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<pb facs="00057508_0001"/>
Qto iEaat (Earnlttuatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.16<lb/>
Tuesday. October 26. 1982<lb/>
Greenville, NX<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
C irculation Ki.tMMi<lb/>
Handicap Access<lb/>
DarryVs Builds Ramp For Wheelchairs<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEII I<lb/>
stall Wrilri<lb/>
DarryPs 190" restaurant has kept<lb/>
its promise to I C U's handicapped<lb/>
students. wheelchair accessibility<lb/>
ramp has been installed to their<lb/>
newly constructed sunroom making<lb/>
the room available to wheelchair<lb/>
c ustomers.<lb/>
I as! month a story appeared in<lb/>
1 M Easl , arolinian reporting that<lb/>
some oi ECt 's handicapped<lb/>
students were upset that the local<lb/>
Darryl's 1W restaurant did not<lb/>
plan to install the wheelchair ac-<lb/>
cessibility ramp in the new section<lb/>
o! the restaurant that was then still<lb/>
undet construction.<lb/>
1 he East Carolinian brought the<lb/>
situation to the attention of Darryl's<lb/>
cials at theii Raleigh offices. A<lb/>
promise was made that the ramp<lb/>
would be promptly installed and this<lb/>
paper was thanked for bringing the<lb/>
situation to theii attention<lb/>
"1 think it's great said ECU<lb/>
;tory graduate student Rick<lb/>
Burke, "becuase Darryl's lived up<lb/>
he i responsibilitN to not onl the<lb/>
community, but to all of the han-<lb/>
dicapped population Burke uses a<lb/>
wheelchair for mobility and is a<lb/>
regular customer of Darryl's, which<lb/>
is located next to Slay Dormitory,<lb/>
where most of ECU's wheelchair<lb/>
students reside.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased added ECU<lb/>
English student Brian Rangeley.<lb/>
"When they found out the nature of<lb/>
the problem over there, they jumped<lb/>
right on it and got it taken care of<lb/>
Rangeley said that he felt that the<lb/>
article in The East Carolinian was a<lb/>
contributing factor in rectifying the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"They've always been very<lb/>
helpful to us in trying to find us a<lb/>
place to sit continued Rangeley,<lb/>
who also uses a wheelchair. "And I<lb/>
think they're continuing this effort<lb/>
to accomodate us by installing that<lb/>
ramp to the sunroom<lb/>
Burke praised Darryl's manager<lb/>
Robert G r i n n e 11 lor being<lb/>
"especially responsive" to the needs<lb/>
oi the wheelchair students. "He's<lb/>
always treated us real well and<lb/>
bends over backwards ? he's real<lb/>
supportive Burke said.<lb/>
"All of the guys I've talked to are<lb/>
very pleased with it added<lb/>
Rangeley. "When I heard that the<lb/>
ramp was installed 1 made it a point<lb/>
to go back over there to eat and see<lb/>
what it's like<lb/>
A spokesperson for Darryl's said<lb/>
he was pleased that the ramp was in-<lb/>
stalled and that the students were<lb/>
satisfied. "We do everything we can<lb/>
to help handicapped people said<lb/>
the spokesperson.<lb/>
An apparent misunderstanding<lb/>
was involved in the original decision<lb/>
to install the ramp. "The ramp was<lb/>
in the (construction) plans claim-<lb/>
ed a local Darryl's employee on<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
In the original news story it was<lb/>
reported that one of Darryl's<lb/>
Raleigh officials was unclear about<lb/>
whether a ramp was in the original<lb/>
plans or not.<lb/>
Burke claimed that one of the<lb/>
local employees of Darryl's voiced<lb/>
his dissatisfaction with The East<lb/>
Carolinian's original story claiming<lb/>
that it was not representative of the<lb/>
facts.<lb/>
Homecoming Queen Celia Hancock<lb/>
Photo Bv STANLEY L??V<lb/>
Celia Hancock was crowned as ECU'S 1982 Homecoming Queen Saturday The announcement took place at half-<lb/>
time during the ECU homecoming game against Illinois State I niverity. Both the Pirates and Celia came away<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
Tibetan Abbot Speaks On Buddhist Faith, Personal Potential<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
. jt' W filer<lb/>
 ? up ??: more than UK) people.<lb/>
most ?1 " ?m K I students, turned<lb/>
tsi rhursday night to hear a<lb/>
ttion given bv a visiting Bud-<lb/>
monk<lb/>
I he venerable Abbot Khenpo<lb/>
karthai Rinpoehe spoke through an<lb/>
rpreter for about an hour on<lb/>
Discovering Inherent Qualities of<lb/>
slligence<lb/>
1 fie lecture, which was held in<lb/>
Building, gave a basic<lb/>
e and introduction to the<lb/>
. ol the Buddhist faith,<lb/>
poche spoke ol the need tor<lb/>
ple to turn more inwardly and<lb/>
re with the mind. He<lb/>
described a basic hope ol Buddhists<lb/>
? b tble to take "whatever may be<lb/>
a- ng and making it right (and)<lb/>
whatt ei may be narrow making it<lb/>
wide He noted that Buddhism was<lb/>
not only a Tibetan religion, but that<lb/>
it had "a long history ot presence in<lb/>
Bn<lb/>
A<lb/>
many parts of the world<lb/>
Rinpoehe said that Buddhism "is<lb/>
a method that challenges one's in-<lb/>
herent abilities" and that all human<lb/>
beings have "inherent richness" and<lb/>
other positive qualities that could be<lb/>
utlizied but are often left<lb/>
undeveloped and unused.<lb/>
According to Rinpoehe there are<lb/>
various Buddhist methods that can<lb/>
be utilized as vehicles to the realiza-<lb/>
tion and opening up to the<lb/>
awareness of one's inherent<lb/>
richness.<lb/>
"Fame and popularity are not im-<lb/>
portant, richness and beauties are<lb/>
not important, sex is not important<lb/>
 what is important is an in-<lb/>
telligence that recognizes one's<lb/>
abilities and being able to develop<lb/>
these abilities Rinpoehe said.<lb/>
He pointed out that the U.S. is<lb/>
recognized all over the world for its<lb/>
technological and material advance-<lb/>
ment, but that it has not fully<lb/>
developed a lot of its potential and<lb/>
i ;<lb/>
-?. i<lb/>
Photo Bv DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
m<lb/>
Abbot Khenpo Karthar Rinpoehe<lb/>
that the state of mind of people both personally and socially. "This<lb/>
should be directed towards bringing is only partially happening(in the<lb/>
peace, happiness, and well being U.S.) Rinpoehe said.<lb/>
"The problems which we see<lb/>
around us in the corporal world<lb/>
such as racism, sexism, destruction<lb/>
of the environment and the nuclear<lb/>
dilemma are all a manifestation of<lb/>
our own inner neuroses said one<lb/>
ECU student who attended the lec-<lb/>
ture. "By working on the quality of<lb/>
our own state of being through<lb/>
meditation and following Buddrrt<lb/>
principles we are enhancing the w ell-<lb/>
being of society and the world<lb/>
According to Rinpoehe a person<lb/>
must have a clear, open and stable<lb/>
mind to begin a Buddhist lifestyle.<lb/>
"The essence of Buddhism lies in<lb/>
the practice he said. He also tied<lb/>
to dispel negative myths that are<lb/>
often associated with meditation<lb/>
practices such as those who claim it<lb/>
is "totally mystical" or tht it turns<lb/>
vou into a zombie. He said these<lb/>
ideas were the result of misinforma-<lb/>
tion and misconceptions.<lb/>
This was Rinpoche's second visit<lb/>
to North Carolina and his first visit<lb/>
to ECU. His trip from his<lb/>
monastery in Woodstock, N.Y. was<lb/>
arranged by ECU physics professoi<lb/>
Dr. Joseph Norwood and sponsored<lb/>
bv the Departments of Sociology.<lb/>
Anthropology and Economics.<lb/>
Philosophy and the Asian Studies<lb/>
Committee oi ECU.<lb/>
"It (Rinpoche's visit) went better<lb/>
than anyone could possibly have ex-<lb/>
pected, "i thought it went<lb/>
marvelously weil said Norwood<lb/>
"1 think the students were highly in-<lb/>
spired by his visit and we're all<lb/>
highly gratified<lb/>
Norwood has known Rinpoehe<lb/>
for several years and takes periods<lb/>
trips to his N. . monastery.<lb/>
Rinpoehe stayed with Dr. Nor-<lb/>
wood and his family during his four<lb/>
day visit. Norwood, who is a<lb/>
member oi Greenville's Tibetan<lb/>
Buddhist Meditation Center, invites<lb/>
all interested students to participate<lb/>
in their activities.<lb/>
Storm Blasts N.C. Coast With Hurricane Winds<lb/>
Causes Floods And Damage To Land, Property<lb/>
Go Home Preppies:<lb/>
hoto Bv DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Art students got their revenge on current fashion and tried out halloween<lb/>
costumes in the annual Beaux Arts Ball held at the Upper Level Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
CAPE HAT TERAS, (UPI) ? An<lb/>
intense storm packing hurricane-<lb/>
force winds plodded northward<lb/>
Monday, leaving behind crippled<lb/>
boats, demolished beach cottages<lb/>
and flooding.<lb/>
High winds and seas began sub-<lb/>
siding along the North Carolina<lb/>
coast as the storm slowly moved in-<lb/>
to Virginia, but Norfolk police said<lb/>
the Willoughby Spit area was under<lb/>
as much as four feet of water.<lb/>
About 60 homes were evacuated by<lb/>
rescue workers using amphibious<lb/>
"Duck" vehicles.<lb/>
Although the Coast Guard<lb/>
reported a number of distress calls<lb/>
from boats caught by the storm, one<lb/>
sailor who rode it out safely in port<lb/>
was former CBS anchorman Walter<lb/>
Cronkite, who was in Elizabeth City<lb/>
w hen winds began kicking up during<lb/>
the weekend.<lb/>
"I hadn't planned on spending<lb/>
this long here he said.<lb/>
Cronkite had been heading for<lb/>
Wrightsville Beach, where he plann-<lb/>
ed to leave his 43-foot sailboat w hile<lb/>
he covered the November elections<lb/>
and later return to resume a cruise<lb/>
to the Florida Keys.<lb/>
After a night-long search, the<lb/>
Coast Guard cutter Point Brown<lb/>
early Monday located a disabled<lb/>
43-foot sailboat that had been<lb/>
blown 90 miles by the winds after<lb/>
losing its mast Sunday morning off<lb/>
Cape Hatteras.<lb/>
Storm warnings ? one step under<lb/>
hurricane force ? were posted from<lb/>
Cape Lookout north through<lb/>
Virginia. Gale warnings remained in<lb/>
effect from Cape Lookout south.<lb/>
Winds over 75 mph were reported<lb/>
at the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-<lb/>
Tunnel Monday morning and gusts<lb/>
of 80 to 92 mph were recorded Sun-<lb/>
day at the Frying Pan Light Tower,<lb/>
located in the Atlantic Ocean off the<lb/>
mouth of the Cape Fear River.<lb/>
The winds pushed waves to 8 to<lb/>
13 foot levels on beaches and into<lb/>
the 20-foot range offshore. Tides<lb/>
were running well above normal<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
At Kitty Hawk, authorities<lb/>
reported 10 oceanfront homes were<lb/>
destroyed by the pounding surf, and<lb/>
three others were endangered. The<lb/>
demolished cottages included two<lb/>
that were washed out to sea and<lb/>
three left as wreckage scattered on<lb/>
the beach.<lb/>
Further south in the county, N.C.<lb/>
12 ? the only highway link on Hat-<lb/>
teras Island ? was closed because<lb/>
of flooding from wind-driven seas<lb/>
and drifting sand.<lb/>
In New Bern ? 40 miles from the<lb/>
ocean ? the Neuse River peaked at<lb/>
eight feet above normal levels, caus-<lb/>
ing minor flooding. Tides normally<lb/>
do not affect the river, but strong<lb/>
winds pushed it over its banks.<lb/>
Guests at the Holiday Inn pitched<lb/>
to move furniture to safety when the<lb/>
waters threatened to flood the<lb/>
ground floor. Manager David<lb/>
Riegel said about a half-inch of<lb/>
water entered 12 of the 35 rooms<lb/>
facing the river, but levels in the<lb/>
parking lot reached 6 inches.<lb/>
"It came up very slowly Riegel<lb/>
said, and employees were able to<lb/>
remove all furniture and carpet<lb/>
from the rooms. "We probably lost<lb/>
about 40 square yards of carpet pad-<lb/>
ding. Everything else was saved<lb/>
Most guests at the motel were<lb/>
relocated to second floor rooms, but<lb/>
two couples asked to be moved to<lb/>
another motel.<lb/>
Lloyd Mason, a bndgekeeper at<lb/>
the drawbridgebinding Cedar Island<lb/>
to Carteret County, spent Sunday<lb/>
night at his post because flooding<lb/>
along U.S. 70 prevented his relief<lb/>
man from getting to work.<lb/>
Co-Manager Killed In Robbery<lb/>
By DARRYI BROWN<lb/>
?istiini Sr l-difor<lb/>
The co-manager of the Greenville<lb/>
A&amp;P Supermarket was shot and<lb/>
killed Saturday night during a rob-<lb/>
bery by two masked gunmen, accor-<lb/>
ding to Greenville Police Chief<lb/>
Glenn Cannon.<lb/>
Howard Manning Jr 39, of<lb/>
Farmville and a co-worker were rob-<lb/>
bed Saturday about 9:30 p.m. as<lb/>
they walked from the store in<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
to the Branch Banking and Trust of-<lb/>
fice on Arlington Boulevard to<lb/>
make a deposit. They were con-<lb/>
fronted by two men wearing ski<lb/>
masks and armed with a shotgun<lb/>
when they arrived at the bank, Can-<lb/>
non said.<lb/>
Manning was shot in the ab-<lb/>
domen after he showed some<lb/>
resistance to the men when they<lb/>
demanded money, according to<lb/>
Cannon. He died at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital about 11 p.m.<lb/>
from internal bleeding which<lb/>
resulted from the gun wound, accor-<lb/>
ding to medical examiner Dr. Stan<lb/>
Harris. The co-worker was not in-<lb/>
jured.<lb/>
The two gunmen were last seen<lb/>
fleeing from the bank on foot but a<lb/>
search of the area following the inci-<lb/>
dent did not turn up any evidence of<lb/>
the masked men. They escaped with<lb/>
approximately $21,000 in cash,<lb/>
checks and food stamps, Cannon<lb/>
said. Greenville police and the State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation are continu-<lb/>
ing a search for the suspects.<lb/>
Manning's co-worker ran back to<lb/>
A&amp;P after the gunmen fled, and<lb/>
told other store employees to phone<lb/>
for police and an abulance.<lb/>
Manning had been co-manager of<lb/>
the Greenville supermarket for three<lb/>
years, after working 12 years at the<lb/>
Farmville A&amp;P Supermarket. He<lb/>
graduated from Farmville High<lb/>
School in 1962.<lb/>
Students Told To Lock Up<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
surf V rllf r<lb/>
"People are making themselves sitting ducks<lb/>
said Inez Fridley, College Hill Campus Coordinator.<lb/>
Fridley was referring to two assaults upon female<lb/>
residents of Belk dormitory in their rooms within the<lb/>
last month. Both assaults occurred on weekend<lb/>
nights exactly one week apart in the early morning<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
The girls were alone in their rooms, and both had<lb/>
their doors unlocked.<lb/>
The attacker, although the two incidents may not<lb/>
have been done by the same man, searched for a<lb/>
room that was not only unlocked but had one occu-<lb/>
pant.<lb/>
Fridley stated that people from outside the ECU<lb/>
community are believed to commit many of the more<lb/>
serious crimes ECU has experienced, such as assault<lb/>
on students. "Students leave their doors wide open -<lb/>
people from outside say to themselves 'this is an easy<lb/>
mark said Fihdley.<lb/>
"The lock is the safest thing you have to prevent<lb/>
crime added Joseph Calder, director of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Safety, in reference to dormitory<lb/>
crime.<lb/>
Findley also stressed that students mistakingly<lb/>
believe they are completely safe from serious crimes<lb/>
in dorms, adding that male students don't realize<lb/>
assaults similar to those on the two Belk residents can<lb/>
happen to them also. "It's not only women that are<lb/>
the possible victims, it could happen to guys too<lb/>
added Findley.<lb/>
Findley urges residents of Scott and Belk dor-<lb/>
mitories to lock their suite doors as well as their room<lb/>
doors at night since they are more vulnerable to<lb/>
criminals because of their outside hallways.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 26, 1982<lb/>
A<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
lion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sized paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
There is no charge for 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 for 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 deparl<lb/>
ments<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Toward tne 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 been 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 tor 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 ilOO 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/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Duke Power has available a<lb/>
variety ot co op positions All work<lb/>
experiences are for alternating<lb/>
semesters beginning m January or<lb/>
May 1983 and are located m<lb/>
Charlotte Any interested students<lb/>
witn a minimum G P A of 2 0 and<lb/>
maiormg m Computer Science.<lb/>
Main. Business Education, Office<lb/>
Administration, industrial Educa<lb/>
tion, Industrial Technology.<lb/>
Chemistry or Environmental<lb/>
Healtn should contact tne Co op of<lb/>
tice. ext 6V79<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter ot Phi Sigma Pi's<lb/>
national honor fraternity will hold<lb/>
its pledge meeting October 27 at<lb/>
SOO p m in 132 Austin. Following<lb/>
the pledge meeting, a dinner<lb/>
meeting will be held at Parker's<lb/>
Barbeque at 6 00 p m All brothers<lb/>
and pledges are urged to attend<lb/>
COMMERCIAL<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Fashionmodel announcement<lb/>
dates have been changed, to<lb/>
November 3 and 4, 7 00 to 10 00<lb/>
CONGRATS<lb/>
Congratulations to the Ugliest<lb/>
man on Campus Gene Gigilo,<lb/>
representing the big Os Come<lb/>
by the AOTT house tor your tree<lb/>
kegi<lb/>
RACQUETBALL<lb/>
An organizational meeting is to<lb/>
beheld in November 2, 1982 at 7.30<lb/>
in room 105 Memorial gym.<lb/>
RacquetbaM players and<lb/>
students interested in learning<lb/>
how to play are urged to attend<lb/>
this first meeting. Re activation of<lb/>
the R ball team is dependent upon<lb/>
student interest. For more irtfor<lb/>
maiton call Amanda 752 9193.<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The internaitonal Language<lb/>
Organization will be meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, October 27, 19t2. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in BC 305 at<lb/>
3 00 p.m. There will be more<lb/>
discussion on the Noche Latina<lb/>
snd the revission of the con<lb/>
stituiton. All interested persons<lb/>
are welcome to attend You do not<lb/>
have to be a Foreign language ma<lb/>
jor or minor.<lb/>
T<lb/>
STUDIES GOT<lb/>
YOU DOWN?<lb/>
A two part mini series offered at<lb/>
NO cost by t he University Counsel<lb/>
ing Center from 3 4pm, 305 Wright<lb/>
Annex On Monday, October 25.<lb/>
"How to Succeed in 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/>
SMITHSONIAN<lb/>
The Smithsonian Institution is<lb/>
offering 10 week graduate<lb/>
research appointments in a varie<lb/>
ty of areas The graduate students<lb/>
will conduct medividual research<lb/>
under staff's supervision The sti<lb/>
pend tor these fellowships is $2000<lb/>
All interested graduate students<lb/>
should contact nte Co op off ice, 313<lb/>
Rawl ext 6979<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Society tor the Advance<lb/>
ment ot Management will be<lb/>
holding a meeting on the 26th of<lb/>
October at 3 00 m Rawl 104 The<lb/>
guest speaker will be the president<lb/>
of the Wall Link Company, Don<lb/>
Boldt. Mr. Boldt is a Harvard<lb/>
MBA and will be speaking on the<lb/>
topic of "The Law ot Personnel<lb/>
Management According tc Boldt<lb/>
All members and mtersted guests<lb/>
are welcome to attend New<lb/>
memberships will be taken at this<lb/>
meeting For more information<lb/>
call 758 5258<lb/>
NOISE ORDINANCE<lb/>
There will be a meeting to<lb/>
discuss Greenville's New propos<lb/>
ed decibel based noise ordinance<lb/>
on Wednesday October 27, 1982 in<lb/>
the multipurpose room, of the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Union at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. All university members and<lb/>
organizations are welcomed to at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
HEALTH CAREERS<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
Nurses, medical techs, physical<lb/>
therapists, occupational<lb/>
therapists, social workers, and<lb/>
slap majors representatives<lb/>
from various hospitals and health<lb/>
agencies will be on campus to talk<lb/>
with you about employment<lb/>
possibilities! Different<lb/>
organizaitons will be here on the<lb/>
following dates November 5<lb/>
Nursing building 945 1.00 p.m<lb/>
November 8 Allied Health<lb/>
Biulding 1 30 4 30 p.m.<lb/>
Mark your calendar and tell<lb/>
another friend about this in case<lb/>
they do not see the announcement.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Chi Initiation will be held at<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room<lb/>
on October 26 followed by a Wine<lb/>
and Cheese Social from 7 30 to<lb/>
?:00 pm for members, new inhates<lb/>
and their dates Reservations<lb/>
must be made by October 22 and<lb/>
Psi Chi Library or calling 756 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 ot 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 ot the<lb/>
University Book Exchange, are in<lb/>
the amount of $500 each To<lb/>
qualify, a student must have a<lb/>
GPA of 3.5 in art, and an overall of<lb/>
3.0. Slides of five works (name. M<lb/>
tie. media, and size) must accom<lb/>
pany the scholarship application<lb/>
form. Application forms may be<lb/>
obtained from the School ot Art of<lb/>
fice. The deadline tor 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/>
75C per line or traction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Kfiurn in Mr III 4 BOIMI) office l?" KASI<lb/>
CABMHJMIAM ?Htwl b 1 p.m. Momta? hrf?r?<lb/>
lui'da paprr and Wdnr?d?? befnrr n??rd?<lb/>
puhhtaiiun.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
City State<lb/>
No. lines <lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75? per line $.<lb/>
No. insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
?1 . J11<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ???,???i?i<lb/>
??1?1rl?1<lb/>
-4-<lb/>
! i??I? -i?,?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
?1?ir-<lb/>
1?L1iiIi i<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
English Department faculty and<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta members are in<lb/>
vited to a Halloween Party this<lb/>
Thursday night. October 28. 8.00<lb/>
p m at the Tar River Clubhouse<lb/>
Dates can come too! All party<lb/>
goers wh wish to participate in the<lb/>
costume contest must dress up as<lb/>
a literary character The BEST<lb/>
costume wms $25 Hope to see you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
SKI FLASH<lb/>
Snowski regisrtation for<lb/>
Christmas Break Trip will be Nov<lb/>
9 at 4:00 PM in Memorial Gym 108<lb/>
A $5 deposit will be accepted to<lb/>
reserve your space Can Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000 if you need<lb/>
more information<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Learn new disc skins, play<lb/>
ultimate, or just come to the bot<lb/>
torn of College Hill Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at 4:00 to throw frisbee<lb/>
and enjoy these remaining<lb/>
beautiful, warm autumn das<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 A'<lb/>
lornay representing Wake Forest<lb/>
Law School.<lb/>
The Preprofesssionai Health<lb/>
Alliance (PPHA) will have a<lb/>
meeting this Thursday. October<lb/>
28.1982 This meeting will be held<lb/>
at 5 30 P m at the Afro American<lb/>
Cultural Center All members and<lb/>
any other interested parties are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
ZETA BETA TAU<lb/>
Congratulations to all the newly<lb/>
elected officers of Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
President Howard Lipman, Vice<lb/>
President Scott A Sutker,<lb/>
Tressurer David Denison.<lb/>
Secretary Thomas W Lanphere,<lb/>
Rush Chairman Mike Friend<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau is looking forward<lb/>
to a successful year with these<lb/>
new officers<lb/>
There will be a meeting Thurs<lb/>
day October 28 at 6:00 m<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Of<lb/>
ticers must be present at 5 30 All<lb/>
members must attend This is<lb/>
your last chance to be a toundign<lb/>
father tor ZBT<lb/>
COMMUNITY<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
The first meeting of the Com<lb/>
munity Theatre Group will take<lb/>
place on Tuesday. October 26 at 7<lb/>
PM m Rawl 232 Actors, singers,<lb/>
dancers and technicians welcome.<lb/>
Experience is nice, but not<lb/>
necessary A full length musical is<lb/>
being planned tor Spring.<lb/>
For more information, call Al<lb/>
Agate at 758 9474.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The co op office has available an<lb/>
opportunity witht he Federal Law<lb/>
Enforcement 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 in Glynco. Georgia for<lb/>
more information contact Nancy<lb/>
Fillnow in the Coop office, ext<lb/>
6979<lb/>
PRC MAJORS<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goldsboro, NC has an<lb/>
alternating Co op position<lb/>
available for Spring semester in<lb/>
the ir recreation department The<lb/>
position reequires a 2 0 GPA and<lb/>
you must be willing to work tor<lb/>
two terms It is an excellent opor<lb/>
tunity for anyone interested in<lb/>
gaming valuable work experience<lb/>
in the area of recreation Salary<lb/>
approximately $1,000 per month<lb/>
gross Contact Nancy Fillnow 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 it<lb/>
you are in need of a tutor can<lb/>
752 3022 tor more information<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Black and Decker in Tarporc<lb/>
has an opening tor a part me ac<lb/>
counting clerk "the person mus'<lb/>
De able to pertorn- miscellaneous<lb/>
accounting duties such as payng<lb/>
invoices and general bookkeep<lb/>
mg Preferred is someone who can<lb/>
operate a 10 key adding machine<lb/>
Employment would start as soon<lb/>
as possible For more into can the<lb/>
Co op office, ext 6979<lb/>
HAPPY<lb/>
HALLOWEEN<lb/>
We re having a Halloween<lb/>
Costume Part next Thursday<lb/>
night. October 28th All parV<lb/>
goers who wish to partiopa'e in<lb/>
our costume con'est must dress up<lb/>
as a literary character The BEST<lb/>
costume wins $25 Enghs Depar'<lb/>
ment faculty as wen as members<lb/>
are cordially invited T.me a"d<lb/>
piace will be posted later S'aT<lb/>
tuned'<lb/>
CO-OP FOR BUSINESS<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
There are positions available<lb/>
with the General Accounting Ot<lb/>
tice as an Evaluation Trainee<lb/>
Students mus' have completed 75<lb/>
hours and be available tor two<lb/>
work periods beginning in the Spr<lb/>
mg 1983 semester Conversion to<lb/>
permanent employment alter<lb/>
graduation would be likely For<lb/>
more information contact Carolyn<lb/>
Powell a the Co op office, ext<lb/>
6979<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
HEY1 Do you enioy friendly<lb/>
fellowship, good friends and food,<lb/>
and a chance to be yourself m this<lb/>
"rat race" environmnt at ECU?<lb/>
Then come join us at the Baptist<lb/>
Student union where we have din<lb/>
ners on Tuesdays at 5 30 for only<lb/>
$1 75 PAUSE on Thursdays at<lb/>
7 00 tc allow us to take a break<lb/>
after an almost fulfilling week<lb/>
and lots ol people lust like you who<lb/>
erioy others Call 752 4646 if you<lb/>
have any questions Bob Clyde<lb/>
campus minister.<lb/>
EPILEPSY<lb/>
All Pre Health Professions<lb/>
students are invited to attend a<lb/>
seminar on EPILEPSY presented<lb/>
by Dr Ross Shupmg ot the Green<lb/>
vitie Neurological Associates at<lb/>
7 30 p m on Tuesday. October 26.<lb/>
1982 The Alpha Epsnon Delta<lb/>
Pleoge meeting will be at 7 00<lb/>
p m. in Flanagan 307<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
A meeting for women interested<lb/>
in forming a chapter of the<lb/>
American Association of Universi<lb/>
ty women will be held Thursday.<lb/>
November 4 at 7 30 p m m the<lb/>
community room at First<lb/>
American Savings &amp; Loan<lb/>
(formerly East Federal Savings 8.<lb/>
loan) m Greenville<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
Need some extra money' Enter<lb/>
the REBEL poetry contest and<lb/>
you could win the $90 first prize,<lb/>
$70 second prize, or the $40 third<lb/>
prize Prize money is provived by<lb/>
the Attic and Budweiser The con<lb/>
test is open to all current ECU<lb/>
students, and all entries should be<lb/>
submitted to the REBEL or Media<lb/>
Board offices in the publications<lb/>
building by November 1 Include a<lb/>
cover sheet with your name, ad<lb/>
dress ana telephone number Win<lb/>
ners win be published in the<lb/>
REBEL and an others will be con-<lb/>
sidered<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up m the Buccaneer office<lb/>
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from<lb/>
2 00 p m till 5 00 p m. The Buc<lb/>
caneer Office is located on the se<lb/>
cond floor of the Publications<lb/>
Building NOTE: All Freshmen<lb/>
Registers must be picked up by<lb/>
October 20 Remember you have<lb/>
already paid tor this publication,<lb/>
so why let your money go to waste<lb/>
PROSE<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
The REBEL is conducting a pro<lb/>
se contest, open to all current ECU<lb/>
students First prize is $125, se<lb/>
cond prize is $100. and third prize<lb/>
is $75 Prize money is provided by<lb/>
the Attic and Budweiser Submit<lb/>
typed entries to tne REBEL or<lb/>
Media offices located in the<lb/>
publications building The<lb/>
deadline is November 1. so get<lb/>
busy. The winners will be publish<lb/>
ed in REBEL '83 and an ohters<lb/>
will be considered. A copy ot the<lb/>
rules is posted outside the REBEL<lb/>
office it you have any questions<lb/>
BRODY BUILDING<lb/>
DEDICATION<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff and students<lb/>
are invited to a special open house<lb/>
at the School ot Medicine's Brody<lb/>
Medical Sciences Building Mon<lb/>
day. Oct 25 from 3 00 6 00 pm<lb/>
The tour is one of several speca'<lb/>
events 'o be held to highlight the<lb/>
dedication of the school's new $26<lb/>
million facility<lb/>
ECU guests will be able to tour<lb/>
teaching areas and research<lb/>
laboratories ana see many ot the<lb/>
buildings special features, m<lb/>
eluding a biohazards containment<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/>
Aiso scheduled during dedica<lb/>
hon 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/>
CO?OP JOB<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in Green<lb/>
ville has an alternating Coop posi<lb/>
tion open in its Validation Depart<lb/>
ment. The job will be tor 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 skiils should contact Nan<lb/>
cy Fillnow 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 for<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/>
Ail interested chemistry maiors<lb/>
with at least two semesters of<lb/>
organic chemistry should contact<lb/>
Nancy Fillnow m the Co op office.<lb/>
ext 6979<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The Co op office has a ioo open<lb/>
ing tor an accounting position<lb/>
avaibie with a local manufactur<lb/>
mg firm Requires adding<lb/>
machine experience and accour<lb/>
tmg background Interested<lb/>
students should inquire at the Co<lb/>
op office located m Raw) at room<lb/>
313<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
mg change of maior week for the<lb/>
Fail Semester, should report to<lb/>
Minges COIiseum from 12 00 2 00<lb/>
p m on Thursday December 9,<lb/>
1982 (reading day) for a motor<lb/>
physical fitness test Satisfactory<lb/>
performance on this test 'S re<lb/>
quired as a pre requis.te tor of<lb/>
ticiai admittance to the physical<lb/>
education maior program More<lb/>
detailed information concerning<lb/>
the test is available by can ng<lb/>
757 4497<lb/>
Any student with a medical con<lb/>
dihon that would contraindicate<lb/>
participation m the testing pro<lb/>
gram should contact Dr israei at<lb/>
757 6497 Examples would include<lb/>
heart murmurs, congenital hear'<lb/>
disease or significant<lb/>
musculoskeletal problems It you<lb/>
have nay significant medical con<lb/>
ditions please notify Dr israei<lb/>
even if you plan to be tested<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
The Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program win hold a mee'ing on<lb/>
October 26 at 5 00 pm in the second<lb/>
floor conference room of Erwm<lb/>
Hall Any student intersted in fur<lb/>
thermg responsible attitudes<lb/>
toward the use of chemical<lb/>
substances is encouraged 'o at<lb/>
tend For more information call<lb/>
757 4793 Or 757 6649<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Weather permng, we will be<lb/>
at the bottom ot college niii today,<lb/>
ana every Tues ana Thurs a"<lb/>
4 00 Look tor the frisbee c uD "<lb/>
the Homecoming parade 198;<lb/>
Natural Light Fly.ng Disc Classic<lb/>
Video win be shown a' the Ml<lb/>
Wed Nov 10 Ciub mee'ngs a'e<lb/>
Monday nights 8 00 -n Venaea:<lb/>
Room 248 anyone n'erested in<lb/>
t'iSOee s urged M ae"a<lb/>
MODELING<lb/>
The ECU Commercial <lb/>
Departynent would nxe 'c .nvi'e<lb/>
an interested persons maai anc<lb/>
Female M aend our oo<lb/>
cataloging photo sess-ons 'c be<lb/>
eio on Wednesday November 3<lb/>
and Thursday November 4 trorr<lb/>
7 10 P m in the "gr ng studio 0?<lb/>
jenx.ns Art Building We w be<lb/>
photographing and ca'oiog.n<lb/>
any owe .ntrested -? modeling tor<lb/>
fashion ads a-s a?:u's A<lb/>
pi 'Dgrapns ariM be i ec ac<lb/>
ca'aioge-d tor tu'ure eterence A<lb/>
?models cosf" wii. be pa a d? 'w<lb/>
hour tor tnir paropa"<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
Par' 'ime ci op tra-ng posi<lb/>
t rs are ava.aoie "r Bue er<lb/>
Mtg Cc in Kinsion ese ra <lb/>
. ocs lions could lead 'c I<lb/>
time opportunities n Produc'ior<lb/>
Superv.Sion ProduC'icn Co I<lb/>
or Purcnas s f e new Buemer<lb/>
piar in Raieign oegnning June<lb/>
1983 All "te'eVec INDT maiors<lb/>
?ac' Nancy F.unow In the Co<lb/>
f "ce ex' 6970<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Its s'hi not toe iae to p-a?<lb/>
Anyone nteres'eo n P aying<lb/>
wemens rubgy neees In 'epc I<lb/>
pradces Tuesday Ihrv Tursaa<lb/>
a" 4 DO We pradce ben.nc 'he<lb/>
Aided Hea" Bei?, bu"d.ng Ab<lb/>
sdu'eiy nc pre'Ous e?per ence s<lb/>
'eaj 'ed<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
A Graduate s'uden- or ac? r?<lb/>
member 'o become an advisor -<lb/>
the ECU acrcsse cue Piease<lb/>
can for more informal an a"er<lb/>
6 00 O'clock 758 6?14 Ask tor NiCk<lb/>
Pen or Bill Jenk.ns t ng answer<lb/>
call 758 1418 ai'er t dock a"C ask<lb/>
fir Brad Brown<lb/>
POSITION FOR<lb/>
INDT MAJOR<lb/>
There IS a" opening with Long<lb/>
Manufacturing Co tor a Quau'y<lb/>
Control Supervisor This perma<lb/>
nent position involves set' g uc<lb/>
and maintaining a qua! "? <lb/>
program in Rumania for tractors<lb/>
manufactured for LOMi The s'ar<lb/>
?,ng date in immediately and "he<lb/>
salary is negotiable Con'act Nan<lb/>
cy Fillnow in the Co op office ext<lb/>
6979. for more information<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
 - - J<lb/>
vnr 123<lb/>
Puoi'Sed every Toesda. s<lb/>
Thursday dur.ng :n acaae? c<lb/>
,ear anc e.er. WaUHiMTll ?<lb/>
-?g m ver<lb/>
Tne Eas' Caronn.an is the ct<lb/>
li( a -ewscaper of Eas-<lb/>
Carolina uW verv'y aatiwd<lb/>
operate- anc OuB' s"c ,cr arc<lb/>
d, me stwowrrts a Eas' Carol.na<lb/>
Univers '?<lb/>
Subscription Rate 20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m 'he Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Sena aocress<lb/>
changes 10 T-e Eas" Carolinian<lb/>
Old 5oo? Building. ECU Green<lb/>
v.lie NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
757 6346 6367,6309<lb/>
ujfmammj<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
on the purchase of<lb/>
one of our lab coats!<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
<lb/>
?F W:<lb/>
PEK1KG CUPPER<lb/>
Elegance in<lb/>
Unisex Hairstyling<lb/>
C jII for appointment at 758-1505<lb/>
KOH-I-NOOR<lb/>
RAPIDOGRAPH<lb/>
Specie! limi-ed-Time<lb/>
Offer<lb/>
Buy a 4-pen set and save 35<lb/>
Regular retail value-$46.75<lb/>
You pay only $29.95<lb/>
The best of RAPIDOGRAPH<lb/>
Technical Pen tor all graphic arts<lb/>
and drafting applications:<lb/>
Hungate's<lb/>
Technical Pen<lb/>
Pm PluaS C<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC<lb/>
Long Leaf Mall<lb/>
WILMINGTON. N.C<lb/>
ARTS ? CRAFTS ? HOBB.ES<lb/>
CrabtrecNalko Mall<lb/>
RALFIGH. NC<lb/>
Northgatc Mall<lb/>
DURHAM. NC<lb/>
Located 12 mile from ECU at 1005-A Hamilton St.<lb/>
PJLzzalxui<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have'hidden' <lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
Pi ZZ A INN has changed<lb/>
??WME????i?m?aqat<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL 758-6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
with<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Nov. 24-Nov. 28,1982<lb/>
Spend your Thanksgiving holiday in style on Broadway,<lb/>
at Macy's Parade, shopping, A touring the city. Space is<lb/>
limited A time is drawing near. For more info, contact<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
for Slaw .35c extra<lb/>
?  -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 21.1982<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
?n 1<lb/>
Brains Sent To Wash<lb/>
s<lb/>
CHAMPAIGN, IL<lb/>
(CPS) ? Someone left<lb/>
a bag full of 22 human<lb/>
brains in the laundry<lb/>
room of a University of<lb/>
Illinois fraternity<lb/>
house, and no one yet<lb/>
knows exactly whose<lb/>
brains they are.<lb/>
Sophomore Paul<lb/>
Gerding opened his<lb/>
laundry bag several<lb/>
weeks ago to find the<lb/>
brains where he<lb/>
thought his dirty<lb/>
clothes would be. In<lb/>
something of an in-<lb/>
stinctive reaction, he<lb/>
pitched the bag into an<lb/>
alley behind the Acacia<lb/>
fraternity house, where<lb/>
he lives, before calling<lb/>
the police.<lb/>
University police in-<lb/>
vestigator Charles<lb/>
Moore says the "case<lb/>
has been solved" since<lb/>
then, and charges have<lb/>
been filed against a<lb/>
group of students<lb/>
thought to be responsi-<lb/>
ble for snatching the<lb/>
brains from a research<lb/>
lab and putting them in<lb/>
the laundry room.<lb/>
Moore refused to name<lb/>
the group.<lb/>
Group members did<lb/>
appear before a<lb/>
disciplinary board last<lb/>
week, but no penalty<lb/>
has been imposed.<lb/>
reports John Scouffas,<lb/>
assistant vice<lb/>
chancellor of student<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
Scouffas adds that,<lb/>
in his view, the case<lb/>
isn't fully solved yet.<lb/>
The group ? another<lb/>
fraternity, some believe<lb/>
? has taken respon-<lb/>
sibility for the theft and<lb/>
placement of the<lb/>
brains, but Scouffas<lb/>
says the individual<lb/>
"ring leaders are not<lb/>
known<lb/>
Acacia member John<lb/>
Holliday says Acacia<lb/>
has "reason to believe<lb/>
it was another fraterni-<lb/>
ty, but it would be un-<lb/>
fair to accuse anyone<lb/>
Holliday notes the<lb/>
incident occurred dur-<lb/>
ing a period when<lb/>
pledges, on their way to<lb/>
a special weekend,<lb/>
often pull pranks on<lb/>
their brothers. Holliday<lb/>
speculates pledges from<lb/>
another house simply<lb/>
chose Acacia this time.<lb/>
"We're not angry.<lb/>
No harm was done. No<lb/>
one is angry. It's a<lb/>
joke<lb/>
Indeed Scouffas,<lb/>
Moore and Champaign<lb/>
Det. Gary Wright all<lb/>
chuckled when discuss-<lb/>
ing the case.<lb/>
Scouffas says the<lb/>
most serious aspect of<lb/>
the case is the theft of<lb/>
the brains. Officials are<lb/>
still unsure from which<lb/>
lab they were stolen.<lb/>
"We think they got<lb/>
them from our medical<lb/>
center<lb/>
Then "they probably<lb/>
dropped them in<lb/>
through a window" at<lb/>
Acacia, which Scouffas<lb/>
is confident won't<lb/>
retaliate for the stunt.<lb/>
Holliday is less confi-<lb/>
dent. Asked if members<lb/>
had plans to try to top<lb/>
the prank, he said they<lb/>
"had thought about<lb/>
it<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Computers In Class XTlTIC<lb/>
Is Symposium Topic<lb/>
The use of<lb/>
microcomputers in the<lb/>
teaching of history and<lb/>
social studies is the<lb/>
focus of the 18th an-<lb/>
nual East Carolina<lb/>
University Symposium<lb/>
on History and the<lb/>
Social Studies Oct. 29.<lb/>
The event is planned<lb/>
as a conference for<lb/>
secondary school<lb/>
teachers of history and<lb/>
social studies and is<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Department of History.<lb/>
Featured speaker is<lb/>
Dr. Mark Rothman, a<lb/>
faculty member at the<lb/>
Paul D. Schreiber High<lb/>
School, Port<lb/>
Washington, N.Y and<lb/>
the C.W. Post Center<lb/>
of Long Island Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Dr. Schreiber is<lb/>
author of several<lb/>
reports and teaching<lb/>
materials dealing with<lb/>
microcomputer ap-<lb/>
plications and has serv-<lb/>
ed as consultant to the<lb/>
Montgomery County,<lb/>
Maryland, school<lb/>
system on computer ap-<lb/>
plications in the social<lb/>
sciences.<lb/>
His symposium topic<lb/>
is "Microcomputer Ap-<lb/>
plications in the Social<lb/>
Studies<lb/>
Other speakers are<lb/>
members of the ECU<lb/>
faculty:<lb/>
"Microcomputers in<lb/>
the Social Studies: An<lb/>
Introduction Hugh<lb/>
Wease of the history<lb/>
faculty;<lb/>
"Microcomputers: A<lb/>
Resource for<lb/>
Teachers John War-<lb/>
ren of the English<lb/>
faculty;<lb/>
"Microcomputers in<lb/>
History Instruction<lb/>
Dale Light of the<lb/>
history faculty and<lb/>
"Introduction to<lb/>
Microcomputing<lb/>
Skills Katye Sowell<lb/>
of the mathematics<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Also appearing on<lb/>
the program will be<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell and professors<lb/>
Walter Calhoun,<lb/>
William Cobb and Fred<lb/>
Ragan of the history<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Persons interested in<lb/>
attending the sym-<lb/>
posium may secure fur-<lb/>
ther information and<lb/>
registration forms from<lb/>
the Department of<lb/>
Historv, ECU Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057508_0004"/><lb/>
2Ur ?afit (Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, n . . rru w<lb/>
Mike Hughes, wtmmmmsm<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, Dtm tor ?J Advents, ClNDY PLEASANTS, Sports Edttor<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ???.? mmw Greg Rideout, ??<lb/>
ALl AFRASHTEH, Cred-i Uunaxer STEVE BACHNER, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. 0nto,vaw Juliana Fahrbach, stvtetd.tor<lb/>
JONI GUTHRIE, Tethnuat SuperMsor MlKE DAVIS, Production Manager<lb/>
October 26, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Warren County<lb/>
Governor Overlooking PCB Threat<lb/>
It was almost as if the Warren<lb/>
County protestors' message of the<lb/>
past six weeks had gone completely<lb/>
unheeded. In Monday's<lb/>
newspapers, state officials were<lb/>
quoted as saying they hope the<lb/>
demonstrators will "bury the hat-<lb/>
chet" when the PCB landfill in Al-<lb/>
ton is sealed next month. To them,<lb/>
the controversy's as simple as that.<lb/>
But it's hardly likely that that view<lb/>
is shared by those on the other side<lb/>
of the fence.<lb/>
It's hardly likely.<lb/>
At the risk of sounding incredibly<lb/>
repititious, it should nonetheless be<lb/>
noted that the Hunt administration<lb/>
established the PCB landfill in Af-<lb/>
ton before conclusive scientific<lb/>
evidence has proven the relative<lb/>
safety or danger of the chemical in<lb/>
relation to humans. Although they<lb/>
(state officials) seem to like to<lb/>
downplay that aspect of the dump-<lb/>
ing, it is still ? and always will be<lb/>
? the paramount consideration.<lb/>
PCB is a toxic chemical that has<lb/>
been linked to cancer in laboratory<lb/>
animals. That much is readily<lb/>
known ? by doctors and officials<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
Unfortunately, we Americans<lb/>
have become more or less immune<lb/>
to initial reports and indications<lb/>
from medical labs. What was once<lb/>
overwhelming news is now virtually<lb/>
commonplace. "Everything<lb/>
nowadays causes cancer anyway<lb/>
right?<lb/>
Well, as ironic, even ridiculous,<lb/>
as that cliche may seem, our state<lb/>
officials seem to have taken it to<lb/>
heart.<lb/>
They sincerely believe that once<lb/>
the proverbial lid is placed on the<lb/>
contaminated soil, the concentra-<lb/>
tion of marches and protests ?<lb/>
which have by now become routine<lb/>
? will diminish shortly thereafter.<lb/>
Somehow it just seems too easy.<lb/>
Especially when most of the<lb/>
outspoken civil rights leaders in-<lb/>
volved in the controversy have vow-<lb/>
ed to continue putting pressure on<lb/>
the Hunt administration to remove<lb/>
the dump. "That dump stands for a<lb/>
symbol of discrimination, Ken Fer-<lb/>
ruccio (president of Warren County<lb/>
Citizens Concerned About PCB)<lb/>
said last week at a rally. "It sym-<lb/>
bolizes just about everything civil<lb/>
rights legislation is supposed to pre-<lb/>
vent. It has to go<lb/>
Nevertheless, officials say that<lb/>
the 20-acre landfill should be per-<lb/>
manently sealed within the next four<lb/>
weeks, pending completion of soil<lb/>
deliveries from 243 miles of con-<lb/>
taminated N.C. highways and from<lb/>
Fort Bragg.<lb/>
But apparently so as not to leave<lb/>
Warren County residents "up in the<lb/>
air gallant attempts have been<lb/>
made to calm the crowds. Gov. Jim<lb/>
Hunt, after finally agreeing to meet<lb/>
with angry protest leaders two<lb/>
weeks ago, promised that he would<lb/>
diligently pursue detoxification of<lb/>
the dumpsite.<lb/>
The outraged public also received<lb/>
consolation from O.W. Strickland<lb/>
(head of the Solid and Hazardous<lb/>
Waste Branch of the N.C. Division<lb/>
of Health Services), who explained<lb/>
that the site will be monitored<lb/>
periodically, and "if any PCB is<lb/>
detected (leaking from the top or<lb/>
bottom of the Afton landfill), it will<lb/>
be pumped out and taken to another<lb/>
landfill that has been approved for<lb/>
the disposal of PCB<lb/>
But if the whole thing's just that<lb/>
simple, then why have 500 marchers<lb/>
already been arrested? And why do<lb/>
they continue to show by the hun-<lb/>
dreds to demonstrate? Don't they<lb/>
know there's nothing to worry<lb/>
about? Don't the people realize that<lb/>
the men working at the dumpsite are<lb/>
only wearing those "moon suits" as<lb/>
a precautionary measure?<lb/>
Well, maybe it's that easy to the<lb/>
state officials who would apparently<lb/>
say anything to quell an angry<lb/>
crowd. But at least one legitimate<lb/>
expert disagrees.<lb/>
He is Albert R. Hanke, project<lb/>
officer for the U.S. Environmental<lb/>
Protection Agency.<lb/>
Hanke says that detoxification or<lb/>
removal of cantaminated soil from<lb/>
the Afton PCB dump is highly<lb/>
unlikely. He emphasized that no<lb/>
such project has ever before been<lb/>
done.<lb/>
"The Warren County landfill is<lb/>
not engineered for any such pro-<lb/>
cedure as detoxification Hanke<lb/>
told the News and Observer last<lb/>
week. "Once you put something in<lb/>
a landfill, you don't take it out<lb/>
Of course, this latest difference of<lb/>
opinion between fast-talking state<lb/>
politicians and a federal expert<lb/>
strikes up yet another dilemma for<lb/>
the residents of Warren County.<lb/>
Just who do we believe? A man<lb/>
more concerned with his future in<lb/>
politics or one who has supervised<lb/>
EPA chemical disposal projects in<lb/>
at least six other states?<lb/>
But, then again, our own gover-<lb/>
nor and his staff certainly wouldn't<lb/>
lie to us about something as poten-<lb/>
tially deadly as PCBs, would they?<lb/>
mm &amp;esry0?soF wuk t sevavi ime wnts<lb/>
WHO OWNfcA DIAMOND MlNEfcor WI &amp;T ANVTHING?<lb/>
I Mm the we throws anwfWMOWCAse<lb/>
'Your Vote Does Make A Difference'<lb/>
'82 Elections Big On Issues<lb/>
I've long felt amtmalent about oting.<lb/>
So often ? nearly always, actually ?<lb/>
casting a ballot comes down to choosing<lb/>
the lesser of two evils. Nearly always, I<lb/>
take a deep breath, decide which<lb/>
Demopublican or Republicrat will cause<lb/>
the lesser harm to me and mine, pull the<lb/>
lever, exhale slowly and walk out from<lb/>
behind the curtain feeling diminished.<lb/>
If you are one of the millions ot<lb/>
Americans who don't vote because you<lb/>
don't think voting makes any difference, I<lb/>
understand. We both know that public<lb/>
policy is often the result of deals cut in<lb/>
secret between powerful special interests.<lb/>
We know that money and mediabhtzes,<lb/>
not integrity, often carry precincts. In the<lb/>
face of that knowledge, casting a ote<lb/>
seems almost quaint, like sipping a cherry<lb/>
phosphate at a computer fair.<lb/>
Yet I'll be voting this Nov. 2, for reasons<lb/>
both rational and emotional. Why? Partly<lb/>
because I'm excited about some of the<lb/>
issues this fall, partly because I believe<lb/>
1982 is a transitional year ? not a sweep-<lb/>
ing, revolutionary one, certainly ? but a<lb/>
pivotal year. The results of next month's<lb/>
congressional, state and local elections will<lb/>
do much to mold the shape of our<lb/>
domestic economy in a time of recession<lb/>
and determine the thrust of American<lb/>
foreign policy in a time of great interna-<lb/>
tional conflict.<lb/>
In Berkeley, California, where I live, the<lb/>
municipal election is largely a referendum<lb/>
on residential and commercial rent control<lb/>
laws passed by the voters last spring.<lb/>
Because 1 believe that rent control is the<lb/>
only thing keeping Berkeley from sucumb-<lb/>
ing to acute toxic gentrification<lb/>
(symptoms: two croissants in every pot, a<lb/>
boutique in every abandoned factory), 1<lb/>
will vote for candidates sworn to uphold it.<lb/>
Moreover, local elections anywhere are<lb/>
those in which voting is most likely to<lb/>
make a difference. The issues are concrete,<lb/>
and the winning candidates are relatively<lb/>
accessible ? and, therefore, accountable<lb/>
? to the people who elect them.<lb/>
My congressional district is fortunate to<lb/>
have as an incumbent Ron Dellums, one of<lb/>
the few unwavering voices of reason in the<lb/>
House of Representatives. For years,<lb/>
Dellums has fought against militarism and<lb/>
for equitable social policies. He gets my<lb/>
vote. In the Senate race, it's Governor<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Gospel According To Mickey?<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following letter is a<lb/>
self-proclaimed "modern parallel" to<lb/>
the 13th chapter oj Paul's letter to Cor-<lb/>
inth.<lb/>
Now, I will show you the ways that we<lb/>
have not surpassed those before us. If<lb/>
we have the technology to advance to<lb/>
higher levels of civilization but do not<lb/>
share with the world, we are but hoar-<lb/>
ding capitalists, a selfish monstrosity. If<lb/>
we have the gift of freedom, and, with<lb/>
full knowledge, understand that respon-<lb/>
sibility, yet we build and stockpile<lb/>
massive, destructive, immoral nuclear<lb/>
weapons to keep this freedom with the<lb/>
cost of social and human deprivation to<lb/>
the rest of the world, we are only fooling<lb/>
ourselves. If we have an adundance of<lb/>
both monetary and environmental<lb/>
wealth, with the capabilities to put food<lb/>
in every person's stomach and<lb/>
knowledge at every person's fingertips,<lb/>
but instead choose false priorities, have<lb/>
we not, in fact, regressed?<lb/>
Freedom is opportunity; the oppor-<lb/>
tunity for everyone to become unequal.<lb/>
Freedom is there for everyone, whether<lb/>
poverty-stricken or not; it sees not the<lb/>
inequality it often creates. Freedom is<lb/>
never wrong. The end always justifies<lb/>
the means. It never puts the burden on<lb/>
those too weak to carry for the few en-<lb/>
compassing populas it serves; neither<lb/>
does it brood on the social cost of our<lb/>
philosophy of Social Darwinism. We do<lb/>
not rejoice in the fact that 50,000 people<lb/>
will die of starvation today, but rather<lb/>
with brainwashing rhetoric that we need<lb/>
more and more nuclear bombs to secure<lb/>
our freedom so we can feed ourselves.<lb/>
There is no limit to our insight, our<lb/>
righteousness heirarchy of priorities, our<lb/>
phobic reactions to communism,<lb/>
socialism and the power of the Pen-<lb/>
tagon.<lb/>
Social injustice never ends.<lb/>
Technology will continue to advance;<lb/>
the gift of freedom will be protected<lb/>
with yet thousands more nuclear<lb/>
weapons. But will we ever be able to<lb/>
solve the real attrocities of this life?<lb/>
Technology will peak; computers do<lb/>
break down. When the perfect computer<lb/>
is designed, human unemployment will<lb/>
peak at revolutionary heights. Two<lb/>
thousand years ago, when the human<lb/>
race was younger, we had the same<lb/>
underlying problems: social injustice, in-<lb/>
equality and a false sense of priorities.<lb/>
As we have grown up 2,000 years, we see<lb/>
we have advanced so little. Now, we see<lb/>
indistinctly ? if we look ? as in a mir-<lb/>
ror; only then can we see face to face.<lb/>
Are we really free now? And have we<lb/>
really progressed? There are, in the end,<lb/>
three things that last: poverty, social in-<lb/>
justice and the military budget. And the<lb/>
greatest of these is our acceptance of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Mickey Skidmore<lb/>
Junior, Social Work<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from foyner Library.<lb/>
Moonbeam for me. Jerry Brown is an op-<lb/>
portunist, but he is not a clone of Ronald<lb/>
Reagan, like his opponent. Brown should<lb/>
be a lively, thought-provoking presence on<lb/>
Capitol Hill.<lb/>
I've saved the most important things ?<lb/>
the arms race and the economy ? for last.<lb/>
David Armstrong<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Nearly one-fourth of the American peo-<lb/>
ple will have a chance to vote on the pro-<lb/>
posed Bilateral Nuclear Weapons Freeze<lb/>
on Nov. 2. It is crucial to the prospects for<lb/>
peace that the freeze resolutions win, and<lb/>
win big. No one seriously expects Ronald<lb/>
Reagan and Leonid Breznev to scrap their<lb/>
missiles on Nov. 3 if the resolutions pass;<lb/>
they are non binding. But the freeze resolu-<lb/>
tions are essential tools for sending a<lb/>
message to the men at the top. Namely,<lb/>
that we, the people, have had enough of<lb/>
their nuclear brinksmanship, that we want<lb/>
jobs and peace instead of the arms race,<lb/>
and we are capable of organizing on a<lb/>
massive scale to make our feelings known.<lb/>
That brings us to the bottom line. The<lb/>
congressional elections are, in effect, a na-<lb/>
tionwide referendum on Reaganomics.<lb/>
Democrats attack President Reagan for<lb/>
starving social services, fattening the<lb/>
military budget and presiding over double-<lb/>
digit unemployment. Republican<lb/>
counterattack, charging that the<lb/>
Democrats got us into this mess and offer<lb/>
no workable alternatives. Both are correct<lb/>
That is why I am looking at third partv<lb/>
alternatives to the fat cats in Washington<lb/>
and the fat cats in exile. In California. I<lb/>
plan to vote for several candidates of the<lb/>
Peace and Freedom Party, a coalition of<lb/>
feminists, peace activists and minorities<lb/>
that posits community control of public<lb/>
policy as an alternative to corporate high-<lb/>
balling. The Citizens Party, which ran Dr<lb/>
Barry Commoner for president in 1980.<lb/>
occupies a similar place on the political<lb/>
spectrum in many states.<lb/>
What are the chances of victory for third<lb/>
party candidates? Slim and none, for most<lb/>
of them. However. I second Eugene Debs'<lb/>
remark that, "I would rather vote for<lb/>
something I want and not get it than for<lb/>
something I don't want and get it<lb/>
Besides, if my intuition about this year is<lb/>
correct ? if 1982 is a transitional year in<lb/>
American politics ? then the seeds of this<lb/>
fall's third party campaigns may blossom<lb/>
in a future spring.<lb/>
That's why I'm going to the polls this<lb/>
vear. See vou there?<lb/>
Two More I Forgot To Write About<lb/>
WHAT 15 THE WORST PROBLEM<lb/>
UIMMY CARTER LEFT US WITH P<lb/>
wrLC?tirmtiUftm?<lb/>
UNEMPLOYMENT INFLATION<lb/>
Bj<lb/>
Q<lb/>
1<lb/>
Li<lb/>
MIS5dONE5IMBWN6METWBaFF?WM<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
. - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0005"/><lb/>
T HE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 26. 1982 5<lb/>
l<lb/>
Ihe<lb/>
i<lb/>
ms<lb/>
Ire<lb/>
!<lb/>
:<lb/>
im<lb/>
Authority To Speak<lb/>
On the Soviet Use<lb/>
Of Yellow Rain'<lb/>
By KEITH BRITAIN<lb/>
Stall Writer<lb/>
On Wednesday Nov.<lb/>
3, a well-known<lb/>
authority on chemical<lb/>
warfare will be at ECU.<lb/>
Dr. James A. Phillips<lb/>
will be giving talks at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center room 244 at 3<lb/>
p.m. and in room 244<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Phillips, a policy<lb/>
analyst for the Heritage<lb/>
Foundation, has done<lb/>
extensive research on<lb/>
the Soviet Union's use<lb/>
of chemical warfare. In<lb/>
the talk he will be<lb/>
discussing the topic<lb/>
"Yellow Rain<lb/>
"Yellow rain" is<lb/>
composed of a lethal<lb/>
chemical known as<lb/>
tricot hecene mycotox-<lb/>
m. Phillips and U.S. in-<lb/>
telligence sources claim<lb/>
that Russia has<lb/>
employed the use of<lb/>
Yellow Rain in Laos,<lb/>
Kampuchea and<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Reports of the in-<lb/>
cidents began in 1976<lb/>
with Soviet-sponsored<lb/>
attacks against the<lb/>
Hmong tribesmen in<lb/>
Laos. U.S. intelligence<lb/>
has been able to recover<lb/>
samples from the<lb/>
jungles despite efforts<lb/>
to cover them with<lb/>
Napalm, according to<lb/>
the State Department.<lb/>
Dr. Phillips states<lb/>
that the Soviets have<lb/>
been using the<lb/>
mycotoxin in<lb/>
Afghanistan because<lb/>
the anti- communist<lb/>
rebels are hard to<lb/>
using conven-<lb/>
weapons. The<lb/>
"hole up" in<lb/>
and using<lb/>
the" yellow rain"<lb/>
enables the Soviets to<lb/>
bring them out of<lb/>
hiding.<lb/>
The use of chemicals<lb/>
in warfare has been<lb/>
prohibited for over 50<lb/>
years. The 1972<lb/>
Biological Warfare<lb/>
Convention, agreed to<lb/>
by Moscow, states,<lb/>
"Never in any cir-<lb/>
cumstances to develop,<lb/>
produce, stockpile or<lb/>
otherwise acquire<lb/>
chemicals for the use of<lb/>
warfare He main-<lb/>
tains that the Soviet<lb/>
Union has not only<lb/>
defeat<lb/>
tionai<lb/>
rebels<lb/>
c a e s<lb/>
broken the agreement<lb/>
but has made chemicals<lb/>
a part of Soviet warfare<lb/>
doctrine.<lb/>
In 1981, the Reagan<lb/>
administration and the<lb/>
United Nations<lb/>
demanded an investiga-<lb/>
tion of the alleged<lb/>
Soviet use of chemical<lb/>
warfare. Moscow<lb/>
repeatedly tried to<lb/>
block formation of the<lb/>
impartial U.N. Nations<lb/>
Commission to in-<lb/>
vestigate the situation<lb/>
in Laos, Kampuchea<lb/>
(formerly Cambodia)<lb/>
and Afghanistan.<lb/>
The talk will be spon-<lb/>
sored by ECU'S chapter<lb/>
of the N.C. Federation<lb/>
of College<lb/>
Republicans. The lec-<lb/>
ture is part of a series<lb/>
of talks given by<lb/>
Phillips in an attempt<lb/>
make the public aware<lb/>
of chemical warfare.<lb/>
The fusarium fungus<lb/>
producing the<lb/>
mycotoxins thrives on<lb/>
grain and bread expos-<lb/>
ed to cold. Soviet scien-<lb/>
tists began studying the<lb/>
fungus as early as 1930.<lb/>
Thirty-five years later<lb/>
they were able to con-<lb/>
vert the fungus into the<lb/>
present weapon. A<lb/>
member of the State<lb/>
Department was recent-<lb/>
ly quoted echoing a<lb/>
statement brought<lb/>
forth in the Phillips ar-<lb/>
ticle. "With their own<lb/>
people starving, I can't<lb/>
believe the Russians are<lb/>
growing a fungus on<lb/>
badly needed wheat to<lb/>
use as an implement of<lb/>
war<lb/>
The population of<lb/>
the Hmong people has<lb/>
dropped by one-fifth<lb/>
since 1960. At least<lb/>
20,000 are thought to<lb/>
have died from the<lb/>
chemicals.<lb/>
Many of the<lb/>
tribesmen still suffer<lb/>
from recurrent attacks<lb/>
including constant<lb/>
headaches, pulmonary<lb/>
disorders and eye or ear<lb/>
problems. At least<lb/>
thirty-five Hmong<lb/>
adults in the U.S. have<lb/>
died suddenly in their<lb/>
sleep for no apparent<lb/>
reason. Similar pro-<lb/>
blems have been<lb/>
reported with the<lb/>
Afghans and Kam-<lb/>
pucheans.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 1<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
$lgS 00 Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control. ?nd Problem Pregnan-<lb/>
cy Counseling. For further intor<lb/>
mat.on call ?3I-0S35 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number MO-ttl 2S4?) between ?<lb/>
AM and 5 P M. Weekday.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
ITALIAN NTTE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
Plus Garlic Breed $99<lb/>
FOOD TOWN<lb/>
ilTlil'Ii111111<lb/>
LFPINCSCVAGA<lb/>
Theae prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, October 30,1982<lb/>
SUtoro<lb/>
USOA Choice Beef Loin<lb/>
USOA<lb/>
choice;<lb/>
USOA ,<lb/>
XMOICEj<lb/>
?c: <lb/>
IS Lb.<lb/>
USOA Ckolea Beef Loin<lb/>
T-Bone<lb/>
Frith Cat Qenrter<lb/>
Oeaaiae<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
choice;<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
USOA Chelee Beef Chuck Beaelees<lb/>
Chuck Roast<lb/>
??<lb/>
Loins<lb/>
Idaho<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
USOA Chelee Fe?iiy Peek<lb/>
Cube Steak<lb/>
Freeh Vifi?'t<lb/>
JV A7rl.Cii.r?<lb/>
1.S Liter - Hearty BereaeeY<lb/>
RhlM ebeblit BUm<lb/>
Pk? e-f 6 -12 Or NR BoHlai<lb/>
Miller Beer<lb/>
Pk. of 6 12 Oz. Cam<lb/>
Budtveiser<lb/>
1.S Liter ? It. Chehili, It Rhiaa U ???<lb/>
Taylor Calif. Cellars<lb/>
1.5 Lifer ? S?fr R S?ft Whit. Sift Plek<lb/>
Taylor Lake Country<lb/>
fej?<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
Pepsi f3J<lb/>
ColaJflU<lb/>
22 Oaeee<lb/>
S2 Oeaee<lb/>
7.25 Or - Feee Te?<lb/>
32.<lb/>
Why Pay M 09<lb/>
WN<lb/>
Why Pay H.I9<lb/>
Why Pay 2 61<lb/>
So-Pri 5oori<lb/>
r?<lb/>
Way Pay 59<lb/>
289<lb/>
17 Ox. WheleCree? Sly I a Oelelee Cara<lb/>
Dal Monte or Stokloy<lb/>
Iff<lb/>
59 UsBss<lb/>
2 Lb. ? Crlakle Cat Freiee Petataae<lb/>
TaterBoy<lb/>
4100<lb/>
IS Oz. ? LiearMeatf iah ft Chick. ? Cat Feed<lb/>
Puss N Boots m<lb/>
Oallea<lb/>
Food Town Bleach<lb/>
jEK<lb/>
potato<lb/>
iiVMiT.<lb/>
Naif Oallea - A??U Jaiee<lb/>
White House<lb/>
3100<lb/>
12S Ct. ? White Faeiel<lb/>
y??n.urt<lb/>
avNatnaresrai<lb/>
99.<lb/>
12 0z. Lere.e BS&amp;eSJjSj<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
389'<lb/>
1 Lb. - Martarlae Oaertera1<lb/>
f?8&amp;.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Page Tissue Shedd's Spread<lb/>
M<lb/>
k?0?<lb/>
ak<lb/>
<lb/>
 EVERVWEPS.<lb/>
SHOWS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
32 Ouace<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
. WhyPey '135 i<lb/>
'jfrukt. i<lb/>
MAYONNAfiE<lb/>
A<lb/>
6 5 Oz. - Lt. Ck. Taaa la Oil<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Of The Sea<lb/>
Why Pay M 09<lb/>
Pricti food at 6roonille Food Towrn Store only<lb/>
49 Oz. ? Softener<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
Why Pay '1 39<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0006"/><lb/>
THt t AS1 CAROl INIAN<lb/>
CXTOBER26. 1982<lb/>
Weapons Cost Called Wasteful By Study<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
More than one<lb/>
million dollars per<lb/>
minute is being spent<lb/>
on the military<lb/>
worldwide and nuclear<lb/>
stockpiles exceed<lb/>
50,000 weapons, accor-<lb/>
ding to a study con-<lb/>
ducted by a coalition of<lb/>
arms control groups.<lb/>
The study, "World<lb/>
Militarv and Social Ex-<lb/>
penditures, 1982<lb/>
ctarges that nuclear<lb/>
and conventional arms<lb/>
races have wasted<lb/>
resources without<lb/>
enhancing international<lb/>
security.<lb/>
Present nuclear<lb/>
stockpiles represent the<lb/>
equivalent of 3.5 tons<lb/>
of TNT for every per-<lb/>
son on earth, more<lb/>
than one million times<lb/>
the explosive power of<lb/>
the Hiroshima bomb,<lb/>
the study reported.<lb/>
"Under its heavy<lb/>
military burden, the<lb/>
global economy has<lb/>
suffered said Ruth<lb/>
Leger Sivard, the<lb/>
author of the study.<lb/>
"The diversion of<lb/>
resources from civilian<lb/>
needs is a silent killer,<lb/>
curbing productivity<lb/>
and development and<lb/>
adding more millions to<lb/>
the hundreds of<lb/>
millions of people who<lb/>
lack the most basic<lb/>
necessities of life<lb/>
Sivard is the director<lb/>
of the non-profit<lb/>
research organization<lb/>
called World Priorities.<lb/>
She is a former chief of<lb/>
the economics division<lb/>
of the U.S. Arms Con-<lb/>
trol and Disarmament<lb/>
Agency.<lb/>
The report, which us-<lb/>
Greenville Residents Protest<lb/>
Nuclear Weapons At Base<lb/>
ed information sup-<lb/>
plied by the Pentagon,<lb/>
the CIA, United Na-<lb/>
tions organizations and<lb/>
several internationl<lb/>
publications, claimed<lb/>
that:<lb/>
? World military costs<lb/>
have risen to $600<lb/>
billion a year ? well<lb/>
over $1 million a<lb/>
minute<lb/>
? The world's nuclear<lb/>
weapons stockpile is<lb/>
equivalent to 16 billion<lb/>
tons of TNT (In World<lb/>
War II, 3 million tons<lb/>
of munitions were ex-<lb/>
pended).<lb/>
? Spending per soldier<lb/>
averages $19,300<lb/>
worldwide.<lb/>
? For every 100,000<lb/>
people, there are 556<lb/>
soldiers. An estimated<lb/>
100 million people<lb/>
worldwide are engaged<lb/>
directly or indirectIv in<lb/>
military activities.<lb/>
? Nuclear missiles can<lb/>
go from Western<lb/>
Europe to Moscow in<lb/>
six minutes.<lb/>
? NATO and Warsaw<lb/>
Pact forces have a total<lb/>
of 100,000 tanks.<lb/>
? Although no nuclear<lb/>
holocaust has occurred,<lb/>
at least 10 million peo-<lb/>
ple hae died in "local<lb/>
wars" since World War<lb/>
II. and more civilians<lb/>
than soldiers have been<lb/>
the victims.<lb/>
The report claims<lb/>
that the Soviet Union<lb/>
and the United States.<lb/>
representing 11 percent<lb/>
ol the world's popula<lb/>
tion, have spearheaded<lb/>
and shaped the global<lb/>
militarv competition<lb/>
since 194<lb/>
The two superpowers<lb/>
"lead in the develop-<lb/>
ment and refinement ot<lb/>
new torms ol war-<lb/>
tare it says. "Ihev<lb/>
spend half the world's<lb/>
militarv budget, export<lb/>
58 percent of the arms<lb/>
moving in international<lb/>
trade and control V<lb/>
percent of the world's<lb/>
stockpile o nuclear<lb/>
weapons<lb/>
"The crux ot the<lb/>
stud) is that it's human<lb/>
madness to utilize so<lb/>
much of our energv and<lb/>
resources for creating<lb/>
destructive equipment<lb/>
instead ot meeting<lb/>
esential human needs<lb/>
said Norman Wait<lb/>
man. a research<lb/>
associate with World<lb/>
Priorities. "Our securi-<lb/>
ty is really being com-<lb/>
promised by the arms<lb/>
race and the build up<lb/>
ot both conventional<lb/>
and nuclear weapon-<lb/>
"I think it's impoi<lb/>
tant tor the students ot<lb/>
East Carolina to in-<lb/>
form themselves ot the<lb/>
nature o t nuclear<lb/>
power and the extent ot<lb/>
world monetarv invest<lb/>
ment that goes into<lb/>
weapons production<lb/>
and military research<lb/>
continued Waitman<lb/>
"They should take an<lb/>
active part in whichever<lb/>
way thev .an to ht<lb/>
forestall the arm-<lb/>
build-up<lb/>
I he -rrr,s oi<lb/>
Association, the In<lb/>
s 111 u i e for W<lb/>
( ?:J e r. the Pea<lb/>
I firough I a a I Juj<lb/>
tion Fund.<lb/>
Rockefeller Foun<lb/>
tion. I he Stanley, F our.<lb/>
dation and the I n<lb/>
ot Concerned Socnii<lb/>
were the Ann-<lb/>
groups that spo-<lb/>
the "<lb/>
I reign .<lb/>
volved included Pi<lb/>
Ploughshai<lb/>
iC anadat. I he H' I<lb/>
 mncil of '<lb/>
the L nsted N ?<lb/>
ssocation 1 v-<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SMI' Vtrtlci<lb/>
A group o Green-<lb/>
ville residents including<lb/>
students, staff and<lb/>
faculty members of<lb/>
ECU joined the North<lb/>
Carolina Peace Net-<lb/>
work (NCPN) in their<lb/>
continuing series of<lb/>
nuclear weapons pro-<lb/>
tests at the gates ot<lb/>
Seymore Johnson Air<lb/>
Force Base in<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
NCPN claims that<lb/>
nuclear weapons are<lb/>
possibly kept on the<lb/>
base property, but<lb/>
Seymore Johnson of-<lb/>
ficials will neither con-<lb/>
firm nor deny the<lb/>
presence ol the nuclear<lb/>
warheads because they<lb/>
-ay that all information<lb/>
regarding U.S. nuclear<lb/>
weapons is classified.<lb/>
According to Sister<lb/>
Marge Grabarek. a<lb/>
member ot the Peace<lb/>
Network Steering Com-<lb/>
mittee, there are still<lb/>
14 Air Force jets kept<lb/>
at the base that are<lb/>
capable ot carrying<lb/>
nuclear weapons.<lb/>
The classification of<lb/>
the base is "category<lb/>
I" despite the removal,<lb/>
last month, of Seymore<lb/>
Johnson's B-52 bomber<lb/>
wing.<lb/>
Category I indicates<lb/>
that Seymore Johnson<lb/>
is one of the primary<lb/>
targets in the event of a<lb/>
nuclear attack. B-52's<lb/>
are known to be used<lb/>
primarily to carry<lb/>
nuclear warheads.<lb/>
"That indicates to<lb/>
me that they probably<lb/>
still have nuclear<lb/>
weapons there<lb/>
Grabarek said. She is<lb/>
also the director ot the<lb/>
Peace and Justice of-<lb/>
fice of the Catholic-<lb/>
Diocese of Raleigh.<lb/>
The group stood with<lb/>
signs on a grass median<lb/>
about 50 yards from<lb/>
the entrance to the<lb/>
base. Passing motorists<lb/>
generally showed little<lb/>
reaction or ignored the<lb/>
demonstrators. Some<lb/>
would react with ap-<lb/>
preciative thumbs-up<lb/>
signals while others ex-<lb/>
hibited facial signs of<lb/>
anger and would shout<lb/>
negative remarks at the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
One series of three<lb/>
signs held by a group of<lb/>
ECU students read<lb/>
"No Nuclear<lb/>
Weapons " USA-<lb/>
USSR" and "Save<lb/>
Goldsboro One<lb/>
Catholic nun held a<lb/>
sign proclaiming<lb/>
"Thou shalt not<lb/>
nuke<lb/>
"I decided it was<lb/>
time that I stopped<lb/>
thinking about the<lb/>
potential atrocity of<lb/>
nuclear war and began<lb/>
to take action to assure<lb/>
a safer world said<lb/>
ECU computer science<lb/>
student Mary Rider,<lb/>
who participated in the<lb/>
one-hour vigil.<lb/>
"It's immoral to<lb/>
have nuclear<lb/>
weapons Grabarek<lb/>
added. "It's immoral<lb/>
even to threaten to<lb/>
kill<lb/>
"A lot ot students<lb/>
live in a microcosm of<lb/>
school and fail to even<lb/>
look beyond the books<lb/>
to the real world con-<lb/>
tinued Rider. "We<lb/>
need to be aware of our<lb/>
responsibilities to make<lb/>
our world a peaceful<lb/>
one, because if there's a<lb/>
nuclear war, the books<lb/>
don't matter<lb/>
anymore<lb/>
Grabarek claimed<lb/>
that the present process<lb/>
of dialogue between the<lb/>
U.S. and the Soviet<lb/>
Union on nuclear arms<lb/>
reductions is not effec-<lb/>
tive. "I think we should<lb/>
begin a serious and<lb/>
honest process to devise<lb/>
some way of getting rid<lb/>
of the nuclear weapons<lb/>
? otherwise they will<lb/>
get rid of us<lb/>
Grabarek said.<lb/>
"The potential threat<lb/>
of nulcear war over-<lb/>
shadows everything we<lb/>
do added Rider. "If<lb/>
we don't take action (to<lb/>
stop the arms race) then<lb/>
eventually our world is<lb/>
going to end<lb/>
Reagan Reported On By ACLU<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NKII I<lb/>
st?f Wrilrr<lb/>
The head of the<lb/>
American Civil Liber-<lb/>
ties Union accused the<lb/>
Reagan administration<lb/>
of "ideological opposi-<lb/>
tion to civil liberties<lb/>
and said that the ad-<lb/>
ministration and its<lb/>
supporters in Congress<lb/>
had been responsible<lb/>
for "the most<lb/>
dangerous threats to<lb/>
civil liberties" in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Ira Glasser, the ex-<lb/>
ecutive director of the<lb/>
national public interest<lb/>
organization that<lb/>
defends the Bill ol<lb/>
Rights, made his ac-<lb/>
cusation in an introduc<lb/>
tion to a 60-page report<lb/>
the organization issued<lb/>
titled "Civil liberties<lb/>
in Reagan's America<lb/>
Glasser said that, in<lb/>
some ways the Reagan<lb/>
administration posed a<lb/>
greater danger to Civil<lb/>
Liberties than former<lb/>
U.S. Sen. Joseph Mc-<lb/>
Carthy or President<lb/>
Richard Nixon, two ol<lb/>
the organization's most<lb/>
frequent targets from<lb/>
earlier decades. The<lb/>
term "McCarthyism"<lb/>
came about as a result<lb/>
of the Wisconsin<lb/>
senator's claims m the<lb/>
1950s that many 1 S<lb/>
government organiza-<lb/>
tions were heavily in-<lb/>
filtrated by com-<lb/>
munists.<lb/>
"Those men were<lb/>
not ideologically com-<lb/>
mitted to making tun-<lb/>
damental changes in<lb/>
our legal structure<lb/>
said Glasser<lb/>
"But tor this ad-<lb/>
ministration con-<lb/>
tinued Glasser. "the<lb/>
erosion ol the Bill ol<lb/>
Rights seems to be a<lb/>
primary goal, not a side<lb/>
effect<lb/>
The report reviewed<lb/>
the status of civil liber-<lb/>
ties in 20 categories in-<lb/>
cluding criminal<lb/>
justice, national securi-<lb/>
ty, political dissent,<lb/>
abortion and women's<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
"One ol the pnn-<lb/>
sipal undercurrents in<lb/>
Reagan's America is a<lb/>
hostility towards<lb/>
women which is mask-<lb/>
ed as a nostalgic de<lb/>
mand tor a way ol life<lb/>
based on traditional<lb/>
tamily value the<lb/>
report said.<lb/>
"1 very often feel<lb/>
that when the president<lb/>
interferes with civil<lb/>
liberties, he doesn't<lb/>
u ridersta<lb/>
f his<lb/>
tions or<lb/>
said Fr?<lb/>
Jacobson<lb/>
democratic ?nt<lb/>
candidate foi th v-<lb/>
i "It<lb/>
unawareness<lb/>
frightens m?<lb/>
he's supp ?ed<lb/>
?<lb/>
Blood Drive On Campus<lb/>
ECU's -ir Force<lb/>
ROTC detachment 6?<lb/>
is sponsoring a blood<lb/>
drive to be conducted<lb/>
on campus today and<lb/>
tomorrow. Students<lb/>
wishing t o donate<lb/>
blood should go to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Room 244. bet-<lb/>
ween 10 a.m. and 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
According :i<lb/>
AFROTC spokesper-<lb/>
son, Detachment 6 ?<lb/>
has been assisting the<lb/>
Red Cross with bK<lb/>
drives since 1951. In the<lb/>
last decade, more than<lb/>
XX) pints ol bl<lb/>
have been collected<lb/>
campus, and the drives<lb/>
supply a large percen-<lb/>
tage of the blood need<lb/>
ed in Pill I<lb/>
rne AFROTC<lb/>
<lb/>
enef it nee<lb/>
"<lb/>
i<lb/>
??<lb/>
"<lb/>
the FF<lb/>
Ho: ?rsS netv cho .<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
App'ts Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321 0575<lb/>
Gi lij ay. o 1 a)u-i-d<lb/>
T sSie p ? wi ,<lb/>
?i- : .?. ? - CiO'i ,j<lb/>
iS ' ?. ? ' T f E C i? r<lb/>
LJ Ove- '00 O ? ??r, n<lb/>
Nr. d I'roi Cono.<lb/>
B&amp;v. ,<lb/>
1 AR'ViY-NAVY<lb/>
S 1 orrc ijcis e.am<lb/>
KESKAKCH PAPERS-<lb/>
Improve our s. U Ruvh S! 00 !or<lb/>
the iiirfcrv. ?(V page. re?rh<lb/>
laialog !l.2"8 VV' en Bit. all<lb/>
aadcrru Msbjccts<lb/>
RrmrcH ,sv?i?r 11322 Idaho<lb/>
K-t ?20fcW 1 o Angrlrs CA9002'<lb/>
(;i'v44T g226<lb/>
Ittf<lb/>
2nd A nnual<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
Sidewalk<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
'?<lb/>
SALE ITEMS:<lb/>
ECU plaques, gift books, sweaters,<lb/>
ECU pitchers, shirts, stadium<lb/>
cushions, huggers and<lb/>
much more loo numerous<lb/>
to list.<lb/>
We feature the best in Video Entertainment<lb/>
1 group of spec, pure hose<lb/>
T-shirts ot $3.95 whilo<lb/>
they lost. Many more<lb/>
bargains you'll be dying<lb/>
to take advantage of.<lb/>
?YOUR FORTUNE TOLD FREE<lb/>
BY MADAME ZOLA<lb/>
?DRAWING FOR FREE PRIZES<lb/>
?Apple bobbing and<lb/>
balloon popping for<lb/>
an extra discount<lb/>
10C<lb/>
pepsfs<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27<lb/>
8:30 A.M. 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
ON THE SIDEWALK BETWEEN RAWL AND WRIGHT BLDG.<lb/>
RAIN DATE OCT. 28<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STOREL<lb/>
jjfl East Carolina University jEa<lb/>
Ms. Pac-Man<lb/>
Pac-Man<lb/>
Turbo<lb/>
Frogger<lb/>
Donkey Kong<lb/>
Donkey Kong Jr.<lb/>
Centipede<lb/>
Zaxxon<lb/>
Tron<lb/>
Tutankham<lb/>
Robotron<lb/>
Satans Hollow<lb/>
Join Our Free Game a Week Club<lb/>
Everyday Specials With<lb/>
Something for Everyone<lb/>
Monday ? Town Merchants Day ? All Town Merchants Receive 2 Free Games<lb/>
Tuesday ? Ladies' Day ? All Ladies Receive 2 Free Games (13 yr. or older)<lb/>
Wednesday ? High School Day ? Show High School ID for 2 Free Games<lb/>
Thursday ? Men's Day ? All Men Receive 2 Free Games (13 yr. or older)<lb/>
Friday ? College Day ? Show College ID for 2 Free Games<lb/>
Saturday ? Elementary School Day ? Any Student Ages 7 14 Receives 2 Free Games<lb/>
Sunday ? Family Day ? Any Young Person With Parent Receives 2 Free Games<lb/>
Mama and Daddy Receives 2 Free Games Apiece Also<lb/>
BARREL OF FUN, INC.<lb/>
r<lb/>
'REDEEMABLE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
TWO FREE<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
OF YOUR<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
tir<lb/>
LIMIT:<lb/>
ONE PER<lb/>
PERSON<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
t r <lb/>
200 E. 5TH STREET<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0007"/><lb/>
?'$<lb/>
help<lb/>
ms<lb/>
ntrol<lb/>
In<lb/>
orld<lb/>
leace<lb/>
luca-<lb/>
The<lb/>
nida-<lb/>
:oun-<lb/>
lnion<lb/>
Intists<lb/>
??can<lb/>
bored<lb/>
in-<lb/>
ject<lb/>
s<lb/>
i tish<lb/>
s and<lb/>
It ions<lb/>
on.<lb/>
the<lb/>
i ac-<lb/>
D IS<lb/>
pdd"<lb/>
ocal<lb/>
? -1 n<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
5 his<lb/>
i ause<lb/>
IS<lb/>
also<lb/>
drive<lb/>
ed<lb/>
.Hid<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
vap-<lb/>
she<lb/>
ore<lb/>
?'oses<lb/>
THE EAST C AROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
CXTOBER 26. I82<lb/>
Pa?ie ?<lb/>
On Halloween?<lb/>
No, Not Men,<lb/>
Devo In 3-D!<lb/>
'<lb/>
? 'r'v<lb/>
 ' - I- V<lb/>
. '  v vV' v'? <lb/>
The Student Union Special Con-<lb/>
certs Committee will venture into a<lb/>
new programming medium this<lb/>
Saturday night, Halloween eve.<lb/>
when the committee presents Deo<lb/>
live in concert via satellite from the<lb/>
Beverly Hills Theatre.<lb/>
The concert, sponsored in con<lb/>
junction with the Campus Enter-<lb/>
tainment Network, will be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium at 10 p.m.<lb/>
In addition, the concert will be<lb/>
broadcast to Wright Auditorium in<lb/>
3-D. Glasses for the 3-D viewing will<lb/>
be available at the door on the even-<lb/>
ing of the event. Opening for Devo<lb/>
on the ticket is new band Wall of<lb/>
Voodoo.<lb/>
Devo, those five musical spuds<lb/>
from Akron, Ohio, are living proof<lb/>
that new pleas are often met with<lb/>
fear and resistance. It's been four<lb/>
years since they burst on the scene<lb/>
with their debut album, O: Are e<lb/>
not men? A: N e are Devo and that<lb/>
outrageously reworked version ot<lb/>
, vWn B- x version oi<lb/>
:V? 'since then, the group has<lb/>
 fr?  ?;rvo7Vw  OcVViSK'ZYJS&amp;XkVJ Ctf&amp;WASW E&amp; Z OHK 7.  ? - ,K developed into a powerhouse rock<lb/>
Live Devo spuds will be leaping from a 40-foot video screen this Saturday night in Wright Auditorium. Wall of Voodoo, loo.<lb/>
unit, with a highly original stage<lb/>
show. By fusing basic rock and roll<lb/>
with a funky back beat. Devo's per-<lb/>
formances blister with unique<lb/>
energy. They are as uplitting, ex-<lb/>
citing and danceable as any contem-<lb/>
porary band.<lb/>
The concept behind this show is<lb/>
brand new and the production<lb/>
technology is currently only<lb/>
available on about titteen campuses<lb/>
across the country. According to<lb/>
University Unions Program Direc-<lb/>
tor Ken Hammond. East Carolina<lb/>
University is helping to pioneer new<lb/>
entertainment concepts which are<lb/>
certainly the wave of the future<lb/>
The technology is made available<lb/>
by the New York-based Campus<lb/>
Entertainment Network The Net-<lb/>
work is operating on the premise<lb/>
that it can deliver top attractions in<lb/>
music, theatre, sports, as well as<lb/>
major lectures, via satellite to col-<lb/>
lege markets at the time the events<lb/>
are occurring at only half the price.<lb/>
This makes it possible con-<lb/>
tinued Hammond, "for a school<lb/>
such as ECU, which would not nor-<lb/>
mally be able to attract the top per-<lb/>
See DEVO, Page 9<lb/>
Artists For Survival Aim Straight For Heart<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
sl?IU rllcr<lb/>
"We hope to reach people emotionally through the<lb/>
language of art, and to educate them about the arms<lb/>
race. Our exhibitions include works expressing our hor-<lb/>
ror of war, and also those with a vision of peace and<lb/>
joy.<lb/>
The above is a quote from the statement ot purpose<lb/>
of a new organization called Artists for Survivial, which<lb/>
began last winter in the New England town of Waltham,<lb/>
Massachusetts.<lb/>
The organization, which now claims 240 members,<lb/>
was founded by two Waltham artists who saw a need to<lb/>
integrate their art work with what has now become an<lb/>
international effort to reverse the nuclear arms race.<lb/>
"Art through the ages has reacted to life and been an<lb/>
expression of life said one of the founders of Artists<lb/>
For Survival Suzanne Hodes "and since life itself is<lb/>
threatened, certainly artists should be concerned<lb/>
"And in addition, art has been a means of com-<lb/>
munication from one age to another, and if there is a<lb/>
threat to our future then art loses all purpose<lb/>
Hodes, who is a v ter and a printmaker, calls<lb/>
herself an "expressionist artist She joined together<lb/>
with Mitchell Kamen, who also paints and works with<lb/>
batik and ceramics, to form the organization last<lb/>
February.<lb/>
"We have both been dealing with the threat of<lb/>
nuclear war in our individual work Hodes said. She<lb/>
added that she often tries to create art forms that deal<lb/>
with social and political issues.<lb/>
She and Kamen decided to exhibit their work together<lb/>
as a social statement on the threat of nuclear war, and<lb/>
soon after their first exhibit. Artists for Survival was<lb/>
born.<lb/>
Hodes said that she and Kamen were inspired during<lb/>
a nuclear freeze rally in Boston where they encountered<lb/>
a group of musicians calling themselves Musicians<lb/>
Against Nuclear Arms. They felt that artists could also<lb/>
make a statement.<lb/>
"We decided that we would exhibit our work on the<lb/>
threat of nuclear war along with information about the<lb/>
arms race Hodes said. "We thought that art was a<lb/>
very good means of reaching people on the emotional<lb/>
level<lb/>
That first exhibit appeared in the Harvard Medical<lb/>
School Countway Library in March of this year. Hodes<lb/>
said that a Boston Globe story.referred to "an organiza-<lb/>
tion" of artists which at the time was only her and<lb/>
Kamen.<lb/>
But soon after the word got out calls and letters came<lb/>
in from other artists, and the numbers grew.<lb/>
Other exhibits soon followed including one in the of-<lb/>
fice of Massachusetts senator Paul Tsongas and another<lb/>
at the "345 Gallery" in New York City. At present, the<lb/>
group has members with work on exhibit at a show at<lb/>
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.<lb/>
Local fabric artist Charlotte Purrington, who found<lb/>
out about Artists For Survival, by sending a letter to<lb/>
Helen Caidicott, the founder of Physicians for Social<lb/>
Responsibility, also has one of her pieces on exhibit at<lb/>
the MIT show.<lb/>
Artists For Survival also provides information, fact<lb/>
sheets, quotations from religious, scientific, and<lb/>
political leaders, photographs, pamphlets and books to<lb/>
its members and other interested people. "We urge<lb/>
viewers to involve themselves in action to stop the arms<lb/>
race the statement of purpose continues.<lb/>
Hodes said that the group held its first formal<lb/>
meeting in April and that 35 people came. Most of their<lb/>
members are in the New England area and Hodes says<lb/>
that her and Kamen are not really trying to start a na-<lb/>
tional organization, but rather an idea which others can<lb/>
also use.<lb/>
"We hope that people will pick this up in different<lb/>
parts of the country Hodes said, "and start their own<lb/>
individual groups She adds that their organization<lb/>
would be happy to help other groups if they can.<lb/>
Hodes feels personally that the arms race is the most<lb/>
"extraordinary criminal wasteful expenditure ot<lb/>
funds" in our world.<lb/>
"Each day that goes by that our taxpayers money is<lb/>
used for nuclear armaments, we are implicated in<lb/>
something that is really insane Hodes said. "The<lb/>
fruits of our labors are being used to create weapons ot<lb/>
massive destruction<lb/>
Hodes also believes that the funds that go to support<lb/>
the arms race create "a real moral dilemma" for people<lb/>
because in reality "you get less security ? not more ?<lb/>
as you keep constructing more armaments<lb/>
Hodes said that she sees an "extreme wastefulness"<lb/>
because on the final level, she doesn't really feel that<lb/>
we're getting anything for our money when we invest it<lb/>
in nuclear weapons, which she claims the U.S. is<lb/>
building at the rate of three more per day. while also<lb/>
becoming "less safe" and "less secure<lb/>
Hodes invites anyone wishing to get more intorma-<lb/>
tion or to join Artists For Survival to send her. or<lb/>
Kamen, a postcard or letter.<lb/>
Membership in their organization costs S10.00. but<lb/>
they add that "more is appreciated. Less is acceptable if<lb/>
$10.00 is an insurmountable obstacle "<lb/>
The address of Artists For Survival is 144 Moody<lb/>
Street. Waltham, Massachusetts. 02154. (617)891-4235.<lb/>
"I urge students in every field to become politically<lb/>
active on this issue she said, "and also to educate<lb/>
themselves as much as possible<lb/>
'Special' Concert<lb/>
Homecoming Crowd Loved .38<lb/>
By MARTY HARDIN<lb/>
M?f f W ritrt<lb/>
As Donnie Van Zant said when I spoke with him<lb/>
backstage, "it was a hell of a show Of course, he's<lb/>
referring to the .38 Special concert held in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum Sunday night, which had every person in the au-<lb/>
dience "rockin It indeed was a "hell of a show<lb/>
Chairman Jerry Dilsaver and the Major Attractions<lb/>
committee did their usual fine job promoting the show<lb/>
and it paid off in dollars. The walk-up of over 900 peo-<lb/>
ple Sunday night set an ail-time record for ECU con-<lb/>
certs and the show was, according to Dilsaver,<lb/>
"technically a sellout Judging by the looks of things,<lb/>
Minges did indeed have close to a capacity crowd.<lb/>
But the committee can be thankful that, after all was<lb/>
said and done at the box office, the bands put on an ex-<lb/>
cellent show for Homecoming.<lb/>
SPYS proved a morc-than-just-adequate opening act<lb/>
and 1 feel that they are one of the hot new groups-on-<lb/>
the-rise which Mr. Dilsaver and his people were quick to<lb/>
catch before their prices started to climb to keep pace<lb/>
with their success. , . <lb/>
My only complaint is that the slick, hi-tech rock of<lb/>
SPYS did not blend well with the down-home, southern<lb/>
grown rock of .38 Special. I do not feel that this conflict<lb/>
of styles clashed to the point of detracting from the<lb/>
overall effect of the show which proved to be, simply<lb/>
stated, a good time. ECU students are a very wise group<lb/>
when it comes to appreciating good rock no matter what<lb/>
the style or blend.  . ??,  ?<lb/>
After a slight delay, .38 Special followed SPYS with a<lb/>
sound that one might have thought would be painfully<lb/>
loud but was instead powerful and clean. The band<lb/>
tours with a very elaborate and impressive system and<lb/>
by flying some of the speakers sound V?<lb/>
acoustically-awful coliseum at least doubled in com-<lb/>
parison to earlier shows. -?-<lb/>
Van Zant poured everything he had into lead vocals<lb/>
Music<lb/>
and the rest of the band, featuring rare dual drummers<lb/>
Steve Brookins and Jack Grondin, followed suit with<lb/>
hot guitar licks courtesy talented Jeff Carlisi, Uarry<lb/>
Junstrom's steady pacing on rhythm guitar, and a bot-<lb/>
tom that provided stability and foundation by Don<lb/>
Barnes.<lb/>
The band kept everyone on their feet with rousing<lb/>
renditions of hits like "Rockin" into the Night<lb/>
"Wild-Eyed Southern Boys" and "Caught Up in You<lb/>
A fine light show and mixdown only made matters bet-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The music took wings and so did Van Zant whose<lb/>
acrobatic flying exhibition near the end of the perfor-<lb/>
mance (swinging from the stage some 30 or 40 feet into<lb/>
the audience) was made possible by wires normally used<lb/>
to fly speakers and other equipment.<lb/>
I will long remember the abundant energy of .38<lb/>
Special as the group will remember the abundant energy<lb/>
of ECU students at the show. Van Zant put it like this:<lb/>
"I usually don't like doing the college concerts because<lb/>
the people don't respond or are too reserved to let go. I<lb/>
was a little worried about it but I was knocked out when<lb/>
1 could see those ECU people let it all go! Honestly, no<lb/>
bullshit, this was one of the best shows on our tour <lb/>
Once again, congratulations to the Major Attractions<lb/>
commitee for a job well done. 1 hope the praise will echo<lb/>
as loudly after the next extravaganza.<lb/>
Donnie Van Zant giving his trousers a hardy hike in Minges Sunday night. (Staff photo by Gary Patterson.)<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
Mi I<lb/>
wmm : "?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0008"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 26, 1982<lb/>
'JinxecT Has<lb/>
Bette Plus<lb/>
Plenty More<lb/>
Bv MICHAEL S. BUTZGY<lb/>
Slaff Writer<lb/>
Jinxed could be one of the fun-<lb/>
niest movies of this season. I went in<lb/>
to it not knowing quite what to ex-<lb/>
pect. After all, this was the movie<lb/>
with the enormous "mishegas"<lb/>
budget that went at least a year over<lb/>
schedule and who knows how much<lb/>
over that budget. Director Don<lb/>
Siegal may not have the movie he<lb/>
wants but, nevertheless, it's a good<lb/>
flick.<lb/>
Review<lb/>
What really makes this movie is<lb/>
Bette Midler. The Rose was maybe<lb/>
just a tad melodramatic, and<lb/>
although she was good in that, she's<lb/>
great in Jinxed. But the movie does<lb/>
not come across as a vehicle for<lb/>
Miss Midler, rather it almost<lb/>
reminds one of a 1940's comedy.<lb/>
Blackjack dealer Willie (Ken<lb/>
Wahl) is being systematically run<lb/>
out of his job by Harold Benson<lb/>
(Rip Torn). It seems that for some<lb/>
reason Harold is a jinx to Willie,<lb/>
resulting in Harold making lots of<lb/>
money, and Willie losing his job<lb/>
alot. Bonita (Bette) lives with<lb/>
Harold, even though he beats her up<lb/>
alot. She doesn't leave because the<lb/>
money's good. "Great" reason to<lb/>
get beat up.<lb/>
Willie decides he's had it and<lb/>
follows Harold home. Harold<lb/>
leaves, and Willie seduces Bonita,<lb/>
who madl falls in love with him.<lb/>
Bonita asks Willie something sne's<lb/>
never asked anyone before: "Will<lb/>
you kill my boyfriend?" And of<lb/>
course the rest of the movie becomes<lb/>
a mishmash of plot twists and hilari-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
Rip Torn is also good in this film.<lb/>
You remember Rip; he played<lb/>
Richard Nixon a couple of years<lb/>
back. In Jinxed he plays one of the<lb/>
nastiest assholes you'd ever want to<lb/>
see. But he does it with such relish.<lb/>
Some of the best acting done in this<lb/>
film is when Torn plays it straight.<lb/>
Of course, this doesn't make any<lb/>
sense.<lb/>
Ken Wahl should raise a few<lb/>
young ladies' blood pressure. He<lb/>
was last seen in Running Scared, a<lb/>
film about the Bay of Pigs invasion<lb/>
in the early sixties. (That film was<lb/>
around for about ten minutes, but if<lb/>
you ever get a chance, it's kind of<lb/>
interesting.)<lb/>
In Jinxed, Wahl is a likeable<lb/>
young man, and he plays off Bette<lb/>
pretty well, which was essential to<lb/>
this film. What it didn't need was a<lb/>
second fiddle. They work together<lb/>
almost as a team. (Bette does kind<lb/>
of get a little more spotlight. But<lb/>
after all, who is the star of the<lb/>
film?).<lb/>
I'm recommending this film but I<lb/>
can't predict how it will do. It would<lb/>
be a shame if it just faded away for<lb/>
HBO to pick up at a later date.<lb/>
It may only be cute, but we need<lb/>
more cute comedies nowadays. The<lb/>
comedy film is not as prevalent as it<lb/>
used to be; and there's no good<lb/>
reason for it, unless watching so-<lb/>
meone's liver getting cut out has<lb/>
become the American past time.<lb/>
This film may remind a few, in an<lb/>
offbeat sort of way, of Continental<lb/>
Divide with Blair Brown and the late<lb/>
John Belushi. It was cute and funny<lb/>
and that's all that counts.<lb/>
I give it ? ? ? . The film is now<lb/>
playing at the Buccaneer Theatre.<lb/>
fod<lb/>
H<lb/>
CM<lb/>
sail<lb/>
Sl<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
at<lb/>
ad<lb/>
ti<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
pi<lb/>
m<lb/>
Otl<lb/>
7<lb/>
pel<lb/>
I<lb/>
he!<lb/>
en!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Cougar's Springsteen Impersonation Has Too Many Holes<lb/>
By ZACK<lb/>
PERKINSON<lb/>
stiff Wriler<lb/>
John Cougar ?<lb/>
American Fool<lb/>
He was hailed as the<lb/>
new Springsteen, which<lb/>
is pretty redundant,<lb/>
since Springsteen was<lb/>
hailed as the new<lb/>
Dylan, who was hailed<lb/>
as the poet of his<lb/>
generation. Is Cougar<lb/>
the poet of his genera-<lb/>
tion? Hardly.<lb/>
Like Springsteen, he<lb/>
evokes the familiar im-<lb/>
ages of common<lb/>
adolescence: teenage<lb/>
romance and imitations<lb/>
of hoodlumry. In<lb/>
"Jack and Diane<lb/>
which has received con-<lb/>
siderable airplay, the<lb/>
recurrent phrase "two<lb/>
American kids growing<lb/>
up in the heartland"<lb/>
rides a locomotive-like<lb/>
beat. Well, I guess I can<lb/>
overlook one or two<lb/>
concessions to popular<lb/>
trends that don't in-<lb/>
terfere with artistic in-<lb/>
tegrity.<lb/>
Colin Hays' writing<lb/>
and singing set the<lb/>
band far above the<lb/>
pack of Mohawked<lb/>
void dwellers. The<lb/>
socio-political<lb/>
statements throughout<lb/>
the album are much<lb/>
more palatable than the<lb/>
Clash's smug artist-as-<lb/>
moral-arbeiter posings.<lb/>
Hays writes with<lb/>
humanity and a passing<lb/>
reference to James<lb/>
Dean that exemplifies<lb/>
the eternal drive-in, hot<lb/>
rod, beating hearts<lb/>
motif.<lb/>
The instrumentals<lb/>
are predictable<lb/>
throughout. The guitar<lb/>
Review<lb/>
licks are a little chop-<lb/>
pier than Springsteen's,<lb/>
but the imitation is<lb/>
almost outright. There<lb/>
is even a little accor-<lb/>
dion, perceived as stun-<lb/>
ning innovation on<lb/>
"Born to Run" and<lb/>
other early Springsteen<lb/>
albums. Here it is just<lb/>
more mimicry by<lb/>
Cougar.<lb/>
Granted, John<lb/>
Cougar has the most<lb/>
powerful and ex-<lb/>
pressive voice in rock<lb/>
'rf roll since Bob Seger.<lb/>
But he lacks a musical<lb/>
expertise that he tries to<lb/>
compensate for with his<lb/>
slavish imitations of<lb/>
Springsteen.<lb/>
He could explore the<lb/>
limits of his con-<lb/>
siderable vocal talent bought this record, but<lb/>
with fresh music and<lb/>
production. I wonder,<lb/>
though, iff he hasn't<lb/>
already seen those<lb/>
limits and is playing it<lb/>
safe with a proven for-<lb/>
mula. A lot of people<lb/>
I'll stick<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
to the real<lb/>
Men at Work ?<lb/>
Business as L sual<lb/>
See BUSINESS, Page 9<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057508_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 26. 1982<lb/>
Mindless, Mutant<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
formers because they only play ma-<lb/>
jor markets, to bring the acts to the<lb/>
campus in a live setting<lb/>
Tickets for the Devo show are on<lb/>
sale at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at $5<lb/>
for ECU students in advance and $6<lb/>
at the door; public tickets are $6 in<lb/>
advance and $7 at the door. Public<lb/>
tickets are also on sale at the two<lb/>
Greenville Record Bars and at Ap-<lb/>
ple Records. For additional infor-<lb/>
mation contact the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office at 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
Halloween Rockers<lb/>
From Way Back<lb/>
The following review originally ap-<lb/>
peared m the Nov. 1, 1981 edition oj<lb/>
the e Brunswick Record.<lb/>
Reprinted by permission; all rights<lb/>
reserved.<lb/>
B DON FFRENC1<lb/>
lh ?? Rrun?uk Rrtord<lb/>
The true spirit of Halloween hit<lb/>
New Brunswick last night when<lb/>
Devo invaded the Barn, holding<lb/>
over 3,000 people captive. The cap-<lb/>
tives were subjected to "new tradi-<lb/>
tionalist" propaganda designed to<lb/>
mutate new coverts for their<lb/>
crusade. The weapons for this<lb/>
RL MP-sponsored de-evolutionary<lb/>
uprising were good music, strange<lb/>
films, dancing, and the mere<lb/>
presence of the modern-day cult<lb/>
heroes.<lb/>
The night was all Devo's. In lieu<lb/>
of an opening band, 20 minutes of<lb/>
movies were shown. These were not<lb/>
your everyday films, but rather<lb/>
videos of Devo songs. A lot has<lb/>
been said about these films and they<lb/>
more than lived up to their reputa-<lb/>
tion. They were very strange, but<lb/>
entertaining, avant-garde films with<lb/>
an oddball cast of characters in-<lb/>
cluding Boogi Boy, General Boy<lb/>
and Devo themselves.<lb/>
Beautiful M orrf, the best film,<lb/>
began with a flower blooming ? the<lb/>
natural innocence of our beautiful<lb/>
world. Then followed the con-<lb/>
trasting, horrible reality of our<lb/>
violent man-made world ? atomic<lb/>
bombs, street violence, starvation<lb/>
? overpowered the ideal images<lb/>
with a stark honesty that left one a<lb/>
bit unnerved. Whether the films<lb/>
made one question the artificial<lb/>
world we've created or just plain<lb/>
laugh, everyone knew one thing for<lb/>
sure; this was not going to be an or-<lb/>
dinary concert.<lb/>
The final footage portrayed three<lb/>
of the Devoids bound to<lb/>
ultramodern crosses. When they<lb/>
symbolically broke away from the<lb/>
chains of today's closed-minded<lb/>
mechanized society the packed<lb/>
house cheered in defiant delight, the<lb/>
screen rose, the curtain opened, and<lb/>
Devo did their stuff. A truly<lb/>
melodramatic and exciting opening!<lb/>
And what a show it was! Even the<lb/>
spaced-out movie shorts could not<lb/>
sufficiently portray the massive<lb/>
amounts of power, energy and fun<lb/>
emitted by the five-man gorup when<lb/>
they were on stage. These up-to-date<lb/>
powerhouse rockers played like they<lb/>
were obviously men with a mission.<lb/>
The spudboys stamina was incredi-<lb/>
ble. They never once stopped their<lb/>
frantic dancing and panicky moving<lb/>
about the stage.<lb/>
The people on the packed floor<lb/>
were there to dance, so despite a<lb/>
lack of space the floor was<lb/>
transformed into a sea of bouncing<lb/>
heads. It was virtually impossible to<lb/>
avoid being swept up by the riotous<lb/>
madness that took over the stage as<lb/>
well as the floor. The people in the<lb/>
reserved seats (upstairs) somehow<lb/>
managed the impossible, however,<lb/>
and remained calm and seated<lb/>
throughout the 2-hour show.<lb/>
A wide variety of songs from each<lb/>
album were played. The crowd<lb/>
seemed unfamiliar with the first few<lb/>
songs which were taken from the<lb/>
LP. Nh Tradidionalists. But<lb/>
everyone burst into jubilant life<lb/>
when they recognizerd the opening<lb/>
notes of "Girl U Want All of the<lb/>
songs were played very well, but the<lb/>
vocals suffered from a less-than-<lb/>
perfect sound system. A knowledge<lb/>
of the lyrics was crucial.<lb/>
One of the highlights of the show,<lb/>
and a real audience favorite, was a<lb/>
frenzied version of "Uncontrollable<lb/>
Urge This song was a perfect<lb/>
description of the urgency of the en-<lb/>
tire concert: "Got an urgeGot a<lb/>
surgeand it's out of control<lb/>
Almost every song got out of con-<lb/>
trol and reached a fevered orgasmic<lb/>
peak unmatched by just about any<lb/>
other band.<lb/>
The music was only one part of<lb/>
the Devo experience. At times, the<lb/>
many special visual effects stole the<lb/>
show. After about 30 minutes, the<lb/>
curtain closed for a setcostume<lb/>
change. As the curious crowd an-<lb/>
ticipated Devo's next surprise a slow<lb/>
countdown added to the suspense.<lb/>
The curtain opened to a new stage<lb/>
set engulfed in fog and lit by a huge<lb/>
strobe light. It was like a scene out<lb/>
of a weird dream set in some<lb/>
futuristic unknown world.<lb/>
The group performed two encores<lb/>
for the very enthusiastic audience.<lb/>
For the first, Mark Mothersbaugh<lb/>
dressed as Boogi Boy and sang their<lb/>
newest single, "Beautiful World<lb/>
The final encore consisted of a well-<lb/>
choreographed rendition of<lb/>
"Working in the Coal Mine the<lb/>
recent cover hit from the movie<lb/>
Heavy Metal. Amidst dense fog,<lb/>
Devo, wearing lighted mining hats,<lb/>
shoveled and picked in the make-<lb/>
belifve coal mine. After they left the<lb/>
stage for the last time, the movie<lb/>
screen was dropped again and while<lb/>
militaristic de-evolutionary music<lb/>
spewed from the speakers, the pro-<lb/>
jectors rolled tootage of the<lb/>
uniformed spudboys saluting some<lb/>
higher being.<lb/>
On the way out, the crowd looked<lb/>
shocked, provoked, satisfied, but<lb/>
most of all entertained. Because for<lb/>
a few hours they were not men, they<lb/>
were Devo.<lb/>
'Business As Usual'<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
'This album is hot.<lb/>
Men at Work are<lb/>
without a doubt one of<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057508_0010"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 26. 1982<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Defense Records Second Shutout<lb/>
Pirates Ruffle Redbirds' Feathers<lb/>
By CINDY PLLASANTS<lb/>
Sports r dilor<lb/>
The setting was perfect for an<lb/>
East Carolina homecoming day.<lb/>
Warm blankets to fend of wintry<lb/>
weather, purple and gold balloons<lb/>
floating through the air, the crown-<lb/>
ing of the queen and a crowd of<lb/>
26,771 fans cheering in the stands as<lb/>
the Pirates marched onto Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium were a few visibilities<lb/>
necessary to make the traditional<lb/>
event memorable.<lb/>
The main attraction, however,<lb/>
was the game. Any school in the<lb/>
country would be disappointed to<lb/>
lose THE homecoming game.<lb/>
Students expect a win, a big win.<lb/>
And the Pirates didn't let them<lb/>
down.<lb/>
ECU captured its second shutout<lb/>
of the season against Illinois State,<lb/>
21-0, upping the Bucs record now to<lb/>
4-3.<lb/>
Head coach Ed Emory said a<lb/>
shutout is always a personal victory<lb/>
for the defensive team. "It was just<lb/>
great to get a shutout he said.<lb/>
"Anytime you get a shutout in col-<lb/>
lege football today, your defense<lb/>
has done a nice job<lb/>
The defensive players, however,<lb/>
were not the only heroines of the<lb/>
day. Led by junior quarterback<lb/>
Greg Stewart, the Pirates finished<lb/>
with 382 yards rushing and 518<lb/>
yards in total offense - the highest<lb/>
ever for a team coached by Ed<lb/>
Emory. Stewart, who was named as<lb/>
the ECAC Offensive Player of the<lb/>
Week, scored twice against the Red-<lb/>
birds while rushing for 79 yards and<lb/>
passing for 141 yards.<lb/>
Stewart scored both touchdowns<lb/>
in the first half to put the Bucs<lb/>
ahead. 14-0. ECU's third<lb/>
touchdown occurred in the final two<lb/>
minutes of the third quarter when<lb/>
fullback Reggie Branch ran three<lb/>
yards into the endzone to score the<lb/>
first TD of his career at ECU. Jeff<lb/>
Heath's three extra point kicks<lb/>
boosted the Pirates' lead to 21-0.<lb/>
Despite some impressive in-<lb/>
dividual efforts. Emory still was not<lb/>
completely satisfied with the of-<lb/>
fense's play. "I was disappointed<lb/>
with the intensity on the offensive<lb/>
team he said. We had too many<lb/>
fumbles. I think they (offense) were<lb/>
surprised they it wasn't as easy as<lb/>
they thought it would beECU<lb/>
had five fumbles and recovered all<lb/>
but one against the Redbirds.<lb/>
Emory added that the offense<lb/>
played well enough on the line to<lb/>
win 60-0. "But our quarterback<lb/>
play left a great deal to be desired<lb/>
he said. "We just didn't make<lb/>
things happen<lb/>
The first quarter just underway,<lb/>
ISU was positioned on ECU's<lb/>
21-yard line but a 10-yard holding<lb/>
penalty moved the Redbirds back to<lb/>
the 31. In a first and 20 situation,<lb/>
ISU's Mark Coppens pass was pick-<lb/>
ed off by strong safety Clint Harris<lb/>
at the 17-yard line who then return-<lb/>
ed 25 yards. Emory said Harris's<lb/>
interception, his fourth for the<lb/>
season, came at a critical point in<lb/>
the game. "Defensively, we played<lb/>
very tight on the first series, but<lb/>
then got real strong he said. "I'm<lb/>
just glad Clint Harris got that in-<lb/>
terception to stop their drive<lb/>
With Ernest Bvner, Branch and<lb/>
Stewart gaining yardage, Stewart<lb/>
scored the first TD of the game with<lb/>
7:37 remaining in the first quarter.<lb/>
The Pirates made another attempt<lb/>
but ECU quarterback Kevin In-<lb/>
gram's pass was intercepted by<lb/>
ISU's cornerback Reggie Sum-<lb/>
merise.<lb/>
In the second quarter, freshman<lb/>
kicker Jeff Heath attempted a<lb/>
34-yard field goal but the kick went<lb/>
just right. After an ECU fumble by<lb/>
Stewart, the Redbirds gained<lb/>
possession and needed four yards<lb/>
for a first down but defensive end<lb/>
Jeff Pegues made sure they didn't<lb/>
get it by sacking Coppens for an<lb/>
eight-yard loss.<lb/>
Injured on the play, Coppens was<lb/>
replaced by ISU's Steve Moews in<lb/>
the second half. The third quarter<lb/>
got off to a bad start for the Pirates<lb/>
with Stewart's pass being in-<lb/>
tercepted by ISU at the its own<lb/>
26-yardline. But Moews was sacked<lb/>
by Moe Bennett on the first play for<lb/>
a five-yard loss and the Redbirds<lb/>
neer regained the yardage they lost.<lb/>
The Bucs' final scoring rally came<lb/>
with a few minutes remaining in the<lb/>
third quarter. Freshman Reggie<lb/>
Branch, who rushed for 109 yards,<lb/>
ran up the middle for six more<lb/>
points. Emory commended Branch<lb/>
for his fine showing against ISU.<lb/>
"Branch has done a very Fine job<lb/>
for us he said. "He's a hard run-<lb/>
ner and has come through when we<lb/>
needed him most<lb/>
A defensive line led by Amos<lb/>
Twitty, Kevin Banks and Jeff<lb/>
Pegues held the Redbirds in the final<lb/>
quarter to only three first downs.<lb/>
ISU made one last attempt but the<lb/>
Redbird center snapped the ball<lb/>
over Moews head for a 19-yard loss<lb/>
and thus eliminated Illinois State's<lb/>
chance to score.<lb/>
Coach Emory praised ISU highly<lb/>
and described the coach and his<lb/>
players as having a "lot of class<lb/>
'Illinois did one heck of a job<lb/>
he said. "We were beat up pretty<lb/>
bad<lb/>
The Pirates will now get ready for<lb/>
a tough road trip to 13th-ranked<lb/>
West Virginia this weekend. The<lb/>
Mountaineers were blanked by Penn<lb/>
State this past Saturday, but WVU<lb/>
managed 382 yards in total offense<lb/>
and 21 First downs. Coach Emory is<lb/>
especially glad that West Virginia<lb/>
had a tough game before meeting<lb/>
the Pirates. "Losing drains you like<lb/>
a leech he said. "It just takes<lb/>
something out of you. The win will<lb/>
help us<lb/>
Illimits S 1?altrust Downsr .aruliM 30<lb/>
26-54Rushes-Yard66-377<lb/>
111Passing Yards141<lb/>
i9Return Yards59<lb/>
23-IO-IPassing21-11-3<lb/>
9-39.8Punts -Ancta&amp;C2-32.5<lb/>
4 1Fumbles Lost5 1<lb/>
3-45Penalties Yards7 58<lb/>
Illinois Stale0 0 0 ?? ?<lb/>
f.?i Carolina7 7 7 0-21<lb/>
Scoring<lb/>
EC -StewartVrun (Heath kick)<lb/>
EC -Stewart5run (Healh Kick)<lb/>
EC -Branch.3run (Heath kick)<lb/>
Individual Mairsnes<lb/>
Rushing: ISU ? Coppens 1(8). Bowers 7 23. Jones<lb/>
I 1 41. vs inters 5 22. Moews 1(5). Team 1 - 19); EC I -<lb/>
Mewart ?.?v. Branch 16-109. Baker 10-47. Ingram 3-12.<lb/>
I ewis6 33. Bvner 10 68, Hill 2-9. Williams l 16. Cobb 1-4<lb/>
Passing ISC - Coppens 12 1601. Moews 10-451-0.<lb/>
McDougle 1-0-0-0; ECU ? Stewart 20-11-141-2. Ingram<lb/>
I-0-0-1<lb/>
Receiving ISL ? Denmson 5-42 Young 1-8. Bowers<lb/>
1-15. Winters 2-6. Collins 1-40. BCD - Nelson 3-81. Branch<lb/>
1 3. Baker 2-0. 5 Adams 2-25. Vann 2 26. Bvner 1-6<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
(Top) Flanker Cariton Nelson runs down the middle against Illinois State after Stewart's release as teammates<lb/>
John Floyd and Reggie Branch look on. (Bottom) Emory and ISU's Otolski and players show good sportsman-<lb/>
ship toward one another after Saturday's game.<lb/>
Emory's Contract Extended<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Before each practice, head foot-<lb/>
ball coach Ed Emory begins work-<lb/>
outs by uttering one word to the<lb/>
players.<lb/>
But rather than the usual morale-<lb/>
boosting adjectives, the happy<lb/>
coach informed his players last<lb/>
Thursday that the word for the day<lb/>
was "contract<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Dr. John M.<lb/>
Ho well, in conjunction with<lb/>
Athletic Director Dr. Ken Karr, an-<lb/>
nounced this past Thursday that<lb/>
Emory's contract had been extended<lb/>
through January of 1985.<lb/>
"We are on a threshold of a new<lb/>
era in NCAA Division I-A foot-<lb/>
ball Howell said. "Coach Emory<lb/>
and the football team have played<lb/>
Division I-A football this season<lb/>
and we are proud of their perfor-<lb/>
mance<lb/>
It seemed only fitting for Emory<lb/>
to first relay the news to the players,<lb/>
especially since he believes they are<lb/>
the main reason for his or any other<lb/>
coach's extension.<lb/>
"I think it (contract renewal), was<lb/>
an endorsement of their character<lb/>
and play he said. "Very few<lb/>
coaches get fired if they (the players)<lb/>
want them as their football coach. I<lb/>
felt like it was what they wanted<lb/>
After the announcement of the<lb/>
contract had been made, Emory was<lb/>
surprised by the overwhelming sup-<lb/>
port he received from the press and<lb/>
Pirate supporters. "I didn't know it<lb/>
was weighing so heavily on<lb/>
everybody's minds he said.<lb/>
Although the head coach had not<lb/>
mentioned his contract to the<lb/>
players this year, a few of them<lb/>
showed their concern at a<lb/>
Fellowship of Christian Athletes<lb/>
meeting last week by praying for<lb/>
Emory and many of their sick and<lb/>
injured teammates. "I was very<lb/>
touched that they would include me<lb/>
in their prayers Emory said.<lb/>
"That meant a lot to me<lb/>
Apparently, the power of prayer<lb/>
should not be underestimated. Two<lb/>
days later his job was once again<lb/>
secure. However, Emory said he<lb/>
had been more concerned about<lb/>
other matters rather than the finan-<lb/>
cial aspects of a job loss. "I wasn't<lb/>
worrying a lot about how I was go-<lb/>
ing to pay my bills he said. "I've<lb/>
seen so many coaches work so hard<lb/>
and not be able to fulfill their goals<lb/>
because they were short of time.<lb/>
'?We've worked very hard and I<lb/>
felt like the coaching staff here<lb/>
knew what was ahead of them<lb/>
If a coach has ever turned a team<lb/>
around and showned marked im-<lb/>
provement, Emory certainly has this<lb/>
year. During the '82 season, he has<lb/>
guided the most explosive offense to<lb/>
be seen at ECU in years. The Pirates<lb/>
have already surpassed last year's<lb/>
passing yardage of 839 with a whop-<lb/>
ping 1031 yards so far this season,<lb/>
besides having four road games to<lb/>
spare. At one time, the Pirates were<lb/>
ranked 16th in offense, racking up<lb/>
500 yards in total offense against<lb/>
Richmond and 474 yards against<lb/>
East Tennessee State.<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates were<lb/>
ranked eighth early in the fall season<lb/>
and are presently listed as 16th in<lb/>
Division-I rankings. The Pirates<lb/>
four home opponents have only<lb/>
been able to score 15 points in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, with ECU's defen-<lb/>
sive team allowing one touchdown<lb/>
to be scored by the Richmond<lb/>
Spiders.<lb/>
A 1959 graduate and former foot-<lb/>
ball standout at East Carolina,<lb/>
Emory truly loves his alma mater.<lb/>
The head coach is filled with Pirate<lb/>
pride and believes wholeheartedly in<lb/>
the ECU football program. In time,<lb/>
he also feels like it has a chance to<lb/>
become a great one. "With the pro-<lb/>
gress we've made and the extended<lb/>
years we now have at East<lb/>
Carolina he said, "we can succeed<lb/>
in making the Pirate program a ma-<lb/>
jor success<lb/>
Karr indicated that Emorv will be<lb/>
facing schedules for the next two<lb/>
seasons which will include op-<lb/>
ponents as equalh as hard as this<lb/>
year's grueling competitors. He fur-<lb/>
ther stated that the Pirates have<lb/>
shown improvement despite limited<lb/>
resources and the increased difficul-<lb/>
ty in the schedule.<lb/>
Emory, meanwhile, will be con-<lb/>
centrating on finishing the four re-<lb/>
maining away games. Now 4-3, the<lb/>
coach doesn't have to wonder<lb/>
anymore if he will be around after<lb/>
this year and according to Emor.<lb/>
that's very good new.<lb/>
"Security brings about a lot ot<lb/>
decisions he said. " When there's<lb/>
insecurities on a staff, there's a<lb/>
tendency to take shortcuts A<lb/>
shortcut, he explained, would be<lb/>
playing an athlete who may be suf-<lb/>
fering a minor mjurv and reallv<lb/>
needs to sit out a game, but is played<lb/>
because he might make the dif-<lb/>
ference between winning and losing.<lb/>
Fortunately. Emory now doesn't<lb/>
have to face the possibility of<lb/>
deciding whether or not to take<lb/>
shortcuts. He's here to stav, and<lb/>
hopefully it will be for quite a long<lb/>
while.<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
Otolski Impressed With Bucs<lb/>
Lady Pirates Hit Road<lb/>
By EDWARD NICKLAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Beginning a lengthy road trip that<lb/>
will last for the remainder of the<lb/>
season, the ECU Lady Pirates suf-<lb/>
fered what Coach Lynn Davidson<lb/>
referred to as a "disappointing<lb/>
loss" in Friday's volleyball match<lb/>
against Appalachian State Universi-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
ECU, however, raised its' record<lb/>
to 20-12, beating a mediocre East<lb/>
Tennessee State squad in Saturday's<lb/>
action.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won 2 out of the<lb/>
first 3 games against ASU, but end-<lb/>
ed up losing the last two games and<lb/>
the match, 14-16, 15-9, 10-15,<lb/>
15-12, 15-13.<lb/>
Davidson seemed frustrated by<lb/>
the loss. "We played fair she said.<lb/>
"Our service, reception, and passes<lb/>
were excellent. We just couldn't<lb/>
seem to get things going<lb/>
In Saturday's game against ETS,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates, who were led by<lb/>
the play of Lita Lamas, won rather<lb/>
handily, 15-12, 15-5, 15-2.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will pack their<lb/>
suitcases once again as they travel to<lb/>
Wilmington Thursday to play UNC-<lb/>
W and the University of South<lb/>
Carolina at Lancaster.<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
With only one senior in their star-<lb/>
ting lineup, the Illinois State Red<lb/>
Birds are in the process of building<lb/>
for the future.<lb/>
After Saturday's 21-0 loss to the<lb/>
Pirates, ISU head coach Bob<lb/>
Otolski said that the ECU squad<lb/>
was just too strong for his young<lb/>
ball club.<lb/>
"They are an extremely well-<lb/>
coached team said Otolski. "ECU<lb/>
is a very physical team; they hit hard<lb/>
and they run hard<lb/>
Two important plays which hurt<lb/>
the Red Birds were an unsuccessful<lb/>
fake punt and the loss of starting<lb/>
quarterback John Coppens.<lb/>
With 21 seconds left in the first<lb/>
quarter and ECU leading 7-0, the<lb/>
Red Birds faced a fourth-down ana<lb/>
nine at the ECU 34-yard line. ISU<lb/>
punter Jim McDougle attempted a<lb/>
pass to the right sideline that was<lb/>
wide of the mark, and the Pirates<lb/>
took over.<lb/>
According to Otolski, the fake<lb/>
punt was pre-meditated, but the<lb/>
Pirates did a good job of shifting<lb/>
out of the formation that they<lb/>
originally showed.<lb/>
Coppens, a sophomore who came<lb/>
into the game with 547 yards passing<lb/>
and three touchdowns, was hurt in<lb/>
the second quarter when his left<lb/>
hand was stepped on by two dif-<lb/>
ferent people on the same play.<lb/>
Otolski was impressed with the<lb/>
ability of ECU defensive end and<lb/>
All-America candidate Jody Schulz.<lb/>
Although Schulz didn't have one of<lb/>
his best games statistically, his<lb/>
presence was felt on the field.<lb/>
Otolski served eight years as an<lb/>
assistant coach at Indiana, and has<lb/>
seen many outstanding defensive<lb/>
lineman. "Schulz can play with the<lb/>
best of 'em commented Otolski.<lb/>
"He's a Fine football player with<lb/>
great pro potential<lb/>
The Red Birds used a spread-out<lb/>
type of offense that they call the<lb/>
"scatter This formation puts only<lb/>
one back behind the quarterback<lb/>
and spreads the others out as<lb/>
receivers. "We went to our spread<lb/>
offense out of respect for their<lb/>
defensive line stated Otolski.<lb/>
Illinois State has a defensive gem<lb/>
of their own in free safety Mike<lb/>
Prior. Prior entered the game rank-<lb/>
ed number two in interceptions in<lb/>
Division 1-AA, with six takeaways.<lb/>
He intercepted two more passes<lb/>
against the Pirates which ran his<lb/>
seasonal total to eight and he how<lb/>
has 11 in his career, which involves<lb/>
only 12 games. He also led the Red<lb/>
Birds with 14 tackles against ECU.<lb/>
"They have real strong running<lb/>
backs noted Prior after the game<lb/>
"They are also very quick and tough<lb/>
to bring down<lb/>
Coach Otolski expressed the fact<lb/>
that the Pirates could easily be 6-1<lb/>
right now if it weren't for a couple<lb/>
of bad breaks against N.C. State<lb/>
and Missouri.<lb/>
"I don't think the people around<lb/>
this area realize how good a football<lb/>
team East Carolina has Otolski<lb/>
observed. "I coached in the Big io<lb/>
for eight years, and I can tdl you<lb/>
this is a good team<lb/>
-1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 26 198:<lb/>
11<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
ind<lb/>
risk<lb/>
Cavaliers Use<lb/>
Wing Offense<lb/>
James Earns SEC Honors<lb/>
CHARLOTTESV1LLE,<lb/>
Va. (UPI) ? Virginia<lb/>
football Coach George<lb/>
Welsh said Monday he<lb/>
had considered putting<lb/>
the Wing-T formation<lb/>
into the Cavalier's of-<lb/>
fensive scheme for<lb/>
several weeks.<lb/>
As it turned out, his<lb/>
timing couldn't have<lb/>
been better.<lb/>
The Wing-T, along<lb/>
with other new offen-<lb/>
sive wrinkles, helped<lb/>
the Cavaliers to a big<lb/>
day Saturday when<lb/>
they rolled up 643 yards<lb/>
total offense and snap-<lb/>
ped an eight-game los-<lb/>
ing streak by beating<lb/>
Wake Forest 34-27.<lb/>
The offensive out-<lb/>
burst represented<lb/>
Virginia's second-most<lb/>
productive game ever.<lb/>
Only a 691-yard effort<lb/>
by the 1968 Cavaliers<lb/>
against Davidson sur-<lb/>
passed Saturday's per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
The Cavaliers went<lb/>
over 300 yards rushing<lb/>
and passing a first for a<lb/>
Virginia team ant;<lb/>
recorded their highest<lb/>
point total against an<lb/>
NCAA Division I op-<lb/>
ponent since a 38-28<lb/>
victory over William '<lb/>
Mary in 1974.<lb/>
Unveiling the Wing-<lb/>
T on the fifth play of<lb/>
the game, Virginia con-<lb/>
fused the Wake Forest<lb/>
defense on numerous<lb/>
occasions in the first<lb/>
half while building a<lb/>
31-14 half time lead.<lb/>
Vireinia scored on<lb/>
five of its first seven<lb/>
possessions while<lb/>
averaging 9.3 yards a<lb/>
play and accumulating<lb/>
447 yards in the first<lb/>
two periods.<lb/>
Welsh said the idea<lb/>
of the Wing-T "had<lb/>
been floating around in<lb/>
my head for a couple of<lb/>
weeks<lb/>
"We were trying to<lb/>
get some type of three-<lb/>
back offense to get<lb/>
some counter plays<lb/>
said Welsh. "We'd<lb/>
reached a point where<lb/>
we had to do something<lb/>
or maybe we weren't<lb/>
going to win a game<lb/>
Virginia's first 1982<lb/>
triumph after five suc-<lb/>
cessive losses represents<lb/>
the Cavaliers' first win<lb/>
since a 13-10 victory<lb/>
over Virginia Military<lb/>
Institute Oct. 31. 1981.<lb/>
"Wake didn't know<lb/>
it (Wing-T) was coming<lb/>
and that helped said<lb/>
Welsh. "Eight times or<lb/>
so in the first half, we<lb/>
just fooled them. Wake<lb/>
uses a read defense and<lb/>
they flow quickly. A<lb/>
counter game is usually<lb/>
successful against that<lb/>
type of defense<lb/>
Virginia's balanced<lb/>
attack was spearheaded<lb/>
by junior quarterback<lb/>
Wayne Schuchts. He<lb/>
completed of 15 of 30<lb/>
passes for a school-<lb/>
record 320 yards, in-<lb/>
cluding a 93-yard<lb/>
touchdown toss to Nick<lb/>
Merrick. Schuchts also<lb/>
ran for 53 vards, giving<lb/>
him 373 yards total of-<lb/>
fense, just three shy of<lb/>
Bob Davis' Virginia<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"Wayne did very<lb/>
well said Welsh.<lb/>
"There was a lot of<lb/>
new stuff, and he<lb/>
handled it well. He<lb/>
broke some tackles run-<lb/>
ning the ball and threw<lb/>
well on the run<lb/>
Virginia hosts VMI<lb/>
Saturday when the<lb/>
Cavaliers will be seek-<lb/>
ing their 50th victory in<lb/>
the 76-game series with<lb/>
the Keydets.<lb/>
Asked if the Wing-T<lb/>
would become a perma-<lb/>
nent fixture, Welsh said<lb/>
he wouldn't tell.<lb/>
"I don't know what<lb/>
we'll do this week<lb/>
said Welsh. "But when<lb/>
I decide, I probably<lb/>
won't tell anyone.<lb/>
"We have to be<lb/>
careful this week. We<lb/>
have to understand<lb/>
what it took to win the<lb/>
game last week. It's a<lb/>
big game for VMI or at<lb/>
least that's what I've<lb/>
heard.<lb/>
"I think it's a big<lb/>
game for us. They've<lb/>
v. on tour games,<lb/>
haven't they0 We'd be<lb/>
foolish to be overconfi-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
CHARLOTTE,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) Western<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
tailback Anthony<lb/>
James was named the<lb/>
Southern Conference's<lb/>
offensive player-of-the-<lb/>
week today for the se-<lb/>
cond consecutive week.<lb/>
James had three<lb/>
touchdowns in the<lb/>
Catamounts' 36-17 win<lb/>
over Wofford.<lb/>
James, from Hart-<lb/>
sville, S.C nows leads<lb/>
the conference in scor-<lb/>
ing with an 8.6 point<lb/>
per game average. He<lb/>
rushed for 117 yards in<lb/>
the Wofford game.<lb/>
"Anthony ignited us<lb/>
again Coach Bob<lb/>
Waters said. "He is so<lb/>
explosive, as good a<lb/>
tailback as there is<lb/>
anywhere when you<lb/>
consider all that he<lb/>
does ' open field runn-<lb/>
ing, blocking, pass<lb/>
receiving and uncanny<lb/>
ability to follow his<lb/>
blocking<lb/>
East Tennessee State<lb/>
linebacker Shannow<lb/>
DePew, who had 23<lb/>
tackles in a 20-15 loss<lb/>
to Furman, was named<lb/>
the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference's defensive<lb/>
player-of-the-week<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
DePew, from<lb/>
Blountsville, Tenn<lb/>
had 12 solo tackles and<lb/>
was credited with 11<lb/>
assists. He also<lb/>
recovered a fumble and<lb/>
broke up a pass play.<lb/>
"Shannon is always<lb/>
around the ball East<lb/>
Tennessee State Coach<lb/>
Jack Carlisle said.<lb/>
"He's just a very<lb/>
steady, reliable player<lb/>
who always gives you<lb/>
100 percent<lb/>
James and DePew<lb/>
were selected for the<lb/>
honors by a panel of<lb/>
sportswriters and sport-<lb/>
scasters who belong to<lb/>
the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference Sports Media<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Tryouts for an ECU Pirate mascot will be held at 5 p.m. on Monda.<lb/>
Nov. 1 at the ticket office in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
l3-? ????  l A<lb/>
I<lb/>
The ECU soccer team tell victim<lb/>
to a tough UNC-Greensboro team<lb/>
Sunday afternoon 4-0.<lb/>
UNC-G, which is ranked number<lb/>
three in Division-Ill, ran it s record<lb/>
to 15-2, while the Pirates dropped to<lb/>
7-6.<lb/>
"We didn't play good in the hrsi<lb/>
half, but played better the second<lb/>
half said ECU head coach Robbie<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
UNC-G was led bv Eddie Rad-<lb/>
wanski, who had two goals and one<lb/>
assist. Mike Sweeney had one goal<lb/>
and two assists and Lewis Borges<lb/>
added a goal and an assist.<lb/>
A big difference in the game was<lb/>
the number of shots-on-goal. LNC<lb/>
G took 22 shots, whereas the Pirates<lb/>
attempted onlv six. Pirate goalie<lb/>
Brian Winchell was credited with 11<lb/>
saes<lb/>
The Pirate's next match is<lb/>
Wednesday night at :(X) p.m. at<lb/>
Old Dominion Universit.<lb/>
Photo By CINOY WALL<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057508_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
I HI EAST CAROI IN1AN<lb/>
OCTOBER 26, 1982<lb/>
Wolfpack Defense Gains Confidence As Offense Proves Itself<lb/>
RALEIGH (UP1) ?<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
coach Monte Kiffin<lb/>
said Monday he<lb/>
behees his detense<lb/>
may hae gained con-<lb/>
fidence in the Clemson<lb/>
game despite giving up<lb/>
38 points.<lb/>
Kiffin said the<lb/>
Wolfpack offense,<lb/>
which came up with 29<lb/>
points, showed it is<lb/>
capable ol a lot of scor-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Our defense may<lb/>
have gained some con-<lb/>
fidence because they<lb/>
knovs that they don't<lb/>
have to shut out so-<lb/>
meone to win he<lb/>
said. 'They know our<lb/>
offense can score some<lb/>
points. That should<lb/>
make them play more<lb/>
relaxed and play bet-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
hosts South Carolina<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"I look for a tough,<lb/>
tough game Kiffin<lb/>
said. "They have an<lb/>
outstanding defense<lb/>
with an extremely big<lb/>
defensive line<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
gained a total of 394<lb/>
yards against Clemson.<lb/>
Tol Avery completed<lb/>
22 of 33 passes for 246<lb/>
yards and two<lb/>
downed them, out-<lb/>
yardaged them he<lb/>
said. "But the defense<lb/>
touchdowns and<lb/>
sophomore Joe Mcln-<lb/>
tosh gained 113 yards.<lb/>
"We improved a lot<lb/>
during last week Kif-<lb/>
fin said. "We improved<lb/>
up front where it starts.<lb/>
I don't feel lucky just<lb/>
to have been in the<lb/>
game with Clemson.<lb/>
"We out-first-<lb/>
didn't play as well as<lb/>
we wanted, or needed<lb/>
to<lb/>
Kiffin said he doesn't<lb/>
know if split end Ricky<lb/>
Wall or right guard<lb/>
Steve Saulnier will be<lb/>
ready to play Saturday.<lb/>
Wall has a knee injury<lb/>
and Saulnier has a<lb/>
bruised sholder.<lb/>
He also said free<lb/>
safety Eric Williams<lb/>
has a pinched nerve in<lb/>
his neck.<lb/>
Kiffin said Doug<lb/>
Howard, a starting left<lb/>
tackle who has missed<lb/>
three games with a knee<lb/>
injury, and Vince<lb/>
Evans, the Wolfpack's<lb/>
starting fullback in the<lb/>
first game of the season<lb/>
who suffered a knee in-<lb/>
jury against Furman,<lb/>
would both miss Satur-<lb/>
day's contest.<lb/>
"With Vince. it's a<lb/>
day-to-day thing<lb/>
whether he will play in<lb/>
the next couple of<lb/>
weeks or we redshirt<lb/>
him Kiffin said. "He<lb/>
jogged some last week,<lb/>
and he's supposed to be<lb/>
close to getting ready,<lb/>
but we'll have to wait<lb/>
and see<lb/>
GREENSBORO,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) - Defen-<lb/>
sive back I endell Jones<lb/>
of Maryland and defen-<lb/>
sive end Andy Headen<lb/>
of Clemson were nam-<lb/>
ed Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference Defensive Carolina The fumble<lb/>
Players-of-the-Week recovery led to a Clem<lb/>
Mondav. son score.<lb/>
Jones, from Easton,<lb/>
Pa , had four intercep-<lb/>
tions in a 49-22 win<lb/>
against Duke. He also<lb/>
had seven tackles and<lb/>
broke up another pass.<lb/>
Headen, from Liber-<lb/>
ty, S.C had eight<lb/>
tackles and recovered a<lb/>
fumble in a 38-29 vic-<lb/>
tor v over North<lb/>
The two were<lb/>
selected for the honor<lb/>
by the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Sports Writer Associa<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Support the<lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
Wed Oct. 27<lb/>
ThuOct.28<lb/>
Sat, Oct. 30<lb/>
Mon Nov. 1<lb/>
Tue Nov. 2<lb/>
Wed Nov. 3<lb/>
ECUS UPCOMING ATHLETIC EVENTS<lb/>
Soccer at Old Dominion, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Volleyball at UNC-Wilmington (7 USC-Lancasfer), 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Football at West Virginia, 1:30 p.m<lb/>
Soccer at Central Florida, 2 p.m<lb/>
Quarterback Club at Ramada Inn, Greenville, 6 p.m<lb/>
Soccer at South Florida, 4 p.m.<lb/>
Press Conference at Pirate Club, noon.<lb/>
Volleyball at Virginia Commonwealth. 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Bobby Knight To Visit ECU<lb/>
Indiana University's<lb/>
highly successful head<lb/>
basketball coach Bobby<lb/>
Knight will be in Green-<lb/>
ville Saturday, Oct. 30,<lb/>
to conduct a coaching<lb/>
clinic along with East<lb/>
Carolina's new head<lb/>
coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison.<lb/>
The clinic will begin<lb/>
with registration at<lb/>
12:30 p.m followed<lb/>
by a session with Har-<lb/>
rison on practice<lb/>
orgfaniation from 2<lb/>
p.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
Knight will speak on<lb/>
his offensive and defen-<lb/>
sive philosophy, star-<lb/>
ting at 4:15. Two ses-<lb/>
sions will be held b<lb/>
Knight with a dinner<lb/>
break between.<lb/>
Those interested in<lb/>
attending ma register<lb/>
in advance with the<lb/>
ECU basketball office<lb/>
The cost of registration<lb/>
is $15.00.<lb/>
Brewers Reinstate Kuenn<lb/>
N.C . State's Joe Mclnlosh runs into "Buc wall<lb/>
MILWAUKEE<lb/>
(UPI) ? Harvey<lb/>
Kuenn, the hometown<lb/>
hero who took the<lb/>
Milwaukee Brewers to<lb/>
within one victory of<lb/>
the World Series cham-<lb/>
pionship, will return as<lb/>
manager for 1983,<lb/>
General Manager<lb/>
Harry Dalton announc-<lb/>
ed today.<lb/>
"We think it is fit-<lb/>
ting that Harvey return<lb/>
to manage the Brewers<lb/>
in 1983 Dalton said.<lb/>
"He played a major<lb/>
role in the Milwaukee<lb/>
Brewers' finest season<lb/>
ever, leading them to<lb/>
the American league<lb/>
championship and a<lb/>
near-miss in the seventh<lb/>
game of the World<lb/>
Series Dalton said.<lb/>
"He was just what the<lb/>
doctor ordered<lb/>
"I'm thrilled that the<lb/>
Jrewers asked me back<lb/>
for 1983 said Kuenn.<lb/>
51, who replaced Bob<lb/>
"Buck" Rodgers as<lb/>
Brewers manager June<lb/>
2, with Milwaukee tied<lb/>
for fifth in the<lb/>
American League East<lb/>
with a 23-24 record,<lb/>
seven games out of firsl<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Under Kuenn, the<lb/>
Brewer posted a 72-43<lb/>
record and finished<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057508_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 26, 1982<lb/>
13<lb/>
nbk<lb/>
ere<lb/>
fcocia<lb/>
'Jt<lb/>
ee1<lb/>
ING<lb/>
INTER<lb/>
SEC ?ace Sef<lb/>
ATLANTA (UP!) ? All of this puts the<lb/>
This year's Sugar Bowl in a dilem-<lb/>
Southeastern Con- ma.<lb/>
ference football race That bowl has an<lb/>
ma) go right down to agreement with the<lb/>
the wire. Southeastern Con-<lb/>
tour of the league's ference to take its<lb/>
10 teams ? Georgia, champion with an op-<lb/>
Auburn, Louisiana tion to choose among<lb/>
state and Alabama are co-champions. With<lb/>
making a run at the bowl berths opening up<lb/>
conference title and, Nov. 20, the week<lb/>
the way the schedule is before the Auburn-<lb/>
set up. the SEC may Alabama game, there is<lb/>
not crown its champion going to be pressure on<lb/>
until after the Auburn- the Sugar Bowl to gam-<lb/>
?Vabama game on Nov. ble.<lb/>
27. That's one of the<lb/>
The Georgia reasons the Sugar Bowl<lb/>
Bulldogs, co-champion insisted on changing a<lb/>
previous agreement<lb/>
which forced it, in case<lb/>
of ties, to take the SEC<lb/>
co-champion which<lb/>
hadn't been to New-<lb/>
Orleans as recently as<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
Under the old rule,<lb/>
since Georgia was there<lb/>
on Jan. 1, 1981, the<lb/>
Sugar Bowl would have<lb/>
had to wait until after<lb/>
last year's Alabama-<lb/>
Auburn game to see if<lb/>
Alabama earned the<lb/>
bid. With the rule<lb/>
vbaek road change, the Sugar Bowl<lb/>
games with Alabama was able to grab<lb/>
(Nov. 6) and Mississip- Georgia, leaving<lb/>
State (Nov. 13). Alabama to line up a<lb/>
rennessee also Cotton Bowl berth.<lb/>
rupted Alabama's "The dust will settle<lb/>
bid to win or share the when Georgia plays<lb/>
Florida and then<lb/>
Auburn said Sugar<lb/>
Bowl executive director<lb/>
Mickey Holmes. "If<lb/>
it's Georgia, we'll<lb/>
know by sundown on<lb/>
Nov. 13. But if Georgia<lb/>
loses, we could go to<lb/>
Nov. 2" before we<lb/>
know anything for<lb/>
sure.<lb/>
"If a tie is looming,<lb/>
we would indicate to<lb/>
the SEC what our<lb/>
choice will be on the<lb/>
weekend of Nov. 20 so<lb/>
other teams can make<lb/>
plans<lb/>
last season and cham-<lb/>
pion the year before<lb/>
that, currently leads the<lb/>
ace with a 4-0 SEC<lb/>
record. But Auburn is<lb/>
right on Georgia's heels<lb/>
at 3-0 and those two<lb/>
meet at Auburn on<lb/>
Nov. 13.<lb/>
I ouisiana State also<lb/>
5 unbeaten in SEC<lb/>
iv. but the Bengals<lb/>
ive a tie with Ten-<lb/>
nessee marring their<lb/>
rec ? so can't afford a<lb/>
loss - a tough task<lb/>
SEC title for the 10th<lb/>
time in 12 years b<lb/>
upsetting the Crimson<lb/>
Tide week before last in<lb/>
Knoxville.<lb/>
But. like Alabama<lb/>
C oach Bear Brvant<lb/>
says, don't count the<lb/>
 de out et. Alabama<lb/>
plays both LSI and<lb/>
Auburn in friendly Bir-<lb/>
mingham, and i f<lb/>
k ? - a loses to ether<lb/>
Florida I No. 6 at<lb/>
.1 av k -on viIle) or<lb/>
Auburn, the Crimson<lb/>
Tide could be co-<lb/>
npion again.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
-  ????<lb/>
?.????<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
PAM SKYWALKER VOU havt<lb/>
and always will be my friand- live<lb/>
long and pro?.p?r mttbwya-<lb/>
Capt. James O Fett. PS. Heard<lb/>
the wookie died. Congratulations'<lb/>
Vader knows; doe LufcaT<lb/>
CHI?OMEGAS: We not only had<lb/>
fun but also won. Now it's time to<lb/>
party with the priie. Let's get<lb/>
together and plan an even better<lb/>
time. Congrats. The PHI TAUS.<lb/>
ROBERT: Pack your tux and grab<lb/>
the keys to a Cadillac because<lb/>
we're gin?to Roseball in style!<lb/>
fAirTHE UGLIEST MAN on<lb/>
campus, dammit! What the hell do<lb/>
you want?<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED to share apartment one block<lb/>
from campus. SIM a month plus<lb/>
one third utilities. CHERYL<lb/>
7SMW.<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MATE Wanted to share rent S70.00<lb/>
per month and one-fourth<lb/>
utilities. Interested persons should<lb/>
come by 417 W. Fourth St after 5<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home. Reasonable rates;<lb/>
7 S 340<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typing service-<lb/>
experience, quality work, IBM<lb/>
typewriter. Call Lanie Shive.<lb/>
7S8 5101 or Gail Joiner 7St-1 Oat.<lb/>
TYPING TERM papers, resumes,<lb/>
thesis, etc. Call 7S?-a713.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL typing rush<lb/>
jobs done. Scientific symbol ele<lb/>
ment Call 7S8 4?J7 after S30 p m<lb/>
10 YEARS typing- reasonable<lb/>
rates spelling, punctuation and<lb/>
grammar corrections. Pro-<lb/>
ofreading. Cindy 9 a.m. top.m.<lb/>
355 2448 <lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: GOLD Seiko-Quarti watch<lb/>
Reward offered. Sentimental<lb/>
Value. Call 7S 702 after 4 p m<lb/>
LOST GREEN backpack contain<lb/>
ing notebooks and other<lb/>
necessities for class. If found,<lb/>
return to David Cobb at 7SI 134 or<lb/>
75B 71 IS. No questions asked<lb/>
Reward.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WE BUY PLAYBOY. Rolling<lb/>
Stone Mag Quicksilver Record<lb/>
Book Exchange 108 East Fifth St<lb/>
WANTED USED LPs<lb/>
REWARD CASH OR TRADE<lb/>
Quicksilver Records. iOt East<lb/>
Fifth St.<lb/>
MODELS NEEDFO<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER needs models<lb/>
for a variety of proiects Will pay<lb/>
tor travel and up to J7S an hour<lb/>
based on experience No ex<lb/>
penence is required. Send full<lb/>
length and full face photo or port<lb/>
folio to NEW DAWN<lb/>
Photography J03E W Lockhaven.<lb/>
Goldsboro. NC 77S30.<lb/>
CRAZY ZACK'S ROAD TRIP Nov<lb/>
if sio includes round trip to Zacks<lb/>
and refreshments on the way to<lb/>
Raleigh Half price admission to<lb/>
Zack's. Call Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
7S2 1073 before Nov 12<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT. HONEST<lb/>
7a-fS30.<lb/>
IT DON'T Mean a thing if it ain't<lb/>
got that swing Sophisticated<lb/>
Ladies, Friday Nov Sth, Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
SIR DUKE, IH be the one sashay<lb/>
mg down the aisle at<lb/>
Sophistocated Ladies. Friday Nov<lb/>
Sth, see you Judith<lb/>
Take the "A" TRAIN, but get<lb/>
there Friday night for Duke EH<lb/>
ington's Sophistocated Ladies in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
YOU'LL HAVE it made with your<lb/>
3D shades See 1-OEVO in CEN<lb/>
Saturday, October 30th<lb/>
THE FIRST LIVE 3D concert in<lb/>
history is coming to ECU on Satur<lb/>
day, October 30th Come dressed<lb/>
to kill<lb/>
WALL OF VOODOO WHO'?? On<lb/>
ly 45 to find out with 3 OEVO on<lb/>
October 30th.<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
NEED RIDE from Washington.<lb/>
NC to ECU Mon. Fri 7.00<lb/>
a.m4:00 p.m. Call Joe l?'i<lb/>
94 47! collect, nights Desire to<lb/>
share expenses<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
HAND CRAFTED rustic ur<lb/>
niture at affordable student<lb/>
prices For more information, call<lb/>
Kim at 752 5717<lb/>
1 FISHER SPEAKERS model 530s<lb/>
would like to trade lor cassette<lb/>
deck. Call 75 877 or The East<lb/>
Carolinian 7S7 ?34 and leave<lb/>
messaoe loi GeeD Johnson<lb/>
FOR RENT ONE ROOM EFF<lb/>
APT for rent within walking<lb/>
distance of ECU Call 75 3057<lb/>
SURFBOARD It ACTION Chan<lb/>
ne! bottom glass on tins S175<lb/>
752-1124<lb/>
ANOTHER COUNTRY, another<lb/>
culture. Picture yourself in Costa<lb/>
Rica this spring carrying on your<lb/>
ECU studies at low cost want to<lb/>
know more? Dr Baker, Brewster<lb/>
A224; Dr Bort. Brew A201 or Dr.<lb/>
Farr, Brew A! 18.<lb/>
? foot 1 inch SINGLE FIN PIN<lb/>
TAIL m the eye surfboard fun<lb/>
Bayley suit and vest good deals<lb/>
Call Billy 7 57 304<lb/>
. ? .<lb/>
<lb/>
Photo Bv STANLEY LEARY<lb/>
Defensive ends Jody Schuiz and Jeff Pegues sack ISU's quarterback in<lb/>
Saturday's game.<lb/>
GALLERY LAINZBERG<lb/>
STROH'S<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Overton's<lb/>
Marsh's Surf-N' Sea<lb/>
AccuCopy<lb/>
Sharpe's<lb/>
Varsity Barber Shop<lb/>
Sandwich Game<lb/>
Arcade Variety &amp; Grill<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
Sharp's Formal Wear<lb/>
THE PHANTOM FORECASTER<lb/>
(the most accurate college football prediction sheet available)<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
at the<lb/>
following locations<lb/>
Hodges<lb/>
Bonds f<lb/>
Archie's Steaks<lb/>
Pantana Bobs<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Heart's Delight<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Mr. Gatti's<lb/>
Arcade Variety<lb/>
TUB. 0CT.lt, l?2 OO-IW ADt4f?? L00<lb/>
Reg. $229.95<lb/>
ThursFri.<lb/>
Oct. 28-29<lb/>
10-7<lb/>
ECUMendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;o? -12.000 btu-s .Cleanbumln9 ?cr?1X?<lb/>
?Odorless<lb/>
?Ideal for large areas<lb/>
batteries<lb/>
? ALL WE ASK IS - COMPARE!<lb/>
Lay a way Now.<lb/>
Also Located In Raleigh, 2741 E. 10th<lb/>
Wilmington &amp; Laurinburg j58-2080<lb/>
10-6MonFri.<lb/>
&amp;M&amp; CALL 75B-4W, OR carter &amp;2P<lb/>
Colonial Heights ,0s,<lb/>
Wed. -<lb/>
DTkMY witf w special any Elbo clothing worn<lb/>
PONY NITE K Beyerage fof 45C<lb/>
SPONSORED BY:<lb/>
CROWS NEST<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
SSNr40 GOO?$ ?0i.CAS?W0RKSH0P<lb/>
SaRSH'S SURF N SEA MARATHON RESTAURANT<lb/>
FOR HEAD'S ONLY<lb/>
SHARPE'S<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
PIZZA TRANSIT AUTHORITY<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Fast, Friendly Delivery<lb/>
Delivery is h'Kh.l-<lb/>
758-5982 or 5616<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
FOOD<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
Happy Hour ?<lb/>
2-Close<lb/>
$1" Pitcher<lb/>
45t Draft<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0014"/><lb/>
14 fHE EAST CAROL ONI AN OCTOBER 26, 1982<lb/>
U<lb/>
him j?<lb/>
mm, novmbcu<lb/>
Duke Ellington's<lb/>
PtlLTTi QTCD<lb/>
SATELLITE PRESENTATION<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
E.C. U. STUDENT UNION<lb/>
FRIDAY, NOV. 5th, 1982 ? 9:30 p.m. ? WRIGHT AUDITORIUM<lb/>
STUDENTS $6.00 ? FACULTYSTAFF $9.00 ? GENERAL PUBLIC $12.00<lb/>
DOORS OPEN 45 MINUTES EARLY ? COLLEGE ID. REQUIRED<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT The Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center-Central Ticket Office<lb/>
 PRODUCED BY ?<lb/>
b<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057508_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>