<?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="00057502_0001"/>
?he lEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.ll<lb/>
Tuesday, October 5, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages,<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Students Protest Building Site<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Maff Vtnirr<lb/>
The controversy over the planned<lb/>
construction of a new building on<lb/>
campus continued last week as three<lb/>
ECU students took their objections<lb/>
ot the proposal directly to the office<lb/>
of ECU Chancellor John Howell.<lb/>
Students Glenn Maughaun, Mike<lb/>
Hamer, and Gerlinde Tolson met<lb/>
with Howell last Thursday to<lb/>
discuss with him their objections to<lb/>
the placement of the building in an<lb/>
aiea which they claim is one of the<lb/>
tew natural areas lett on campus.<lb/>
The proposed building would be<lb/>
built in the area located behind the<lb/>
Graham building. Rawl building<lb/>
and Rawl annex.<lb/>
Maughaun. an ECU education<lb/>
indent who organized the group,<lb/>
claims that the proposed area for<lb/>
the site is part of the Sally Davis<lb/>
loynet MJoretum which was<lb/>
dedicated in the 1930s.<lb/>
The Davis Aboretum was part of<lb/>
a campus beautification project that<lb/>
was originally slated to include five<lb/>
or six acres Davis was a charter<lb/>
member of the ECTC faculty in the<lb/>
Department of History. ECTC<lb/>
became ECU in 1967.<lb/>
Maughaun, who researched the<lb/>
history ot the beautification project<lb/>
by looking at old copies ot the<lb/>
Techo Echo (now The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian) and The News and Observer<lb/>
on microfilm, noted that two large<lb/>
granite pillars that are still in place<lb/>
near the area were originally con-<lb/>
structed as entrances to the<lb/>
aboretum. "Now when you look<lb/>
through that stone gate, you're not<lb/>
going to see anything but that<lb/>
building Maughaun said.<lb/>
"The area is supposed to be<lb/>
preserved<lb/>
Howell, who claimed he hadn't<lb/>
even heard of the aboretum until<lb/>
recently, said that for the most pan<lb/>
the original plans tor the beautifica-<lb/>
tion project were abandoned in<lb/>
150. but that a possible memorial<lb/>
of some kind commemorating Davis<lb/>
may be considered.<lb/>
"The campus should hae some<lb/>
kind ot recreational area where<lb/>
there are trees, away from the hustle<lb/>
and bustle said Tolson, who is a<lb/>
senior in finance. "They're going to<lb/>
build a building in one o the few<lb/>
places we have<lb/>
Hamer, who recognized that there<lb/>
is a real need for the new buiding,<lb/>
said that he felt Howell had trouble<lb/>
understanding the distinction bet-<lb/>
ween trees and a quiet, natural<lb/>
place. "1 didn't think he understood<lb/>
what we meant by a quiet place<lb/>
Hamer said.<lb/>
"1 would say there are quieter<lb/>
places on campus than that said<lb/>
Howell, disputing the claims of op-<lb/>
ponents to the project hat's not a<lb/>
quiet place he said adding that the<lb/>
area in question leaves a great deal<lb/>
to be desired.<lb/>
Howell also disputed opponent's<lb/>
claims that the area was being used<lb/>
for solitude or any other reason for<lb/>
that matter. He said that the area<lb/>
has no benches for people to sit on<lb/>
and that it hasn't been maintained.<lb/>
"They don't sit there - 1 challenge<lb/>
that - people don't sit there<lb/>
Howell said.<lb/>
According to Howell the universi-<lb/>
ty plants a good many more trees<lb/>
than it cuts down. "I don't feel very<lb/>
guilty about cutting down a tree<lb/>
he said. Opponents say that many of<lb/>
the most beautiful trees on campus<lb/>
will be lost to the construction.<lb/>
Howell claims that the university<lb/>
has purchased over 777 trees in the<lb/>
past 14 years. "That's an average of<lb/>
about 55 trees per year he added.<lb/>
Tolson said that the figures<lb/>
relating to the number of trees<lb/>
planted to the number cut down<lb/>
created a "distorted rationale"<lb/>
because larger trees that have been<lb/>
growing for decades can't be replac-<lb/>
ed by planting seedlings. "We don't<lb/>
want our campus to be nothing but<lb/>
concrete she added.<lb/>
Recently 21 members of the<lb/>
biology faculty petitioned Howell to<lb/>
change the proposed site of the new<lb/>
building to the parking area behind<lb/>
Joyner library.<lb/>
Howell claims that this alternative<lb/>
plan is not viable because the park-<lb/>
ing area is necessary and can't be<lb/>
replaced. He states that there are<lb/>
two groups, the parking place group<lb/>
and the tree lovers group. "I don't<lb/>
jump at pleasing one to arouse the<lb/>
other" he added.<lb/>
"We're not going to construct a<lb/>
building anywhere on campus<lb/>
without cutting down some trees<lb/>
said Howell.<lb/>
Ptwto f<lb/>
"Someday You 7 Go To ECU<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LABSON<lb/>
A future Pirate takes a cautious look at student life around Ml as a<lb/>
more experienced eve points out some features of campus.<lb/>
Governor's Council Holds Local Hearing On Handicap Law<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
staff W nier<lb/>
About 200 people attended the<lb/>
Governor's Advocacy Council tor<lb/>
Persons with Disabilities hearings<lb/>
that were held in the Willis building<lb/>
last rhursday night.<lb/>
The hearings were held to discuss<lb/>
proposed changes in Public Law<lb/>
(P.l .) 94-142 which would affect<lb/>
services to handicapped children<lb/>
and adults.<lb/>
Earlier in the day there was some<lb/>
speculation that the hearings ma be<lb/>
The Student's Hress<lb/>
canceled in light oi the news from<lb/>
Washington D.C. on Wednesday<lb/>
that the Reagan administration was<lb/>
backing down from its original pro-<lb/>
posals because ot the "storm of pro-<lb/>
test" which was being created bv<lb/>
people opposed to the PT . 94-142<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
Education Secretary Terrel H.<lb/>
Bell announced Wednesday the por-<lb/>
tions of the regulations that, what<lb/>
he called, "the major source of con-<lb/>
cern and apprehension" were being<lb/>
withdrawn. Bell was speaking<lb/>
bet ore a crowded hearing oi a<lb/>
House select education subcommit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Despite Bell's welcomed state-<lb/>
ment, the hearings continued amid<lb/>
fears that the withdrawn proposals<lb/>
would in fact be resubmitted in<lb/>
mildei or subtler forms. "The news<lb/>
out ol D.C is something that I'm<lb/>
putting no stock in at the moment<lb/>
ECU assistant profesor of<lb/>
psychology Mvree Hayes told The<lb/>
Hast Carolinian.<lb/>
Hayes, who presided over the<lb/>
Handout Accuses President<lb/>
Thursday hearings, felt that con-<lb/>
tinued lobbying pressure would be<lb/>
needed to assure the complete<lb/>
withdrawal of the proposals, which,<lb/>
it implemented, would relax the<lb/>
rules that guarantee equal education<lb/>
for handicaaped students.<lb/>
"I just hope that parents, profes-<lb/>
sionals and interested lay people will<lb/>
respond to their state and national<lb/>
legislative representatives in regard<lb/>
to matters pertaining to the educa-<lb/>
tion of handicapped children and<lb/>
adults said Dr. William Martin,<lb/>
an ECU professor in the School of<lb/>
Education ji.u a member ot trie Pitt<lb/>
Count) Association ot Retarded<lb/>
Citizens. Martin was one of more<lb/>
than 25 people, mostly the parents<lb/>
of handicapped children, who spoke<lb/>
during the two hour program.<lb/>
He agreed with Hayes that despite<lb/>
B (,RE(, RIDKOIT<lb/>
n intormation sheet titled The<lb/>
Student's Press hit the newsstand<lb/>
yesterday with accusations that<lb/>
SGA president Eric Henderson was<lb/>
unfit to hold office.<lb/>
Tim Mer whose name appears<lb/>
on the 8 : 1 news sheet as editor in<lb/>
chiet. said the paper was printed<lb/>
because the students have a right to<lb/>
know. He said the information con-<lb/>
tained in the sheet was obtained<lb/>
from public record, campaign trial<lb/>
documents, and people connected<lb/>
with Henderson's campaign.<lb/>
Among the charges listed on the<lb/>
sheet are that Henderson cheated in<lb/>
last year's campaign, made several<lb/>
questionable appointments, has not<lb/>
kept one campaign promise and<lb/>
took an expense paid trip to<lb/>
W ashington D.C. on student fees.<lb/>
Henderson called the sheet<lb/>
"garbage" and said he wished the<lb/>
people involved would get their<lb/>
tacts right. Henderson denied the<lb/>
cheating charges, and said he was<lb/>
keeping his campaign promises.<lb/>
"Changes as widespread as a<lb/>
book rental take some time<lb/>
Henderson explained. "1 never pro-<lb/>
mised to do anything concerning a<lb/>
tow truck<lb/>
Mertz said he feels he and the<lb/>
"group of concerned students" who<lb/>
put the broadsheet together have the<lb/>
records to prove their charges.<lb/>
Henderson pointed to two<lb/>
statements in the sheet which were<lb/>
untrue. One said Henderson was<lb/>
quoted in The East Carolinian as<lb/>
saying that politics were involved in<lb/>
his recent appointments. Attorney<lb/>
General Mike Swaim made that<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
The other misstatement concern-<lb/>
ed Henderson's and SGA vice presi-<lb/>
dent Bob Mill's trip to a student<lb/>
go varment convention in<lb/>
Washington D.C. The Student's<lb/>
Press claimed that the trip cost<lb/>
S2.000 and was payed for from stu-<lb/>
dent tees. The trip actually cost bet-<lb/>
ween S600 and S800 dollars. Men<lb/>
admitted to these errors.<lb/>
Four-thousand copies of the<lb/>
paper were printed, according to<lb/>
Mertz. They were done by a Green-<lb/>
ville printer and cost about $40<lb/>
dollars. The money to finance the<lb/>
newssheet came from private dona-<lb/>
tions, he said.<lb/>
Henderson said that was a<lb/>
disgruntled David Cook supporter.<lb/>
"Why keep crying over in his cof-<lb/>
fee, even if I am impeached, David<lb/>
Cook wouldn't become president<lb/>
Publications of this kind are re-<lb/>
quired to be approved by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Life office. Mertz said that as<lb/>
far he knows, one of the people in-<lb/>
volved got Dean James Mallory's<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
"If he's (Mertz) so concerned,<lb/>
why doesn't he get directly involv-<lb/>
ed Henderson said<lb/>
Pitoto By STANLEY LEAKY<lb/>
Hey Officer, You Forgot One<lb/>
This conscientious student tries to help out the campus police department. He diligently puts down traffic cones<lb/>
to further the cause of justice.<lb/>
the Bell announcement, the problem<lb/>
was not resolved. " The difference is<lb/>
going to come when the bucks keep<lb/>
coming added Martin.<lb/>
He praised the parents who spoke<lb/>
during the hearing. "The parents<lb/>
spoke up in defense ol the program<lb/>
that their children were getting -<lb/>
theywant a continuation ol the<lb/>
funds to sustain those pro-<lb/>
gramscontinued Martin. "The<lb/>
parents did it pretty much bv<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
N.C. State Senator Vernon I<lb/>
White and N.C. State Rep. Ed War-<lb/>
len were present ai the hearing.<lb/>
Representative Sam. D. Bundv<lb/>
could not be there. All three men are<lb/>
running for re-election next month<lb/>
to their democratic seats. Manem<lb/>
House and Freddy Jacobson, who<lb/>
are running as write-in candidates<lb/>
tor the Senate and the House resp -<lb/>
tively, were also present.<lb/>
Both Martin and Haves wei<lb/>
pleased with the iarge turnout at the<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
Martin felt that the proposed<lb/>
in the program were especially un-<lb/>
fair in light ol the fact that the pro-<lb/>
gram was never fully funded in the<lb/>
first place. "Now they're planning<lb/>
on cutting upwards of 30 percent<lb/>
Martin said. He dddu thai the<lb/>
announcement showed that the peo-<lb/>
ple have strength in their numbers<lb/>
"We are hopeful - we're not<lb/>
ing to stop working -we'rt<lb/>
keep those letters goii -<lb/>
W ashington said Haves "We<lb/>
can't be thinking that now we have<lb/>
it made and be apathetic we still<lb/>
need to push<lb/>
Infirmary Stops Giving Tylenol<lb/>
The ECU Student Health Center<lb/>
has discontinued the dispensing of<lb/>
all Tylenol products as precau-<lb/>
tionary measure until further infor-<lb/>
mation is available concerning the<lb/>
recent deaths of seven people from<lb/>
the Chicago area who ingested<lb/>
cyanide-laced Extra-Strength<lb/>
Tylenol capsules.<lb/>
"What we've decided to do is not<lb/>
to give out anv Tylenol at all said<lb/>
ECU Student Health Services Phar-<lb/>
macist Bill Bass. He added that the<lb/>
SHC presently doesn't handle the<lb/>
Tylenol Extra Strength which have<lb/>
been taken in all seven of the fatal<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
"Basically what we have is the<lb/>
regular tablets Bass said. "We're<lb/>
not going to give out any of those til<lb/>
this thing clears up. We're just play-<lb/>
ing it one step safer by just not giv-<lb/>
ing out any at all<lb/>
The two most recent deaths from<lb/>
Tylenol cyanide poisoning both oc-<lb/>
cured on Friday. Both victims, like<lb/>
all the others, were from the<lb/>
Chicago area.<lb/>
Nineteen year old Theresa Janus<lb/>
died of cyanide poisoning at 1:15<lb/>
pm. She had been hospitalized<lb/>
Wednesday night after her husband<lb/>
and brother-in-law also died of<lb/>
poisoning. The seventh victim was<lb/>
35-year old flight attendant Paula<lb/>
Prince, who was found dead in her<lb/>
apartment Friday night, a few steps<lb/>
from a 24-capsule bottle of Extra<lb/>
Strength Tylenol she bought at a<lb/>
near-by drugstore.<lb/>
Although only five bottles of the<lb/>
contaminated Tylenol have been<lb/>
found, the Food and Drug Ad-<lb/>
ministration (FDA) has urged con-<lb/>
sumers nationwide to stop using the<lb/>
capsules pending more intormation.<lb/>
Bass advises students who have<lb/>
recently purchased the product (in<lb/>
the last week or two) to return it to<lb/>
the place of purchase. "If they've<lb/>
got a bottle they've had for a fairly<lb/>
long time 1 wouldn't worry about<lb/>
it he added.<lb/>
So far, four different batches of<lb/>
the capsules have been found to<lb/>
have been laced with the cyanide<lb/>
poison, lot numbers MB1833,<lb/>
1801MA, MC2880, and 1910MD<lb/>
have been involved in the seven<lb/>
fatalities, but only the latter two<lb/>
have been recalled thus far.<lb/>
Distribution of the four lots has<lb/>
been wide spread throughout the<lb/>
eastern and southern states and even<lb/>
some west of the Mississippi river.<lb/>
Experts working in the case<lb/>
suspect that the bottles of the pain<lb/>
reliever have been tampered with.<lb/>
possibly by a psychotic killer, at the<lb/>
retail level, not in the distribution<lb/>
chain. Bass also believes that<lb/>
retail contamination is probably the<lb/>
case. "We're just being extra<lb/>
cautious in case thev would find out<lb/>
that it's been contaminated in theii<lb/>
plants and that it's more than just<lb/>
the capsuleshe said.<lb/>
ECU freshmen general college<lb/>
student Susan Van Arnam said her<lb/>
roommate had some of the suspect<lb/>
Tylenol Extra-Strength capsules.<lb/>
but that the numbers on their bottle<lb/>
were one number above the<lb/>
numbers they said to watch out for<lb/>
"We heard about it and we check-<lb/>
ed the numbers an Arnam said<lb/>
"We still have it. but most likely<lb/>
we'll throw it away<lb/>
"I couldn't believe it said<lb/>
another ECU student, computer<lb/>
science major Theresa Gallagher "1<lb/>
had taken them before, but 1 won't<lb/>
take any now<lb/>
Gallagher said that her roommate<lb/>
Robin Muzzarelli had some of the<lb/>
Tylenol capsules, but that thev were<lb/>
thrown away by a third roomate. "i<lb/>
don't think I would ever bu anv bv<lb/>
the same company again added<lb/>
Gallagher.<lb/>
Registration Resister Sentenced<lb/>
A 21 year-old college student has<lb/>
been sentenced to 2Vi years in<lb/>
federal prison for refusing to<lb/>
register for the military draft.<lb/>
Benjamin H. Sasway, formally of<lb/>
Humboldt State University in Ar-<lb/>
cata, Calif is the first person to be<lb/>
jailed for wilfull non-registration<lb/>
since the Vietnam war.<lb/>
The decision was handed down by<lb/>
U.S. federal Magistrate Gordon<lb/>
Thompson, who previously had said<lb/>
he respected Sasway's conscience<lb/>
but that he could not respect his<lb/>
position because it was against the<lb/>
law.<lb/>
Thompson told Sasway's at-<lb/>
torney, Charles T. Burner, that an<lb/>
appeal bail of $10,000 could be ar-<lb/>
ranged if Burner could assure the<lb/>
court that Sasway would . ot try to<lb/>
flee prosecution.<lb/>
"I only ask that you let your con-<lb/>
science be your guide, as I have let<lb/>
my conscience be mine Sasway<lb/>
told the judge while reading from a<lb/>
prepared statement.<lb/>
Local response to Sasway's plight<lb/>
was strong from both sides. "I<lb/>
would think the individual had prior<lb/>
warning of the possible legal im-<lb/>
plications of not complying said<lb/>
the chairman of ECU's Air Force<lb/>
ROTC Lt. Col. James Thomas.<lb/>
"The adjudication would seem to<lb/>
me to be fair<lb/>
"It's a tragedy that judges cannot<lb/>
understand the consciences of the<lb/>
most moral people of our time<lb/>
said Dr. Carroll Webber of the<lb/>
Greenville Peace Committee. "That<lb/>
people of less conscience are m a<lb/>
position to punish those of greater<lb/>
conscience ? the sentence is bar-<lb/>
banc<lb/>
"It's a tragedy in American<lb/>
justice said Barbara Fay Mann, of<lb/>
the Draft Information Service in<lb/>
Raleigh. "Are the ideals on which<lb/>
this nation was founded truly served<lb/>
by subjecting these dissenters to<lb/>
sentences such as this? The Draft In-<lb/>
formation Service thinks not<lb/>
Sasway's mother Dolores C.<lb/>
Sasway said she was not surprised<lb/>
by Thompson's harsh decision. "I<lb/>
just hope that the country will listen<lb/>
to these young people. We can't<lb/>
take away these peoples freedoms<lb/>
just because they disagree<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 5, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian m 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/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity.<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
is 3 p m. Monday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3pm Wednesdayy tor<lb/>
the Thursday paper No an<lb/>
nouncements receivea after these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
SCENES FROM<lb/>
THREE OPERAS<lb/>
The ECU Opera Theatre<lb/>
presents An Evening of Scenes<lb/>
from Opera F nday, October 8. at<lb/>
8 15 pm m the A J Fletcher<lb/>
Recita. Hail The public is invited<lb/>
to attend, and no admission will be<lb/>
charged<lb/>
Scenes to be featured in this an<lb/>
nual program are from Verdi's<lb/>
FALSTAFF. Ravel's LENFANT<lb/>
ET LES SORTILEGES, and Of<lb/>
tenoach's BA TA CLAN<lb/>
Dr C Hiss is Director ot the<lb/>
Opera Theatre Special<lb/>
choreography tor this pertor<lb/>
mance was done by Paula Johnson<lb/>
ot the ECU dance faculty<lb/>
Student performers are. Melvyn<lb/>
T. Waddell Sandra S Quick,<lb/>
Jayne Humphrey Daphne A<lb/>
Dunston Elizabeth S Evans.<lb/>
Catherine Oldham Alderman K<lb/>
West. Robert Todd. Timothy K<lb/>
Ward. Alderman K West, and<lb/>
Mark Gansor<lb/>
There will be no Saturday, Oc<lb/>
tobcr 9 performance, as previous<lb/>
ly announced<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Persona: Development Courses<lb/>
begin<lb/>
Oct 18 Getting Organized Oct 21<lb/>
Real Estate Finance. Commodity<lb/>
Hedging Oct 26 Aerobic Exer<lb/>
cise Nov 17 Real Estate Ap<lb/>
praisat<lb/>
Sep' 79 Mime Sept 30 In<lb/>
vesting m the 80 s Oct 5 Basket<lb/>
ban Officiating Oct 12 Cop'na<lb/>
with Stress Philosophy and<lb/>
Retirement For information call<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
GAMMA BETA<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
Members, our next meeting will<lb/>
be held on Thursday October 6 m<lb/>
Mendenhall m room 244 at 7 00<lb/>
pm Plan to attend<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Brother. Pledges and the<lb/>
Little sisters ot the Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity would like to thank all<lb/>
of the ECU Ladies who came out<lb/>
tor our Little Sister rush Party,<lb/>
because we think that you are all<lb/>
great Thanks so much for ex<lb/>
pressing an interest in being part<lb/>
ot the Greek system Hope that we<lb/>
will be seeing you again real soon<lb/>
IRSOUTDOOR<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
The IRS Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center (113 Memorial Gym) is<lb/>
sponsoring horseback ndmg trips<lb/>
twice a week Transportation <lb/>
provided Reservations and pay<lb/>
ment tor Monday afternoon trips<lb/>
are due by 2 30 p m each Monday<lb/>
Reservations and payment for<lb/>
Thursday trips are due by 4 00<lb/>
p m each Wednesday Rates are<lb/>
J5 00 per hour Both trips leave at<lb/>
3 40 p m and return approximate<lb/>
ly 5 30 p m For more information<lb/>
stop by tthe Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center or call 757 6911<lb/>
BIG BROTHER<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
AOTT soroify will have a Big<lb/>
Brother Rush on Oct 5 from<lb/>
9 00 11 00 pm All interested guys<lb/>
are invited For more information<lb/>
and a ride call 758 4290<lb/>
FLORIDA<lb/>
The ECU Student Athletic Board<lb/>
(SABi invites any interested<lb/>
students to attend the ECU<lb/>
Florida State game on October<lb/>
16th via charter bus The bus will<lb/>
leave Mmges Coliseum at 2 00 am<lb/>
and arrive m Tallahassee by game<lb/>
time (7 00 pm) with a scheduled<lb/>
departure from Tallahassee im<lb/>
mediately after the game The<lb/>
charter must isvf 46 passangers<lb/>
a' a cost of S53 per person tor the<lb/>
bus and $12 for the game ticket or<lb/>
a total ot 165 round trip<lb/>
Anyone interested should bring<lb/>
the money to Pam Holt in the<lb/>
Director ot Athletics Office.<lb/>
Mmges before 5 pm, Tuesday Oc<lb/>
tober 5th<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
There will be a silent dinner a'<lb/>
the Treehouse on Wednesday. Oc<lb/>
tober 6 a' 6 30 pm Come on down<lb/>
and Oin m with members ot the<lb/>
Sign Language Club<lb/>
INDT Majors<lb/>
Part t.me co op training posi<lb/>
tions are avilable with Buehier<lb/>
Mtg Co m Kmston. These tram<lb/>
mg positions could lead to full<lb/>
time opportunities in Production<lb/>
Supervision. Production Control<lb/>
or Purchasing m the new Buehier<lb/>
plant in Raleigh beginning June,<lb/>
1983 All mtersted INDT maiors<lb/>
contact Nancy Fillnow in the Co<lb/>
op office, ext 6979<lb/>
I.S.A.<lb/>
The International Student<lb/>
Association will hold its first<lb/>
semester meeting tor all Interna<lb/>
tional students and all those who<lb/>
are interested in the Internaional<lb/>
Student Affair On Saturday Oc<lb/>
tober 9, at the International House<lb/>
on 9th Street, starting at 330 pm<lb/>
Please come and join us and meet<lb/>
new friends.<lb/>
BAHA'I<lb/>
The BAHA'I association of ECU<lb/>
will be holding their first bi<lb/>
weekly fireside Anyone interested<lb/>
in discussing the great religions of<lb/>
the world and how they apply to<lb/>
mankind today is welcome The in<lb/>
formal gathering will be held<lb/>
Wednesday evening October 6 at<lb/>
5 00 pm for about an hour in 212<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
ECU LAW<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will make<lb/>
a field trip to Campbell University<lb/>
Law School on October 20. This<lb/>
will be an excused absence for<lb/>
Law Society members For fur<lb/>
ther information, contact Diane<lb/>
Jones, 756 6556<lb/>
I. L. O.<lb/>
The International Language<lb/>
Organization will be meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, October 6 The<lb/>
meeting will be held in BC 305 at<lb/>
3 00 pm There will be further<lb/>
discussion on both Noche Latma<lb/>
and the revision of the constitu<lb/>
tion. All persons interested in<lb/>
foreign languages are 'ged to at<lb/>
tend You do not nave to be a<lb/>
foreign language maior or minor<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
"See how great a love the<lb/>
Father has bestowed upon us, that<lb/>
we should be called children ot<lb/>
God. and such we are " (1 John<lb/>
3 12)<lb/>
Inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship meets Wednesday<lb/>
nights at 6 30 in the Biology<lb/>
building, room 102N Come join in<lb/>
song and fellowship with us.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
The Phi Eta Sigma National<lb/>
Freshman Honor Society will<lb/>
meet Tuesday, October 5, at 5<lb/>
pom in Room 212 at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Plans<lb/>
will be made for the National Con<lb/>
vention so all members are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
General College students should<lb/>
contact their advisors prior to Oc<lb/>
tober 11, 1982 to arrange tor<lb/>
preregistration<lb/>
COLLEGIATE<lb/>
JOURNALISTS<lb/>
An organizational meeting ot the<lb/>
Society ot Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
will be held on Tuesday, oct 5. at 7<lb/>
p m in Austin 208 Any jour<lb/>
nalists, would be lournalists, or<lb/>
other mtersted persons are in<lb/>
vited Those unable to attend or<lb/>
who would like additional mtorma<lb/>
tion may contact Alex Albright,<lb/>
English Annex (Old Security<lb/>
Building) 102. or phone 757 6412<lb/>
COMMUNITY<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
Al Agate and Debra Wiggins are<lb/>
organizing a Community Theatre<lb/>
Group made ot students from<lb/>
ECU From its ranks tney plan to<lb/>
cast a lull length, full cast musical<lb/>
in the Spring, in addition, they<lb/>
hope to support experimental pro-<lb/>
jects The goal is to tap some of the<lb/>
vast unused talent in the<lb/>
Greenivlle area. Singers dancers,<lb/>
actors, and technicians are<lb/>
welcome. For information call<lb/>
758 9474<lb/>
PRE MEDS<lb/>
Doctor William E. Laupus, Dean<lb/>
ot the ECU School ot Medicine and<lb/>
Doctor Calvin Smith, a family<lb/>
physician practicing in Winstead<lb/>
vine, NC will speak to the ECU<lb/>
Biology Club and any pre medical<lb/>
students wishing to attend on Oc<lb/>
tober 11, at 7 00 in BN 102<lb/>
Dean Laupus will speak concer<lb/>
nmg the ECU School ot Medicine<lb/>
and medical student life Doctor<lb/>
Smith will discuss the lite o? a<lb/>
family practicioner in a rural<lb/>
community.<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
MIXER<lb/>
interested in Occupational<lb/>
Therapy Come to our mixer in<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room n<lb/>
October 7, 1982 at 7 00 p.m. Meet<lb/>
Junior and Senior OT students,<lb/>
faculty and area clinicians There<lb/>
will be displys and a film presenta<lb/>
tion Refreshments will be served<lb/>
See you there!<lb/>
U.S. NAVY<lb/>
INTERVIEWS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
will have representatives from the<lb/>
U.S. Navy Recruiting Office here<lb/>
on September 29 between 9am<lb/>
and 4 pm to talk with Seniors A<lb/>
sheet is available tor those<lb/>
registered with us to sign up tor an<lb/>
interview All maiors are<lb/>
welcome, the most demand will be<lb/>
for those in the Health and<lb/>
technical fields You must sign up<lb/>
on or before September 28<lb/>
AEROBICS AND DANCE<lb/>
Noontime classes in Aerobics<lb/>
(already m progress but<lb/>
newcomers welcome) for faculty<lb/>
and staff are held on Monday,<lb/>
Wednesday, and Friday in Room<lb/>
112, Memorial Gym Noontime<lb/>
classes in Ballroom dancing (start<lb/>
October 7) for Faculty and Staff<lb/>
will be held on Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays Both ot these classes<lb/>
are tree and you may call Jo<lb/>
Saunders 757 6000 for further m<lb/>
formation<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a CORSO meetmq<lb/>
in room 101 (Allied Health) Mon<lb/>
day October 11, at 5 30 pm All<lb/>
SOCW and CORS maiors or in<lb/>
tended maiors are invited to at<lb/>
'end CRSO is the organization<lb/>
tor students m Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services<lb/>
CATHOLIC<lb/>
NEWMAN CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
10m in with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday in the Biology<lb/>
Lecture HaH starting at 12 30 and<lb/>
every Wednesday at 5 00 at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center located<lb/>
down at the bottom ot College Hill<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
The PRC Club will hold its<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday, October 5th<lb/>
at 7 30 in the Mendenhall Multi<lb/>
purpose Room Club Bylaws<lb/>
Secretary election, and T Shirts<lb/>
will be discussed r?mbers and<lb/>
prospective members please at<lb/>
rend<lb/>
CHOWAN COLLEGE<lb/>
Alumni and Friends of Chowan<lb/>
College will be having an Alumni<lb/>
Meeting m Greenville on Monday<lb/>
evening, October 11 from 6 00 to<lb/>
8 00 pm The meeting will be held<lb/>
in the private dining room at the<lb/>
Western Sizzim Steak House at 610<lb/>
W Greenville Boulevard<lb/>
Dr Bruce E Whitaker. Presi<lb/>
dent of Chowan College will be the<lb/>
speaker<lb/>
All alumm and friends of<lb/>
Chowan College are invited To<lb/>
reserve you place, call Bob or Bet<lb/>
y Dough evenings at 756 5128<lb/>
PRE-OCCUPATIONAL<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
Pre Occupational Therapy<lb/>
students should be advised of the<lb/>
following<lb/>
Application forms and fees for<lb/>
November Allied Health Protes<lb/>
sions Admissions Test must be<lb/>
received by the Testing company<lb/>
by October 8, 1982 Application<lb/>
forms are available at the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, 105 Speight<lb/>
Building between 8 00 and 1 00<lb/>
and between 2 00 and 5 00<lb/>
Occupational Therapy Admis<lb/>
sion Packets will be available in<lb/>
the Occupational Therapy Depart<lb/>
mental Office October 4, 1982 and<lb/>
also at pre registration<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
HELP START A FRATERNI<lb/>
TY Are you considering fraterni<lb/>
ty life, but missed fall rush Well a<lb/>
Zefa Beta Tau chapter is being<lb/>
organized on campus Come help<lb/>
us start a fraternity and make it<lb/>
what you want it to be You can be<lb/>
a charter member An organtza<lb/>
tional meeting is being held on Oc<lb/>
tober 7 at 5 30 in New Deli<lb/>
Resturant<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Its still not too late to play<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
womens rubgy needs to report to<lb/>
practices Tuesday thru Thursday<lb/>
at 4 00 We practice behind the<lb/>
Allied Health (Belk) building Ab<lb/>
solutely no previous experience s<lb/>
required<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
The Co op office has a iob open<lb/>
mg for an accounting position<lb/>
avaible with a local manufactur<lb/>
ing firm Requires adding<lb/>
machine experience and accoun<lb/>
ting background Interested<lb/>
students should inquire at the Co<lb/>
op office, located in Rawl at room<lb/>
313<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
Need some light reading" The<lb/>
AC S S A is taking orders tor the<lb/>
CRC Handbook of Chemistry and<lb/>
Physics and the CRC Handbook ot<lb/>
Tables for Organic Compound<lb/>
Identification tor J25 00 and $20 00<lb/>
respectively A reference must tor<lb/>
any science major! Place orders<lb/>
in the Chemistry office located in<lb/>
Flanagan between the hours of<lb/>
10 00 and 12 00 Sept 20 through<lb/>
OctPlace your orders now<lb/>
Payment due when order is plac<lb/>
ed<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up m 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 'he Publications<lb/>
Building<lb/>
PIANIST<lb/>
Prize winning pianist Bradford<lb/>
Gowen will perform a recital<lb/>
Wednesday, October 6 1982, at<lb/>
8 15 p m in the A J Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall The performance,<lb/>
sponsored by The Rockefeller<lb/>
Foundation, is part of the ECU<lb/>
School ot Music's "Festival<lb/>
'82 83 " The public is invited to at<lb/>
tend, and no admission wit be<lb/>
charged In addition to his pertor<lb/>
mance. Gowen will present a<lb/>
masterclass on Thursday. October<lb/>
7. from 9 30 am to 11 30 a m m<lb/>
the A J Fletcher Recital Hall in<lb/>
terested persons are invited to at<lb/>
tend the masterclass tree of<lb/>
charge<lb/>
INDT Major<lb/>
There is an opening with Long<lb/>
Manufacturing Co tor a Quality<lb/>
Control Supervisor This perma<lb/>
nent psition involves setting up<lb/>
and maintaining a qual'ty control<lb/>
program m Rumani tor tractors<lb/>
manufactured for Long The star<lb/>
ting date is immediately and the<lb/>
salary is negotiable Contact Nan<lb/>
cy Fillnow m the Co op office, ext<lb/>
6979, for more info<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
It you want it here it is Come<lb/>
and get. bu' you better hurry<lb/>
because it may no'last TneCRC's<lb/>
are going fast This s your ias<lb/>
week to place orders in tne<lb/>
chemistry office between 10 a m<lb/>
and 12 noon CRC of chem in<lb/>
physics $25 00 and CRC of organic<lb/>
compound I D $20 00 Payment<lb/>
due when order .s placed Place<lb/>
orders now! (<lb/>
HOLY<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday. October 5.<lb/>
m the canpei ot St Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal Church Loca'ed a' 406<lb/>
4th Street (one block from Garre"<lb/>
Dorm) The service will be a' 5 X<lb/>
p m with the Episcopal Chaplm,<lb/>
the Rev B H Hadden ceiebra' ng<lb/>
DUKE POWER<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
Duke Power has available a<lb/>
variety ot co oppositions AHwur?<lb/>
experiences are tor alternating<lb/>
semesters beginning in January or<lb/>
May. 1983 and are located in<lb/>
Charlotte Any mteres'ed students<lb/>
with a minimum G P A of 2 0 and<lb/>
maiormg in Computer Science<lb/>
Ma'n. Business Educa'ion, Office<lb/>
Administration. Industrial Educa<lb/>
tion. industrial Technci . ?<lb/>
Chemistry or Environmi<lb/>
Health should contac' the Co op<lb/>
office e?t 6979<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 tit. 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. Enclose<lb/>
Tsc per line or traction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! L'se capital and<lb/>
lower case letters,<lb/>
Rrlurn in MIDI BD4RI) office innl r AST<lb/>
 4.ROI IMAN office! t 2 p.m. Wi.ndji hrforr<lb/>
iurdii paper and M rdnrsdat brfnrr hurvdo<lb/>
puhllcullon.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityState<lb/>
No. lines <lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75 per line $.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
enclosed<lb/>
1?"1?-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
11<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
1??J,??<lb/>
FLASH<lb/>
Snowski Chns'mas Break<lb/>
There will b- a meeting tor all per<lb/>
sons interested in snowsknng on<lb/>
Tuesday October 12 at 4 00 pm in<lb/>
Memorial Gym 108 A trip is being<lb/>
organized for January 2 6 to<lb/>
Snowshoe. West Virginia You<lb/>
may elect to go for credit in the<lb/>
Physical Education Department<lb/>
or you may attend on a non credit<lb/>
basis Contact Ms Jo Saunders at<lb/>
757 6000 or came by Memorial<lb/>
Gym 205 for fur'her information<lb/>
TABLE TENNIS<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
All Day Students who are full<lb/>
time students with a 2 0 GPA mar<lb/>
participate m a singles Tables<lb/>
Tenms Tournament sponsored by<lb/>
the Department of University<lb/>
Unions The tournament wiH be<lb/>
held at 6 00 PM on Tuesday Oc<lb/>
totoer 5. 19t2 m the Table Tenms<lb/>
Room of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Winners of this competion will<lb/>
be eligible to compete in the Ail<lb/>
Campus Table Tennis Tourna<lb/>
ment to be held on Thursday<lb/>
November 4, 1982 Register at the<lb/>
Billiards Control Center at MSC<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
DECORATIONS<lb/>
Any organization wishing to<lb/>
enter the Float ot House Dorm<lb/>
Decoratmn competition for<lb/>
homecoming sl-ould submi' an ap<lb/>
plication to Jon Curtis Room 203<lb/>
Mendenhall by October 8<lb/>
SIGMATHETA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
Ms Geneive Foley wii be 'he<lb/>
speaker at the fan educational<lb/>
meeting on Wed OC 13 She s a<lb/>
Clinical Nurse Speoaiis' in<lb/>
Pediatric Oncology from tne<lb/>
Memorial Sloan Kettenng Cancer<lb/>
Center in New York O'y and<lb/>
received the Mane Hppens'ee'<lb/>
Lingeman Award tor Excellence<lb/>
in Nursing pract.ee She has Oeer<lb/>
credited as a prime mc'iva'or m<lb/>
the establisbment of a pediatric<lb/>
center tor children wtr cancer<lb/>
and tor parent support groups She<lb/>
has appeared on ne Today Snow<lb/>
Phil Donanue Snow, The Good Day<lb/>
snow, and 'he Bostons Woman<lb/>
Today This exc 'ng program will<lb/>
oe held at 'he Greenville Goit and<lb/>
country Club A cas" bar and nors<lb/>
d oeuvres ili be a' 6 00 pm and<lb/>
the program anil s'ar- at 7 00 pm<lb/>
Registration is $4 50 Make c"eck<lb/>
payable to Sigma Tne'a Tau Be'a<lb/>
Nu Chapter and turn in M Car<lb/>
Cox, ECU School of Nursing by Oc<lb/>
'ooer 6<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
Which career tits you bes-7<lb/>
Career Br Choice Not Chance is<lb/>
a two part mini series offered a<lb/>
Nc Cost by the University Counsel<lb/>
ing Center It is offered on October<lb/>
5 in 305 Wright Annex '757 666"<lb/>
from 3 00 PM 5 00 PM The<lb/>
Strong Campbell Voca'ionai<lb/>
'erest inventory will Oe ad<lb/>
ministered m the Firs' Mee'mg<lb/>
No advance regis'ra o" s<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
BUSINESSMAJORS<lb/>
There are posi'ions available<lb/>
wi'h the General Accounting Of<lb/>
tice as an Evaluation Trainee<lb/>
Students mus' r ave cempie'ea 75<lb/>
hours and oe available tor ?.<lb/>
work periods beginning m "it Spr<lb/>
mg 1983 semester Corv ?<lb/>
permanent emplcyme a<lb/>
gradua'ion would be likeiy F r<lb/>
more information contact Car<lb/>
Powell at the Coop office e?'<lb/>
6979<lb/>
CO OP<lb/>
Black and Decker .n Tarbor<lb/>
"as an opening tor a par' 'me ac<lb/>
coun'ng clerk Tne perv.<lb/>
be able to perform m sceuaneous<lb/>
accounting duties sue as Pa ng<lb/>
es and general oookeep<lb/>
?-q Preferred s someone a-<lb/>
operate a 10 key adairq n ?<lb/>
Employment would s'ar- as soon<lb/>
as possible For more -?<lb/>
Co op office, ex 6979<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
Old Arr.Dassac '?- ? . . ?<lb/>
an ECU AmDassadcr Our - g ? ?<lb/>
1981 1982 school iear ana nave nc'<lb/>
a"ended a General Mee'<lb/>
contacted "e ?'? i Center<lb/>
757 6072) you must do sc bet're<lb/>
Fr Jay, Oct 8. c- .<lb/>
be dropped from me  It<lb/>
Present Ambassadors<lb/>
forge' Tre General Meet<lb/>
Wednesday OC 6 a 5 OC -<lb/>
'he Mendenhall Muitifj<lb/>
Room There are a I<lb/>
Homeccm.ng Ewer's com<lb/>
we wan- 'c oe invt ?ec - arc the<lb/>
Telephone Camca c-<lb/>
through De'a ?; al these bi<lb/>
announcea a' hi s meet rtg<lb/>
Fu'ur Arroassacrs A An<lb/>
bassaaor appi car's a r 'ece v<lb/>
"Qa"cCerV-<lb/>
; t'eeMre Aeo-ec?<lb/>
20<lb/>
PHOTOGENIC<lb/>
The ECU Ce a Arts<lb/>
aepar'men would like nv "e a<lb/>
those nterested n ??<lb/>
mooe'ng tc a'e"c  <lb/>
ca'oioging pne'ograp !r<lb/>
On Wed Oc' 19 ? Thurs<lb/>
. ? mes will be announced ???<lb/>
a oe pneograp ng a"0 ca"<lb/>
ng an fOe a' a . ?<lb/>
mooei tor fashion aos ana layc's<lb/>
All par'iopan's z ? - a- -<lb/>
ca'oiogea tor fuhjle reference -<lb/>
moaeis encrsen from zac ?<lb/>
pr -?;?? De pan: d, i<lb/>
tor 'ner par'iopa'ion<lb/>
COMMUNITY PATRON<lb/>
irtmui '? Pa't ' seasor<lb/>
'icke's are now n sale KM<lb/>
Ayden Tneatre A I?If p s 1982 83<lb/>
season ot five exc ng plays Oc?<lb/>
7 9 10 the C' ? Hour and<lb/>
a Halt Dec 2 4 5 The<lb/>
Miracle A rkt-r ,dn 27 29 30<lb/>
A Midsummer Nigh' s Dream<lb/>
Mar 3.5.6 Or tne N.gr- ?<lb/>
Janua'y 16'n ana bpr<lb/>
70 2123 24 Cam?a TnePur<lb/>
-?sr ? r. vt-as ' ' kel " ' ?<lb/>
? en bersi c ?- a t a<lb/>
special acng and make up<lb/>
 no) s ItIO Newslf<lb/>
pi tours and a1" n, 'a'<lb/>
'he Spring Ceiebra' en all tor .?<lb/>
$10 0C A- to Awtfe ra'<lb/>
A rfcSl P 6 ? 293 Ayden NC<lb/>
28513 ? ? u . . '? ;<lb/>
524 4250<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
DISNEY WORLD<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
t. ? World's Vag<lb/>
?<lb/>
erviewtng<lb/>
pus Oc ? ? -<lb/>
.<lb/>
terns Sja- ? a wort<lb/>
? ? - '?<lb/>
$4 00 pe .vexs ipeoa<lb/>
 ? ? .<lb/>
S'uder ' p arc a.<lb/>
terested<lb/>
i<lb/>
COOPERATIVE<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
111<lb/>
p<lb/>
l.90 p rr<lb/>
s ? I<lb/>
? .<lb/>
. -<lb/>
progra<lb/>
a E . ?? ? ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOCMT UNION<lb/>
la OUKjUU J?rtV<lb/>
The Kast Carolinian<lb/>
Pub ? ?? ac<lb/>
-<lb/>
tear m<lb/>
- ? <lb/>
rhe East<lb/>
? E as'<lb/>
Caroina ?med<lb/>
Dy tm ? lenfj - - us' Z3 na<lb/>
. ? s '?<lb/>
SubscC'CKi Rate SlOyei' ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian of?icei<lb/>
are located in 'he Old Sou'h<lb/>
Building on 'he campus o ECU<lb/>
Green'Ht N C<lb/>
Send a:c-es'<lb/>
- ? ?? ' 3-<lb/>
ee-<lb/>
N . - -<lb/>
Telephone '57 ei? ?37 JO?<lb/>
BASIC NAUI<lb/>
PADISCUBA<lb/>
A no' iom our new class<lb/>
whicn begms Tueso? Oc:oe- 13<lb/>
instruction will oe "eio on ca ? c.<lb/>
except for 'he open a'e- d .<lb/>
w"ich are necessar recto.reme<lb/>
tor cer'ifica'ion Regis"a"c- ;<lb/>
limited Fcr ere informa'icn ca<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
EAST CAIOUNA UMVftSiTT<lb/>
1907 1982<lb/>
REMEMBER DROP-ADD DAY<lb/>
IF YOU RECEIVED A<lb/>
YELLOW V.I.P. CARD,<lb/>
DON'T FORGET TO USE IT.<lb/>
&amp;2<lb/>
Western SteerQ<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEAKH0VSE<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities for 15<lb/>
to 150 Persons<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
Orders Call<lb/>
758-8550<lb/>
3005 E. 10th St Greenville<lb/>
Open SunThur. 11am-9pm<lb/>
Friday-Saturday liam iOpm<lb/>
-saw vw ?w Kf saw Me?. mm MM 3MC-<lb/>
AT BARRE,ltd.<lb/>
SeeusoCail<lb/>
qfrma Haltow&amp;n Nmds.<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Siop<lb/>
For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
422 ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
(91?) 754-4470<lb/>
Pepsi and the Pirates<lb/>
a winning combination<lb/>
30C<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
:xc<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
N.X.VXXN.XVNN.XN.S.VVVVVNXXVVXVVN<lb/>
Located 1 milepast<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
for Slaw354 extra<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
I"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0003"/><lb/>
I HI 1 ASI C AKOl IM N<lb/>
ikh B1 k M9H2<lb/>
3<lb/>
<lb/>
Student Health Concerns<lb/>
Breast Cancer Discussed<lb/>
Breast cancer is (he number<lb/>
one cancer-killer of American<lb/>
women.<lb/>
1 his year an estimated 100.(XX)<lb/>
nevN caes oi breast cancer will be<lb/>
diagnosed These newl diagnos-<lb/>
ed women will hae seeral times<lb/>
the number ot close female<lb/>
relatives who will be concerned<lb/>
about their own breast cancer<lb/>
risk I his is attributed to beliet<lb/>
that a family history ot breast<lb/>
cancel increases one's own risk ot<lb/>
the disease.<lb/>
But jusl what are the chances<lb/>
ol deeloping breast cancer in a<lb/>
woman with a family history ol<lb/>
the disease' How much increased<lb/>
risk is there to sisters and<lb/>
daughters of such individuals?<lb/>
In the United States the<lb/>
average woman's probability ol<lb/>
developing breast cancer is about<lb/>
nine percent. One in every 11<lb/>
? men will develop the disease in<lb/>
hei lifetime. The risk ol dying<lb/>
?m the disese is about 3 per<lb/>
cent However, the risk will vary<lb/>
according to the age ol the p.<lb/>
tient. Foi instance, in the 20-30<lb/>
age range the risk ol developing<lb/>
breast cancer is 05 percent, but<lb/>
in the 50 70 age range the risk is<lb/>
nosl foui percent, and one out<lb/>
? every tour will die from the<lb/>
Studies have shown that in ad-<lb/>
ion to a family history ol<lb/>
?. cancer, other tactors are<lb/>
. ated to increased risk<lb/>
rhese divide into major and<lb/>
? nor influences on risk . 1 he<lb/>
ones are family historv,<lb/>
oid benign breast disease<lb/>
1 he minor factors are onset ol<lb/>
menstrua! period prior to age 12.<lb/>
menopause greater than age 50,<lb/>
absence ol childbirth before age<lb/>
 md hight bod tat content,<lb/>
t actors carrying noincreased risk<lb/>
are breast feeding, breast size and<lb/>
number ol children.<lb/>
Nevertheless, a family history<lb/>
 breast cancer has been the<lb/>
erriding, major determinant ol<lb/>
risk ol cancer, and a woman who<lb/>
has a mother or sister with the<lb/>
sease has been found to have a<lb/>
' in times higher risk than<lb/>
i ??? -man without such a family<lb/>
ry. Recent recognition ol<lb/>
other factors such as menopausal<lb/>
laterally of disease and<lb/>
age al diagnosis has further serv-<lb/>
ed to more accuately assess pro-<lb/>
bability in these women of higher<lb/>
?<lb/>
Furthermore, in some cases<lb/>
considerable apprehension will be<lb/>
?v ed by the determination ol a<lb/>
risk no higher than that ol the<lb/>
general population, for example,<lb/>
il a woman's mother or sistei<lb/>
develops breast cancer in both<lb/>
breasts following menopause the<lb/>
woman has. over her lifetime, a<lb/>
four-fold increased chance ol<lb/>
developing breast cancer.<lb/>
A woman with a mother or<lb/>
sistei with pre-menopausal and<lb/>
bilateral disease will have about a<lb/>
live-fold increased risk ol<lb/>
Ok eloping the disease in the<lb/>
course ol her lifetime. The same<lb/>
individual, it the relative has<lb/>
unilateral disease and is post<lb/>
menopausal, will have a pro-<lb/>
bability ol disease veiv near that<lb/>
of the general populaiton.<lb/>
More recently, risk determina-<lb/>
tion has been based on two af-<lb/>
fected individuals in a pedigree,<lb/>
and the pattern ol breast cancer<lb/>
occurrence over two generations<lb/>
has been used. Results ol these<lb/>
surveys indicate that tor a close<lb/>
relative (sister oi daughter),<lb/>
where a mother and daughter had<lb/>
bilateral and premenopausal<lb/>
breast cancer, the risk for the<lb/>
relative is 50 percent greater than<lb/>
the general population.<lb/>
It both affected cases are<lb/>
unilateral and post-menopausal<lb/>
when they developed the disese,<lb/>
the risk to the relative is only lh<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
In the situation where two<lb/>
sisters in the family have bilateral<lb/>
pre-menopausal disease, a close<lb/>
relative (sister or daughter) would<lb/>
have a one in two chance to<lb/>
develop the disease in her<lb/>
lifetime. It the index cases have<lb/>
unilateral and post-menopausal<lb/>
disese, a close relative would only<lb/>
have the same average risk as the<lb/>
general population, a realization<lb/>
that will reassure main overly ap<lb/>
pre hen si ve individuals. Ot<lb/>
course, the relative risk will vary<lb/>
between these extremes. 1 his risk<lb/>
information is of great practical<lb/>
significance to both patient and<lb/>
physician. Patients, at relatively<lb/>
low risk, can be reassurred. The<lb/>
truly high-risk patients can be<lb/>
managed more appropriately by<lb/>
trequent physical exams, more<lb/>
frequent mammography testing<lb/>
and prompt biopsy ol suspicious<lb/>
lesions.<lb/>
I ven mote aggressive manage-<lb/>
ment may be indicated in those<lb/>
individuals where a dispropor-<lb/>
tionate iisk exists bv way ol<lb/>
preventive mastectomy, although<lb/>
this is still a controversial pro<lb/>
cedure at this writing.<lb/>
Although there is no known<lb/>
protection against cancer, the<lb/>
best weapon is a periodic com-<lb/>
plete health checkup. In addition,<lb/>
every woman should learn to per-<lb/>
form a self-breast exam and<lb/>
should become diligent in perfor-<lb/>
ming the self-breast examination<lb/>
on a regular monthly basis. In-<lb/>
formation and insrtuctions on<lb/>
self-breast examinations are<lb/>
available at the Student Health<lb/>
Center on request.<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
?  net au .<lb/>
Gi Ca .? jyed Fa'iqut-s ana<lb/>
Sri : f-tp.ng Baqs<lb/>
 ? - Well! Camp,no Equ.p<lb/>
S'et : Toed Snoes<lb/>
D me d-a Over ?00 Different<lb/>
 "0 Used Items Cowboy<lb/>
Boo's S3? 9S<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE T-<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
24 weeh terminations<lb/>
App ts Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
:cu sth St<lb/>
oAppp cofids<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
ITEMS<lb/>
ve ?e<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
rolling stones<lb/>
steve winwood<lb/>
george matcher<lb/>
bruce springstein<lb/>
mike mcdonald<lb/>
kool &amp; the gang<lb/>
KENNY LOGGINS<lb/>
AEROSMITH<lb/>
BILLY JOEL<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
?Others unadvertised<lb/>
also on sale<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
WE SEW<lb/>
LEATHER COATS<lb/>
1iW<lb/>
f<lb/>
SAAIVS<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
S3.00off reg priceANY GIANT PIZZA<lb/>
.OOoffreg prlceANY LARGE PIZZA<lb/>
WE SUPPORT<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ST et-nvilli b d Phone 756 082<lb/>
S6 0825<lb/>
Not ai'd wilt jn( other specials i ;cupo? Exemts OCTOBER li t?I<lb/>
No B.S. Jewelr<lb/>
Repair (Custom<lb/>
(rafting ? Fair<lb/>
Prices &amp;<lb/>
Guaranteed Work) I<lb/>
hv I.KS JEWELRY.<lb/>
? 120 E. 5th St.<lb/>
728-2127? 10-5<lb/>
ruesSat.<lb/>
Bring thts ad for 20<lb/>
off UK chain repairs.<lb/>
I<lb/>
TRIM YOUR FIGURE<lb/>
VIM K HIM<lb/>
I OOk. IN<lb/>
Proqrams or Men 1 Women<lb/>
? M. dr al Weight Control<lb/>
Mu'i ??onai onselinq<lb/>
; ' I<lb/>
Individual S? vsis<lb/>
Deep Pore Ci "9<lb/>
Face A Body W?ing<lb/>
Manicures and Pedicures<lb/>
Complimentary Consultation<lb/>
Check phone book for<lb/>
discount coupon<lb/>
FAMILY EYE CARE<lb/>
and<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
Ad till anil Pediatrk vision care in a<lb/>
relaxed and personal setting Full on-<lb/>
tart lens services Quick, accurate<lb/>
'? egiass sen i i<lb/>
DR PETER W HOI.US<lb/>
C?rQMOigC<lb/>
OSCAACCQTCR<lb/>
TiPTONi Af ? , H<lb/>
'I IE BlvD<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
jsonoo<lb/>
i<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses Or<lb/>
Contact Lens Fitting)<lb/>
Musi Be Presenter! At T,me O Order<lb/>
I Other Discounts Do Not Apply<lb/>
Conservative Paper<lb/>
Appears On Campusl<lb/>
B KEITH BRITTA1N<lb/>
Mall Wrilrr<lb/>
An alternative<lb/>
newspaper has hit the<lb/>
campus, Freedom's<lb/>
Defense. It is a monthly<lb/>
publication published<lb/>
b the N.C. Federation<lb/>
ol College<lb/>
Republicans.<lb/>
Freedom's Defense is<lb/>
available to every ma-<lb/>
un campus in the state<lb/>
including Wake Forest,<lb/>
N.C. State and UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"It has been brought<lb/>
about because ot a need<lb/>
to present students with<lb/>
another side ol the<lb/>
issues. Students need<lb/>
something else besides<lb/>
liberal newspapers,<lb/>
such as I he Fast<lb/>
Carolinian said Den<lb/>
nis Kilcoyne, president<lb/>
ol the republican group<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Kilcoyne, a<lb/>
sophomore in political<lb/>
science, also writes tor<lb/>
the paper. He main-<lb/>
tains that the<lb/>
philosophy of the<lb/>
t e d e r a 11 o n a n d<lb/>
Freedom's Defense is<lb/>
"to support the spirit<lb/>
o t d em oc r a t i c<lb/>
capitalism<lb/>
I he conservath e<lb/>
newspaper is funded<lb/>
entirely by private<lb/>
donations, according to<lb/>
kilco)ne. It reciexes no<lb/>
money from the Con<lb/>
gressional Club or the<lb/>
Republican Party.<lb/>
There are reported to<lb/>
be 200 conservative<lb/>
newspapers on the<lb/>
drawing board or<lb/>
already in circulation<lb/>
throughout the coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
Freedom's Dejense is<lb/>
published in Raleigh<lb/>
and distributed to the<lb/>
various campuses in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
The newspaper ad-<lb/>
dresses issues from a<lb/>
conservative viewpoint.<lb/>
The first issue contain-<lb/>
ed articles on the war in<lb/>
Lebanon and the future<lb/>
of the mid-east.<lb/>
Freedom's Dejense<lb/>
and the N.C. Federa-<lb/>
tion o 1 College<lb/>
Republicans have a<lb/>
platform that is similar<lb/>
to the 1980 Republican<lb/>
Platform. The Federa-<lb/>
tion sees itself as more<lb/>
conservative than the<lb/>
country club<lb/>
republicans or much<lb/>
of the GOP.<lb/>
The publishers of the<lb/>
paper, Kilcoyne said,<lb/>
would like to put out<lb/>
the paper more than<lb/>
once a month, but<lb/>
because it is privately<lb/>
funded this is impossi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
"I ike it or not, there<lb/>
are nations, such as<lb/>
Russia, that are out to<lb/>
destroy us We think it<lb/>
is very important tor<lb/>
students to be aware of<lb/>
this.<lb/>
ONE FOR<lb/>
THE ROAD<lb/>
-J&amp;&amp;?&amp;i:&amp;k<lb/>
CrQ PIONEER<lb/>
jg&amp;H<lb/>
4 V<lb/>
JhW<lb/>
ITALIAN NITE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
Ato-oxo-<lb/>
c<lb/>
?y<lb/>
: s<lb/>
AND<lb/>
TS-165 6 2"door-mount<lb/>
speakers. 20-oz. magnet.<lb/>
I Coaxial 2-vvay speaker.<lb/>
2"tweeter. High-o mpli-<lb/>
ance woofer. 2 watts<lb/>
power handling.<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
 WlTr<lb/>
Garlic Broad<lb/>
?<lb/>
'S<lb/>
UKP-5600 A mini in-dash cassette with AM FM<lb/>
stereo. Supertuner II. Separate bass and treble<lb/>
controls. Built-in PNS noise suppressor. 5 Station<lb/>
preset pushbutton tuning. Music Search. ATSC<lb/>
(Automatic Tape Slack Canceller Key-off pinch-<lb/>
roller release. FM auto mono switch. Auto replay<lb/>
and auto eject. Locking fast forward rewind.<lb/>
Loudness control. Automatic mutiny on FM auto.<lb/>
FM stereo indicator. Hard permalloy head<lb/>
JUTSP<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
cSHCNEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
296<lb/>
in<lb/>
Installed<lb/>
??<lb/>
9 6 M. Th.<lb/>
9 8 Fri.<lb/>
9 5 Sat<lb/>
107 Trade St.Greenville<lb/>
ATiTICL<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
IOOSBAU<lb/>
TOUR<lb/>
1ST PRIZk<lb/>
FOOS8ALI<lb/>
? ABU<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
PROTEUS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
BUDDY &amp;<lb/>
THE HIT MEN<lb/>
(Ml DENTS FREE)<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
(LADIES' LITENITEJ<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
SAT. ASIA<lb/>
SAINT<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
MONDAY PIZZA &amp; PASTA<lb/>
BUFFET S 9 oil p.nol<lb/>
spoahetti - S 2 79<lb/>
TUESDAY PIZZA BUFFET - S2 49<lb/>
todM' Nit - Chai &amp; IK<lb/>
Ladict - No Co? ? Fre?fcr9<lb/>
Happy Hour $1 00 ?ptc<lb/>
WEDNESDAY - $2.1S SALAD BAR<lb/>
THURSDAY - STAG SPEC - $2 49<lb/>
Ckompoa,nc lorn H.H 9 'til 1<lb/>
Ladiei ? l?t glass Free - Mark Deaton<lb/>
HH Jl 00 spec - 2SdaH<lb/>
FRIDAY - HH 4-7 Free hors d BRUCE FRYE<lb/>
SATURDAY - HH 4-7 BRUCE FRYE<lb/>
SUNDAY - LASAGNA SPEC 12 99<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
MALE BEST BODD CONTEST<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
PONY NIGHT - 30? ponies<lb/>
Free adm tor ECU students<lb/>
THURSDAY - $1 00 Adm<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE - 70 cons<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF THE WEEK PARTY<lb/>
New Hours - 3 JO-7 30<lb/>
3 30-4 30 oil pomes 30<lb/>
4 30-7 30 all cans 6S<lb/>
9:00-11 00 ail cans 6S<lb/>
Lodies od??itted Free w H H stomp<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BEST IN DANCE MUSIC<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
Ladies admitted tree<lb/>
SC atati Mi ?? lasts<lb/>
0? E FIFTMSTR<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
EVENiNG MEAL<lb/>
SPECIALS S:<lb/>
SL PER HI RGERS<lb/>
SUNDAY ?<lb/>
SERVING BREAKFAST<lb/>
10:00a.m. 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
'i<lb/>
Across Irom U B 6<lb/>
SI3 Cotanche S . Greenville<lb/>
8 0080 lor TAKE OUT<lb/>
Open Mon Sat - 8 30 a.mI-00 a.m<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR DAILY<lb/>
4 p.m 7 p.m.<lb/>
VIDEO, PINBALL,<lb/>
FOOSBALL BILLIARDS<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
PROTEUS<lb/>
(PROGRESSIVE JAZZ)<lb/>
<lb/>
Starting Thurs.<lb/>
H.H, 11:00 p.m<lb/>
12:00 midnight<lb/>
Same prices as our<lb/>
4-8 H.H.<lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
109 E. 5th St.<lb/>
752 1361<lb/>
DARTS<lb/>
Mon. at 8:00<lb/>
FREE PINBALL 3-4<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 4-7<lb/>
Now open 7 days a week ?<lb/>
3 p m. 1 a m<lb/>
Largest selection<lb/>
of imports<lb/>
tf fcttvUlrr-&amp;<lb/>
ffl&amp;S<lb/>
?:?<lb/>
0.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmsk - ; - -m Ite wm.<lb/>
mgrn<lb/>
IM EAST Sth STREET<lb/>
rst-0ii<lb/>
Open 7 Days<lb/>
A Week<lb/>
Daily H. H.<lb/>
begins<lb/>
at 5:30<lb/>
This is a private club.<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0004"/><lb/>
IHfcl-ASI AROl INIAN (KTOBhR?. 1982<lb/>
Soviets Attack<lb/>
Reagan Policy<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Wnle-r<lb/>
In a strongl) worded<lb/>
speech to the 37th ses-<lb/>
sion oi the United Na-<lb/>
tions Genera! Assembly<lb/>
o n Friday, Soviet<lb/>
Foreign Minister An-<lb/>
drei Gromyko accused<lb/>
the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion ol planning tor<lb/>
nuclear war with the<lb/>
"cold blooded com-<lb/>
posure oi gravedig-<lb/>
gers<lb/>
During his speech<lb/>
Gromyko combined his<lb/>
attack on I .S. defense<lb/>
policies with a proposal<lb/>
tor a worldwide<lb/>
? - atorium on all<lb/>
iclear explosions, in-<lb/>
. uding peaceful ones,<lb/>
as a mean oi impeding<lb/>
he development of new<lb/>
. eai weapons.<lb/>
G 1 o m k o<lb/>
characterized the U.S.<lb/>
bsessed with "the<lb/>
? has to be<lb/>
ne militari-<lb/>
st<lb/>
? sa<lb/>
hi So let I nion<lb/>
r e c o g n . <lb/>
e' s right to<lb/>
superiority.<lb/>
ee to M that<lb/>
happen<lb/>
n address<lb/>
6 a embl on<lb/>
d a v. I S<lb/>
ed some criticism ol the<lb/>
Soviet role in<lb/>
Afghanistan and sup-<lb/>
pression of human<lb/>
rights at home. Shultz,<lb/>
who's comments were<lb/>
reviewed as less severe,<lb/>
was not present during<lb/>
Gromyko's address.<lb/>
Outside the U.N.<lb/>
building about 200 peo-<lb/>
ple demonstrating<lb/>
against Soviet interven-<lb/>
tion in Afghanistan<lb/>
burned a Soviet flag<lb/>
and hanged an ettigv of<lb/>
soviet President<lb/>
1 eon id Brezhnev.<lb/>
Gromyko also pro-<lb/>
posed that the U.N.<lb/>
assembly adopt a<lb/>
resolution that would<lb/>
call on all nuclear<lb/>
powers to freeze the<lb/>
production and deploy-<lb/>
m e n t oi n u c lea i<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
A similar freeze<lb/>
measure has been en-<lb/>
dorsed b over 200<lb/>
members of Congress,<lb/>
a well as countless citv<lb/>
and town governments<lb/>
throughout the U.S.<lb/>
President Reagan has<lb/>
taken a strong position<lb/>
oi opposition to the<lb/>
freeze proposals<lb/>
because he believes that<lb/>
the I SSR has a decisive-<lb/>
advantage in nuclear<lb/>
weapons and that a<lb/>
freeze would onlv serve<lb/>
to lock in that advan-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
Election<lb/>
Corrections<lb/>
Aing are corrections in the election<lb/>
. teed in the Sept. 30 edition ol The<lb/>
- ?represenitive is Missv<lb/>
Hei name was inadvertentiv left<lb/>
Bam Pec, h the freshman class presiden-<lb/>
i icinda Alston.<lb/>
Tht ia represenitives that were listed did<lb/>
: win. Thev were Lynn Jackson, Rick Belcher<lb/>
Michae Rabon. The winners were Kirk<lb/>
uck Blake and Mike Sommersett.<lb/>
Y-m<lb/>
PKTSk 1<lb/>
VILLAGEiS jL<lb/>
L 7 H yV<lb/>
reg 27 99 SALE $22.99<lb/>
ig reg 5 1 99 SALE $1 29<lb/>
O He r G oc T - ?? Of '3<lb/>
1 so<lb/>
1 umplrlf iini- ol Irrvh A su 11 tt?? r supphrv<lb/>
Available every day of the year<lb/>
J.D.<lb/>
DAWSON CO.<lb/>
2818 t. 10th St. Greenville<lb/>
Gold Lance Class Rings-2-4 Week Delivery<lb/>
Church of God<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
OCTOBER 12<lb/>
College career class ?<lb/>
9:45 a.m.<lb/>
Corner of Skinner &amp; Spruce<lb/>
Dial-A-Prayer 752-1362<lb/>
Church no. ? 752-4967<lb/>
A<lb/>
FOOD TOWN<lb/>
$gZH32HflJiP<lb/>
USDA Cheie Best Round Whole<lb/>
LFPINCSCVAGA<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, October 9, 1982<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
choice:<lb/>
10-12 Lb. A9-<lb/>
Sliced Free<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Ckelea Beef Rib 10-12 Lb. A?. - Slieai FfM<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Rib Eyes<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
choice:<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Ckelea Faeally Peak<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
Roan1 - Tftt?M?t<lb/>
USDA Cheie Beef<lb/>
Rib Eye Steaks<lb/>
u 39<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
USM Cheie. 6( R?M<lb/>
Sirloin Tip Roatt<lb/>
. 2"<lb/>
Seedless<lb/>
Crapes<lb/>
1.S Liter - Hearty Bera.iaa'y<lb/>
Rkita, Ckaklla Blane<lb/>
Pk. aU 12 0t. Caa<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Pk. af 6 12 02. Cam<lb/>
Miller Beer<lb/>
1.S Liter - laakraeee Biaace Raaata <lb/>
2 Litar meaBMI<lb/>
Riunite Coca<lb/>
Wine r Cola<lb/>
,iWi<lb/>
WK<lb/>
22 Oiaee<lb/>
9<lb/>
23 02. - Biaker Hill<lb/>
0W<lb/>
J<lb/>
i<lb/>
Wky Pay '1.09<lb/>
7.25 02. - Feoa Ta?a<lb/>
1<lb/>
Wky Pay '162<lb/>
V<lb/>
Wky Pay 2 61'<lb/>
ISS?<lb/>
ttO S.mii - Urj. I.II<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
Wky Pay 97<lb/>
J<lb/>
r<lb/>
$<lb/>
i <lb/>
49 Oz. - .Soft.tr<lb/>
Q.irl<lb/>
Fab Detergent JFG Mayonnaise<lb/>
1 Ik. - Marjarina Quartan<lb/>
 Mrs. Filbert's Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
?JEW-<lb/>
12 0i. Lare,e C JT'i -<lb/>
489<lb/>
6.5 or 6 Oz. - Tim Tim ICkleke Beef<lb/>
2 Liver Turkey t 6ik!eti - Cat Foal<lb/>
Purina 100<lb/>
i rif - 4 Riii rick<lb/>
Edon Toilet Tissue<lb/>
? (mm. 2.99<lb/>
18.5 Oz. - Anertaa' Cake Mlxai ITBOUlllU 1 96 Oz. 50 Off Daamy<lb/>
Duncan Hines <lb/>
Fabric Softener<lb/>
t<lb/>
?y refflFr<lb/>
si<lb/>
M<lb/>
32,<lb/>
Half Oellea 50 Off<lb/>
32 Oaaea<lb/>
15 Oi. - De Feea - Stan<lb/>
Ken-L<lb/>
Ration<lb/>
Wky Pay 277<lb/>
lf?<lb/>
Wifk<lb/>
Wisk<lb/>
Wky Pay ?3 33<lb/>
TOMATO<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
P<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Wky Pay M 19<lb/>
Prices ?ood at Greenville Food Town Store oaly<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0005"/><lb/>
6THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 5, 1982<lb/>
OOK<lb/>
arn<lb/>
?6r? Perf-Colas<lb/>
?frefr- HaKmak' )ahhookS<lb/>
i<lb/>
tefljjja iMt Giving<lb/>
6tyen h II 0fm<lb/>
Wfl&amp;,mtfrl;Ocfb-d<lb/>
 E FIFTH ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C 27834<lb/>
JZtV Cameras vSfioip<lb/>
B18S. COTANCHE ST. ? GREENVILLE. N.C.J7S34<lb/>
Annual<lb/>
m saiE"<lb/>
0-7-8-9<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera<lb/>
511 S. COTANCHE ST<lb/>
QREENVILLE . N.C 27134<lb/>
FRAME I<lb/>
SHOP ?<lb/>
20 off ?<lb/>
ANY COMPLETE FRAMING ?<lb/>
ORDER BROUGHT IN OC- ?<lb/>
TOBER ?,7.l,9. VOID Oct. 10. <lb/>
1M2. NOT GOOD FOR PICK-M<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera<lb/>
511 S COTANCHE ST<lb/>
QREENVILLE. N.C. 77t34<lb/>
FRAME<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
20 off<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ANY COMPLETE FRAMING<lb/>
ORDER BROUGHT IN OC-<lb/>
TOBER 6.7.8,9 VOID Oct. 10.<lb/>
1M2 NOT GOOD FOR PICK-<lb/>
1?Alley Sale (next to University Book Ex-<lb/>
change)<lb/>
-damaged merchandise<lb/>
-discontinued items<lb/>
-things that were dampened in our<lb/>
summer flood<lb/>
2?20 off on all art supplies<lb/>
3?10 off our regular price on all 35MM<lb/>
cameras.<lb/>
410 off our regular price on all Nikon and<lb/>
Canon lenses.<lb/>
530 off our regular price on all zoom<lb/>
lenses (except Canon and Nikon).<lb/>
6?20 off our regular price on all Kodak<lb/>
cameras and projectors.<lb/>
720 off our regular price on all Polaroid<lb/>
cameras.<lb/>
8?20 off our regular price on all<lb/>
binoculars.<lb/>
g20 off any photofinishing order brought<lb/>
in during sale with coupon.<lb/>
10?Register for free prizes.<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA SHOP. BIGGEST SALE OF<lb/>
THE YEAR. UNIVERSITY BOOK EX-<lb/>
CHANGEGIANT SPORTSWEAR SALE &amp;<lb/>
BIG REDUCTIONS ON MANY OTHER ITEMS.<lb/>
BOOK BARNGRAND OPEN-<lb/>
INGREGISTER FOR FREE PRIZES &amp; GIFT<lb/>
CERTIFICATES.<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera<lb/>
SM COTANCHE ST<lb/>
QREENVILLE N C 2734<lb/>
FRAME<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
20 off<lb/>
ANY COMPLETE FRAMING<lb/>
ORDER BROUGHT IN OC<lb/>
TOBER 6.7.?.? VOID Oct 10.<lb/>
1?S1 NOT GOOO FOR PICK<lb/>
UP<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera<lb/>
51? COTANCHE ST<lb/>
QREENVILLE. N C 27134<lb/>
FRAME<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
20 off<lb/>
ANY COMPLETE FRAMING<lb/>
ORDER BROUGHT IN OC-<lb/>
TOBER 6.7.8.9 VOID Oct 10<lb/>
192 NOT GOOD FOR PICK<lb/>
1<lb/>
'?? r-MANKr i , niiS. , ? i a 4 "<lb/>
Jlrl' 'I fat Ict? ? V-Sfi?p<lb/>
"alley safe coupon" "alley sale coupon"<lb/>
GoM f0? ?"I off ?? ? pttnlfi<lb/>
I l? iShing 0, ir. b' DfM "?<lb/>
rt?n fVtfb' ? 0 Miff<lb/>
H" qff" ?? pi' k ?<lb/>
Annual<lb/>
IriJ Cameras vSfiop<lb/>
518 S. COTANCHE ST. ? GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834 "<lb/>
0-7-8 - 9<lb/>
nfLE<lb/>
 Canon<lb/>
PRDGRAfv"<lb/>
Programmed Automation<lb/>
Plus Shutter-Priority Sophistication.<lb/>
System Integration.<lb/>
1 I . Canon Af 1 PROGRAM is the sophisticated SLR camera that's<lb/>
' is-and-shoot simple to use1 Its computer brain is programmed<lb/>
to give you perfect pictures in any light - even with flash' Concen-<lb/>
ir ite nn your ,ubect and let the AE-1 PROGRAM do all the work<lb/>
set it yourself - it's a sophisticated camera capable of pro'es-<lb/>
sional results, and can use nearly fifty Canon FD wide-angle, tele<lb/>
pi to and zoom lenses plus additional accessories to cover every<lb/>
h lure idk ing situation. Automatically!<lb/>
')?? A2. A jtxJ<lb/>
v? MA .Ivjilablr<lb/>
vq.(?? st'Ool"i<lb/>
'88 A s-ts spetnJ<lb/>
ir?- 'u tullv ?i?lU<lb/>
I. i itejraphy<lb/>
N Canon D Inaa<lb/>
. Ylhi won't<lb/>
believe your eyes!<lb/>
When you see the great pictures you get with a<lb/>
Canon Snappy Camera Large 35mm film gives you<lb/>
bigger and better prints And they're so easy to use<lb/>
? Focus-Free Canon 35mm lens ? Automatic Exposure<lb/>
? Automatic Film Loading, Advance, and Rewinding<lb/>
? Built-in Flash ? Handy Wrist Strap<lb/>
Snappy 20<lb/>
Available in Five Colors<lb/>
$69.00<lb/>
Canon<lb/>
The first computerized,<lb/>
shutter-priority automatic SLR.<lb/>
The last word in value.<lb/>
The AE-1 is changing the way cameras il! be maoe anc: the a.<lb/>
photographers tae pictures its shutter-Dnonty automatic exposo-e<lb/>
and sensitive silicon photo ce'i fee you as never before to approach<lb/>
your subiect? yet with ai1 the versatility that Cano- s more Thar-<lb/>
forty FD lenses ana multitude ot accessories makes easily possp'e<lb/>
To realty appreciate the AE-i you have tope it up ana use ? I<lb/>
list may change the course ol yow photography<lb/>
Snappy 50<lb/>
With Automatic Focusing<lb/>
89.00<lb/>
Canon AE-1 PROGRAM<lb/>
wlens FD 50mm f1.8<lb/>
249.95<lb/>
Canon<lb/>
Snappy 5020<lb/>
?SrkjneF-pnonr) auO'nat'C<lb/>
??"POSu'eSL<lb/>
? inceoWv hgN ' ti<lb/>
zzvac' ai: easy<lb/>
?<lb/>
?irram -eiocse se"S'<lb/>
? boon f'0suie<lb/>
-rvete'ing<lb/>
?Cooac? w?' w lei a<lb/>
? ? - ? ted ?? iiiai<lb/>
shoo?ng<lb/>
Soeedi'te 'b5A?na<lb/>
Poer wnaef A<lb/>
sivf oDtonai<lb/>
 ana 'A sutc -ji-<lb/>
ar fs s- SM '?? 0<lb/>
Siiluil ' . ? ? " l .i<lb/>
A?-c??c:i <lb/>
. ? ?<lb/>
? ? ibeaiat - c<lb/>
Canon AE-1 w tens<lb/>
FD 50mm f1 8<lb/>
$ 215.96<lb/>
IrO f( Cameras v5fi<lb/>
518 S. COTANCHE ST. ? GREENVILLE, N.C. 27934<lb/>
10 OFF Regular price on all CANON Lenses<lb/>
20 OFF all accessories<lb/>
?f<lb/>
"ALLEY SALE" WILL BE IN ALLEY NEXT<lb/>
TO U.B.E. ON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9.<lb/>
A<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0006"/><lb/>
I HI bASl K ?l INIAN K H ?HI K 5 IMU<lb/>
QQSST (J5?<lb/>
SALE JVM<lb/>
U.B.Ei<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
rC<lb/>
)<lb/>
P<lb/>
an of MiiiM mm <lb/>
(X ottw tforkwr on iALf km<lb/>
puple, opti, ufefe n?Y. .royd, mooonM, Uft blot, butter, prifed!<lb/>
0 Mvfrt Coupons i Cone on dom o tt Ui<lb/>
pp<lb/>
ReZioqs<lb/>
nnded MolfK<lb/>
100<lb/>
0:<lb/>
00offw<lb/>
ftP loHto-<lb/>
Wr<lb/>
JjpfMdM<lb/>
00<lb/>
 1 ooVr Ujcouf<lb/>
I 0<lb/>
on<lb/>
gtPM<lb/>
$ooo<lb/>
nqr<lb/>
$ faOxpvv<lb/>
"?"? Wi.<lb/>
00<lb/>
eip totl&amp;i<lb/>
?xP 0MJ8Z<lb/>
W- Q ftp ggg <lb/>
ftp igi<lb/>
U004T<lb/>
R 445T95-<lb/>
00Coupon<lb/>
ffyWS-lb$<lb/>
00$ kiCoufon<lb/>
at M82<lb/>
jroup<lb/>
2 price "wen<lb/>
ML LodifA<lb/>
V?K ' flpuhlit<lb/>
on<lb/>
tiuJted uoeAjrk<lb/>
poet ycnpon<lb/>
6fJ tolibz<lb/>
v<lb/>
Add I00 for frwSfw 0 per litter for p&amp;rionaii'zoJTon<lb/>
 e Ocf. &amp;-<lb/>
? fvj Pepsi - &amp;aS<lb/>
AgporHweaf fie) j<lb/>
a) dtck -for oar Mtufiait tk$ SatwhuT few<lb/>
(jUe-4tJiJt we, hoit Wvtbiitet Motion in. M mid.<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0007"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
HI EASTC ROl 11 W<lb/>
i K 1 OBI K ?. 1982<lb/>
ECU Bank Helps Staff<lb/>
B ANTHOW BOl)<lb/>
Ivso o'clock in the<lb/>
morning, an ECU pro-<lb/>
fessor has nisi taken his<lb/>
vs11c to Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital. He later<lb/>
lea:ns that she must be<lb/>
transferred to the Duke<lb/>
Uni ersit Medical<lb/>
Center The transfer<lb/>
will cost monev mone<lb/>
the professor doesn't<lb/>
have<lb/>
1 his stor doe- ha e<lb/>
.i rtapps ending. 1 he<lb/>
professoi belongs to<lb/>
the 1(1 Facult And<lb/>
Stall Credit I nion.<lb/>
v : Di William<lb/>
Durham, i ha i man ol<lb/>
. Business 1 ducation<lb/>
1 )epai'men' auA lied I<lb/>
ti eas  t' didn't<lb/>
d gettmi ip at two<lb/>
make the<lb/>
. lei  loan. He<lb/>
describes the credit<lb/>
union as a "famih<lb/>
; ?d" opei ation<lb/>
 ? e :red i  r has<lb/>
i n ope rat n lot<lb/>
2 2 years 1' was<lb/>
rganized in 1 fsii<lb/>
because there vas no<lb/>
credn union in Green-<lb/>
ville at the time Facul-<lb/>
t ? d ? r' membei -<lb/>
id trael to Raliegl<lb/>
use -i ci ed i union.<lb/>
ccording to D i<lb/>
Dui ham, the ECl<lb/>
credit nion i- :om-<lb/>
ble to t he taie run<lb/>
" e otter a re 1 atie-<lb/>
a!e  esi ment w - h<lb/>
thai aei age<lb/>
n that invest-<lb/>
said Durl n<lb/>
rhe ci edit union cui<lb/>
rent pa - a 12 percent<lb/>
rej rted assets<lb/>
? SI 65 million. In-<lb/>
resi rates on loan-<lb/>
? ictuate and large<lb/>
pel  n 'he type ol<lb/>
loan and i he : i ai ?i i<lb/>
He ed v p esei i the<lb/>
PK ranees from 10.8<lb/>
peicent to 18 percent<lb/>
The major benefit to<lb/>
credit union membei- is<lb/>
the life insurance plan<lb/>
The plan matches<lb/>
dollar t oi dollai<lb/>
amount in an account<lb/>
F or e a m p I e it a<lb/>
member die- with<lb/>
$4.(XX) m the account,<lb/>
then the survivors<lb/>
recene S8.000<lb/>
Dr. Dui ham has<lb/>
been involved with the<lb/>
credit union almost<lb/>
since it began He<lb/>
recalls ihe times he has<lb/>
had to run the da -to-<lb/>
da operations on his<lb/>
lunch hout 1 he cred i<lb/>
union has - hanged ol<lb/>
fices man "mho- Di<lb/>
Dui Mam i ememb .?: s<lb/>
one ifl t at ? as tust<lb/>
big eno igl for a desk,<lb/>
a safe and one<lb/>
customer<lb/>
1 he credit union now<lb/>
has : v o full t i m e<lb/>
em pIoyees Ci ediT<lb/>
utv m op ? are<lb/>
e c 1 u s i e 1 b <lb/>
membei - 1<lb/>
new officers e ti<lb/>
n lanuai ? 1 ted<lb/>
officers nle<lb/>
board f directors, loan<lb/>
??? :et and i ?m-<lb/>
and  super-<lb/>
- ard ?' directors I ? -<lb/>
o: members.<lb/>
; nm ttee<lb/>
has three mem bers<lb/>
headed bv loan officer<lb/>
Di Ra lone-<lb/>
cre committi<lb/>
screen- ? u ip<lb/>
plicat - rhe , m<lb/>
mittee uses standard<lb/>
banking pi ?. ed .<lb/>
det e : iii: t" in<lb/>
1 a<lb/>
members . ? ha -<lb/>
tei ire and stall<lb/>
bee em .ed tor at<lb/>
rhe supervisor) Credit Do ision and the rates and finance<lb/>
committee is the credit federal government. charges. The regula-<lb/>
tion watch dog. The tions also prohibit<lb/>
committee conducts in- Dr. Durham said discrimination. Dr<lb/>
ternal audits and makes that one ol his mam Durham said, " I here is<lb/>
sure the operation run- concerns is complying more to getting a loan<lb/>
smoothly. 1 he credit with federal truth and than paving interest<lb/>
union is also closely lending regulations. He suggests shopping<lb/>
supervised bv the State The regulations require around to get the best<lb/>
Commerce Department disclosure of interest rates.<lb/>
Women Get Support<lb/>
bo<lb/>
Bv PA IRK K (VNEI1 1<lb/>
M?fl W<lb/>
I u o Greenv ille<lb/>
women itave begun a<lb/>
series ol eieht<lb/>
w orkshops on the sub-<lb/>
ject Ol women and how<lb/>
thev can bettei unders-<lb/>
tand then place in to-<lb/>
day's fast moving<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"W omen li e" is<lb/>
the title ol the series ol<lb/>
intensiv e grow th 21 oup<lb/>
sessions " 1 he series is<lb/>
designed to expand<lb/>
your ability to ex-<lb/>
perience sat is facti 1<lb/>
d aliveness in youi<lb/>
i elationship to yoursell<lb/>
md others stated a<lb/>
p ibl :it flyei : ??<lb/>
pi giam, "I Ovus areas<lb/>
: ; ide ' he body. sex-<lb/>
uality and barriers to<lb/>
comm  :ation in rela-<lb/>
tions! ps<lb/>
?' me n - a t o<lb/>
themselves, 'I should<lb/>
b e a c e r t ai n way<lb/>
VVomei  ? ha<lb/>
f socia ati<lb/>
? nmenta pro-<lb/>
eran ming said i ? 1<lb/>
d 1 r ec 101 ' w 11 .1<lb/>
Air. e N01 ma 1 ew is<lb/>
1 e w :  who 1 - a<lb/>
? egistered nurse tl it<lb/>
a orks pi te ? nally in<lb/>
the field of psycl<lb/>
? - : - nai i men see<lb/>
a id in their live<lb/>
" I hey feel a 1 eal sense<lb/>
? ? ?id,<lb/>
e<lb/>
she contn led<lb/>
1 ewi- has teamed up<lb/>
with Dee Morris, a<lb/>
counseloi in the<lb/>
psychology field, to try<lb/>
to respond to the vOld<lb/>
they see. Each ol the<lb/>
eight houi -and-a-hali<lb/>
sessions deal v ith a dif-<lb/>
ferent subject. I hey try<lb/>
to help participants<lb/>
become more aware ol<lb/>
the everyday problems<lb/>
women face, and how<lb/>
they c a n e f f e c t i v eh<lb/>
deal with them.<lb/>
1 ew is claims tl ai<lb/>
most support c ups<lb/>
tot womei come trom<lb/>
a political foundation<lb/>
T hese eroups hav e<lb/>
ni imai<lb/>
work i<lb/>
H<lb/>
on<lb/>
the Equal Rights<lb/>
?mendmem move-<lb/>
ment, but women who<lb/>
aren't political a r e<lb/>
usually left without a<lb/>
group thev can identify<lb/>
w ? h<lb/>
 . imen l e is try -<lb/>
e to reach out to these<lb/>
types ol women. I ew is<lb/>
ud tha .vome ften<lb/>
unconsciously accept a<lb/>
pre pi  ammed image<lb/>
?t what society says<lb/>
they -houi be like.<lb/>
Lewis behev es<lb/>
the ' rst step is to help<lb/>
a men make choices<lb/>
about then ehes, and<lb/>
lot them ' cme 11 <lb/>
? gr 'c theii ow n<lb/>
Ue qua les. I :io is<lb/>
done in most cases by<lb/>
stressing indivduality.<lb/>
Lewis also thinks<lb/>
a certain mvths tor<lb/>
w omen a r e c o n -<lb/>
tributing tact or- to the<lb/>
negative sell image that<lb/>
some women have.<lb/>
"Most women believe<lb/>
that the should nur-<lb/>
ture other people, that<lb/>
other's live- should<lb/>
c 0 m e b e t o r e I heir<lb/>
own she said<lb/>
I ewis doesn't agree<lb/>
with that conclusion<lb/>
and think- women must<lb/>
develop a sense ol self-<lb/>
love before anvthing<lb/>
else.<lb/>
Physical appearance<lb/>
can also be a stumbling<lb/>
block for some women.<lb/>
Women hate their<lb/>
bodies or body parts,<lb/>
1 ewis -aid. Thev often<lb/>
don't take .ate ol theii<lb/>
bodies, but mead ig-<lb/>
nore or punish them<lb/>
because thev d ?n'i liv e<lb/>
up to society's<lb/>
"glamour" standards.<lb/>
W omen li ? e tries to<lb/>
help women to love<lb/>
their bodies ? even it<lb/>
they're not erl<lb/>
and to take bettei . 11<lb/>
ol 1 hern.<lb/>
lewis said the<lb/>
response from tl ;<lb/>
women who took pan<lb/>
in the initial ?<lb/>
Alive program ha I<lb/>
enthusiastic <lb/>
session will beg r<lb/>
Oct 5 and is<lb/>
1 2 pai tic ipants. I he<lb/>
sessions are d  I in-<lb/>
to tw0 group a<lb/>
?up and an eve<lb/>
croup.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
E.C.U.<lb/>
Major Attractions<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Sunday, Oct. 24<lb/>
.35 Special<lb/>
with special Guests<lb/>
Spys<lb/>
featuring 2 former members<lb/>
of Foreigner<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Tickets now on sale ?<lb/>
S7.00 advance to ECU Students<lb/>
S9.00 ? General Public<lb/>
at Mendenhall Central Ticket office<lb/>
Greenville Record Bars &amp;<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Free<lb/>
GeneraI Foods<lb/>
Sample Pack<lb/>
Nl TRI-SYSTEM ? PROVEN EFFECTIVE<lb/>
FOR ECL STUDENTS &amp; STAFF<lb/>
LILLIAN FLYTHE OF<lb/>
GOLDSBORO SAYS:<lb/>
TrishMnhaJWint<lb/>
TBskMZT.<lb/>
i t<lb/>
ip e Pack  tr e<lb/>
d "ere" one-ct<lb/>
Gratis<lb/>
Oil'FfMNT<lb/>
OlNIRAlKxxIS<lb/>
i BaBaBgBflaMjm<lb/>
(Cappuccino<lb/>
U 3 t?lo?<lb/>
roorr. ' cl" ?'? " " c<lb/>
1 VJ ? .<lb/>
 <lb/>
Gratuit<lb/>
Smoor and T' French st e<lb/>
Kostenfrei<lb/>
0W.CUPSt.IMNG<lb/>
GfNtRAltqpds<lb/>
hltKNAlk<lb/>
Baii?iiiiiia<lb/>
CaFe Francajs<lb/>
.m-V- 5TLl N'S'AN7 lOFFfcl BttBAit<lb/>
()Nl CUP SI HVlNt.<lb/>
OneraILv<lb/>
hit hnauonaI CoHi I s<lb/>
Car 'I<lb/>
tenna<lb/>
Viennese st e .?. "<lb/>
c r romor<lb/>
Saor<lb/>
Delicous Like a chocolate after-dinner mint<lb/>
Gratis<lb/>
Rich and chocolatey Swiss<lb/>
0W CUP Sf RVINC<lb/>
Ot Nt KAl hXXJv<lb/>
hllRNAIJONAl CoWttS<lb/>
lrisb?AocbaMint<lb/>
BBHSTYU NSWNTCOffEEBFVERAGf<lb/>
?K???SE?V?C<lb/>
OtNtRAl Nxxh<lb/>
liNimisAiioNAlCoHtts<lb/>
So isse Mocha<lb/>
SV?iSS SWE iNS'AN COtfEE BtvEPAOE<lb/>
LILLIAN FLYTHE OF<lb/>
GOLDSBORO LOST<lb/>
45 LBS. ON THE<lb/>
NUTRISYSTEM PRO-<lb/>
GRAM!<lb/>
rvE<lb/>
ALREADY<lb/>
LOST 45 LBS.<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
NUTRI<lb/>
SYSTEM<lb/>
"I came to Nutri System because I had<lb/>
tried EVERYTHING else. 1 really needed<lb/>
to learn how to KEEP THE WEIGHT OFF<lb/>
and I felt that the Nutri System program<lb/>
could do that.<lb/>
1 love everything about the program It's<lb/>
really easy to follow and 1 don't have to<lb/>
worry about counting calories or preparing<lb/>
food. 1 don't have to think about food<lb/>
The behavior education program is<lb/>
retraining my thinking about food<lb/>
MonFri<lb/>
9tol<lb/>
3to7<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORES<lb/>
HAS YOUR FREE SAMPLE PACK OF GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
COFFEES. CLIP THIS COUPON AND HAVE A TASTE ON US.<lb/>
Limit-one request per customer Sample packs are avaiiaoie at your<lb/>
college bookstore niie supples last This offer expires December 15.<lb/>
1982<lb/>
tl sample pack is not available at your college bookstore,<lb/>
send coupon, along with your name and address, printed on a<lb/>
3 x 5 card to General Foods' International Coffees Sample<lb/>
Pack Offer, PO Box 4051. Kankakee, III 60902<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Genera Foods I srporat ' '?'<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CALL TODAY AND SEE<lb/>
what NUTRISYSTEM<lb/>
CAN DO FOR YOU!<lb/>
FREE NO OBLIGATION CONSULTATION)<lb/>
SAVE 50<lb/>
f it i ?f?tscoupon?!??y o? mMulri S??'e'<lb/>
A(g?' loss MeO'cai Ce'es hs?o ?na w H<lb/>
OeOUC' 50"? trom your program OHer valid Of<lb/>
lew events only O" discount per person Ex<lb/>
piresOC 13 !??<lb/>
nutri system<lb/>
I i?i i ??? ii cvMlerSi<lb/>
201 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Call<lb/>
355-2470<lb/>
Over 500 Centers Nationwide<lb/>
nutrisystcm<lb/>
weight loss medical centers<lb/>
?x<lb/>
A<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? K<lb/>
<lb/>
? <lb/>
? v.<lb/>
<lb/>
Par I<lb/>
? ew<lb/>
Oc<lb/>
open<lb/>
j<lb/>
? B<lb/>
I A<lb/>
an-<lb/>
.shbi<lb/>
26, J<lb/>
I rich<lb/>
undersd<lb/>
? St. ta<lb/>
Oct. W<lb/>
medkui<lb/>
hospital<lb/>
? Tales<lb/>
p.m (;<lb/>
Stepheri<lb/>
South fl<lb/>
Monke<lb/>
? SrwtH<lb/>
at 8 p.<lb/>
brotherj<lb/>
ranchh<lb/>
nders<lb/>
? Hit hi<lb/>
ting O<lb/>
millioni<lb/>
frequeri<lb/>
for thef<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0008"/><lb/>
I k<lb/>
IHt 1-AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
(KTOBER 5, 1982 Page 9<lb/>
.38 Special:<lb/>
Gunning For<lb/>
'Permanence'<lb/>
left to right: Don Barnes. Larry Junslrom, Donnie Van Zant, Jack (.rondin, Jeff Cariisi and Steve Brookins of .38 Special.<lb/>
.38 Special and guest band SPYS<lb/>
will be performing at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum on Sunday night, Oct. 24, at 8<lb/>
p.m. Tickets Jor the pairing went on<lb/>
sale yesterday at the Central Ticket<lb/>
OJJice in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, as well as both Record Bar<lb/>
locations in Greenville and Apple<lb/>
Records. Student tickets are priced<lb/>
at $7; tickets for the general public<lb/>
are $9. All tickets sold at the door<lb/>
will be 59. The following article first<lb/>
appeared in the October edition oj<lb/>
The Record magazine. (Use by per-<lb/>
mission; all rights reserved.)<lb/>
By DAVID GANS<lb/>
I hr Record<lb/>
OAKLAND, Ca. ? "The longer<lb/>
it takes for you to get there, the<lb/>
longer you'll be there when you<lb/>
make it says Don Barnes,<lb/>
guitarist, vocalist and co-producer<lb/>
of .38 Special. "We really believe<lb/>
that, because you learn so many<lb/>
lessons along the way Having<lb/>
been taught ten years worth of<lb/>
lessons in the gritty grind of<lb/>
American rock 'n' roll, Barnes and<lb/>
his five bandmates have of late<lb/>
developed a more sophisticated<lb/>
sound in an effort to escape the<lb/>
"southern boogie band" label that<lb/>
has dogged them since they emerged<lb/>
from Jacksonville, Florida. Their<lb/>
struggle wasn't helped along any by<lb/>
lead singer Donnie Van Zant's kin-<lb/>
ship to I.ynyrd Skynyrd's late<lb/>
vocalist Ronnie Van Zant (Donme's<lb/>
the middle button .n the Van Zant<lb/>
clan, with brother Johnny being the<lb/>
youngest of the three); and, as<lb/>
Barnes admits, the early .38 Special<lb/>
wasn't all that special.<lb/>
"On our first two albums we tried<lb/>
to get into that little niche of what<lb/>
was successful at the time he says,<lb/>
referring to the hard-attack style<lb/>
popularized by Lynyrd Skynyrd and<lb/>
capitalized on by dozens, if not hun-<lb/>
dreds, of bands. "All that did was<lb/>
make everyone categorize us as<lb/>
'Lynyrd Skynyrd junior<lb/>
J8 Special began to evolve<lb/>
See .38 SPECIAL, Page 10<lb/>
N.C. Has Best Video Game Players In U.S.<lb/>
B CATHERINE CHAPIN<lb/>
1 hr Charioilr Ohwrr<lb/>
I eo Daniels, by any standard you care to apply, is a<lb/>
professional.<lb/>
He began planning his career in 1978, while a<lb/>
sophomore at John T. Hoggard High School in Wilm-<lb/>
ington. N.C He spent $700-$l,200 a summer (all in<lb/>
quarters) in 19"9 and 1980 learning his trade.<lb/>
This year it paid off.<lb/>
Daniels, 21, is the most successful video game player<lb/>
in the United States, with five national records recogniz-<lb/>
ed by Twin Galaxies International Scoreboard, the only<lb/>
service in the country that logs video game scores cer-<lb/>
titied by video arcade owners.<lb/>
' Ops' is my career now says Qaaiels, who manages<lb/>
the Light Years Amusement Center in Wrightsville<lb/>
Beach. "I'm managing my own arcade. We're going in-<lb/>
to national franchising of Light Years so I'll be promo-<lb/>
Video<lb/>
tional material for that. I'll also put on demonstrations<lb/>
of games<lb/>
And Daniels isn't the only one to make a name for<lb/>
himself from video games.<lb/>
Nine other players in North Caroina are national<lb/>
champions, making the state home to more video game<lb/>
champions than anywhere else in the country. The 10,<lb/>
including Orlando Funderburk of Charlotte, have set<lb/>
records in 15 games.<lb/>
Battling It Out<lb/>
Networks Vying For Top<lb/>
FROM WIRF REPORTS<lb/>
Here is a list of all the new series on the three com-<lb/>
mercial networks, arranged by day of the week. ABC<lb/>
and CBS each have seven new series; NBC has 10.<lb/>
? Riplev's Believe It Or ot ? ABC, Sundays at 7 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) Jack Palance hosts this weekly<lb/>
tribute to the unusual, based on the popular newspaper<lb/>
column by Robert L. Ripley.<lb/>
? Voyagers! ? NBC, Sundays at 7 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) Jon-Erik Hexum and Meeno Peluce travel<lb/>
through time and witness great events of history.<lb/>
? Matt Houston ? ABC, Sundays at 8 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) Lee Horsley stars as a Texas millionaire<lb/>
who passes the time by playing detective and wearing<lb/>
tieht jeans.<lb/>
? Gloria ? CBS, Sundays at 8:30 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) Archie Bunker's daughter, now divorced<lb/>
and living in upstate New York, goes to work for a<lb/>
veterinarian. Sally Struthers and Burgess Meredith star.<lb/>
? Square Pegs ? CBS, Mondays at 8 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) Written and produced by Anne Beatts,<lb/>
formerly of Saturday Night Live, this comedy centers<lb/>
on two teenagers, Amy Linker and Sarah Jessica<lb/>
Parker, as they cope with high school life.<lb/>
? ewhart ? CBS, Mondays at 9:30 p.m starting<lb/>
Oct. 25. A writer drags his wife to Vermont, where they<lb/>
open a country inn without knowing the first thing<lb/>
about running it. Bob Newhart and Mary Frann star.<lb/>
? Bring 'em Back Alive ? CBS, Tuesdays at 8 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) The adventures of real-life wild<lb/>
animal hunter Frank Buck serve as the basis for this<lb/>
swashbucker. Bruce Boxleitner stars.<lb/>
? Gavilan ? NBC, Tuesdays at 9 p.m starting Oct. 19<lb/>
or 26, depending on the World Series schedule. Robert<lb/>
Unch stars as a former CIA agent who works for an<lb/>
undersea research institute. With Kate Reid.<lb/>
? .S7. Elsewhere ? NBC, Tuesdays at 10 p.m starting<lb/>
Oct. 19 or 26. From the producers of Hill Street Blues, a<lb/>
medical drama tinged with humor, set in a large, busy<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
? Tales of the Gold Monkey ? ABC, Wednesdays at 8<lb/>
p.m. (Already premiered.) A cargo pilot played by<lb/>
Stephen Collins fights Nazi spies and other nasties in the<lb/>
South Pacific whenever he's not raising an elbow at the<lb/>
Monkey Bar on the island of Bora Gora.<lb/>
? Seven Brides for Seven Brothers ? CBS, Wednesdays<lb/>
at 8 p.m. (Already premiered.) We start with seven<lb/>
brothers but just one bride all living together in the same<lb/>
ranchhouse in Northern California. Richard Dean<lb/>
Anderson and Terri Treas star.<lb/>
? Filthy Rich ? CBS, Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m star-<lb/>
ting Oct. 6. Comedy about a looney family led by<lb/>
millionaire Big Guy Beck (Slim Pickens), now dead but<lb/>
frequently seen on videotaped messages he left behind<lb/>
for the benefit of his oddball relatives. Charles Frank<lb/>
also stars.<lb/>
? Family Ties ? NBC, Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) Michael Gross and Meredith Bax-<lb/>
ter Birn'ey play former student radicals whose children<lb/>
don't hold to quite the same beliefs.<lb/>
? Tucker's Hitch ? CBS, Wednesdays at 10 p.m star-<lb/>
ting Oct. 6. Catherine Hicks and Tim Matheson star as a<lb/>
husband and wife detective team, with the wife having<lb/>
the dubious advantage of extrasensory perception.<lb/>
? Star of the Family ? ABC, Thursdays at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) A fire captain, deserted by his<lb/>
wife, tries to rear a teenage daughter who aspires to a<lb/>
career as a professonal singer. Brian Dennehy and<lb/>
Kathv Maisnik star.<lb/>
? Cheers ? NBC, Thursdays at 9 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) Comedy set in a bar run by a former big-<lb/>
league baseball pitcher. Ted Danson and Shelley Long<lb/>
star.<lb/>
? It Takes Two ? ABC, Thursdays at 9:30 p.m star-<lb/>
ting date to be announced. Comedy about marital<lb/>
strains between a woman laywer and her doctor hus-<lb/>
band. Patty Duke Astin and Richard Crenna star.<lb/>
? The Powers of Matthew Star ? NBC, Fridays at 8<lb/>
p.m. (Already premiered). A friendly alien (Peter Bar-<lb/>
ton) tries to lead a normal human life as a high school<lb/>
student, but creepy enemy aliens give him a hard time.<lb/>
Louis Gossett Jr. also stars.<lb/>
? The iew Odd Couple ? ABC, Fridays at 8:30 p.m<lb/>
starting in late October. The only thing really new about<lb/>
this comedy is that the two lead characters are black.<lb/>
Fortunately, they are played by Demond Wilson and<lb/>
Ron Glass.<lb/>
? Knight Rider ? NBC, Fridays at 9 p.m. (Already<lb/>
premiered.) An urban answer to The Dukes of Hazzard.<lb/>
The characters don't have Southern accents, and the car<lb/>
is filled with computers, but the car is still the star. Also<lb/>
featuring Edward Mulhare and David Hasselhoff.<lb/>
? The Quest ? ABC, Fridays at 9 p.m starting in late<lb/>
October. Four unlikely Americans compete for the<lb/>
privilege of ruling a small country in the Mediterranean.<lb/>
Perry King and Noah Beery Jr. star.<lb/>
? Remington Steele ? NBC, Fridays at 10 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) Stephanie Zimbalist stars as a<lb/>
private detective who creates a fake male boss so that<lb/>
clients won't worry about turning their jobs over to a<lb/>
young woman. Then one day someone claiming to be<lb/>
that man shows up at her office, ready to take over.<lb/>
? Silver Spoons ? NBC, Saturdays at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) Ricky Schroder, as a 12-year-old<lb/>
boy reared in a military school, is shocked to learn how<lb/>
lazy and immature his millionaire father is. Joel Higgins<lb/>
also stars.<lb/>
? The Devlin Connection ? NBC, Saturdays at 10 p.m.<lb/>
(Already premiered.) A former spy who runs a civic<lb/>
auditorium learns he has son, now grown and working<lb/>
as a detective. Rock Hudson stars.<lb/>
"They are superstars in North Carolina says Walter<lb/>
Day, who runs the Twin Galaxies International<lb/>
Scoreboard in Ottumwa, Iowa. "Most of the records on<lb/>
important games are held by North Carolinians says<lb/>
Day. "The quality of mindbody coordination is in-<lb/>
credible<lb/>
Why North Carolina has earned this singular honor<lb/>
seems to be, in large measure, because of Daniels and<lb/>
the Light Years Amusement Center. Eight of North<lb/>
Carolina's 15 records have been set there.<lb/>
"We started Light Years with me because I had more<lb/>
world records than anybody else says Daniels, who is<lb/>
vice president of the firm owned by businessmen Andy<lb/>
Howell and Louten Hedgteth. "When we opened, we<lb/>
advertized for people to come down and try to break<lb/>
records or challenge me.<lb/>
"Instead of them having to go somewhere else and set<lb/>
a record, we'd like them to come here and set a record<lb/>
he says. "Were willing to stay open as long as it takes<lb/>
The attraction of an "as long as it takes" arcade is no<lb/>
small consideration for aspiring video game champions.<lb/>
"The first time 1 went for a record with Asteroids (at<lb/>
a Carolina Beach arcade), I played 201: hours and the<lb/>
owner came along and unplugged the machine on me<lb/>
says Daniels.<lb/>
Daniel's longest stretch on one machine was 42 hours,<lb/>
10 minutes in his second record-setting attempt on<lb/>
Asteroids. He had to quit with a nervous stomach. He<lb/>
played 27 hours, 13 minutes to set the national record<lb/>
on another game, Robotron. His Robotron record was<lb/>
just broken by Chris Quade of Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Daniels tutors other national champions in the fine<lb/>
art of mastering the video game.<lb/>
"He taught me a lot of things, strategies to most of<lb/>
these games says Scotty Williams, 15, who holds a na-<lb/>
tional record on Vanguard set at Light Years. "Ive been<lb/>
playing (video games) since they first came out, but I<lb/>
was never very good at it until Leo came along<lb/>
If you think it's easy being a video champ, think<lb/>
again. Besides skill, potential champions also need time<lb/>
and money.<lb/>
Williams, a junior at Hoggard High School in Wilm-<lb/>
ington, spends 25 hours a week practicing on his record<lb/>
game and others he wants to master.<lb/>
"1 usually pick games I'm pretty good at and try for<lb/>
those he says. "It somebody's going for my record<lb/>
and 1 think they might beat it, I'll go for it that (same)<lb/>
night. Leo talks to Walter Day (at the scoreboard) right<lb/>
much and he lets me know all that stuff<lb/>
Charles Brown, at age 11, is the youngest video game<lb/>
champion in the country, on a game called Looping.<lb/>
And, you guessed it. he plavs at Light Years.<lb/>
Brown, a rising 7th grader at Lake Forest Junior High<lb/>
School in Wilmington, says he spends S50 a week hon-<lb/>
ing his skills. He earns his pin money ? about S100 a<lb/>
week, he says ? mowing lawns and cleaning the glar<lb/>
on video games for Daniels.<lb/>
"1 try to pick the biggest yards and charge them more<lb/>
money says Charles. "I don't spend all of it at Light<lb/>
Years. Besides my mom won't even let me. She makes<lb/>
me put some in savings<lb/>
Charles isn't sure what he'll do for playing money<lb/>
once school starts, but says hopefully, "Sometimes my<lb/>
mom will give me some<lb/>
Orlando Funderburk says he has spent about $50<lb/>
mastering a game called Phoenix on which he holds a<lb/>
national record.<lb/>
"1 just keep going back everytime I get money says<lb/>
Funderburk, 18, a rising senior at Gannger High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Funderburk is more casual about his champion status<lb/>
than most record-holders.<lb/>
"1 drop in from time to time he says, to see if his<lb/>
record still stands. But he's not practicing for any other<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Once video game players approach championship<lb/>
caliber, there are other things to consider before setting<lb/>
a national record ? like stamina, the ability to digest<lb/>
See VIDEO, Page 10<lb/>
v;<lb/>
' ilSfc.<lb/>
p<lb/>
<lb/>
? "<lb/>
.???? ' '<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
Dance Theatre Auditions Set For Tomorrow, Thursday<lb/>
The East Carolina Dance Theatre has scheduled auditions for its January production tomorrow and<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Dance Studio 114 of the Messick Theatre Arts Center. Dance Theatre produc-<lb/>
tions are performed each year for the University and area audiences. This year the program will feature<lb/>
modern ballet and jazz pieces choreographed by members of the dance faculty. Auditions are open to<lb/>
the community, ECU students, faculty and staff. Dancers planning to audition should be warmed up<lb/>
and ready to dance at 7:30. Appropriate shoes for ballet and jazz should be worn; auditions for modern<lb/>
pieces require no shoes. January 27, 241, and 29 are the production dates in McGinnis Theatre. For fur-<lb/>
ther information about the auditions, participants should call 757-6390.<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0009"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 5, 1982<lb/>
Video Champions<lb/>
N.Cs Best Give Trade Tips<lb/>
Record Sales Plummeting<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
food quickly and a lightning-paced speed bet-<lb/>
ween machine and bathroom.<lb/>
"You have to loosen up before you start<lb/>
says Daniels of his championship technique. "I<lb/>
usually get these foam rubber pads and stick<lb/>
them on the machine underneath my palms. The<lb/>
first time I played Asteroids (without pads) it<lb/>
made my wrists swell.<lb/>
"1 have a stool there, always ready he says.<lb/>
"Usually my mother gets me something to eat<lb/>
and feeds me<lb/>
And then there's that nagging problem, how to<lb/>
heed nature's call during a frenzied record-<lb/>
breaking attempt.<lb/>
"You station yourself (on the screen) in a pret-<lb/>
ty safe place and run for the bathroom as fast as<lb/>
you can he says. "You can be gone about a<lb/>
minute<lb/>
Daniels doesn't recommend getting too much<lb/>
sleep or taking pills to stay awake before a record<lb/>
breaking attempt. He learned that the hard way<lb/>
during his second try for an Asteroids record.<lb/>
"I took a No-Doz and that doesn't help at<lb/>
all he says. "The caffeine gives you a nervous<lb/>
stomach. That's why 1 had to quit. I got sick<lb/>
When video champs nationwide set a record,<lb/>
they call Twin Galaxies scoreboard.<lb/>
"We get calls at 2 in the morning, 3 in the mor-<lb/>
ning said Day, who began the service this year.<lb/>
"For the first time, if a person wants to know<lb/>
how they stand in the nation, they call and they<lb/>
know immediately he says.<lb/>
"Somebody has to keep a solid record that's<lb/>
certified says Carl Hayes, who owns Gaston<lb/>
MiniGolf and Games in Gastonia. "In North<lb/>
Carolina and South Carolina, this organization is<lb/>
recognized in most arcades. Nobody else is<lb/>
Day is building a scoreboard at his Kirksville,<lb/>
Mo arcade which he hopes will become a mecca<lb/>
for aspiring video game champs.<lb/>
"Imagine a scoreboard about 18 feet high and<lb/>
about 35 feet long with 12 black-and-white TV<lb/>
monitors on it he enthuses. "It's going to be<lb/>
one of the most glamorous spectacles in the<lb/>
world<lb/>
Dav says the board should be finished next<lb/>
month at a cost of $15,000-$20,000. He's also<lb/>
starting a poster service with the latest champion-<lb/>
ship scores. The posters will be sent to video ar-<lb/>
cades nationwide every two weeks, starting Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
And Day, 33, is looking into a syndicatd radio<lb/>
show and a cable TV show on video games.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Leo Daniels has co-authored a<lb/>
book on video games, How To Master Video<lb/>
Games, Book II (Bantam, $2.95). It's due in<lb/>
bookstores this month.<lb/>
All for the love of colored blips dancing across<lb/>
a computer screen.<lb/>
But that's not the way Daniels sees it, of<lb/>
course.<lb/>
He likes the special effects. "On some games<lb/>
it's the graphics and the sounds effects he says.<lb/>
"On some games, it's the themes. Then you have<lb/>
the cartoon characters, like Donkey Kong<lb/>
But most of all, Leo Daniels likes to get away<lb/>
from it all as he controls the action on the screen.<lb/>
"For a quarter, you can blow away a galaxy or<lb/>
take a trip beyond says Daniels. "And if you<lb/>
get good enough you can make your quarter last<lb/>
for two days<lb/>
By KURT LODER &amp;<lb/>
STEVE POND<lb/>
Bo4Uat Sloae<lb/>
NEW YORK ? The<lb/>
U.S. record industry is<lb/>
in the worst shape in its<lb/>
history. Consider the<lb/>
following facts:<lb/>
Record executives<lb/>
estimate that in 1982,<lb/>
record and tape sales<lb/>
have decreased by as<lb/>
much as fifty percent<lb/>
from last year, and<lb/>
possibly more. And<lb/>
things were already<lb/>
bad: after 1978, the in-<lb/>
dustry's last "boom"<lb/>
year, the retail record<lb/>
business declined from<lb/>
a gross of more than $4<lb/>
billion to a 1981 level of<lb/>
$3.6 billion ? a drop<lb/>
of $400 million (a total,<lb/>
in constant 1982<lb/>
dollars, of closer to<lb/>
$500 million).<lb/>
Current best sellers<lb/>
no longer sell in the<lb/>
quantities they used to.<lb/>
For example, REO<lb/>
Speedwagon was able<lb/>
to sell some 6 million<lb/>
copies of its High In-<lb/>
fidelity album, but this<lb/>
year's biggest seller so<lb/>
far is Asia's debut LP,<lb/>
which has sold about 2<lb/>
million copies.<lb/>
Despite the decreased<lb/>
revenues, the record<lb/>
business as an industry<lb/>
has not made realistic<lb/>
investments in<lb/>
marketing and advertis-<lb/>
ing campaigns to regain<lb/>
lost sales.<lb/>
In the midst of all<lb/>
this, the companies<lb/>
have been slow to res-<lb/>
pond to the challenges<lb/>
of new technology ?<lb/>
home taping, an up-<lb/>
surge in the use of<lb/>
cassettes and the<lb/>
decline of the vinyl<lb/>
disc.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, cut-<lb/>
backs have become<lb/>
commonplace. Since<lb/>
1979, more than 1,000<lb/>
people directly<lb/>
employed by American<lb/>
record companies have<lb/>
lost their jobs. On<lb/>
August 13th, CBS<lb/>
Records, perhaps the<lb/>
largest record company<lb/>
in the world, let go of<lb/>
more than 300<lb/>
employees. One month<lb/>
earlier, a reorganiza-<lb/>
tion at ElektraAsylum<lb/>
Records severed five<lb/>
executives, and a few<lb/>
days after the CBS<lb/>
shake-up, Atlantic<lb/>
Records dismissed for-<lb/>
ty staffers. Most<lb/>
recently, on August<lb/>
27th, Warner Bros.<lb/>
Records let go of<lb/>
twenty-nine employees.<lb/>
The extent of the<lb/>
CBS cutback was startl-<lb/>
ing. Fifteen percent of<lb/>
the company's salaried<lb/>
staff, including nine<lb/>
vice-presidents, was let<lb/>
go, and all five of its<lb/>
regional offices ?<lb/>
along with nine of its<lb/>
nineteen smaller branch<lb/>
offices ? were shut<lb/>
down. Such a Draco-<lb/>
nian option may not be<lb/>
available to smaller,<lb/>
more financially strap-<lb/>
ped record companies.<lb/>
ElektraAsylum is<lb/>
rumored to be on the<lb/>
verge of absorption by<lb/>
its larger sister com-<lb/>
pany, Warner Bros.<lb/>
Records, and further<lb/>
firings, at the very<lb/>
least, are widely feared.<lb/>
"This industry is<lb/>
hurting real bad says<lb/>
M. Richard Asher,<lb/>
deputy president of the<lb/>
CBS Records Division.<lb/>
. 38 Special Find Musical Niche<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
musically in 1979 with their third<lb/>
album, Rockin' Into The Night. The<lb/>
title track received substantial FM<lb/>
airplay, paving the way for the<lb/>
massive success of 1981 's Wild-Eyed<lb/>
Southern Boys and the<lb/>
breakthrough single, "Hold On<lb/>
Loosely<lb/>
The band's latest album, Special<lb/>
Eorces, and the first single,<lb/>
"Caught Up In You have reached<lb/>
the trade charts' top ten, indicating<lb/>
that sales will equal or surpass its<lb/>
predecessor's platinum-plus perfor-<lb/>
mance. "People ask us if we feel<lb/>
like we're selling out with a pop<lb/>
sound says Jeff Carlisi, who<lb/>
shares guitar and production duties<lb/>
with Barnes. "We're just trying to<lb/>
fit into what radio wants. We've<lb/>
been educated over the years about<lb/>
what the industry needs ? all the<lb/>
elements ? but we're playing<lb/>
because there's nothing any of us<lb/>
would rather be doing. Everyone in<lb/>
.38 Special gives his full 110 per-<lb/>
cent<lb/>
Barnes, Carlisi and Van Zant ?<lb/>
along with stage manager Larry<lb/>
Steele and Survivor's Jim Peterik<lb/>
(who penned "Eye of the Tiger")<lb/>
write the lion's share of .38 Special's<lb/>
songs, with occasional contributions<lb/>
from bassist Larry Junstrom and<lb/>
drummers Steve Brookins and Jack<lb/>
Grondin. On Wild-Eyed and Special<lb/>
Eorces, Rodney Mills (of Atlanta<lb/>
Rhythm Section fame) is listed as<lb/>
producer, with Barnes and Carlisi<lb/>
credited as "production<lb/>
associates But Barnes notes that<lb/>
Mills "doesn't override us. It's ac-<lb/>
tually a three man production team.<lb/>
Nobody can tell the group how to<lb/>
sound or direct them better than<lb/>
somebody who's been in on the<lb/>
molding of the band for ten years<lb/>
The collaborative approach to<lb/>
songwriting and production extends<lb/>
to everything .38 Special does.<lb/>
That's one part of the "good ol'<lb/>
boy" stereotype that doesn't bother<lb/>
Barnes and Carlisi. "No one person<lb/>
is the star in this group Barnes<lb/>
asserts. "We approach everything<lb/>
as a team. It's so different from<lb/>
anything we've been exposed to with<lb/>
Skynyrd. They approached it pretty<lb/>
much like an athletic team<lb/>
What holds .38 Special together<lb/>
more than anything is friendship:<lb/>
the six band members have known<lb/>
each other since they were kids in<lb/>
Jacksonville, and Barnes points out<lb/>
that this near-blood relationship<lb/>
creates "a feeling of permanence<lb/>
Their bond proved especially impor-<lb/>
tant early on, when Peter Rudge,<lb/>
who managed Skynyrd and .38<lb/>
Special, became, as Barnes says,<lb/>
"disenchanted" with the music<lb/>
business after the Skynyrd plane<lb/>
crash. "He wasn't helping us at all,<lb/>
and we saw that as our time to get<lb/>
out he relates. "A&amp;M figured<lb/>
we'd break up, because that's what<lb/>
most bands would do. They sent a<lb/>
little bit of money to keep us going,<lb/>
but they were astonished that we<lb/>
were still writing songs and staying<lb/>
together after all these problems.<lb/>
But it never entered our minds to<lb/>
break up<lb/>
Instead, the crisis pulled the musi-<lb/>
cians together even tighter. "After<lb/>
the first two albums, we realized we<lb/>
were going nowhere fast says<lb/>
Barnes. "We revamped the for-<lb/>
mula, updated everything, and tried<lb/>
some new things. We learned from<lb/>
being so close to Skynyd that you<lb/>
have to put your own character into<lb/>
the music. People relate to character<lb/>
more than proficiency in playing<lb/>
Although the material rewards of<lb/>
a pair of platinum albums cannot be<lb/>
denied, both Carlisi and Barnes<lb/>
maintain that .38 Special's values<lb/>
are the same as they've always been,<lb/>
"We came from point zero, Satur-<lb/>
day night in a bar with ten people<lb/>
who didn't care if we lived or died<lb/>
Barnes explains. "We were exposed<lb/>
to the big time before we were big<lb/>
time ? whatever that term means ?<lb/>
and we've seen so many people get<lb/>
taken down by the business. We've<lb/>
had the chance to learn from other<lb/>
people's mistakes.<lb/>
"It's nice to have financial in-<lb/>
dependence, but soul and spirit and<lb/>
character are more valuable. We're<lb/>
richer in spirit and character and<lb/>
camaraderie within ourselves and<lb/>
our friends than we are in money<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
on the purchase of<lb/>
one of our lab coats!<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
<lb/>
"Somebody's got to<lb/>
give us a break<lb/>
The "break" sought<lb/>
by industry lobbyists is<lb/>
a legislated royalty on<lb/>
consumer home-taping<lb/>
equipment, which, thev<lb/>
claim, violates the<lb/>
royalty rights ot artists<lb/>
and record companies.<lb/>
Not everyone buys this<lb/>
argument. Ben Karol of<lb/>
New York City's King<lb/>
Karol record-store<lb/>
chain refers to the in-<lb/>
dustry's elaborate<lb/>
home-taping survey as<lb/>
"a crock of shit And<lb/>
even Joe Cohen, who<lb/>
heads the National<lb/>
Association of Recor-<lb/>
ding Merchandisers<lb/>
(NARM), and who<lb/>
favors the royalty, ad-<lb/>
mits the home-taping<lb/>
issue is "a two-sided<lb/>
sword. With the 20<lb/>
million Walkman-type<lb/>
units that were sold, we<lb/>
sold a lot of prerecord-<lb/>
ed tapes ? and a lot of<lb/>
people learned to start<lb/>
taping at home. We<lb/>
have to accept the good<lb/>
with the bad Without<lb/>
the Walkman, people<lb/>
would not have bought<lb/>
as much music last year<lb/>
as they did<lb/>
While record ex-<lb/>
ecutives continue to<lb/>
froth over home tap<lb/>
ing, critics have<lb/>
discerned more tangible<lb/>
problems in the in-<lb/>
dustry. Aside from the<lb/>
national recession, thev<lb/>
cite poor management<lb/>
and the increasing<lb/>
burden ot extravagant<lb/>
long-term recording<lb/>
contracts. For example,<lb/>
it was recently reported<lb/>
that Glenn Fre and<lb/>
See RFC OKI). Pane 11<lb/>
ST. JAMES<lb/>
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH<lb/>
UNIVERSITY STUDENT<lb/>
PICK-UP SCHEDULE<lb/>
Students who wish to attend Sunday morning worship ser<lb/>
vices, but do not have a ride, may attend the worship ser<lb/>
vice at St. James United Methodist Church by observing<lb/>
the following schedule. The church van will be used to<lb/>
transport students to and from the church.<lb/>
10:10<lb/>
Methodist Student Center<lb/>
10:12<lb/>
Garrett Resident Hall<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
Jarvis Resident Hall<lb/>
10:17<lb/>
Fleming Resident Hall<lb/>
10:20<lb/>
Cotton Resident Hall<lb/>
10:25<lb/>
White Resident Hall<lb/>
10:27<lb/>
Umstead Resident Hal<lb/>
10:30<lb/>
Tyler Resident Hall<lb/>
10:40<lb/>
St. James United<lb/>
Methodist Church<lb/>
OPEN24HOURS DRIVE THRU Wl NDOW<lb/>
Special:<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
2 ribs, fries, slaw &amp; biscuit<lb/>
on Wed. only<lb/>
11-2 p.m. and 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
No Take Outs<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ?752-1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
Athletic fUlbrld<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
"The Fun Way<lb/>
to Fitness<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
26<lb/>
classes<lb/>
a week<lb/>
to choose<lb/>
from.<lb/>
Not all clinics are the same.<lb/>
ABORTION is a difficult decision that's<lb/>
made easier by the women of the Fleming<lb/>
Center. Counselors are available day and<lb/>
night to support and understand you. Com-<lb/>
fort, safety, privacy, and a friendly staff . . .<lb/>
that's what the Fleming Center is all about.<lb/>
Insurance accepted Free pregnancy testing<lb/>
All inclusive fees Saturday appointments<lb/>
Up to 18 weeks Very early pregnancy tests<lb/>
Call 781-5550 day or night.<lb/>
The Fleming Center makes the difference.<lb/>
jfff t Sr S 20 Located 1 mile past<lb/>
 -T w -fr Hastings Ford on<lb/>
ll 1 1 .WSr5 10th St. extension<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday,<lb/>
and Wednesday<lb/>
Ocean Perch Nuggets<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Hamburger Steak<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Beef Tips$2.99<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato, Tossed Salad<lb/>
may be substituted for Slaw35c extra<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
"Original Ladies' Lockout<lb/>
Thursday ? Appearing ?<lb/>
The CATALIN AS<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/>
?<lb/>
River<lb/>
Bluff Rd<lb/>
Behind<lb/>
Putt Putt<lb/>
( ontij<lb/>
Dor,<lb/>
for m<lb/>
L.agi<lb/>
adv<lb/>
?lek<lb/>
$1 <lb/>
mi!h<lb/>
tor<lb/>
albui<lb/>
has<lb/>
copi<lb/>
100,<lb/>
Heni<lb/>
ship(<lb/>
spca<lb/>
dcai<lb/>
the<lb/>
lab-<lb/>
prec<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
He<lb/>
renei<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
B .<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0010"/><lb/>
"HE LAi.1 CAROI IMAN<lb/>
(K 1UBLR 5. IV82<lb/>
. ol<lb/>
w e<lb/>
11<lb/>
itl P:<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
82 Record Sales Are Off<lb/>
C untinued From Page 10<lb/>
Don Henley, the two<lb/>
tormer leaders of the<lb/>
I agles, had been paid<lb/>
advances by<lb/>
1 lektra Asylum of<lb/>
$1.5 million and $2<lb/>
million, respectively,<lb/>
for their debut solo<lb/>
albums. Frev's record<lb/>
has sold only 2(X),000<lb/>
copies, and only<lb/>
100,000 copies of<lb/>
Henley's LP were even<lb/>
shipped, leading to<lb/>
speculation that those<lb/>
deals alone might tip<lb/>
the balance in the<lb/>
label's already<lb/>
precarious financial<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Joe Smith, chairman<lb/>
o 1 the board of<lb/>
t-lektra Asylum, says<lb/>
that the Frey and<lb/>
Henlev deals were part<lb/>
o i "an Eagles<lb/>
renegotiation and<lb/>
that the actual ad-<lb/>
vances paid out were<lb/>
about "Fifty percent<lb/>
lower<lb/>
"But we do make<lb/>
ridiculous deals<lb/>
Smith agreed. "CBS is<lb/>
paying Billy Joel $5<lb/>
m'lion an album. I'm<lb/>
sure the) made that<lb/>
deai figuring he was go-<lb/>
me to sell 5 million<lb/>
copies of ever) album.<lb/>
He won't (CBS<lb/>
declined comment on<lb/>
its contractual arrange-<lb/>
ment with Joel.)<lb/>
Smith says the record<lb/>
business may be off as<lb/>
much as sixty percent<lb/>
this year, "although<lb/>
that may be a little<lb/>
astic. If you could<lb/>
have sold 2 million<lb/>
copies of an album last<lb/>
year, maybe you'll sell<lb/>
12 million this year.<lb/>
But it's hard to com-<lb/>
pare figures like that.<lb/>
Queen's last album<lb/>
(The Game) sold 3.5<lb/>
million, and the new<lb/>
one (Hot Space) hasn't<lb/>
hit 1 million yet; but<lb/>
that doesn't mean the<lb/>
business is off sixty per-<lb/>
cent ? it means that<lb/>
the new Queen record is<lb/>
not as good as the last<lb/>
one. It never would<lb/>
have sold 3.5 million,<lb/>
because it doesn't have<lb/>
the hits on it<lb/>
These days, even the<lb/>
best-selling chart acts<lb/>
aren't moving<lb/>
anywhere near the<lb/>
number of albums they<lb/>
used to. Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac, who sold 12<lb/>
million copies of their<lb/>
Rumours album in<lb/>
1977 and 2 million<lb/>
copies oH the eclectic<lb/>
two-record set Tusk in<lb/>
1979, have sold just<lb/>
over 1 million copies of<lb/>
their new FP, Mirage.<lb/>
And though RFC)<lb/>
Speedwagon has<lb/>
likewise sold more than<lb/>
a million copies of its<lb/>
new FP, Good Trou-<lb/>
ble, in the first two<lb/>
months of release, it's<lb/>
highly unlikely that the<lb/>
record will approach<lb/>
the 6 million mark<lb/>
reached by its<lb/>
predecessor. Hi In-<lb/>
fidelity. (REO's Nine<lb/>
Lives, which came out<lb/>
in 1979, sold in the<lb/>
neighborhood of<lb/>
500.000 copies.)<lb/>
Blond le's The<lb/>
Hunter peaked at<lb/>
Number Thirty-three<lb/>
and then dove down the<lb/>
charts, having sold just<lb/>
over 500,000 copies;<lb/>
their previous album,<lb/>
Autoamerican, sold<lb/>
more than 1 million<lb/>
copies last year.<lb/>
Heart's Private Audi-<lb/>
tion only made it to<lb/>
Number Twenty-five<lb/>
and Dolly Parton's<lb/>
Heartbreak Express<lb/>
didn't even crack the<lb/>
Top Hundred.<lb/>
When prestige acts<lb/>
fail to generate record<lb/>
sales, chart position<lb/>
becomes a moot issue.<lb/>
At the time of the CBS<lb/>
firings, twenty-four of<lb/>
the lop Hundred<lb/>
albums on the<lb/>
Billboard magazine<lb/>
chart were by CBS ar-<lb/>
tists, as were seventeen<lb/>
of the Top Hundred<lb/>
singles, including the<lb/>
Number One record,<lb/>
Survivor's "Eye of the<lb/>
Tiger "Nothing is<lb/>
selling said one ex-<lb/>
ecutive "It's grim out<lb/>
there, and we're all get-<lb/>
ting hit m a heavy way.<lb/>
In 1979, business drop-<lb/>
ped, but lots of com-<lb/>
panies bounced back<lb/>
and made money the<lb/>
next year. This time<lb/>
around, people are say-<lb/>
ing that nothing like<lb/>
that is going to happen.<lb/>
They say this is going to<lb/>
be the new record in-<lb/>
dustry<lb/>
One factor in the<lb/>
declining consumer in-<lb/>
terest in records is the<lb/>
$8.98 list price for<lb/>
albums, introduced<lb/>
three years ago, which<lb/>
continues to meet con<lb/>
su mer resistance.<lb/>
Record companies said<lb/>
the) needed the higher<lb/>
list price because unit<lb/>
manufacturing costs<lb/>
had gone up: since<lb/>
fewer records were be-<lb/>
ing shipped, fewer were<lb/>
being pressed, thus<lb/>
raising the cost per<lb/>
unit. Logical, but<lb/>
loathsome to con-<lb/>
sumers. Savs Russ<lb/>
Solomon, owner ot<lb/>
California's lowc<lb/>
Records retail chain:<lb/>
"We in the industr)<lb/>
have, by need and bv<lb/>
greed, raised the price<lb/>
of record- so high that<lb/>
the youngest group ot<lb/>
tans cannot afford<lb/>
them anymore. Those<lb/>
are the fans that sup-<lb/>
port the heavy hitters in<lb/>
rock &amp; roll ? the<lb/>
thirteen fourteen<lb/>
and fifteen-year-olds.<lb/>
They don't have as<lb/>
much money as thev us-<lb/>
ed to, and when<lb/>
everything they want to<lb/>
buy is eight or nine<lb/>
dollars, that's too<lb/>
much<lb/>
Jim Greenwood,<lb/>
owner ot the Fos<lb/>
Angeles-based licorice<lb/>
Pizza chain, agrees.<lb/>
Greenwood says his<lb/>
sales are generally<lb/>
down by only fifteen<lb/>
percent this year, "but<lb/>
the best sellers, the big<lb/>
artists, are down more<lb/>
than that EP's,<lb/>
however, are moving<lb/>
briskly. Greenwood<lb/>
says he is selling as<lb/>
many copies of the re-<lb/>
cent Missing Persons<lb/>
FP on Capitol, which<lb/>
lists for $5.98, as he<lb/>
sells of the new Fleet-<lb/>
wood Mac album.<lb/>
"The companies<lb/>
should release more<lb/>
$3.98 and $4.98 pro-<lb/>
duct. At $8.98, the<lb/>
sales aren't there<lb/>
And if the sales<lb/>
aren't there, retailers<lb/>
can't afford to keep a<lb/>
record around. Until<lb/>
the late Seventies, retail<lb/>
record outlets could<lb/>
essentially be capitaliz-<lb/>
ed by extended consign-<lb/>
ment credit from the<lb/>
record companies. The<lb/>
stores paid for their<lb/>
records as they sold<lb/>
them. With the rise ot<lb/>
interest rates into dou-<lb/>
ble digits, however, the<lb/>
c o m p a n i e s b e g a n<lb/>
demanding their money<lb/>
more quickly. Many<lb/>
retailers got caught in<lb/>
the crunch<lb/>
" Their insistence on<lb/>
payment within sixty<lb/>
days is so unrealistic it<lb/>
could put the industry<lb/>
out of existence says<lb/>
Ben Karol. "We have<lb/>
the facilities to expose<lb/>
whatever record the<lb/>
companies make, but<lb/>
we're not gonna pay<lb/>
for it before we sell it,<lb/>
and it's not gonna sell<lb/>
in sixtv davs. We're<lb/>
lucky if halj of it sells<lb/>
in that period. To say<lb/>
we have to pay that<lb/>
quickly is ludicrous.<lb/>
It's the greatest stumbl-<lb/>
ing block for exposing<lb/>
new acts. They all can<lb/>
make a profit if they'll<lb/>
get it through their<lb/>
heads that the record<lb/>
business doesn't<lb/>
operate like the meat<lb/>
business<lb/>
According to Karol,<lb/>
the major companies<lb/>
"got carried away with<lb/>
their big successes" in<lb/>
the mid-Seven ties,<lb/>
"and now we've got a<lb/>
lot of idiots running the<lb/>
record business. They<lb/>
are supplying absolute-<lb/>
ly no promotional sup-<lb/>
port anymore. All they<lb/>
say is 'Give us the<lb/>
money. We don't care<lb/>
about anything else,<lb/>
just give us the money<lb/>
It's like they don't care<lb/>
if the records sell or<lb/>
not, because they just<lb/>
won't support them<lb/>
anymore<lb/>
Another problem,<lb/>
according to CBS'<lb/>
Asher and others, is<lb/>
album-oriented radio.<lb/>
N ARM's Joe Cohen<lb/>
says it "must become<lb/>
far more exciting than<lb/>
it has been m the last<lb/>
year<lb/>
There are no quick-<lb/>
ti solutions to the<lb/>
record industry's pro-<lb/>
blems, but not<lb/>
everyone is panicked<lb/>
vet. Records and tapes<lb/>
aie still selling, after<lb/>
all. The Rolling Stones<lb/>
have two albums on the<lb/>
charts now, the .1. Ceils<lb/>
Band has sold over 3<lb/>
million copies of Us<lb/>
Freeze-trame I P. and<lb/>
the new Go-Go's<lb/>
album, iacation, sold<lb/>
600,000 copies in its<lb/>
first three weeks,<lb/>
foreigner is now up to<lb/>
6 million copies on its<lb/>
most recent album, ?.<lb/>
released late last vear.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 16<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
c ? FURTHER EXPENSt<lb/>
.10 P" ynncy Test. Birth<lb/>
ai uivm Preqnan<lb/>
cy Counseling For turthr- tnfor<lb/>
mation call 83: 0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 800 ?2i 2548) between 9<lb/>
A M and 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N C<lb/>
Art and ideas, ad-<lb/>
vertising layouts,<lb/>
attention-getting<lb/>
headingsall the<lb/>
elements ot quality<lb/>
advertising is at<lb/>
your serviceand<lb/>
3t no extra cost<lb/>
when you adver-<lb/>
tise with us! The<lb/>
Metro advantage<lb/>
means advertising<lb/>
to YOUR advantage)<lb/>
Nov. 24-Nov. 28, 1982<lb/>
Spend your Thanksgiving holiday in style on Broadway,<lb/>
at Macy's Parade, shopping, &amp; touring the city. Space is<lb/>
limited &amp; time is drawing near. For more info, contact<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
To advertise<lb/>
call 7576366<lb/>
HAPPY<lb/>
TUESDAY,<lb/>
LADIES!<lb/>
Announcing<lb/>
"LADIES' cfi<lb/>
NITE" '<lb/>
(Every Tuesday) a<lb/>
"The Four,<lb/>
Seasons"<lb/>
Featuring our<lb/>
House wine for 25C<lb/>
a glass for ail<lb/>
ladies between<lb/>
10-12 p.m.<lb/>
Also<lb/>
Daily Happ Hours<lb/>
4:30-6:30<lb/>
10:00-2:00<lb/>
301 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
(At the corner of 3rd St.<lb/>
and Evans Mall in<lb/>
basement of the<lb/>
Minges Bldg.)<lb/>
" Closed Sundays<lb/>
y Must be 21<lb/>
" ID. Requited<lb/>
752 546<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available lor sale at or<lb/>
below the advertised price m each A&amp;P Store except as specifically noted<lb/>
m this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT OCT. 9. AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
,?- P fc Pouin, Spec.ii ?SfW<lb/>
(LIMIT2PKGS)<lb/>
Fresh Fryer 8?Pkg<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
Leg Quarters<lb/>
or more<lb/>
lb<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE (20-26 LB. AVG.)<lb/>
Bottom &amp; Eye<lb/>
Round<lb/>
Cut Free!<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS BOTTOM<lb/>
Round Roast<lb/>
-98<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY FRESHLY<lb/>
Ground Chuck<lb/>
-J68<lb/>
3 lbs. or<lb/>
more<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
ALLGOOD<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
97c<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
pg<lb/>
RUDY FARMS<lb/>
Pork Sausage <lb/>
78<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
PATTIES ;<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
LINKS<lb/>
?2 oz<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
179<lb/>
189 Mb.<lb/>
1 Pkg<lb/>
1<lb/>
EFAR<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP SOLID ICEBERG<lb/>
large<lb/>
heads<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN<lb/>
PINK OR WHITE<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
.Grapefruit I Dole Bananas<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
II<lb/>
Groc,<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Sandwich Bread<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
24 oz.<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
2 liter<lb/>
plastic<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
79<lb/>
HOMESTYLE OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
Ann Page Biscuits<lb/>
4 k 790<lb/>
cans m ww<lb/>
?CPHi<lb/>
ICE CREAM PARLOR TASTE<lb/>
oGdltBSt Cream<lb/>
179<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 40<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 10 OZ. JAR<lb/>
MAXWELL HOUSE<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
'2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
Instant Coffee<lb/>
686<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT. OCT 9 AT A&amp;P<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 OROER<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON f? ?? I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
688 I<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. OCT 9 AT AAP f<lb/>
UNTT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 OROER ?<lb/>
SAVE 20?<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 1-LB. QTRS<lb/>
MRS. FILBERTS<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
-SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
!T<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 32 OZ.<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
'I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tomato Ketchup!<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 4 CT PKG<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Bath Tissue<lb/>
687<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT. OCT 9 AT A&amp;P<lb/>
UNIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 OROER<lb/>
PI<lb/>
I SAVER COUPON<lb/>
;v<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF GAL. CTN.<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
689<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT. OCT S AT AAP<lb/>
UMTf ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 50 OROER<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON?:<lb/>
SAVE20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 64 OZ. CAN<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Chunk Tuna wa,er<lb/>
690.<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT OCT. 9 AT A&amp;P f<lb/>
UMtT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER M <lb/>
691<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. OCT 9 AT AAP <lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 SO OROER<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL 1N1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 5, 1982 Page 1 2<lb/>
Mizzou's Final Rally Assures Win<lb/>
By CINDY PLEAS A NTS<lb/>
Saorlst-dllor<lb/>
If the people of Missouri didn't<lb/>
know where Hast Carolina was<lb/>
from, they certainly do now.<lb/>
The Pirates lost to Missouri, 28-9,<lb/>
but the score was no indication of<lb/>
how the Pirates played defensively.<lb/>
In an awesome snowing, ECU's<lb/>
defense held the Tigers to one<lb/>
touchdown and 102 yards rushing in<lb/>
the first two quarters of the game<lb/>
and was responsible for two in-<lb/>
terceptions and four quarterback<lb/>
sacks.<lb/>
The Pirate defense performed<lb/>
well, but the man of the hour was<lb/>
freshman sensation Jeff Heath. The<lb/>
soccer-style kicker booted a 45-yard<lb/>
field goal in the second quarter to<lb/>
put the Pirates ahead of the Tigers<lb/>
3-0. Heath went on to kick another<lb/>
38-and 42-yarder, scoring the team's<lb/>
only points against the Tigers.<lb/>
Now making his fourth game<lb/>
debut, Heath apparently hasn't had<lb/>
any difficulty adjusting from small<lb/>
hometown crowds to stadiums filled<lb/>
with over 50,000 people. "I just<lb/>
concentrated on following through<lb/>
when I went out there and I blocked<lb/>
everybody out Heath said. The<lb/>
former all-state kicker also wanted<lb/>
to give credit to the offensive line,<lb/>
his snapper, Whitley Wilkerson and<lb/>
holder, Greg Stewart.<lb/>
Stewart, who has been FC'U's<lb/>
number one quarterback in the last<lb/>
three games, suffered an asthma at-<lb/>
tack and was unable to play Satur-<lb/>
day. The loss of Stewart's throwing<lb/>
arm could definitely be seen on<lb/>
Missouri's Faurot Field, with the<lb/>
Pirates winding up with a mere 205<lb/>
yards in total offense. Head coach<lb/>
Ed Emory said that without Stewart<lb/>
in the ball game, the Pirates were<lb/>
unable to throw the ball well. "We<lb/>
needed to make the big plays on of-<lb/>
fense but never could ECU has<lb/>
rolled up 399 yards per game offen-<lb/>
sively, which ranked the team 28th<lb/>
in the Division I-A ranks last week.<lb/>
ECU's other quarterback, Kevin In-<lb/>
gram usually alternates with Stewart<lb/>
but had the chance to call all the<lb/>
signals against Missouri. Ingram,<lb/>
known for his running ability, com-<lb/>
pleted 7 of 17 passes for a total of 85<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Much to the Missouri fans' sur-<lb/>
prise, the Tigers led by only one<lb/>
point at halftime, 7-6. But the<lb/>
Tigers broke loose in the final half,<lb/>
taking advantage of a few key<lb/>
mistakes made by ECU in the third<lb/>
quarter. With the third, quarter<lb/>
just underway, a punt by Larry<lb/>
Brobst was blocked by Missouri<lb/>
noseguard James Lockette. Mizzou<lb/>
recovered on the 19-yard line and<lb/>
drove for a touchdown to boost the<lb/>
Tigers' lead, 14-6. "That blocked<lb/>
kick was the turning point in the<lb/>
game Emory said. "The third<lb/>
quarter made the difference<lb/>
Missouri kicker Todd Richmond<lb/>
attempted a 37-yard field goal in the<lb/>
last two quarters of the game but<lb/>
both went wide.<lb/>
In the final quarter, the Pirates<lb/>
made a valiant effort to come back<lb/>
with Curtis Wyatt recovering a fum-<lb/>
ble after Missouri's Rick Doby<lb/>
mishandled a 42-vard punt bv<lb/>
ECU's John Williams.<lb/>
The Pirates, however, didn't have<lb/>
possession for long. The Tigers<lb/>
drove to the goal line and Mizzou's<lb/>
freshman prize runningback Eric<lb/>
Drain ran for a two-yard<lb/>
touchdown when Brad Perrv dished<lb/>
pnoio By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Place-Kicker Jeff Heath follows through on 45-yard field goal.<lb/>
off to him. Now 21-9, ECU moved<lb/>
toward the endone once again, but<lb/>
a pass batted down by Missouri's<lb/>
Randy Jostes followed by a no gain<lb/>
play sent Williams in to punt.<lb/>
With only 2:35 remaining, Perry<lb/>
found Drain once again and the<lb/>
backfielder ran 59 yards down the<lb/>
right sideline for a touchdown.<lb/>
Outside the locker room after the<lb/>
game, Emory said there were three<lb/>
reasons whv the Pirates lost against<lb/>
the Missouri Tigers. "1 said before<lb/>
the game that we had to do three<lb/>
things to win he said. "One, our<lb/>
kicking game had to be sound, but<lb/>
we gave up the blocked punt, then<lb/>
had poor coverage and our kickoff<lb/>
returns were poor<lb/>
"Second, we had to keep from<lb/>
giving up the big play. We held'em,<lb/>
hit'em. but did gie up the big play.<lb/>
"Third, our offensive got stale.<lb/>
But they have a great defense, the<lb/>
best defense we've faced this year.<lb/>
They kept the pressure on us<lb/>
Emory was extremely pleased<lb/>
with the defense, especially since<lb/>
eight linebackers have been sidelin-<lb/>
ed, including ECU's leading tackier<lb/>
Ron Reid and defensive tackle Barry<lb/>
Smith. "Yes, the loss of eight<lb/>
linebackers, the top four today, had<lb/>
a great, great effect on our ability to<lb/>
have good pass coverage Emory<lb/>
said. "You take that many<lb/>
linebackers away from any team, no<lb/>
matter who they face, and you'll<lb/>
have major problems<lb/>
Defensive end Jody Schulz led in<lb/>
tackles with 14. Clint Harris, who<lb/>
had an interception in the first<lb/>
quarter of the game, placed second<lb/>
with 10 and Smokey Norns and Jeff<lb/>
Pegues had eight apiece. On<lb/>
Missouri's offensive players, Pegues<lb/>
said the Tigers were definitely big-<lb/>
ger, but were not as mobile as the<lb/>
other teams the Pirates have faced<lb/>
in the past. "Basically they were just<lb/>
a power offense he said, "that<lb/>
came straight at us<lb/>
Offensively, the Bucs missed<lb/>
freshman runningback Tony Baker,<lb/>
who was out with a sprained back.<lb/>
But another freshman Reggie<lb/>
Branch, Jimmy Walden and Ricky<lb/>
Nichols combined for 114 yards<lb/>
rushing. Nichols, who led in pass<lb/>
receiving with 43 yards, com-<lb/>
plimented the Missouri team on<lb/>
having a good defensive strategy.<lb/>
"They did a lot of switching around<lb/>
on defense and we just had to adjust<lb/>
to them<lb/>
When asked whether or not he<lb/>
was intimidated by the Big Eight<lb/>
football team, Nichols had an<lb/>
answer waiting. "No, not really and<lb/>
I don't think anv ot the rest of the<lb/>
guys were either<lb/>
After backlashes from the<lb/>
Missouri press, the Pirate should<lb/>
have left little doubt in the mine<lb/>
thousands of Missounans that H I<lb/>
can compete against a Big light<lb/>
team<lb/>
"I think thev know who we arc<lb/>
now Emory said, "1 think we<lb/>
definitely have the talent to plav in<lb/>
this league and we look forwa-<lb/>
coming back here Oct. 1 next vear<lb/>
ECU plays Richmond on Sal<lb/>
day at 7 p.m<lb/>
t arotmsMr ?<lb/>
12?o?n<lb/>
50-120- . <lb/>
10Pawing ? Rjetui<lb/>
17 0Pass.nii-<lb/>
9 38 4Pur<lb/>
4  '<lb/>
J WPrru<lb/>
l-avarotma?<lb/>
Mi?o?n? - u :?<lb/>
Scoring<lb/>
ECL - FG Hmh 44<lb/>
M Ba-K a ' - ? . .<lb/>
i ' - r-G Hraif.<lb/>
M 1 i-r-4 pas-fn rr Pen .  .<lb/>
Ed FCHril4;<lb/>
M DrainI R -<lb/>
M - r'iir.59 (R. .<lb/>
isdixdtiai StaaMei<lb/>
Rushing B I B'a - 1 " ?<lb/>
Nichols 1 14. S Ada- i . - -<lb/>
. . Draw ?" Ma -<lb/>
HrJvtrn ? 4 tdan ?-( I<lb/>
Passing - FCl Ingram " 0 1<lb/>
t. dlcr 3 4 -4<lb/>
Revci ng I N - <lb/>
M Caver 6-71 tHomas 5-83 M ? -<lb/>
snjcr. i 5 tbiei : '?<lb/>
4.1'fnaanvr 141<lb/>
All<lb/>
Thirti<lb/>
betwi<lb/>
one fi<lb/>
7<lb/>
Hungry Tigers Kept Eyes On Tasty Pirates<lb/>
By CINDY PLEAS A NTS<lb/>
Sports r dilor<lb/>
"THE EYE OF THE TIGER<lb/>
That's what Missouri had when they<lb/>
met the Pirates Saturdav afternoon<lb/>
at Faurot field, especially after be-<lb/>
ing shut out at Texas, 21-0, the<lb/>
previous week.<lb/>
The Tigers, however, weren't see-<lb/>
ing too well in the firs' I alt. The<lb/>
Pirates, led by defensive ends Jody<lb/>
Schulz and Jeff Pegues, blinded<lb/>
Missouri's offense, holding the<lb/>
Tigers to 102 yards rushing in the<lb/>
first half while the Bucs racked up<lb/>
130 yards. Mizzou coach Warren<lb/>
Powers was aware of ECU's<lb/>
nationally-ranked defense, but was<lb/>
a little surprised by how well the<lb/>
Pirates executed against a Big Eight<lb/>
football team.<lb/>
"I thought we could pass on<lb/>
them he said. "They gave us some<lb/>
problems, stacking up the center, so<lb/>
we went outside. We planned to<lb/>
throw dropbacks on them and we<lb/>
did that pretty well<lb/>
The Tigers didn't score until mid-<lb/>
way through the second quarter<lb/>
when Missouri runningback Santio<lb/>
Barbosa flipped over an ECU defen-<lb/>
sive player's back into the endzone.<lb/>
Todd Richmond kicked for the ex-<lb/>
tra point to put the Tigers ahead,<lb/>
7-3.<lb/>
Missouri definitely had trouble<lb/>
moving the ball in the first two<lb/>
quarters of play. At the half,<lb/>
Missouri led by a single point, 7-6.<lb/>
On offense, Missouri also alter-<lb/>
nated quarterbacks with Marlon<lb/>
Adler and Perry splitting time.<lb/>
Then one of the Tigers actually did<lb/>
have trouble seeing against the<lb/>
Pirates. Adler suffered a concus-<lb/>
sion and a possibly a damaged retna<lb/>
in the second quarter of the game.<lb/>
Missouri's number one quarterback<lb/>
was constantly hampered by ECU's<lb/>
Schulz, who sacked Adler in the<lb/>
first quarter for a loss of six yards<lb/>
on the play. "Marlon started seeing<lb/>
double en the sidelines and that's<lb/>
why Brad Perry came in<lb/>
Perry, a 6-2, 204-pound junior,<lb/>
completed eight out of twelve passes<lb/>
in the first half for 95 yards. Adler<lb/>
was four-for-five for a total of 34<lb/>
yards passing.<lb/>
Under the direction of Perry, the<lb/>
Tigers scored three more<lb/>
touchdowns in the second half.<lb/>
With 10:23 left in the third quarter.<lb/>
Perry threw a four-yard pass to split<lb/>
end James Caver, who was standing<lb/>
in the endzone. In the fourth, Perry<lb/>
found full back Eric Drain who ran<lb/>
two yards for another TD and with<lb/>
1:50 second remaining, Perry again<lb/>
passed off to Drain who ran down<lb/>
the right sideline for a 59-yard<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
"I thought he (Perry) did a real<lb/>
good job Powers said. "It's nice<lb/>
to have someone who doesn't get<lb/>
nervous wno's been in the big bat-<lb/>
tles before, and we didn't have to<lb/>
adjust our game plan at all<lb/>
In the second half, Missouri<lb/>
began moving the ball better. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Powers, the real turning<lb/>
point in the game for the Tigers was<lb/>
after Heath kicked a 42-yard field<lb/>
goal at the beginning of the fourth<lb/>
quarter. "Coming off a tight game<lb/>
(at Texas), they were a little low in<lb/>
confidence. After their field goal<lb/>
that made it 14-9, that drive(MU),<lb/>
really picked them (offensive line)<lb/>
up Caver ran for a 16-yard pick-<lb/>
up after Heath's field goal.<lb/>
In final statistics, the main dif-<lb/>
ference between ECU and Missouri<lb/>
was the passing game. The Tigers<lb/>
completed 19 of 27 passes for a total<lb/>
of 210 yards. The Pirates finished<lb/>
with 85 passing yards, and 7 out of<lb/>
17 pass completions. Greg Stewart,<lb/>
ECU's passing quarterback, was<lb/>
unable to play due to sickness.<lb/>
Missouri was ranked tenth na-<lb/>
tionally in passing offense last week,<lb/>
with a 267-yard average. Tiger QB<lb/>
Adler was also tenth in passing effi-<lb/>
ciency with a 146.9 rating and six-<lb/>
teenth in total offense with 215.7<lb/>
yards per game. Adler was four-<lb/>
for-five for a 95-yard gain before he<lb/>
was injured in the game. Perry took<lb/>
over, completing 8 of 12 attempts<lb/>
for 95 yards.<lb/>
Adler and Perry connected with<lb/>
receivers like split end senior James<lb/>
Caver and freshman runningback<lb/>
Santio Barbosa. Barbosa had 73<lb/>
yards rushing in the first half and a<lb/>
touchdown. Caver wound up with<lb/>
78 yards receiving and 5-11,<lb/>
182-pound split end Curtland<lb/>
Thomas led the Tigers with 82 yards<lb/>
on five carries.<lb/>
Defensively, Missouri's Jay<lb/>
Wilson and Randy Jostes headed<lb/>
the most tackles list. Wilson, a 6-3,<lb/>
209-pound junior, had 14 tackles<lb/>
while Jostes, a 6-5, 257-pound<lb/>
senior, finished with nine.<lb/>
Mizzou's senior noseguard James<lb/>
Lockette probably made the biggest<lb/>
play of the game in the third quarter<lb/>
when he blocked a punt by ECU's<lb/>
Larry Brobst. The Tigers recovered<lb/>
on the 19-yard line and went on to<lb/>
score a touchdown.<lb/>
In total offense, the Tigers ended<lb/>
up with 414 yards, which was short<lb/>
of the 467-yard average they have<lb/>
achieved so far this season. Missouri<lb/>
had 23 first downs to ECU's 12, a<lb/>
44.0 punting average, and called 76<lb/>
offensive plays.<lb/>
After a disappointing loss, head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory congratulated the<lb/>
Tigers for a job well done. "1 con-<lb/>
gratulate Missouri on a fine win<lb/>
he said. "Missouri is good, but our<lb/>
players are very, very disappointed.<lb/>
We really thought we could win<lb/>
Powers praised the Pirates for a<lb/>
good game plan. "They had a big,<lb/>
strong offensive line and they came<lb/>
at our defense pretty good he<lb/>
said, "In the second half, we put<lb/>
more heat on them and finally got to<lb/>
him (Ingram).<lb/>
? -EtunonT<lb/>
rf?ottj Bv DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Jodv Schulz and Company Sack Missouri Quarterback.<lb/>
Travelling Pirates Handle MU<lb/>
Insults With The Utmost Ease<lb/>
ECU Pirates Board Plane For Game in Missouri.<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
The ECU football players, along<lb/>
with a few Pirate fans and media<lb/>
people, landed at the Missouri air-<lb/>
port around 6:30 p.m. on Friday<lb/>
Oct. .<lb/>
When arriving at the Hilton Inn,<lb/>
the East Carolina clan immediately<lb/>
noticed that many Missourians were<lb/>
wearing bright yellow buttons on<lb/>
their chests, with the following<lb/>
slogan in bold, black letters:<lb/>
"Where in the hell is East<lb/>
Carolina?" A few Pirates, who were<lb/>
lucky enough to get their hands on a<lb/>
button, wore them proudly and just<lb/>
dared anyone to say something to<lb/>
them about the whereabouts of East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the game officials<lb/>
and the radio hosts couldn't even<lb/>
get the name right either. Head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory said, "The referees<lb/>
didn't even know who was playing.<lb/>
They kept calling us 'Eastern<lb/>
Carolina We're not Eastern<lb/>
Carolina, we're East Carolina<lb/>
The radio hosts finally got it<lb/>
straight by the second half of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Even Mizzou's souveoier football<lb/>
magazine insulted ECU. On the<lb/>
cover, a Pirate dressed in all the ap-<lb/>
propriate garb had just been trampl-<lb/>
ed by Missouri's marching band.<lb/>
That was the straw that broke the<lb/>
camel's back.<lb/>
The Missouri press, along with<lb/>
the 50,848 fans who attended the<lb/>
game were somewhat amazed by the<lb/>
Pirates first debut in Missouri and<lb/>
were downright scared when the<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Bucs trailed by only one point at<lb/>
halftime. At this point, Emory said<lb/>
he was feeling very optimistic. "I<lb/>
really thought the difference in the<lb/>
baligame would be a field goal he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Meanwhile, up in the press box,<lb/>
Missouri writers were ranting and<lb/>
raving about the Pirates' defense.<lb/>
After all, they had heard so much<lb/>
about ECU's defense. One thinc's<lb/>
for sure, they must have been think-<lb/>
ing about the possibility of having<lb/>
to eat a few words?written words.<lb/>
that is, that they had previouslv<lb/>
written.<lb/>
Despite the biting words the press<lb/>
printed in Columbia, St. I ouis, and<lb/>
Kansas City, the football plavers<lb/>
were poised during the entire trip.<lb/>
Ah, the marking of a true Pirate<lb/>
But 1 must get in one last parting<lb/>
shot. Does anyone reallv know<lb/>
where Columbia is?<lb/>
The Pirates take on the University<lb/>
of Richmond at Ficklen Stadium on<lb/>
Saturday. The Pirates beat the<lb/>
Spiders, 17-13 last year when Jody<lb/>
Schulz set up both Pirate<lb/>
touchdowns in the fourth quarter<lb/>
with a 24-yard interception return<lb/>
and a 26-yard return of a field goal<lb/>
attempt blocked by corncrback<lb/>
Gerald Sykes. What is ECU defen-<lb/>
sive end Jeff Pegues prediction for<lb/>
this year's game? "Its gonna be<lb/>
just like the other games we've<lb/>
played he said. "It's gonna be a<lb/>
war<lb/>
Dai<lb/>
1<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0012"/><lb/>
he<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN OCTOBER 5, 1982<lb/>
13<lb/>
v<lb/>
?i<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
le<lb/>
:eten<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
rtna be<lb/>
we've<lb/>
a be a<lb/>
Braves Capture Championship<lb/>
ATLANTA (UP1)<lb/>
Thirteen years elapsed<lb/>
between the Atlanta<lb/>
Braves two division<lb/>
championships, but<lb/>
one thing remained the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
Down the stretch,<lb/>
when it counted the<lb/>
most. Phil Niekro was<lb/>
the Braves' "money"<lb/>
pitcher.<lb/>
Just as he did in<lb/>
14, the mflappable<lb/>
knuckleballer. now 43<lb/>
years old. closed<lb/>
strong. Thai year, he<lb/>
had five oi his 23 vic-<lb/>
tories m September and<lb/>
the Braves, who grab<lb/>
the lead for keeps with<lb/>
nine games to play,<lb/>
beat runnerup San<lb/>
Francisco by three<lb/>
games in the first<lb/>
season of divisional<lb/>
play<lb/>
Niekro, winding up<lb/>
17-4, the best won-lost<lb/>
record in the majors in<lb/>
his 19th season with the<lb/>
Braves, closed with two<lb/>
straight shutouts this<lb/>
time, blanking Los<lb/>
Angeles on just two<lb/>
hits, then doing the<lb/>
same to San Diego with<lb/>
a three-hitter.<lb/>
Niekro is the only ac-<lb/>
tive Braves player who<lb/>
was on that '69 team<lb/>
which lost in three<lb/>
straight in a playoff<lb/>
against the New York<lb/>
Mets who went on to<lb/>
win the World Series.<lb/>
The Braves went into<lb/>
deep hibernation after<lb/>
that one division title -<lb/>
never coming close<lb/>
again until this season,<lb/>
and Niekro had to<lb/>
wonder if he'd ever<lb/>
have a chance to plav in<lb/>
a World Series.<lb/>
So little wonder he<lb/>
was the one who ap-<lb/>
peared most emotional<lb/>
when the Braves,<lb/>
despite a closing loss at<lb/>
San Diego, won the<lb/>
division championship<lb/>
when the Dodgers, one<lb/>
game behind, lost at<lb/>
San Francisco.<lb/>
"This is what I've<lb/>
been waiting for all<lb/>
these years said<lb/>
Niekro. "This is why<lb/>
I'm still in baseball. It's<lb/>
been worth the wait<lb/>
Joe Torre, who<lb/>
returned this season as<lb/>
manager, had been a<lb/>
teammate of Niekro for<lb/>
five years but wasn't on<lb/>
the '69 Braves, having<lb/>
been traded to St.<lb/>
Louis in the off season.<lb/>
In his place on that<lb/>
division winning club<lb/>
was first baseman<lb/>
Orlando Coeda who<lb/>
hit only .257 but had 22<lb/>
home runs and 88 rbi.<lb/>
The '69 Braves had<lb/>
Hank Aaron (44<lb/>
homers), Rico Carty<lb/>
(.342 average), Felipe<lb/>
Alou and Tony Gon-<lb/>
zalez in the outfield;<lb/>
Clete Boyer at third,<lb/>
Felix Millan at second;<lb/>
Gil Garrido and present<lb/>
Braves coach Sonny<lb/>
Jackson sharing short;<lb/>
and a rookie named<lb/>
Bob Didier catching.<lb/>
The top pitchers on<lb/>
that team were Niekro<lb/>
(23-13); Ron Reed<lb/>
(18-10); who is still in<lb/>
the league but pitching<lb/>
for Philadelphia;<lb/>
George Stone (13-10);<lb/>
and Pa Jarvis (13-11),<lb/>
now the sheriff of near-<lb/>
by DeKalb County<lb/>
(Cia.).<lb/>
This year's team,<lb/>
with no .300 hitter and<lb/>
Niekro its only consis-<lb/>
tent winning pitcher,<lb/>
lost four more games<lb/>
than the '69 team, but<lb/>
attracted a lot more at-<lb/>
tention.<lb/>
There was little ex-<lb/>
citement when the<lb/>
Braves won the Na-<lb/>
tional League West 13<lb/>
years ago, partially<lb/>
because it was the first<lb/>
year of divisional play<lb/>
and partially because<lb/>
few realized it would be<lb/>
so long before it hap-<lb/>
pened again.<lb/>
Also, this year's<lb/>
team had its fans feel-<lb/>
ing like they were on a<lb/>
roller coaster ride.<lb/>
"We can't let up<lb/>
now said Niekro.<lb/>
"Just winning the divi-<lb/>
sion championship<lb/>
won't be enough. We<lb/>
want the National<lb/>
League pennant, then<lb/>
the World Series.<lb/>
That's what these next<lb/>
two weeks are all<lb/>
about<lb/>
Niekro, who joined<lb/>
the Braves farm system<lb/>
in 1959, the very next<lb/>
year after the Braves<lb/>
last played in a World<lb/>
Series, shares the blame<lb/>
for the Braves failure to<lb/>
get past the National<lb/>
League playoff in '69.<lb/>
He started the first<lb/>
game, gave up nine<lb/>
runs in eight innings,<lb/>
and the Mets went on<lb/>
to a 9-5, 11-6, 7-4<lb/>
sweep.<lb/>
Two Star Recruits Reunited as Pirates<lb/>
R HOKU K<lb/>
McCORMACK<lb/>
Sports i"1,1 flllr<lb/>
e are carefully<lb/>
tec I e d and<lb/>
d upon bv col-<lb/>
.iinters as it they<lb/>
were precious uncut<lb/>
gems Once chosen.<lb/>
sy are polished if the<lb/>
sntial to shine is<lb/>
; u! it it is lack-<lb/>
and of course.<lb/>
from the less<lb/>
H gems, their<lb/>
former teammates.<lb/>
1 hese standouts are the<lb/>
college football<lb/>
recruits.<lb/>
Two years ago, while<lb/>
in high school. Last<lb/>
Carolina's 6-2,<lb/>
223-pound linebacker<lb/>
P.J. Jordan and 6-3,<lb/>
210-pound split-end<lb/>
Damon Pope found<lb/>
themselves in this<lb/>
quarry of recruits. But<lb/>
no college, from the<lb/>
Georgia Bulldogs to the<lb/>
Big Ten schools, could<lb/>
break the inseperble<lb/>
bond between these two<lb/>
former recruits. As<lb/>
high school recruits,<lb/>
they found nearly every<lb/>
football honor possible<lb/>
following their names<lb/>
in the state's<lb/>
newspapers. Im-<lb/>
mediately, Jordan and<lb/>
Pope began to shine.<lb/>
P.J. Jordan and<lb/>
Damon Pope came<lb/>
from Clark Central, a<lb/>
high school ranked<lb/>
number two nationally<lb/>
their senior year, and<lb/>
nowhere else but in<lb/>
Athens, Georgia, home<lb/>
oi Herschel Walker's<lb/>
Georgia Bulldogs. They<lb/>
were raised in a city<lb/>
that praises the pigskin<lb/>
as if it were religion.<lb/>
"In Athens, football<lb/>
seemed to be year-<lb/>
round said Jordan.<lb/>
"It had to be in order<lb/>
to preserve the high<lb/>
standards of Georgia<lb/>
football in our high<lb/>
school<lb/>
During their stay at<lb/>
Clark Central, P.J. and<lb/>
Damon became ex-<lb/>
tremely close friends<lb/>
both on and off the<lb/>
field. "We developed<lb/>
great respect for each<lb/>
other. P.J. gave me<lb/>
confidence when 1 was<lb/>
down stated Damon.<lb/>
"And he did the same<lb/>
tor me added Jor-<lb/>
dan. While being<lb/>
recruited, they both<lb/>
thought the "good<lb/>
times" would end.<lb/>
They never anticipated<lb/>
being roommates for<lb/>
the next four-years. But<lb/>
the friendship proved<lb/>
to be thicker than all of<lb/>
-tfce pfomises of per<lb/>
s u as i v e college<lb/>
recruiters, except for<lb/>
ECU's of course.<lb/>
P.J. and Damon<lb/>
desired a change from<lb/>
the disadvantages that<lb/>
accompany being from<lb/>
a large, football<lb/>
oriented city. "That's<lb/>
one reason why we<lb/>
chose ECU states<lb/>
Jordan, as Pope affir-<lb/>
mingly nods his head.<lb/>
"We were constantly<lb/>
exposed to large city<lb/>
football. Even our<lb/>
mothers worked for the<lb/>
University of Georgia.<lb/>
We saw ECU as<lb/>
somewhat of a refuge<lb/>
tOsjust relax and enjoy<lb/>
playing football<lb/>
After one year,<lb/>
roommates Damon<lb/>
Pope and P.J. Jordan<lb/>
are now sophomores at<lb/>
ECU and still as tight<lb/>
as uncut gems. "We are<lb/>
still as close as ever<lb/>
said Jordan. "We've<lb/>
been through some<lb/>
tough times, adjusting<lb/>
Damon Pope<lb/>
P.J. Jordan<lb/>
to college life and in-<lb/>
juries. Sometimes 1<lb/>
may not feel like going<lb/>
to class because I'm<lb/>
sore or bruised from<lb/>
practice. But Damon is<lb/>
there to give me en-<lb/>
couragement I need,<lb/>
and I go despite the<lb/>
bruises. We give each<lb/>
other support we could<lb/>
only get from our<lb/>
famiilies<lb/>
"Coping with college<lb/>
football is very dif-<lb/>
ferent from high school<lb/>
football, not just cop-<lb/>
ing with bigger and<lb/>
stronger players, but<lb/>
academics stated<lb/>
Pope.<lb/>
"We are both the<lb/>
first in our families to<lb/>
go to college, and we<lb/>
never forget it. Our<lb/>
parents did a lot to get<lb/>
us here and we take a<lb/>
great deal of pride in<lb/>
pleasing them<lb/>
academically as well as<lb/>
on the field added<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
"We came here with<lb/>
our minds filled with<lb/>
just football stated<lb/>
Pope. "Although we<lb/>
still appreciate it, we<lb/>
stress our academics<lb/>
even more. All college<lb/>
players dream of that<lb/>
day with the NFL, but<lb/>
P.J. and I dream more<lb/>
about the day we get<lb/>
our degrees<lb/>
"I just wish that<lb/>
more high school<lb/>
recruits would open<lb/>
their eyes to the impor-<lb/>
tance of the books<lb/>
said Jordan. "Both<lb/>
players realize that the<lb/>
biggest asset to suc-<lb/>
ceeding as a college<lb/>
player is not how much<lb/>
weight you can lift, nor<lb/>
how many solo tackles<lb/>
you average, but how<lb/>
wed you tackle the<lb/>
books<lb/>
Nevertheless, neither<lb/>
Pope nor Jordan has<lb/>
forgotten that they are<lb/>
here to play football.<lb/>
Jordan had his first<lb/>
start at linebacker in<lb/>
the N.C. State game,<lb/>
ECU's season opener,<lb/>
holding the Wolfpack<lb/>
to only 97 yards<lb/>
rushing. Although he<lb/>
had to miss the East<lb/>
Tennessee State game<lb/>
to weather a shoulder<lb/>
injury, Jordan returned<lb/>
two weeks ago against<lb/>
Central Michigan, in-<lb/>
troducing himself with<lb/>
an interception.<lb/>
The coaching staff<lb/>
also has some impor-<lb/>
tant plans for Pope.<lb/>
"He's a hard worker,<lb/>
not just with a football,<lb/>
but with anything he<lb/>
sets out to do. He's one<lb/>
of our most talented<lb/>
athletes and in-<lb/>
dividuals said assis-<lb/>
tant coach Ricky Bus-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
Inseperable Damon<lb/>
Pope and P.L Jordan,<lb/>
a year ago raw gems to<lb/>
eager, prospecting col-<lb/>
lege scouts panning the<lb/>
country for athletes,<lb/>
are now being molded<lb/>
and polished as promis-<lb/>
ing future starters and<lb/>
future graduates of<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
KATZ<lb/>
proudly presents<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHT<lb/>
TheCATALINAS<lb/>
One of the best bands<lb/>
to come to the<lb/>
Green ville A rea.<lb/>
Pfcoto By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU Rugby Team In Action<lb/>
PEP<lb/>
RALLY<lb/>
at Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 7<lb/>
Ed Emory &amp;<lb/>
members of<lb/>
Football Team<lb/>
E.C.U. Cheerleaders<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
E.C.U. Band<lb/>
Drawing for Prizes<lb/>
donated by Pitt Plaza Merchants<lb/>
FREE PEPSI &amp; PEPSI T-SHIRTS<lb/>
WHILE THEY LAST<lb/>
For members &amp;<lb/>
Their Guests Only<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0013"/><lb/>
u<lb/>
1 ill<lb/>
i W<lb/>
i H loHl-K 5 , 1982<lb/>
Wine hell Leads Hooters<lb/>
 Kl HOI KIN<lb/>
-i .in<lb/>
1 he I<lb/>
an<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
Doi<lb/>
er a<lb/>
tatch<lb/>
da aftei<lb/>
del tted<lb/>
V<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
was ?-<lb/>
tie sa<lb/>
ht<lb/>
, . <lb/>
ran it's record to 4-3<lb/>
v lule Guilford dropped<lb/>
to 4 6 1 Foi Guilford,<lb/>
ill three goals were<lb/>
ei scored by Robert 1 a<lb/>
ECl goalie loin<lb/>
Rechnei recorded 10<lb/>
saves as Guilford took<lb/>
12 shots-on-goal as<lb/>
compai ed to ECl ls 24.<lb/>
 f lei consecutive<lb/>
 ictoi ies on ei Elon Col-<lb/>
ted lege, Virginia Wesleyan<lb/>
by scoi and Guilford, the<lb/>
Mso Pirates will now pla<lb/>
l 1 what Church calls "the<lb/>
biggest match ol the<lb/>
A eai w her, c ampbell<lb/>
College comes to<lb/>
c ireenville w ednesday<lb/>
afternoon at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
1 he Camels, ?ho<lb/>
ted curi enth boast a record<lb/>
of 5-3, ait always one<lb/>
ofl . ? the strongest teams<lb/>
'W( ??' ; he south, according<lb/>
. ai i Inn eh 1 his year is<lb/>
 t exct ption as Camp-<lb/>
is now the th-<lb/>
anked team m the<lb/>
vampbell I nivei<lb/>
? . , ? 1- taken<lb/>
? ;ei iousl. Since<lb/>
the do not have a tool-<lb/>
ball team, the students<lb/>
are active participants<lb/>
m the soccei program.<lb/>
1 he Camels usually<lb/>
draw anywhere from<lb/>
l(XX) to 1 500 spectators<lb/>
for each match.<lb/>
As an incentive, the<lb/>
Pirates will have a<lb/>
revenge motive going<lb/>
into the Campbell<lb/>
match. I ast yeai. I?( 'U<lb/>
was deteated In the<lb/>
Camels 3-1. Coach<lb/>
Church and the test ol<lb/>
the team hope to have a<lb/>
good crowd as this will<lb/>
be a big match foi the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
s Church puts it.<lb/>
the team is playing the<lb/>
best that the can, but<lb/>
they need to tighten up<lb/>
a little bit on defense<lb/>
"To beat a quality<lb/>
'earn like Campbell, we<lb/>
can't give them any<lb/>
goals Church said<lb/>
" I his is a good c hance<lb/>
for the tans to see some<lb/>
real hard nosed sot,<lb/>
cer<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PKRsr <lb/>
s<lb/>
KORJsAI.I-<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
 UOOWM41ES needed<lb/>
? . ?  blocks from<lb/>
175 (X ?' nth Can Bun<lb/>
. ??? W t 13th SI<lb/>
ViIE NEED<lb/>
bedroom nouse on<lb/>
I bloct ifom can:<lb/>
. lies Can or<lb/>
51 7i8 'e?4<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
? sS ON AL T ,pn' wants to<lb/>
type a' hom ??asonabie rates<lb/>
. <lb/>
f<lb/>
ice<lb/>
4?a ??. ctk IBM<lb/>
C a unif Shive<lb/>
II 'S6 1061<lb/>
? RM apt ? I ? iom? s<lb/>
I '2733<lb/>
EH VICES Reiumi s<lb/>
esearcli papers etc M s<lb/>
??? I tt A son Phon<lb/>
 YWS Spinq ' easonabie i ate.<lb/>
q rimctua'ion and qram<lb/>
Prool<lb/>
p m 1 s s Ht,&amp;<lb/>
s SPANISH avaiiablt<lb/>
 n a 1 ?? pta<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING K istl<lb/>
iobs done Scientific notations ha<lb/>
element available Good ran s<lb/>
Call 7S8 6917<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
FOUt ? ?<lb/>
restauran' I jc .<lb/>
Bulova atcn i:q- ? ? d<lb/>
Great sentimenta  K<lb/>
Call tse 7903 a-id as? ?<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
BASS PLAYER wanted '<lb/>
hme c"nmporarv Countr,<lb/>
Band Band has nv<lb/>
inqs and Ma, . ib s q. r 1<lb/>
air piav Serious i mp U '<lb/>
ctans on.y Can ' .e -<lb/>
p m<lb/>
INTERESTED In lot<lb/>
1 ? ? n physics<lb/>
phr iC S ,r C ' ?<lb/>
rour Crf 464<lb/>
.?ninqt,<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
HIDE NE EDE D t<lb/>
D hi. Car ? a - ?<lb/>
Thurs 'in<lb/>
n7<lb/>
ulr1 i ki,<lb/>
pttOHG cupper<lb/>
Hair buion Unisex<lb/>
? ?. ?? n<lb/>
in ? ??- hLU students<lb/>
as our customers, we are looking<lb/>
ring 1 . our every hair care need<lb/>
'? ? :  i jemand certain stv Ies<lb/>
? "? ?'UPPfcR is accustomed to domq<lb/>
' jes &amp; I hurs nights till 9 30 p m<lb/>
forappoM rment at 7 8 I 505<lb/>
A H'Jrr '<lb/>
f<lb/>
Ingram pitches out during Missouri game.<lb/>
Volleyball Team Places Fifth In Tourney<lb/>
MC kl s<lb/>
- il w<lb/>
In this weekend's<lb/>
t si i ai Iina las<lb/>
e ECl lad P rates<lb/>
? olleyba tm proved<lb/>
ould " : te s 11 h<lb/>
. name schools. I h<lb/>
loin nameni. w hit. h wis<lb/>
Id .it the : <lb/>
o Si ' ? na, co n<lb/>
? la with<lb/>
!I linishine : HI<lb/>
1 he toui nament was<lb/>
divided into two days<lb/>
ol pool pla In I.<lb/>
da 's ai tion, I he I adv<lb/>
Pirates defeated<lb/>
M ississippi State 15-9,<lb/>
7-15, 15-5; Francis<lb/>
Marion 15-11, 15-12;<lb/>
and College ol<lb/>
Charleston 15-6, 15-12.<lb/>
I c L's onl loss on Ft<lb/>
da was to Georgia<lb/>
8-15, 15-11, 8-15.<lb/>
Davidson was pleased before losing to the them<lb/>
with the team's pertor Lads Tigers 15-10,<lb/>
mance aftei Friday's 5-15, 10-15. After the<lb/>
pool pi ?? ? 'Overall, we C lemson mauh, coach<lb/>
played prettv well1 she Davidson ?a impre<lb/>
said "We beat the ed with the team's per-<lb/>
Hea<lb/>
? a<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 111;<lb/>
team wc were suppos-<lb/>
' ? beat and gave<lb/>
Ge i gia a fod<lb/>
match<lb/>
In Saturday's action.<lb/>
1 c I went up agamst<lb/>
pi iwerful ('lemson and<lb/>
got ott to an early lead<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"We came out and<lb/>
lumped on them in the<lb/>
first game ated<lb/>
Davidson. "In the se-<lb/>
cond game, theii ol<lb/>
fense reallv ? i and<lb/>
we couldn't<lb/>
Da<lb/>
plimeni<lb/>
put fort<lb/>
Irv, 1<lb/>
tain s<lb/>
Diane I<lb/>
nan 1<lb/>
tournan<lb/>
The 1 ad<lb/>
?<lb/>
Col<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ruesdav. Oct. 5. 1982<lb/>
9:00 'lil 2:00<lb/>
0k I"7.ilSis's<lb/>
presen t<lb/>
Male<lb/>
Best Bodd<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
Admission SI.00<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
1st $100<lb/>
2nd $50<lb/>
3rd $25<lb/>
Plus a years free<lb/>
pass to the Elbo<lb/>
Plus a year's free<lb/>
pass to the Elbo<lb/>
Plus a year's free<lb/>
pass to The Elbo<lb/>
SPONSORED BY:<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PTA<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
HODGES SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
TODD'S STEREO<lb/>
MARATHON RESTAURANT<lb/>
TREEHOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
Come<lb/>
Early<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are <lb/>
ov Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
deliver costs in (he price ?<lb/>
P. ha changed all (hat!<lb/>
, p We sell our delivery<lb/>
izas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
I<lb/>
STROH'S<lb/>
presents<lb/>
a<lb/>
PI<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
ie FREE I)rinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY IS TODAY! <lb/>
6 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
THE PHANTOM FORECASTER<lb/>
(the most accurate college football prediction sheet available)<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Available I lbL at the<lb/>
following locations:<lb/>
Hodges<lb/>
Bonds<lb/>
Archie's Steaks<lb/>
Pantana Bobs<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Heart s Delight<lb/>
U.B.E<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Mr Gatti's<lb/>
Arcade Variety<lb/>
Apple Record<lb/>
AccuCopy<lb/>
Sharpe's<lb/>
Varsity Barber Shop<lb/>
Sandwich Game<lb/>
Friendly Eating House<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Puza Transit Authority<lb/>
Ladies ? Meet<lb/>
ECUs Finest<lb/>
Thursday Oct. 7th<lb/>
7-9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
FREE dmi?.sion<lb/>
FREE BEER<lb/>
ECU I.I). Required<lb/>
?net a ??. ?4a??????.?&amp; ,a-1<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIANS COUPON<lb/>
S<lb/>
i This coupon mus'<lb/>
accompany order<lb/>
12<lb/>
Off Complete<lb/>
Eye Glasses With E,<lb/>
This Coupon Oct 30<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
all non-sale<lb/>
items to ECU Students<lb/>
Fifing in ad &amp; student I D<lb/>
30<lb/>
DISCOUNT ON<lb/>
B&amp; LRAYBAN<lb/>
SUNGLASSES<lb/>
(WITH G 15 LENSES)<lb/>
fc?M<lb/>
VUE<lb/>
 5 FOR ? N<lb/>
EXAMINA1 H WITH 1<lb/>
RCH<lb/>
plicians CS<lb/>
315 PARK VIEW COMMONS<lb/>
ACROSS FROM DOCTORS PAR<lb/>
f52<lb/>
OPES - - V ' . ? V<lb/>
M <lb/>
C a?E ? ac )c c 4cc Hi c : c c csjc ?c c c c sjc $<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY ? ECl DORMS&amp;HOSPH I<lb/>
FOR TAKE OUT CALL: 757-1701<lb/>
&amp;,<lb/>
v-<lb/>
Eating House<lb/>
All you can eat ?<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Meatsauce<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Oct.4-Oct. 11<lb/>
7 days a week<lb/>
SunWed 11 a.m11 p.m.<lb/>
ThursSat. 11 a.m2 a.m.<lb/>
507 E. 14th Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0014"/><lb/>
3tye !EaBt (Eawlintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, c?w???<lb/>
Mike Hughes, &amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
WAVERLY MERR1TT, unaoroj MwrW? ClNDY PLEASANTS, s,u.m Ld??r<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ?U1,? mmm Greg Rideout, ? &amp;,?,<lb/>
Ai i Afrashteh, cm? vu,r Steve Bachner. tn(,?u???,?,t(??,<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. cmmmmir Juliana Fahrbach, &amp;&amp;,<lb/>
JONl GUTHRIE, fnftimuif "tonmiiiiii MlKE DAVIS, Products Mnmrti<lb/>
October 5, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Racial Injustice<lb/>
Alive And Well 20 Years Later<lb/>
Twenty years ago, most of us<lb/>
were far more concerned with walk-<lb/>
ing and talking than the events of<lb/>
our turbulent nation and world.<lb/>
Rolling in the safety of our cribs, we<lb/>
were practically oblivious to the fact<lb/>
that "the last battle of the civil<lb/>
war" was being fought in Mississip-<lb/>
pi.<lb/>
Little did we know at that time<lb/>
that a young black man named<lb/>
James Meredith was etching his<lb/>
name in our history books. Little<lb/>
did we know the changes that<lb/>
awaited us in our lifetimes.<lb/>
Like the classical American hero,<lb/>
Meredith had fought the uphill bat-<lb/>
tle against a seemingly-<lb/>
insurmountable foe, the United<lb/>
States government, and won. But<lb/>
unlike the typical hero of our<lb/>
childhood, Meredith's victory was<lb/>
not without bloodshed. And twenty<lb/>
years later, in 1982, the victory has<lb/>
yet to be fully realized.<lb/>
On Sept. 30, 1962, the small town<lb/>
of Oxford, Miss broke out into a<lb/>
series of race riots as the University<lb/>
of Mississippi's first black student,<lb/>
James Meredith, was escorted by<lb/>
federal officials onto campus to<lb/>
begin the fall semester.<lb/>
Amid the hordes of protestors,<lb/>
the burning cars, the gunshots, the<lb/>
flying bricks and teargas cannisters,<lb/>
two people on the Ole Miss campus<lb/>
died, another fifty or more were in-<lb/>
jured, and one man silently wound<lb/>
his way to class.<lb/>
That event, or more properly,<lb/>
that series of events, was among the<lb/>
first in a string of civil rights cases<lb/>
that virtually "changed the face" of<lb/>
our nation in almost every aspect.<lb/>
But today, 20 years later, the battle<lb/>
is still being fought.<lb/>
Sure, we no longer hear of mob<lb/>
lynchings or the riots that were so<lb/>
very common in the '60s. We find<lb/>
blacks and other minorities in all<lb/>
walks of life. But the discrimination<lb/>
and prejudice which were so readily<lb/>
apparent then have all but disap-<lb/>
peared today. To say the least, the<lb/>
bigotry is less outright. Nonetheless,<lb/>
it exists, although in a different<lb/>
form, in the 1980s.<lb/>
Naturally, to think that an<lb/>
editorial in a small college<lb/>
newspaper could possibly make any<lb/>
difference in the racial prejudices of<lb/>
even those people on campus is<lb/>
naive at best. Those among us who<lb/>
still judge the value ? academic,<lb/>
athletic, etc. ? of others by the col-<lb/>
or of their skin (be it black or white)<lb/>
will continue to do so regardless of<lb/>
the random preachings and<lb/>
teachings of those aroung us. This is<lb/>
simply a sad fact which has proven<lb/>
itself true time and time again.<lb/>
And furthermore, the purpose of<lb/>
this writing is not necessarily to<lb/>
sway opinion one way or another<lb/>
but rather to increase, if possible,<lb/>
the awareness of what has yet to be<lb/>
accomlished.<lb/>
And as much as we may like to<lb/>
deny it, we are all guilty, to a greater<lb/>
or lesser extent, of the same pre-<lb/>
judice which characterized the<lb/>
1960s. After all, how many of us<lb/>
honestly believe the world and the<lb/>
United States have reached racial<lb/>
equality? Sure, we've come a long<lb/>
way.<lb/>
But we've got such a long way yet<lb/>
to go.<lb/>
Reagan Considers Issuing<lb/>
Sanctions Against Israelis<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? In his televised<lb/>
speech on the Middle East last week, Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan came very close to accusing<lb/>
the Israeli government of being totally<lb/>
responsible for the massacre of hundreds<lb/>
of Palestinians in the Shatila and Sabra<lb/>
refugee camps.<lb/>
It wasn't the first time this month that<lb/>
Reagan was tempted to lock horns with<lb/>
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin.<lb/>
The president came close to delivering an<lb/>
ultimatum to Israel when he delivered his<lb/>
Middle East peace proposal on Sept. 1. But<lb/>
at the last minute, Reagan crossed out<lb/>
several points in his speech that he decided<lb/>
were too strident.<lb/>
The original text, for example, warned<lb/>
Israel that its stubborn stand on the<lb/>
Palestinian problem would precipitate a<lb/>
"major crisis" with the United States. But<lb/>
the president deleted the reference to a<lb/>
"major crisis<lb/>
Any talk of a "major crisis he knew,<lb/>
would imply a threat to cut off military aid<lb/>
to Israel. That threat is a powerful<lb/>
weapon, but it's like a nuclear bomb: It's<lb/>
more effective as a threat than it is actually<lb/>
to use. There is no halfway measure the<lb/>
United States can invoke.<lb/>
So, Reagan decided not to threaten sanc-<lb/>
tions ? in other words, not to apply U.S.<lb/>
pressure on Israel. Instead, he chose to br-<lb/>
ing world pressure on Israel. This was the<lb/>
purpose of his Middk East peace plan. He<lb/>
hoped it would mobilize world pressure<lb/>
against Israel.<lb/>
Then the Israelis moved into west<lb/>
Beirut. On Sept. 15, the president received<lb/>
a secret state department report. It charged<lb/>
that the assassination of Lebanon's<lb/>
President-elect Bashir Gemayel had<lb/>
presented "the opportune moment for<lb/>
consolidation of Israel's presence in<lb/>
Lebanon<lb/>
Reagan was angry over the occupation<lb/>
of west Beirut. But again, he avoided a<lb/>
"major crisis Again, he sought to bring<lb/>
world pressure on Israel.<lb/>
Then came the slaughter of the Palesti-<lb/>
nians. Now, the "major crisis" is closer.<lb/>
There is renewed talk in the White House<lb/>
of cutting off military aid to Israel.<lb/>
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES:<lb/>
Does the Navy have too many admirals? In<lb/>
1945, there was one admiral for every 130<lb/>
ships. Today, each admiral has charge over<lb/>
about two ships.<lb/>
? Intelligence sources say they have<lb/>
spotted a new Soviet weapon deployed<lb/>
near the Chinese border. But U.S. military<lb/>
experts can't decide whether it's a laser<lb/>
weapon or something else. So, they've<lb/>
nicknamed it "Tora That's the word the<lb/>
Japanese used to identify their surprise at-<lb/>
tack against Pearl Harbor.<lb/>
mmuH&amp;0&amp;tS<lb/>
Y6AH YOU, JOHNSON ?, I PiDNT S6E W SAVING<lb/>
Don't Blame Me; You Asked It<lb/>
Answering Letters As Best I Can<lb/>
Ah, the perils of tame and fortune!<lb/>
Eer since I've become famous as a star<lb/>
of stage, screen and newsprint, letters hae<lb/>
been pouring in b the ton from all over<lb/>
the state asking question after question<lb/>
about eerything from my favorite color<lb/>
and scent of toilet tissue to what I look for<lb/>
in a bran cereal.<lb/>
Now, although I do appreciate the gravi-<lb/>
ty of the situation ? people are reportedly<lb/>
losing sleep over unanswered questions ?<lb/>
the truth is, I just don't have the time to<lb/>
answer all of your wonderful letters per-<lb/>
sonally. And since I cannot rightly include<lb/>
all of your questions in the Campus<lb/>
Forum, I will, as a service to you ? the<lb/>
few, the faithful ? attempt to answer, as<lb/>
best 1 can those eight questions most often<lb/>
asked in your letters.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: I think ou're the on-<lb/>
l one who can help me. Please settle a bet.<lb/>
My friend Jeb says the Professor on<lb/>
(iMigan's Island is now married to (finger<lb/>
Great. Is that true?<lb/>
To the hundreds of letter writers anx-<lb/>
iously awaiting a response to this question,<lb/>
let me just answer that with a resounding<lb/>
NO. Although vicious rumors were spread<lb/>
all over Hollywood following the cancella-<lb/>
tion of that legendary TV show in 1966,<lb/>
Russell Johnson is not now, nor has he<lb/>
ever been, married to Tina Louise.<lb/>
However,a frustrated Johnson did tie the<lb/>
knot with the Skipper (Alan Hale) only<lb/>
months after the progam got the axe. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, that relationship ended in<lb/>
legal separation in 1976. Johnson is now<lb/>
gamefully employed with Dura-Cell Corp<lb/>
where iie is chief technician in the fledgling<lb/>
coconut-battery division.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: We know from your<lb/>
column that you've got class, so answer us<lb/>
this: Who's your favorite guest star on the<lb/>
Love Boat?<lb/>
Whew! That's a toughie. There are so<lb/>
many fine entertainers to choose from ?<lb/>
Charo, Bob Denver, Jim Nabors, Arte<lb/>
Johnson just to name a few. But, I guess<lb/>
if 1 had to choose one, it'd have to be<lb/>
Donald O'Connor's amazing and talented<lb/>
seal, Clarabel. Her excellent performance<lb/>
as a jealous wife in the touching episode<lb/>
with Georgette Baxter won over my heart,<lb/>
and, thus, my vote.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: You work for the<lb/>
paper, right? Tell me something: What's<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill really like? Is he anything<lb/>
like those editorials he writes?<lb/>
Boy, I can't count the number of times<lb/>
I've read that one. But let's see, that's<lb/>
another thinker Well, I'm sure this will<lb/>
come as a surprise to a lot of people out<lb/>
there, but all in all, Pat is just a regular<lb/>
guy. Sure, he's got a few idiosyncrasies ?<lb/>
sometimes he orders the empty-plate<lb/>
special when we go out to lunch and that<lb/>
kind of stuff. But for my money, there<lb/>
isn't a better pal around. Who else do you<lb/>
know who'd lie down in the middle of 10th<lb/>
Street just so his friends could get across to<lb/>
Mr. Gam's?<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Wa It Is<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: I'm new in town, and<lb/>
I was wondering, where can a gladiator get<lb/>
a good mixed drink around here?<lb/>
Boy, I must get eight to 10 letters like<lb/>
this every week. But the truth is, gals, I just<lb/>
don't know. All the great gladiator joints,<lb/>
have gone out of business in Greenville,<lb/>
you know, with the big run on video games<lb/>
and all. And if they wouldn't serve you at<lb/>
the sorority house, I just have no idea.<lb/>
Sorry.<lb/>
Hev Hughes: You got change for a<lb/>
buck?<lb/>
Once and for all: NO.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: I've got all the books,<lb/>
but they just don't help. So, do you have<lb/>
any tips on grooming care for my<lb/>
Chihuahua?<lb/>
There are four or five ladies who w rite in<lb/>
week after week with this one. Let's see<lb/>
now aren't Chihuahuas those little<lb/>
rodents with bug eyes that bark at anything<lb/>
that moves? Ah yes, as a matter of fact, I<lb/>
do have a few helpful hints: First of all,<lb/>
don't waste your time clipping the little<lb/>
thing; hair just grows back. Instead, use<lb/>
electrolysis, especially on the face, back<lb/>
and paws. Then, clip off that excess appen-<lb/>
dage on the ears ou know, the part that<lb/>
sticks out. Don't worry, it doesn't hurl<lb/>
him. Sure, he might shake a little, but<lb/>
Chihuahuas are babies anyway. And fur-<lb/>
thermore, he doesn't need :hose sill claws<lb/>
either. They're unattractive and a nuisance<lb/>
to both you and your canine companion<lb/>
So, be sure to trim those down as close a<lb/>
possible. Pay no attention to bleeding;<lb/>
doesn't bother him a bit.<lb/>
I hope these tips will heir vour tine dog<lb/>
look his best. Believe me. your neighbo<lb/>
will thank you He'd thank you too<lb/>
he could.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes: W e know you're a big<lb/>
fan of little theatre. So please answer this<lb/>
for us. Is it true that Hene ellachaize. the<lb/>
world-renowned Tatoo of lantasx Island<lb/>
fame, will be moving over to NBC to star<lb/>
in his own new series this fall?<lb/>
It is. indeed, heartwarming lor me to<lb/>
discover that such a fine actor as Herve<lb/>
such an active following in Greenville <lb/>
people really know great performers when<lb/>
you see them. But, regretably. the Tatoo<lb/>
charm didn't get the same reception at<lb/>
NBC. Vellachaize's pilot for NBC's latest<lb/>
blockbuster. Josh Ramsey: <lb/>
Caseworker, just didn't pan out with the<lb/>
studio heads, and his world premier was<lb/>
subsequently cancelled. Nevertheless, their<lb/>
loss is our gain. Herve will once again<lb/>
charm the screen with his oriental mystique<lb/>
this year in yet another season as the il-<lb/>
lustrious Tatoo, sidekick of Boss and<lb/>
champion of young and old alike.<lb/>
And finally the question most often ask-<lb/>
ed in viewer mail:<lb/>
Why do you always lie in your Editor's<lb/>
Notes? You're not really from the<lb/>
Galapagos Islands, are you?<lb/>
Well, I guess you've got me there. 1 have<lb/>
to admit, I've never even been to the<lb/>
Galapagos Islands. And I'm not certified<lb/>
in arc welding either, although I once<lb/>
burned my hand on a soldering iron. What<lb/>
can I say? You called my bluff.<lb/>
Sleep well.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes is a senior<lb/>
Jrom Oyster Mountain. Tenn where he<lb/>
has spent the past three summers as presi-<lb/>
dent oj the Boxcar Hilly Fan dub and<lb/>
Laundromat.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Observer Observations Yield Unfair Image<lb/>
On Sunday, Sept. 26, an article writ-<lb/>
ten by Marney Rich appeared in the<lb/>
News and Observer. The article, titled<lb/>
"Having a Wild Weekend emphasized<lb/>
the drinking and partying of the ECU<lb/>
student body. Because of the fact that<lb/>
virtually the same circumstances can be<lb/>
found on almost any college campus,<lb/>
because one cannot judge a student by a<lb/>
few, because of the misuse of statistics<lb/>
and because of the positive aspects of<lb/>
ECU, Ms. Rich's article must be<lb/>
refuted.<lb/>
The partying mentioned in the article<lb/>
exists at all state universities in North<lb/>
Carolina. However, I have seen no such<lb/>
article relating to the renowned party at-<lb/>
mosphere at UNC-Chapel Hill, for ex-<lb/>
ample. If analyzing party atmosphere in<lb/>
colleges and universities, why not in-<lb/>
clude all other major state institutions in<lb/>
the article?<lb/>
The article was based primarily on a<lb/>
few fraternity parties, including inter-<lb/>
views with frat brothers. Fewer than<lb/>
four percent of the ECU student body<lb/>
belong to fraternities. It is unfair to<lb/>
judge an entire student body on the opi-<lb/>
nion of such a small group.<lb/>
In the article, words and phrases were<lb/>
added that were strictly the opinion of<lb/>
the writer, with no basis whatsoever.<lb/>
Statistics were also badly misused. For<lb/>
example, Ms. Rich points out that the<lb/>
ABC store closest to campus sold 1,051<lb/>
bottles of booze that night. This par-<lb/>
ticular store serves most of the city of<lb/>
Greenville. She also says that a Green-<lb/>
ville beer distributor delivered 90 kegs of<lb/>
beer. Delivered to whom?<lb/>
Finally, the article didn't mention any<lb/>
of the positive aspects of ECU. East<lb/>
Carolina has an excellent academic pro-<lb/>
gram, including one of the finest schools<lb/>
of business in the South, to mention on-<lb/>
ly one. A university's primary objective<lb/>
is to provide a quality education. Con-<lb/>
sidering the fine academic record of<lb/>
ECU, which has produced many fine<lb/>
businessmen and women, teachers and<lb/>
other community leaders, it is evident<lb/>
that the clear majority of students at<lb/>
ECU have preparation for the future as<lb/>
their first priority, not partying.<lb/>
ECU is not just a party. Perhaps ar-<lb/>
ticles such as this one attract students<lb/>
seeking easy classes and a party at-<lb/>
mosphere. 1 wonder how many of these<lb/>
students are among the nearly one-half<lb/>
of the freshmen at ECU who don't make<lb/>
it back for their sophomore year.<lb/>
John Parnell<lb/>
Israeli Rebuttal Rebutted<lb/>
It is ironical that Mr. Resnik whisked<lb/>
a "judicious" editorial, yet his own let-<lb/>
ter is a reiteration of the Zionist<lb/>
"justification" to minimize the hideous<lb/>
nature of the massacre of the innocent<lb/>
and unarmed Palestinian civilians of<lb/>
Chatila and Sabra camps in Lebanon by<lb/>
labelling it is a mere "repitition of what<lb/>
has been tolerated in silence by the world<lb/>
over the last 10 years<lb/>
Contrary to Mr. Resnik's claim, Israel<lb/>
has been acting for the past few years in<lb/>
a manner which could be labeled as<lb/>
anything but peaceful. There are cons-<lb/>
tant attempts to further complicate an<lb/>
already-intricate ArabIsraeli conflict<lb/>
by creating numerous Jewish settlements<lb/>
largely by blowing up Arab homes and<lb/>
by confiscating Arab land; bombing the<lb/>
nuclear facility in Iraq and declaring us<lb/>
"right" to do so again in the future; an-<lb/>
nexing the Golan Heights and East<lb/>
Jerusalem ? territories acquired<lb/>
through military operations, murderous<lb/>
raids in Lebanon in the name of<lb/>
"retaliation and then creating several<lb/>
holocausts in Lebanon since June 6.<lb/>
George Ball, former undersecretary of<lb/>
state under the Kennedy and Johnson<lb/>
administrations, was right when he<lb/>
thought that Israel should be saved from<lb/>
its own precipitous acts, which are sow-<lb/>
ing the seeds of hatred toward the<lb/>
Jewish state in the Middle East. This<lb/>
hatred might not be lessened even after<lb/>
several decades. As a friend of Israel,<lb/>
Mr. Resnik, and those who think like<lb/>
him must strive to save Israel from Begin<lb/>
and Sharon, who are not acting as the<lb/>
decendents of the victims of the<lb/>
holocaust but the decendents of its Nazi<lb/>
perpetrators.<lb/>
Cordially,<lb/>
Mohammed E. Ahrari<lb/>
Assistant Professor<lb/>
Poly. Sci.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057502_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>