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<pb facs="00057507_0001"/>
?be Safit (Unniliuinn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No J5<lb/>
ja<lb/>
Thursday, October 21,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
2 Sections 18 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Blue Light Telephones<lb/>
Security System Operational<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
I ast week the ECU Department<lb/>
of Public Safety announced that the<lb/>
blue light security telephone system<lb/>
has become fully operational.<lb/>
Each telephone is encased in a<lb/>
weatherproof box that is attached to<lb/>
a pole with a blue light on top.<lb/>
"The purpose of the system is to<lb/>
trv to give the student body a<lb/>
quicker response in cases when they<lb/>
need help said Joseph Calder,<lb/>
director of public safety. The system<lb/>
is also designed to deter criminals<lb/>
from the areas in which the blue<lb/>
lights are located.<lb/>
The telephone system is to be used<lb/>
by anyone who needs the assistance<lb/>
of a public safety officer or anyone<lb/>
who witnesses a crime.<lb/>
If a person needs assistance, he or<lb/>
she should locate a phone (look for<lb/>
a blue light), open the box encasing<lb/>
the phone and lift up the receiver.<lb/>
The instant after a receiver has been<lb/>
lifted a public safety officer will<lb/>
dispatch an officer to the location of<lb/>
the phone. Then, the officer will<lb/>
speak to the person in need of<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
Calder stated that misuse of the<lb/>
telephone system can and will lead<lb/>
to prosecution, similar to prosecu-<lb/>
tion for misuse of the fire alarm<lb/>
system.<lb/>
According to Dr. Elmer Meyer,<lb/>
vice chancellor for student life, the<lb/>
system was approved in the spring<lb/>
of 1980, after he suggested the idea<lb/>
in 1979. Construction started in<lb/>
1981 but was delayed because the<lb/>
Carolina Telephone Company had<lb/>
complications in installing the<lb/>
phone lines. The switchboard in<lb/>
Howard House, the location of the<lb/>
Department of Public Safety, also<lb/>
had to be rebuilt.<lb/>
The system is currently in opera-<lb/>
tion in many other universities such<lb/>
as N.C. State, Cornell, and the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin ?<lb/>
Milwaukee.<lb/>
If the system proves to be a suc-<lb/>
cess the university may add several<lb/>
more telephones in other locations<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
The locations for the telephones<lb/>
were determined in part by easy ac-<lb/>
cessibility, well-known locations,<lb/>
volume of pedestrian traffic, and<lb/>
areas of isolation on the campus.<lb/>
They are as follows:<lb/>
? In the large paved parking lot<lb/>
south of Joyner Library and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center in the<lb/>
north center area of the lot.<lb/>
? At the corner of Seventh and<lb/>
James Streets on the east side of<lb/>
James Street.<lb/>
See SECURITY, page 8<lb/>
(AST CRfiOUnfl umVERSITy<lb/>
Dots indicate position of securit phones on campus.<lb/>
Governor Hunt Supports Extended Benefits For Unemployed<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jr. said Wednesday he is<lb/>
concerned over the loss of extended<lb/>
unemployment benefits for 15,000<lb/>
jobless North Carolinians and he<lb/>
hopes it will become a campaign<lb/>
issue in the No. 2 congressional<lb/>
races.<lb/>
"This is no time to be penalizing<lb/>
people who through no fault of their<lb/>
own, are out of work, trying to find<lb/>
a job and who are struggling to pro-<lb/>
ide for themselves and their<lb/>
tamities the governor said at his<lb/>
weekly news conference.<lb/>
All workers who are laid off<lb/>
because of plant shutdowns are now<lb/>
eligible for 26 weeks of unemploy-<lb/>
ment benefits. Those who have not<lb/>
found new jobs have been eligible<lb/>
for an additional 13 weeks of<lb/>
benefits under the supplemental<lb/>
program, but about 15,000 jobless<lb/>
North Carolinians and workers in<lb/>
eight other states will lose those<lb/>
benefits Saturday.<lb/>
Some of them will be eligible for<lb/>
an additional six to 10 weeks of sup-<lb/>
plemental benefits under another<lb/>
program expiring in March.<lb/>
Hunt said the cutoff was caused<lb/>
by changes in the complex formula<lb/>
for supplemental benefits. The<lb/>
change was pushed by the Reagan<lb/>
administration and enacted by Con-<lb/>
gress last year, amid projections<lb/>
unemployment would be about 7<lb/>
percent nationally.<lb/>
But the national jobless rate is<lb/>
now 10.1 percent, he said, and "this<lb/>
is the kind of time you need those<lb/>
additional weeks.<lb/>
"We're at a time right now when<lb/>
we've got a lot of people hurting<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Hunt said he was raising the issue<lb/>
because he is concerned about<lb/>
vorkers and he wants Congress to<lb/>
restore the benefits when it returns<lb/>
after the elections.<lb/>
"I don't think there's any ques-<lb/>
tion there are political implications<lb/>
to this he said, and he hopes can-<lb/>
didates will make it an issue in the<lb/>
two weeks before the elections.<lb/>
The governor said it is unfair<lb/>
because South Carolina workers will<lb/>
remain eligible for supplemental<lb/>
benefits while North Carolina<lb/>
workers will lose them. It would be<lb/>
difficult for the Legislature to find<lb/>
money to continue the program on a<lb/>
state level, he said.<lb/>
In other topics, Hunt downplayed<lb/>
the significance of a planned visit by<lb/>
President Reagan to Raleigh next<lb/>
week, saying the trip would<lb/>
motivate GOP workers but could<lb/>
also inspire Democrats to work<lb/>
harder for candidates they support.<lb/>
He said he felt there would be no<lb/>
substantial change in the current<lb/>
lineup of seven Democrats and four<lb/>
Republicans in Congress, but<lb/>
repeated earlier warnings the GOP<lb/>
will out-end the Democratic Party<lb/>
by a large margin.<lb/>
While Reagan remains personally<lb/>
popular, Hunt said the president's<lb/>
policies have slipped in popularity.<lb/>
Democrats must counter<lb/>
Republican campaign distortions by<lb/>
stressing the economic issues and<lb/>
the recession, Hunt said.<lb/>
The governor also sidestepped<lb/>
comment on a recent poll showing<lb/>
him ahead of Sen. Jesse Helms,<lb/>
R-N.C, if the 1984 Senate race were<lb/>
held now. The poll, by the Universi-<lb/>
ty of North Carolina journalism<lb/>
school, showed Hunt held a 51-35<lb/>
lead over Helms, but Helms has not<lb/>
lost any popularity in the state<lb/>
despite losing Senate battles over<lb/>
prayer in schools and abortions.<lb/>
"Polls of that kind don't make<lb/>
any particular impression on me<lb/>
said Hunt, but he admitted, "I<lb/>
sometimes look with interest at what<lb/>
people do<lb/>
There has been widespread<lb/>
speculation Hunt will challenge<lb/>
Helms in two years, but the gover-<lb/>
nor said he has made no plans for a<lb/>
race.<lb/>
Local Company To Lay Off Employees<lb/>
ECU Selected To See<lb/>
Sneak Preview Concert<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One of Greenville's largest<lb/>
employers, the Proctor and Gamble<lb/>
Company, has announced that they<lb/>
are laying off 10 percent of their<lb/>
workforce effective Dec. 3.<lb/>
The statement from Proctor and<lb/>
Gamble comes less than a week after<lb/>
it was announced that the national<lb/>
unemployment rate had reached<lb/>
10.1 percent. This is the first time<lb/>
that the U.S. unemployment rate<lb/>
has hit double digit figures since the<lb/>
1940s.<lb/>
Gene Parker, a spokesperson for<lb/>
the Proctor and Gamble plant, said<lb/>
that it was hard to say if the layoff<lb/>
at the Greenville facility could be at-<lb/>
tributed to the present economic<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Parker noted that the layoff in-<lb/>
volved 50 technicians who have been<lb/>
with the plant for less than three<lb/>
years. He said that the layoffs were<lb/>
necessary because of the curtailment<lb/>
of the plants Pampers business.<lb/>
"We have more-capacity than We<lb/>
need right now he said. "The<lb/>
plant primarily ships to interna-<lb/>
tional markets<lb/>
Parker mentioned that much of<lb/>
Proctor and Gamble's international<lb/>
shipping was no longer necessary<lb/>
because their foreign affiliates have<lb/>
now developed their own produc-<lb/>
tion facilities. Much of the expor-<lb/>
ting of Pampers disposable diapers,<lb/>
which was coming from N.C. ports,<lb/>
are now being done via their West<lb/>
German plants, said Parker.<lb/>
"We're very upset about the<lb/>
whole thing Parker continued. He<lb/>
noted that this was the first time<lb/>
that any layoffs had to be made at<lb/>
the Greenville facility in its seven<lb/>
years of operation in Greenville.<lb/>
Laid-off employees will be eligi-<lb/>
ble for "recall rights" for one year,<lb/>
but there was no way to predict if<lb/>
any of them would be rehired.<lb/>
Parker said. He added that no addi-<lb/>
tional layoffs were anticipated at<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Percy Cox<lb/>
when reached for comment noted<lb/>
that the layoffs were unfortunate.<lb/>
He said that he had no further com-<lb/>
ment at this time.<lb/>
B GREG HIDEOUT<lb/>
ECU is one of 15 schools<lb/>
throughout the country selected by<lb/>
Campus Entertainment Network to<lb/>
view a sneak preview of their new<lb/>
atelllte network. On Saturday, Oct.<lb/>
30, at 10 p.m. CEN will beam live-<lb/>
via-satellite the music of Devo and<lb/>
Wall of Vodoo to a 40-feet high<lb/>
screen in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
"It's what major entertainment is<lb/>
coming down to said Ken Ham-<lb/>
mond, assistant programing direc-<lb/>
tor at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
"All because of cost<lb/>
ECU was picked to be part of the<lb/>
network, according to Hammond,<lb/>
because of the size of its facilities,<lb/>
campus population and proximity<lb/>
to a major market. He explained<lb/>
that a marketing firm was hired by<lb/>
CEN to find schools to meet this<lb/>
criteria.<lb/>
The venture will not cost ECU<lb/>
any money. Hammond says CEN<lb/>
will fit Wright Auditorium with the<lb/>
necessary equipment to make it<lb/>
acoustically perfect. They will also<lb/>
install a receiver disk for the satellite<lb/>
transmission. "We will be responsi-<lb/>
ble for promotion and assisting with<lb/>
on-site production he said.<lb/>
Hammond said the next show will<lb/>
be Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated<lb/>
Ladies" live from Broadway on<lb/>
Nov. 5. The official launching of<lb/>
CEN is in December with a concert<lb/>
featuring The Who.<lb/>
Hammond says the network plans<lb/>
to broadcast lectures and sporting<lb/>
events as well as concerts and plays.<lb/>
The agreement with CEN is for<lb/>
See LIVE, page 5<lb/>
New Marketing Chairman Selected<lb/>
Departments Split In Business School<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Aafctaat Nm Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of Business this<lb/>
semester has divided its Department<lb/>
of Marketing and Management into<lb/>
two seperate divisions, completing<lb/>
the last of the adminstrative<lb/>
modifications planned for the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Dr. Edward W. Wheatley, for-<lb/>
mally chairman of the marketing<lb/>
department at Univerity of Miami,<lb/>
has joined the ECU faculty this<lb/>
semester to head the new marketing<lb/>
department. Dr.Carl W. Gooding,<lb/>
formally chairman of marketing<lb/>
and management, will head the new<lb/>
management division.<lb/>
The departments now have<lb/>
separate facilities, with most of the<lb/>
classrooms adjacent to faculty of-<lb/>
fices, to promote student-teacher<lb/>
communication. The management<lb/>
department, according to Gooding,<lb/>
will offer two areas of concentra-<lb/>
tion: human resource management<lb/>
and production management.<lb/>
The new marketing department is<lb/>
growing in size and course offer-<lb/>
ings, says Wheatley. They are ac-<lb/>
tively recruiting two new faculty<lb/>
members at the national level to<lb/>
begin teaching in the fall semester of<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
The department currently has<lb/>
nine full-time professors and five<lb/>
adjunct professors who are active,<lb/>
prominant businesspersons in the<lb/>
professional marketing field.<lb/>
The department is planning to of-<lb/>
fer several new courses in their cur-<lb/>
riculum. Possible courses include<lb/>
service marketing, public relations<lb/>
and music merchandising. The<lb/>
department is hoping to offer<lb/>
courses of value to music majors<lb/>
and arts and sciences students.<lb/>
Wheatley is meeting with the<lb/>
music department next week to<lb/>
discuss the possibility of an option<lb/>
for music students with a business<lb/>
emphasis. He also hopes some new<lb/>
marketing courses will be valuable<lb/>
and of interest to pre-law, health<lb/>
care and medical students.<lb/>
"I'm very much in favor of the<lb/>
idea of having qualified students<lb/>
take double majors or free electives<lb/>
in business Wheatley said. "I'm<lb/>
enthusiastic about the possibility of<lb/>
having arts and sciences students in<lb/>
our marketing courses<lb/>
The marketing department is<lb/>
planning several seminars in the new<lb/>
Branch Banking and Trust Manage-<lb/>
ment Development Centerand is<lb/>
preparing a brochure, to be<lb/>
available by spring semester, that<lb/>
discusses the field of marketing,<lb/>
course options and career oppor-<lb/>
tunities for students.<lb/>
Class Officers Denied Vote<lb/>
Enjoying Her Fall Break<lb/>
This ECU faculty member spent her fall break in the mountains of western N.C.<lb/>
MM By STAWLCY LCA Y<lb/>
By BUDDY CONNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A ruling by the SGA attorney<lb/>
general, Mike Swaim, has put the<lb/>
status of the recently elected SGA<lb/>
legislature speaker in doubt.<lb/>
Swain, at the request of SGA<lb/>
President Eric Henderson, ruled<lb/>
that under his interpretation of the<lb/>
SGA constitution class officers do<lb/>
not have a vote in the legislature.<lb/>
This ruling also means that Gary<lb/>
Williams, graduate class president,<lb/>
can not serve as speaker, a job<lb/>
which the legislature by aclaimation<lb/>
elected him for at their last meeting.<lb/>
Williams said the decision ap-<lb/>
pears to have been politically<lb/>
motivated since the request for the<lb/>
ruling was' made by Henderson prior<lb/>
to Williams being elected to the<lb/>
position of speaker. He also ex-<lb/>
plained that Henderson, as junior<lb/>
class president last year, had been a<lb/>
voting member of the legislature.<lb/>
Williams is appealing the attorney<lb/>
general's ruling to the Review Board<lb/>
and according to Swaim, no date<lb/>
has been set for the board to meet to<lb/>
consider the appeal. This, Swaim<lb/>
explained, is to ensure fairness for<lb/>
Williams. "The new Review Board<lb/>
has not been selected yet and the old<lb/>
one has worked with me in the past<lb/>
and may be partial to me he ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
Swaim's ruling is controversial<lb/>
because there are conflicting sec-<lb/>
tions in the constitution. Article III,<lb/>
Section 2 states that "No person ex-<lb/>
cept a full-time student at East<lb/>
Carolina University shall be eligible<lb/>
for a legislative office; neither shall<lb/>
any person be eligible to that office<lb/>
who is serving on the Executive<lb/>
Council of a judiciary body<lb/>
Class officers serve on the Executive<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Article IV, Section 5(B) states<lb/>
that "The president of the several<lb/>
classes shall enjoy the following<lb/>
powers and duties: (1) To be a<lb/>
member of the Executive Council.<lb/>
(2) To be an ex-officio member of<lb/>
the Legislature. (3) To perform all<lb/>
duties as delegated by the<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
Ex-officio members have, accor-<lb/>
ding to Robert's Rules of Order and<lb/>
SGA tradition, always had the right<lb/>
to vote. Also, Williams was<lb/>
delegated by the legislature to serve<lb/>
as speaker.<lb/>
This gives Williams his ground<lb/>
See ATTORNEY, page 1<lb/>
J<lb/>
tt WM<lb/>
- " ?<lb/>
W ' Mttq s Ml I -??"<lb/>
itoCB<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0002"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
it you or your organization<lb/>
would like to nave an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it to Tne East<lb/>
Carolinian m care of tne produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at tne East Carolinian<lb/>
office m tne Publications Building.<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sued paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
There is no cnarge 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 for<lb/>
the Thursday paper No an<lb/>
nouncements received after these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
menfs<lb/>
COMMUNITY<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
The first meeting of the Com<lb/>
munity Theatre Group will take<lb/>
piace on Tuesday, Oc'ooer 26 at 7<lb/>
PM in Rawl 232 Actors, singers,<lb/>
oancers and technicians welcome<lb/>
Experience is nice, but not<lb/>
necessary A full length musical is<lb/>
be'ng planned tor Spring<lb/>
For more information, call Al<lb/>
Agate at 758 9474<lb/>
BIBLE ISTRUTH<lb/>
The B'ble is truth it is NOT iust<lb/>
another good book because it was<lb/>
written by Men of God who were<lb/>
inspired by God (II Tim 3 16, II<lb/>
Peter 1 21) H is not a book of<lb/>
nega'ive laws but the heart of<lb/>
God giving us attitudes and pr.n<lb/>
oples to iive by so we can prosper,<lb/>
enioy life, aa really "eip others<lb/>
(II Tim 3 16. John 10 10. I Tim<lb/>
6 17! Ccme learn more of tne truth<lb/>
ot God s word so you can change<lb/>
your life for the better (Romans<lb/>
12 2) Monday, October 18th at<lb/>
Wndenhaii Studen' Center, in<lb/>
Rm 242 at 7 30<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
T he co op office has available an<lb/>
-pportunify witht he Federal Law<lb/>
E ntorcement Training Center in<lb/>
its Criminal Justice intern Pro<lb/>
gram The internship runs from<lb/>
January 3 through March 11 and is<lb/>
located n Glynco, Georgia tor<lb/>
rore information contact Nancy<lb/>
Fiilnow in the Co op office, ext<lb/>
6979<lb/>
BACKGAMMON<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring an All<lb/>
Campus Backgammon Tourna<lb/>
ment on Monday. October 25. 1982<lb/>
a" 6 00 PM m "he MSC Multi Pur<lb/>
pose Room All ECU full time<lb/>
students with a 2 0 GPA are eligi<lb/>
cie to enter Register at tne<lb/>
B ihards Center by Friday. Oc<lb/>
'coer 22 Trophies will be awarded<lb/>
to first, second, and third place<lb/>
t.n,shers It sufficient participa<lb/>
fton permits, 2 winners will repre<lb/>
sent ECU at the Association of Col<lb/>
lege Unions international<lb/>
Regional Tournament in Knox<lb/>
vule. Tennessee<lb/>
CO?OP JOB<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in Green<lb/>
ville has an alternating Co op posi<lb/>
tion open in its Validation Depart-<lb/>
ment. The job win be for two<lb/>
terms beginning in January. 1983<lb/>
INDT students with some<lb/>
background in math, physics,<lb/>
computers, electricity, and<lb/>
chemistry and who hav good<lb/>
writing skills should contact Nan<lb/>
cy Fiilnow in the Co op office, ext.<lb/>
6979<lb/>
CHEMISTRY MAJORS<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in<lb/>
Research Triangle Park has an<lb/>
alternating co op position open tor<lb/>
a chemistry major The job will in<lb/>
volve working with chemistry<lb/>
researchers and begins in January<lb/>
1983 running for about six months.<lb/>
All interested chemistry majors<lb/>
with at least two semesters of<lb/>
organic chemistry should contact<lb/>
Nancy Fiilnow in the Co op office,<lb/>
ext 6979<lb/>
SING BEETHOVEN<lb/>
The Beethoven Ninth Sym<lb/>
phony, for orchestra and chorus,<lb/>
will be performed by the ECU<lb/>
Symphony with chorus on Sun<lb/>
Nov 14. at 315 pm in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium The chorus will in<lb/>
dude an School of Music choruses<lb/>
and the Greenville Community<lb/>
Chorus<lb/>
ECU students, faculty, and staff<lb/>
with some choral experience are<lb/>
invited to participate in the<lb/>
chorus Rehearsals will be con<lb/>
ducted by Or Brett Watson of the<lb/>
music faculty each Tuesday<lb/>
(except Oct 19) beginning Oct<lb/>
12, from 3 4.00 p m in Rm 105 of<lb/>
the Fletcher Music Center Final,<lb/>
rehearsals will be Fri , Nov 12, at<lb/>
7 30pm and Sat , Nov 13, at 200<lb/>
pm (Interested persons may<lb/>
begin rehearasais Oct 12 or Oct<lb/>
26.) Singers should bring their own<lb/>
choral scores, available from the<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The Co op office has a job open<lb/>
ing tor an accounting position<lb/>
avaibie with a local manutactur<lb/>
mg firm Requires adding<lb/>
machine experience and accoun<lb/>
tmg background interested<lb/>
students should inquire at the Co<lb/>
op office, located in Rawl at room<lb/>
313<lb/>
PRC MAJORS<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goidsboro. NC has an<lb/>
alternating Co op position<lb/>
available for Spring semester in<lb/>
the r recreation department The<lb/>
position reequires a 2 0 GPA and<lb/>
you must be willing to work for<lb/>
two terms It is an excellent opor<lb/>
tuhity for anyone interested in<lb/>
gaming valuable work experience<lb/>
m the area of recreation Salary:<lb/>
approximately $1,000 per month<lb/>
gross Contact Nancy Fiilnow in<lb/>
the Coop office. 313 Rawl,<lb/>
757 6979, if you would like to apply<lb/>
or want more information.<lb/>
TUTOR<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi, the National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity is offering tutors<lb/>
tor a variety of General College<lb/>
subjects at competitive rates. If<lb/>
you are hi need of a tutor call<lb/>
752 3072 for more information.<lb/>
POSITION FOR<lb/>
INDT MAJOR<lb/>
There is an opening with Long<lb/>
Manufacturing Co. for a Quality<lb/>
Control Supervisor. This perma-<lb/>
nent position involves setting up<lb/>
and maintaining a quality control<lb/>
program in Rumania tor tractors<lb/>
manufactured for Long. The star<lb/>
ting date in immediately and the<lb/>
salary is negotiable. Contact Nan<lb/>
cy Fiilnow in the Co op office, ext.<lb/>
6979, for more information.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Personal Development Courses<lb/>
begin<lb/>
Oct 21 Real Estate Finance,<lb/>
Commodity Hedging Oct. 26 -<lb/>
AerobicExercise Nov. 17 Real<lb/>
Estate Appraisal.<lb/>
For information call 757 6143.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Part-time coop training posi<lb/>
tions are available with Buehler<lb/>
Mfg. Co. in Kinston. These train<lb/>
ing positions could lead to full<lb/>
time opportunities in Production<lb/>
Supervision. Production Control<lb/>
or Purchasing in the new Buehler<lb/>
plant in Raleigh beginning June,<lb/>
1983. All interested INDT majors<lb/>
contact Nancy Fiilnow in the Co-<lb/>
op office, ext 6979<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 (Beik) building Ab<lb/>
solutely no previous experience is<lb/>
required<lb/>
CAR BASHZ<lb/>
Today and tomorrow Oct 21 and<lb/>
22 on the Mall, the Geology Club<lb/>
has organized a tundraising Car<lb/>
Bash Come start the Homecom<lb/>
ing weekend off with a smash.<lb/>
NUTRITION<lb/>
The Nutrition and Community<lb/>
Health class in the Department of<lb/>
Food. Nutrition, and Institution<lb/>
Management will present a pro<lb/>
gram on Nutritious Snacks for<lb/>
children The program, which<lb/>
centers around a Halloween<lb/>
theme, will be presented to the<lb/>
students of Falkland Elementary<lb/>
School on Monday October 25.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
A Graduate student or faculty<lb/>
member to become an advisor for<lb/>
the ECU Lacrosse club Please<lb/>
call for more information after<lb/>
6:00 O'clock 758 6914 Ask for Nick<lb/>
Pell or Bill Jenkins, it no answer<lb/>
call 758 1418 after 6 o'clock and ask<lb/>
for Brad Brown<lb/>
?erf ifjf x? k I<lb/>
??'<lb/>
FAMILY EYE CARE<lb/>
and<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
Adult and Pediatric vision care in a<lb/>
relaxed and personal setting. Full eon-<lb/>
tad lens services Quiek. aecurale<lb/>
eyeglass service.<lb/>
DR PETER W HOLLIS<lb/>
? CAM CENTO<lb/>
Of GAtCiVHiC r?<lb/>
TiPTON ANNEX ??8 GREtNVILlE BLVD<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses Or<lb/>
Contact Lens Fitting<lb/>
Must Be Presented At Time Of Order<lb/>
Other Discounts Do Not Apply<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Chi initiation win be held at<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room<lb/>
on October 26 followed by a Wine<lb/>
and Cheese Social from 7 30 to<lb/>
9 00 pm tor members. new intiates<lb/>
and their dates. Reservations<lb/>
must be ,nade by October 22 and<lb/>
Psi Chi Library or calling 7 56 8495<lb/>
This is your chance to meet all the<lb/>
members and take an active part<lb/>
in supporting Psi Chi.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The School of Art is offering ten<lb/>
scholarships for undergraduate<lb/>
art students of the junior and<lb/>
senior rank. Eight scholarships<lb/>
are in the amount of $250 each<lb/>
Two scholarships, established by<lb/>
Don and Jack Edwards of the<lb/>
University Book Exchange, are in<lb/>
the amount of S500 each To<lb/>
quality, a student must have a<lb/>
GPA of 3 5 m art, and an overall of<lb/>
3.0. Slides of five works (name, ti<lb/>
tie, media, and size) must accom<lb/>
pany the scholarship application<lb/>
form Application forms may be<lb/>
obtained from the School of Art Of<lb/>
fice The deadline for all com<lb/>
pleted application material is<lb/>
November 30<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75? per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Kfiurn to MEDIA BOARD office (Ml EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN (fieri ? 2 p.m. Monday befonr<lb/>
Tundat paper and Vtedaetday before Tb?rsa<lb/>
publication<lb/>
I Name.<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
Mi?-lines ?<lb/>
-Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75c per line $.<lb/>
, No insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
frn??J??z?1<lb/>
n<lb/>
-? ?<lb/>
V?<lb/>
?i r?1-<lb/>
<lb/>
t?1<lb/>
<lb/>
ti<lb/>
L?m<lb/>
SKI FLASH<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
DECORATIONS<lb/>
Any organization wishing to<lb/>
enter me Float of HouseDorm<lb/>
Decorating competition for<lb/>
homecoming should submit an ap<lb/>
plication to Jon Curtis Room 203<lb/>
Mendenhall by October 8<lb/>
Snowski regisrtafion for<lb/>
Christmas Break Trip will be Nov<lb/>
9 at 4 00 PM in Memorial Gym 108<lb/>
A 15 deposit will be accepted to<lb/>
reserve your space Call Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000 if you need<lb/>
more information<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Learn new disc skills, play<lb/>
ultimate, or just come to the bot<lb/>
torn of College Hill Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at 4 00 to throw tnsbee<lb/>
and enioy these remaining<lb/>
beautiful, warm autumn days<lb/>
Club meetings are Mondays at<lb/>
8 00 in MSC. room 248 1982<lb/>
Natural Light Flying Disc Classic<lb/>
Video will be shown at the Attic on<lb/>
Wed Nov 10.<lb/>
ECU LAW<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will meet<lb/>
Thursday evening, October 21 in<lb/>
room 241 of MSC Guest Lecturer<lb/>
will be Ms Betsy Warren, At<lb/>
torney representing Wake Forest<lb/>
Law School.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
Our next group meeting will be<lb/>
nejd on Oct 21 m MendenhaH's<lb/>
room 221 at 7 00 PM Plan to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
STUDIES GOT<lb/>
YOU DOWN?<lb/>
A two part mini series offered at<lb/>
NO cost by t he University Counsel<lb/>
mg Center from 3 4pm 305 Wright<lb/>
Annex On Monday, October 25,<lb/>
How to Succeed m College and<lb/>
Still Have Fun and on Tuesday,<lb/>
October 26, How to Avoid Test<lb/>
Anxiety" No advance registration<lb/>
is necessary<lb/>
LEARING<lb/>
A program for increasing Lear<lb/>
ning Efficiency will be offered by<lb/>
the Counseling Center this fall. Dr.<lb/>
George Weigand will teach the<lb/>
class on Monday and Wednesday<lb/>
at 100 PM begimng October 25<lb/>
and Or Wilbert R Ball will teach<lb/>
the class on Tuesday and Thurs<lb/>
day at 1 00 pm begming Oct. 26.<lb/>
Both groups will meet in 305<lb/>
Wright Annex The Classes are<lb/>
available to all students Atten<lb/>
dance is voluntary no fromal<lb/>
registration is required.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
"Toward the New Millennium:<lb/>
Challenges and Dreams will be<lb/>
the theme of the eighth annual<lb/>
ECU Phi Kappa Phi symposium to<lb/>
be held on campus in early<lb/>
February, of 83 A call for both<lb/>
faculty and student papers suppor<lb/>
tmg this theme, which deals with<lb/>
the future, has tieen issued In an<lb/>
ticipation of the new millennium,<lb/>
papers are invited to deal with a<lb/>
wide range of topics ranging from<lb/>
discussions of the near future will<lb/>
or may hold Faculty are invited,<lb/>
at this time, to submit abstracts of<lb/>
approximately one page with a<lb/>
deadline for submission of<lb/>
November 15 Papers selected will<lb/>
be announced by November 24.<lb/>
Student papers directed toward<lb/>
the same theme are invited, two of<lb/>
which will be selected for a award<lb/>
of JIO0 each The best student<lb/>
paper submitted will be included<lb/>
m the symposium program Both<lb/>
faculty and student papers are to<lb/>
be submitted to Dr j W. Byrd,<lb/>
Department of Physics<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
HEY! Do you enjoy friendly<lb/>
fellowship, good friends and food,<lb/>
and a chance to be yourself n this<lb/>
"rat race" environment at ECU?<lb/>
Then come iom us at tne Baptist<lb/>
Student union where we nave din-<lb/>
ners on Tuesdays at 5:30 for only<lb/>
$1 75 PAUSE on Thursdays at<lb/>
7 00 to allow us to take a break<lb/>
after an almost fulfilling week,<lb/>
and lots of people iust like you who<lb/>
enjoy others Call 752 4646 if you<lb/>
have any questions Bob Clyde<lb/>
campus minister<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Duke Power has available a<lb/>
variety of co-op positions. All work<lb/>
experiences are tor alternating<lb/>
semesters beginning in January or<lb/>
May '983 and are located in<lb/>
Charlotte Any interested students<lb/>
with a minimum GPA of 2 0 and<lb/>
majoring in Computer Science,<lb/>
Math, Business Education, Office<lb/>
Administration, industrial Educa-<lb/>
tion, industrial Technology,<lb/>
Chemistry or Environmental<lb/>
Health should contact tne Co op of<lb/>
fice, ext 6979<lb/>
SLAPBAKESALE<lb/>
If you're hungry for Mom's<lb/>
home cooking, we have the next<lb/>
best thing. Come on out Sat Oct<lb/>
23 from 10 a.m. until 12 noon to the<lb/>
SLAP bakesale in the tresnman<lb/>
parking lot across from Beef'n<lb/>
Shakes Help make this fundraiser<lb/>
a success!<lb/>
CO?OP<lb/>
There win be an organizational<lb/>
meeting tor the Co-op club on<lb/>
Thursday. October 21, at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
in 306 Rawl The club is for an<lb/>
returning Co op students and those<lb/>
interested In the Cooperative<lb/>
Education program at ECU. Call<lb/>
757 6979 for more information<lb/>
BRODY BUILDING<lb/>
DEDICATION<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff and students<lb/>
are invited to a special open house<lb/>
at the School of Medicine's Brody<lb/>
Medical Sciences Building Man<lb/>
day. Oct 25 from 3:00 6:00 pm<lb/>
The tour is one of several special<lb/>
events to be htid to highlight the<lb/>
dedication of the school's new S26<lb/>
million facility<lb/>
ECU guests will be able to tour<lb/>
teaching areas and research<lb/>
laboratories and see many of the<lb/>
building's special features, in<lb/>
eluding a biohazards contamnc-<lb/>
facility Refreshments will be<lb/>
served<lb/>
Gov James B Hunt Jr will be<lb/>
the keynote speaker at the formal<lb/>
dedication and ribbon cutting on<lb/>
Oct. 29 at 4 00 pm The ECU Wind<lb/>
Ensemble under the direction of<lb/>
Prof Herbert L Carter will per<lb/>
form<lb/>
Also scheduled during dedica<lb/>
tion week are an open house for<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
employees on Oct 26 and special<lb/>
continuing medical education pro-<lb/>
gram on calicum antagonists on<lb/>
Oct 27<lb/>
Rock ? roll<lb/>
with a<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
The Record Bar goes undercover to bring you<lb/>
two albums of perilous rock at a very safe price.<lb/>
38 Special "Special Forces"<lb/>
Spy "Spys"<lb/>
on sale through October 27<lb/>
$6.49 LP$6.99 Tape<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
RECORDS. TAPES ? A LITTLE BIT MORE<lb/>
Pitt PlazaCarottrta East Matt<lb/>
ZETABETATAU<lb/>
There wil be ? meeting at 6:00 at<lb/>
New Deli on Thursday October 21.<lb/>
Ail of the officers must be present<lb/>
at 5:30. If there are any questions<lb/>
call 758 790 or 753 7290. Anyone in-<lb/>
terested is welcomed to attend, if<lb/>
is not too late to be a charter<lb/>
member<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a major dur<lb/>
ing change of major week for the<lb/>
Fall Semester, should report to<lb/>
Minges COMseum from 12:00-2:00<lb/>
p.m. on Thursday. December 9,<lb/>
1982 (reading day) for ? motor<lb/>
physical fitness test. Satisfactory<lb/>
performance on this test Is re-<lb/>
quired as a pre requisite to' of<lb/>
ficial admittance to the physical<lb/>
education major program. More<lb/>
detailed information concerning<lb/>
the test is available by calling<lb/>
757 6497<lb/>
Any student with a medical con-<lb/>
dition that would contrainaicafe<lb/>
participation in the testing pro<lb/>
gram should contact Dr. Israel at<lb/>
757 6497 Examples would include<lb/>
heart murmurs, congenital heart<lb/>
disease or significant<lb/>
muscuioskeietai problems if you<lb/>
have nay significant medical con<lb/>
ditions please notify Dr Israel<lb/>
even if you plan to be tested.<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
Tne Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program will hold a meeting on<lb/>
October 26 at 5 00 pm m the second<lb/>
floor conference room of Erwin<lb/>
Hall. Any student intersted in fur<lb/>
thering responsible attitudes<lb/>
toward tne use of chemical<lb/>
substances is encouraged to at-<lb/>
tend For more information call<lb/>
757 6793 or 757 6649<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Black and Decker in Tarboro<lb/>
has an opening tor a part time ac<lb/>
counting clerk. Tne person must<lb/>
be able to perform miscellaneous<lb/>
accounting duties such as paying<lb/>
invoices and general bookkeep-<lb/>
ing Preferred s someone who can<lb/>
operate a 10-key adding machine.<lb/>
Employment would start as soon<lb/>
as possible For more info, can the<lb/>
Co-op office, ext. ef79<lb/>
SIGMA TAU<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
We're having a Halloween<lb/>
Costume Party nexi Thursday<lb/>
nignt, October 2tth. ah party<lb/>
goers who wish to participate a<lb/>
our costume contest must dress up<lb/>
as a literary character The BEST<lb/>
costume wins S25. English Depart<lb/>
ment faculty as wen as members<lb/>
are cordially invited. Time and<lb/>
place win be posted later Stay<lb/>
tuned!<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Weather permitting, we will be<lb/>
at the bottom of college hill today.<lb/>
ana every Tues and Thurs. at<lb/>
4.00. Look for the frisbee dub in<lb/>
the Homecoming parade. 19?2<lb/>
Natural Light Flying Disc Class c<lb/>
video win be snown at the Attic<lb/>
Wed Nov 10 Club meetings are<lb/>
Monday nights-l 00 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Room 24t. anyone interested n<lb/>
frisbee is urged to attend<lb/>
BE A CLOWN<lb/>
Anyone who would like to star in<lb/>
the homecoming parade by dress<lb/>
ing like a clown and giving out<lb/>
balloons, or iust for the excuse of<lb/>
acting crazy in public, please con<lb/>
tact John Curtis MS Center and<lb/>
leave your name and pnone<lb/>
number Thanks!<lb/>
CATHOLIC<lb/>
NEWMAN CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
join in with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday n the Biology<lb/>
Lecture Han starting at 12 30 and<lb/>
every Wednesday at 5 00 at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center located<lb/>
down at the bottom of College Hill<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center is<lb/>
having a Burger and Beer Bash 111<lb/>
and you are invited it will be held<lb/>
Sunoay October 24 at 2:30 till<lb/>
whenever, it win be held at tne<lb/>
Newman Center, 953 E 10th<lb/>
Street, located at the bottom of trie<lb/>
Hill we will supply tne oeer<lb/>
burgers, notoogs and soda Please<lb/>
bring a salad or dessert, and a Si<lb/>
donation Hope to see you there.<lb/>
PROSE<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
The REBEL sconouct.ngapro<lb/>
se contest, open to an current ECU<lb/>
students First prize is S?25. se<lb/>
cond prile M S100. and third prie<lb/>
is S7S. Pnre money is provided by<lb/>
the Attic and Budweise' Submit<lb/>
typed entries to tne REBEL or<lb/>
Media offices located n the<lb/>
publications building The<lb/>
deadline is November I so ge'<lb/>
busy The winners win be pub. 6<lb/>
eo m REBEL 83 ana af ante's<lb/>
will be convoked A copy of the<lb/>
rules is pos'ed outside the REBEi-<lb/>
office if you "ave any questions<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
Need some extra money Er-er<lb/>
the REBEL poe'ry ccres" ao<lb/>
you could win the S90 Nrtl pr it<lb/>
$70 second pr.xe or 'he Sac Haird<lb/>
prize Prize money s prav vec o?<lb/>
the Attic ano Budweise' Tne cor<lb/>
test If open to an current ECU<lb/>
students, and aH entries snou'C be<lb/>
submitted to tne REBEL Dr Mec a<lb/>
Board offices in tne putucaons<lb/>
building py November t nciyoe a<lb/>
cover sheet with your aa-ie ad<lb/>
dress and telephone number yym<lb/>
ners win be pubisMeo Hi tne<lb/>
REBEL and an o'hers ?fN be cor<lb/>
sidered<lb/>
S.R.A.<lb/>
Stuoen' Residence Association<lb/>
now has an office loca'ed l? Gree"<lb/>
Hall Anyone interested H con<lb/>
tnbufing 'deas offering<lb/>
assistance or asking questions<lb/>
having to do with tne Stude<lb/>
Residence Association tee' tree ?c<lb/>
come by Office Hours are from<lb/>
2 X pm to 4 00 pm Monday<lb/>
through Friday<lb/>
COMMERCIAL<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Fasnionmooei announcement<lb/>
dates have been changec to<lb/>
November 3 and 4. 7 00 to 10 0C<lb/>
4 HCLUB<lb/>
The ECu Conegiate 4H Cant<lb/>
will meet October 25 n room 248 of<lb/>
MSC at 5 15 Everyone welcome<lb/>
For questions can 7S? 8887<lb/>
Carolina east mall Sgreenville<lb/>
If s Gant Week! FREE Mug! FREE Giveaway!<lb/>
Register now for a week's worth (7) of drMi shirts to be given away October<lb/>
aOthl No purchase is necessary to register. Also, a Gant mug will be givan<lb/>
away with the purchase of a Gant shirt or slacks at regular price. Our Gant<lb/>
salesman, Joe Overfett will be here Saturday, October 23rd to help you.<lb/>
Make Gant your best wardrobe investment for long<lb/>
comfort! Polyestercotton, 100 2x2 ply cotton oxford shirts,<lb/>
plaids. Sizes 14 to 17, 32 to 36. Mi to tM<lb/>
Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m.<lb/>
Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2366)<lb/>
year round<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0003"/><lb/>
Amendments On State Ballot<lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 21.1982<lb/>
RALEIGH (UP1) ?<lb/>
North Carolinians will<lb/>
decide the fate of con-<lb/>
stitutional amendments<lb/>
affecting the start of<lb/>
legislative terms and<lb/>
finances for urban<lb/>
renewal projects when<lb/>
they vote Nov. 2.<lb/>
Unlike the furor last<lb/>
spring over proposed<lb/>
tour-year terms for<lb/>
General Assembly<lb/>
members, this fall's<lb/>
suggested changes have<lb/>
generated hardly any<lb/>
debate. Both are likely<lb/>
to pass.<lb/>
The first amendment<lb/>
would push back the<lb/>
start of a legislator's<lb/>
term from election day<lb/>
to Jan. 1, mostly to ac-<lb/>
commodate local of-<lb/>
ficials who are headed<lb/>
to the General<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
The Constitution<lb/>
forbids an official from<lb/>
holding two public jobs<lb/>
at the same time. This<lb/>
meant, for example,<lb/>
that a mayor elected to<lb/>
the House would have<lb/>
to resign from City<lb/>
Hall immediately after<lb/>
winning the legislative<lb/>
seat, even though he<lb/>
wouldn't be going to<lb/>
Raleigh for several<lb/>
more months.<lb/>
Senior Deputy At-<lb/>
torney General James<lb/>
F. Bullock said he<lb/>
favors the change<lb/>
because it eliminates<lb/>
confusion over what a<lb/>
local official can do.<lb/>
But Rep. JP. Huskins,<lb/>
D-lredell, believes it<lb/>
will only cause confu-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"If something hap-<lb/>
pened and the governor<lb/>
had to call a special ses-<lb/>
sion you'd have a<lb/>
School Budgets Cut<lb/>
EAST LANSING.<lb/>
MI (CPS) ? Budget<lb/>
cuts have gone so deep<lb/>
that Michigan State<lb/>
University dorm<lb/>
residents now must pay<lb/>
extra for a sound<lb/>
night's sleep.<lb/>
The university has<lb/>
stopped supplying<lb/>
dorm residents with<lb/>
feather pillows this fall<lb/>
as part of an effort to<lb/>
save money, explains<lb/>
Donald Schmidt, assis-<lb/>
tant dorm manager.<lb/>
Students now have to<lb/>
bring their own pillows<lb/>
to school.<lb/>
MSU and all<lb/>
Michigan state schools<lb/>
already have had to<lb/>
cope with four budget<lb/>
cuts this year as the<lb/>
state tries to make up<lb/>
for revenue shortfalls<lb/>
in the depressed region.<lb/>
Losing pillows isn't<lb/>
the first indignity MSU<lb/>
students have suffered.<lb/>
In July, the school an-<lb/>
nounced it would<lb/>
replace its traditional<lb/>
"leatherette" diploma<lb/>
covers with 35-cent<lb/>
cardboard covers.<lb/>
But MSU students<lb/>
aren't the only ones ex-<lb/>
periencing such hard-<lb/>
ships. Colleges in more<lb/>
than 20 states are being<lb/>
forced to cut budgets<lb/>
? and in some cases<lb/>
student services ? in<lb/>
mid-fiscal year.<lb/>
Kansas State, for ex-<lb/>
ample, now delivers<lb/>
grades to students by<lb/>
hand instead of by<lb/>
mail, thus saving some<lb/>
$4000 a term in postage<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
At American Univer-<lb/>
sity in Washington,<lb/>
D.C dorms have<lb/>
removed paper towels<lb/>
from lounges, laid off<lb/>
security guards, and<lb/>
shut down air condi-<lb/>
tioning during the day.<lb/>
Northern Illinois<lb/>
students recently<lb/>
camped outside to pro-<lb/>
test the shutting down<lb/>
of their dorm air condi-<lb/>
tioning.<lb/>
Maryland recently<lb/>
became the largest<lb/>
school to drop free<lb/>
telephones from the list<lb/>
of dorm amenities.<lb/>
The most serious ef-<lb/>
fects of the state cut-<lb/>
backs have been on<lb/>
academic jobs and pro-<lb/>
grams. During the sum-<lb/>
mer. Temple Univesity<lb/>
fired 50 tenured pro-<lb/>
fessors, while Sonoma<lb/>
State fired 29.<lb/>
The State University<lb/>
of New York at<lb/>
RCADF N XRIKM<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
Gl Cainoutiagtd Fatiguii and<lb/>
T Shirts Sleeping Baqs<lb/>
HacKp?c? Camping Equip<lb/>
merit Steel Toed Shoes<lb/>
Dishf s and Over 700 OiMerent<lb/>
New. and Used Items Cowboy<lb/>
Boots 13? 95<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
SYORE fUr"<lb/>
Brockport laid off 52<lb/>
teachers, eliminated its<lb/>
geography, German<lb/>
and Music majors, and<lb/>
cut a number of course<lb/>
offerings.<lb/>
The University of<lb/>
Idaho similarly reduced<lb/>
the number of classes it<lb/>
offers, ended its<lb/>
museum studies pro-<lb/>
gram and stopped its<lb/>
tutoring service to<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Over the last two<lb/>
weeks, Alabama,<lb/>
Georgia and Colorado<lb/>
colleges learned they<lb/>
would have to slash<lb/>
their budgets for the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The problems arise<lb/>
when local economies<lb/>
sour, people make less<lb/>
money, and thus pay<lb/>
the states less in taxes<lb/>
than the states had<lb/>
planned to spend. Even<lb/>
though a majority of<lb/>
state legislatures actual-<lb/>
ly budgeted more for<lb/>
higher education than<lb/>
they did last year, a ma-<lb/>
jority of those have<lb/>
since had to renege on<lb/>
their promises of more<lb/>
money. When that hap-<lb/>
pens, all state-funded<lb/>
institutions ? in-<lb/>
cluding colleges ?<lb/>
typically have to 1m-<lb/>
ARCADE ARIETY<lb/>
;i?t S ii a titbit '? i?<lb/>
All<lb/>
2 Liters<lb/>
99C<lb/>
pose emergency cut-<lb/>
backs.<lb/>
It took two years of<lb/>
such cuts to affect stu-<lb/>
dent service at<lb/>
Michigan State.<lb/>
Now "we annually<lb/>
go through all the ser-<lb/>
vices we offer to<lb/>
students to see which<lb/>
are most utilized and<lb/>
cost-effective<lb/>
Schmidt says. "Pillows<lb/>
have been a high-<lb/>
replacement item for<lb/>
us<lb/>
MSU spent $22,000<lb/>
last year to repair or<lb/>
replace warm feather<lb/>
pillows, Schmidt says.<lb/>
Some 4000 pillows ?<lb/>
out of a total of 16,000<lb/>
? are typically replac-<lb/>
ed because of wear and<lb/>
destruction during<lb/>
pillow tights.<lb/>
Schmidt says of-<lb/>
ficials have been ex-<lb/>
perimenting with ways<lb/>
of solving the pillow<lb/>
problem, including us-<lb/>
ing throw-away<lb/>
pillows. "But the<lb/>
throw-aways didn't<lb/>
even make it through a<lb/>
year's use<lb/>
Students apparently<lb/>
are bringing their own<lb/>
without much fuss,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
bunch of lame ducks in<lb/>
Raleigh passing on<lb/>
whatever happens to be<lb/>
called he said.<lb/>
The other amend-<lb/>
ment would let a city<lb/>
issue "tax increment"<lb/>
bonds for specific parts<lb/>
of their communities<lb/>
without seeking voter<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
The bonds would<lb/>
raise money for public<lb/>
works in a particular<lb/>
area, such as a civic<lb/>
center or parking deck.<lb/>
Those bonds funding<lb/>
those projects then<lb/>
would be paid back by<lb/>
the growth in property<lb/>
taxes ? the tax incre-<lb/>
ment ? assessed<lb/>
private businesses in<lb/>
the area.<lb/>
"It's such a nice new<lb/>
financing device said<lb/>
Ernest Ball, legal coun-<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 -i4 week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
cheapest gomes<lb/>
in town<lb/>
You won't<lb/>
find a<lb/>
better deal<lb/>
on games<lb/>
anywhere in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
?5 Tokens tor $1.00<lb/>
?Longest plays in town<lb/>
?2 tree tokens witn each<lb/>
food order<lb/>
? Great sandwiches<lb/>
? Supervised Game Room<lb/>
? Take-out Service<lb/>
sandwich<lb/>
game<lb/>
756-9219<lb/>
264 Bypass Behind Ramada Inn<lb/>
South Park Shopping CenterGreenville<lb/>
Watch for our ad in the East Carolinian<lb/>
on Tues Oct. 26, about our annual<lb/>
Halloween Sidewalk Sale for Oct. 27.<lb/>
Bargains and fun for all.<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and operated by hast Carolina University<lb/>
cil for the North<lb/>
Carolina League of<lb/>
Municipalities. "It<lb/>
would make it much<lb/>
easier to provide public<lb/>
facilities in conjunction<lb/>
with private develop-<lb/>
ment in downtown<lb/>
areas without putting a<lb/>
charge against the<lb/>
public<lb/>
Huskins said he liked<lb/>
the idea in general but<lb/>
opposed issuing bonds<lb/>
without a public vote.<lb/>
Ball argued, however,<lb/>
that many bonds are<lb/>
charged only against<lb/>
certain groups, such as<lb/>
for water projects.<lb/>
State Treasurer<lb/>
Harlan Boyles also en-<lb/>
dorsed the amendment,<lb/>
calling it an innovative<lb/>
idea for North Carolina<lb/>
that has proved itself in<lb/>
nearly 40 other states.<lb/>
"JS<lb/>
jegf<lb/>
752-0476<lb/>
COUKTRV<lb/>
C0OKIM6<lb/>
Daily Special<lb/>
$t99<lb/>
plus tea and tax<lb/>
1 meat, 2 veggies, 1 bread<lb/>
Open after the game until. <lb/>
"Tailgate with Barbeque Ribs<lb/>
&amp; Chicken"<lb/>
Come see us after the game<lb/>
and try our new beef tips.<lb/>
We deliver if S plates or more.<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
J t ? i i ?- innm9' i 4V?<lb/>
Clothing x <lb/>
Warehouse Jeam<lb/>
752-1268<lb/>
402 S. Evans Street<lb/>
On the Downtown Mall<lb/>
Ladies' &amp; Men's Shoes<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Topsiders BASS<lb/>
Leather Men's &amp; Ladies' Boots<lb/>
and all other name brands<lb/>
BUY ONE PAIR AT<lb/>
REGULAR PRICE ?<lb/>
GET 2nd PAIR AT PRICE<lb/>
12<lb/>
Also in the back section:<lb/>
ladies' &amp; Children's<lb/>
Shoes or Clogs<lb/>
3 pair for $15<lb/>
or $7 for 1 pair<lb/>
Men's Shoes $8.00<lb/>
Hours: 10:00-5.30 Mon. Sat.<lb/>
MasterCharge Visa Layaway Plan Available<lb/>
It<lb/>
oo<lb/>
t f We Are Going for<lb/>
? Volume With Permanently<lb/>
Reduced Prices<lb/>
Reg. Our<lb/>
Brond price Price<lb/>
Jordache42- 27"<lb/>
Calvin Klein42" 24"<lb/>
Chic34- 20"<lb/>
LeeJr.&amp;Ms29- 18"<lb/>
Gloria Vanderbilt46" 27"<lb/>
Men's Lee Rider25" 16"<lb/>
Boys' Lee Rider19" 12"<lb/>
Dee Cee 14 ox. Denim15" 9"<lb/>
For Men &amp; Women UMany Others<lb/>
Black Denim<lb/>
Gloria Vanderbilt<lb/>
9Q99<lb/>
Reg $42 00 OUR PRICE X7<lb/>
OVER 3,000 pairs in stock<lb/>
Next to McDonald's On<lb/>
264 By Pass, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
31<lb/>
Several Sty In<lb/>
Overalls<lb/>
3<lb/>
Reg. $24 00 OUR PRICE<lb/>
15<lb/>
99<lb/>
Phone 756-0857<lb/>
MB<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
3tt?e laot (Earoltafan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, a- Ma?atrr<lb/>
Mike Hughes. ManaitlnKtd,?r<lb/>
Waverly Merritt. mm oj Cindy Pleasants. - mm,<lb/>
Robert Rucks. ?? m Greg Rideout. ,? ?,<lb/>
AU AFRASHTEH. ? M- STEVE BACHNER. -?- WOm<lb/>
Stephanie Croon, c ? Juliana Fahrbach. ????<lb/>
Joni Guthrie. r?- w? M,KE DAV,S- Produc"onManag"<lb/>
October 14. 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
U.S. Politics<lb/>
Can We Trust Our Leaders?<lb/>
IN RESPONSE TO THE<lb/>
PRESIDEN1SSPEECH,<lb/>
WE DEMOCRATS ASK.<lb/>
ArHWrMLYBETTER<lb/>
OFFNWTH<lb/>
YOU WERE <lb/>
A YEAR<lb/>
MO<lb/>
BESIDES YOU<lb/>
MRS. REAGAN<lb/>
Although cases of impropriety<lb/>
among elected officials are by no<lb/>
means unique to this time period,<lb/>
the recent rash of crimes committed<lb/>
by several of this country's ? and<lb/>
especially this state's ? politicians<lb/>
definitely merits comment.<lb/>
Only a few weeks ago, amid a<lb/>
wave of controversy, Rep. Ike An-<lb/>
drews from North Carolina pleaded<lb/>
guilty to driving under the influence<lb/>
of alcohol on his way home from<lb/>
Washington, D.C. A common of-<lb/>
fense, admittedly, but nonetheless,<lb/>
a direct violation of the law.<lb/>
But even that event seems trivial<lb/>
by comparison to what has since<lb/>
evolved. This week's news has been<lb/>
virtually overflowing with other<lb/>
reports of similar cases. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, it seems a trend is upon us.<lb/>
In Wednesday's newspapers<lb/>
alone, three separate stories herald-<lb/>
ed case after case of illegalities<lb/>
engaged in by our elected officials.<lb/>
Closest to home, G. Ronald<lb/>
Taylor, a former state house<lb/>
member, was sentenced Tuesday to<lb/>
five years in prison and a $10,000<lb/>
fine for accepting a bribe from<lb/>
federal undercover agents.<lb/>
He had pleaded guilty to that<lb/>
charge on Sept. 17, obviously hop-<lb/>
ing to receive the sympathies of<lb/>
federal Judge Franklin T. Dupree.<lb/>
Instead, Dupree ? who is apparent-<lb/>
ly as sick and tired of this all-too-<lb/>
familiar mess as are most of us ?<lb/>
invoked the maximum penalty<lb/>
allowed under current law.<lb/>
But Taylor was only one of 21<lb/>
persons arrested in that case on July<lb/>
29 following a 21-month FBI in-<lb/>
vestigation. Another official, Ed-<lb/>
ward W. Williamson, a former Col-<lb/>
umbus County commissioner,<lb/>
pleaded guilty to bribery on Mon-<lb/>
day and received a prison sentence<lb/>
of 10 years.<lb/>
And still another state official,<lb/>
District Court Judge J. Wilton<lb/>
Hunt of Whiteville, is awaiting trial<lb/>
on several charges, including<lb/>
counterfeiting, bribery and<lb/>
racketeering, possession of stolen<lb/>
property and narcotics violations.<lb/>
Elsewhere, Rep. Philip Crane,<lb/>
R-Ill was charged Tuesday with<lb/>
driving under the influence of<lb/>
alcohol in San Rafael, Calif. He<lb/>
Nuclear.<lb/>
refused to submit to a blood-alcohol<lb/>
test, and a standard check revealed<lb/>
he was driving on an expired license.<lb/>
Sadly, the list goes on and on<lb/>
from a mayor in Newark, N.J<lb/>
charged with campaign im-<lb/>
proprieties to an Erie, Pa county<lb/>
tax director charged with embezzl-<lb/>
ing $268,000 in public monies over a<lb/>
four-year period.<lb/>
But if there is a point to be had<lb/>
from all this, then surely it has been<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Perhaps it would be too easy to<lb/>
dwell on the ironies surrounding<lb/>
lawmakers in today's society. That<lb/>
argument, however valid, is,<lb/>
nonetheless, overused. But by the<lb/>
same token, perhaps we have grown<lb/>
too accustomed to the infidelities of<lb/>
our elected officials. Perhaps we<lb/>
have even become immune.<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
Poetic, Prosaic Responses Uprooted<lb/>
Ten years ago ? roughly speak-<lb/>
ing the credibility of most U.S.<lb/>
public officials was simply accepted<lb/>
as fact. Trustworthiness was merely<lb/>
a campaign prerequisite ? at least<lb/>
in the eyes of the average voter.<lb/>
But since the age of Watergate,<lb/>
the ABSCAM convictions and<lb/>
numerous other offenses that have<lb/>
come to plague U.S. politics on a<lb/>
regular basis, elected officials are<lb/>
probably the least-trusted persons in<lb/>
American society.<lb/>
And aside from all the<lb/>
characteristic buck-passing that oc-<lb/>
curs at all levels of government<lb/>
(starting at the grassroots plateau),<lb/>
it is this lack of solid trust between<lb/>
officials and constituents which has,<lb/>
time and time again, stunted this na-<lb/>
tion's progress.<lb/>
After all, it is difficult to believe<lb/>
that any of the problems and issues<lb/>
facing the United States today will<lb/>
ever be absolutely solved when a<lb/>
goodly number of our "leaders"<lb/>
consistently opt to break the laws<lb/>
they are charged with enforcing.<lb/>
Granted, this oversimplification<lb/>
of such a truly gigantic tragedy is,<lb/>
by definition, dangerously over-<lb/>
simplified. But the dilemma is,<lb/>
nonetheless, set. As voters, we are<lb/>
charged with the responsibility of<lb/>
choosing "the best" candidate in<lb/>
the upcoming elections. How in hell<lb/>
are we supposed to know?<lb/>
First Step In Halting 'Futility'<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
President Reagan is against it; the<lb/>
Department of Defense is against it; Jesse<lb/>
Helms and John East are against it. And,<lb/>
closer to home, ECU Political Science Pro-<lb/>
fessor Dr. Edwin Griffith is against it.<lb/>
All these persons are oposed to what is<lb/>
known as the "Nuclear Freeze" move-<lb/>
ment. In fact, Griffith goes one step fur-<lb/>
ther; he implies that the KGB (the Soviet<lb/>
brand of the CIA) is behind both the freeze<lb/>
and peace movements in the U.S.<lb/>
Despite Griffith's absurd claims and<lb/>
President Reagan's scare-tactic warnings<lb/>
that a freeze will lock the U.S. in a<lb/>
vulnerable position of inferiority, the<lb/>
freeze is here to stay. The people of the<lb/>
United States and of the world are finally<lb/>
realizing that the insanity of the nuclear<lb/>
arms race must be stopped ? and revers-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The nuclear freeze is calling on the<lb/>
United States and the Soviet Union to ?<lb/>
bi-laterally stop the research and produc-<lb/>
tion of all nuclear weapons.<lb/>
Already, the freeze has received<lb/>
widespread support ? cities and towns all<lb/>
over the country have adopted local freeze<lb/>
legislation. On election day next month,<lb/>
the freeze will be on the ballots of several<lb/>
states in the form of a resolution.<lb/>
A groundswell is now emerging that<lb/>
What The Hell Do You Know, Lady?<lb/>
Nothing more than knowing<lb/>
I am ready to have<lb/>
my arms cut off.<lb/>
Goodbye red-gold<lb/>
reaching for the moon.<lb/>
Chaimawed at the ankles,<lb/>
falling like a fool,<lb/>
Soon I will crush<lb/>
my own ripe fruit.<lb/>
My wavey auburn curls,<lb/>
squirrel nest barrettes,<lb/>
also crushed;<lb/>
our final fall.<lb/>
Sectioned in all directions,<lb/>
mauled and split,<lb/>
they '11 smile<lb/>
when they heave me<lb/>
to the fire.<lb/>
With broken arthritic fingers,<lb/>
a torn natural dress,<lb/>
I'll decompose<lb/>
still feeling the pain.<lb/>
As I understand it,<lb/>
the chemicals are next.<lb/>
Broadcast to my feet<lb/>
they permanently dissolve<lb/>
my Mother Earth roots.<lb/>
Cut, split, burned,<lb/>
humiliated with acid<lb/>
what a way<lb/>
for a 200 year old<lb/>
lady to go.<lb/>
They don't understand<lb/>
I live, feel, remember<lb/>
before they were born.<lb/>
I could also forget<lb/>
the -times they said<lb/>
they lived.<lb/>
Maybe that's it.<lb/>
Like elephants, big turtles,<lb/>
I live longer<lb/>
than they do.<lb/>
They need<lb/>
to kill me.<lb/>
But what can I expect?<lb/>
They kill each other.<lb/>
Why should they think<lb/>
anything<lb/>
about murdering me?<lb/>
What the hell do you know, Man?<lb/>
Hal J. Daniel III<lb/>
Professor, S.L.A.P.<lb/>
Adjunct Professor, Anthropology<lb/>
Editor's Note: In addition to his posi-<lb/>
tion on the faculty at ECU, Hal Daniel is<lb/>
regional editor Jor Fine Madness, a<lb/>
Seattle-based poetry review.<lb/>
The geology faculty would like to be<lb/>
on record as opposing the Davis Ar-<lb/>
boretum site for the proposed new<lb/>
classroom building. We favor a location<lb/>
between Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
10th Street. This latter site would bring a<lb/>
more even balance to our campus; it<lb/>
would avoid adding to the congestion<lb/>
associated with Brewster, Memorial<lb/>
Gym and the Science Complex area, and<lb/>
it would preserve the wooded area<lb/>
associated with the arboretum.<lb/>
The question of the building site is not<lb/>
simply a fight between two gangs, one in<lb/>
favor of trees, the other in favor of<lb/>
parking lots. If this were the case, the<lb/>
mall would be the best site for the new<lb/>
building and for new parking lots, and<lb/>
all tree-lovers would come out on the<lb/>
losing side. The arboretum site will have<lb/>
negative long-term impacts on the<lb/>
physical and intellectual character of the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Also, there is a large reservoir of opi-<lb/>
nion within the university and Greenville<lb/>
in favor of saving the arboretum. Many<lb/>
alumni also would like to see the ar-<lb/>
boretum area preserved. The ad-<lb/>
ministration would be wise to consider<lb/>
these opinions and to refrain from what<lb/>
many of us feel is callous treatment of<lb/>
land and trees left as a gift to the univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
As far as we can see, the only viable<lb/>
argument in favor of the arboretum site<lb/>
is that it may cost less. The university<lb/>
does not own enough land in the area<lb/>
that would be a better site between Ninth<lb/>
and 10th streets! By its ngid point-by-<lb/>
point defense of the arboretum site, the<lb/>
administration is substituting trivial<lb/>
debate for substantive explanation.<lb/>
The administration also seems to be<lb/>
unwilling to assume a leadership role in<lb/>
acquiring the best site for the building.<lb/>
We are being asked to accept second-<lb/>
best status for the classroom building.<lb/>
Evidently, the administration does not<lb/>
accept second-best status for programs it<lb/>
deems important.<lb/>
The successful development of the<lb/>
medical school and the $1-million cam-<lb/>
paign for our football team are cases in<lb/>
point. If second-best status is not bang<lb/>
accepted for other ECU programs, why<lb/>
should it be accepted for an academic<lb/>
classroom building?<lb/>
A fund-raising drive for the<lb/>
Mendenhall-10th Street site could begin<lb/>
with faculty and students. Good<lb/>
response could form the basis for alum-<lb/>
ni, community and business support.<lb/>
These would give added weight to the re-<lb/>
quest for funds which the general ad-<lb/>
ministration will eventually have to sub-<lb/>
mit to the legislative process. All<lb/>
elements in the community could be in-<lb/>
volved in putting the new building in the<lb/>
best site, and the arboretum area could<lb/>
be preserved. If the administration<lb/>
wishes to lead, we will follow.<lb/>
The Geology Faculty<lb/>
Over The River And Through The Woods<lb/>
N.C. Home<lb/>
hopefully will not heed the type of pressure<lb/>
that is being applied by the likes of these<lb/>
madmen.<lb/>
For 37 years, the nuclear arms race Iul,<lb/>
gone on and on without interruption. It<lb/>
has been largely orchestrated by the same<lb/>
people who now oppose the freeze.<lb/>
These people are living in a fantasy<lb/>
world. They refuse to sec the futility of the<lb/>
arms race. Every year, they are given<lb/>
billions and billions of dollars for<lb/>
weapons, but it's never enough. They<lb/>
always want more and more. Fear is the<lb/>
basis of their argument.<lb/>
But now, the fear is no longer based<lb/>
solely on our Russian "enemies Rather,<lb/>
the fear results from the nuclear weapons<lb/>
themselves. There are now so many<lb/>
weapons on our planet that we are quickly<lb/>
losing control. Thirty-five nations will<lb/>
have nuclear weapons potential by the end<lb/>
of this decade. The ability to control the<lb/>
proliferation hinges on a sincere effort by<lb/>
all the superpowers to work together in an<lb/>
atmosphere of trust. Anti-Soviet rhetoric<lb/>
will not set the stage for this dialogue; it<lb/>
will only serve to maintain the status quo.<lb/>
The freeze is a constructive first step.<lb/>
Fortunately, the American people are<lb/>
ahead of their "leaders" in the effort to<lb/>
create a safe and peaceful world. No<lb/>
longer will their empty, trustless words<lb/>
reign supreme.<lb/>
Unlike most every other normal<lb/>
American kid who's ever gone to grade<lb/>
school, I never got to write a boring essay<lb/>
on "How I Spent My Summer Vacation<lb/>
It is, of course, entirely unfair. Eleven<lb/>
years of grammar school simply wasted.<lb/>
Naturally, this has left an incredible void<lb/>
in my life, an unachieved lifelong goal, an<lb/>
unfulfilled dream, so to speak.<lb/>
It is to this end, then, that I now bestow<lb/>
upon you, the faithful reader(s), the<lb/>
dubious honor of reading my first travel<lb/>
treatise, which I have so catchily tided<lb/>
"How I Spent My First ECU Fall Break<lb/>
It is my sincere hope that you may gain as<lb/>
much insight from reading it as I have lost<lb/>
from writing it.<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Way It Is<lb/>
Now, I don't know about you, but<lb/>
before I go on a trip ? regardless of where<lb/>
? I like to give the car the once-over, just<lb/>
to be sure all the important things are<lb/>
working okay. I've run into some pro-<lb/>
blems in the past, and let me tell you, it's<lb/>
no fun.<lb/>
But, fortunately, this time, everything<lb/>
was fine. The tape player wasn't slurring as<lb/>
usual; the ash tray was empty, and the coat<lb/>
hanger was still snug around the muffler. I<lb/>
was all set for my big trip ? my very first<lb/>
exposure to North Carolina culture.<lb/>
Needless to say, the excitement was<lb/>
mounting when I left on Friday with my<lb/>
trusty K-Mart road atlas at my side. Fall<lb/>
break couldn't have come at a better time<lb/>
 right smack in the middle of North<lb/>
Carolina Festival Week. And I for one<lb/>
planned to take in all the excitement.<lb/>
It's strange, but many people just don't<lb/>
realize that North Carolina ? a state I cer-<lb/>
tainly like calling home ? is simply a well<lb/>
of tradition and celebration?<lb/>
I mean, think about it; we've got a<lb/>
festival for almost anything you'd ever<lb/>
want to honor (and even some you pro-<lb/>
bably wouldn't). Let's see, there's a Shad<lb/>
Festival, Mullet Festival, Shrimp Festival,<lb/>
Collard Festival, Blue Crab Festival,<lb/>
Hollering Contest, bla bla bla.<lb/>
And, as if eating and drinking tons of<lb/>
"delicious" seafoods and greens weren't<lb/>
enough, each of these crowd-pleasing ex-<lb/>
travaganzas hosts a traditional beauty<lb/>
pageant, featuring young lovelies who<lb/>
gather from all over the "tri-county area"<lb/>
to vie for the coveted prize: a year's reign<lb/>
as Miss Mullet, Crab Girl or Queen Col-<lb/>
lard. Just imagine the thrill!<lb/>
But, as I was so fortunate to find out on<lb/>
my trek, these "rip-roarin' " get-togethers<lb/>
are only a small part of what this proud<lb/>
state has to offer. Several other lesser-<lb/>
known festivals, although they may well be<lb/>
just as good as their metropolitan counter-<lb/>
parts (Grifton, Swansboro, etc.), have yet<lb/>
to hit North Carolina's big-time media cir-<lb/>
cuit.<lb/>
Take the Squirrel-Carcass-Throwing<lb/>
Festival in Stench, N.C, for instance.<lb/>
Amazingly, not too many people this side<lb/>
of the Guano River know about it. But<lb/>
every year in October, since around the<lb/>
turn of the century, hundreds of folks<lb/>
from Hog's Breath to Toadsville turn up at<lb/>
the Stench County Fair Grounds to take<lb/>
part in two days of distance and accuracy<lb/>
competition, not to mention plenty of<lb/>
eating, dancing and evicerating. Last<lb/>
year's winner, Mr. J.D. "J.D Shankar,<lb/>
repeated his expert performance from one<lb/>
year ago, w? a record toss of 76 feet, 4 in-<lb/>
ches, and only a moderate splat.<lb/>
In nearby Nosehair, N.C, I found out<lb/>
that the semi-annual Barber Shop Quartet<lb/>
Belching Contest has been pulling in the<lb/>
crowds for years. Yes, this small rural<lb/>
community of 38 comes to life twice a year<lb/>
? in early and late October ? to host the<lb/>
spectacular festivities. Last year's first<lb/>
contest was an upset victory by none other<lb/>
than Zack and Elrod Jackson, the town's<lb/>
mayor and milkman. Zack and Elrod won<lb/>
the hearts of old and young alike with their<lb/>
"stirring" rendition of "Yes, Jesus Loves<lb/>
Me It was truly a sight to behold.<lb/>
And then, of course, there's the Edna<lb/>
Gleck Look-Alike Contest and Festival in<lb/>
Wide Load, N.C, which features singing<lb/>
and dancing by the Gleckettes, a fine enter-<lb/>
tainment experience. Ironically, I found<lb/>
out that the event has never been won by<lb/>
Miss Gleck, although one corpulent par-<lb/>
ticipant said Edna did come in second the<lb/>
year Inez Dumfry took the trophy.<lb/>
But my favorite of all was probably the<lb/>
Half Moon (N.C.) Square Dance Festival<lb/>
and Bottle Fill. Now, there's a town that<lb/>
really knows how to throw a party. For<lb/>
eight hours, six of the best clogging bands<lb/>
this side of Gunk, Tennessee, performed<lb/>
night and day, playing the music that has<lb/>
made them and Half Moon famous<lb/>
(punkabilly), while the crowds gathered in<lb/>
awe around what has become the most<lb/>
popular festival attraction in recent years:<lb/>
the out-of-order sign on the plastic port-a<lb/>
john door. It's truly a sight to behold.<lb/>
Well, in short, that's how I spent my<lb/>
first ECU fall break. I'm sorry if you're<lb/>
turning green with envy, but I guess that's<lb/>
how it goes.<lb/>
So, the next time you're sitting around<lb/>
the house feeling sorry for yourself<lb/>
because you "don't have anything to do<lb/>
don't blame North Carolina. It certainly<lb/>
isn't her problem.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes is a seventh-<lb/>
generation parsley farmer from Saska-<lb/>
toon, Saskatchewan. This is not the first<lb/>
time he has written for The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian, although it may be the test.<lb/>
of<lb/>
will<lb/>
Clgi<lb/>
l.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Joi<lb/>
Th<lb/>
not<lb/>
to<lb/>
nsl<lb/>
<lb/>
fluJ<lb/>
sev<lb/>
41<lb/>
smi<lb/>
in<lb/>
.?<lb/>
pa<lb/>
vail<lb/>
imm ? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 21. 1982 5<lb/>
IV<lb/>
rc<lb/>
's<lb/>
id<lb/>
HI<lb/>
I-<lb/>
Flu Worse For Smokers<lb/>
BOSTON (UPl) ?<lb/>
People who smoke run<lb/>
a 25 percent greater risk<lb/>
of contracting the flu<lb/>
and when the do are<lb/>
likely to be sicker than<lb/>
non-smokers, Israeli<lb/>
doctors reported<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
The risk and severity<lb/>
of the flu increased<lb/>
with the number of<lb/>
cigarettes smoked dai-<lb/>
ly, the doctors reported<lb/>
in the New tngland<lb/>
Journal of Medicine.<lb/>
The report also said<lb/>
non-smokers confined<lb/>
to smoky rooms in the<lb/>
winter run a greater<lb/>
risk of contracting flu.<lb/>
"The risk for all in-<lb/>
fluenza (both mild and<lb/>
severe) increased from<lb/>
47 percent in non<lb/>
smokers to 72 percent<lb/>
in the heavy smokers"<lb/>
who puff more than a<lb/>
pack a da. the studv<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We conclude that<lb/>
smoking is a major<lb/>
determinant o' mor-<lb/>
bidity (sick rate) in<lb/>
epidemic influenza and<lb/>
may contribute<lb/>
substantially to m-<lb/>
capacitation in out-<lb/>
breaks in populations<lb/>
that smoke heavily<lb/>
the doctors said.<lb/>
The study, con-<lb/>
ducted on 336 healthy-<lb/>
young men in the Israel<lb/>
Defence Forces over a<lb/>
17-dav period during a<lb/>
1978' influenza<lb/>
epidemic, found<lb/>
smokers had 21.3 per-<lb/>
cent more cases of flu.<lb/>
It also found that<lb/>
smokers with the flu<lb/>
lost 20.5 percent more<lb/>
work days.<lb/>
"The relation bet-<lb/>
ween smoking and in-<lb/>
fluenza described here<lb/>
is probably causal<lb/>
they said. "We con-<lb/>
sider it highly unlikely<lb/>
that the association<lb/>
reflects the<lb/>
'constitutional'<lb/>
characteristic of<lb/>
smokers rather than the<lb/>
effects of smoking<lb/>
The results back up<lb/>
previous research in the<lb/>
Israeli military that<lb/>
found female recruits<lb/>
who smoked had a sick<lb/>
rate 44 percent higher<lb/>
than their non-smoking<lb/>
counterparts during an<lb/>
epidemic of an<lb/>
influenza-like illness.<lb/>
The doctors recom-<lb/>
mended flu immuniza-<lb/>
tion and a program to<lb/>
discourage smoking be<lb/>
implemented in large<lb/>
industrial and service<lb/>
organizations to cut<lb/>
down the number of<lb/>
work days lost by<lb/>
smokers with the flu.<lb/>
"Since both smoking<lb/>
and epidemic influenza<lb/>
are widespread, the im-<lb/>
pact of a causal<lb/>
association between the<lb/>
two would be of im-<lb/>
mense importance in<lb/>
terms of health and<lb/>
economic considera-<lb/>
tions the study said.<lb/>
Although the new<lb/>
study found the<lb/>
number of cigarettes<lb/>
smoked daily increased<lb/>
the risk and severity of<lb/>
the flu, the length of<lb/>
time a person smoked<lb/>
had no impact. The<lb/>
recruits studied all had<lb/>
smoked at least 6 mon-<lb/>
ths.<lb/>
And cases of severe<lb/>
flu was 30 percent in<lb/>
non-smokers; 40 per-<lb/>
cent in tight smokers<lb/>
(under 10 cigarettes a<lb/>
day); 52 percent in<lb/>
moderate smokers (up<lb/>
to a pack a day); and 54<lb/>
percent in heavy<lb/>
smokers.<lb/>
The 132 subjects with<lb/>
severe cases lost an<lb/>
average of three work-<lb/>
ing days each and the<lb/>
whole unit lost 403<lb/>
working days.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ECU Society of Collegiate<lb/>
Journalists<lb/>
Live 3-D Concert<lb/>
Comes To Campus<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
two years, after which<lb/>
the equipment they in-<lb/>
stalled becomes the<lb/>
property of the univer-<lb/>
sity. According to<lb/>
Hammond this opens<lb/>
up numerous<lb/>
possibilities for campus<lb/>
programming.<lb/>
The Devo concert on<lb/>
Oct. 30 will be the first<lb/>
live 3-D concert in<lb/>
history. Tickets will be<lb/>
$5 advance for students<lb/>
and $6 at the door. For<lb/>
non-students, tickets<lb/>
will be $6 advance and<lb/>
$7 at the gate. Tickets<lb/>
are on sale now at the<lb/>
central ticket office in<lb/>
Mendenhall and the<lb/>
local branches of Apple<lb/>
Records and Record<lb/>
Bar.<lb/>
Will Meet On Oct. 26 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Austin 203<lb/>
Guest Speaker Dr. Jim Holte<lb/>
Everyone Welcome<lb/>
ARCADE<lb/>
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UKP-5600 A mini in-dash cassette with AM FM<lb/>
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pre-set pushbutton tuning. Music Search. ATSC<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
7<lb/>
,<lb/>
t<lb/>
Tibetan Monk To Speak At ECU Tonight<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
A Tibetan Buddhist<lb/>
monk will be speaking<lb/>
tonight at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. The<lb/>
lecture is titled<lb/>
"Discovering Inherent<lb/>
Qualities of In-<lb/>
telligence and is be-<lb/>
ing co-sponsored by the<lb/>
departments of<lb/>
sociology, an-<lb/>
thropology, economics<lb/>
and philosophy. The<lb/>
Asian Studies Commit-<lb/>
tee is also involved.<lb/>
The Venerable Khen-<lb/>
po Karthar Rinpoche<lb/>
traveled to Greenville<lb/>
from his monastery in<lb/>
Woodstock, N.Y.<lb/>
"He's a being who is a<lb/>
great deal more<lb/>
enlightened than we<lb/>
are said ECU physics<lb/>
professor Dr. Joseph<lb/>
Norwood. "He's a<lb/>
Judge Hard On Protesters<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? A federal<lb/>
judge says he gave the<lb/>
maximum fine of<lb/>
$1,000 each to five anti-<lb/>
nuclear activists who<lb/>
trespassed at the Savan-<lb/>
nah River Plant after a<lb/>
peace rally this sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
Judge Charles E.<lb/>
Simons Jr. said<lb/>
Wednesday that he<lb/>
wanted to sentence the<lb/>
protesters to jail but<lb/>
"there's no sentence<lb/>
available to me. If there<lb/>
was, I'd impose it<lb/>
The five are Chris<lb/>
Kueny, 24, and<lb/>
Rosemarv Freriks, 26,<lb/>
of Chapel Hill, N.C<lb/>
Michael Gooding, 22;<lb/>
Barbara Smith, 23, and<lb/>
Mitch Yarborough, 40,<lb/>
all of Columbia.<lb/>
Federal officials have<lb/>
charged a sixth defen-<lb/>
dant, John Penley, 30,<lb/>
of Chapel Hill, with<lb/>
jumping bail.<lb/>
Simons ordered the<lb/>
group held at the<lb/>
Riehland County Jail<lb/>
until an indigency hear-<lb/>
ing before a U.S.<lb/>
magistrate today.<lb/>
U.S. Attorney Henry<lb/>
McMaster, who recom-<lb/>
mended the stiff fines,<lb/>
said if the defendants<lb/>
are indigent, meaning<lb/>
they have no way to<lb/>
pay the fines, they will<lb/>
be released.<lb/>
"When we are con-<lb/>
fronted with such a<lb/>
complete and utter<lb/>
disregard for the law<lb/>
and such a knowing<lb/>
and intentional and, in<lb/>
this case, an announced<lb/>
intention to break the<lb/>
law, we always recom-<lb/>
mend the maximum<lb/>
sentence he said.<lb/>
But defense attorney<lb/>
John Delgado said,<lb/>
"This is a vindictive<lb/>
response of the govern-<lb/>
ment to stifle dissent<lb/>
and free speech<lb/>
A spokesman for the<lb/>
Natural Guard that<lb/>
sponsored the peace<lb/>
rally said the group did<lb/>
not agree with their<lb/>
trespassing but sup-<lb/>
ported them through<lb/>
the trial.<lb/>
Brett Bursey said the<lb/>
defendants believed<lb/>
"their First Amend-<lb/>
ment right to freedom<lb/>
of speech to protest the<lb/>
government's nuclear<lb/>
arms policy was<lb/>
violated<lb/>
great deal saner than<lb/>
we are ? therefore he<lb/>
is an example<lb/>
The monastery,<lb/>
known as the Karma<lb/>
Triyana Kharmachakra<lb/>
Retreat Center, was<lb/>
established in 1978 as a<lb/>
center where students<lb/>
could study traditional<lb/>
Tibetan Buddhism.<lb/>
In 1976 Rinpoche<lb/>
was instructed by his<lb/>
Holiness the 16th<lb/>
Gyalwa Karmapa to<lb/>
help in the establish-<lb/>
ment of the KTD.<lb/>
Karmapa is head of<lb/>
the Kagyu Order and is<lb/>
the;chief holder of the<lb/>
meditation and Yoga<lb/>
teachings known as the<lb/>
Mahamudra and the<lb/>
Six Doctrines of<lb/>
Naropa. His spiritual<lb/>
status is considered<lb/>
equivalent to that of<lb/>
the Kalai Lama.<lb/>
Both Karmapa and<lb/>
Rinpoche were forced<lb/>
to flee from Tibet in the<lb/>
late 1950's after it was<lb/>
annexed by the<lb/>
Chinese.<lb/>
According to a state-<lb/>
ment issued by the<lb/>
Tibetan Buddhist<lb/>
Mediation Center of<lb/>
Grenville, the annexa-<lb/>
tion of Tibet destroyed<lb/>
much of its unique<lb/>
religious culture and<lb/>
forced what remained<lb/>
into exile. Many adept<lb/>
practitioners of Bud-<lb/>
dhism sought sanctuary<lb/>
in the West.<lb/>
Karmapa is credited<lb/>
with foreseeing the an-<lb/>
nihilation of Buddhist<lb/>
culture in Tibet. He<lb/>
successfully relocated<lb/>
to India a large number<lb/>
of Lamas as well as sav-<lb/>
ing valuable texts and<lb/>
relics.<lb/>
Rinpoche, 57, began<lb/>
his formal training at<lb/>
Trangu Monastery in<lb/>
the 1930s. He was fully<lb/>
ordained as a monk in<lb/>
the Hinayana tradition<lb/>
and received the or-<lb/>
dination of the<lb/>
Mahayana and Va-<lb/>
jrayana from the<lb/>
Venerable Situ Rin-<lb/>
poche when he was 20.<lb/>
He has also worked in<lb/>
the establishment of the<lb/>
first seminary for the<lb/>
Tibetan refugee com-<lb/>
munity at Buxa, India.<lb/>
Norwood describes<lb/>
Rinpoche as "an exam-<lb/>
ple of the fact that we<lb/>
don't have to settle for<lb/>
our usual level of<lb/>
neurosis<lb/>
He adds that Rin-<lb/>
poche is "practically<lb/>
entirely sane" and "it's<lb/>
rather startling to be<lb/>
around him<lb/>
According to Nor-<lb/>
wood, Buddhists<lb/>
recognize the value in<lb/>
all religions, believe in<lb/>
reincarnation, and are<lb/>
able to achieve a state<lb/>
of mind known as nir-<lb/>
vana. "They don't look<lb/>
down on other<lb/>
religions<lb/>
Agriculture Secretary Angry At<lb/>
Magazine Insult Of TV. C. Farms<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) ?<lb/>
Agriculture Commis-<lb/>
sioner James A.<lb/>
Graham vowed<lb/>
Wednesday he would<lb/>
never buy Newsweek<lb/>
again because this<lb/>
week's cover shows a<lb/>
reputed North Carolina<lb/>
farmer surrounded by<lb/>
marijuana plants.<lb/>
"It's absolutely,<lb/>
positively, completely,<lb/>
any way you look at it,<lb/>
a clear-cut insult to our<lb/>
state farmers who do<lb/>
their part to supply<lb/>
food to this state and<lb/>
this nation the raspy-<lb/>
voiced commissioner<lb/>
complained.<lb/>
"I think it's ternble.<lb/>
I resent it very much.<lb/>
My question is there are<lb/>
21 states that produce<lb/>
more marijuana than<lb/>
North Carolina. So<lb/>
why did they single out<lb/>
North Carolina0"<lb/>
The cover picture<lb/>
shows a man wearing a<lb/>
ski mask and holding a<lb/>
pitchfork and rifle. The<lb/>
lower right hand corner<lb/>
bears the words "North<lb/>
Carolina Farmer<lb/>
The article leads with<lb/>
seven paragraphs about<lb/>
"Uncle Jesse a<lb/>
former moonshiner<lb/>
who now grows mari-<lb/>
juana somewhere near<lb/>
the Yadkin River in<lb/>
western North<lb/>
Carolina. The man's<lb/>
marijuana patch can<lb/>
bring in $50,000 on the<lb/>
open market, the<lb/>
magazine said.<lb/>
North Carolina is not<lb/>
mentioned again in the<lb/>
article, which generally<lb/>
discusses how mari-<lb/>
juana now might be the<lb/>
nation's third largest<lb/>
cash crop, worth more<lb/>
than $10 billion a<lb/>
year<lb/>
Graham said he ob-<lb/>
jects to the cover's<lb/>
reference to its subject<lb/>
as a "farmer<lb/>
"The man on that<lb/>
cover is an outlaw he<lb/>
said. "By no stretch of<lb/>
the imagination could<lb/>
you call him a<lb/>
legitimate North<lb/>
Carolina farmers<lb/>
We do not have a pro-<lb/>
blem with legitimate<lb/>
farmers growing mari-<lb/>
juana. We produce<lb/>
peanuts, meats. We're<lb/>
number one in sweet<lb/>
potatoes and we take<lb/>
pride in tobacco.<lb/>
"I'd sue 4em if I<lb/>
could<lb/>
?<lb/>
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s ?,<lb/>
HAIR GALLERY<lb/>
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Homecoming Special<lb/>
YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN<lb/>
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IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
Your BSN means you're a professional In the Armv, it also<lb/>
means you're an officer You start as a full-fledged member of our<lb/>
medical team Write: Armv Nurse Opportunines,<lb/>
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ARMY NURSE CORPS.<lb/>
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GOOD 10-20 thru 10 27<lb/>
Open Mon. Sat Thurs. evening by app't.<lb/>
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To begin with, your order's made<lb/>
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That's different. And it's all served<lb/>
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You also get served fast, which<lb/>
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And you get it all at the terrific<lb/>
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Plus, where else do you find food<lb/>
with deliciously different names like<lb/>
Taco Supreme Burrito Supreme,<lb/>
and Enchirito.? Each one a far cry<lb/>
from the usual fast food fare (not to<lb/>
mention whatever that is they serve<lb/>
in the cafeteria).<lb/>
So cut out the coupon, then cut<lb/>
out for Taco Bell and see for your-<lb/>
self what a difference we make.<lb/>
.ui WHAT A Ufft0'Ct<lb/>
Indulge yourself in a warm cup of Cafe Vienna. It's a light<lb/>
and cinnamony touch of class. And just one of five deliciously<lb/>
different flavors<lb/>
from General Foods?<lb/>
International Coffees.<lb/>
GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES<lb/>
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GOOD ONLY AT 319 E. Greenville Boulevard Greeiwile<lb/>
?'H??MW'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21. 1982<lb/>
IV<lb/>
s<lb/>
e<lb/>
rn<lb/>
lie<lb/>
r<lb/>
k<lb/>
Group Protests Military Rally<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
SUH Writer<lb/>
A week-long conven-<lb/>
tion sponsored by<lb/>
Soldier of Fortune<lb/>
magazine was held in<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C. last<lb/>
week drawing over<lb/>
1,000 participants as<lb/>
well as a group of peace<lb/>
protestors.<lb/>
Soldier of Fortune<lb/>
magazine is noted for<lb/>
their pro-military, pro-<lb/>
mercenary slant. Their<lb/>
classified ads typically<lb/>
advertise "soldiers for<lb/>
hire" with the<lb/>
qualifications asked for<lb/>
ranging from expert<lb/>
markmanship to<lb/>
knowledge of<lb/>
weaponry, for high risk<lb/>
jobs for dependable<lb/>
pro-western alliances.<lb/>
The event drew<lb/>
various speakers, in-<lb/>
cluding U.S. Army<lb/>
General William<lb/>
Westmoreland who<lb/>
highlighted the closing<lb/>
session of the conven-<lb/>
tion Saturday night.<lb/>
Westmoreland was<lb/>
field commander dur-<lb/>
ing the Vietnam War<lb/>
from 1964 to 1968 and<lb/>
army chief of staff<lb/>
from 1968-1972.<lb/>
Attorney General Ruling<lb/>
Objected To By Meyer<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
for appeal and Swaim<lb/>
the basis for his ruling.<lb/>
Swaim noted that<lb/>
Dr. Hlmer Meyer, vice<lb/>
chancellor for student<lb/>
life, might try to per-<lb/>
suade him to change his<lb/>
ruling when they met<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Meyer said he had no<lb/>
intention of trying to<lb/>
pressure Swaim to<lb/>
change his vote. "1 will<lb/>
be trying to tell him<lb/>
that he is clearly wrong<lb/>
on the ex-officio mat-<lb/>
ter. Not only is it clear<lb/>
in Robert's Rules of<lb/>
Order (that ex-officio<lb/>
members can vote) but<lb/>
is is also in the tradition<lb/>
of the SGA Meyer<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Swaim also based his<lb/>
ruling on the separate<lb/>
but equal branches of<lb/>
government doctrine,<lb/>
saying that the<lb/>
legislative and ex-<lb/>
ecutive council should<lb/>
not have a vote in the<lb/>
proceedings of the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Henderson could not<lb/>
be reached for com-<lb/>
ment on why he re-<lb/>
quested Swaim to rule<lb/>
on the matter in the<lb/>
first place.<lb/>
Other class officers<lb/>
such as David Cook,<lb/>
senior class president,<lb/>
Jill Tippet, sophomore<lb/>
class president and Jim<lb/>
Henderson, junior class<lb/>
president, were also af-<lb/>
fected by the ruling.<lb/>
Cook has also filed and<lb/>
appealed the ruling.<lb/>
Numerous books and<lb/>
buttons were on sale in-<lb/>
cluding one reading "I<lb/>
Love the Smell of<lb/>
Napalm in the Morn-<lb/>
ing "Assassination:<lb/>
Theory and Practice"<lb/>
and "Quiet Killer II:<lb/>
Silencer Update<lb/>
"We were opposed<lb/>
to the glorification and<lb/>
promotion of<lb/>
weaponry which was<lb/>
going on at the conven-<lb/>
tion said Aaron<lb/>
Newlander, one of the<lb/>
group of people who<lb/>
joined together in a<lb/>
silent vigil outside the<lb/>
convention center.<lb/>
Newlander was part<lb/>
of an ad-hoc committee<lb/>
called Concerned<lb/>
Citizens of Charlotte<lb/>
that came together<lb/>
specifically to oppose<lb/>
the Soldier of Fortune<lb/>
See us for all your<lb/>
Halloween needs, including<lb/>
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AT BARRE,ltd.<lb/>
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For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
Full Masks at greatly reduced Prices.<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd Greenville, N. C. 756 6670<lb/>
gathering.<lb/>
The magazine claims<lb/>
that its readers are<lb/>
mostly military<lb/>
veterans and active per-<lb/>
sonnel, police offiers<lb/>
and gun afficionados.<lb/>
Soldier of Fortune<lb/>
has been criticized<lb/>
because of its policy of<lb/>
carrying advertisements<lb/>
for mercenaries seeking<lb/>
work.<lb/>
It is illegal for any<lb/>
U.S. citizen to work in<lb/>
the military of a foreign<lb/>
army for pay. But the<lb/>
Boulder, Colorado-<lb/>
based publication<lb/>
claims that is a<lb/>
"magazine for profes-<lb/>
sional adventurers"<lb/>
and denies that they<lb/>
cater to mercenaries.<lb/>
Newlander said that<lb/>
the demonstrators were<lb/>
also opposed to the<lb/>
promotion of the use of<lb/>
violence to solve pro-<lb/>
blems rather than a<lb/>
peaceful and creative<lb/>
means of conflict<lb/>
resolution.<lb/>
The third annual<lb/>
gathering of the<lb/>
organization included<lb/>
military seminars, a<lb/>
shooting competition<lb/>
and demonstrations in<lb/>
the use of attack dogs,<lb/>
machine guns and<lb/>
parachuting.<lb/>
During a parachute<lb/>
jump that was con-<lb/>
ducted in cooperation<lb/>
with the convention, an<lb/>
Oklahoma man was<lb/>
killed when he landed<lb/>
in a tree and was<lb/>
strangled.<lb/>
<lb/>
PEKWG CUPPEft<lb/>
Hair Salon Unisex<lb/>
With a large number of<lb/>
ECU students (male &amp; female) as<lb/>
our customers, we are looking forward<lb/>
to catering to your every hair care<lb/>
need. College students of today<lb/>
demand certain styles that the<lb/>
PEKING CLIPPER is accustomed to<lb/>
doing. We stay open Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
nights till 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Call for appointment ot 758-1505<lb/>
Located 12 mile from ECU at 1005 A Hamilton St<lb/>
WILDFIRE<lb/>
RACING,<lb/>
IMPORT<lb/>
AUTO PARTS<lb/>
STOCK AND<lb/>
Hl-PERFORMANCE<lb/>
S.C.C.A. RACING<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
Thru Oct. 28th<lb/>
OPEN TO SERVE YOU DAILY<lb/>
FROM 6 P.M9 P.M.<lb/>
1604 DICKENSON AVENUE 758-3459<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/>
I<lb/>
'Home of Greenville's Best Meats1<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
EXPIRES 103082<lb/>
Name ?<lb/>
Address<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
Amt. of Purchase<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
Overtoil's Finest<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
Cottonelle<lb/>
Toilet<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 roll pkg.<lb/>
Limit 2<lb/>
Natural Light<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
6 Pack ? 12 Op. Cans<lb/>
$199<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
Overton's Finest<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
Lesueur<lb/>
Peas<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY<lb/>
303 can<lb/>
Limit 4<lb/>
All<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
Products<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
each<lb/>
Fresh,<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
43C<lb/>
Incredible Savings!<lb/>
Breyer'S<lb/>
tall<lb/>
Assorted Flavors<lb/>
Yogurt<lb/>
4$l<lb/>
8 oz. cup<lb/>
Great for Freezing!<lb/>
oo<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
4 lbs.<lb/>
$100<lb/>
Fresh Pork<lb/>
Small<lb/>
Spareribs<lb/>
$149<lb/>
Duncan Hines Butter<lb/>
Golden or<lb/>
Yellow<lb/>
Cake Mix<lb/>
18 oz. box<lb/>
78C<lb/>
Grade " A" White<lb/>
Large Eggs<lb/>
68C<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
Limit 2 dozen<lb/>
20C Off Label<lb/>
22 oz. bottle<lb/>
98C<lb/>
Go Pirates!<lb/>
Beat Illinois State!<lb/>
Be sure to do all of<lb/>
your homecoming grocery<lb/>
shopping at OVERTON'S<lb/>
&amp;1PN<lb/>
?hi '?ii vmm$wr-gfiwigg<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
A<lb/>
???<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
"r<lb/>
Woman Testifies In<lb/>
Trial Of Cycle Gang<lb/>
CHICAGO (UPI) ?<lb/>
A North Carolina<lb/>
woman testified<lb/>
Wednesday she spent<lb/>
Christmas Day, 1981,<lb/>
with her motorcycle<lb/>
gang captors, engaging<lb/>
in sexual orgies, taking<lb/>
drugs and sitting down<lb/>
to Christmas dinner<lb/>
with armed men.<lb/>
Darlene Betty<lb/>
Callahan, 25, was the<lb/>
key witness in the case<lb/>
against six members of<lb/>
the Outlaws motorcycle<lb/>
gang charged with kid-<lb/>
napping her and forc-<lb/>
ing her to work as a<lb/>
prostitute to pay off<lb/>
her boyfriend's $1,500<lb/>
drug debt.<lb/>
Ms. Callahan said<lb/>
she was taken to the<lb/>
homes of two gang<lb/>
members' mothers<lb/>
Christmas Day and that<lb/>
"everybody" took<lb/>
valium and snorted co-<lb/>
caine, drank and ate.<lb/>
She said dinner con-<lb/>
versation centered<lb/>
largely on the fate of a<lb/>
fellow gang member<lb/>
who was killed when<lb/>
his pickup truck was<lb/>
blown apart by a<lb/>
bomb.<lb/>
I ater, she said, she<lb/>
was taken to a motel<lb/>
where she was forced to<lb/>
engage in sexual acts<lb/>
with reputed gang<lb/>
leader Tommie Stimac,<lb/>
32, and his wife, Toni<lb/>
Summers, 35, while all<lb/>
took turns taking pic-<lb/>
tures.<lb/>
Ms. Callahan said<lb/>
che was also taken to<lb/>
the gang's Gary, Ind<lb/>
farmhouse, where she<lb/>
saw "pistols, shotguns,<lb/>
rifles and automatic<lb/>
weapons" and t-shirts<lb/>
with the Outlaws' skull<lb/>
emblem on them.<lb/>
She said she was con-<lb/>
stantly warned by the<lb/>
defendants not to try to<lb/>
escape. She said her<lb/>
captors carried<lb/>
automatic pistols in<lb/>
their belts and shoulder<lb/>
holsters.<lb/>
Ms. Callahan<lb/>
testified Tuesday she<lb/>
was kidnapped by the<lb/>
Outlaws, sold to Stimac<lb/>
and forced to have sex<lb/>
with club members to<lb/>
work off her<lb/>
boyfriend's $1,500<lb/>
drug debt.<lb/>
But lawyers for two<lb/>
of six members of the<lb/>
Outlaws charged with<lb/>
kidnapping and white<lb/>
slavery said she was a<lb/>
prostitute and drug ad-<lb/>
dict and traveled from<lb/>
North Carolina to<lb/>
Chicago willingly.<lb/>
Ms. Callahan, 25,<lb/>
testified in federal<lb/>
court she turned to pro-<lb/>
stitution in 1977 to sup-<lb/>
port her $300 to $500 a<lb/>
i<lb/>
2704 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758 1033<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Automotive Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
Jartran Rentals Available<lb/>
day heroin habit.<lb/>
She said she and her<lb/>
boyfriend were ab-<lb/>
ducted from their<lb/>
Asheville, N.C motel<lb/>
room in December 1981<lb/>
by Allan Ray Hat-<lb/>
taway, 33, Salisbury,<lb/>
N.C and Gary Miller,<lb/>
33, of Asheville.<lb/>
She said the pair<lb/>
forced her to travel to<lb/>
Chicago, where she was<lb/>
sold to Stimac and held<lb/>
prisoner for 44 days<lb/>
before she escaped Jan.<lb/>
25.<lb/>
Her boyfriend, Tom<lb/>
Forrester, and Lonnie<lb/>
Gamboa, both 29, were<lb/>
killed and tossed 100<lb/>
feet down an abandon-<lb/>
ed mine shaft in North<lb/>
Carolina, Ms. Callahan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Forrester was in debt<lb/>
for drugs, she said.<lb/>
Stimac, reputed<lb/>
regional vice president<lb/>
of the Outlaws; Ms.<lb/>
Summers; George R.<lb/>
"Snoopy" Borroughs,<lb/>
36, reputed head of the<lb/>
gang's Montreal<lb/>
chapter; Martin Cur-<lb/>
ran, 28; Hattaway and<lb/>
Miller were indicted in<lb/>
May on charges of kid-<lb/>
napping, using firearms<lb/>
in the commission of a<lb/>
felony and violating the<lb/>
Mann Act against white<lb/>
slavery.<lb/>
Hunt Promises<lb/>
Dump Site Safe<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jr. assured<lb/>
Warren County<lb/>
residents in an open let-<lb/>
ter Wednesday he will<lb/>
work to guarantee the<lb/>
safety of a PCB landfill<lb/>
near Alton, but one<lb/>
resident said Hunt's<lb/>
pledges are inadequate.<lb/>
The letter, published<lb/>
on a full page of the<lb/>
Warren Record, outlin-<lb/>
ed commitments Hunt<lb/>
made during an Oct. 8<lb/>
meeting with a<lb/>
10-person delegation<lb/>
representing opponents<lb/>
of the landfill.<lb/>
Hunt said the state<lb/>
will monitor the landfill<lb/>
and the environment<lb/>
and health of residents<lb/>
in the area. The gover-<lb/>
nor also said he will<lb/>
work for detoxification<lb/>
of the landfill and sup-<lb/>
port legislation banning<lb/>
further landfill con-<lb/>
struction in Warren<lb/>
County and transfer of<lb/>
any other toxic material<lb/>
to the PCB dump.<lb/>
Some opponents<lb/>
have claimed the Afton<lb/>
site was selected<lb/>
because a majority of<lb/>
Warren County citizens<lb/>
are black. Other critics<lb/>
say the landfill is bound<lb/>
to leak and thus en-<lb/>
dangers the health and<lb/>
safety of area residents.<lb/>
Security Phones<lb/>
Now Operating<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
? In the middle of the<lb/>
grass area between the<lb/>
Bloxton House and<lb/>
Garrett dormitory.<lb/>
? In the grass area bet-<lb/>
ween the Jenkins<lb/>
building and Jarvis<lb/>
dormitory on the north<lb/>
side facing the service<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
? On the southwest cor-<lb/>
ner of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium at the bar-<lb/>
ricades.<lb/>
? On the west side of<lb/>
the Croatan.<lb/>
? On the southwest cor-<lb/>
ner of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
? At the bus stop on the<lb/>
northeast side of Tyler<lb/>
dormitory.<lb/>
? In the grass area east<lb/>
of Minges Coliseum<lb/>
and west of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
? In the parking lot<lb/>
west of the Allied<lb/>
Health building.<lb/>
? On the north side of<lb/>
Fletcher dormitory.<lb/>
The Shoe Outlet<lb/>
i<lb/>
Wjl JP i?0 Evans Stree'<lb/>
' Weekly<lb/>
fromsup.m Specials<lb/>
7 DAYS A WK <lb/>
MONDAY - ?? <lb/>
Gyro Sondwich 2.45 2.00<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
Athenian Chicken 2.95 2.55<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
Steak &amp; Cheese Sub (or mushroom)2.65 2.25<lb/>
T URSDAY<lb/>
m ifior i.  Sp? ciat  2.95 2.55<lb/>
FKIDA .<lb/>
Kcubo a. m,  2.95 2.55<lb/>
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY<lb/>
Souvlakia Sandwich2.45 2.00<lb/>
201 West 9th Street<lb/>
NAME BRANDS at<lb/>
DISCOUNT PRICES<lb/>
50-75<lb/>
Off Regular Price<lb/>
Men's &amp; Ladies' SHOES<lb/>
Acme r? -<lb/>
Dingo DOOTS<lb/>
Hanover<lb/>
Nome Brand Leather Clogs<lb/>
$4.95-510.95<lb/>
Ladies' Dress &amp; Western Boots<lb/>
$10-$27.95<lb/>
BASS FREEMAN<lb/>
HANOVER TOPSIDER<lb/>
FLORSHEIM DINGO BOOTS<lb/>
Next door to C<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD v<lb/>
Pt<lb/>
ID REQUIRED<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Admission 25<lb/>
Beverages 65t<lb/>
Friday Oct. 22 4-7pm<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
THE STATES<lb/>
wLAHNN &amp; LOFTIN<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
?LADIES' ADMITTED FREE<lb/>
WHAPPY HOUR STAMP<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
MAXX WARRIOR<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
ROLLING STONES<lb/>
VIDEO<lb/>
ON 7' KLOSS NOVA BEAM TV<lb/>
4<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
E?ch of to? ?ovftu0 iiwns Is require to be reedtty eveUeWe for ???<lb/>
) below the advertUed price In each AAP Store, except aa apecmcairy nofa<lb/>
In thl? ad.<lb/>
at ot<lb/>
o<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, OCT. 23, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
GOOD WED THURS FRI. AND SAT. ONLY<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
5-lb. Roll<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONE-IN<lb/>
(T-BONE <lb/>
Steak 1<lb/>
it, 2.68'<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY FRESHLY<lb/>
u- t Ground<lb/>
m- Chuck<lb/>
3 lbs. or<lb/>
more<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
rE FARrV<lb/>
WH.D MECXOM<lb/>
Yellow Onions 3 : 59c<lb/>
TRUCKLOAD POTATO SALE! EASTERN GROWN<lb/>
All R  CQc OH, -158<lb/>
I nUUIMUMU<lb/>
White<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Purpose<lb/>
lb<lb/>
bag<lb/>
5 a 68' 20<lb/>
50ft 3 10ft 88'<lb/>
Bag Your Own bulk ? 8C<lb/>
CALIFORNIA THOMPSON OR RUBY RED<lb/>
LONG ISLAND GROWN SNOW WHITE<lb/>
Seedless Grapes I Cauliflower<lb/>
89 fesr s88<lb/>
p&amp;o brand w Savings y<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Sandwich Bread<lb/>
88<lb/>
24 oz.<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
hs-i<lb/>
51<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
Va gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
2 liter<lb/>
plastic<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
79<lb/>
SEALTEST<lb/>
Light N' Lively<lb/>
49<lb/>
r-Pl<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON <lb/>
SAVE 30'<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 48 OZ. BTL.<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
Wesson Oil<lb/>
698<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT OCT 23 AT AAP<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 ORDER<lb/>
I" mm PjW $urer $aver COUPON i tm obj<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 2 BIG ROLLS<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
601<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. OCT. 23 AT AAP<lb/>
UNIT TWO WITH COUPON ANO 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
"fS<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON ? tm<lb/>
V"<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 3-8 02. PKGS.<lb/>
ANN PAGE -Beef<lb/>
Hn BSaa 'Chicken<lb/>
POt TIBS 'Turkey<lb/>
603<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT OCT. 23 AT AAP<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 2-17 02. CANS<lb/>
DEL MONTE SMALL<lb/>
Premium Sweet Peas<lb/>
699<lb/>
QOOO THRU SAT OCT 23 AT AAP<lb/>
UMTT TWO WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 ORDER<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON ? mt<lb/>
'?<lb/>
r-<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 10 OZ. JAR<lb/>
NESCAFE<lb/>
Instant Coffee<lb/>
 602<lb/>
gTW GOOD THRO SAT OCT 23 AT AAP<lb/>
I VuSJmW LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7 50 ORDER<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON ?? ?? ,<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ON THE PURCHASE OF 12 OZ. PKG<lb/>
ANN PAGE CHED-O-Brr<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Food<lb/>
Slices<lb/>
iOOO THRU SAT OCT. 23 AT AAP<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND? SO<lb/>
604<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ra I<lb/>
f<lb/>
bJ<lb/>
j<lb/>
ing<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
year<lb/>
u ho<lb/>
I<lb/>
on<lb/>
client<lb/>
' j<lb/>
i!<lb/>
L<lb/>
the J<lb/>
wa<lb/>
r rl<lb/>
dearf<lb/>
roc<lb/>
c a<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
ar<lb/>
leeisl<lb/>
relej<lb/>
role I<lb/>
Marl<lb/>
I<lb/>
and<lb/>
I<lb/>
leg)<lb/>
surei<lb/>
ded<lb/>
I m i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
OCTOBER 21. 1982<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Bolcom And Morris Tonight<lb/>
Singing Duo Performing Their Campus Debut<lb/>
-  . . .? ru?.?. A lomnnrrv Art in Wimton-Salem. mittee will launch the 1<lb/>
As part of the homecoming and<lb/>
75th anniversary festivities, the<lb/>
ECU Unions Artists Series Commit-<lb/>
tee is pleased to announce the<lb/>
premier campus performance of<lb/>
Bolcom and Morris, tonight at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theatre of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
For the past ten years, the hus-<lb/>
band and wife team of Bolcom and<lb/>
Morris have been tantalizing au-<lb/>
diences with their vast repertoire of<lb/>
music that is an unusual blend of<lb/>
concert music and the vernacular.<lb/>
With an ear for style and tempo they<lb/>
will give you a typical evening,<lb/>
songs of the parlor piano days of a<lb/>
hundred years ago, the pop songs of<lb/>
the early 1900's, the exciting wit and<lb/>
elegance of the great Gershwin and<lb/>
Porter show tunes, some Charles<lb/>
lves, and the latest of Leiber and<lb/>
Stroller's cabaret songs.<lb/>
Between the two of them, Bolcom<lb/>
and Morris have appeared in a<lb/>
variety of clubs and recitals, and<lb/>
together they have performed with a<lb/>
number of major symphonys and<lb/>
have recorded five albums on the<lb/>
Nonesuch label.<lb/>
Tickets are still available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
at $2.50 for ECU students and $7.50<lb/>
for ECU faculty and staff and for<lb/>
the general public. All tickets at the<lb/>
door are $7.50.<lb/>
'Collage' Exhibit<lb/>
Opens Tomorrow<lb/>
Collage, an exhibition of five<lb/>
southeastern artists working in col<lb/>
lage, will open at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Friday, October 22,<lb/>
continuing through Sunday,<lb/>
November 21, 1982.<lb/>
Many artists use collage as a<lb/>
means of artistic expression. Some<lb/>
using elements of collage in their<lb/>
work, others like those in this ex-<lb/>
hibition, as the only means for<lb/>
creating a piece.<lb/>
The Southeastern Center for Con-<lb/>
temporary Art in Winston-Salem,<lb/>
N.C organizers of this exhibition,<lb/>
have chosen five artists: Kaola Allen<lb/>
of North Carolina; Marcia Goldens-<lb/>
tein of Tennessee; Judy Voss Jones<lb/>
of South Carolina; Dale Loy of<lb/>
Mississippi; and Anne Hanger<lb/>
Markle of Lousiana.<lb/>
This exhibit is circulated by the<lb/>
Southern Arts Federation and fund-<lb/>
ed in part by the National Endow-<lb/>
ment for the Arts and the state arts<lb/>
agencies of Alabama, Florida,<lb/>
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,<lb/>
Mississippi, North Carolina, South<lb/>
Carolina and Tennessee.<lb/>
Collage is being brought to East<lb/>
Carolina University's Mendehall<lb/>
Gallery under the auspices of the<lb/>
Student Union Art Exhibition Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
1Juicy' Playing In<lb/>
Wright Tomorrow<lb/>
The Homecoming Steering Com-<lb/>
Progressive Locals Try<lb/>
Luck With Legislature<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Miff nlr<lb/>
It was an unusual sight, at downtown Greenville's<lb/>
Rathskeller Night Club, to see groups of middle aged<lb/>
patrons lining up at the door to pay the cover charge.<lb/>
But this was indeed no ordinary night at the Rat,<lb/>
because on this night the groups performing were play-<lb/>
ing a benefit for two democratic political candidates.<lb/>
The turnout was larger and the crowd mix included 18<lb/>
year old ECU freshmen, as well as Greenville residents<lb/>
who once voted for people like Truman and Stevenson.<lb/>
The guests of honor, were Fredrica (Freddy) Jacob-<lb/>
son and Mariem House and the liberal-progressive<lb/>
clientele of Greenviile were out in full force to wish<lb/>
them good luck in their effort to get elected to the NC<lb/>
State Legislature.<lb/>
The Equal Rights Amendment was defeated, but the<lb/>
spirit of its supporters continues on as women all over<lb/>
the country are deciding to run for political offices as a<lb/>
way of winning their battle for equal rights.<lb/>
Freddy and Mariem are in the running and that was<lb/>
clearly evidenced at the Rat as they went around the<lb/>
room shaking hands and introducing themselves to<lb/>
ever v body.<lb/>
Both women are mothers and college graduates, both<lb/>
have vears of volunteer service in the Pitt County area,<lb/>
and both are sick and tired of a male dominated<lb/>
legislature making the decisions that keep women<lb/>
relegated to the status of second class citizens.<lb/>
"Women have helped to shape civilization in their<lb/>
role as those who nurture and care for others said<lb/>
Mariem in her candidacy statementWhen women are<lb/>
able to take these qualities, service to others before self<lb/>
and sense of justice and fairness, into public life, all<lb/>
citizens benifit<lb/>
"We feel the ERA would allow women to exercise<lb/>
basic privileges and responsibilities in a truly equal part-<lb/>
nership with men continues House.<lb/>
"We want to increase the numbers of women in our<lb/>
legislature, so that an effective female presence will en-<lb/>
sure full and fair consideration of women's issues ad-<lb/>
ded Freddy.<lb/>
Mariem, who is running for the North Carolina State<lb/>
Senate, or as they say "House for the Senate has been<lb/>
a resident of Grifton for 31 years and a registered<lb/>
democrat for 36 years.<lb/>
She graduated from RoberSonville High School and<lb/>
attended the University of North Carolina and Alfred<lb/>
University of New York. She has three children and is a<lb/>
member of the Grifton United Methodist Church.<lb/>
She is also a member of the Pitt County League of<lb/>
Women Voters, past president of the Grifton Service<lb/>
League and past chairwoman of the Grifton Board of<lb/>
Elections.<lb/>
Mariem is on the board of the Women's Treatment<lb/>
Facility (halfway house for women inmates), a member<lb/>
of the Pitt County Chapter of the Naitonal Organiza-<lb/>
tion for Women (NOW), and the Pitt County Council<lb/>
on the Status of Women, and a counselor at the REAL<lb/>
Crisis Prevention Center.<lb/>
Freddy, like her running partner, is involved in<lb/>
numerous volunteer community projects. She has been<lb/>
a Greenville resident for 16 years and is presently the<lb/>
Vice President of WOOW Radio in Greenville. She<lb/>
graduated from Lutheran Hospital School of Nursing in<lb/>
Baltimore, Maryland. She has two children.<lb/>
Freddy was on the original advisory board of the<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention Center, Pitt County League<lb/>
of Women Voters and the Greenville Chapter of the<lb/>
American Civil Liberties Union. She is also a past chair-<lb/>
woman of the Women's Treatment Facility.Her ac-<lb/>
tivities also include membership in NOW, the Greenville<lb/>
Fair Housing Task force, North Carolina Broadcasters<lb/>
Association, and the Eastern Arts Festival Publicity<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
In addition, Freddy is a board member of the First<lb/>
District Democratic Women (Pitt County), an advisor<lb/>
to the Mayor's Advisory Commission, and current<lb/>
President of the Pitt County Women's Political Caucus.<lb/>
Both believe that their records of service speak for<lb/>
itself and hope that the voters will feel likewise. "We're<lb/>
serious candidates adds Mariem.<lb/>
See LOCALS, Page 13<lb/>
mittee will launch the 1982<lb/>
Homecoming weekend activities on<lb/>
Friday, October 22 with a concert<lb/>
featuring Arista recording artist<lb/>
JUICY. The concert will be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium and will begin<lb/>
at 9:00 p.m. There is no admission<lb/>
charge to the event.<lb/>
With enthusiasm, excitement and<lb/>
plenty of talent. Juicy, a Five-<lb/>
member ensemble from North<lb/>
Carolina, is making an exceptional<lb/>
debut on Arista Records. The group<lb/>
comprises a complete spectrum of<lb/>
musical talents, with backgrounds<lb/>
stemming from classical, jazz,<lb/>
popular, gospel, rock and soul<lb/>
roots. It gives Juicy a sound which is<lb/>
fresh, dynamic and quite unique.<lb/>
Juicy's members are as varied as<lb/>
their musical backgrounds, held<lb/>
together by a common thread of<lb/>
talent, professionalism and a<lb/>
tremendous desire to give pleasure<lb/>
to their audiences.<lb/>
Jerry Barnes, (bassist, vocalist) is<lb/>
also an accomplished artist, actor<lb/>
and vocalist. Self-taught, this pro-<lb/>
digy of the bass guitar captivates<lb/>
and excites an audience with his<lb/>
precision, stylish variety and<lb/>
tremendous showmanship.<lb/>
Katresse Barnes, (keyboard,<lb/>
vocalist, percussions) was the win-<lb/>
ner of the talent award in the Miss<lb/>
North Carolina Teen U.S.A.<lb/>
pageant in 1980. Her exceptional<lb/>
virtuosity as a pianist has won her<lb/>
numerous awards and honors, in-<lb/>
cluding the Omega Psi Phi Talent<lb/>
Hunt in 1978 and the Sanford<lb/>
Scholarship in Music in 1979.<lb/>
Katresse was also rated superior in<lb/>
the voice competition at Temple<lb/>
Texas. Her exciting piano, percus-<lb/>
sion and vocal styles are showcased<lb/>
richly in Juicy.<lb/>
Guitaristvocalist Wyatt Staton is<lb/>
another highpoint of Juicy's unique<lb/>
sound. A self-taught musician, his<lb/>
dynamic presence and performances<lb/>
contribute a great deal to the overall<lb/>
spirit that is Juicy.<lb/>
Allison Bragdon, (saxophones,<lb/>
vocalist, keyboard) began playing<lb/>
tenor sax in high school, performing<lb/>
both as a tenor saxophonist and as a<lb/>
vocalist. A member of the 1978 edi-<lb/>
tion of Who's Who in American<lb/>
Colleges and Universities, Allison<lb/>
holds a B.M. degree from North<lb/>
Carolina State.<lb/>
Full Slate For The Weekend<lb/>
Clockwise from top: "Wall Series 10" by Dale Loy, from Collage ex-<lb/>
hibit; Steve Martin in weekend free flick, Pennies From Heaven<lb/>
crossover band Juicy; and music duo William Bolcom and Joan Morris.<lb/>
.38 Special, SPYS All Set For<lb/>
Sunday 9s Homecoming Coup<lb/>
A t Friendly Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Capping 75th anniversary<lb/>
homecoming activities this year is a<lb/>
major concert this Sunday night at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum featuring one of<lb/>
the hottest bands in contemporary<lb/>
rock, .38 Special. Opening for them<lb/>
Don Barnes. Larry Junstrom, Donate Van Zant, Jack Grondin, Jeff Carltei and Steve Brooking of .38 Special.<lb/>
is up-and-coming SPYS whose self-<lb/>
titled debut LP recently cracked<lb/>
Billboard's top forty album chart.<lb/>
"For the convenience of students,<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
will operate a ticket booth in front<lb/>
of the student store from 10 a.m. to<lb/>
2 p.m. today and tomorrow or until<lb/>
tickets sell out said Jerry Dilsaver,<lb/>
chairman of the committee.<lb/>
Tickets will remain on sale at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center at $7 for students<lb/>
and $9 for the general public. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door the night of<lb/>
the show will be $9. Tickets are also<lb/>
on sale at both Record Bar locations<lb/>
and Apple Records.<lb/>
1981 saw .38 Special's aim proven<lb/>
true. The group scored a platinum<lb/>
album with Wild-Eyed Southern<lb/>
Boys (the 23rd best-selling LP of<lb/>
1981, according to Billboard<lb/>
surveys), as well as a hit single with<lb/>
"Hold on Loosely which was the<lb/>
third most played song on AOR<lb/>
radio in 1981, according to Kal Rud-<lb/>
man's Friday Morning Quarterback<lb/>
Album Report. From January to<lb/>
September of that same year, .38<lb/>
Special played for three-quarters of<lb/>
a million fans; and with the release<lb/>
of their fifth A&amp;M album, Special<lb/>
Forces, .38 Special will be setting<lb/>
out on a nearly year long tour<lb/>
(primarily headlining 10,000 seat<lb/>
arenas) that will be seen by close to a<lb/>
million concertgoers.<lb/>
.38 Special have come a long way<lb/>
from their earliest road trips, when<lb/>
the band and crew traveled in an<lb/>
Econoline van with a mattress in the<lb/>
back, slept four to a hotel room,<lb/>
and watched a $20.00 a month pro-<lb/>
fit disappear when "Big Blue<lb/>
their cantankerous equipment truck<lb/>
constantly broke down. But<lb/>
somehow they managed to eke out<lb/>
the princely sum of $2.50 a day per<lb/>
member to eat. To limit the money<lb/>
to one meal a day, the band would<lb/>
sleep as late as possible and wait as<lb/>
long as they could to eat, then spend<lb/>
two dollars at a local cafeteria or<lb/>
McDonald's.<lb/>
Following the evening shows,<lb/>
"we would all pool our extra fifty<lb/>
cents recalls guitarist Jeff Carlisi,<lb/>
"and buy sandwiches from our road<lb/>
manager, who would bring cases of<lb/>
peanut butter and jelly on the road<lb/>
with him When the band signed<lb/>
for their first manager, "he was real<lb/>
embarrassed to tell us how low the<lb/>
daily allowance he could give us for<lb/>
food was. When he finally admitted<lb/>
it was $10.00, we rejoiced<lb/>
But such was .38 Special's drive<lb/>
to make the mark in music and to<lb/>
get out of Jacksonville's west side,<lb/>
the Liverpool of the American<lb/>
South. Like Liverpool, it is heavily<lb/>
industrial, a community where the<lb/>
best future a kid can look up to is a<lb/>
job as a truck driver and the only<lb/>
escape routes are rock'n roll or<lb/>
crime. "Back On The Track a<lb/>
song from the new Special Forces<lb/>
LP, sums up what life was like for<lb/>
many of Jacksonville's west side<lb/>
kids:<lb/>
Bad reputation, it seems to be my<lb/>
style I been categorized as a little<lb/>
wild. Police took my photograph;<lb/>
a hunted boy runnin' From his<lb/>
past Some people call me the<lb/>
devil's child.<lb/>
At 17 I was on my own Had<lb/>
clothes on my back from a broken<lb/>
home. Slapped in the face til my<lb/>
daddy got straight I knew it was<lb/>
time to run.<lb/>
No wonder Jacksonville spawned<lb/>
such bands as the Ailman Brothers,<lb/>
Lynyrd Skynyrd, Blackfoot and<lb/>
Molly Hatchet. As Don Barnes ex-<lb/>
plains, "None of us came from a<lb/>
See SINGER,<lb/>
It<lb/>
"?"?"awifi ?n '?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
What Really Happened To The Citizens' Party?<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff W rim<lb/>
In 1982 it is possible for one to<lb/>
hear people ask, "What ever<lb/>
became of the Citizens Party?"<lb/>
You remember the Citizens' Party.<lb/>
In 1980 it ran Barry Commoner for<lb/>
President and LaDonna Harris for<lb/>
Vice President. Despite its poor<lb/>
showing in that race, however, the<lb/>
party is still alive and active. Recent-<lb/>
ly, in fact, the fledgling party has<lb/>
won races in Burlington, Vermont,<lb/>
Schenectady. New York, and Seat-<lb/>
tle, Oregon. In a number of other<lb/>
races, though the Citizens' Party en-<lb/>
trants did not win, they improved<lb/>
their support strikingly, gathering<lb/>
from 26 to 49 percent of the vote in<lb/>
five places.<lb/>
The Citizens' Party was created as<lb/>
a result of what it refers to as the<lb/>
ideological stagnation of the<lb/>
Democratic and Republican parties.<lb/>
Its supporters claim that the two<lb/>
major parties are reluctant to con-<lb/>
front "the central crisis of our<lb/>
time" ? an economic system<lb/>
dominated by the nation's largest<lb/>
corporations' overriding concern<lb/>
for profits.<lb/>
As a remedy for this the Citizens'<lb/>
Party prescribes a transition to<lb/>
"Economic Democracy The tran-<lb/>
sition would require two major<lb/>
steps: 1) direct social control over<lb/>
the productive sectors of the<lb/>
economy so that the wealth of com-<lb/>
munities is not lost, for example, by<lb/>
sudden, uncontrollable plant clos-<lb/>
ing; and 2) reducing the amount of<lb/>
resources being used by the military.<lb/>
In a telephone interview with The<lb/>
East Carolina Citizens' Party,<lb/>
spokesperson Rick LaRue<lb/>
elaborated on the concept of<lb/>
Economic Democracy.<lb/>
"You've got companies making<lb/>
billions of dollars and paying very<lb/>
little in taxes LaRue said. "The<lb/>
people are believing in a myth when<lb/>
they think of the American<lb/>
economic system as a system in<lb/>
which government is not involved<lb/>
with the economy. It is. We have a<lb/>
tax structure which subsidizes and<lb/>
benefits large corporations to the<lb/>
detriment of small business and en-<lb/>
trepreneural enterprises<lb/>
LaRue further stated that, as a<lb/>
consequence, the Citizens' Party is<lb/>
in favor of a corporate tax and<lb/>
restructuring of tax laws so that<lb/>
small businesses and enterprises,<lb/>
which benefit the public as a whole,<lb/>
will be encouraged. Although it<lb/>
does not shy away from public<lb/>
ownership of certain industries like<lb/>
utilities and railroads the party's<lb/>
agenda emphasizes decentralization<lb/>
of the economy. It does not favor<lb/>
nationalization of industry as a<lb/>
general rule.<lb/>
Besides encouraging small<lb/>
businesses, decentralization would<lb/>
include getting workers and con-<lb/>
sumers involved in the decision-<lb/>
making process of industries. This<lb/>
might be done, a Citizens' Party<lb/>
spokesperson said, by government<lb/>
regulation requiring a cerntain<lb/>
number of consumers and a certain<lb/>
number of employees on the board<lb/>
of directors of industries. Another<lb/>
one of the party's economic pro-<lb/>
posals is establishing public work<lb/>
programs to bring about full<lb/>
employment.<lb/>
The Citizens' Party held its bien-<lb/>
nial convention in New York City<lb/>
during the summer. This convention<lb/>
drew over 250 participants from<lb/>
twenty-seven states and the District<lb/>
of Columbia. It also drew represen-<lb/>
tatives of "green parties" from<lb/>
West Germany, Britain, and the<lb/>
Netherlands who, together with the<lb/>
Citizens' Party, announced the<lb/>
establishment of a Euro-<lb/>
peanAmerican Peace Alliance to<lb/>
work for nuclear control and disar-<lb/>
mament. The development of the<lb/>
alliance with the West German<lb/>
"green parties" is particularly<lb/>
significant because of major vic-<lb/>
tories that they achieved in the re-<lb/>
cent West German elections.<lb/>
Among the initiatives that the<lb/>
EuropeanAmerican Peace Alliance<lb/>
intends to take in working toward<lb/>
disarmament is to work for a 40-50<lb/>
billion dollar cut in defense spen-<lb/>
ding and elimination of the cruise<lb/>
missile and Pershing II from<lb/>
Western Europe. The Alliance also<lb/>
supports an immediate international<lb/>
moratorium on research, testing,<lb/>
manufacture, deployment and sale<lb/>
of new nuclear weapons and<lb/>
technology. The Citizens' Party<lb/>
calls on the United States to take the<lb/>
first step toward this initiative.<lb/>
Up until the present, perhaps, the<lb/>
Citizens' Party has been most<lb/>
associated in the media with the<lb/>
cause of environmentalism. It pro-<lb/>
posed a moratorium on new nuclear<lb/>
power plant construction long<lb/>
before Ted Kennedy did in the 1980<lb/>
presidential election. In addition, it<lb/>
has advocated a phase-out of all ex-<lb/>
isting plants within five years, say-<lb/>
ing that their energy contribution<lb/>
can be replaced with solar,<lb/>
photovoltaic, geothermal, wind and<lb/>
other sources of renewable, en-<lb/>
vironmentally clean energy.<lb/>
The most bold environmental<lb/>
policy that the party has proposed,<lb/>
however, is the creation of a Na-<lb/>
tional Environmental Bill of Rights.<lb/>
This measure would, ostensibly,<lb/>
protect the rights of all to a<lb/>
healthful environment, including<lb/>
the rights to clean air and water;<lb/>
safe renewable energy systems, and<lb/>
freedom for involuntary exposure to<lb/>
toxic materials. It would also secure<lb/>
scenic resources and the natural<lb/>
habitats of animals from encroach-<lb/>
ment of industry.<lb/>
In comtemplating the Citizens'<lb/>
Party's prospects its members point<lb/>
out that Reagan was elected by only<lb/>
27 percent of America's eligible<lb/>
voters. The Citizens' Party, they<lb/>
say, is presently dedicated to a<lb/>
grassroots coalition building effort<lb/>
in order to consolidate power for a<lb/>
major national push within twenty<lb/>
years. This November the party is<lb/>
planning to contest more than<lb/>
eighty local and state races in at<lb/>
least twenty states. Another twenty<lb/>
or so candidates are planning to run<lb/>
for the U.S. Senate and House.<lb/>
Doctor Dorothy Clayton, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Political Science at East<lb/>
Carolina said that the chances of a<lb/>
third party succeeding in the United<lb/>
States are poor at the present time.<lb/>
She added, "If, however, the<lb/>
economy fails to improve or it<lb/>
worsens than a third party's chances<lb/>
might improve considerably During<lb/>
periods of economic turmoil or a<lb/>
crisis old loyalties and coalitions<lb/>
may weaken. Then new loyalties<lb/>
and new organization can spring up<lb/>
to take their place "<lb/>
Singer Van Zant Inspired<lb/>
By Legendary Skynyrd Band<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
rich background. We had zero,<lb/>
nothing at all. Our relatives would<lb/>
ask, 'Why don't you get a job or<lb/>
join the navy?' The only thing we<lb/>
had was our belief in ourselves<lb/>
Singer Donnie Van Zant's interest<lb/>
in music started at age twelve, when<lb/>
he'd watch his brother Ronnie Van<lb/>
Zant's band rehearse in his parent's<lb/>
living room ? the band that became<lb/>
Lynyrd Skynyrd. "It looked like a<lb/>
lot of fun. so I thought I'd try it<lb/>
.38 Special drummer Steve Brookins<lb/>
lived down the road and had a band<lb/>
that needed a singer, so Donnie<lb/>
joined.<lb/>
Fourteen year-old Don Barnes<lb/>
joined the band in unusual cir-<lb/>
cumstances. While unsuccessfully<lb/>
attempting to steal some of the<lb/>
band's equipment, he was literally<lb/>
caught in the act.<lb/>
A few years later. Barnes and Van<lb/>
Zant met guitarist Jeff Carhsi. and<lb/>
they struck up a musical association<lb/>
that lasted through high school.<lb/>
The new band scoured the en-<lb/>
virons around Jacksonville for an<lb/>
isolated structure in which to<lb/>
rehearse and finally settled into an<lb/>
abandoned stucco auto part-<lb/>
warehouse they called "The<lb/>
See 38 SPECIAL, Page 12<lb/>
The Medical Store<lb/>
2205 IV. 5th St. I P.O. Box 59<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
MEDICAL STUDENTS<lb/>
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A VERY HEALTHY<lb/>
DISCOUNT on COMBO. SETS<lb/>
PHONE 757-3490<lb/>
OPEN: Mon. 2-7; Wed. 2-7; Fri. 2-7; S?t. 10-3<lb/>
East Carolina Medical Supply Co.<lb/>
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With Very Special Guest<lb/>
WALL OF Voodoo<lb/>
?<lb/>
LIVE FROM HOLLYWOOD<lb/>
HALLOWEEN EVE OCT. 30<lb/>
SATELLITE PRESENTATION<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION SPECIAL CONCERTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
SATURDAY, OCT. 30.1982 10:00p.m. WRIGHT AUDITORIUM STUDENTS $5.00 in advance $6.00 at door<lb/>
NON-STUDENTS $6.00 In advance $7.00 at door DOORS OPEN 45 MINUTES EARLY<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER. THE RECORD BAR (Pitt Raza)<lb/>
THE RECORD BAR (Carolina East Mall). APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0011"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
l e or it<lb/>
.nances<lb/>
Dui i<lb/>
oil 01 a<lb/>
oalit ions<lb/>
 .1<lb/>
d<lb/>
dnJ.<lb/>
1 he<lb/>
i:<lb/>
Wall Of Voodoo Doing Their Magic With Devo<lb/>
The Student I nion Special C oncerts Committee will venture into a new programming medium on<lb/>
Saturdav, Oct. 30. when the committee presents Devo live in concert with guests Wall of Voodoo<lb/>
(pictured above) via satellite from Beverlv Hills, California. The concert, which is being sponsored<lb/>
in conjunction with the Campus Entertainment Network, will be held in Wright Auditorium and<lb/>
will and will begin at 10 p.m. As an added bonus, the show will be broadcast in 3-D. Tickets for the<lb/>
show are on sale at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student Center at $5 for students and<lb/>
S6 for the public. All tickets sold at the door will be $7. Public tickets are also available at both<lb/>
Record Bar locations and Apple Records. Watch for further information in Tuesday's East Caroli-<lb/>
nian.<lb/>
Dinner Theatre Has<lb/>
Neil Simon Comedy<lb/>
Tonight through Saturday, October 23,<lb/>
auditorium 244 of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
will come alive with good food and the delightful<lb/>
Broadway comedy Same Time, Next Year for<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Fall Dinner<lb/>
Theatre production.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to the full dinner perfor-<lb/>
mances October 21-23 at 6:30 p.m. The food pro-<lb/>
mises to continue in the fine tradition of ex-<lb/>
cellence previous productions started. The<lb/>
talented Alpha-Omega players of the Repertory<lb/>
Theatre of America will return for another bright<lb/>
and engaging production.<lb/>
Same Time, Next Year is the romantic comedy<lb/>
about Doris and George as lovers who are mar-<lb/>
ried, but not to each other. They meet by chance<lb/>
in a North California inn in 1951. The play<lb/>
follows their one-night-a-year romance that lasts<lb/>
25 years and survives each character's develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Doris grows up becomes a flower child, a<lb/>
Women's Libber, and finally becomes the head<lb/>
of a succesful catering business. George goes<lb/>
from being wound up to being laid back and<lb/>
finds himself with wider lapels and attitudes<lb/>
throughout the years, the couple remain devoted<lb/>
to their respective spouses, and we see their love<lb/>
as a beneficial growth, rather than a harmful<lb/>
happening.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
11<lb/>
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Large selection of<lb/>
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Individual Skm 4n?<lb/>
Deep Pee Cleansing<lb/>
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Manicures and Pedicu't ??<lb/>
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Large selection of Purple<lb/>
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Call Mrs. Tabor<lb/>
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starring CENEVIEVE BUJOLD FERNANDO REY JASON MILLER<lb/>
JOE CORTESE ADOLFO CELI with TOMAS MILLAN as Francisco<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
ECU Major Attractions<lb/>
presents<lb/>
f Sunday, Oct. 24<lb/>
.38<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
STARTS TOMORROW! R<lb/>
??TTMCTTO jjj <lb/>
IMMI i' MIUIMI tCCMfUTWt<lb/>
PIMIT KHWI tWMUl<lb/>
ith Special Guests<lb/>
Spys<lb/>
featuring 2 former members<lb/>
of Foreigner<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Tickets now on sale ?<lb/>
$7.00 advance to ECU Students<lb/>
$9.00 ? General Public<lb/>
at Mendenhall Central Ticket office<lb/>
m? a mye A Glorious Uproarious Love Story.<lb/>
TOMORROW!<lb/>
LUCIANO PAVAROTTI<lb/>
(PGlwcrnt a?p atgsrti<lb/>
53<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Record Bars<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
?m.m.iimmmmmmm<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
.38 Special Didn't Give<lb/>
In To Typical Pressures<lb/>
Continued From Page 10<lb/>
Alamo For security, they boarded<lb/>
up the doors and windows, and had<lb/>
to enter the building by climbing up<lb/>
a drainpipe. It was at The Alamo<lb/>
that .38 Special got their name.<lb/>
Although it was in the middle of<lb/>
nowhere, somebody complained<lb/>
about the noise. The police,fearing<lb/>
that they had come across a voodoo<lb/>
drug cult, surronded The Alamo<lb/>
with pistols and shotguns drawn.<lb/>
Over the horns, the band could<lb/>
hear them yell: "Come on out<lb/>
peacefully or these.38 Specials will<lb/>
take you to jail<lb/>
.38 Special set out to make it in<lb/>
the rowdy bars of the South where,<lb/>
to quote Donnie Van Zant, "If<lb/>
there's no girl pretty enough to start<lb/>
a fight over, you start a fight<lb/>
anyway These are the bars that in-<lb/>
spired "Rough-housin on Special<lb/>
Forces, a song filled with "fighting<lb/>
fools  getting loose at the corner<lb/>
joint<lb/>
Three years of bar dates paid off<lb/>
when a tape recorded at Lynyrd<lb/>
Skynyrd's demo studio attracted the<lb/>
interest of Peter Rudge, Skynyrd's<lb/>
manager, who soon had the unsign-<lb/>
ed band opening for Peter Framp-<lb/>
ton, Kiss, and Johnny Winter. "We<lb/>
went from playing for 10 people to<lb/>
playing for 10,000 recalls Donnie.<lb/>
The band signed with A&amp;M<lb/>
Records and recorded their first LP,<lb/>
.38 Special. Bassist Larry Junstrom,<lb/>
who was briefly a member of the<lb/>
Lynyrd Skynyrd band, joined the<lb/>
group, they cut their second album,<lb/>
Special Delivery, and became a top<lb/>
attraction on the national circuit.<lb/>
But for a band who wanted to<lb/>
"make our mark as Don Barnes<lb/>
says, the results weren't totally satis-<lb/>
fying. In the year and a half follow-<lb/>
ing Lynyrd Skynyrd's plane acci-<lb/>
dent, .38 Special severed their rela-<lb/>
tionship with Rudge, went back to<lb/>
Jacksonville, went on unemploy-<lb/>
ment, and started trying to write the<lb/>
best songs they could. "We wrote<lb/>
songs, threw them out, and then<lb/>
wrote more songs Barnes says.<lb/>
With the help of Mark Spector,<lb/>
then with A&amp;M's A&amp;R Department<lb/>
and now the band's manager, they<lb/>
refined their song style and were in-<lb/>
troduced to the songwriting talents<lb/>
of Jim Peterik (who led the band<lb/>
The Ides of March and now co-<lb/>
writes with .38 Special). Peterik's<lb/>
song "Rockin' Into The Night"<lb/>
became an FM hit for the band.<lb/>
Back on the road again as<lb/>
head liners, .38 Special earned a<lb/>
reputation as live performers that<lb/>
caused one paper to note their<lb/>
"instant ability to conjure a spirit of<lb/>
celebration  anytime they set up<lb/>
their amplifier A good part of<lb/>
that spirit comes from Donnie Van<lb/>
Zant, whose antics have earned him<lb/>
the tag of a "beserk riverboat<lb/>
gambler When Van Zant gets ex-<lb/>
cited, he tends to jump off the stage<lb/>
into the audience. At England's<lb/>
Reading Festival, Donnie jumped 20<lb/>
feet from the stage into the au-<lb/>
dience, figuring that if he broke a<lb/>
leg, it didn't matter, since it was the<lb/>
last date of the tour.<lb/>
For Barnes and the other<lb/>
members of .38 special, it's a lesson<lb/>
they learned from one of those<lb/>
Jacksonville boys "born on the<lb/>
wrong side of the tracks Ronnie<lb/>
Van Zant. As Don Barnes says,<lb/>
"Nobody thought he'd ever amount<lb/>
to anything, nobody cared if he did<lb/>
or not, but he just went out and did<lb/>
it because he knew he could<lb/>
St. Louis<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21. 1982<lb/>
13<lb/>
A<lb/>
Fredrica Jacobson<lb/>
Miriem House<lb/>
Locals<lb/>
Campaign<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
Both women are running as write-in candidates<lb/>
on the democratic ticket because they missed the<lb/>
filing deadline to get their names on the ballot.<lb/>
Freddy is running for the Ninth House District<lb/>
against incumbents Sam D. Bundy and Edward<lb/>
(Ed) Warren. Mariem is running in the Ninth<lb/>
Senate District against Vernon E. White (D), and<lb/>
Sallie C. Keel (R). Both are relying on the hard<lb/>
work of their supporters who are being supervis-<lb/>
ed by Dot Gronert, their campaign manager and<lb/>
the current president of the Pitt County Chapter<lb/>
of NOW.<lb/>
"People have been very receptive said<lb/>
MariemThey have come up to us and said<lb/>
"We're so glad you're doing this "<lb/>
During a door to door campaign swing in<lb/>
Williamston, N.C. Freddy was recognized by a<lb/>
local resident, "Oh you're the woman I saw on<lb/>
TV proclaimed a local woman. Freddy was<lb/>
pleased to see that she was indeed a viable and<lb/>
visible candidate.<lb/>
ilii'i 1 Department Qf University Unions<lb/>
ttllil ACU-I Ail Campus Backgammon Tournament<lb/>
e TcjtTiar-e; w ' oe ;or,awcrec tc 3ere'?ir tn?  1 ??. men -??' I ?? represent<lb/>
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Feorjary 10, 11, ir.a IS "983<lb/>
How To Enter<lb/>
A registration, 'orr- awlarJt ? (he<lb/>
Billiards Center at Mcaerw St-aent<lb/>
Certer. must te :ompJeCed ir-z subm:<lb/>
to tne Sooervscr c- 3uty at re Center ?<lb/>
Wednesday, Octooe' 20<lb/>
All-Campus Tournament<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
? Mcoay Octooer 25<lb/>
? 6 0C PM-MSC Muto-Purpose Roc-<lb/>
? Doubie-efcmrtaoon ana or roun z<lb/>
robin format<lb/>
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transportnon eas arc entry "ees part<lb/>
- "?vcennaij Student Ce"te'<lb/>
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Rules was be sec n trie pen<lb/>
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Office<lb/>
Eac" oa" c pan) s -eu-este tobnog<lb/>
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Awards<lb/>
tnopti es a oe av.a'oec .o re first<lb/>
secede yc 9 'Z cace sV-s<lb/>
Immortal Bard Really A Fake?<lb/>
?JWWVSJWSSSSSSSSSSSS&amp;SSSSSSSS'<lb/>
B I)K K WEST<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(I PI) ? Calvin Hoff-<lb/>
man, author of "The<lb/>
Murder of the Man<lb/>
Who Was<lb/>
Shakespeare claims<lb/>
new evidence un-<lb/>
covered in England<lb/>
supports his thesis that<lb/>
Shakespeare's plays ac-<lb/>
tually were written b<lb/>
Christopher Marlowe.<lb/>
I'm not enough of a<lb/>
student of Elizabethan<lb/>
I'ama to evaluate Hof-<lb/>
fman's uspicion.v On<lb/>
a pop quiz, I would<lb/>
have identified<lb/>
Christopher Marlowt.<lb/>
a a fictional private<lb/>
ce created by Ray-<lb/>
mond Chandler.<lb/>
It occurred to me,<lb/>
however, 'hat expert<lb/>
testimony on the sub-<lb/>
ject could be found in<lb/>
the disputed works<lb/>
themselves. Here is<lb/>
how an interrogation of<lb/>
the Immortal Bard<lb/>
might read:<lb/>
Q. Come now, Mr.<lb/>
Shakespeare, 'fess up.<lb/>
Did you really write<lb/>
those plays yourself?<lb/>
A. "An ill-favoured<lb/>
thinj sir, but mine<lb/>
own. I call the gods to<lb/>
witness<lb/>
Q. What about the<lb/>
claim that Marlowe was<lb/>
the author?<lb/>
A. "This is a very<lb/>
false gallop of verses.<lb/>
Falser than vows made<lb/>
in wine. Stands not<lb/>
within the prospect of<lb/>
belief. What imports<lb/>
the nomination of this<lb/>
gentleman?"<lb/>
Q. Well. Hoffman<lb/>
says it has been<lb/>
discovered that<lb/>
Marlowe was still alive<lb/>
five vears after his<lb/>
reputed murder in<lb/>
1583. That would at<lb/>
least physically place<lb/>
him in the time frame<lb/>
of some of the later<lb/>
manuscripts.<lb/>
A. "But this denoted<lb/>
a foregone conclusion.<lb/>
Give me the ocular pro-<lb/>
of<lb/>
Q. Hoffman also<lb/>
wants to re-open the<lb/>
tomb of Marlowe's<lb/>
patron. Sir Thomas<lb/>
Walsingham. to locate<lb/>
a box that might con-<lb/>
tain conclusive<lb/>
evidence of Marlowe's<lb/>
authorship.<lb/>
A. "That takes the<lb/>
reason prisoner. Poor<lb/>
Tom's a-cold. So may<lb/>
he rest. Vex not his<lb/>
ghost<lb/>
Q. Is there any con-<lb/>
nection at all between<lb/>
you and Marlowe?<lb/>
A. "Thev sav we are<lb/>
<lb/>
ARCADE<lb/>
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Q. Yeah, but where<lb/>
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good name robs me of<lb/>
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Q. That certainly is<lb/>
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it. Shall I put you down<lb/>
as insisting you wrote<lb/>
the plays?<lb/>
A. "No hinge nor<lb/>
loop to hang a doubt<lb/>
on<lb/>
Q. Thank you, Mr.<lb/>
Shakespeare. Your<lb/>
witness, Mr. Hoffman.<lb/>
A. "Bid me<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0014"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 21. 1982<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
 Explosive' Seminoles AxeBucs, 56-17<lb/>
By CINDY PLEAS ANTS<lb/>
Shorts ?lor<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirates travell-<lb/>
ed to sunny Florida last weekend<lb/>
but in Campbell Stadium at Florida<lb/>
State University, the Bucs found a<lb/>
chill in the air that cut to the bone.<lb/>
The Seminoles were on a war-<lb/>
path, racking up 706 yards in total<lb/>
offense and 456 yards passing to<lb/>
totally devastate ECU, 56-17. FSU<lb/>
surpassed its previous record of 645<lb/>
yards in total offense, which the<lb/>
Seminoles set in 1969 against Mem-<lb/>
phis State.<lb/>
"As far as I'm concerned, they're<lb/>
(FSU) probably one of the most ex-<lb/>
plosive offensive teams in the coun-<lb/>
try said ECU coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
"We had great field position and<lb/>
they still took the ball and moved<lb/>
it<lb/>
Unlike the Pirates, the Seminoles<lb/>
mostly moved the ball through the<lb/>
air. The Seminoles had 277 yards<lb/>
passing the first half to ECU'S 22.<lb/>
FSU quarterbacks Kelly Lowrey and<lb/>
Blair Williams displayed a passing<lb/>
extravaganza, with Williams com-<lb/>
pleting eight-out-of 12 passes for<lb/>
208 yards and Williams connecting<lb/>
four-out-of-five attempts for 69<lb/>
yards. In Division I-A, the<lb/>
Seminoles were ranked 19th in pass-<lb/>
ing offense, averaging 228 yards.<lb/>
But with Lowrey and Williams com-<lb/>
pleting 21 of 31 passes, FSU doubl-<lb/>
ed their passing average, while ECU<lb/>
collected a total of 51 yards.<lb/>
ECU quarterback Greg Stewart,<lb/>
who was listed in tenth place in pass-<lb/>
ing efficiency in last week's rank-<lb/>
ings, was constantly pressured by<lb/>
FSU's defensive line and completed<lb/>
one of ten passes and threw four in-<lb/>
terceptions. Ingram replaced<lb/>
Stewart in the second half, but faced<lb/>
a few of the same problems as<lb/>
Stewart, thus enabling Ingram to<lb/>
only complete two of eight attempts<lb/>
for 29 yards.<lb/>
Down 35-3 at halftime, it looked<lb/>
as though the Pirates would collapse<lb/>
in the third quarter, but that was not<lb/>
to be. The Seminoles came into the<lb/>
third quarter and intercepted<lb/>
Stewart's pass in the first eight<lb/>
seconds of play. Now in possession,<lb/>
FSU's Lowrey then threw a 32-yard<lb/>
pass to Jessie Hester to put the<lb/>
Seminoles on ECU's three-yard line.<lb/>
Greg Allen leaped headfirst into the<lb/>
endzone to score FSU's sixth<lb/>
touchdown, upping their lead to<lb/>
42-3.<lb/>
With 12:29 remaining in the<lb/>
quarter, the Pirates began to move<lb/>
down the field with Ingram calling<lb/>
the signals. Ingram passed to<lb/>
Carlton Nelson for a 16-yard pick-<lb/>
up and a first down. Reggie Branch,<lb/>
who tied with Ernest Byner with 77<lb/>
yards as ECU's leading rushers,<lb/>
sprinted for 24-yards for another<lb/>
first down. Ingram then kept for 16<lb/>
yards and the Pirates scored their<lb/>
first TD of the game when Byner<lb/>
faked left and ran fifteen yards into<lb/>
the endzone.<lb/>
The Seminoles in control once<lb/>
again, a 21-yard pass to Tony<lb/>
Johnson put FSU on the 30-yard<lb/>
line. However, on the next play,<lb/>
Mowatt fumbled a Williams pass,<lb/>
which was recovered by ECU. Only<lb/>
4:23 remaining, ECU's Scott Lewis<lb/>
and Branch rallied to put the Pirates<lb/>
on the two-yard line at the end of<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
In the first play of the fourth<lb/>
quarter, Ingram pitched out to Tony<lb/>
Baker who ran in to score ECU's se-<lb/>
cond consecutive touchdown<lb/>
against the Seminoles.<lb/>
Emory praised his team for not<lb/>
giving up against Florida State.<lb/>
"We could have laid down and died<lb/>
but we didn't he said. "We picked<lb/>
up almost 200 yards (total offense)<lb/>
in the second half<lb/>
Now 49-17, the Seminoles went<lb/>
on to score their final touchdown<lb/>
when Williams threw to Weegie<lb/>
Thompson in the endzone. With<lb/>
7:31 remaining in the game, the<lb/>
Pirates had two more opportunities<lb/>
to score but Baker fumbled on a se-<lb/>
cond down and Ingram threw two<lb/>
incomplete passes in ECU's final<lb/>
scoring attempt.<lb/>
The Pirates only points in the first<lb/>
half was a 39-yard field goal by Jeff<lb/>
Heath in the second quarter. The<lb/>
Seminoles scored five touchdowns,<lb/>
with sophomore tailback Greg Allen<lb/>
responsible for scoring three of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The win boosted FSU's record to<lb/>
5-1, suffering one loss to Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh, 17-37. Now ranked 17th by<lb/>
the Associated Press and 14th by<lb/>
United Press International this<lb/>
week, FSU coach Bobby Bowden<lb/>
was pleasantly surprised by his<lb/>
team's showing last Saturday night.<lb/>
"We played much better than 1 ex-<lb/>
pected he said. "We played a<lb/>
much different team tonight than<lb/>
we did last week. Southern Illinois<lb/>
(59-8) was a finesse team and East<lb/>
Carolina was more of a physical<lb/>
team. I guess we played about twice<lb/>
as good as I thought we could<lb/>
Emory expressed the bitter disap-<lb/>
pointment that he shared with rest<lb/>
of the Pirate squad after the loss.<lb/>
"It's hard to explain the pain and<lb/>
hurt I feel right now he said. "We<lb/>
came to this game with the 16th-best<lb/>
defense in the country and gave up<lb/>
700 yards. It's really hard to unders-<lb/>
tand how that happened<lb/>
Emory added that FSU did a<lb/>
grand job of picking the Pirates all<lb/>
night. "They screened us, draw-<lb/>
played us and threw out of their<lb/>
minds he said. "And in some<lb/>
parts of the game, we played<lb/>
defense like we were on ice<lb/>
The head coach said that after the<lb/>
Seminoles first scored, the Pirates<lb/>
never seemed to regain any defen-<lb/>
sive poise. "We're not that bad on<lb/>
defense he said. "We're 3-3 now<lb/>
and there's a lot of schools in the<lb/>
country who wish they were 3-3 Ir<lb/>
tackles, Schulz led the Pirates with<lb/>
nine tackles. Hal Stephens followed<lb/>
with eight and Steve Hamilton<lb/>
wound up with seven, including one<lb/>
quarterback sack.<lb/>
The Bucs face Illinois State in this<lb/>
Saturday's homecoming game, and<lb/>
Emory said the Florida State bout is<lb/>
now history. "The least important<lb/>
game to us is the Florida State<lb/>
game he said. "We cannot do a<lb/>
damned thing about it. We'll be<lb/>
picking up our wounds and getting<lb/>
ready for Illinois State<lb/>
Gametime is 2 p.m.<lb/>
Ptioto ty OA?Y FATTEKSON<lb/>
Ernest Byner runs in for TD against Florida State.<lb/>
E.arolinaFlorida Slate<lb/>
17First Downs29<lb/>
59293Rushing44-250<lb/>
51Passing Yards456<lb/>
8Return Yards46<lb/>
18 3-4Passing33-22 1<lb/>
3-436Punting1-400<lb/>
4-2Fumbles-Lost4-1<lb/>
4-20Penalties-Yards7-63<lb/>
East aroitna0 3 7 7-17<lb/>
Florida State1411 7 14-54<lb/>
Scoring:<lb/>
FSU - HJones.38 pass from Lowrey (Hall kick)<lb/>
FSU ? G.Allen.24 pass from Lowry (Hall kick)<lb/>
FSU - GAllenrun (Hall kick)<lb/>
ECU ? Heath. 39 FG<lb/>
FSU ? GAllen.5 run (Hall kick)<lb/>
FSU ? Hester. 21pass from Lowrey (Hall kick)<lb/>
FSU ? G.Allen1 run (Hall kick)<lb/>
ECU - Byner. 1!run (Heath kick)<lb/>
ECU ? Baker, 2run (Heath kick)<lb/>
FSU ? HJones2 pass from Williams (Hall kick)<lb/>
FSU - WThompson. 16 pass from Williams (Hall kick<lb/>
Emory Looking Ahead<lb/>
IndiMdyal Statistics<lb/>
Rushing? ECU: Baker 10-60. Byner II-77, Branch<lb/>
16-77, Stewart 5-1. Lewis 6-25, Ingram 11-53: P5U ? O.<lb/>
Allen 11-60. R Williams 6-41, T Smith 6-68, Lowrey 4-11.<lb/>
B Williams H-7). C. Jones 12-73. B Allen 3-0. T Smith<lb/>
6-68. Dans 1-4.<lb/>
Passing - ECU Stewart 10-1-422. Ingram 8-2-0-29;<lb/>
FSU: Lowrey 15-9-1-237. B Williams 16-12-0-223. Davis<lb/>
2-1-0-1-4).<lb/>
Receiving ? ECU: Nichols I 22. Nelson 1-16. Adams<lb/>
1-13; FSU: Hester 4-138. G. Allen 3-65. H Jones 2-40. T.<lb/>
Smith 1-5. Mcltinnon 2-87. T Johnson 2 50. Mowatt 3-19.<lb/>
Hester 4-138. C Jones 3-40. W Thompson 1 16<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina University football<lb/>
fans knew it wasn't going to be easy<lb/>
when the Pirates confronted the<lb/>
Florida State Seminoles.<lb/>
Two years ago, the Pirates went<lb/>
down to the Sunshine State and<lb/>
came away a 63-7 loser. This year's<lb/>
game was a little closer even though<lb/>
the Seminoles won by a large<lb/>
margin, 56-17.<lb/>
But the final score doesn't lay as<lb/>
much blame on the ECU football<lb/>
program as it may appear, as ex-<lb/>
perts agree that this is probably the<lb/>
best team that Florida State has ever<lb/>
had.<lb/>
After the game, head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory emphasized the difference in<lb/>
the two schools' programs. "FSU<lb/>
spends four million dollars on their<lb/>
football program he said. "Last<lb/>
year they decided that they needed<lb/>
some linemen, so they went out and<lb/>
signed eighteen linemen from all<lb/>
over the country<lb/>
As Emory put it, the loss was just<lb/>
a case of too many turnovers and<lb/>
poor defense. "You can't go into a<lb/>
game ranked 16th in the country in<lb/>
total defense, give up 706 yards and<lb/>
feel good about your defensive<lb/>
play<lb/>
The Pirates will have to forget<lb/>
about the Seminoles and concen-<lb/>
trate on Illinois State, this week's<lb/>
opponent in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
An undefeated home season<lb/>
could be a reality for the ninth time<lb/>
in the 20-year history of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium if the Pirates down Illinois<lb/>
State. This being the final home<lb/>
game of the 1982 season, ECU<lb/>
enters with a 3-0 mark on their<lb/>
home turf.<lb/>
Illinois State will come to Green-<lb/>
ville with a 1-5 record. The head<lb/>
coach of the Red Birds is Bob<lb/>
Otolski, who is 4-12 in his second<lb/>
season at ISU.<lb/>
The Red Birds will come into the<lb/>
game with a potent passing attack<lb/>
that has already accounted for 1100<lb/>
yards through the air. "Despite be-<lb/>
ing a young team, offensively they<lb/>
can move the ball, said Emory.<lb/>
"Illinois State throws the ball a<lb/>
good deal from the shotgun,<lb/>
something that we have not seen this<lb/>
year from an opponent<lb/>
The Red Birds especially concern<lb/>
Hmory for three reasons.<lb/>
"One, Illinois State has had an<lb/>
open week, which gives them two<lb/>
full weeks to get ready for us<lb/>
"Second their last game as<lb/>
against Wknita State, a team that<lb/>
runs the same offense we do<lb/>
Wichita State started the<lb/>
I-formation as ECU runs it under<lb/>
Larry Beckish, ECU's current of-<lb/>
fensive coordinator.<lb/>
"Third, I'm concerned about a<lb/>
letdown going into this game. And<lb/>
if they looked at the films of the<lb/>
FSU game, they might get real thirs-<lb/>
ty Emory added.<lb/>
A True 'Team Player'<lb/>
Shulz: All America<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Three years ago, ECU defensive<lb/>
end Jody Schulz was considering<lb/>
hanging up his cleats and not play-<lb/>
ing any more football. At that time,<lb/>
he was playing for Chowan College<lb/>
in Murfreesboro, N.C. And during<lb/>
his freshman year, he did not play<lb/>
very much and became discouraged.<lb/>
But Schulz stuck with it, and it<lb/>
has paid off tremendously. In the<lb/>
last three years, he has started every<lb/>
game that he has played in. His last<lb/>
year at Chowan, he was chosen as a<lb/>
junior college All-American. He<lb/>
then decided to attend ECU because<lb/>
the Pirates put forth the most effort<lb/>
in recruiting Schulz.<lb/>
During his first year at ECU,<lb/>
Schulz recorded 125 tackles and led<lb/>
the team with 56 solo stops, 23 bet-<lb/>
ter than the second man. He also led<lb/>
the Pirate defense with nine quarter-<lb/>
back sacks and six tackles in the<lb/>
backfield that resulted in losses.<lb/>
After the 1981 season, he was<lb/>
voted the team's top defensive per-<lb/>
former and received the Purple<lb/>
Pirate Award for excellent play.<lb/>
Schulz also received the E.E. Rawl<lb/>
Award for character, scholarship<lb/>
and athletic ability.<lb/>
His credentials also earned him<lb/>
AP All-America honorable mention<lb/>
honors and led to this year's build-<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Coming into this season, Schulz<lb/>
was touted as ECU's next All-<lb/>
American. And after six games, he<lb/>
has proven worthy of that recogni-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
A Green Bay Packer scout may<lb/>
have said it best aUer the Richmond<lb/>
game: "Jody Schulz rates right up<lb/>
there with the best defensive players<lb/>
in the country. He does a lot of<lb/>
good things. The guy at Rutgers<lb/>
(Bill Pickel) is bigger and may be the<lb/>
best in the country, but Jody is not<lb/>
far behind<lb/>
All of the publicity is something<lb/>
that Schulz could just as well do<lb/>
without. "The pressure bothered me<lb/>
a lot at the beginning said Schulz.<lb/>
"I just wish the press would put<lb/>
more emphasis on the team, since<lb/>
that's the most important thing<lb/>
Schulz pays little attention to per-<lb/>
sonal statistics, and is more con-<lb/>
cerned with winning. "I look at my<lb/>
stats, but I don't dwell on them he<lb/>
said. "If you worry about it too<lb/>
much, they won't be around to look<lb/>
at<lb/>
One of Schulz's main concerns is<lb/>
the lack of support which is evident<lb/>
at every home game. "At Florida<lb/>
State last week, it was 56-17 and you<lb/>
looked up into the stands and not<lb/>
more than 100 people had left he<lb/>
said. "I wish we had their kind of<lb/>
support, because you wouldn't<lb/>
believe the difference that a crowd<lb/>
makes<lb/>
Schulz always seems to have his<lb/>
biggest games against the top teams<lb/>
on ECU's schedule. Last year<lb/>
against North Carolina, he had 14<lb/>
tackles and a quarterback sack.<lb/>
Then against Miami (FL), Schulz<lb/>
racked up 13 tackles, including 2<lb/>
sacks for 17 yards in losses.<lb/>
This year, Schulz has also saved<lb/>
his best for the big teams. He had 14<lb/>
hits, one tackle for an eight-yard<lb/>
loss and two quarterback sacks<lb/>
against Missouri. Last weekend, he<lb/>
had nine tackles against Florida<lb/>
State.<lb/>
According to Schulz, Florida<lb/>
State was the best offensive team<lb/>
that he has faced since being at<lb/>
ECU. "We knew that they were<lb/>
good, but we were surprised at how<lb/>
good they really were he said.<lb/>
"They had good depth, with their<lb/>
second and third strings as good as<lb/>
the first team<lb/>
Schulz will try to put the FSU<lb/>
game out of his mind, and concen-<lb/>
trate on this weekend's homecoming<lb/>
game against Illinois State. It will be<lb/>
his last home game as a Pirate.<lb/>
"When you wake up in the morn-<lb/>
ing and you're so sore that you can't<lb/>
get out of bed, you wonder why you<lb/>
keep doing this stated Schulz.<lb/>
"You learn a lot about yourself<lb/>
when you lose, but winning makes<lb/>
all of the pain and work worth it<lb/>
Tarheels' Impressive Offense<lb/>
Downs Lady Pirate Spikers<lb/>
By EDWARD NICKLAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Lady Pirate volleyball<lb/>
team, led by seniors Stacey Weitzel<lb/>
and Mitzi Davis, succumbed to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina's im-<lb/>
pressive offensive play, losing 15-5,<lb/>
15-11 and 15-12.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, who have had<lb/>
closer matches with the Lady Tar<lb/>
Heels in the past, were forced to<lb/>
play a defensive match.<lb/>
"The key to the match said<lb/>
head coach Lynn Davidson, "was<lb/>
that Carolina controlled the game<lb/>
offensively. You can't win playing<lb/>
defensively all night<lb/>
Davidson added that the Pirates'<lb/>
previous matches with the Tar Heels<lb/>
have always been long and drawn<lb/>
out. "I give them a lot of credit<lb/>
she said. "They are exceptional this<lb/>
year<lb/>
UNC dominated the first game<lb/>
but fought hard to win the next two<lb/>
games. Behind Stacy Weitzel and<lb/>
Mitzi Davis, both of whom were<lb/>
playing in their last home game at<lb/>
ECU, led their team to a hard-<lb/>
fought finish. Behind Weitzel's bat-<lb/>
tle cries, ferocious spikes and diving<lb/>
saves, along with Diane Lloyd's<lb/>
nimble set-ups, ECU tied the second<lb/>
game 8-8 before surrendering five<lb/>
straight points to Carolina.<lb/>
? In the third game, UNC jumped<lb/>
to a quick 8-1 lead. AfteT two ECU<lb/>
timeouts, the Lady Pirates struck<lb/>
for 10 straight points to rattle the<lb/>
Lady Tar Heels. UNC, however,<lb/>
regrouped and won the game and<lb/>
match, winning seven of the last<lb/>
eight points.<lb/>
Weitzel and Davis, who received<lb/>
gifts and gracious hugs prior to the<lb/>
start of the match, were praised<lb/>
highly by Coach Davidson.<lb/>
"Weitzel is probably the best player<lb/>
to have competed in volleyball at<lb/>
ECU she said. The standout is<lb/>
captain of the Lady Pirates team<lb/>
this year and has been a starter for<lb/>
the last three years.<lb/>
"Mitzi Davis Davidson con-<lb/>
tinued, "is a great kid to coach. She<lb/>
is a hard worker, a great athlete and<lb/>
has a super attitude. Davis is also an<lb/>
all-American on ECU's softball<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Now 19-11, ECU will take to the<lb/>
road for the remainder of the<lb/>
season, starting with Appalachian<lb/>
State on Oct. 22.<lb/>
Golfers Post Best Match Yet<lb/>
Defensive End Jody Shah<lb/>
fry ?ABY FATTMSON<lb/>
By ECU SPORTS INFO.<lb/>
The ECU golf team had its best<lb/>
match of the season at Campbell<lb/>
University's Hargrove B. Davis In-<lb/>
vitational this week, with the team<lb/>
finishing fourth and capturing one<lb/>
individual victory.<lb/>
David Dooley, a freshman from<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C, placed third after a<lb/>
four-hole play-off against<lb/>
Guilford's Charles Bradshaw and<lb/>
Campbell's John Marshall. All<lb/>
three paired the first two holes, but<lb/>
Marshall fell off of the third hole<lb/>
after shooting a bogey. Bradshaw<lb/>
and Dooley both paired the third<lb/>
hole, but Dooley eagled the fourth<lb/>
to take third place.<lb/>
Jack Nicklas, Jr of UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill captured first place<lb/>
after a play-off with N.C. State's<lb/>
Neal Braxton.<lb/>
Overall, the State team won with<lb/>
729 strokes, with Carolina close<lb/>
behind with 731. Guilford took<lb/>
third place with 737 and ECU had<lb/>
740 strokes for fourth place.<lb/>
Individual scores included,<lb/>
Dooley, 143; Kelly Stimart, 147;<lb/>
Don Sweeting, 148; Chris Czaja,<lb/>
154; John Riddle, 155 and David<lb/>
Woodard had 158 strokes.<lb/>
The ECU golfers will end the fall<lb/>
season at William &amp; Mary on Oct.<lb/>
25 and 26.<lb/>
ECU Booters Edge Wesleyan;<lb/>
Improve Overall Record To 7-5<lb/>
The ECU soccer<lb/>
team tied the school<lb/>
record for most wins<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
when they defeated<lb/>
N.C. Wesleyan 2-1.<lb/>
The Pirates record for<lb/>
the year is now 7-5.<lb/>
Goals were scored by<lb/>
Bill Merwin and Mike<lb/>
Swan, with an assist by<lb/>
Chip Baker.<lb/>
"We played real well<lb/>
especially with only 14<lb/>
players said head<lb/>
coach Robbie Church.<lb/>
"They were a tough<lb/>
team and we were for-<lb/>
tunate to get that last<lb/>
goal<lb/>
"We'll have to be<lb/>
sharp for UNC-<lb/>
Grecnsboro Church<lb/>
added, referring to<lb/>
ECU's next opponent.<lb/>
"They're ranked fifth<lb/>
nationally in<lb/>
Division-3<lb/>
The UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro match is<lb/>
scheduled for Oct. 24 at<lb/>
2:00 in Greensboro.<lb/>
I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 21,1982 15<lb/>
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Soccer Star Brian Winchell<lb/>
Scoring Goals On &amp; Off Field<lb/>
Booters Equal Record Win Mark<lb/>
Bt BARBARA<lb/>
TYNDALL<lb/>
oporto Inf Wriln<lb/>
Meet Brian Winchell,<lb/>
a returning senior at<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty who enjoys nothing<lb/>
more but to be able to<lb/>
kick a soccer ball<lb/>
around and score<lb/>
game-winning points.<lb/>
Winchell, playing<lb/>
forward, is in his<lb/>
fourth year witrf the<lb/>
Pirates. In 1979, he<lb/>
received the most<lb/>
valuable defensive<lb/>
award.<lb/>
The team has been<lb/>
playing well so far this<lb/>
year with a 7-5 record.<lb/>
During a match against<lb/>
Guilford College this<lb/>
month, Winchell at-<lb/>
tempted seven shots<lb/>
and made three by per-<lb/>
forming the "hat<lb/>
trick"technique.<lb/>
We're good when we<lb/>
are playing good, but<lb/>
bad when we're playing<lb/>
bad Winchell com-<lb/>
mented. "The team<lb/>
works well together.<lb/>
With a few key players,<lb/>
the team works well off<lb/>
of them<lb/>
In the game prior to<lb/>
Guilford against<lb/>
Wesleyan College,<lb/>
Winchell played goalies<lb/>
for the first time in two<lb/>
years. He shut out<lb/>
Wesleyan, the fourth<lb/>
ECU shutout this year.<lb/>
Winchell began play-<lb/>
ing soccer at the age of<lb/>
seven. Originally from<lb/>
New Jersey, it was<lb/>
there he learned his<lb/>
first lessons in how to<lb/>
play the game. His<lb/>
older brothers were<lb/>
also avid soccer players<lb/>
and Winchell said this<lb/>
<lb/>
Brian Winchell<lb/>
had a lot of influence<lb/>
on him picking up the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
To Winchell, soccer<lb/>
is more than just kick-<lb/>
ing a ball around. Men-<lb/>
tal and physical exer-<lb/>
tion are provided in the<lb/>
versatile sport. Physi-<lb/>
que has little to do with<lb/>
the player; "As long as<lb/>
you re flexible, you<lb/>
don't necessarily have<lb/>
to be big Winchell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Luckily he has never<lb/>
been seriously injured<lb/>
during a game. The one<lb/>
injury feared my most<lb/>
soccer players is a kick<lb/>
to the knee which can<lb/>
bench a player for a<lb/>
while.<lb/>
"Aggression flares<lb/>
during the game said<lb/>
Winchell. "But the<lb/>
worse ones are put out<lb/>
of the game<lb/>
Winchell is majoring<lb/>
in accounting and plans<lb/>
to practice as a certified<lb/>
public accountant after<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
By Joel Scales<lb/>
Sports lafo. Writer<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University's soccer<lb/>
team is off to one of its<lb/>
better starts in the<lb/>
history of Pirate soc-<lb/>
cer.<lb/>
The early season suc-<lb/>
cess can be attributed<lb/>
to many factors, in-<lb/>
cluding new head coach<lb/>
Robbie Church. After<lb/>
beating N.C.<lb/>
Wesleyan, the Pirates<lb/>
have now tied the<lb/>
school record for the<lb/>
most wins in a season.<lb/>
The impressive start<lb/>
can also be attributed<lb/>
to overall team play<lb/>
and strong defensive ef-<lb/>
forts.<lb/>
One of the standout<lb/>
defensive players is<lb/>
senior Dannis Elwell.<lb/>
The Springfield, Va<lb/>
native plays the<lb/>
sweeper position and is<lb/>
a captain on the squad.<lb/>
Elwell said that one of<lb/>
the reason why he<lb/>
decided to attend East<lb/>
Carolina was because<lb/>
his brother had come<lb/>
here.<lb/>
"I hadn't planned on<lb/>
playing soccer here<lb/>
said the 5-11,<lb/>
170-pound Elwell. "I<lb/>
was out by one of the<lb/>
dorms kicking and<lb/>
former coach Brad<lb/>
Smith asked me to<lb/>
come and try out<lb/>
Elwell earned a<lb/>
scholarship his<lb/>
freshman year. The<lb/>
Elwell success story<lb/>
continued until the K<lb/>
cond game during his<lb/>
sophomore season<lb/>
when he went down<lb/>
with a knee injury.<lb/>
Because of the injury<lb/>
Elwell had to sit out for<lb/>
the remainder of the<lb/>
season and was red-<lb/>
shir ted. After months<lb/>
of rehabilitation during<lb/>
the off-season, Elwell<lb/>
returned with three<lb/>
years of eligibility re-<lb/>
maining.<lb/>
Elwell. who will<lb/>
Wwto By CINOY WALL<lb/>
ECU Soccer At Its Finest<lb/>
graduate in December<lb/>
with a degree in<lb/>
business administra-<lb/>
tion, will be nominated<lb/>
by East Carolina for<lb/>
academic all-America<lb/>
in the at-large category<lb/>
"Dennis is a fine<lb/>
young man who has of-<lb/>
fered us a lot of leader-<lb/>
ship said coach<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
But Elwell<lb/>
unselfishly stated<lb/>
otherwise. "I'm just<lb/>
one of the many<lb/>
members of the team<lb/>
he said. "Things are<lb/>
really coming together<lb/>
for the teams now. No<lb/>
coach is perfect, but<lb/>
coach Church listens to<lb/>
the players and works<lb/>
well with the personnel<lb/>
he Has<lb/>
Elwell said he is anx-<lb/>
ious to finish the season<lb/>
just as well as he began<lb/>
it. "We're playing<lb/>
much better than last<lb/>
year assured Elwell.<lb/>
"Our attitudes have<lb/>
also improved<lb/>
There's no doubt<lb/>
that ECU will continue<lb/>
to improve with players<lb/>
like Elwell on the field<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
Running Back Tony<lb/>
Baker Filling Role<lb/>
With Great Success<lb/>
New York Native Adjusting Fine<lb/>
McCOI?Jtel?ORACE<lb/>
S??rs Info. Writer<lb/>
When the ECU<lb/>
coaching staff realized<lb/>
they would have to<lb/>
begin their 1982 season<lb/>
without premier runn-<lb/>
ing back Jimmy<lb/>
Walden, they had to ex-<lb/>
plore their depth charts<lb/>
like tailors plundering<lb/>
through a tangled<lb/>
threadbox searching<lb/>
for that perfect hue.<lb/>
They threaded player<lb/>
after player and none<lb/>
fit the eye of the needle<lb/>
as well as a 5-10,<lb/>
175-pound freshman<lb/>
sensation named Tony<lb/>
Baker.<lb/>
The High Point<lb/>
native led all ECU<lb/>
rushers with 353 total<lb/>
yards on 56 carries<lb/>
after only four games,<lb/>
averaging 6.2 yards per<lb/>
carry. His longest<lb/>
burst, a 75-yard<lb/>
scamper down the<lb/>
sidelines agaisnt Rich-<lb/>
mond was the longest<lb/>
touchdown run since<lb/>
Ed Emory has been<lb/>
head coach at ECU.<lb/>
"Before high school<lb/>
I didn't play football<lb/>
because it just didn't<lb/>
seem to be my game at<lb/>
all he said. "I never<lb/>
played recreation or lit-<lb/>
tle league football when<lb/>
I was growing up. All I<lb/>
ever though about was<lb/>
playing baseball until<lb/>
my last two years of<lb/>
high school<lb/>
Baker did consider<lb/>
playing football his<lb/>
freshman year in high<lb/>
school, but said he<lb/>
thought more about<lb/>
other sports. Track<lb/>
then came into the pic-<lb/>
ture, which outshadow-<lb/>
ed baseball and Tony's<lb/>
ideas of playing foot-<lb/>
ball. He was im-<lb/>
mediately known in<lb/>
western North Carolina<lb/>
after his first year of<lb/>
track for his times in<lb/>
the 400 200- and<lb/>
100-meter races and<lb/>
was well respected for<lb/>
his anchor leg on the<lb/>
relays.<lb/>
"I still wanted to<lb/>
play baseball though,<lb/>
but 1 couldn't because<lb/>
baseball and track oc-<lb/>
curred during the same<lb/>
season in high school.<lb/>
It was a difficult choice<lb/>
but I decided to go<lb/>
ahead and concentrate<lb/>
on being a sprinter<lb/>
Tony replied.<lb/>
Baker soon turned in<lb/>
his spikes and baton for<lb/>
cleats and a football.<lb/>
The accomplished<lb/>
sprinter wanted to find<lb/>
out if he could earn<lb/>
some respect on the<lb/>
grid.<lb/>
"1 knew I had the<lb/>
speed to play football<lb/>
but I was small. It<lb/>
seemed like all the<lb/>
other sprinters were go-<lb/>
ing to play football so I<lb/>
decided to show up for<lb/>
summer drills too<lb/>
Baker said.<lb/>
Baker's high school<lb/>
coaches were aware of<lb/>
his quickness and im-<lb/>
mediately put him at<lb/>
the tailback position to<lb/>
determine just how<lb/>
quick he actually was.<lb/>
He ran the forty-yard<lb/>
dash in 4.4 seconds and<lb/>
the coaches knew they<lb/>
had found a speedster.<lb/>
"From that day on, I<lb/>
knew speed would<lb/>
always be my greatest<lb/>
asset if I was going to<lb/>
be a football player<lb/>
Baker said.<lb/>
By the end of Bakers'<lb/>
senior season at High<lb/>
Point Andrews, Baker<lb/>
had gained over 1600<lb/>
yards and received an<lb/>
invitation to play in the<lb/>
Shrine Bowl, made all-<lb/>
conference, all-state<lb/>
and had received<lb/>
honorable mentions as<lb/>
a high school ail-<lb/>
American.<lb/>
As expected, Baker<lb/>
was being noticed by<lb/>
college recruiters. He<lb/>
was recruited by N.C.<lb/>
State, Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Clemson and nearly<lb/>
every other ACC team<lb/>
for both football and<lb/>
track. He admitted,<lb/>
however, that he had<lb/>
hopes of playing col-<lb/>
lege baseball at one<lb/>
time but changed his<lb/>
See BAKER, Page 18<lb/>
By HORACE<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
ECU Sports Info<lb/>
Steve Hamilton, a<lb/>
former tight end at<lb/>
Williamsville High<lb/>
School in Williamsville,<lb/>
NY, has begun to<lb/>
emerge as one of East<lb/>
Carolina University's<lb/>
premier defensive<lb/>
lineman. The towering<lb/>
6-4, 236-pound junior<lb/>
began to stand out dur-<lb/>
ing spring drills, winn-<lb/>
ing the Pirate's Defen-<lb/>
sive Attack and<lb/>
Weight-Lifter-of-the-<lb/>
Year awards.<lb/>
Hamilton didn't<lb/>
always awaken to the<lb/>
boisterous sounds of<lb/>
neighboring loud music<lb/>
and other campus life<lb/>
alarms. Three years<lb/>
ago, he was rising to<lb/>
the trumpeting inota-<lb/>
tions of a bugle. Steve<lb/>
was not marching down<lb/>
College Hill Drive in<lb/>
old leather Converses<lb/>
and a clashing sweat-<lb/>
suit either, but fully<lb/>
dressed in uniform<lb/>
marching in blindingly-<lb/>
shined shoes to the beat<lb/>
of "taps" at the Fork<lb/>
Union Military<lb/>
Academy at 6:00 a.m.<lb/>
every morning.<lb/>
"Living in a military<lb/>
academy was like living<lb/>
in a totally different<lb/>
world Hamilton said.<lb/>
"Discipline was very<lb/>
tight. It was like living<lb/>
every hour of your life<lb/>
on a schedule. When<lb/>
the flag was down we<lb/>
were in bed and when<lb/>
the bugles blew we were<lb/>
up, even if the sun was<lb/>
still down. Beds were<lb/>
checked before<lb/>
breakfast and so were<lb/>
we from our hats to our<lb/>
shoes<lb/>
Although the<lb/>
military academy was<lb/>
extremely confined,<lb/>
Hamilton still managed<lb/>
to acquire most of his<lb/>
knowledge of football<lb/>
there.<lb/>
climb aboard the No. 12<lb/>
StadecoacbLWestern Sizzlin's<lb/>
chopped sirloin<lb/>
Head for<lb/>
.Western<lb/>
Sizzlin and some mighty<lb/>
Jfine eatm' with the<lb/>
j No. 12 Stagecoach<lb/>
I Chopped sirloin beef<lb/>
I ground dally by our<lb/>
j own butchers and<lb/>
I cooked just the way<lb/>
with your choice of potato<lb/>
The No. 12 Stagecoach, a<lb/>
delicious, affordable meal<lb/>
at Vfestem Sizzlin Can't<lb/>
you Just taste it sizzlin?<lb/>
"I went to Fork<lb/>
Union in Virginia right<lb/>
after I graduated from<lb/>
high school in<lb/>
Williamsville added<lb/>
Hamilton. "I didn't<lb/>
come directly to college<lb/>
to play football because<lb/>
I didn't feel that I was<lb/>
actually ready for col-<lb/>
lege ball at the time. I<lb/>
knew I had the poten-<lb/>
tial, so I went to the<lb/>
pleted his first season<lb/>
just as planned, but<lb/>
didn't expect the<lb/>
recognition to come so<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
"Just after my first<lb/>
season explained<lb/>
Hamilton, "there I<lb/>
was, immediately faced<lb/>
with the decision of<lb/>
whether or not to stay<lb/>
at the academy another<lb/>
year or to go on and<lb/>
Defensive Linemen Steve Hamilton<lb/>
academy to prepare<lb/>
myself as a better col-<lb/>
lege prospect. As m<lb/>
first season at the<lb/>
academy progressed,<lb/>
my play seemed to just<lb/>
get better and better.<lb/>
Scouts began to notice<lb/>
me early in the<lb/>
season<lb/>
During Hamilton's<lb/>
first season at the<lb/>
academy, he was<lb/>
recruited by Wake<lb/>
Forest, Virginia Tech<lb/>
and Boston University,<lb/>
among others. He corn-<lb/>
play college ball. The<lb/>
decision wasn't really<lb/>
tough at all. I knew<lb/>
that college football<lb/>
was what I wanted. The<lb/>
tough decision was<lb/>
deciding where to go. I<lb/>
decided on East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
During the re-<lb/>
mainder of Hamilton's<lb/>
stay at Fork Union, the<lb/>
academy really began<lb/>
to grow on him.<lb/>
"For the first time<lb/>
assured Hamilton, "I<lb/>
was beginning to adjust<lb/>
to the atmosphere and I<lb/>
began to enjoy it. They<lb/>
taught me things that I<lb/>
could have never learn-<lb/>
ed anywhere else.<lb/>
Everything I learned<lb/>
there has stayed with<lb/>
me through college and<lb/>
has helped me to adapt<lb/>
to college football<lb/>
Hamilton was no<lb/>
longer "just a caged<lb/>
bird singing a sad<lb/>
song" at the academy<lb/>
"I felt good when I<lb/>
left the academy to<lb/>
come down South to<lb/>
East Carolina said<lb/>
Hamilton. "I miss the<lb/>
academy, but I won't<lb/>
forget any of the things<lb/>
that I learned there.<lb/>
They taught me to ap-<lb/>
preciate the simple<lb/>
things in life that most<lb/>
of us take for<lb/>
granted<lb/>
Hamilton had played<lb/>
tight-end at<lb/>
Williamsville and at the<lb/>
academy. When his<lb/>
freshman season at<lb/>
ECU began, he was still<lb/>
a tight-end, but just un-<lb/>
til the day head coach<lb/>
Ed Emory called him<lb/>
into his office.<lb/>
"There was a sur-<lb/>
prising number of in-<lb/>
juries on our defensive<lb/>
line that year<lb/>
Hamilton recalled.<lb/>
"Unexpectedly, coach<lb/>
Emory asked me if I<lb/>
felt I had the ability to<lb/>
play defensive tackle. I<lb/>
was surprised at first,<lb/>
but coach Emory knew<lb/>
that I had some ex-<lb/>
perience playing defen-<lb/>
sive line while going<lb/>
both ways as a tight-<lb/>
end and defensive end<lb/>
in high school. I was<lb/>
hesitant at first, but I<lb/>
wasn't a starter at the<lb/>
time and I didn't mind<lb/>
helping the team in any<lb/>
John's<lb/>
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EAST CAROLIHA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
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way I could, even if it<lb/>
meant not playing<lb/>
tight-end anymore<lb/>
That same day<lb/>
Hamilton informed<lb/>
coach Emory that "he<lb/>
was going for it He<lb/>
completed the second<lb/>
half of his freshman<lb/>
season at defensive<lb/>
tackle, but not to his<lb/>
satisfaction, even<lb/>
though the coaches<lb/>
were pleased. During<lb/>
spring drills, Hamilton<lb/>
changed his mind and<lb/>
went back to offense.<lb/>
Before the fall came,<lb/>
Hamilton changed his<lb/>
mind again and found<lb/>
himself back at defen-<lb/>
sive tackle early during<lb/>
summer drills.<lb/>
In 1981, Hamilton<lb/>
split his duties at defen-<lb/>
sive tackle with senior<lb/>
George Crump.<lb/>
"I didn't mind<lb/>
said Hamilton.<lb/>
"George was a senior<lb/>
(and a pro draft pick)<lb/>
and I knew my day as a<lb/>
starter was coming.<lb/>
During the off-<lb/>
season, I was enthused<lb/>
about returning to<lb/>
camp. My day was here<lb/>
and 1 was ready to<lb/>
show it<lb/>
Hamilton did exactly<lb/>
what he said he would.<lb/>
The once "caged bird"<lb/>
to the confines of a<lb/>
military academy in<lb/>
Virginia is now singing<lb/>
his way up the defen-<lb/>
sive statistics chart, no<lb/>
longer rising to bugles,<lb/>
but to the occasions<lb/>
that are demanded of a<lb/>
real defensive tackle.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WHO IS THE uaiieii man on cam<lb/>
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folio to NEW DAWN<lb/>
Photoqraphy 202E W Lockhaven<lb/>
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USED LP v earn EXTRA CASH<lb/>
Quicksilver Records? Book Ex<lb/>
change 1M East Ffth St<lb/>
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Book Exchange 1M East Fifth St<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
ANOTHER COUNTRY another<lb/>
culture Picture yoursei m Costa<lb/>
Rica this spring carrying on your<lb/>
ECU studies at low cost Want to<lb/>
know more? Or Baker Brewster<lb/>
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OPEN 24 HOURS DRIVE THRU WINDOW<lb/>
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OLD FASHIONED HOMEMADE<lb/>
BREAD PUDDINGonly<lb/>
25C<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ? 752-1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
?? ??<lb/>
<lb/>
Beef Barn Presents<lb/>
Dick Gable and<lb/>
His Dixie Land Band<lb/>
members have performed with<lb/>
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Sat Oct. 23rd ? 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0017"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
17<lb/>
Sherman Pleased As Men's And<lb/>
Women's Tennis Teams Improve<lb/>
In ECU's opening<lb/>
match of the fall seaon,<lb/>
the men's tennis team<lb/>
easily beat Campbell<lb/>
University, winning<lb/>
five singles and two<lb/>
doubles matches for a<lb/>
7-2 victory over the<lb/>
Camels.<lb/>
New head coach<lb/>
Patricia Sherman said<lb/>
she was pleased with<lb/>
the team's perfor-<lb/>
mance, especially since<lb/>
the players did not<lb/>
practice last week and<lb/>
have just returned from<lb/>
fall break.<lb/>
Sherman added that<lb/>
the players have work-<lb/>
ed mainly on their<lb/>
4<lb/>
Tennis Coach Patricia Sherman<lb/>
Photo By STANLEY LEARY<lb/>
doubles game.<lb/>
"General coverage was<lb/>
not good when we<lb/>
started practice she<lb/>
said. "We've learned<lb/>
how to chip shots<lb/>
In singles, Ted Lep-<lb/>
per (E) def. David<lb/>
Holland (C), 6-2, 6-2;<lb/>
Galen Treble (E) def.<lb/>
Frankie Delconte (C),<lb/>
6-3, 6-0; Cole King (E)<lb/>
def. Steve Davis (C),<lb/>
5-7, 6-0, 6-1; Don<lb/>
Rutledge (E) def. Bruce<lb/>
Eickhoff (C) 6-2, 6-2;<lb/>
Peter Gemborys (C)<lb/>
def. Kevin Covington<lb/>
(E), DEFAULT; Paul<lb/>
Owen (E) def. Don<lb/>
Gordon (C), 6-1, 6-3.<lb/>
In doubles,<lb/>
Rutledge-Lepper (E)<lb/>
def. Holland-<lb/>
Horcasitus (C), 6-3,<lb/>
5-7, 6-3; Creech-Treble<lb/>
(E) def. Delconte-<lb/>
Gordon (C), 6-4, 4-6,<lb/>
6-4; Eickhoff-<lb/>
Gemborys (C) def.<lb/>
Owen-King<lb/>
DEFAULT.<lb/>
Now 1-0, the Pirates<lb/>
play Richmond on<lb/>
Monday, Oct. 25 at<lb/>
Minges courts. The<lb/>
match begins at 3:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
As for the women's<lb/>
team, they were<lb/>
defeated by N.C. State<lb/>
9-0 in their final match<lb/>
Located in parking lot<lb/>
behind H L Hodges<lb/>
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Expires Sunday, Oct. 24<lb/>
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Our goal is to make dining with us a<lb/>
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Arcade Variety &amp; Grill<lb/>
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Snarp's Formal Wear<lb/>
of the fall season.<lb/>
According to Sher-<lb/>
man, it was a learning<lb/>
experience. "We found<lb/>
out some things we<lb/>
were weak on this fall,<lb/>
particularily doubles<lb/>
she said. "Today, we<lb/>
played much better but<lb/>
we need to work on<lb/>
consistency<lb/>
In singles, Ellie Com-<lb/>
pton (N) def. Katherine<lb/>
Folson (E), 6-0, 6-4;<lb/>
Michelle Nadanzi (N)<lb/>
def. Debbie Christine<lb/>
(E), 6-2, 6-1; Leslie<lb/>
Lewis (N) def. Janet<lb/>
Russell (E), 6-2, 6-3;<lb/>
Robbin Burch (N) def.<lb/>
Laura Redford (E) 6-0,<lb/>
6-1; Meg Caller (N)<lb/>
def. Kim Harrison (E)<lb/>
6-1, 6-1; Kathy Ellis (N)<lb/>
def. Jackie Mayer (E),<lb/>
6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
In doubles,<lb/>
Compton-Lewis (N)<lb/>
def. Tolson-Christine<lb/>
(E), 6-1, 7-6; Nadanzi-<lb/>
Burch (N) def. Russell-<lb/>
Redford (E), 6-2, 6-3;<lb/>
Ellis-Caller (N) def.<lb/>
Harrison-Sowers (E),<lb/>
6-0, 6-0.<lb/>
Photo By GA?Y PATTERSOM<lb/>
Tonv Baker Pauses For A Break During FSl Game.<lb/>
The best I'izza<lb/>
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?Enjoy the SOAPS with lunch or<lb/>
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Hrs Mon-Thurs. 6 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
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Sunday 7 a.m2 p.m.<lb/>
Welcome ECU Students<lb/>
&amp; Faculty<lb/>
1 'reasonably priced '<lb/>
Specializing in<lb/>
Broiled or Fried Seafood<lb/>
also Steaks<lb/>
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Beer &amp; Wine available<lb/>
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Save $25 on all 14K Gold Rings<lb/>
You're ready! For the biggest and the best that life has<lb/>
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Now is your time to get what you deserve. And<lb/>
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BEFORE<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
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A<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057507_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21, 1982<lb/>
Baker A Success<lb/>
Continued From Page 16<lb/>
mind. "Track and<lb/>
football seemed to be<lb/>
my ticket into college,<lb/>
so I put baseball behind<lb/>
me for good he said.<lb/>
Baker was ap-<lb/>
preciative of his<lb/>
scholarship offers, but<lb/>
there was alway two<lb/>
things missing<lb/>
whenever he reviewed<lb/>
the backgrounds of the<lb/>
prospective schools: an<lb/>
1-formation and an art<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"Before I even<lb/>
thought about playing<lb/>
college football, I knew<lb/>
I wanted to go to art<lb/>
school he said.<lb/>
"Later, after reviewing<lb/>
ECU, Baker discovered<lb/>
that they had one of the<lb/>
best art schools in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
After talking to a few<lb/>
ECU coaches and<lb/>
found out that ECU<lb/>
was converting to the<lb/>
I-formation, Baker<lb/>
decided that attending<lb/>
ECU would be in his<lb/>
best interest.<lb/>
Baker reported for<lb/>
summer drills at ECU<lb/>
and immediately stood<lb/>
out above the majority<lb/>
of the long line of runn-<lb/>
ing backs, fighting for<lb/>
that second position<lb/>
behind returning<lb/>
starter, Jimmy Walden.<lb/>
But soon Walden went<lb/>
down with an injury<lb/>
and the fight was now<lb/>
for the first team.<lb/>
"I used to lie in my<lb/>
room and daydream<lb/>
abnout starting during<lb/>
the summer he said.<lb/>
"1 thought that if so-<lb/>
meone got hurt that<lb/>
they would put another<lb/>
more experienced<lb/>
player in, if not, cer-<lb/>
tainly someone bigger<lb/>
than me But two<lb/>
weeks before the N.C.<lb/>
State game. Baker was<lb/>
informed that he would<lb/>
be starting and the<lb/>
pressures were on.<lb/>
"I knew I had the<lb/>
ability and the con-<lb/>
fidence, but I didn't<lb/>
think any one else truly<lb/>
believed in me except<lb/>
the coaches he said.<lb/>
"I knew I was going to<lb/>
have to prove myself to<lb/>
the other players. Their<lb/>
acceptance of my per-<lb/>
formance was the mcbt<lb/>
important thing to me<lb/>
then<lb/>
When the State game<lb/>
was finally here, it<lb/>
didn't take long for the<lb/>
Pirates to accept Baker.<lb/>
"After we went into<lb/>
the dressing room after<lb/>
the first half, I really<lb/>
began to feel like I was<lb/>
one of them he said.<lb/>
"They had accepted my<lb/>
performance and me as<lb/>
a Pirate<lb/>
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These prices good thro<lb/>
Saturday, October 23, 1982<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057507_0019"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>