral con-<lb/>
5 ich as passing a soft drink<lb/>
an from one person to<lb/>
other.<lb/>
Generally, using good health<lb/>
its such as covering your<lb/>
?? a hen coughing or sneez-<lb/>
not eating or drinking after<lb/>
hers, and washing your hands<lb/>
(end to decrease the<lb/>
usness o infectious<lb/>
mononucleosis.<lb/>
Once you have contracted in-<lb/>
fectious mononucleosis, it may<lb/>
take up to six weeks for the first<lb/>
symptoms to develop. The symp-<lb/>
toms usually last only 2-4 weeks,<lb/>
but may last for months depen-<lb/>
ding on the seventy of the infec-<lb/>
tion and the organ systems in-<lb/>
volved.<lb/>
Many people have a mild case<lb/>
of infectious mononucleosis,<lb/>
with lymph node enlargement be-<lb/>
ing the only sign of the disease.<lb/>
They are generally able to con-<lb/>
tinue their daily routine with<lb/>
minimal restrictions.<lb/>
If you happen to be one of<lb/>
those with a more complicated il-<lb/>
lness, ou may be restricted to<lb/>
bed rest to allow your body to<lb/>
recover more quickly and also<lb/>
prevent possible trauma to your<lb/>
liver and spleen by increased ac-<lb/>
tivity.<lb/>
There is no rapid cure for in-<lb/>
fectious mononucleosis. Symp-<lb/>
toms tend to be decreased by ade-<lb/>
quate rest, good nutritious diet<lb/>
and avoiding strenuous physical<lb/>
exercise<lb/>
As stated, most of the symp-<lb/>
toms will be gone within 2-4<lb/>
weeks. However, there seems to<lb/>
be a period of fatigue that<lb/>
sometimes lingers beyond the<lb/>
other symptoms. This vanes with<lb/>
individuals and also with the in-<lb/>
dividual's state of mind.<lb/>
Those who tend to be strongly<lb/>
motivated to return to their work<lb/>
recover more rapidly than others.<lb/>
Those with depression and low<lb/>
self-esteem are likely to recover<lb/>
more slowly.<lb/>
What ou should do if you<lb/>
have infectious mononucleosis.<lb/>
? I. Get adequate rest.<lb/>
?2. fcat well (regular, nutritious<lb/>
meals).<lb/>
?3. Take Tylenol or aspirin for<lb/>
fever or aching.<lb/>
?4. Take other medication only<lb/>
as prescribed by your health care<lb/>
provider.<lb/>
?5. Avoid alcohol and strenuous<lb/>
physical activity.<lb/>
?6. Use good health habits to<lb/>
decrease the possibility of<lb/>
spreading your illness.<lb/>
School Prayer Bill Supported<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SI.II u rilrr<lb/>
The controversy over<lb/>
prayer in public schools<lb/>
heated up last weekend<lb/>
as President Reagan,<lb/>
citing what he called<lb/>
U.S. heritage as a na-<lb/>
tion under God, asked<lb/>
Congress to enact<lb/>
legislation which would<lb/>
allow prayer in public<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Reagan urged<lb/>
members of Congress<lb/>
TuES. QEPT. 14<lb/>
00-2:00<lb/>
ADMISSION l-&amp;0<lb/>
?apple ecfos-ewt0'<lb/>
'? Pose's ? uoOGfS ? u.B E<lb/>
? Qook. &amp;h&amp;K ? PCP5 I COLA<lb/>
CACCoLueAiStSCWTES Cv<lb/>
? CCA COLA<lb/>
? F emeus F- zzo<lb/>
2nd ?? <lb/>
PLUS C7WES PRIZK<lb/>
?0ME EARLY !<lb/>
ooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooooooo<lb/>
<lb/>
?"<lb/>
?s<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St extension<lb/>
to pass this "long over-<lb/>
due" measure and "to<lb/>
help make us one na-<lb/>
tion under God again<lb/>
He made his comments<lb/>
during his weekly radio<lb/>
address.<lb/>
Former North<lb/>
Carolina Civbil Liber-<lb/>
ties Union board<lb/>
member Carroll Web-<lb/>
ber said he agreed with<lb/>
the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union's<lb/>
(ACLU) position that<lb/>
the phrase "one nation<lb/>
under God" is un-<lb/>
constitutional.<lb/>
A school prayer<lb/>
amendment has already<lb/>
been sponsored by<lb/>
N.C. Senator Jesse<lb/>
Helms (R) and has the<lb/>
strong support of con-<lb/>
servative backers. The<lb/>
Helms' amendment<lb/>
would strip the<lb/>
Supreme Court of<lb/>
power to rule on the<lb/>
school prayer issues. So<lb/>
Chairperson Selected<lb/>
Emily S. Boyce, a<lb/>
widely-known advocate<lb/>
of an expanded role of<lb/>
libraries and librarians<lb/>
in today's society, has<lb/>
been appointed perma-<lb/>
nent chairperson of the<lb/>
Department of Library<lb/>
Science at ECU.<lb/>
Boyce, who has been<lb/>
acting chairperson for<lb/>
the past year, was the<lb/>
unanimous choice of<lb/>
the department to suc-<lb/>
ceed Gene D. Lanier,<lb/>
according to Angelo A.<lb/>
Volpe, dean of the col-<lb/>
lege of arts and<lb/>
sciences.<lb/>
Lanier, the previous<lb/>
and first chairperson of<lb/>
the department, re-<lb/>
quested more than a<lb/>
year ago to be relieved<lb/>
of administrative duties<lb/>
to devote his time to<lb/>
teaching and research,<lb/>
including his advocacy<lb/>
of intellectual freedom.<lb/>
Lanier and Boyce<lb/>
were original members<lb/>
of the library science<lb/>
faculty when the<lb/>
department was created<lb/>
in 1966.<lb/>
Volpe thanked<lb/>
Lanier "for all he did<lb/>
in bringing about the<lb/>
successful evolution of<lb/>
this department<lb/>
"This is an exciting<lb/>
time to be involved in<lb/>
managing an education<lb/>
program in librarian-<lb/>
ship. 1 believe that East<lb/>
Carolina University can<lb/>
become a regional<lb/>
center of excellence in<lb/>
preparing graduates for<lb/>
a great ariety of jobs<lb/>
in the knowledge in-<lb/>
dustryBoyce said.<lb/>
ECU's department<lb/>
currently has 82<lb/>
graduate majors. Volpe<lb/>
said the department's<lb/>
graduate program "is<lb/>
exceptionally strong<lb/>
Long active in library<lb/>
association work,<lb/>
Boyce has held<lb/>
numerous positions,<lb/>
offices and committee<lb/>
assignments and is a<lb/>
frequent speaker. She<lb/>
serves on the executive<lb/>
board of the N.C.<lb/>
Library Association<lb/>
and on the governing<lb/>
council of the<lb/>
American Library<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Boyce is a member of<lb/>
the Bibliotherapy Com-<lb/>
mittee of the Associa-<lb/>
tion of Cooperative<lb/>
and Specialized Library<lb/>
Agencies, a division of<lb/>
the ALA. She is a<lb/>
regional director-elect<lb/>
for the N.C. Communi-<lb/>
ty Colleges Learning<lb/>
Resources Association.<lb/>
Prior to joining the<lb/>
ECU library faculty in<lb/>
1959, she was a<lb/>
librarian at Tileston<lb/>
Junior High in Wilm-<lb/>
ington, and the Wilm-<lb/>
ington public library.<lb/>
She joined the ECU<lb/>
library in the cataloging<lb/>
and circulation depart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Volpe said the ap-<lb/>
pointment was effective<lb/>
at the start of the fall<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
far a liberal filibuster<lb/>
has delayed the<lb/>
measures.<lb/>
Sen. Gary Hart<lb/>
(D-Col) delivered the<lb/>
official Democratic<lb/>
response to Reagan's<lb/>
remarks. Hart claimed<lb/>
that Reagan was hawk<lb/>
ing school prayer<lb/>
because his "economic<lb/>
program has failed,<lb/>
and apparently he<lb/>
would rather not talk<lb/>
about it<lb/>
The ACLU has<lb/>
claimed that any type<lb/>
of school prayer would<lb/>
likely be unconstitu-<lb/>
tional, and they have<lb/>
taken some cases to<lb/>
court at the state level<lb/>
to block such legisla-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The founding<lb/>
fathers wisely saw thai<lb/>
the power ot the state<lb/>
should not promote<lb/>
any religious group<lb/>
said Aebber "The<lb/>
public schools arc an<lb/>
instrument ol state<lb/>
power. No praver. ex-<lb/>
cept one of the most<lb/>
watered down kind,<lb/>
could be agreed on bv<lb/>
all religious groups I<lb/>
don't want our children<lb/>
to have a watery<lb/>
religion<lb/>
Some proponents ?<lb/>
school prayer have if<lb/>
gested that a moment<lb/>
o silence be held in-<lb/>
stead ot an open<lb/>
prayer. They claim tha?<lb/>
in this wav student-<lb/>
could choose to par<lb/>
ticipaie or not to par<lb/>
tisipate They could<lb/>
also use a praver of<lb/>
their choice<lb/>
Opponents ol school<lb/>
praver slaim thai<lb/>
students already h i<lb/>
pi in anwa<lb/>
The context of<lb/>
silence is an imp I<lb/>
factoi w ebbei said H<lb/>
said tha: what happens<lb/>
before the prayer, aft<lb/>
the prayer, an<lb/>
said b the iea hei ?<lb/>
other students will<lb/>
fluence the m<lb/>
"I ither it will be sec<lb/>
?.? in or it il<lb/>
??erv pablum<lb/>
Income Growth Low<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPI) ? The personal<lb/>
income of Americans<lb/>
grew by only 0.3 per-<lb/>
cent in August, the<lb/>
smallest gain since<lb/>
March, as factory pay<lb/>
and government<lb/>
benefits levelled off,<lb/>
the Commerce Depart-<lb/>
ment said Monday.<lb/>
After-tax disposable<lb/>
income showed even<lb/>
less improvement, go-<lb/>
ing up only 0.2 percent<lb/>
after increases in both<lb/>
taxes and government<lb/>
fees, the department<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The anemic Au<lb/>
increases were in sharp<lb/>
contrast to July-<lb/>
figure which h a d<lb/>
shown a full one per-<lb/>
cent increase in per-<lb/>
sonal income and a<lb/>
heaithy 2.1 percent in-<lb/>
crease in atter-tax<lb/>
disposable income<lb/>
because of the July tax<lb/>
cut.<lb/>
Personal spending<lb/>
outpaced increases in<lb/>
income for August, go-<lb/>
ing up 0.7 percent, the<lb/>
department said.<lb/>
The departme<lb/>
Bureau of Economic<lb/>
V ilysis -a per; i i<lb/>
income increas I<lb/>
58.6 bil an<lb/>
nual rate ol S2.<lb/>
triuion, after adj isi<lb/>
ment for seasonal<lb/>
come trend<lb/>
Factor) pay i<lb/>
dropped at an anr .<lb/>
rate o: ? Bu<lb/>
the far largei rtl<lb/>
h s the - ' - in<lb/>
government benel<lb/>
an mere only<lb/>
5900<lb/>
from July's<lb/>
rgc<lb/>
512.9 b n.<lb/>
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? Globe Hardware Store<lb/>
? Bicycle Post<lb/>
? Quick Snak<lb/>
? Pharo's<lb/>
? Sharpe's Formal Wear<lb/>
? University Book Exchange<lb/>
? Book Barn<lb/>
? Varsity Barber Shop<lb/>
? Subway<lb/>
? Heart's Delight<lb/>
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SUPPORTING<lb/>
BASKETBALL ?GOLF.BASEBA ? 5JHBA ?  -<lb/>
SWIMMING ? TENNIS ? SOCCER ? ?OL. E v B AL. ? c : TBALl<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board is currently involved m a membership drive<lb/>
(Sept. 20-Oct. 1) Someoii3 will be contacting your dorm sorority or<lb/>
fraternity soon with more information If you should miss this then there<lb/>
is a meeting of the entire SAB scheduled for Sept 29 at 700 in room 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhai! Student Center. For more information call Pam Holt Ass't<lb/>
Athletic Director, 757 6417.<lb/>
Become a part of the total athletic picture. Join the SAB and be an ECU<lb/>
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THURSDAY $1.00 Adm.<lb/>
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END OF THE WEEK PARTY<lb/>
N?. Houri - 3 30 7 30<lb/>
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When ou get the munchies<lb/>
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this weekend. ou need<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0004"/><lb/>
Sire last (Earoltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, cm mm<lb/>
Mike Hughes, wbHUKM t?"<lb/>
WAVERLY MERR1TT, v?o, ?; MMfMwv ClNDY PLLASANTS. s,?,ns t,im?<lb/>
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Mike Davis, ??u7?m t&amp;Moxr<lb/>
September 21. 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
U.S. &amp; Israel<lb/>
Senseless Massacre Severing Ties<lb/>
It is somehow difficult to believe<lb/>
that two nations so essentially<lb/>
disparate as the United States and<lb/>
Israel could have ever carried on<lb/>
anvthing but sporadic, heated and<lb/>
west Beirut even claim that<lb/>
"wounded people (in the refugee<lb/>
camps) were killed in their hospital<lb/>
beds<lb/>
We condemn and deplore, time<lb/>
unproductive diplomatic relations, and time again, the Nazi murdering<lb/>
After all, it would seem to follow<lb/>
that any nation which continually<lb/>
chooses to propagate the influence<lb/>
of senseless bloodshed and violent<lb/>
destruction would run counter to<lb/>
the policies of a nation such as the<lb/>
U.S which claims "life, liberty and<lb/>
the pursuit of happiness" as its fun-<lb/>
damental tenets.<lb/>
But nonetheless, U.S.Israeli ties<lb/>
have been, perhaps, the foremost<lb/>
oasis this country has had in the<lb/>
Middle East in recent years, which is<lb/>
almost sickening to realize when one<lb/>
considers that country's recent<lb/>
chain of events.<lb/>
In this summer's siege of Beirut,<lb/>
for example, Israeli troops were<lb/>
responsible for killing 17,825<lb/>
Lebanese and Palestinians ? in-<lb/>
cluding women, children and<lb/>
civilian men ? and injuring another<lb/>
30,203. These figures may seem in-<lb/>
ordinately high, except when one<lb/>
compares them with the official<lb/>
Israeli count, which claimed the<lb/>
death toll was even less than one<lb/>
thousand.<lb/>
of six million Jews in the WW II<lb/>
concentration camps ? as well we<lb/>
should. The world has probably<lb/>
never known such a decadent,<lb/>
reproachful crime. But deny it as we<lb/>
may, that same attempted genocide<lb/>
is occurring today in the Middle<lb/>
East.<lb/>
The "proud" nation of Israel has<lb/>
rejected, on numerous occasions,<lb/>
U.S. demands to withdraw its<lb/>
troops from Lebanon. And the<lb/>
government in Jerusalem, which<lb/>
amounts to little more than a<lb/>
power-hungry insane asylum, says it<lb/>
"regrets" the horrible incidents at<lb/>
the refugee camps, yet maintains<lb/>
that Israeli troops will continue<lb/>
their "mission-of-peace" occupa-<lb/>
tion of west Beirut until terrorist<lb/>
and other anti-Israeli factions are<lb/>
eliminated.<lb/>
Admittedly, casting the im-<lb/>
mediate blame at the feet of Israel is<lb/>
unjust. As yet, there is no sound<lb/>
proof as to who's to blame for the<lb/>
massacre. However, even that coun-<lb/>
try's own citizens (or, at least, a<lb/>
Then, practically a month after goodly number of the Israeli people)<lb/>
cease-fire negotiations had reached believe their own government is at<lb/>
an apparent settlement, the flame of least partly, if not directly, at fault<lb/>
madness rekindles. Israeli tanks in the incidents.<lb/>
surge deeper and deeper into the<lb/>
heart of west Beirut, directly-<lb/>
violating diplomatic arrangements<lb/>
? once again, killing and destroy-<lb/>
ing everyone and everything in<lb/>
This past weekend, angry protests<lb/>
were staged in Jerusalem, once<lb/>
again voicing the Israeli people's<lb/>
distrust of their government<lb/>
They were dispersed by military<lb/>
sight. Suddenly, the Soviet Embassy police armed with teargas, concus-<lb/>
is occupied by Israeli troops, sion grenades and clubs<lb/>
Naturally, they deny that takeover, When will the world learn that<lb/>
despite the fact that Israeli artillery Israel cannot be trusted? How many<lb/>
has already seriously damaged the more lives must be wasted in this<lb/>
entire embassy compound. senseless bloodbath? How much<lb/>
Israel, of course, claims that any longer will it be before we find<lb/>
damage to the Soviet compound has ourselves in the midst of another<lb/>
been unintentional, although the world war? Despite what we may<lb/>
buildings have been shelled more like to believe, WW 111 is right<lb/>
than a dozen times since the fighting around the bend, just aching for a<lb/>
began 14 weeks ago. reason to launch itself. The stage is<lb/>
And then, apparently so as not to already set.<lb/>
omit the United States from the Perhaps the only logical mode of<lb/>
growing Middle East insanity, an action for the United States is to<lb/>
Israeli officer takes a shot at a U.S.<lb/>
Marine standing guard atop a<lb/>
clearly-marked American Embassy<lb/>
sever its ties with the warmongering<lb/>
Middle East nation, since it is ob-<lb/>
vious that Israel has neither any<lb/>
building in west Beirut. Fortunate- concept nor intention of spreading<lb/>
ly, the bullet missed its mark; never- the influence of peace in that<lb/>
theless, days later came the awaited region They have flatly rejected the<lb/>
denial, which has almost become<lb/>
standard practice for the Israeli<lb/>
government, especially in recent<lb/>
months.<lb/>
But now, perhaps the most<lb/>
sickening act to date has occurred:<lb/>
the massacre of men, women and<lb/>
children alike in the Palestinian<lb/>
refugee camps of Chatilla and<lb/>
Sabra, which occurred on Sept. 17<lb/>
and 18, only days after the multi-<lb/>
U.S. peace initiatives, saying they<lb/>
are contradictory to the Camp<lb/>
David accords, despite Former<lb/>
President Carter's firm statement<lb/>
that the current plan is "completely<lb/>
compatible with the Camp David<lb/>
agreements" he helped negotiate<lb/>
with Israeli Prime Minister<lb/>
Menachem Begin and the late Egyp-<lb/>
tian President Anwar Sadat.<lb/>
It is also obvious that Israel has<lb/>
national U.N. peace-keeping force manipulated its entire region using<lb/>
pulled out of Beirut. Bodies, human its bogus alliance with and approval<lb/>
and animal corpses, strewn together<lb/>
and buried by bulldozers in the rub-<lb/>
ble of destruction. And the<lb/>
characteristic, blood-boiling blame<lb/>
tossing ensues.<lb/>
Israel blames the murders on<lb/>
Phalange gunmen loyal to the<lb/>
recently-slain president-elect of<lb/>
Lebanon, Bashir Gemayel. The<lb/>
PLO accuses the Israelis of the<lb/>
slaughter, claiming they went<lb/>
through the camps simply killing<lb/>
"every man, woman and child in<lb/>
sight<lb/>
The disregard these people show aid, aid for the elderly, etc.), it is ex-<lb/>
toward human life is utterly incom- pected that $3 billion dollars will be<lb/>
prehensible. Men driven by some allotted to Israel this year to<lb/>
obvious insanity, killing helpless "protect U.S. interests" in the Mid-<lb/>
bystanders. Red Cross volunteers in die East.<lb/>
from the United States. Our own<lb/>
nation has been far too hesitant in<lb/>
disapproving of Israeli policy and<lb/>
actions.<lb/>
Once the guise of protection from<lb/>
this Western super-power is formal-<lb/>
ly and actually withdrawn, Israel<lb/>
will stand ? and rightly so ? as a<lb/>
nation alone.<lb/>
Consider This<lb/>
While the Reagan administration<lb/>
has sharply cut back many domestic<lb/>
programs this year (i.e financial<lb/>
50RRYSIRmITS B?N AWNexePASAN ISRAELI SETTLEMENT<lb/>
Poster Airplanes Bombard Ficklen<lb/>
The Pirate 'Aerial Attack'<lb/>
Ah, the sights and sounds of Pirate toot-<lb/>
ball. Wow, did 1 miss thai over the long<lb/>
haul since last year. What an audio-visual<lb/>
experience! The hand marching proud in<lb/>
their regal uniforms, striking up their<lb/>
"stirring rendition" of our national an-<lb/>
them; the heartwarming sound of<lb/>
cheerleaders screeching in unison; the<lb/>
heartbreaking whimper of a die-hard tan<lb/>
who's just dropped a halt-lull bottle ol his<lb/>
favorite beverage. Boy, I'm sure glad<lb/>
Pirate football's back.<lb/>
Just sitting up there in the north stands<lb/>
of Ficklen Stadium the other night really<lb/>
brought back the memories. That im-<lb/>
mense, howling crowd ? the likes ol<lb/>
which can't be found this side o Wilson. 1<lb/>
love it! Fans who stick right with the team<lb/>
through thick and thin, fans who just<lb/>
don't miss a trick.<lb/>
Take this ?uy who sat behind me at the<lb/>
game. Not really all that big or anything.<lb/>
In fact, he looked more like Frnie Douglas<lb/>
than a football fan. But nonetheless, this<lb/>
guv was on his feet the whole game,<lb/>
screaming and cheering his team on to vic-<lb/>
tory. It just so happened that he couldn't<lb/>
sit down, because someone had spilled a<lb/>
drink on his seat. But he didn't mind. That<lb/>
was a small price to pay to watch ECU<lb/>
football in real life.<lb/>
"Kill 'em he yelled. "Tear his legs<lb/>
off! Rip his lungs out Gees, this fella's<lb/>
really getting into the game, 1 thought to<lb/>
myself. 1 mean, this guy practically had<lb/>
tears streaming down his face he was<lb/>
screaming so loud. Little did 1 know that<lb/>
someone had just stolen his precious flask<lb/>
What a fan!<lb/>
And then there was the girl sitting a cou-<lb/>
ple of rows up Boy, was she excited. In<lb/>
fact, she got so involved in the game that<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
she threw up on the people sitting in front<lb/>
of her. It was right then and there that I<lb/>
knew Pirate football was back and bet-<lb/>
ter than ever.<lb/>
And some people say ECU fans are<lb/>
apathetic. Hah! 1 think Ed Emory should<lb/>
be proud to have fans who loe good,<lb/>
tough grid-iron competition that much.<lb/>
Like these other guys sitting nearbv.<lb/>
Talk about your spirit. Everytime we<lb/>
scored a touchdown, thev not only clapped<lb/>
and hollered with the rest of the crowd, but<lb/>
the went that extra mile, grouping<lb/>
together in their ritual circle and belching<lb/>
the familiar fraternity cheer. Fll tell ou, if<lb/>
that didn't get the ol' adrenaline flowing,<lb/>
nothinc would.<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Wa It Is<lb/>
v<lb/>
And wasn't it great to see the famous<lb/>
?aerial attack" we've been hearing so<lb/>
much about? The only trouble was, I<lb/>
couldn't tell where the attack was coming<lb/>
from. Who'd have thought those free<lb/>
posters would make such great paper<lb/>
airplanes.<lb/>
At one point, I was watching intently as<lb/>
the entire East Tennessee team was huddl-<lb/>
ing around an injured player. He'd been<lb/>
laying in the same spot for about 10<lb/>
minutes. His legs didn't even move. We all<lb/>
thought he was dead or sleeping or<lb/>
something. The crowd grew restless.<lb/>
All of a sudden, a few rows back, this<lb/>
tiny eirl with Pirate stickers plastered all<lb/>
over her face. vrcan. "What <lb/>
Damn, what a hit<lb/>
?- little late on th  1 &amp;a d<lb/>
mvself. shaking im head, until i rea<lb/>
she wasn't ret, neat all. Het<lb/>
boyfriend, who 1 pre-umed ha<lb/>
upon himselt b<lb/>
the respite, was in the midd It<lb/>
in the aisle.<lb/>
Yes. ECl football in SZ s chai<lb/>
but 1 can tell alreadv. it's g ?nna be gr<lb/>
Like the new mascot. Actually, Ht s si<lb/>
the same, but now h.<lb/>
instead ot a motorcycle. 1 guess 'he<lb/>
wanted him to bean tic p i r.e.<lb/>
I personally th i ighi it was - t<lb/>
although 1 couldn't help but wond<lb/>
would ha- e happened I ht dec<lb/>
?'go on the field (The h ?rsc ? is<lb/>
Whoa!<lb/>
And wasn't ? great to hav? I ckfc<lb/>
Stadium's own version of the Ooodve<lb/>
Blimp hovering overhead, hacking awaj at<lb/>
the clouds Saturday night? Almost mac.<lb/>
feel like the Rose Bowl, didn't it? (V<lb/>
either the Rose Bowl oi Pearl Harbor 1<lb/>
couldn't decide.)<lb/>
But the one thing I didn't understand<lb/>
about the whole deal was wh it flew<lb/>
just after the national anthem. I mea<lb/>
you'd think a traffic copter would vant to<lb/>
hang around at least long enough to ac-<lb/>
commodate the mas exodus of fans from<lb/>
the stadium. After all. two minutes into<lb/>
the second quarter isn't too much to ask<lb/>
is it?<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Mike Hughes is a Jon<lb/>
exchange student from the Ga<lb/>
Islands whose favorite acting combo is<lb/>
Tony Don and Jerry Mathers as the<lb/>
Beaver.)<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
zeapytooo<lb/>
si6n up for<lb/>
SOME INTERVIEWS,<lb/>
SPORT?<lb/>
?rcf<lb/>
 vlV<lb/>
2 "M ,?<lb/>
NO, MIKB, I'M<lb/>
AFRAtDI'VE<lb/>
CHAN6EPMY<lb/>
MNP<lb/>
WHAT?<lb/>
HOucoMer<lb/>
AFTER6lVIN6(TALOT 0H,)?AH?<lb/>
0FMm;i)eeaB ukb<lb/>
70 take next year off. what?<lb/>
ineeptimev6Rowaw<lb/>
fulfill some tmport-<lb/>
AffTPERSONAL 60ALS<lb/>
WELL, FOR EXAMPLE<lb/>
WERERE A LOT<lb/>
OFVIVEC6AMES<lb/>
I HAVENT7WEP<lb/>
1ET<lb/>
I'LL Bt !N<lb/>
1HECAR<lb/>
<lb/>
Campus Forum"<lb/>
Who's Running And Why?<lb/>
As a candidate running for office in<lb/>
the upcoming SGA election, a common<lb/>
complaint arises as I recruit students to<lb/>
get out and exercise their right to vote<lb/>
next week. A major reason for the poor<lb/>
voter turnout may be that the students<lb/>
don't know the candidates running.<lb/>
Understandably, many would rather<lb/>
leave the decision to the various voting<lb/>
interest groups than flip a coin and hope<lb/>
for the best choice. This newspaper<lb/>
could help the uninformed voter by in-<lb/>
terviewing candidates running for the<lb/>
class offices and even those running for<lb/>
the legislature. Or at least, you could<lb/>
print a brief background and list issues<lb/>
concerning the candidates. I feel that<lb/>
more people would vote and the elected<lb/>
officers and the SGA legislature would<lb/>
be more representative.<lb/>
Linda Bishop<lb/>
Senior, Political Science<lb/>
(Editor's Note: On Tuesday, Sept. 28,<lb/>
The East Carolinian will print a sum-<lb/>
mary oj the platjorms oj any and all<lb/>
candidates who wish to make their oj-<lb/>
Jtcial SGA candidacy known. All those<lb/>
wishing to run a brief platjorm must<lb/>
submit a typewritten, one-page max-<lb/>
imum, sheet, written exactly as it is to<lb/>
appear. Deadline Jor these platjorms<lb/>
will be Monday, Sept. 27, at 11 a.m.<lb/>
This deadline and the above strictures<lb/>
will be strictly adhered to. Alt candidates<lb/>
are welcome to take advantage oj this<lb/>
opportunity, provided their candidacy is<lb/>
legitimate, i<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing alt points of view Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes oj verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0005"/><lb/>
THt t?i tAKOLIfWAN Ml'HMBl K:i. IV8<lb/>
?<lb/>
deau<lb/>
28n<lb/>
 South<lb/>
wrary.<lb/>
ii letters<lb/>
r and<lb/>
umber<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
nazes.<lb/>
Alt let-<lb/>
"revity,<lb/>
fcnal at-<lb/>
Poor Health Prevents Graham Trip<lb/>
CHARLOTTE,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) ? Billy<lb/>
Graham has been in-<lb/>
vited to preach next<lb/>
month in East Ger-<lb/>
many, but the<lb/>
evangelist has not yet<lb/>
accepted the invitation<lb/>
because of health pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
WSOC-TV reported<lb/>
Monday that negotia-<lb/>
tions were under wav to<lb/>
have Graham preach in<lb/>
another Eastern Euro-<lb/>
pean Communist coun-<lb/>
try. Sources with<lb/>
Graham's organization<lb/>
would not reveal the<lb/>
name of the second<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Graham injured his<lb/>
back during a fall<lb/>
about two weeks ago<lb/>
while rock-climbing in<lb/>
Spokane, Wash. He<lb/>
has cancelled all his ap-<lb/>
pearances until Sept.<lb/>
27, when he is schedul-<lb/>
ed to conduct a<lb/>
religious lectures series<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Groundwork for the<lb/>
East German visit was<lb/>
laid in May when<lb/>
Graham visited<lb/>
Moscow and was in-<lb/>
vited by a bishop of the<lb/>
East German Lutheran<lb/>
Church to visit that<lb/>
country, WSOC said.<lb/>
Sources with<lb/>
Graham's organization<lb/>
said negotiations have<lb/>
been conducted<lb/>
throughout the summer<lb/>
and the trip is tentative-<lb/>
ly set for Oct. 15-25.<lb/>
Most of the negotia-<lb/>
tions were handled by<lb/>
Dr. Alexander<lb/>
Harastzi, an Atlanta<lb/>
surgeon who is<lb/>
Graham's East Euro-<lb/>
pean adviser, WSOC<lb/>
said.<lb/>
PAC Supports Aid To Schools<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Moreover, "Evans'<lb/>
support for education<lb/>
is long-standing<lb/>
Meyer asserts. "His<lb/>
'right vote' rating was<lb/>
as high as some of the<lb/>
candidates supported<lb/>
(by NSPAC)<lb/>
Hugh Coffman of<lb/>
Covne's office is equal-<lb/>
ly aggrieved, swearing<lb/>
Coyne supported stu-<lb/>
dent aid legislation.<lb/>
"He (Coyne) was one<lb/>
of the founding<lb/>
members of CARE<lb/>
(Coalition Against<lb/>
Reductions in Educa-<lb/>
tion). Their criticism is<lb/>
unfounded<lb/>
"CARE is not a<lb/>
coalition contends<lb/>
Kostmeyer aide Seager.<lb/>
CARE is "a political<lb/>
smokescreen formed to<lb/>
leave the impression<lb/>
(coalition members)<lb/>
were against cutting aid<lb/>
when in fact the<lb/>
damage (the vote to cut<lb/>
aid) was already<lb/>
done adds Scott<lb/>
Williams, an aide to<lb/>
Rep. Peter Peyser,<lb/>
D-N.Y who led the<lb/>
House fight against the<lb/>
Reagan education<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Sweeney regrets the<lb/>
appearance of NSPAC<lb/>
favoring Democrats.<lb/>
"It's not that we are a<lb/>
partisan organization.<lb/>
It's just the fact that,<lb/>
overall. Democrats<lb/>
have been more<lb/>
favorable to our posi-<lb/>
tion on student aid<lb/>
Helping them won't<lb/>
be easy. The massive<lb/>
student vote that pro-<lb/>
mised to alter elections<lb/>
never has been mobiliz-<lb/>
ed successfullv.<lb/>
The NSPAC for-<lb/>
mula, moreover,<lb/>
doesn't take into ac-<lb/>
count that, though<lb/>
huge numbers of<lb/>
students mieht go to<lb/>
school in 100 closely-<lb/>
contested districts, very<lb/>
few of them may be<lb/>
eligible to vote in those<lb/>
districts. ?<lb/>
In the eighth district,<lb/>
for example, the ma-<lb/>
jority of 18- to 22-year-<lb/>
olds who attend college<lb/>
out of the<lb/>
Seager points<lb/>
do so<lb/>
district,<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"The younger people<lb/>
are, the less likely they<lb/>
are to vote he says.<lb/>
But he adds, perhaps a<lb/>
little wishfully, that<lb/>
"the most fundamental<lb/>
change in American<lb/>
politics (the furor of<lb/>
the '60s and early '70s)<lb/>
was once brought on by<lb/>
students. And with<lb/>
students hanging on by<lb/>
financial fingertips,<lb/>
this might be the<lb/>
margin we need<lb/>
New Project Started<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
siaff Wnlrr<lb/>
A newly formed<lb/>
organization in the<lb/>
Grenville area called<lb/>
The Hunger Project<lb/>
will be holding what<lb/>
they call an "ending<lb/>
hunger briefing" at the<lb/>
First Federal Savings<lb/>
and Loan on Greenville<lb/>
Boulevard this Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Hunger Project<lb/>
is a non-profit,<lb/>
charitable corporation<lb/>
which states as its goal<lb/>
the elimination of star-<lb/>
vation by the turn of<lb/>
the century. "The end<lb/>
of hunger and starva-<lb/>
tion on our planet by<lb/>
the year 1997. An idea<lb/>
whose time has come<lb/>
is the written goal of<lb/>
the group.<lb/>
The all day briefing<lb/>
by the new local<lb/>
chapter of the national<lb/>
organization will be<lb/>
broken into three parts:<lb/>
the basic facts about<lb/>
hunger, the major<lb/>
assumptions and false<lb/>
beliefs about why<lb/>
hunger persists and<lb/>
what you can do to be<lb/>
an effective participant<lb/>
in ending hunger<lb/>
The workshop is<lb/>
open to the public and<lb/>
will be free of charge.<lb/>
A representative from<lb/>
the national office of<lb/>
the Hunger Project will<lb/>
be directing the pro-<lb/>
gram. For more infor-<lb/>
mation call David M.<lb/>
Baughan at 355-6855.<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
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HAPPY HOUR ? 7 Days a Week<lb/>
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Pitcher $1.79 Mug35C<lb/>
Wine 50C<lb/>
Spicy Italian or Greek<lb/>
Taco ? $1.99<lb/>
6 Pks. ? $2.99<lb/>
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ITEM POOCY<lb/>
Each o? these advertised items s required to be 'eadiiy available ?C" sale at D?<lb/>
below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store eicept as specifically noted<lb/>
m this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT SEPT 2V AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
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GOLD KIST<lb/>
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69c<lb/>
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL<lb/>
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Pork Sausage<lb/>
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TRUCKLOAD POTATO SALE! EASTERN GROWN<lb/>
All<lb/>
Purpose<lb/>
White-?5 ?68c 2? 158<lb/>
Potatoes50<lb/>
. 88<lb/>
Bag Your Own bulk a 8C 1<lb/>
3s8 10 ? Qa<lb/>
CALIFORNIA RED TOKAY. BLACK EXOTIC. THOMPSON<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
??<lb/>
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79c<lb/>
CJ? A<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
0<lb/>
Savings y<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW. READY TO EAT<lb/>
Dole Bananas<lb/>
! 3.1?<lb/>
II<lb/>
'2 gal. 2TM,<lb/>
ctn. 0<lb/>
GOLDEN QUARTERS<lb/>
Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
Margarine -gg<lb/>
mmt pkqs. 1<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
Cola ? Orange<lb/>
Ginger Ale<lb/>
? 2 liter<lb/>
plastic<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
79<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Pizzas<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Cheese 10 oz.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
79<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
A&amp;P GRADE "A"<lb/>
Large Eggs<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, SEPT. 25 AT A&amp;P<lb/>
680<lb/>
CF?<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
EXTRA ACTION<lb/>
AP<lb/>
Tide Detergent<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, SEPT. 25 AT A&amp;P.<lb/>
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i LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, SEPT. 25 AT A&amp;P IN<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
THE EASTCAROl INI AN<lb/>
SI-PI I MBI K 21, IS?S2<lb/>
Regional Workshop Held<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Starr W nirr<lb/>
"The United States<lb/>
says it's preventing<lb/>
communism but it<lb/>
doesn't take com<lb/>
munism to tell people<lb/>
they're hungry said<lb/>
ECU Catholic Campus<lb/>
Minister Sister Helen<lb/>
Shondell commenting<lb/>
on the role that she sees<lb/>
the U.S. as playing in<lb/>
Central America.<lb/>
Shondell vvas one of<lb/>
over a hundred people<lb/>
who gathered in<lb/>
Raleigh this weekend<lb/>
for the Southeastern<lb/>
United States Regional<lb/>
Training Workshop<lb/>
titled "creating a<lb/>
presence on Central<lb/>
America<lb/>
The workshop,<lb/>
which was the seventh<lb/>
one to be held in the na-<lb/>
tion this summer, was<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
Carolina Inter faith<lb/>
Task Force on Central<lb/>
America (CTTCA) and<lb/>
the Coalition for a new<lb/>
foreign and Military<lb/>
Policy of Washington<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
The 13-hour Satur-<lb/>
day program included a<lb/>
series of eductioanal<lb/>
activities such as panel<lb/>
discussions, films,and<lb/>
activies. The morning<lb/>
panel discussion includ-<lb/>
ed five panelists each<lb/>
responsible for a<lb/>
specific topic and how<lb/>
U.S. Policy related to<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Gil Joseph, profesor<lb/>
of history at UNC<lb/>
Chapel Hill spoke on<lb/>
Nicaragua. Knut<lb/>
Walters, a former dean<lb/>
of students at the Cen-<lb/>
tral American Universi-<lb/>
ty in El Salvador spoke<lb/>
of the troubles there,<lb/>
Honduras was led by<lb/>
Joseph M o r a n,<lb/>
associate director of<lb/>
CITCA and Guatemala<lb/>
was led by Gail Phares,<lb/>
director of CTTCA.<lb/>
Another panelist who<lb/>
gave a U.S. policy over-<lb/>
view was Ondv Buhl<lb/>
from the D.C. office of<lb/>
the coalition.<lb/>
During the panel<lb/>
discussion Joseph ac-<lb/>
cused the U.S. of at-<lb/>
tempting a<lb/>
"destabilzation" of the<lb/>
Nicaraguan govern-<lb/>
ment. He claimed that<lb/>
the U.S. was providing<lb/>
$19 million to finance a<lb/>
500 man para-military<lb/>
force to disrupt the na-<lb/>
tion. He also feJi there<lb/>
was a possibility of<lb/>
direct U.S. intervention<lb/>
in Nicaragua.<lb/>
Walters said that El<lb/>
Salvador was in a state<lb/>
of "military stagna-<lb/>
tion" and that there<lb/>
was no chance of a<lb/>
"quick military victory<lb/>
(by the government<lb/>
forces) in El<lb/>
Salvador.This means a<lb/>
continued violation of<lb/>
human rights" because<lb/>
the government troops<lb/>
take part in<lb/>
"systematic" killings.<lb/>
"The only way to stop<lb/>
the human rights viola-<lb/>
tions is to stop the<lb/>
fighting<lb/>
Walters supported a<lb/>
negotiated settlement<lb/>
to the problems in El<lb/>
Salvador.<lb/>
Moran also felt that<lb/>
the U.S. was attemp-<lb/>
ting a process of<lb/>
polarization and<lb/>
destabilization" in<lb/>
Honduras. "The U.S.<lb/>
has had no involvement<lb/>
in Honduras in 20<lb/>
years said Moran.<lb/>
He claims that now<lb/>
we are "quietly" pro-<lb/>
viding $40 million in<lb/>
aid that will be used for<lb/>
military purposes. He<lb/>
also said that the U.S.<lb/>
would possibly use El<lb/>
Salvador as a staging<lb/>
irea for our other cen-<lb/>
tral Ameican military<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
Phares claimed that<lb/>
the army in Guatemala<lb/>
was carrying on a "war<lb/>
of extermination"<lb/>
against their own peo-<lb/>
ple with U.S. support.<lb/>
She claimed that social<lb/>
reforms were what was<lb/>
really needed in<lb/>
Guatemala, but that<lb/>
heavy U.S. corporate<lb/>
investment was not<lb/>
supporting such<lb/>
reforms.<lb/>
"Social reform does<lb/>
not equal communism,<lb/>
social reform is not a<lb/>
threat to U.S. security.<lb/>
In fact social reform is<lb/>
good for U.S. securi-<lb/>
ty added Phares.<lb/>
Shondell said that<lb/>
the U.S. position in<lb/>
Central America was<lb/>
actually going to force<lb/>
the people into com-<lb/>
munism The U.S.<lb/>
role is one of giving<lb/>
military aid training to<lb/>
a small oligarchy said<lb/>
Shondell. "That just<lb/>
enables the ruling party<lb/>
to kill their own peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Shondell suggested<lb/>
that people in the U.S.<lb/>
should get involved and<lb/>
unite together in an ef-<lb/>
fort to keep the U.S.<lb/>
military aid out ?<lb/>
Strike Will Hurt Farmers<lb/>
RALEIGH, NX.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Utility com-<lb/>
panies and farmers pro-<lb/>
bably will not suffer<lb/>
immediately from a na-<lb/>
tionwide railroad<lb/>
engineers strike, utility<lb/>
officials and an<lb/>
economics professor<lb/>
say.<lb/>
Coal supplies are suf-<lb/>
ficient for both of the<lb/>
state's major electric<lb/>
utilities to survive a<lb/>
short strike. Mac Har-<lb/>
ris of Carolina Power &amp;<lb/>
Light Co. said Monday<lb/>
his firm has about a<lb/>
75-day supply of coal,<lb/>
while Alex Coffin of<lb/>
Duke Power Co. said<lb/>
his firm has about the<lb/>
same backlog.<lb/>
The nationwide<lb/>
strike stopped most<lb/>
freight traffic and all<lb/>
four passenger trains<lb/>
that pass through<lb/>
North Carolina. A<lb/>
Southern Railway<lb/>
spokesman estimated<lb/>
40 percent of<lb/>
f'Outhern's freight was<lb/>
being hauled, while a<lb/>
Seaboard Coast Line<lb/>
officials could not<lb/>
estimate how many<lb/>
trains were stopped by<lb/>
the strike.<lb/>
Railroad engineers<lb/>
walking picket lines<lb/>
said they were forced<lb/>
into striking to protect<lb/>
their right to stage<lb/>
walkouts.<lb/>
"Striking is part of<lb/>
the collective bargain-<lb/>
ing process and we're<lb/>
entitled to it said<lb/>
Jimmy Stevenson, a<lb/>
40-year veteran<lb/>
engineer for SCL who<lb/>
was manning a picket<lb/>
line during the strike.<lb/>
Bobby Day, an SCI<lb/>
engineer for 20 years,<lb/>
said the strike was forc-<lb/>
ed on the Brotherhood<lb/>
of Locomotive<lb/>
Engineers after 18<lb/>
months of talks<lb/>
because management<lb/>
was adamant about<lb/>
putting in a no-strike<lb/>
clause.<lb/>
"If no strikes were<lb/>
allowed it would take<lb/>
collective bargaiing<lb/>
completely out Day<lb/>
argued.<lb/>
Ticket offices were<lb/>
closed Monday at<lb/>
Raleigh's Amtrak Sta-<lb/>
tion because up to<lb/>
4,000 workers tor the<lb/>
rail company have been<lb/>
furloughed, an Amtrak<lb/>
spokesman said.<lb/>
Amtrak has four<lb/>
lines serving North<lb/>
Carolina: the Silver<lb/>
Star and Silver Meteor,<lb/>
traveling between New<lb/>
York and Florida via<lb/>
the coastal plain; the<lb/>
Palmetto, linking New<lb/>
York and Savannah,<lb/>
Ga via the same<lb/>
route; and the Cres-<lb/>
cent, which crosses<lb/>
North Carolina's Pied-<lb/>
mont en route between<lb/>
New York and New<lb/>
Orleans.<lb/>
The state's farmers<lb/>
will not immediately<lb/>
feel the effect of the<lb/>
strike, although corn<lb/>
farmers and companies<lb/>
that prepare feed could<lb/>
be affected if the strike<lb/>
does not end soon, said<lb/>
Mark Johnson, an<lb/>
economics professor at<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"Residents ot North<lb/>
Carolina are not heavi<lb/>
Iv dependent in the<lb/>
short term because<lb/>
much of the market can<lb/>
be shipped in trucks<lb/>
Johnson said in a<lb/>
televised interview.<lb/>
"Those who would<lb/>
be affected most are<lb/>
corn farmers he said<lb/>
"Any farmer thinking<lb/>
of harvesting should<lb/>
check with their<lb/>
elevator to see if there's<lb/>
room for their grain "<lb/>
Johnson said com-<lb/>
panies that prepare<lb/>
feed material also<lb/>
would be among the<lb/>
first hurt, because soy-<lb/>
beans make up much of<lb/>
their ingredients and<lb/>
the soybeans usually ar<lb/>
rive at plants via rail<lb/>
!<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE<lb/>
ALPHA GAMMA<lb/>
CHAPTER OF<lb/>
CHI BETA PHI<lb/>
NATIONAL SCIENCE<lb/>
FRATERNITY<lb/>
ANNOUNCES ITS<lb/>
FALL RUSH<lb/>
FOR ALL SCIENCE &amp;<lb/>
MATHEMATICS MAJORS<lb/>
WHEN: Wed Sept. 22,1982<lb/>
TIME: 6:30<lb/>
WHERE: Room 103 in the<lb/>
Biology Building<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
j<lb/>
t<lb/>
 Biology Building j<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
fREBE<lb/>
u ECU'S Literary-Art Magazine<lb/>
"Columbia Scholastic Press Association's<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 I, 1982.<lb/>
$90.00 First Prize, $70.00 Second Prize,<lb/>
$40.00 Third Prize.<lb/>
 IIprize money provided by the TTK and Budweiser.<lb/>
:<lb/>
Located 1 milepast<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
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French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
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for Slaw354 extra<lb/>
wmmmmammm<lb/>
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Hair Salon Unisex<lb/>
With a large number of<lb/>
ECU students (male &amp; female) as<lb/>
our customers, we are looking forward<lb/>
to catering to your every hair care<lb/>
need. College students of today<lb/>
demand certain styles that the<lb/>
PEKING CLIPPER is accustomed to<lb/>
doing. We stay open Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
nights till 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Call tor appointment at 758 505<lb/>
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Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
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PIZZA INN has changed ail that!<lb/>
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Due to a schedule change this event has been moved to Wed Sept. 22, from Tues Sept. 21. As<lb/>
previously advertised, contestants for the event will be selected from the audience.<lb/>
line<lb/>
Pin<lb/>
ed<lb/>
iam<lb/>
?he<lb/>
yea <lb/>
mu:<lb/>
mas<lb/>
pot<lb/>
I<lb/>
Flo<lb/>
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H j<lb/>
mec<lb/>
J<lb/>
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i<lb/>
?<lb/>
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1<lb/>
I<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
I HI I fcSTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 21. 1982 Page 1<lb/>
Waters' Wall<lb/>
Solidly Built<lb/>
"What shall we use to fill the emp-<lb/>
ty Spaces where we used to talk How<lb/>
shall I fill the final places How shall I<lb/>
complete the wall <lb/>
B MICHAEL S.Bl'TZGV<lb/>
SMI ?nur<lb/>
"So you thought you might<lb/>
like to go to the show Well do.<lb/>
Pink Floyd the Watt, which open-<lb/>
ed Friday at the Plitt Enter-<lb/>
tainmet Center in Greenville, is<lb/>
the most powerful film of the<lb/>
ear. It combines imagery,<lb/>
music, and animation in a<lb/>
masterful way that will leave you<lb/>
pondering this film long after you<lb/>
leave the theatre.<lb/>
Beginners and die-hard<lb/>
Floydics alike will love this film.<lb/>
It is in essence. Pink Floyd on<lb/>
film, although you see not a hair<lb/>
on their heads. They have long<lb/>
had an attitude that the world<lb/>
sucks and there's nothing you can<lb/>
do about it. After seeing the<lb/>
U all, you'll start to believe it. So-<lb/>
meone once said that Pink Floyd<lb/>
was a product of our industrial<lb/>
society. If so. the Hall is our mir-<lb/>
ror.<lb/>
The H till as an album came out<lb/>
m late 1979. All the lyrics and<lb/>
eighty-five percent of the music<lb/>
were written by Roger Waters,<lb/>
whose leadership of the group<lb/>
since the departure of acid<lb/>
casualty Syd Barrett had turned<lb/>
more into a dictatorship. Only<lb/>
lead-guitarist David Gilmour<lb/>
continued to have musical input.<lb/>
Fed up with this situation,<lb/>
keyboard player Rick Wright has<lb/>
left the group, with drummer<lb/>
Nick Mason reportedly not too<lb/>
far behind. Both had been with<lb/>
the group since it's earliest forms<lb/>
in nineteen sixty-five, seeing their<lb/>
roles increasingly downplayed<lb/>
since the Flovd albums of the ear-<lb/>
ly 1970s.<lb/>
The album The Hall is pro-<lb/>
bably the starkest, most gut<lb/>
wrenching album ever recorded.<lb/>
John Lennon's Plastic ONO<lb/>
Band album looks positively op-<lb/>
timistic by comparison. It went to<lb/>
number one, and produced a<lb/>
number one single, "Another<lb/>
Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2 Then<lb/>
Pink Floyd took it out on the<lb/>
road in what is probably the<lb/>
greatest special effects concert<lb/>
tour in history. During the show,<lb/>
workmen constructed a huge<lb/>
wall, brick by brick, around the<lb/>
group. At the end, it came<lb/>
crashing down. After this, due to<lb/>
the limited tour, the only thing<lb/>
left to do was make a film.<lb/>
And that they did. It is the<lb/>
story of Pink Floyd, a rock 'n'<lb/>
roll star who is being torn apart<lb/>
by his life, so he builds a wall of<lb/>
defense to protect himself. The<lb/>
story skips back and forth<lb/>
through Pink's life up till the<lb/>
night of the fateful concert.<lb/>
Pink's father is killed at Anzio<lb/>
Beach, so he grows up under an<lb/>
overprotective mother. Then he is<lb/>
sent off to school, a veritable<lb/>
meatgrinder of children, all<lb/>
under the sadistic teachers who<lb/>
"hurt the children in any way"<lb/>
they can. Brick by brick, Pink<lb/>
starts to build his wall. When<lb/>
Pink grows up, he becomes a<lb/>
rock star, and gets married, but<lb/>
the film shows very little of this.<lb/>
The story picks back up with<lb/>
the breakup of Pink's marriage,<lb/>
and at this point he becomes<lb/>
catatonic. (By the way, Pink, as<lb/>
played by Bob Geldof of the<lb/>
Boomtown Rats, barely speaks<lb/>
yet comes across in a powerful<lb/>
way as a product of the<lb/>
dehumanizing society in which<lb/>
we live.) He picks up a groupie<lb/>
and takes her home, but ends up<lb/>
attacking her instead, and driving<lb/>
her out of the room. Pink's wall<lb/>
is complete; it towers around<lb/>
See PINK, Page 8<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Newcomers Brighten Season's Films And Hollywood's Future<lb/>
By VINCENT CANBY<lb/>
NEW YORK ? You might be getting the feeling that<lb/>
movie actors are out of date. The Muppets can do no<lb/>
wrong. A flesh-and-blood child named Aileen Quinn,<lb/>
who plays the title role in Annie, is an also-ran next to<lb/>
that extraordinary mechanical contraption named E.T.<lb/>
This Christmas, Jim Henson, the father of the Mup-<lb/>
pets, will release The Dark Crystal, a live-action film<lb/>
cast entirely with creatures made not by God but by<lb/>
man. Humans, however, are not yet ready for the junk<lb/>
heap.<lb/>
Take this season, for example. It's actually been quite<lb/>
a good one, and among its supplementary delights have<lb/>
been the appearances of a number of new ? or com-<lb/>
paratively new ? performers who, on occasion, have<lb/>
made even some of the rotten movies if not memorable,<lb/>
then at least tolerable in fits and starts. Clearly there is<lb/>
no shortage of acting talent here or abroad.<lb/>
The following performers, listed in alphabetical<lb/>
order, are some of the people who are on show in cur-<lb/>
rent movies and who, I trust, will be on show in even<lb/>
bigger and better films in the future.<lb/>
? Mel Gibson: Gibson, American-born and<lb/>
Australian-bred, is a good bet to become the first actor<lb/>
of his generation from Down Under to make the inter-<lb/>
national big time. He's been quite visible in the wave of<lb/>
not-always-great Australian films that recently have<lb/>
been flooding this country, especially in Gallipoli and<lb/>
Tim. Not, however, until George Miller's beautifully ex-<lb/>
ecuted shock-adventure The Road Warrior, has it been<lb/>
apparent that here is a major league film personality.<lb/>
Gibson recalls the young Steve McQueen. It has<lb/>
something to do with his looks, which are more clean-<lb/>
cut than the character he plays in the Miller film, and<lb/>
also with the kind of cool, infinitely pragmatic manner<lb/>
with which he deals with his existential situation. His<lb/>
Max, the title character in The Road Warrior is the lone-<lb/>
ly gunman of classic westerns tranferred to the post-<lb/>
holocaust Australian outback. I can't define "star<lb/>
quality but whatever it is, Gibson has it.<lb/>
? Julie Hagerty: As the stewardess in Airplane! Miss<lb/>
Hagerty was one of the lunatic classic's most charming<lb/>
conceits, though it was impossible to tell whether she<lb/>
was simply a beautuiful former model, which she is,<lb/>
who was being used to perfection, or comedian. Ap-<lb/>
parently Woody Allen knew the answer. In his A Mid-<lb/>
summer Sight's Sex Comedy, Miss Hagerty emerges as<lb/>
one of the brightest comic beauties to appear on the film<lb/>
scene since the discovery of Paula Prentiss. In the pre-<lb/>
World-War-1 Allen comedy, Miss Hagerty plays every<lb/>
men's dream of a registered nurse. She's stunning look-<lb/>
ing, capable, unshockable, available, sexy and so ex-<lb/>
perienced that she can instruct the other women in the<lb/>
film in various erotic maneuvers, including something<lb/>
called "the Mexican cartwheel<lb/>
? David Keith: In Taylor Hackford's sleeper-hit, An<lb/>
Officer and a Gentleman Keith plays the best friend to<lb/>
Richard Gere's emotionally desperate, opportunistic<lb/>
hero. It's not a super role, and it's about the only incon-<lb/>
sistently written role in the film, but Keith comes off as<lb/>
such a decent guy that he goes a long way to providing<lb/>
the consistency that is otherwise lacking. Keith's perfor-<lb/>
mance in An Officer and a Gentleman is so fully realiz-<lb/>
ed that it wasn't until I checked his previous credits that<lb/>
I remembered he was the fellow who played the<lb/>
murderous redneck in The Great Santini. He's not an<lb/>
actor who need be typecast.<lb/>
? Willie Nelson: Nelson's is not exactly a new face.<lb/>
It's been around a long time in all sorts of cir-<lb/>
cumstances. That experience is defined not only in his<lb/>
face but in every gesture, every mannerism, each shrug,<lb/>
each squint, each sudden burst of sagebrush wisdom.<lb/>
He's" a joy to behold, and he's the principal reason that<lb/>
Fred Schepisi's Barbarosa is so thoroughly winning even<lb/>
when you can't be sure just who is doing what to whom<lb/>
or why.<lb/>
Nelson and Gary Busey are the not engaging pair of<lb/>
outlaws to wander the mythical west in several decades.<lb/>
Until now Nelson has been sort of playing around with<lb/>
movies, but Barbarosa demonstrates that he could be a<lb/>
continuing attraction.<lb/>
? Gordon John Sinclair: As the lovesick teenager.<lb/>
Gregory, in Bill Forsyth's Gregory's Girl, young<lb/>
Sinclair exemplifies what is both the style and the con-<lb/>
tent of this unusual Scottish-made comedy. He is naive<lb/>
without appearing to be retarded, and blyth to a<lb/>
transcendentally comic degree. Sinclair's Gregory, who<lb/>
looks to be about 7 feet tall but not yet ready to shave<lb/>
every day, is never for a minute fazed by the strange<lb/>
things that happen to him. I've no idea whether Sinclair<lb/>
is capable of becoming the screen personality he pro-<lb/>
mises to be in Gregory's Girl, but this performance is<lb/>
one of the year's treats.<lb/>
? Barbara Sukowa: Miss Sukowa plays the title role<lb/>
in Rainer Werner Fassbinder's Lola, that of a classy<lb/>
whore with a heart of bourgeois stone. Compare Miss<lb/>
See NEW STARS, Page 9<lb/>
Cougar's Catchy Pop<lb/>
Topping Music Charts<lb/>
By ANDREW SLATER<lb/>
RnHtn StoM<lb/>
BLOOMINGTON, lnd. ? John Cougar may be well<lb/>
acquainted with the mechanics of the music business ?<lb/>
after all, his single "Hurts So Good" is one of the sum-<lb/>
mer's biggest hits ? but as a chauffeur he's got a lot to<lb/>
learn. On this humid July afternoon, the thirty-year-old<lb/>
singer greets me at Bloomington's Monroe County Air-<lb/>
port with a biker friend named Bo and two prodigious<lb/>
Harley Davidsons.<lb/>
"Hope you don't mind riding with Bo says Cougar,<lb/>
rubbing the stubble around an affable but nonetheless<lb/>
kicked grin. "He's really a safe rider. Hasn't had a<lb/>
wrett in weeks. Honest Bo revs up the throttle on his<lb/>
battered lowrider, then callously suggests that I get on<lb/>
? and keep my hands off his waist. Rumor has it that<lb/>
Cougar may be wheeling his way into Minges in the near<lb/>
future, ed.<lb/>
Arms folded across a sleeveless T-shirt, Cougar seems<lb/>
to be thoroughly enjoying this scene, particularly my<lb/>
sudden pallor over cruising helmetless on this man-<lb/>
mangling machine. Perhaps he's getting even for all<lb/>
those years the critics pegged him as just a pallid Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen clone from the Midwest. While the relative<lb/>
success of such songs as "I Need a Lover "This<lb/>
Time" and "Ain't Even Done with the Night affirmed<lb/>
Cougar's upward AOR mobility over the past couple of<lb/>
years, few were taking note.<lb/>
But now that his latest LP, American Fool, is loiter-<lb/>
ing in Billboard's Top Ten, "Hurts So Good" is<lb/>
Number Three on the singles chart, and a new track,<lb/>
"Jack and Diane is hit-bound as well, the Indiana-<lb/>
born-and-bred Cougar is finally garnering the attention<lb/>
and respect he thinks he deserves. "For a while, it was<lb/>
like I didn't even exist outside of being this guy who was<lb/>
copying Bruce Springsteen moans Cougar, once in-<lb/>
side the safe confines of his quaint suburban home. "1<lb/>
was influenced by the guy, but I was also influnced by<lb/>
Bob Dylan, Mitch Ryder and Eric Curdon. It's getting<lb/>
better now, but someday I've got to meet Bruce Springs-<lb/>
teen, because I want to tell him all the trouble he's caus-<lb/>
ed me<lb/>
Trouble or not, the similarities are inescapable. Like<lb/>
Springsteen, Cougar is streetwise and tough, and he has<lb/>
a viselike grip on his blue-collar background. An<lb/>
assaultive performer with a rough-and-tumble voice, he<lb/>
writes of women, cars and his own restless youth-lately,<lb/>
fashioning a longing for teenage freedom and first-love<lb/>
euphoria into chart-topping rock hits. "Now that I'm<lb/>
getting older, so much older1 long for those young boy<lb/>
See COUGAR, Page S<lb/>
John Cougar: Streetwise and tough, with an arresting! rough-and-tumble voice.<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
IHl EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 21. 1?H2<lb/>
Cougar Tired Of Comparisons To Springsteen<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
days he sings in<lb/>
"Hurts So Good<lb/>
And in "Jack a. i<lb/>
Diane it's the same<lb/>
lament: "Holdin' onto<lb/>
sixteen as long as you<lb/>
can<lb/>
"Growing old tor a<lb/>
lot of people, myselt in-<lb/>
cluded, is a scary<lb/>
thing says Cougar.<lb/>
"1 think there're a lot<lb/>
of people out here in<lb/>
the midlands who feel<lb/>
that way. A lot of the<lb/>
guys I grew up with and<lb/>
still hang out with,<lb/>
their fucking lives end-<lb/>
ed when they got to be<lb/>
nineteen. It was like<lb/>
this fucking business of<lb/>
being forty, there's a<lb/>
lot of responsibility.<lb/>
The older 1 get, the<lb/>
more complicated life<lb/>
becomes, so lots of<lb/>
times 1 remember those<lb/>
days when everything<lb/>
was simple and eas "<lb/>
Cougar grew up in<lb/>
Seymour, Ind as<lb/>
short, stocky John<lb/>
Mellencamp. B seven-<lb/>
teen, he was married; at<lb/>
nineteen, he as a<lb/>
father, pouring con-<lb/>
crete foi a living and<lb/>
then working as a<lb/>
line m an tor t h e<lb/>
telephone company. He<lb/>
kicked around the local<lb/>
Seymour bar scene, and<lb/>
in 1975, with aspira-<lb/>
tions to make it in the<lb/>
music business, he took<lb/>
his demo tapes to New<lb/>
York. Eventuarlly, he<lb/>
linked up with I ony<lb/>
DeFries, David Bowie's<lb/>
manager who got him a<lb/>
deal with MCA<lb/>
Records. Cougar's<lb/>
debut 1 P, Chestnut<lb/>
Street Incident, was<lb/>
released in 1976, but<lb/>
there was one catch.<lb/>
I was John Mellen-<lb/>
camp. 1 went up to see<lb/>
Pink Floyd 9s ' Wall' Filled With<lb/>
Powerful Images, Visual Effects<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
turn.<lb/>
For the remainder ot the film, Pink looks pain-<lb/>
tullv inward and relives old memories. He also<lb/>
undergoes something of a startling transforma-<lb/>
tion, living out his sickest fantasies within his<lb/>
mmd. To go any further would ruin the film, so 1<lb/>
won't.<lb/>
One of the most amazing things within this<lb/>
film is the animation, designed by Waters and<lb/>
British cartoonist Gerald Scarfe. It is at once the<lb/>
most amaing. shocking, and innovative anima-<lb/>
tion 1 have ever seen. Disney and Bakshi have<lb/>
dazzled us with their work in film, but never has<lb/>
movie artwork spoken so powerfully to an au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
Yet. the images within the film are just as<lb/>
powerful. There are some amazing scenes in this<lb/>
film, like the comparison of a World War II bat-<lb/>
tle with a crowd of fans descending on a rock<lb/>
concert then clashing with the police, and Pink's<lb/>
long dead father holding up Pink's dead pet<lb/>
muskrat. Perhaps most disturbing is the com-<lb/>
parison between a rock idol and a fascist leader<lb/>
such as Hitler or Mussolini and the audience that<lb/>
will do anything they are told. You'll have to do<lb/>
a lot of thinking for yourself at this film, because<lb/>
it shows that you may not do as much of it as you<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
The enigmatic climax depicting young boys<lb/>
milling in the wreckage left after the wall is level-<lb/>
ed by Pink himself is certainly open to many in-<lb/>
terpretations. The ensuing image, frozen for em-<lb/>
phasis, ol a boy emptving the petrol from a<lb/>
Moloto cocktail, is a bit anti-climactic but at<lb/>
least thought-provoking.<lb/>
()! course, the other major part of the film is<lb/>
the music. It seems to be mostlv culled from the<lb/>
original H all album, but there arc a few new ver-<lb/>
sions ot some songs, and the addition of two new<lb/>
songs. "When the I igers Broke free and<lb/>
"What Shall We Do which curiously enough<lb/>
was on the album's lync sheet but is nowhere to<lb/>
be found on vinyl. Every song from the original<lb/>
album is in tins film in one wav or another, with<lb/>
only minor edits in two of them. So those ot you<lb/>
that are familiar with the album have nothing to<lb/>
fear. Bob Geldof only sings three of the songs,<lb/>
which is good because the film doesn't end up<lb/>
like a musical. I hat would have been the death of<lb/>
this film.<lb/>
the Hull is coherent, and those that had trou-<lb/>
ble visualizing the events ol the album will love it<lb/>
all the more tor, lo and behold, it now makes<lb/>
sense! Anyone that accuses this film ol being<lb/>
muddled or contusing is dead wrong.<lb/>
The basic focal point of tins film is the loss of<lb/>
innocence. Children are seen as the hope for<lb/>
society, it thev can withstand the brainwashing<lb/>
? and tortures ol adults. Witness Pink's loss of<lb/>
childhood, and the souring of his marriage, and<lb/>
this is not unique to Pink. I here is probably no<lb/>
person over twenty that doesn't feel they've lost<lb/>
their innocence in some wav.<lb/>
I seriously recommend this film, whether you<lb/>
are a Pink Floyd fan or not. It raises some very<lb/>
important issues having to do with our western<lb/>
industrial society, that should not be ignored or<lb/>
written off as demented ravings bv a malcontent.<lb/>
I am not trying to suggest this film is perfect, but<lb/>
it rolls awa the western dream and. shows the<lb/>
maggots festering underneath. This is not a film<lb/>
for little kids. It is violent, has some sex. and is<lb/>
too intense tor the little ones. But, 1 think this is<lb/>
an important tilm and should not be dismissed as<lb/>
a pop opera. Because it it is. we may have some<lb/>
serious reappraising to do.<lb/>
D e fries w h e n t h e<lb/>
record came out, and<lb/>
there was "Johnny<lb/>
Cougar' on it. Nobody<lb/>
ever called me that in<lb/>
my life. So Tony ex<lb/>
plained it to me, and 1<lb/>
bought it like a tucking<lb/>
idiot. He said, 'Do you<lb/>
think David Bowie<lb/>
came up with the name<lb/>
Ziggy Stardust? Ziggy<lb/>
Stardust was supposed<lb/>
to be this cartoon<lb/>
character from outer<lb/>
space, and when the<lb/>
record came out,<lb/>
everybody believed that<lb/>
it was really Bowie. So<lb/>
Johnny Cougar is just<lb/>
like Ziggy Stardust<lb/>
Ot course, that's not<lb/>
the way it came across<lb/>
? cartoon character<lb/>
from the Midwest<lb/>
comes to life. Chestnut<lb/>
Street Incident suffered<lb/>
not only its unabashed<lb/>
"Springsteen i n -<lb/>
fluence but the ton ol<lb/>
hype that served to pro-<lb/>
mote such a trivial<lb/>
debut. Cougar wa<lb/>
dropped from MCA<lb/>
betore he could deliver<lb/>
a second LP and.<lb/>
through his attorney,<lb/>
met Billy Gaff (then<lb/>
Rod Stewart's<lb/>
manager), head ol Riva<lb/>
Records. Under the<lb/>
aegis of Gaff, he releas<lb/>
ed his first Riva album<lb/>
in the U.S John<lb/>
Cougar. The songs<lb/>
were tough vet pas<lb/>
sionate, and Cougar's<lb/>
penchant tor mining<lb/>
real-lite stones from<lb/>
the Midwest seemed<lb/>
palatable enough to<lb/>
radio programmers<lb/>
hungrv tor a gravel<lb/>
throated ()R heart<lb/>
throb.  1 Need a<lb/>
I over" was a radio hit.<lb/>
and Pat Benatar later<lb/>
covered it on her debut<lb/>
1 P.<lb/>
Cougar's next<lb/>
album, othin' Mat-<lb/>
ters and H hat If It Did.<lb/>
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Here at ECU onTues Sept. 21, a representative of ZBT<lb/>
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Student Center ? anyone interested is invited.<lb/>
No Pledging, Become an Active Now<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau, founded 1898<lb/>
produced bv Sieve<lb/>
Cropper, yielded iwo<lb/>
singles: " I his 1 ime" a<lb/>
putt pastry ballad a la<lb/>
Rod Stewart's<lb/>
?' tonight's the Night<lb/>
and "Ain't Even Done<lb/>
with the Night The<lb/>
album was a bit more<lb/>
melodic, with horns<lb/>
and keyboards, but<lb/>
Cougar wasn't happy<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
"Nothing sounded<lb/>
the same from track to<lb/>
track Cougar ex<lb/>
plains, "the drums<lb/>
didn't sound the same;<lb/>
the guitars didn't sound<lb/>
the same Rattier than<lb/>
tight with somebodv al<lb/>
that point in mv life<lb/>
I was getting divoi<lb/>
I was getting married, a<lb/>
thousand things<lb/>
going on I figured<lb/>
next time out, I'd do it<lb/>
myself. I knew enough<lb/>
about the business bv<lb/>
then, enough about<lb/>
how my records should<lb/>
sound, to jusl do it<lb/>
Apparently, he was<lb/>
right. Cougar pruned<lb/>
his band, the one. to a<lb/>
toucher guitars-b i<lb/>
I-drums outfit, i<lb/>
with Don (iehman<lb/>
Xmerican<lb/>
I nl has become<lb/>
kll COUf<lb/>
knew h ike a<lb/>
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i .<lb/>
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figured out. and h<lb/>
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New Stars<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
Sukowa's performance in Iota, with her perfor-<lb/>
mance in Margarethe von Trotta's Marianne and<lb/>
Juliane and you'll reahe that a fine, versatile,<lb/>
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scene.<lb/>
? limothv Van Patten: Although he is cur-<lb/>
rentlv appearing in what must be one of the<lb/>
trashiest movies of 1982, Mark Lester's Class of<lb/>
IVS4, a camp exploitation feature about low life<lb/>
in high school. Van Patten could evolve into one<lb/>
of the more employable of the new young a- tors<lb/>
now hanging out in Hollywood. He has a distinc-<lb/>
tive screen presence, far different from the<lb/>
homogenized, square-jawed actors who play all<lb/>
the young male roles in things like Dallas, Falcon<lb/>
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? Jobeth Williams. There's been so much talk<lb/>
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? Debra Winger: Discovered in Irkan<lb/>
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That was the beginning and end of Miss Winger<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057498_0010"/><lb/>
I Ml I AS CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Stewert, Nelson Pace Victory<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
si pn mhi k ;i is; it.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pirates Amass 474 Yards In Rout<lb/>
B C1ND1 PLEASANTS<lb/>
sports dllitr<lb/>
In an ot tensive attack led by<lb/>
quarterback dreg Stewert, the<lb/>
Pirates scored tour touchdowns to<lb/>
overwhelm I ast Tennessee State<lb/>
I niversitv. 30-0.<lb/>
With an offensive total of 474<lb/>
yards and 242 yards passing, the<lb/>
Pirates completely dominated the<lb/>
R.meers this past Saturday night<lb/>
at I cklei Stadium.<lb/>
w ith split end Carlton Nelson on<lb/>
the receiving end and Stewert throw-<lb/>
ing the passes, the duo worked<lb/>
the first halt to place the<lb/>
P i es on top, 21-0, at halftime.<lb/>
Iton caught two touchdown<lb/>
passes, mcludtng a 42-varder from<lb/>
Stewert, in the lust quarter. Two<lb/>
kicks from freshman .left Heath<lb/>
ui the Pirates ahead. 14-0.<lb/>
rht second quarter just under-<lb/>
wa Stewert dished ofl to flanker<lb/>
S dams, who ran six vards<lb/>
. ?thei 11).<lb/>
1 he Pirates had an offensive total<lb/>
ol $04 yards at the half, with<lb/>
Steweri completing S ot 14 passed<lb/>
12" yards. Nelson accumulated<lb/>
102 yards in pass receiving and two<lb/>
touc ftdow Us.<lb/>
Defensively, ECU held the Buc-<lb/>
caneers ;o five first downs and 29<lb/>
.r ds -ashing, averaging almost one<lb/>
. a pt: , arrv.<lb/>
But a! let lumping to such a<lb/>
ginal lead, the Pirates were<lb/>
lb e so sustain the same amount<lb/>
; tensitv the demonstrated in<lb/>
? it si half.<lb/>
1 v. I committed nine penalties.<lb/>
iih  occurring in the third<lb/>
a loss ot 35 vards. With<lb/>
1:16 0 anj, five punting<lb/>
. . late ?. defensive end Moe<lb/>
tackled ETSU's Richard<lb/>
ne for a two-point<lb/>
sal. . ipp ng the score to 23-0.<lb/>
In a slow-paced fourth quarter.<lb/>
1 v I 's dams earned six ards to<lb/>
,  a touchdown in the last four<lb/>
minutes of the game. Heath's field<lb/>
goal kick made the score, 30-0.<lb/>
After alternating quarterbacks<lb/>
Kevin Ingram and Stewert<lb/>
throughout the game, number three<lb/>
QB John Williams came in at the<lb/>
end of the fourth quarter. Making<lb/>
his first game debut, Williams car-<lb/>
ried for 29 yards in four offensive<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
ECU's defensive team held East<lb/>
Tennessee to 158 yards rushing and<lb/>
78 yards passing.<lb/>
"It's great to get back in the win<lb/>
column said head coach Id<lb/>
Emory. "And it's great to get a<lb/>
shutout. 1 can't remember the last<lb/>
one. It's a heck of an achievement<lb/>
for any team. I congratulate the<lb/>
defense<lb/>
Emory was pleased with the of-<lb/>
fense but was disappointed that the<lb/>
Pirates didn't score more more than<lb/>
21 points in the first half with 304<lb/>
vards on total offense. "1 felt we<lb/>
should have had 42 points and put it<lb/>
away "<lb/>
"30-0 is a great score, but we<lb/>
wanted to get out in front earlier so<lb/>
we could put in a lot ot different<lb/>
players<lb/>
Emorv said the team was not as<lb/>
physically as tough against I I SI as<lb/>
it was in last week's game at N.(<lb/>
State because ot the difference in<lb/>
competition. "I think the kids fell<lb/>
we were belter than them (East ren-<lb/>
nessee) and you could sec our emo-<lb/>
tional drop ott he said. "We<lb/>
were a little flat at times in the se-<lb/>
cond halt<lb/>
Emorv, however, had nothing but<lb/>
praise tor some great individual ef-<lb/>
forts, including Stewert. "He's still<lb/>
improving, but his leadership and<lb/>
confidence is so much better he<lb/>
said. Stewert completed 15 ot 21<lb/>
passes tor 209 yards, which now<lb/>
places him seventh on ECl 's all<lb/>
time pass completion career list and<lb/>
ninth on passing vardage career<lb/>
totals with S67<lb/>
In last week's game against N.C<lb/>
State, Emory was disappointed with I<lb/>
the amount of pass protection<lb/>
shown,but that was not the case<lb/>
against ETSU. "Stewert had a great<lb/>
deal o time to throw the ball he<lb/>
said, "the offensive line did a good<lb/>
job<lb/>
freshman tailback Tony Baker<lb/>
rushed for 91 yards against East<lb/>
Tennessee, moving his total up to<lb/>
150 yards for the season so far.<lb/>
"He just totally has no regard for<lb/>
his body Emory said. "Instead of<lb/>
faking, he jusl bows his neck and<lb/>
accelerates right into his defender<lb/>
Nelson was named as the recipient<lb/>
ot the R.W. Moore "Most Valuable<lb/>
Player Award" for ECU and Emory<lb/>
has been delighted with the former<lb/>
quarterback's transistion to the split<lb/>
end position "He's adjusted real<lb/>
well he said. "But I'm not that<lb/>
surprised. We knew he had a lot of<lb/>
speed He jusl had a super tirst<lb/>
halt<lb/>
I he Pirates take on the Central<lb/>
Muhigan t'hippewas next Saturday<lb/>
at 1 icklen Stadium. Ciametime is 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
(<lb/>
pho'o B. GAB ? ?<lb/>
I srolina<lb/>
? 9<lb/>
 J4 0<lb/>
Carlton Nelson out jumps KTSl defender for first quarter touchdown.<lb/>
Chips To Pose Many Problems<lb/>
I . nut m<lb/>
i irottna<lb/>
n n (i n<lb/>
14 7 2 7<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
H"a:h Ink<lb/>
I nit i<lb/>
idumI SlatlMH<lb/>
r :<lb/>
? ,<lb/>
I'assirn; i<lb/>
?<lb/>
rs h<lb/>
: i . hi<lb/>
I l S a ,<lb/>
S V  i<lb/>
, . - ?<lb/>
an<lb/>
II. B<lb/>
i' p. :<lb/>
: s v ? :<lb/>
A crowd of 22,12" people attend-<lb/>
ed ECU's first home game of the<lb/>
season against East Tennessee State<lb/>
University ? a number that didn't<lb/>
surprise head tootball coach Ed<lb/>
Emory too much.<lb/>
"That's about realistic he said.<lb/>
"We cost ourselves about S,(XX bv<lb/>
losing to N.C. Slate<lb/>
Emory said a big crowd will be a<lb/>
must when the Pirates go up against<lb/>
Central Michigan this coming Satur<lb/>
day. "Student support means more<lb/>
to the kids (players) than anything<lb/>
Lady Pirate Spikers<lb/>
Enjoy Busy Weekend<lb/>
The K I 1 adv Pirate volleyball<lb/>
n aw plentv ot action towards<lb/>
end ot last week, playing in<lb/>
seven matches in just three days.<lb/>
1 asi rhursdav night, the Lady<lb/>
P ? lefeated William and Mary<lb/>
11-15, IS 15-4, 15-9. Head coach<lb/>
I Davidson expressed satisfac-<lb/>
? it wa ttie team is improv-<lb/>
ing "Wt played better as a team,<lb/>
nore communication bet-<lb/>
ween the plavers she said.<lb/>
"I verybody did their job and that is<lb/>
aI . we were able to control trie<lb/>
e so well<lb/>
avers mentioned by Davidson<lb/>
as having an outstanding match<lb/>
. Diane Lloyd, who had an ex-<lb/>
ceptional game setting the ball, and<lb/>
lene Hedges, who played very<lb/>
smart at the net according to David-<lb/>
ftei the victorv over William<lb/>
and Mary, the 1 adv Pirates headed<lb/>
to Washington, D.C. to participate<lb/>
in the George Washington Invita-<lb/>
tional ()n I tidav, the teams all took<lb/>
part m pool play to determine the<lb/>
seeding tor the actual tournament<lb/>
which started Saturdav.<lb/>
In the tirst match, ECU lost to<lb/>
George Washington 5-15, 15-8,4-15<lb/>
hut bounced back to defeat Hofstra<lb/>
University 3-15, l-5, 15-7. By do-<lb/>
ing so, EC U was the only team to<lb/>
beat Hofstra, the eventual winner of<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
"In the first match against<lb/>
George Washington, we weren'1<lb/>
mentally readv to plav stated<lb/>
coach Davidson. "1 think we might<lb/>
have been scared because we knew<lb/>
nothing about these teams and the<lb/>
facilities that we were playing in<lb/>
were overwhelming. We had some<lb/>
trouble getting statted and we didn't<lb/>
plav very well<lb/>
Before the Hofstra match. David-<lb/>
son and assistant coach Sue Martin<lb/>
had a talk with the team about not<lb/>
having high expectations of<lb/>
themselves. As Davidson puts it,<lb/>
"We told them that instead ot play-<lb/>
ing well and losing, we should be<lb/>
winning<lb/>
In the first game ot the match,<lb/>
Hofstra won 15-3. The normal reac-<lb/>
tion would be one of devastation.<lb/>
But, according to Davidson, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates shook it off because<lb/>
they were mentally tough.<lb/>
"Realizing that we could beat the<lb/>
big team could be the turning point<lb/>
in our season added Davidson<lb/>
The serving of Lexanne Keeter,<lb/>
who had eight aces in the two mat-<lb/>
ches, was a big difference tor the<lb/>
Lady Pirates. "Last season. 1 ex-<lb/>
anne couldn't get the ball over the<lb/>
net with a 50 per cent accuracy<lb/>
See LADY, Page 11<lb/>
Photo by CINDY WATL<lb/>
A juhilant Slefon Adams celebrates after scoring ECl 's third touchdown.<lb/>
Golf Squad Battles<lb/>
First-Game Jitters<lb/>
B EDWARD NICKLAS<lb/>
Mall WriK-r<lb/>
The ECU golf team concluded its<lb/>
its tirst match of the fall season<lb/>
Saturdav, finishing tenth among<lb/>
twelve teams in the Wolf pack In-<lb/>
vitational. The tournament,<lb/>
which was held at the MacGregor<lb/>
Downs Country Club in Raleigh, in-<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU Golf Coach Jerry Lee<lb/>
eluded such participating teams as<lb/>
South Carolina, UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
and Guilford College.<lb/>
ECU was led by John Riddle and<lb/>
Chris Cbaja who each shot a 230 for<lb/>
the three-day invitational. Don<lb/>
Sweeting rounded out the top<lb/>
scorers with a total of 234. Cbaja<lb/>
was the recipient of the lowest<lb/>
round score, having shot a 73 on<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
ECU coach Jerry Lee felt that<lb/>
ECU's showing could be partly at-<lb/>
tributed to first-game jitters. Also,<lb/>
Lee said, the team might have been<lb/>
expecting too much considering that<lb/>
they had been pushed for practice<lb/>
time ir the days preceding the<lb/>
match.<lb/>
"We just started practicing the<lb/>
Monday before the invitational he<lb/>
said. "So with more practice, we<lb/>
are looking for a better showing.<lb/>
We are expecting better results<lb/>
The team will have that chance<lb/>
when they take part in the Dunlap<lb/>
Invitational in Pickens, S.C, on<lb/>
Oct. 9 and 10.<lb/>
he said, "And CMC is gonna be<lb/>
verv, erv tough<lb/>
THE CHIPPLWAS Under the<lb/>
direction of head coach Herb<lb/>
Deromedi, Central Michigan has<lb/>
not had a losing season since he ar-<lb/>
rived in 1967. The Chippewas were<lb/>
4 last vear and piaced third in the<lb/>
mid-American conference. CMl<lb/>
averaged 365.7 vards and 20 ;<lb/>
points per game during the "81<lb/>
season and their 5-2 detense was na<lb/>
nonallv ranked.<lb/>
This vear, the Chippewas are now<lb/>
1-1-0 after losing to Bowling Green,<lb/>
34-30 this past weekend CMU beat<lb/>
Indiana State 35-10 in its opening<lb/>
game c the season.<lb/>
Cindy Peasants<lb/>
<lb/>
A I ook Inside<lb/>
Although C Ml usually scores a<lb/>
high number of points. Emory isn't<lb/>
expecting an offense-oriented game.<lb/>
"1 don't think it'll be a high scoring<lb/>
game he said. "We have good<lb/>
teams defensiveh and 1 think that<lb/>
will make the difference<lb/>
Emory said CMl suffers from an<lb/>
identity problem with 1 C I 's<lb/>
plavers, coaches and tans.<lb/>
"A lot o people don't know<lb/>
about Central Michigan, but I car.<lb/>
tell vou this he said. "They're ai<lb/>
aca a I<lb/>
one<lb/>
seas t,<lb/>
IVJl Rlfs -<lb/>
i imrnv w i ; ?<lb/>
<lb/>
hopefull) be<lb/>
ne<lb/>
?<lb/>
end Norv<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
ot bruised ribs a<lb/>
for next<lb/>
I inebacker P. i<lb/>
shoulder in<lb/>
Greg Qu .ha ?<lb/>
PR( IIG MAkE<lb/>
PERFECT?<lb/>
makes perfect<lb/>
"We'll be<lb/>
assignments .<lb/>
coachi - i<lb/>
and<lb/>
thev follow a<lb/>
their nun<lb/>
The<lb/>
week a<lb/>
Hamili Han<lb/>
aff afte ;N<lb/>
vtai -ame Ron F .<lb/>
champ v<lb/>
went to G I x ?<lb/>
 S<lb/>
Harris had he<lb/>
percentaf . i<lb/>
team 's iffensive p<lb/>
is <lb/>
Carlisle Happy Not To<lb/>
Relive Last Year's Game<lb/>
B KEN BOLTOiN<lb/>
vslslan: p.M? dihi<lb/>
Although visibiv disappointed.<lb/>
East Tennessee State head coach<lb/>
Jack Carlisle was able to retain his<lb/>
sense ot humor after the 3O-0 loss to<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
When asked about 1 as<lb/>
Carolina's new ot tensive lineup,<lb/>
Carlisle responded, "I'm glad thev<lb/>
changed. Thev didn't score as manv<lb/>
points as they did last year<lb/>
Carlisle was reterring to the 1981<lb/>
game between ETSU and ECU in<lb/>
which the Pirates demolished the<lb/>
Buccaneers 66-23 ECU leads the<lb/>
series 4-2-1.<lb/>
Carlisle, who is in his fifth season<lb/>
as Buccaneer head coach, has<lb/>
posted an overall record of 207<lb/>
wins, 66 losses and 17 ties<lb/>
In the past four seasons under<lb/>
Carlisle, ETSU has established 2<lb/>
school records and the 199 team<lb/>
posted the best mark of am Last<lb/>
Tennessee State football team in a<lb/>
decade with a 7-4 record.<lb/>
Even though this year's game<lb/>
wasn't as overwhelming as tne 1981<lb/>
contest, it was obvious from the<lb/>
start that the Buccaneers were out-<lb/>
manned. Coming into the game.<lb/>
East Tennessee State was 0-2 and<lb/>
had not scored a touchdown all<lb/>
year. Their two losses were to Ten-<lb/>
nessee Tech 14-0. and VMI 21-3.<lb/>
After the game, Carlisle expressed<lb/>
disappointment in the plav o the<lb/>
offensive line. "Our offensive line is<lb/>
too inexperienced and we have sut<lb/>
fered too many injuries at that posi-<lb/>
tion he said. "Because of all of<lb/>
the shuffling of players that we have<lb/>
to do, we need more continuitv in<lb/>
our ?'<lb/>
On offense. I fie B .<lb/>
onh able to gain a<lb/>
vards. most of it <lb/>
outcome<lb/>
I rSl was I<lb/>
territory tour time<lb/>
drive ending a<lb/>
missed a field<lb/>
Bucs never got in- <lb/>
c arolina 40<lb/>
One of (<lb/>
was the fa U the B<lb/>
able to move the I<lb/>
tinuallv forced to star: tl<lb/>
with pooi<lb/>
occasions, punter Bobbv c<lb/>
was forced to kick fi om<lb/>
one<lb/>
1 he Buccaneer's inabilit.<lb/>
the ball was shown bv the<lb/>
the final total yardage figures ?<lb/>
to 158. One reason tor this was the<lb/>
tact that Carlisle had to use his<lb/>
second stung quarterback R<lb/>
Achoe. along vuh ? Wall<lb/>
Bowlin. In explanation. v ai<lb/>
reterred back to his point ah<lb/>
offensive line<lb/>
"Bowlin is strict!) a drop K .<lb/>
passer he stated. "Without<lb/>
protection, he won be able to do<lb/>
the tob<lb/>
Although the Buccanee u<lb/>
0-3 and have onlv scored one tield<lb/>
goal in the three games. Carlisle<lb/>
mains optimistic "It's a learning<lb/>
process, ou tust have to look al<lb/>
and go with what you've got he<lb/>
added<lb/>
ETSU is at James Madison next<lb/>
weekend, and the Pirates will return<lb/>
home to host Central Michigan of<lb/>
the Mid-American Conference at 7<lb/>
p m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0011"/><lb/>
THF IAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBtR2l, 1982<lb/>
11<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ki<lb/>
Lady Pirates Compete<lb/>
In Northern Tournament<lb/>
i ?'iinmit'il Y rum Page 10<lb/>
aid David-<lb/>
son. ' 1 his season, she<lb/>
in sen ing at an 80-per-<lb/>
cent accurac mark and<lb/>
is get tine aces<lb/>
In the next match.<lb/>
the Pirates defeated<lb/>
W illiam and Mar<lb/>
N v 15-9 I his ended<lb/>
the pool plav Mth ECU<lb/>
and Hofstra tied for the<lb/>
top seed But since<lb/>
Hofstra had won more<lb/>
mes in their matches.<lb/>
the) were established as<lb/>
the number-one seed<lb/>
and ECU was seeded<lb/>
number two.<lb/>
As the tournament<lb/>
got underway Satur-<lb/>
day, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
got off to a bad start.<lb/>
Against the University<lb/>
of Maryland, they were<lb/>
defeated 12-15, 14-16.<lb/>
This loss put ECU in<lb/>
the consolation bracket<lb/>
for the rest of the tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
After the Maryland<lb/>
defeat, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates outspiked<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
again 15-13, 15-6 to put<lb/>
them in the consolation<lb/>
finals against James<lb/>
Madison. ECU lost in<lb/>
the finals 13-15, 5-15<lb/>
and ended up placing<lb/>
sixth out of eight<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
After the tourna-<lb/>
ment, Davidson felt<lb/>
that ECU might have<lb/>
suffered a letdown<lb/>
after the big win over<lb/>
Hofstra. "When we<lb/>
came out of the pool<lb/>
play, we weren't ex-<lb/>
cited about playing<lb/>
said Davidson. "We<lb/>
went from one extreme<lb/>
to the other<lb/>
ECU's next match is<lb/>
tonight at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
against the University<lb/>
of North Carolina in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
ECU Soccer Team Edged<lb/>
Out By Ranking Indians<lb/>
Get fast, impressive results on<lb/>
demand with newspaper adver-<lb/>
tising! Just say the words,<lb/>
we'll take care of your<lb/>
needs efficiently. Our staff<lb/>
is at your service to get<lb/>
your message across<lb/>
to your audience.<lb/>
Just give us a call!<lb/>
To advertise<lb/>
in the<lb/>
PRE-REGISTRATION<lb/>
ISSUE<lb/>
(Sept. 30)<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
H KfN BOl ION<lb/>
 . . int ? rls t diuw<lb/>
I s o c c e i<lb/>
iffered t's firsl<lb/>
? n Sun-<lb/>
with a<lb/>
? e hands<lb/>
im and<lb/>
<lb/>
id Mary<lb/>
ie match<lb/>
eenth in<lb/>
a week.<lb/>
ayed to a<lb/>
e I ni ei -<lb/>
tei open-<lb/>
ox e'<lb/>
 -A port<lb/>
isi week.<lb/>
to 1I<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
BOKl IONS<lb/>
Adp ts Made 7 Days<lb/>
i. L TOLL FREE<lb/>
BOO J. : 575<lb/>
i 3MY-NAVY<lb/>
TOR<lb/>
Church, the Indian's<lb/>
experience was the ma-<lb/>
jor factor in the match.<lb/>
"We played really well<lb/>
early in the game he<lb/>
said. "1 think their<lb/>
edge in experience hurt<lb/>
Us<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
opened the scoring with<lb/>
two corner kicks mid-<lb/>
way through the first<lb/>
half. Then ECU's Bill<lb/>
Merwin scored on a<lb/>
penalty kick at the<lb/>
23-minute mark to cut<lb/>
the lead to 2-1. The<lb/>
Pirates added another<lb/>
goal by Mark Harry<lb/>
with an asMst by Jay<lb/>
Bergen. William and<lb/>
Mar countered with<lb/>
another score and the<lb/>
' : si halt ended with the<lb/>
score 3-2.<lb/>
Both teams ended up<lb/>
with ten shots-on-goal<lb/>
with ECU goalie lony<lb/>
R ec h n e r recording<lb/>
eight saves as compared<lb/>
to the six saves for<lb/>
William a :d Mary<lb/>
goalie Jaurgin Kloo.<lb/>
Despite the loss,<lb/>
Church was pleased<lb/>
with the team's effort.<lb/>
"We played right with<lb/>
them, but we didn't<lb/>
have the experience to<lb/>
get us over the hump<lb/>
Church stated. "We<lb/>
played our hearts out,<lb/>
but we lost to a club<lb/>
that was just a little bet-<lb/>
ter in regard to talent<lb/>
and experience<lb/>
The road doesn't get<lb/>
any easier for the Pirate<lb/>
hooters. This Wednes-<lb/>
day, ECU is scheduled<lb/>
to play the N.C. State<lb/>
W'olfpack, currently<lb/>
ranked fifteenth in the<lb/>
nation. So far this<lb/>
season, no team has<lb/>
been within six goals of<lb/>
the Wolf pack. The<lb/>
match will be played in<lb/>
Raleigh at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon.<lb/>
6Se.v' ? <lb/>
 f<lb/>
r &amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
Ln?<lb/>
 of <lb/>
nC if ci<lb/>
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SVNVXSN.VVXN.XNVSVX,XVNVVVVV<lb/>
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DELI KITCHEN<lb/>
Home Cooked Food<lb/>
Meat &amp; 2 Veg Bread, )?<lb/>
$ 'l 0 0 free reills on<lb/>
coffee &amp; tea.<lb/>
Breakfast Served 6:30 a. m. -10:30 a. m.<lb/>
Sausage &amp; Ham Biscuits ? 50<lb/>
Lunch Served from 11:00-7:30<lb/>
Homemade Biscuits &amp; Desserts<lb/>
Eat In or Take Out<lb/>
103 Raleigh &amp; Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
752-5339<lb/>
H hy eat anywhere else when you can<lb/>
eat at the Deli Kitchen<lb/>
kL?LLLLiLLtLL.Ltlt?.LlLLn.LL,LLLlLClHHHlH.H.ntr<lb/>
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r<lb/>
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S<lb/>
(This coupon must<lb/>
accompany order<lb/>
12<lb/>
Off Complete<lb/>
Eye Glasses With<lb/>
This Coupon<lb/>
it Stce On<lb/>
Expires<lb/>
Sept. 30,<lb/>
1982<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
for ECU students on<lb/>
prescription glasses.<lb/>
Bring in ad &amp; student I.D.<lb/>
30<lb/>
DISCOUNT ON<lb/>
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14K Fine<lb/>
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Prices<lb/>
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Oct. 2nd<lb/>
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Saia<lb/>
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 I<lb/>
.<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
IHt I ASI C AROI INIAN<lb/>
SfcPTFMBl R21, 1982<lb/>
Bulldogs Placed On<lb/>
One-Year Probation<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Kevin Ingrain cuts back against the flow for good gain aainsi KTSl<lb/>
A CC Players Chosen<lb/>
uKl NSBORO,<lb/>
N.C. (MM)<lb/>
I inebackers Chris<lb/>
Ward of llth-ranked<lb/>
North c ai olina and<lb/>
nd Hendell oi North<lb/>
(. arolina State were<lb/>
named the Atlantic<lb/>
Coasi C onference's<lb/>
defensive players-of-<lb/>
the-week today.<lb/>
(i e o r g i a T e c h<lb/>
tailback Robert 1 avette<lb/>
:mJ Duke spin end<lb/>
C hris Caster earlier<lb/>
were named the con-<lb/>
ference's offensive<lb/>
players-of-the-week.<lb/>
1 he selections were<lb/>
made bv a special com-<lb/>
mittee oj the Atlantic<lb/>
i. oasl Sports Writers<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
W aird, a 6-foot,<lb/>
210-pound senior from<lb/>
( ru nnati, Ohio, had<lb/>
11 solo tackles and two<lb/>
assists in North<lb/>
Carolina's 34-10 win<lb/>
over Vanderbilt Satur-<lb/>
day. He also caused<lb/>
two tumbles and broke<lb/>
up a pass in the secon-<lb/>
dary.<lb/>
Hendel, a 6foot-l,<lb/>
220-pound junior from<lb/>
Rochester, N.V made<lb/>
a team high 13 tackles<lb/>
in North Carolina<lb/>
State's 30-0 shutout of<lb/>
Wake Forest Saturday<lb/>
and caused two<lb/>
fumbles.<lb/>
He called the<lb/>
Wolfpack's defensive<lb/>
signals against Wake<lb/>
Forest's m u 11 i -<lb/>
formation pass offense,<lb/>
which held Deacon<lb/>
quarterback Gary<lb/>
Schofield to just 151<lb/>
yards passing.<lb/>
A 6-foot, 189-pound<lb/>
sophomore from<lb/>
C a r t e r s v i 11 e, G a<lb/>
I avette rushed for 148<lb/>
yards on 27 carries and<lb/>
scored two touchdowns<lb/>
as the Yellow Jackets<lb/>
snapped an 11-game<lb/>
losing streak with a<lb/>
36-7 win over the<lb/>
Citadel Saturday.<lb/>
His effort pushed<lb/>
him oer the 1,000-yard<lb/>
career mark for his<lb/>
13-game collegiate<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Caster, a 6- foot<lb/>
170-pound senior from<lb/>
C a r y, caught<lb/>
touchdown passes of 36<lb/>
and 10 yards in Duke's<lb/>
30-17 win over South<lb/>
Carolina Saturday. His<lb/>
season total now stands<lb/>
at four completions<lb/>
and three touchdowns.<lb/>
MISSION, Kan.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Fifth-ranked<lb/>
Georgia was placed on<lb/>
one-year's probation<lb/>
Monday for a one-year<lb/>
period by the NCAA's<lb/>
Committee on Infrac-<lb/>
tions as a result of foot<lb/>
ball recruiting viola-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The NCAA said the<lb/>
probation imposed on<lb/>
Georgia, which is<lb/>
retroactive to Sept. 17,<lb/>
does not include sanc-<lb/>
tions related to televi-<lb/>
sion appearances or<lb/>
post-season bowl<lb/>
games. They will,<lb/>
however, penalie the<lb/>
school through the loss<lb/>
of three initial granis-<lb/>
in-aid for incoming<lb/>
football players during<lb/>
the 1983-84 academic<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The announcement<lb/>
comes less than a week<lb/>
after a federal court<lb/>
ruline in a 1981 suit til-<lb/>
ed on behalf of the<lb/>
University of Georgia<lb/>
Athletic Association<lb/>
and the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma Board of<lb/>
Regents that stripped<lb/>
the NCAA of its<lb/>
blanket negotiation<lb/>
power for the telecasts<lb/>
of college football<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The NCAA has since-<lb/>
said it will appeal the<lb/>
ruling, which in effect<lb/>
struck down the four-<lb/>
year $280.6 million<lb/>
agreement with three<lb/>
television networks.<lb/>
In addition, Georgia<lb/>
will prohibit two out-<lb/>
side representatives of<lb/>
its interests from par-<lb/>
ticipating in the recruit-<lb/>
ment of players during<lb/>
the period of proba-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This case was<lb/>
limited to violations<lb/>
that occurred in the<lb/>
recruitment of one pro-<lb/>
spective student-athlete<lb/>
by a former assistant<lb/>
football coach and two<lb/>
representatives ot the<lb/>
university's athletic in-<lb/>
terests said Charles<lb/>
Alan Wright, chairman<lb/>
oi the NCAA Commit-<lb/>
tee on Infractions.<lb/>
"Some of the viola-<lb/>
tions in the case were<lb/>
the subject on<lb/>
newspaper articles dur-<lb/>
ing the summer of 1982<lb/>
when the university an-<lb/>
nounced that it had<lb/>
'released' the prospect<lb/>
from his national letter<lb/>
ot intent in light of<lb/>
violations that occurred<lb/>
during his recruitment.<lb/>
"In addition to the<lb/>
one-year probationary<lb/>
period that was impos-<lb/>
ed in this case, the com-<lb/>
mittee determined that<lb/>
action to reduce the<lb/>
number of new recruits<lb/>
who will attend the in-<lb/>
stitution in the fall of<lb/>
1983 was approriate to<lb/>
emphasize the institu-<lb/>
tion's responsibility to<lb/>
avoid future viola-<lb/>
tions Wright said in a<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to our ei<lb/>
ceilent AOPI 'an pledges' Love<lb/>
your new sisters<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES needed<lb/>
4 bedroom house. 2 blocks trom<lb/>
campus 173 per month Call Bun<lb/>
Chadwick 7S2 4UI 30 E 3th S'<lb/>
SHARE TRAILER IS WMites<lb/>
Trailer Park near Pitt Plaia on<lb/>
ECU gold bus route S40 per month<lb/>
and one third utilities Kitchen<lb/>
privileges and your own room<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
PRESCHOOL Elementar, educa<lb/>
tion maiors Need resource<lb/>
materials Former incut' has<lb/>
books on linger plays art cteas<lb/>
science eiperimenti math pro<lb/>
iects. kid s stutt "j batkteyi<lb/>
Can Pam at ?s? ???i<lb/>
FOR SALE 1?C KAWASAKI ?SC :<lb/>
cyl Emc COnd Only jiOC miles<lb/>
SiWC Can Darren at in 4S4C<lb/>
HANO CRAFTED ruS' c 'uf<lb/>
mture at aftordaoie s'uon<lb/>
prices For more intormation  a<lb/>
Kim at T53 SU<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL T.c i" n?s to<lb/>
'ype a' home Reasorbit ? ?. ?<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL T.p.r'qs-<lb/>
e?perience guaht, work IBV<lb/>
'rpewr.ier Can Lan.e S ? ?<lb/>
'SI 510! or Gail Joiner ?S :?:<lb/>
FOR SALE JVC JAS 77 Stereo<lb/>
Amp ?S wattsc StSO or best offer<lb/>
752 0449<lb/>
FREE KITTENS NEED A good<lb/>
home call 7S? 4402 ask for Chris<lb/>
FOR SALE glasses dishes and<lb/>
hot plate Call Pam at 7S4 ?5?5<lb/>
TYPING TEBV jiPf-i ?<lb/>
thesis etc Can ?: 4733<lb/>
TEN YEARS Prolessior.i p -g,<lb/>
eiperience reasonab t 'as<lb/>
spelling punctua'io a"Q Q' 4<lb/>
matical corrections ?? -<lb/>
work proofread Ca N C ?a. ta.m<lb/>
? p m 235 :???<lb/>
HAVING TROUBLE M<lb/>
SPANISH' Tutoring i.i 40<lb/>
Can Osca' nati.e speakf<lb/>
7S? ?527<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOS' n FOuR SEA N<lb/>
't-s'iu'1" Lad. i ? - -<lb/>
Buo.a wa'C- e9ra.?-e wi oar?<lb/>
Great sen'imra ? -? Rent I<lb/>
sa rWJ a"C as? NH (I<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
BASS PiAVER .Hive ?<lb/>
; on'empo' ir?<lb/>
Banc Bi<lb/>
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Ait p'a? Serious  <lb/>
? a"S WKA Ca 7SM<lb/>
p m<lb/>
AAS-fcC i - -<lb/>
pt ??? Kb work <lb/>
mtf) ECU grtvf<lb/>
mm uinera airi ?<lb/>
o ? encf Ea" S-<lb/>
- -<lb/>
NC 2?4SS<lb/>
BREAKEAlST<lb/>
IN THE COUNTRY<lb/>
1 egg with bacon OR sausage<lb/>
and grits OR hashbrowns<lb/>
and biscuit OR toast<lb/>
With juice OR coffee<lb/>
v<lb/>
$&amp;&amp;5<lb/>
$1.95<lb/>
?' t:<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
TWO GREENVIT.T.F, LOCATIONS<lb/>
2903 E. TENTH ST.610 W. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS DRIVE THRU WINDOW<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT ?<lb/>
CHICKEN $2.99<lb/>
(dark meat)<lb/>
This meal includes Chicken,<lb/>
Fries, Biscuits &amp;<lb/>
1 Small Tea (no refills)<lb/>
4-9 p.m. Mon Tues &amp; Wed.<lb/>
No TakeOuts<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ? 752-1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
SsS&amp;sS<lb/>
IN rf aN? ?'<lb/>
rr' 'jf?<lb/>
yeab<lb/>
ggoKH<lb/>
Contact Lisa Coleman<lb/>
at the Buccaneer Office<lb/>
or call 757-6501<lb/>
after 1:00 M-F<lb/>
iN<lb/>
Art and ideas, ad-<lb/>
vertising layouts,<lb/>
attention-getting<lb/>
headingsall the<lb/>
elements oi quality<lb/>
advertising is at<lb/>
your serviceand<lb/>
at no extra cost<lb/>
when you adver-<lb/>
tise with us! The<lb/>
Metro advantage<lb/>
means advertising<lb/>
to YOUR advantage!<lb/>
To advertise<lb/>
in the<lb/>
PRE-REGISTRATION<lb/>
ISSUE<lb/>
(Sept. 30)<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
MGzemmp<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 Ball,<lb/>
and being together as a group! There are fun and<lb/>
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 DATESTOREMEMBER<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/>
?sssssssssssv<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for Men &amp; Women<lb/>
1002 Evans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
Open Under<lb/>
New<lb/>
Management<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
RECENTLY REMODELED It's that time again to<lb/>
get back into shape. Nautilus is located on Evans<lb/>
Street, within walking distance from campus. Featur-<lb/>
ing a full line of Nautilus equipment, Olympic free<lb/>
weights, sauna, whirlpool and locker room.<lb/>
Call and ask about our pro-rated student rates and<lb/>
group rate. Cali and schedule a<lb/>
free introductory workout.<lb/>
HOURS OF OPERATION:<lb/>
MonThurs. ? 10 a.m. 9 p.m. Friday ? 10 a.m. 8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday ? 10 a.m5 p.m. Sunday ? 1 p.m. 5 p.m.<lb/>
l<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
i<lb/>
i.<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
Wh off<lb/>
on the purchase of<lb/>
one of our lab coats!<lb/>
All types ot uniforms at reasonab;e<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes shoes<lb/>
and hose. Also - used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms 1 rade-ins allowed<lb/>
 . 17 10W 6th <lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Near HolloweM's Druq and<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
with<lb/>
ECT<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Nov. 24-Nov. 28. 1982<lb/>
Spend your Thanksgiving holiday in style on Bi jadwa.<lb/>
at Macy's Parade, shopping, c: touring the cit . Spat t -<lb/>
limited &amp; time is drawing near, for more info, contaei<lb/>
Central Ticket Office. Mendenhall Student Centei<lb/>
Take Om<lb/>
St?r k c<lb/>
Monday $06b<lb/>
4'2 oi. Sirloin ?<lb/>
Tuesday sosb<lb/>
5 oi. Beef Tips "<lb/>
Wednesday $085<lb/>
8 oi. Chopped Steak <lb/>
Thursday $049<lb/>
7 Vi oi. Sirloin O<lb/>
Friday A5<lb/>
8 oi. Rib Eye <lb/>
Saturday A5<lb/>
6 oi. NY Strip H<lb/>
Sunday $099<lb/>
5 oi. Beef Tips a<lb/>
plus<lb/>
30 Item Salad Bar<lb/>
315 Stantonburg Road 758"4600<lb/>
IB<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057498_0013"/>
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