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<pb facs="00057511_0001"/>
?hc<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.19<lb/>
Thursday, November 4,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
City Council Proposes New Noise Ordinance<lb/>
 o   wc knuo alert rirnnwioHopH that limit the noise when thev think<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Wrilfr<lb/>
The city of Greenville has held<lb/>
two public hearings to invite public<lb/>
discussion on a recently proposed<lb/>
noise ordinance which, if approved<lb/>
by the full City Council, would have<lb/>
a direct impact on the students of<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
The noise ordinance would put<lb/>
decibel limits, which would be<lb/>
measured by a meter, on any ac-<lb/>
tivities where loud noise was a fac-<lb/>
tor. Limits would vary depending<lb/>
on location, day of the week and<lb/>
time, but under no circumstances<lb/>
could the decibel limit exceed 70<lb/>
without a permit, in which case the<lb/>
limit would be 85 decibels. Cost of a<lb/>
permit would vary anywhere from<lb/>
$5 to $50 depending on factors<lb/>
which have yet to be resolved.<lb/>
In its present form the noise or-<lb/>
dinance would even require permits<lb/>
for activities that took place on<lb/>
university owned property.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
Elmer Meyer was among a group of<lb/>
approximately 30 people who met<lb/>
with McCarley at a hearing that was<lb/>
held in Mendenhall last week.<lb/>
Meyer told The East Carolinian<lb/>
that he did not approve of the noise<lb/>
ordinance in its present form<lb/>
because he felt that the university<lb/>
was already doing a responsible job<lb/>
at controlling noise at campus func-<lb/>
tions and that he was opposed en-<lb/>
tirely to the permit clause.<lb/>
In a letter to McCarley, Meyer<lb/>
made these points of opposition:<lb/>
"The need to apply for permits and<lb/>
pay fees when events are held on<lb/>
university property, events which<lb/>
now must be registered with the<lb/>
university and approved before tak-<lb/>
ing place. The whole permit scheme,<lb/>
and fees seems to be unnecessary to<lb/>
fulfill the purposes of the or-<lb/>
dinance<lb/>
Meyer sent a copy of the ECU<lb/>
conference manual, which details<lb/>
university rules and procedures, to<lb/>
McCarley, which he says could easi-<lb/>
ly have the essence of any noise or-<lb/>
dinance added to its next edition.<lb/>
During the hearing, McCarley<lb/>
cited the TKE fraternity on 10th<lb/>
Street as a major source of the noise<lb/>
complaints that were being<lb/>
reported. "The file of complaints<lb/>
against the TKE's is extremely<lb/>
thick<lb/>
Associate Dean of Judiciary<lb/>
James B. Mallory, who oversees the<lb/>
activities of the Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
Council, acknowledged that he had<lb/>
gotten some complaints about<lb/>
noise, but not very many.<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell, campus<lb/>
minister at the Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center, which is next door to the<lb/>
TKE house, also acknowledged that<lb/>
there was a definite improvement in<lb/>
the levels of noise coming from her<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
Mallory agreed with Meyer that<lb/>
permits should not be required for<lb/>
on-campus events, but he did<lb/>
however recognize the need for an<lb/>
ordinance to be passed for the city<lb/>
of Greenville because the present<lb/>
laws regarding loud noise are not<lb/>
enforceable. McCarley made the<lb/>
same point during the hearing.<lb/>
Mallory added that the source of<lb/>
the noise problem ought to be<lb/>
removed or the orginization respon-<lb/>
sible has to be removed.<lb/>
"They've got to have some way to<lb/>
limit the noise when they think it's<lb/>
too loud said ECU English stu-<lb/>
dent Holly Gilliam, who is president<lb/>
of the College Hill Area Residence<lb/>
Council. Gilliam approved of the<lb/>
basic idea of an ordinance, although<lb/>
she claimed there was no problem at<lb/>
all with noise complaints in Iwr<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"I was distressed in the amount it<lb/>
will cost to get a permit said<lb/>
another resident council president.<lb/>
Danny White.<lb/>
Meyer, who made a number of<lb/>
amendment and change suggestions<lb/>
at the hearing, said McCarley would<lb/>
be notifying him before submitting<lb/>
the final document.<lb/>
Contributions Reach $500,000<lb/>
Athletic Fund Hits Half Way<lb/>
This Is The Lije<lb/>
Photo ttv Sf AMLET LEAHY<lb/>
One of ECU's finest takes advantage of Greenville's Indian summer and uses the unseasonably warm weather<lb/>
to do a little relaxed studying.<lb/>
By BOB MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU adminstration has<lb/>
reached the halfway mark of<lb/>
$500,000 in a drive to raise $1<lb/>
million for the athletic department.<lb/>
Started in early August, the cam-<lb/>
paign is expected to be completed by<lb/>
the end of 1982. It is being directed<lb/>
by the office of Chancellor John<lb/>
Ho well.<lb/>
Dick Blake, Howell's assistant,<lb/>
explained that the money is being<lb/>
donated through a five-year plan<lb/>
that is directed towards large con-<lb/>
tributors in both the private and<lb/>
public sectors. The money will be<lb/>
given to the athletic department to<lb/>
help support its budget.<lb/>
Athletic Director Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
said this is an attempt by the univer-<lb/>
sity to make ECU more competitive<lb/>
in the division I-A level of the Na-<lb/>
tional Collegiate Athletic Associa-<lb/>
Protestors Blockade 'Department Of War'<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A group of 200 people decided to<lb/>
take their election day vote to the<lb/>
Pentagon instead of the polls and as<lb/>
a result 29 people were arrested in<lb/>
what was billed as a blockade of the<lb/>
Pentagon by organizers.<lb/>
Under the theme: "If voting<lb/>
could stop the arms race, voting<lb/>
would be illegal the group took<lb/>
part in various activities designed to.<lb/>
disrupt the business as usual at-<lb/>
mosphere of what they referred to<lb/>
as the "department of war<lb/>
The 29 people arrested included<lb/>
many out of state residents. Most<lb/>
demonstrators classified themselves<lb/>
as "Christian Pacifists" who ob-<lb/>
jected to the nuclear arms race.<lb/>
Most were charged with<lb/>
blocking access to a government<lb/>
facility" as they chained themselves<lb/>
to the doors of two entrances to the<lb/>
Pentagon. Other protestors splat-<lb/>
tered their own blood on the Pen-<lb/>
tagon building, while another used<lb/>
acid to deface the concrete. All were<lb/>
released with out bail and given cita-<lb/>
tions. They were told to appear in<lb/>
court on Nov. 23.<lb/>
"People really went at it with<lb/>
great determination and non-<lb/>
violence said long time peace ac-<lb/>
tivist Elizabeth McAlister.<lb/>
McAlister, who is the wife of<lb/>
Catholic activist Philip Berrigan,<lb/>
was one of the key organizers of the<lb/>
protest. She and Berrigan live with<lb/>
their three children in what they<lb/>
refer to as a "resistance communi-<lb/>
ty" called Jonah House in<lb/>
Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
"On election day, whatever your<lb/>
vote, make it 'no' to nuclear an-<lb/>
nihilation was the message of the<lb/>
Baltimore community.<lb/>
"The first Trident (the USS Ohio)<lb/>
roams the seas armed for world<lb/>
wide destruction said McAlister.<lb/>
"The second (the USS Michigan)<lb/>
heads soon for its home base. The<lb/>
Pentagon schedules West European<lb/>
deployment of Pershing II and<lb/>
cruise for next year, first at Camiso,<lb/>
Sicily<lb/>
McAlister told The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian that all the demonstrators were<lb/>
completely aware of the conce-<lb/>
quences of their actions and that<lb/>
many were people who were involv-<lb/>
ed in peace protests for the first<lb/>
time. Some sympathetic lawyers<lb/>
also provided their services free of<lb/>
charge to those arrested.<lb/>
The protest, which began at 7<lb/>
a.m. and lasted till noon, included<lb/>
vigils, distributing leaflets and<lb/>
parading with banners.<lb/>
McAlister informed those who<lb/>
planned to be arrested that a jail<lb/>
sentence was a real possibility and<lb/>
that the consequences of being ar-<lb/>
rested at the Pentagon often varied.<lb/>
"We are best off following Gan-<lb/>
dhi's advice: 'Expect the best and<lb/>
prepare for the worst " McAlister<lb/>
said.<lb/>
tion. At the present, ECU is one of<lb/>
90 schools in the nation who are<lb/>
classified in this top category of in-<lb/>
tercollegiate athletics.<lb/>
To keep division I-A status, the<lb/>
university has to meet certain finan-<lb/>
cial requirements of the NCAA, in-<lb/>
cluding the size of the athletic<lb/>
department's operating budget. The<lb/>
chancellor's office explains that the<lb/>
purpose of the drive is an attempt to<lb/>
help the university retain this status.<lb/>
Currently, the athletic budget is<lb/>
$2.4 million. In five years, the pro-<lb/>
jection is for the budget to reach<lb/>
$3.5 million, an increase of almost<lb/>
50 percent.<lb/>
"We are only buying time for the<lb/>
next five years so we can get the pro-<lb/>
gram rejuvinated and self-<lb/>
sustainaing to be competitive at this<lb/>
higher level Blake said.<lb/>
In announcing the progress of the<lb/>
fund raising drive, Howell said,<lb/>
"We are extremely pleased with the<lb/>
positive response we have received<lb/>
in the first 90 days of the drive.<lb/>
More than 80 businesses and in<lb/>
dividuals have contributed the first<lb/>
$500,000 of the goal.<lb/>
"This favorable response reflects<lb/>
the confidence held in the future of<lb/>
our athletic program. It also shows<lb/>
the strong feeling of support by<lb/>
friends who have embraced East<lb/>
Carolina and its goal over the<lb/>
years<lb/>
The administration announced<lb/>
Tuesday that the Planters National<lb/>
Bank and Trust Company has<lb/>
pledged $10,000 towards the fund.<lb/>
According to Blake, another in-<lb/>
tention of the drive is to spur in-<lb/>
creases in ticket sales for revenue<lb/>
producing sports and membership<lb/>
in the Pirate Club. The Pirate Club<lb/>
annually raises money for the sup-<lb/>
port of the athletic program.<lb/>
Blake describes this undertaking<lb/>
by the administration as a<lb/>
"double-barrel dividend" for the<lb/>
entire unversity. He feels it will not<lb/>
only help sports but will also in-<lb/>
crease the prominence of the dif-<lb/>
ferent academic departments at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"Strong athletics and academics<lb/>
go hand in hand. We are not placing<lb/>
one above the other by any means<lb/>
but are shooting for quality and na-<lb/>
tional prominence in everything we<lb/>
do<lb/>
Reagan 9s Campaign Fails<lb/>
As Democrats Win Seats<lb/>
In Congressional Elections<lb/>
Honors Program To Hire Paid Director<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Assistant t?s Editor<lb/>
The ECU Honors Program is<lb/>
planning to hire a paid director next<lb/>
year,according to Myra Cain, assis-<lb/>
tant to the vice-chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs. The university is<lb/>
set to conduct a national search for<lb/>
the position ?<lb/>
Dr. David Sanders, coordinator<lb/>
for the program, has managed the<lb/>
department without pay for several<lb/>
years and has seen tremendous<lb/>
growth in the program's size.<lb/>
"What we need most is a direc-<lb/>
tor Sanders said.<lb/>
Sanders noted that the program<lb/>
has grown from about 12 students<lb/>
with one special topics seminar in<lb/>
1971 to a present enrollment of over<lb/>
200 students with five seminars and<lb/>
numerous honors sections of regular<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
The Honors Program is at present<lb/>
for General College only and is open<lb/>
to all ECU students with a 3.5 grade<lb/>
point average or other interested<lb/>
students with faculty approval.<lb/>
Some university departments have<lb/>
their own upper level honors pro-<lb/>
grms.<lb/>
Sanders would like to see all the<lb/>
honors programs combined and ex-<lb/>
panded to include upper level classes<lb/>
and more honors sections. He noted<lb/>
that the program has suffered from<lb/>
lack of funding in the past. Cain<lb/>
said there would be an operational<lb/>
funding increase along with the<lb/>
creation of the half-time director's<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"1 hope funding will mean only<lb/>
good things Sanders said. He<lb/>
noted that a paid director is needed<lb/>
to recruit faculty and students and<lb/>
to carry out the administrative<lb/>
aspects of the program.<lb/>
ECU has one of the strongest<lb/>
seminar programs for its size of any<lb/>
university in the country and puts<lb/>
more emphasis on interdisciplinary<lb/>
classes than most schools.<lb/>
"These seminars are ideally team<lb/>
taught (by two faculty<lb/>
members), "Sanders said. Many<lb/>
faculty who teach honors seminars<lb/>
must do so in addition to their<lb/>
regular teaching load.<lb/>
Dr. Norman Kosenfeid, a pro-<lb/>
fessor in the English department is a<lb/>
long time supporter of the honors<lb/>
program. "There's no reason we<lb/>
shouldn't have participation across<lb/>
the board. All schools should par-<lb/>
ticipate Rosenfeld said.<lb/>
Dr. Michael Bassman of the<lb/>
foreign languages department is<lb/>
another advocate of the program.<lb/>
Bassman said that the program<lb/>
"does for students what a<lb/>
humanities degree does. It teaches<lb/>
you how to think and exposes<lb/>
students to a variety of ideas He<lb/>
added that the program is less<lb/>
restrictive than normal courses and<lb/>
"gives students confidence<lb/>
Sanders cited important recogn-<lb/>
tion that the ECU program has<lb/>
received. "We belong to National<lb/>
Collegiate Honors Council, and<lb/>
we're getting respect and attention<lb/>
for our program<lb/>
The program has also received<lb/>
high marks from the Southern<lb/>
Regional Honors Council and the<lb/>
Southern Association of Colleges<lb/>
and Universities, who encouraged<lb/>
full funding for the program.<lb/>
By EMILY CASEY<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
Tuesday's election results, which<lb/>
saw a strong performance by North<lb/>
Carolina's Democratic candidates,<lb/>
marked a serious blow to the<lb/>
Republican party which had hoped<lb/>
to win as many as five or more new<lb/>
congressional seats.<lb/>
Last week President Reagan came<lb/>
to North Carolina to campaign for<lb/>
GOP congressional candidates, tell-<lb/>
ing North Carolina voters to "stay<lb/>
the course" and continue to support<lb/>
his policies.<lb/>
Yesterday's midterm election<lb/>
results, which could be viewed as a<lb/>
democratic landslide, may be in-<lb/>
dicative that North Carolinians have<lb/>
another course they wish to follow.<lb/>
Democrats swept nine out of North<lb/>
Carolina's 11 congressional seats<lb/>
with only the ninth and 10th District<lb/>
incumbants, James T. Broyhill and<lb/>
James G. Martin, keeping their<lb/>
Republican seats.<lb/>
Two Republican incumbants<lb/>
Wiliam M. Hendon of the 11th<lb/>
District and W. Eugene Johnston in<lb/>
the sixth were defeated by<lb/>
Democratic challengers.<lb/>
Hendon, who was defeated by<lb/>
Sec DEMOCRATS, Page 5<lb/>
Reserve Board Member<lb/>
To Lecture On Campus<lb/>
By GREG R1DEOUT<lb/>
NcwaEWtev<lb/>
A Federal Reserve Board Gover-<lb/>
nor and two North Carolina bank-<lb/>
ing leaders will be the speakers at a<lb/>
banking forum Nov. 9 from 1:30 to<lb/>
3:30 p.m. in Mendenhall 244. The<lb/>
Department of Finance will sponsor<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
Charles Partee, a member of the<lb/>
Federal Reserve Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors, will talk on the banking<lb/>
regulations of the future, said<lb/>
Department of Finance chairman<lb/>
Bruce Wardrip. Partee is chairman<lb/>
of the Federal Financial Institutions<lb/>
Examination Council, a body<lb/>
devoted to achieving greater unifor-<lb/>
mity in supervision, examination<lb/>
.and reports among the five agencies<lb/>
regulating depository institutions.<lb/>
Wardrip said that this was the<lb/>
first time in his memory that a man<lb/>
of Partee's stature has visited ECU.<lb/>
He empashized the important<lb/>
changes in the banking community<lb/>
within the last 10 years and said<lb/>
Partee, along with NCNB chairman<lb/>
Thomas I. Storrs and BB&amp;T<lb/>
Charlotte metropolitan manager<lb/>
Kelly S. King, will lead an open<lb/>
discussion on these issues.<lb/>
Storrs will be centering his talk on<lb/>
the bank of the future, while King<lb/>
will focus on everyday banking pro-<lb/>
cedures affected by the new era of<lb/>
deregulation.<lb/>
The Federal Reserve Board of<lb/>
See FED, Page 6<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi gets its poiat across with a larger-than-life<lb/>
a tea-cent piece. The fraternity was coUectiag for the March of<lb/>
hi front of the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
.i.t;<lb/>
?-<lb/>
i A ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Scholarships art available for<lb/>
School of Business majors.<lb/>
Students interested in making ap-<lb/>
plication should secure forms<lb/>
from the Financial Aid Office or<lb/>
one of the following department of-<lb/>
fices in the School of Business: Ac-<lb/>
counting - R32S; Decision Sciences<lb/>
R238; Finance - R343; Manage<lb/>
ment - R137, Marketing - R223. All<lb/>
applications must be submitted to<lb/>
Ruth Jones (R334), Chairman of<lb/>
Scnool of Business Scholarhips<lb/>
Committee by November 30, 1981.<lb/>
Final selection will be made by the<lb/>
ECU Student Scholarhips,<lb/>
Fellowships, and Financial Aid<lb/>
Committee upon recommendation<lb/>
of the Dean of the School of<lb/>
Business. The Dean's recommen-<lb/>
dation will be made from can-<lb/>
didates selected by the School of<lb/>
Business Scholarship Committee.<lb/>
The applicant must express an in-<lb/>
terest in insurance on the applica-<lb/>
tion and the permanent residence<lb/>
of a candidate for this scholarship<lb/>
must be in Eastern NC (East of<lb/>
Highway i -95; or any county west<lb/>
of Highway I -95 in which Pittard<lb/>
and Perry, Inc maintains an of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
BIBLE ISTRUTH<lb/>
The bible is truth, it is not just<lb/>
another good book, because it was<lb/>
written by Men of God. (II<lb/>
Timothy 3:16, II Peter 1:21). It is<lb/>
not a book of negative laws; but<lb/>
the heart of God giving us at-<lb/>
titudes and principles to live by so<lb/>
we can prosper, enjoy life, and<lb/>
really help others. (II Timothy<lb/>
3:16, John 10:10, I Timothy 6:17).<lb/>
Come learn more of the truth of<lb/>
God's word so you can change<lb/>
your life for the better. Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 18, at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, Rm. 242 at 7:30.<lb/>
LADIES OF<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
You must know a good looking<lb/>
guy. If so then turn to page 3.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Club, which is open to all faculty<lb/>
and staff, is holding a "silent auc-<lb/>
tion" and evening of wine and<lb/>
chees on November 7, from 5-7<lb/>
p.m. in the MSC.<lb/>
Individuals and businesses in<lb/>
the Greenville area have donated<lb/>
the items to be auctioned off.<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell will be the<lb/>
auctioneer this year. All procedes<lb/>
of the auction will benefit the<lb/>
Lillian J. Jenkins scholarship<lb/>
fund.<lb/>
GREEKS<lb/>
Marajen is here on Nov. 10 in<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tion will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 11, 1982. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R, Princeton, NJ<lb/>
08540. Applications may be obtain-<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room 105. Speight Building.<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test<lb/>
(LSAT) will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 4, 1982. Application<lb/>
blanks re to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R, Princeton, NJ<lb/>
08540. Registration deadline is<lb/>
November 4, 1982. Registrations<lb/>
postmarked after this date must<lb/>
accompained by a $15, non-<lb/>
refundable, late registration fee.<lb/>
RESIDENCE LIFE<lb/>
The Department of Residence<lb/>
Life is accepting applications tor<lb/>
Resident Advisors for Spring<lb/>
Semester. Applications can be ob-<lb/>
tained from the Residence Hall<lb/>
Directors, Area Coordinators and<lb/>
the Residence Life Office. The<lb/>
deadline for completed applica-<lb/>
tions is November 19.<lb/>
FREE CASH<lb/>
Forty-five minutes of your time<lb/>
could land you 15.00! Graduate<lb/>
students need participants to com-<lb/>
plete survey forms for a<lb/>
Marketing Research Project. A<lb/>
drawing for a 85 (five dollar) door<lb/>
prize will be held after each ses<lb/>
sion. Come to the appropriate<lb/>
room number in Rawl Building at<lb/>
any one of these times: Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 8: 10:00am, Rawl 201. Tues-<lb/>
day, Nov. 9, 12:00 noon, Rawl 203<lb/>
and 5:00 pm Rawl 203. Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. ii. l 00 pm, Rawl 203.<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
The career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering the following one hour<lb/>
sessions to help you prepare your<lb/>
own resume. November 10-2:00<lb/>
p.m. and November 11-2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Those seniors or graduate<lb/>
students finishing this year and<lb/>
planning to register with us are<lb/>
especially urged to attend. You<lb/>
may come to the Bloxton House at<lb/>
either of the above times.<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
The Career Planning and place-<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering these one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you in developing better in<lb/>
terviewing skills for use in your<lb/>
job search. You may select a time<lb/>
from those listed ; November<lb/>
10-3:30 p.m and November<lb/>
11-3:30 p.m.<lb/>
A film and discussion of inter-<lb/>
viewing through the Career Plann-<lb/>
ing and Placement Service will be<lb/>
shared.<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Learn new disc skills, play<lb/>
ultimate, or just come to the bot-<lb/>
tom of College Hill Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at 4:00 to throw frisbee<lb/>
and enjoy these remaining<lb/>
beautiful, warm autumn days.<lb/>
Club meetings art Mondays at<lb/>
8:00 in MSC, room 241. 1982<lb/>
Natural Light Flying Disc Classic<lb/>
Video will be shown at the Attic on<lb/>
wed. Nov 10.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
"Toward the New Millennium<lb/>
Challenges and Dreams will be<lb/>
the theme of the eighth annual<lb/>
ECU Phi Kappa Phi symposium to<lb/>
be held on campus in early<lb/>
February, of 83. A call for both<lb/>
faculty and student papers suppor-<lb/>
ting 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 for submission of<lb/>
November 15. Papers selected will<lb/>
be announced by November 24.<lb/>
Student papers directed toward<lb/>
the same theme art invited, two of<lb/>
which will be selected for a award<lb/>
of 8100 each. The best student<lb/>
paper submitted will be included<lb/>
in 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 FOR BUSINESS<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
There are positions available<lb/>
with the General Accounting Of-<lb/>
fice as an Evaluation Trainee.<lb/>
Students must have completed 75<lb/>
hours and be available for two<lb/>
work periods beginning in the Spr-<lb/>
ing 1983 semester. Conversion to<lb/>
permanent employment after<lb/>
graduation would be likely. For<lb/>
more information contact Carolyn<lb/>
Powell at the Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979.<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
On Nov. 8, 1982 SCEC will hold a<lb/>
bake sale in front of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store from 8:30 a.m. to4:00<lb/>
p.m. Please support Student Coun-<lb/>
cil tor Exeptional Children and<lb/>
buy something good to eat<lb/>
ART CONTEST<lb/>
The REBEL is conducting an art<lb/>
contest open to all current ECU<lb/>
students. There will be first prizes<lb/>
of $50 in seven categories and a<lb/>
$150 best-in-show prize. Prize<lb/>
money is provided by the Attic and<lb/>
Budweiser. The seven categories<lb/>
are: painting sculpture,<lb/>
ceramics, drawing,<lb/>
photoghraphy, design (meals,<lb/>
wood, fibers), and graphic art and<lb/>
illustration.<lb/>
Bring entries to Jenkins 1325 on<lb/>
November 5 with a one dollar en-<lb/>
try fee tor each piece. Limit two<lb/>
entries per artist. Entries should<lb/>
be ready for exhibition. All 2-D<lb/>
work must be prepared for hang-<lb/>
ing and framed or matted and<lb/>
acetated. All Sculpture must be<lb/>
self-supporting.<lb/>
Winners will be notified on Mon-<lb/>
day, November 8. Non-winning ar-<lb/>
tists must pick up their work on<lb/>
Monday before 4:00. Artists must<lb/>
sign a form giving the REBEL<lb/>
staff permission to move their<lb/>
work to the Greenville Museum of<lb/>
Art. If artists do not wish to<lb/>
release REBEL staff from all<lb/>
liability, they should move their<lb/>
own work that Monday.<lb/>
CATHOLIC<lb/>
NEWMAN CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
join in with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday in the Biology<lb/>
Lecture Hall starting at 12:30 and<lb/>
every Wednesday at 5:00 at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center located<lb/>
down at the bottom of College Hill.<lb/>
4-H<lb/>
There will be an important Col-<lb/>
legiate 4-H Club meeting Monday<lb/>
evening at 7:30 in Room 247 of<lb/>
Mendenhall student Center. We<lb/>
will be finalizing plans for the An-<lb/>
tique Car show on Nov. 13 so<lb/>
please try to attend. For questions<lb/>
call Denise or Teri at 758-8887.<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
The Alpah Tau Pledge class of<lb/>
the Kappa Sigma Fraternity is<lb/>
holding a car wash Saturday,<lb/>
November 6, from 10:00 a.m. to<lb/>
5:00 p.m. at the Cash n-Carry<lb/>
located on 14th Street. Wash and<lb/>
dry the outside of your car for $2.<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
On Nov. 22, 1982 in room 129<lb/>
Speight at 4:00 there wilt be a pro-<lb/>
gram of much interest. As our<lb/>
November program meeting<lb/>
SCEC has invited Special Educa-<lb/>
tion Directors from different<lb/>
school systems to talk about their<lb/>
system and job requirements.<lb/>
Please attend. It will be to your ad-<lb/>
vantage.<lb/>
POSITION FOR<lb/>
INDTMAJOR<lb/>
There is an opening with Long<lb/>
Manufacturing, Co. for a Quality<lb/>
Control Supervisor. This perma-<lb/>
nent position involves setting up<lb/>
and maintaining a quality control<lb/>
program in Rumania for tractors<lb/>
manufactured for Long. The star-<lb/>
ting date in immediately and the<lb/>
salary is negotiable. Contact Nan-<lb/>
cy Fillnow in the Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979, for more information.<lb/>
MODELING<lb/>
The ECU Commercial Art<lb/>
Departyment would like to invite<lb/>
all interested persons (male and<lb/>
Female) to attend our model<lb/>
cataloging photo sessions to be<lb/>
held on Wednesday, November 3<lb/>
and Thursday, November 4 from<lb/>
7-10 p.m. in the lighting studio of<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building. We will be<lb/>
photographing and cataloging<lb/>
anyone interested In modeling for<lb/>
fashion ads and layouts. All<lb/>
photographs will be filed and<lb/>
cataloged for future reference. All<lb/>
models chosen will be paid by the<lb/>
hour for their participation.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Part-time co-op training posi-<lb/>
tions are available with Buehler<lb/>
Mfg. Co. in Kinston. These train-<lb/>
ing positions could lead to full-<lb/>
time opportunities in Production<lb/>
Supervision. Production Control<lb/>
or Purchasing in the new Buehler<lb/>
plant In Raleigh beginning June,<lb/>
1983. All interested INDT majors<lb/>
contact Nancy Fillnow in the Co-<lb/>
op office, ext. 6979.<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Its still not too late to play.<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
womens rubgy needs to report to<lb/>
practices Tuesday thru Thursday<lb/>
at 4:00. We practice behind the<lb/>
Allied Health (Belk) building. Ab-<lb/>
solutely no previous experience is<lb/>
required.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The School of Art is offering ten<lb/>
scholarships for undergraduate<lb/>
art students of the junior and<lb/>
senior rank. Eight scholarships<lb/>
are in the amount of $250 each.<lb/>
Two scholarships, established by<lb/>
Don and Jack Edwards of the<lb/>
University Book Exchange, are in<lb/>
the amount of $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, ti-<lb/>
tle, media, and size) must accom-<lb/>
pany the scholarship application<lb/>
form. Application forms may be<lb/>
obtained from the School of Art Of-<lb/>
fice. The deadline for all com-<lb/>
pleted application material is<lb/>
November 30.<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
The ECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday, Nov. 7 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Room 221. The sup-<lb/>
per will begin at 6.00 p.m. with a<lb/>
short business meeting and cap<lb/>
tioned film to follow.<lb/>
The meal and meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, faculty<lb/>
member, or a member of the com-<lb/>
munity. You do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Lnguage to attend, but<lb/>
students who are taking sign<lb/>
language classes or who have<lb/>
taken them in the past are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend. The purpose of<lb/>
the SLC is to allow sign language<lb/>
students and hearing impaired<lb/>
students and community<lb/>
members to socialize and develop<lb/>
communication skills.<lb/>
We hope to sac you there.<lb/>
PHI BETA<lb/>
LAMBDA TO<lb/>
HOSTCONFERENCE<lb/>
Omicron Chapter of Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda will host the Fall<lb/>
Membership Training Conference<lb/>
for hte State Chapter on Saturday,<lb/>
November 6. Advance registration<lb/>
indicates that over 150 members<lb/>
from 20 colleges in North Carolina<lb/>
will attend. All meetings art<lb/>
scheduled for Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
Freshman Registers may be<lb/>
picked up in the Buccaneer office<lb/>
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from<lb/>
2:00 p.m. till 5:00 p.m. The Buc-<lb/>
caneer Office is located on the se-<lb/>
cond floor of the Publications<lb/>
Building. NOTE: All Freshmen<lb/>
Registers must be picked up by<lb/>
October 20. Remember you have<lb/>
already paid for this publication,<lb/>
so why let your money go to waste.<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 inedivldual research<lb/>
under staff's supervision. The sti-<lb/>
pend for these fellowships is $2000.<lb/>
All interested graduate students<lb/>
should contact hte Co-op office, 313<lb/>
Rawl, ext. 6979.<lb/>
SIERRA CLUB<lb/>
Interested in canoeng,<lb/>
backpacking and conservation?<lb/>
Our meeting this month concerns<lb/>
conservation of our beaches and<lb/>
coastal resources. Coming outings<lb/>
will be described. We meet in<lb/>
basement of First Presbyterian<lb/>
church, corner of 14th and Elm at<lb/>
? p.m. Monday, Nov. 0. You will be<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
192 Natural Light Flying Disc<lb/>
Classic Video will be shown at the<lb/>
Attic on Wed. Nov. 10. Free<lb/>
beverage for those wearing tour-<lb/>
nament shirts. Play ultimate at<lb/>
the bottom of the hill on Tues. and<lb/>
Thurs. at 4:00 - the team is getting<lb/>
hot and an ultimate tournament is<lb/>
planned for a future date.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
There will be a business meeting<lb/>
of SCEC on Nov. 8, 192 at 4:00<lb/>
pm. in Room 129 Speight. Please<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
RECIPES<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff are<lb/>
invited to submit their favorite<lb/>
recipes to be compiled into a<lb/>
cookbok of ECU'S favorite recipes.<lb/>
Ten of the final entries will be<lb/>
selected for the BAKE-OFF,<lb/>
which the date will be announced<lb/>
later. The recipes will be judged<lb/>
on I) originality 2)appearance and<lb/>
3)taste. The grand prize will be<lb/>
dinner for two at Darryl's<lb/>
Restaurant. Submit your recipes<lb/>
in designated boxes located at<lb/>
Mendenhall, Student Supply Store<lb/>
and selected Dormitories. For any<lb/>
additional information- call<lb/>
758-3272 or 757-1920. Come on ECU-<lb/>
get involved.<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The ECU Student union Special<lb/>
Concerts Committee will present<lb/>
Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated<lb/>
Ladies" live via-satellite from<lb/>
Broadway on November 5. The<lb/>
program will take place in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets for the show art on sale<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Offices and<lb/>
are priced at $6 for ECU students,<lb/>
$9 for ECU faculty and staff and<lb/>
-$12 for the public. For additional<lb/>
information contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
50,000 people die every day from<lb/>
Starvation) If you would like to<lb/>
find out how YOU CAN HELP stop<lb/>
these tragedies from happening,<lb/>
you art invited to an End Hunger<lb/>
Breifing to be hew on Tuesday,<lb/>
November 16, from 3 to 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Coffeehouse In Mendenhall.<lb/>
For more information on this im-<lb/>
portant please call Steve Dear at<lb/>
752 8786 or Jennifer Baugham at<lb/>
355-655.<lb/>
DRAMATIC<lb/>
STARVATION<lb/>
The ECU Hunger Coalition is<lb/>
trying to put a stop to Ihis<lb/>
holocaust. Come to our important<lb/>
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. at 9S3<lb/>
E. 10th Street. Call for more infer<lb/>
mation 752-4216.<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. in the<lb/>
community room at First<lb/>
American Savings &amp; Loan<lb/>
(formerly East Federal Savings &amp;<lb/>
loan) in Greenville.<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 Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979.<lb/>
CO?OP JOB<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in Green-<lb/>
ville has an alternating Co-op posi-<lb/>
tion open in its Validation Depart-<lb/>
ment. The job will be far two<lb/>
terms beginning in January, 1983.<lb/>
INDT students with some<lb/>
background in math, physics,<lb/>
computers, electricity, and<lb/>
chemistry and who hav good<lb/>
writing skills shou 3 contact Nan-<lb/>
cy Fillnow in the Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979.<lb/>
ZETA BETA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
There will be a pledge class in<lb/>
auction Nov. 4 at 6:00 and coat and<lb/>
tie is required, it will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall Conference room on<lb/>
the second floor. Monthly dues are<lb/>
due at this time. There will be an<lb/>
executive board meeting at 5:30.<lb/>
Orders for jerseys and hooded<lb/>
sweatshirts will be taken. Please<lb/>
bring money or check if you are in<lb/>
forested in getting one. All<lb/>
members must attend.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Black and Decker in Tarboro<lb/>
has an opening for a part-time ac<lb/>
counting clerk. The person must<lb/>
be able to perform miscellaneous<lb/>
accounting duties such as paying<lb/>
invoices and general bookkeep<lb/>
ing. Preferred is someone who can<lb/>
operate a 10-key adding machine.<lb/>
Employment would start as soon<lb/>
as possible. For more info, call the<lb/>
Co-op office, ext 6979<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. Call Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757-6000 if you need<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
1982 Natural Light Flying Disc<lb/>
Classic Video wil be shown at the<lb/>
Attic Wednesday, Nov. 10. Come<lb/>
out and play ultimate Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday at 4:00 at the bottome of<lb/>
the hill. Hey Tony, how about an<lb/>
ultimate tournament!? We've got<lb/>
the best team we've ever had ?<lb/>
Wonder if we could beat state?<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
The ECU Percussion Ensemble<lb/>
will present a concert on Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 8,1982 at 8:15p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall. The concert<lb/>
will feature music of George<lb/>
Frock, Warren Benson, Mitchell<lb/>
Peters, as well as transcriptions of<lb/>
music by Stravinsky and Debussy.<lb/>
The concert is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
$1 MILLION<lb/>
PER MINUTE<lb/>
Our world spends $1 million a<lb/>
minute on military spending ? we<lb/>
now have 60,000 nuclear weapons<lb/>
on our planet. Does this,outrage<lb/>
you? Then join in the acthitfcs of<lb/>
The Greenville Peace committee.<lb/>
We meet Friday nights at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. at 610 South Elm St. For<lb/>
more information call 758-4906.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Chi presents another in-<lb/>
teresting and Informative meeting<lb/>
Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 129<lb/>
Speight. Mr. Dick Daves will<lb/>
discuss the many ways Biofeed-<lb/>
back is used In today's society and<lb/>
give a better insight into this topic.<lb/>
Come and find out how Biofeed-<lb/>
back can help you in everyday life.<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/>
organizations will be here on the<lb/>
following dates: November 5 -<lb/>
Nursing building 9:45-1:00 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/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Our fiext meeting will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 4th in<lb/>
Mendenhall's room 244 at 7 p.m. A<lb/>
meeting for those going to State<lb/>
Convention will be held im-<lb/>
mediately following.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The American College Testing<lb/>
(ACT) will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday.<lb/>
December 11, 1982. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
Box 414, Iowa City. Iowa 52240. Ap<lb/>
plications may be obtained from<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105<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 tob will in-<lb/>
volve working with chemistry<lb/>
researchers and begins in January<lb/>
1983 running for about six months.<lb/>
All interested chemistry majors<lb/>
with at least two semesters of<lb/>
organic chemistry should contact<lb/>
Nancy Fillnow in the Co-op office,<lb/>
ext. 6979.<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
On Nov. 30, 1982 Student Council<lb/>
for Exceptional Children will host<lb/>
the Caswell Spirit Singers for a<lb/>
Christmas concert. The concert<lb/>
will begin at 3:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Auditorium 244 Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Everyone is invited<lb/>
and welcome Come out and get<lb/>
into the Christmas spirit early.<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Weather permitting, we win be<lb/>
at the bottom of college hill today,<lb/>
and every Tues. and Thurs. at<lb/>
4:00. Look for the frisbee club in<lb/>
the Homecoming parade. 1982<lb/>
Natural Light Flying Disc Classic<lb/>
Video will be shown at the Attic<lb/>
Wed. Nov. 10. Club meetings are<lb/>
Monday nights 8:00 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Room 248; anyone interested in<lb/>
frisbee is urged to attend.<lb/>
SIG-EP<lb/>
BROTHERS<lb/>
Thank you for accepting us as<lb/>
Little Sisters into your great<lb/>
fraternity. Fraternally devoted.<lb/>
Little Sisters!<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Automatic Data Processing in<lb/>
Charlotte has a co-op position open<lb/>
for a CSC1 major, undergraduate<lb/>
or graduate. The job will involve<lb/>
technical support and operating<lb/>
systems. Students should have<lb/>
analytical skills and a background<lb/>
in Assembler, Compiler, Coboi.<lb/>
and RPG languages. The alter<lb/>
nating position will run from<lb/>
January May. For more info con<lb/>
tact Carolyn Powell in me Co-op<lb/>
of ice, ext. 6979, Rawl 313.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The Co-op office has a job open<lb/>
ing for an accounting position<lb/>
avaible with a local manufactur<lb/>
ing firm. Requires adding<lb/>
-nachine experience and accoun-<lb/>
ting background. Interested<lb/>
students should inquire at the Co-<lb/>
op office, located in Rawl at room<lb/>
313.<lb/>
PRC MAJORS<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goldsboro, NC has an<lb/>
alternating Co-op position<lb/>
available tor Spring semester in<lb/>
the ir recreation department The<lb/>
position reequires a 2.0 GPA and<lb/>
you must be willing to work for<lb/>
two terms. It is an excellent opor<lb/>
tunity for anyone interested in<lb/>
gaining valuable work experience<lb/>
in the area of recreation Salary:<lb/>
approximately $1,000 per monrh<lb/>
gross. Contact Nancy Fillnow in<lb/>
the Coop office. 313 Rawl,<lb/>
757 6979. it you would like to apply<lb/>
or want more information<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The Norm Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will be holding a<lb/>
membership screening meeting,<lb/>
Monday night. Nov. 8 in room 238<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
The meeting will start at 6 p.m.<lb/>
and all interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to come and learn about me<lb/>
NCSL.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will hold its weekly<lb/>
meeting Monday night in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Room<lb/>
248. The meeting will start at 7<lb/>
p.m. All members and interested<lb/>
persons are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
CO-OP POSITION<lb/>
The U.S. Naval Academy in An<lb/>
napoiis, MD has a posiNen open<lb/>
for a Co-op student to work as a .<lb/>
programmer analyst. Tne-stubent<lb/>
must have a computer cscience<lb/>
background and should be a<lb/>
junior, the work experience is<lb/>
alternating for two periods, the<lb/>
first beginning on January 3. 1982<lb/>
For more info contact Carolyn<lb/>
Powell in the Co-op office, ext<lb/>
6979 Rawl 313.<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 call<lb/>
752 3022 for more information.<lb/>
BACKGAMMON<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
If you love backgammon ana<lb/>
fancy yourself pretty gooo. men<lb/>
sign up ??? for the 1982 Depart<lb/>
ment of university Unions ACU-i<lb/>
All Campus Backgammon Tour<lb/>
namenf. The tournament will be<lb/>
conducted to determine the twe<lb/>
winners who will represent ECU.<lb/>
if sufficient participation permits<lb/>
in the Association of College<lb/>
Unions International reg-c-a<lb/>
face to-face tournaments to be<lb/>
held at the University of Ten<lb/>
nessee on February 10. II. ana 12.<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
interested persons may pick up<lb/>
a registration form at the Biiiiaros<lb/>
Center at Mendenhall Stuoen<lb/>
Center. The form must be com<lb/>
Dieted and submitted to the super<lb/>
visor on duty at the center t?<lb/>
Tues Nov. 9.<lb/>
The tournament will beam or<lb/>
Thurs . Nov 11 at 6 p.m in the<lb/>
MSC Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
Double-elimination andor round<lb/>
robin format win be usea Eac-<lb/>
match will be played to a<lb/>
designated point total<lb/>
An entry tee of SI is required anc<lb/>
payable at the tournament 'e<lb/>
The participants who will be going<lb/>
to Tennessee will have the costs o?<lb/>
lodging, transportation, meals<lb/>
and entry fees paid by Menaenhan<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
Each participant will be re<lb/>
quired to show his-her ECU ID or<lb/>
driver's license ana activity cara<lb/>
prior to the start of the 'ourna<lb/>
ment The ACU I Backgammon<lb/>
Tournament Rules will be used m<lb/>
the competition Copies of the<lb/>
rules are available tor use at the<lb/>
Billiards Center it is - ; .<lb/>
recommended that all par<lb/>
ticipents study tte rules prior to<lb/>
the tournament. Each participant<lb/>
must have a 2.0 GPA. This win be<lb/>
verified with the Registrars Of<lb/>
f ice. Each participant is requestec<lb/>
to bring a backgammon board H<lb/>
possible<lb/>
Trophies will be awaroea to me<lb/>
first, second and third place<lb/>
finishers.<lb/>
IBM CO?OP<lb/>
IBM in Charlotte and Greenville<lb/>
have alternating co-op positions<lb/>
tor CSCI or mam maiors The<lb/>
work in Charlotte involves pro<lb/>
gramming while the Greenville<lb/>
tob includes general training with<lb/>
me company The positions are ?o<lb/>
start in January Contact Carolyn<lb/>
Powell in the Co-op ott.ee. ext<lb/>
6979 Rawl 313. for more into<lb/>
DUKE POWER<lb/>
Duke Power m Charlotte has a<lb/>
co op position open tor a program<lb/>
mer analyst. The job is alternating<lb/>
tor two periods, the first beginning<lb/>
January 3, 1982. Interested CSCi<lb/>
or math majors, preferably<lb/>
juniors with a GPA of at least 2 0<lb/>
and a fairly strong computer<lb/>
background, chould contact<lb/>
Carolyn Powell m the Co op office<lb/>
ext. 6979, Rawl 313<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organizat-or<lb/>
would tike to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form ana send it to The Eas"<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the Eas' Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten fopy on<lb/>
odd-sized paper cannot 't? ac<lb/>
cepfedV<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space s often<lb/>
limited. Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest mat you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column tor publicity.<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 3 p.m. Monday for me Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3 p.m. Wednesaayy for<lb/>
the Thursday paper No an<lb/>
nouncements received after mese<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to an<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Duke Ellington's<lb/>
tm mon<lb/>
TC'iaM<lb/>
'SATELLITE PRESENTATION<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
E.C. U. STUDENT UNION<lb/>
FRIDAY, NOV. 5th, 1962 ? 9:30 p.m. ? WRIGHT AUDITORIUM<lb/>
STUDENTS $3.00 ? FACULTYSTAFF $5.00 ? GENERAL PUBLIC S12.0Q<lb/>
DOORS OPEN 45 MINUTES EARLY ? COLLEGE I.D. REQUIRED<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT The Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center-Central Ticket Office<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
PRODUCED BY<lb/>
Rl AU l<lb/>
H<lb/>
A series of<lb/>
lectures spot<lb/>
the ECU<lb/>
of Library<lb/>
Alumni Asl<lb/>
kicked off its I<lb/>
program witt<lb/>
on "Library<lb/>
for the Han<lb/>
held last<lb/>
night.<lb/>
"It was i<lb/>
program<lb/>
Lo<lb/>
Do<lb/>
B 1 R M I N<lb/>
Ala. (L'Pl)<lb/>
cigarettes d<lb/>
result in a ci<lb/>
tar and nicd<lb/>
sumed by si<lb/>
cording to<lb/>
presented<lb/>
by scientist<lb/>
American<lb/>
Society<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
U.S. Depa<lb/>
Agriculture<lb/>
from Athensl<lb/>
people who<lb/>
cigarettes p<lb/>
on their smo<lb/>
a result, in hi<lb/>
much tar ai<lb/>
as smokers<lb/>
cigarettes.<lb/>
The rese?<lb/>
Dr. Witliai<lb/>
zhauer, Dr.<lb/>
tvk and Rot<lb/>
of the USD<lb/>
co Safety<lb/>
Unit ? defi?!<lb/>
cigarettes as<lb/>
three t<lb/>
milligrams<lb/>
They sa<lb/>
though tar<lb/>
levels in cigs<lb/>
dropped si<lb/>
over the ias<lb/>
Ol Camovoi<lb/>
T-Skirti. l<lb/>
Backpacks. c?<lb/>
ment. Steel Te<lb/>
and Over rm Oil<lb/>
Used Items.<lb/>
ARMY-<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
t -i<lb/>
A<lb/>
0<lb/>
sa;<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
lUGraj<lb/>
7sal<lb/>
fe t Iy-i?<lb/>
. B ??? ?? -<lb/>
"?itfcii?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 4, 1982 3<lb/>
iMMON<lb/>
tMENT<lb/>
Sckgammon and<lb/>
Iretty good, then<lb/>
lt'ie 1982 Depart<lb/>
Itv Unions ACUI<lb/>
bkgammon Tour<lb/>
Lmament will be<lb/>
termtne the two<lb/>
represent ECU,<lb/>
Ic oation permits,<lb/>
ltion of College<lb/>
t.onal regional<lb/>
rnamenrs to be<lb/>
liversity of Ten<lb/>
10. 11 and 12.<lb/>
ions may pick up<lb/>
r at the Billiards<lb/>
enhall Student<lb/>
must be com<lb/>
tied to the super<lb/>
the center by<lb/>
Ir wii begin on<lb/>
I ?T 6 p.m in the<lb/>
urD0se Room<lb/>
lo ? ana or round<lb/>
III oe usea Each<lb/>
Diayed to a<lb/>
J lota)<lb/>
Is is required and<lb/>
Itvurnament site<lb/>
1 who will be going<lb/>
I "ave the costs ot<lb/>
?ortation. meals<lb/>
pu by Menoenhali<lb/>
pi W will be re<lb/>
is er ECU ID or<lb/>
 a activity card<lb/>
I ot the fourna<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
a oe used in<lb/>
Copies ot the<lb/>
e tor use at the<lb/>
it is htgnly<lb/>
?ha' an par<lb/>
e rules prior to<lb/>
J Each participant<lb/>
GPA This will be<lb/>
Registrar s Of<lb/>
Jipant is requested<lb/>
immon board if<lb/>
awarded to the<lb/>
: th.rd place<lb/>
to?OP<lb/>
a and Greenviile<lb/>
co-op positions<lb/>
?n maiors The<lb/>
t involves pro<lb/>
the Greenville<lb/>
rai training with<lb/>
positions are to<lb/>
Contact Carolyn<lb/>
op off.ce ext<lb/>
Tvore 'nto.<lb/>
POWER<lb/>
Charlc'te has a<lb/>
I tor a program<lb/>
00 isal'ernahng<lb/>
Ime trst beginning<lb/>
Interested CSC I<lb/>
Kri oreterably<lb/>
JPA of at least 2.0<lb/>
I S'rong computer<lb/>
cnoulo contact<lb/>
Jin the Co op office.<lb/>
ICEMENTS<lb/>
cur organization<lb/>
e an item printed<lb/>
hcement column,<lb/>
 an announcement<lb/>
t to The East<lb/>
??e of the produc<lb/>
forms are<lb/>
Eas? Carolinian<lb/>
locations Building<lb/>
?ritten copy on<lb/>
cannot be ac<lb/>
charge for an<lb/>
bu' space is often<lb/>
Ifore, we cannot<lb/>
your announce<lb/>
long as vou want<lb/>
it you oo not rely<lb/>
llumn for publicity.<lb/>
fcr announcements<lb/>
??or the Tuesday<lb/>
Aeonesoayy for<lb/>
aper No an-<lb/>
eived after these<lb/>
printed<lb/>
?s available to all<lb/>
b' ens and depart<lb/>
Handicapped Give Lecture<lb/>
A series of monthly<lb/>
lectures sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Department<lb/>
of Library and its<lb/>
Alumni Association<lb/>
kicked off its 1982-1983<lb/>
program with a lecture<lb/>
on "Library Problems<lb/>
for the Handicapped"<lb/>
held last Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
"It was an excellent<lb/>
program said Dr.<lb/>
Donald E. Collins,<lb/>
associate professor in<lb/>
the Department of<lb/>
Library Science and<lb/>
coordinator Of the lec-<lb/>
ture series. "People get<lb/>
a lot more out of<lb/>
something if they hear<lb/>
it from a handicapped<lb/>
person Collins add-<lb/>
ed, referring to the<lb/>
panel of three disabled<lb/>
ECU students who<lb/>
presented the program.<lb/>
The lecture was<lb/>
designed to give<lb/>
librarians, teachers and<lb/>
interested persons the<lb/>
opportunity to hear<lb/>
handicapped students<lb/>
relate their experiences<lb/>
in doing library<lb/>
research.<lb/>
ECU English student<lb/>
Mary Susan Menius<lb/>
represented hearing im-<lb/>
Low Tar Cigarettes<lb/>
Don 9t Help Smokers<lb/>
paired library users.<lb/>
Richard Hartness, a<lb/>
chemistry major spoke<lb/>
on the problems of the<lb/>
blind and history<lb/>
graduate student<lb/>
Richard Burke spoke<lb/>
on the difficulties of<lb/>
wheelchair bound<lb/>
library users.<lb/>
Hartness mentioned<lb/>
that just familiarizing<lb/>
himself with the library<lb/>
and knowing his way<lb/>
around was difficult.<lb/>
He also spoke of the<lb/>
special needs, such as<lb/>
auditory aids and<lb/>
reading material in<lb/>
Braille, that blind peo-<lb/>
ple have.<lb/>
quire ramps to gain en-<lb/>
trance to them. He<lb/>
noted that card<lb/>
catalogues and book<lb/>
shelves are often out of<lb/>
the reach of wheelchair<lb/>
students. He added his<lb/>
wish that library<lb/>
employees would be<lb/>
more sensitive to the<lb/>
special needs of disabl-<lb/>
ed students.<lb/>
Another lecture deal-<lb/>
ing with the same sub-<lb/>
ject will be held on Dec.<lb/>
2 in Room 221 of the<lb/>
ECU library sciences<lb/>
department, Joyner<lb/>
Library. The speakers<lb/>
will be Charles Fox and<lb/>
Penny Hornsby of the<lb/>
N.C. Regional Library<lb/>
218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
752-4156<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
BIRMINGHAM,<lb/>
Ala. (UPI) ? Low-tar<lb/>
cigarettes don't really<lb/>
result in a cutdown of<lb/>
tar and nicotine con-<lb/>
sumed by smokers, ac-<lb/>
cording to a report<lb/>
presented Wednesday<lb/>
by scientists at an<lb/>
American Chemical<lb/>
Society regional<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
U.S. Department of<lb/>
Agriculture scientists<lb/>
from Athens, Ga said<lb/>
people who like low-tar<lb/>
cigarettes puff harder<lb/>
on their smokes and, as<lb/>
a result, inhale about as<lb/>
much tar and nicotine<lb/>
as smokers of regular<lb/>
cigarettes.<lb/>
The researchers ?<lb/>
Dr. William Schlot-<lb/>
zhauer, Dr. O.T. Chor-<lb/>
tyk and Robert Martin<lb/>
of the USDA's Tobac-<lb/>
co Safety Research<lb/>
Unit ? defined low-tar<lb/>
cigarettes as those with<lb/>
three to seven<lb/>
milligrams of tar.<lb/>
They said even<lb/>
though tar and nicotine<lb/>
levels in cigarettes have<lb/>
dropped significantly<lb/>
over the last 30 years,<lb/>
the volume of smoke<lb/>
inhaled by the average<lb/>
smoker has increased<lb/>
appreciably during the<lb/>
same period.<lb/>
"The duration of the<lb/>
puff and puff frequen-<lb/>
cy have also increas-<lb/>
ed said Chortyk.<lb/>
"Our laboratory<lb/>
results indicate that as a<lb/>
consequence of this<lb/>
change in smoking<lb/>
behavior, many<lb/>
smokers are inhaling a<lb/>
lot more tar and<lb/>
nicotine than is in-<lb/>
dicated by the Federal<lb/>
Trade Commission<lb/>
figures calculated for<lb/>
these cigarettes he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The scientists used<lb/>
smoking machines to<lb/>
simulate various smok-<lb/>
ing behaviors and then<lb/>
analyzed the com-<lb/>
ponents of inhaled<lb/>
smoke. Several brands<lb/>
of low-tar cigarettes<lb/>
were tested.<lb/>
"When we increase<lb/>
the puff volume from<lb/>
35 milliliters ? the<lb/>
average volume for a<lb/>
smoker of 30 years ago<lb/>
? to 48 milliliters ? a<lb/>
typical volume for a<lb/>
smoker of today's low-<lb/>
tar cigarettes ? we find<lb/>
a dramatic increase in<lb/>
the levels of certain in-<lb/>
haled smoke com-<lb/>
ponents said Chor-<lb/>
tyk.<lb/>
He explained that<lb/>
smoke contains<lb/>
thousands of<lb/>
chemicals, many of<lb/>
which are known to be<lb/>
hazardous to human<lb/>
health, and the levels of<lb/>
many of these<lb/>
chemicals increased<lb/>
with the increased puff<lb/>
volume.<lb/>
Smoking machines<lb/>
were also used to study<lb/>
the effects of<lb/>
simultaneously increas-<lb/>
ing puff volume, dura-<lb/>
tion and frequency.<lb/>
Results of that study<lb/>
indicate today's<lb/>
average low-tar<lb/>
cigarette smoker, with<lb/>
some exceptions, in-<lb/>
hales about as much tar<lb/>
and nicotine as does the<lb/>
average smoker who<lb/>
smokes higher tar<lb/>
cigarettes.<lb/>
Burke mentioned the for the Blind and<lb/>
fact that libraries are Physically Handicap-<lb/>
"built high" and re- ped in Raleigh.<lb/>
All Polo &amp;<lb/>
Lacoste Frames<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
with purchase of<lb/>
prescription lens.<lb/>
(This coupon Mint<lb/>
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V5ttTci<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
31S Park view Cammoai<lb/>
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Open t a.mtil S: JO p.m.<lb/>
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ALL SWEATS 507o POLYESTER, 50 COTTON;<lb/>
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ELASTIC WAIST WITH DRAWSTRING,<lb/>
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ALL CREWNECK SWEATSHIRTS - REG. $8.95<lb/>
FULL CUT PATTERN, CREW NECK,<lb/>
SET-IN SLEEVES, RIBBED NECK, CUFF, WAIST.<lb/>
$1.00 OFF WTTHTHCCOUfOM.<lb/>
XlThoodedpulloverjackets -<lb/>
REG. $1.50<lb/>
FULL-CUT PATTERN, SET-IN SLEEVES,<lb/>
HOODED, RIBBED CUFFS AND WAIST,<lb/>
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$2.00 OFF WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
CUP THESE COUPONS FOR YOUR NEXT PURCHASE.<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES 111382<lb/>
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T-Shirts, Sleeping Bags,<lb/>
Backpacks, Camping Equip-<lb/>
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ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
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Mitchell's Hair Styling Salon<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
is offering a<lb/>
Body Wave Special<lb/>
Bring this coupon in<lb/>
and get $3.00 off<lb/>
the price of<lb/>
any body wave.<lb/>
Spec, good thru Nov. 10,1982<lb/>
l<lb/>
l<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
Phone - 756-2950 or 756-4042<lb/>
When it comes to the food at Taco<lb/>
Bell there's really only one school<lb/>
of thought. What a difference!<lb/>
To begin with, your order's made<lb/>
up fresh from the best ingredients.<lb/>
That's different. And it's all served<lb/>
up piping hot to be sure you get all of<lb/>
the delicious flavor. That's different.<lb/>
You also get served fast, which<lb/>
means that our schedule will keep<lb/>
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And you get it all at the terrific<lb/>
Taco BelL price. That's really different.<lb/>
Plus, where else do you find food<lb/>
with deliciously different names like<lb/>
Taco Supreme Burrito Supreme,<lb/>
and Enchirito.? Each one a far cry<lb/>
from the usual fast food fare (not to<lb/>
mention whatever that is they serve<lb/>
in the cafeteria).<lb/>
So cut out the coupon, then cut<lb/>
out for Taco Bell and see for your-<lb/>
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sr<lb/>
r<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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please present this<lb/>
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limit: one coupon<lb/>
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GOOD ONLY AT 319 L(ar?xtrYaleBoutevanl Grecartlc<lb/>
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OFFER EXPtRES<lb/>
October 31, 982<lb/>
?, .??-<lb/>
?oji mi ii ?w?i iaW?iai a? ?rfOi<lb/>
lll- jfit.j, . - ??!?! ?? ??? ??aMM?aiii?iiBi"a?i?? ???<lb/>
t ? .?<lb/>
???i i? ?-IT m 0 ???? ?i'<lb/>
.mm? a.it ia? ??-? vaaavVi? ?"<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0004"/><lb/>
?fte ?0t (Hwculinim<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, ow mmo<lb/>
Mike Hughes. ,??.?,???<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. Orrctor of Advertising<lb/>
Robert Rucks, mmm ???<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH. Crtdk Manager<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, arc "<lb/>
JONl GUTHRIE. TechnKa! Supervisor<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants, spomEdnor<lb/>
Greg Rideout, ????<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Juliana Fahrbach, saw-<lb/>
Mike Davis, production Mmv-<lb/>
November 4, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Law's Long Arm<lb/>
Reagan Deputizes Financial Aides<lb/>
In what has become almost a<lb/>
characteristic move for the Reagan<lb/>
administration, the President<lb/>
recently signed into law a bill mak-<lb/>
ing college financial aid offices an<lb/>
extension of the Selective Service.<lb/>
If the above makes little or no<lb/>
sense to you, don't feel alone; it's<lb/>
questionable whether Reagan<lb/>
understands the concept himself.<lb/>
What the new law actually means<lb/>
is that from this point onward, col-<lb/>
lege and university financial aid of-<lb/>
fices in the United States must<lb/>
receive adequate proof that male<lb/>
petitioners have registered with the<lb/>
Selective Service before those<lb/>
students are granted financial aid<lb/>
benef<lb/>
Naturally, most of the worrying<lb/>
at this time is anticipatory, since the<lb/>
government hasn't yet told the of-<lb/>
fices what they have to do to imple-<lb/>
ment the law. However, some<lb/>
speculation has arisen that financial<lb/>
aid offices around the nation will<lb/>
soon be equipped with surplus Ar-<lb/>
my M-16s "to further the cause of<lb/>
justice<lb/>
As if college aid offices don't<lb/>
have enough to do, now they have<lb/>
to play Matt Dillon and company,<lb/>
the long-arm of the law.<lb/>
This latest development has<lb/>
nothing whatsoever to do with the<lb/>
legality or morality of draft registra-<lb/>
tion. That is an entirely different<lb/>
question.<lb/>
In theory, the new law is<lb/>
presumably an effort on the part of<lb/>
the Reagan administration to<lb/>
"crack down" on non-registrants<lb/>
by denying them the benefits en-<lb/>
joyed by their law-abiding peers ?<lb/>
a standard American enforcement<lb/>
technique. In fact, however, the<lb/>
legislation only goes to further ex-<lb/>
emplify that administration's lack<lb/>
of ability in dealing with law en-<lb/>
forcement.<lb/>
Perhaps they are right in denying<lb/>
non-registrants financial aid. After<lb/>
all, most other felons aren't eligible<lb/>
for too many federal benefits.<lb/>
But what the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion seems to have forgotten ?<lb/>
aside from a proper implementation<lb/>
plan ? is that in trying to enforce<lb/>
the new law, financial aid offices<lb/>
may just be breaking another, an<lb/>
older civil rights law. Title IX of the<lb/>
Higher Education Amendments of<lb/>
1972 forbids discrimination in col-<lb/>
leges on the basis of gender. And<lb/>
the new law forces financial aid of-<lb/>
fices to place a condition on men's<lb/>
educations that they don't have to<lb/>
place on women's, since at present,<lb/>
women do not have to register for<lb/>
the draft.<lb/>
Does our illustrious President feel<lb/>
that he is somehow above the law?<lb/>
Perhaps his plan is like those of so<lb/>
many other chief executives before<lb/>
him: to enact legislation that will<lb/>
serve only to bog down a federal<lb/>
court system which is already suf-<lb/>
fering from the overload of diverse<lb/>
other cases pending.<lb/>
All legal considerations aside,<lb/>
though, the new financial aid law is<lb/>
little more than an admission of in-<lb/>
competence by the federal govern-<lb/>
ment. Since the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion consistently opts for the pick-<lb/>
and-choose method of prosecution,<lb/>
they have opened themselves up to<lb/>
criticism.<lb/>
Furthermore, what is $13 million<lb/>
of tax-payers' money (the average<lb/>
annual Selective Service budget) be-<lb/>
ing used for if the federal govern-<lb/>
ment has to rely on such asinine tac-<lb/>
tics to enforce its draft registration<lb/>
laws?<lb/>
As on every other controversial<lb/>
issue, a split has emerged between<lb/>
those who support the law and those<lb/>
opposed to it. Edward Marsh,<lb/>
financial aid director at Florida<lb/>
State University maintains that op-<lb/>
posing the legislation would be like<lb/>
 opposing God and country,<lb/>
mom and apple pie<lb/>
Apparently, not too many<lb/>
students in Tallahassee crowd the<lb/>
financial aid office on campus dur-<lb/>
ing the first month of every<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
However, other institutions, like<lb/>
Earlham College in Indiana, are<lb/>
vocally opposed. Earlham Financial<lb/>
Aid Director Kathy Malutich claims<lb/>
that while the school will make an<lb/>
attempt to enforce the law, she and<lb/>
her co-workers will also strive to<lb/>
find and develop new campus pro-<lb/>
grams to create "like aid" for any<lb/>
"serious" registration resister cut<lb/>
off from federal student aid for<lb/>
military reasons.<lb/>
Campus Incident Raises Questions<lb/>
Considering Handgun Laws<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Well, it happened again. An ECU stu-<lb/>
dent ? this time it was sophomore Steve<lb/>
Sellers ? was shot with a handgun on cam-<lb/>
pus last Sunday night. Several years ago, a<lb/>
student committed suicide in his Aycock<lb/>
dormitory room using a handgun, not to<lb/>
mention the armed robberies that took<lb/>
place "years ago acording to Joseph<lb/>
Calder, director if the ECU Department of<lb/>
Public Safety.<lb/>
The first question that came to my mind<lb/>
when I heard the news of Sunday night's<lb/>
tragedy was, "What was a student doing<lb/>
with a handgun in the first place?"<lb/>
So, Jeff Pagues, the student who ac-<lb/>
cidentally shot his friend Sellers while<lb/>
"horsing around obtained the gun from<lb/>
his girlfriend. Why does she have a gun?<lb/>
For protection?<lb/>
I am amazed at the naive view people<lb/>
sometimes have ? that possessing a han-<lb/>
dgun can actually be a beneficial, protec-<lb/>
tive measure in making them more secure.<lb/>
Unfortunately, owning a handgun, for<lb/>
those who own them for "protective" pur-<lb/>
poses, not only gives people a false feeling<lb/>
of security but docs more harm than good.<lb/>
Fact: For every time a handgun is used<lb/>
in households against a burglar in the<lb/>
United States, at least six innocent victims<lb/>
are killed, according to Handgun Control<lb/>
Inc a national organization calling for<lb/>
stricter handgun control laws.<lb/>
Fact: In 1979, Great Britain, with a<lb/>
population of more than 54 million, had<lb/>
only eight (that's eight!) handgun-related<lb/>
deaths; West Germany had only 42; Japan,<lb/>
48; Canada, 52; and Switzerland, 34. All<lb/>
of these countries enforce strict handgun<lb/>
control laws However, about 22,000 peo-<lb/>
ple die from bullet wounds brought about<lb/>
by people with handguns every year in the<lb/>
U.S and the numbers are increasing.<lb/>
In North Carolina alone, a far number<lb/>
more homicides occur annually than in all<lb/>
five of those foreign countries combined.<lb/>
In 1980, North Carolina had 275 handgun-<lb/>
related homicides.<lb/>
Why do our citizens continue to allow<lb/>
such an incredible amount of attrocity to<lb/>
occur every year? And why was it possible<lb/>
for a man who was later legally considered<lb/>
to be insane to easily buy a handgun and<lb/>
use it to shoot the President? The primitive<lb/>
arguments by organizations, such as the<lb/>
National Rifle Association's citing of their<lb/>
"right to bear arms become absurdities<lb/>
in light of episodes like Sunday night's<lb/>
shooting.<lb/>
Although on Tuesday, Caiifomians re-<lb/>
jected an amendment calling for stricter<lb/>
handgun controls, this at least shows that<lb/>
people are beginning to take the problerrr<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
This amendment should set a precedent<lb/>
for all the country to follow. In a sense, if<lb/>
more communities like ours do not de-<lb/>
mand our government to make and en-<lb/>
force stricter handgun control laws for<lb/>
handguns of any size, then we will be<lb/>
responsible for the deaths of innocent<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
Is Jeff Pegues solely guilty of assault<lb/>
with a deadly weapon, or are the people of<lb/>
this country guilty of allowing tragedies<lb/>
like this to become realities by not having<lb/>
stricter handgun control laws? I choose the<lb/>
latter.<lb/>
Both Parties Ignore "Real9 Issues<lb/>
'Staying The Curse?'<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
Well, the votes are counted, and the<lb/>
GOP has received a new message from the<lb/>
American people. Reaganomics is a<lb/>
failure! Reagan came to North Carolina<lb/>
last week to stump for his boys, but none<lb/>
of them managed to come up with a vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
Throughout the mid-term campaign, he<lb/>
kept telling the voters to "stay the<lb/>
course but instead, the voters took a<lb/>
detour. The Republicans blew a fortune on<lb/>
campaigns, and as usual. North Carolina's<lb/>
own Congressional Club kept up its mud-<lb/>
slinging-and-lies approach. Despite all the<lb/>
unscrupulous attempts of the Republicans,<lb/>
everything still came up Democrat.<lb/>
So, what does all this mean? From the<lb/>
standpoint of a "radical" like myself, pro-<lb/>
bably not much. When I glance at the<lb/>
voting records of North Carolina con-<lb/>
gressmen (let's not mention our senators),<lb/>
I can't help but think there isn't much dif-<lb/>
ference between Republicans and<lb/>
Democrats. Even my own Democratic<lb/>
Congressman Walter B Jones, who was<lb/>
re-elected in a landslide, couldn't bring<lb/>
himself to support the bi-lateral nuclear<lb/>
freeze.<lb/>
North Carolina Democratic represen-<lb/>
tatives in Washington consistently vote<lb/>
against human needs programs and for in-<lb/>
creases in the military budget. Lobbying<lb/>
organizations, like Bread for the World<lb/>
(anti-hunger lobby) and the Coalition for a<lb/>
New Foreign and Military Policy<lb/>
(anti-military build-up lobby) continually<lb/>
show the dismal voting records of North<lb/>
Carolina's national reps on the issues that<lb/>
really count.<lb/>
All considered, I must admit that my<lb/>
faith and hope in the legislative process<lb/>
(creating a framework for a more peaceful<lb/>
and just world) is very weak.<lb/>
The issues that I consider most impor-<lb/>
tant ? the ones that affect life and death<lb/>
daily ? have received virtually no con-<lb/>
sideration from the major parties. I don't<lb/>
expect to see any dramatic changes in U.S.<lb/>
policy regarding military spending or<lb/>
human needs because of Tuesday's vote.<lb/>
So, as a result, I plan to take Reagan's<lb/>
advice. I'm going to "stay the course<lb/>
But I'm quite sure it's not the course he<lb/>
had in mind.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Lack Of Communication Poses Serious Threat Of Danger<lb/>
On Monday night, at 9:37, one Robert<lb/>
Poolc, a player on the Scott "Booty<lb/>
Crew" soccer team, was painfully ? as<lb/>
well as seriously ? injured when pushed<lb/>
unintentionally into the upright post of<lb/>
the other team's soccer goal. Although<lb/>
no bleeding resulted from the injury,<lb/>
Poole suffered from severe abdominal<lb/>
pains and was unable to continue the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Unsure of (Poole's) injury, an alert<lb/>
student trainer and an official supervisor<lb/>
acted patiently yet as quickly and effec-<lb/>
tively as was in their power to alert the<lb/>
Pitt County Rescue Squad via the cam-<lb/>
pus police "Blue Light" system. The call<lb/>
for help was made within five minutes of<lb/>
the accident. However, this was the only<lb/>
efficient link in a three-link chain of<lb/>
events.<lb/>
The campus police department, un-<lb/>
sure of the accident's validity, saw fit to<lb/>
send a patrolman to the accident scene;<lb/>
this took nearly 15 minutes. Once at the<lb/>
scene, the patrolman made the call for<lb/>
the rescue squad, which took another 10<lb/>
minutes to arrive.<lb/>
Suppose Poole had been bleeding pro-<lb/>
fusely, or was in shock or unconscious,<lb/>
or was bleeding internally? The 25<lb/>
minutes taken to assess the situation<lb/>
could have been the difference between<lb/>
his life and death.<lb/>
Agreed, the police do receive some<lb/>
calls from foolish student pranksters<lb/>
who get their kicks from making false<lb/>
"Blue Light" calls. Also agreed, the in-<lb/>
tramural recreational services, acting on<lb/>
a limited budget, cannot afford to put<lb/>
an ambulance on every field for every<lb/>
event. But something can be done.<lb/>
A confidential code can be arranged<lb/>
between the police and the intramural<lb/>
department, for instance. This would<lb/>
eliminate the 15 minutes wasted in sen-<lb/>
ding a patrolman to assess the situation.<lb/>
There are certainly other solutions to<lb/>
this problem, although this one strikes<lb/>
me as the most efficient, or, at least, the<lb/>
least expensive method.<lb/>
Certainly, this one letter, based on<lb/>
this one incident, dealing with this one<lb/>
complaint, won't move too many moun-<lb/>
tains, but the actions of many students<lb/>
can. What is needed is for students,<lb/>
spectators and participants of in-<lb/>
tramural sports to bring their complaints<lb/>
to a stronger, more powerful voice, our<lb/>
voice, the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion. If this fails to bring results, we<lb/>
must merge together again, as one<lb/>
group, and voice a complaint to the ad-<lb/>
ministrators involved with intramural<lb/>
sports themselves.<lb/>
If you think of this subject as<lb/>
preposterous or foolish, imagine<lb/>
yourself in Robert Poole's shoes Mon-<lb/>
day, Nov. 1: in severe pain, unsure of<lb/>
your injury, and waiting, and wonder-<lb/>
ing, and waiting, and wondering<lb/>
James Aleo<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Thank You's<lb/>
With the end of the 1982 homecoming<lb/>
activities, it is time to recognize those in-<lb/>
dividuals who volunteered their time to<lb/>
make it all a reality. True, there were<lb/>
flaws and faults; criticisms and com-<lb/>
plaints were made known from day one.<lb/>
However, compliments have come in<lb/>
too, and these have made it all wor-<lb/>
thwhile! To those of you who suffered<lb/>
from our errors, our sincere apologies.<lb/>
We are putting everything together now<lb/>
so that those individuals who volunteer<lb/>
to do next year's homecoming can gain<lb/>
from our experiences. We have all gain-<lb/>
ed a tremendous amount of knowledge<lb/>
useful in minimizing any future pro-<lb/>
blems, and certainly, terminating many<lb/>
of those experienced this year.<lb/>
Thank you's this year can go to many<lb/>
individuals: merchants who helped us,<lb/>
service fraternities and sororities who<lb/>
helped inflate 1,644 purple and gold<lb/>
balloons, the wonderful students who<lb/>
dressed as clowns to pats out those<lb/>
balloons, and many others who caught<lb/>
on to the spirit and lent a helping hand.<lb/>
To the students of the Student<lb/>
Homecoming Committee, many of you<lb/>
gave far beyond the call of duty as did<lb/>
your committee members. Thank you:<lb/>
Stuart Fulghum (Bands and Parade),<lb/>
Lauri Daughtry (Parade), Larry Clayton<lb/>
(Half-time), Cathy Edwards<lb/>
(Entertainment), Jesse Riggs (Publicity),<lb/>
Suzanne Wilson (Decorations), and<lb/>
Monica Forties (Secretary). A thank you<lb/>
also to my co-adviser, Mr. C.C. Rowe,<lb/>
who handled a lot of technical ar-<lb/>
rangements. And last, a very big thank<lb/>
you to Regiiia Hardee, who chaired the<lb/>
committee and who worked extremely<lb/>
diligently coordinating the plans, who<lb/>
rolled with the punches, and who said to<lb/>
me just ence, "You said this would be<lb/>
easy Again, thank you all for making<lb/>
the weekend work and Homecoming '82<lb/>
the success it was. Now let's evaluate<lb/>
and begin next year's planning<lb/>
Jon Curtis, Co-Adviser<lb/>
Student Homecoming Committee<lb/>
Smokeont<lb/>
I am happy to be back this year as Pitt<lb/>
County Chairman of the Great<lb/>
American Smokeojit. Again, we<lb/>
volunteers are preparing to make Nov.<lb/>
18, 1982, our sixth annual "smokeless<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Last year, the Gallup survey showed<lb/>
that more than 16 million Americans<lb/>
participated in the Great American<lb/>
Smokeout, and nearly five million didn't<lb/>
smoke for 24 hours. Just under three<lb/>
million cigarette smokers were still not<lb/>
smoking one to 11 days later.<lb/>
I invite the students, faculty and staff<lb/>
at ECU to join us in this fantastic<lb/>
smokeout campaign. Who knows,<lb/>
maybe this will be the time you quit for<lb/>
good!<lb/>
Good luck on Nov. 18. Hooray for<lb/>
quitters, and Hooray for the American<lb/>
Cancer Society.<lb/>
Joan Boudreaux<lb/>
Pin County i<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing ail points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major ami<lb/>
P,<lb/>
ByP<lb/>
Low<lb/>
didn't deci<lb/>
thusiasm<lb/>
participai<lb/>
week's<lb/>
"North<lb/>
Meeung"j<lb/>
series thai<lb/>
ECLs J<lb/>
Arts Cente<lb/>
De<lb/>
Ike<lb/>
Continue<lb/>
James<lb/>
by less tta<lb/>
tage pomi<lb/>
C. Robin<lb/>
ed Johns!<lb/>
than 10<lb/>
another<lb/>
didn't exj<lb/>
Margins<lb/>
were alsj<lb/>
several ot<lb/>
eluding tl<lb/>
tested f<lb/>
race betw <lb/>
drews, tl<lb/>
Democral<lb/>
CongresiJ<lb/>
backed<lb/>
William<lb/>
Chapel<lb/>
Republics<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs).<lb/>
,miMiHm ?i iiimwEw<lb/>
k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 4. 1982<lb/>
S<lb/>
precedent<lb/>
a sense, if<lb/>
lo not de-<lb/>
ce and en-<lb/>
! laws for<lb/>
will be<lb/>
If innocent<lb/>
of assault<lb/>
le people of<lb/>
Ig tragedies<lb/>
not having<lb/>
choose the<lb/>
feral nuclear<lb/>
ic rcpresen-<lb/>
stently vote<lb/>
and for in-<lb/>
Lobbying<lb/>
the World<lb/>
alition for a<lb/>
y Policy<lb/>
continually<lb/>
Ids of North<lb/>
e issues that<lb/>
lit that my<lb/>
ktive process<lb/>
lore peaceful<lb/>
jmost impor-<lb/>
fe and death<lb/>
lly no con-<lb/>
rties. I don't<lb/>
lges in U.S.<lb/>
spending or<lb/>
lay's vote.<lb/>
ike Reagan's<lb/>
Ithc course<lb/>
Ihe course he<lb/>
er<lb/>
make Nov.<lb/>
"smokeless<lb/>
rvey showed<lb/>
Americans<lb/>
U American<lb/>
ullion didn't<lb/>
under three<lb/>
ere still not<lb/>
ler.<lb/>
llty and staff<lb/>
his fantastic<lb/>
rho knows,<lb/>
you quit for<lb/>
Hooray for<lb/>
the American<lb/>
in Boudreaux<lb/>
ity Chairman<lb/>
les<lb/>
comes letters<lb/>
?w. Mail or<lb/>
he Old South<lb/>
W Library.<lb/>
Iron, all letters<lb/>
major and<lb/>
one number<lb/>
or(s).<lb/>
PBS Filming Draws Low Local Attendance<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
04NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Low attendance<lb/>
didn't decrease the en-<lb/>
thusiasm of audience<lb/>
participants in last<lb/>
week's two-part<lb/>
"North Carolina Town<lb/>
Meeting" television<lb/>
series that was filmed in<lb/>
ECU'S Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center.<lb/>
The two-28 minute<lb/>
programs, which will<lb/>
be aired by the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina<lb/>
Center for Public<lb/>
Television in about a<lb/>
month, were filmed<lb/>
before audience crowds<lb/>
producers and camera<lb/>
crews to scan the art<lb/>
building for students or<lb/>
anyone else who would<lb/>
be willing to fill a seat<lb/>
in the almost empty<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
The programs were<lb/>
of approximately 25 to designed to encourage<lb/>
30 people.<lb/>
Poor publicity was<lb/>
generally cited as the<lb/>
reason for the low tur-<lb/>
nout which prompted<lb/>
television dialogue bet<lb/>
ween panalists and<lb/>
citizens on the "critical<lb/>
issues" facing North<lb/>
Carolinians today. The<lb/>
topics chosen for<lb/>
Greenville were "The<lb/>
Plight of The Farmer"<lb/>
on Wednesday night<lb/>
and 'Justice For The<lb/>
Rich, and Justice For<lb/>
The Poor" on Thurs-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Each segment includ-<lb/>
ed a panal of three local<lb/>
residents who respond-<lb/>
ed to audience ques-<lb/>
tions or question from<lb/>
the shows host Reese<lb/>
Democrats Take Elections While<lb/>
Ike Andrews Fends Off Cobey<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
James M. Clark, lost<lb/>
by less than one percen-<lb/>
tage point. Democrat<lb/>
C. Robin Britt outpoll-<lb/>
ed Johnston by less<lb/>
than 10 percent in<lb/>
another race the GOP<lb/>
didn't expect to lose.<lb/>
Margins of victory<lb/>
were also close in<lb/>
several other races in-<lb/>
cluding the hotly con-<lb/>
tested fourth district<lb/>
race between Ike F. An-<lb/>
drews, the incumbant<lb/>
Democrat, and his<lb/>
Congresional Club-<lb/>
backed opponent<lb/>
William Cobey Jr the<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
Republican.<lb/>
Cobey who ran on a<lb/>
"support the presi-<lb/>
dent" platform seemed<lb/>
closer to victory after<lb/>
Andrews' arrest and<lb/>
conviction on drunk<lb/>
driving charges last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Cobey, who spent<lb/>
over $500,000 on his<lb/>
campaign, primarily<lb/>
through television and<lb/>
radio advertising, could<lb/>
not overcome the hard<lb/>
fought comeback cam-<lb/>
paigning of the usually<lb/>
low key Andrews. "1<lb/>
couldn't be more pleas-<lb/>
ed said Andrews who<lb/>
added that "people<lb/>
here just more and<lb/>
more have a great<lb/>
resentment of the Con-<lb/>
gresional Club<lb/>
In another race<lb/>
which was expected to<lb/>
be close, newcomer<lb/>
Democrat l.T. "Tim"<lb/>
Valentine easily out-<lb/>
polled Republican<lb/>
Challenger John W.<lb/>
"Jack" Marin. Valen-<lb/>
tine said that he was<lb/>
"relieved, elated and<lb/>
tired" after his win. He<lb/>
won the seat being<lb/>
vacated by conservative<lb/>
Democrat<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
L.H. Foun-<lb/>
In other races,<lb/>
democrats were also<lb/>
able to outpoll<lb/>
Republicans. Third<lb/>
district incumbant<lb/>
Charles O. Whitley<lb/>
easily won what was<lb/>
supposed to be a tight<lb/>
race against his<lb/>
Republican challenger<lb/>
Eugene "Red"<lb/>
McDaniel.<lb/>
Edwards.<lb/>
The Wednesday<lb/>
evening panal included<lb/>
Winterville farmer<lb/>
Kenneth Dews, Pitt<lb/>
County Agricultural<lb/>
Extension Service<lb/>
Chairman Leroy<lb/>
James, and R.T. (Bud)<lb/>
Forrest, regional direc-<lb/>
tor of the Federal Crop<lb/>
Insurance Corporation.<lb/>
The three responded<lb/>
to questions on a range<lb/>
of issues concerning<lb/>
farming in Pitt County<lb/>
and other eastern N.C.<lb/>
areas. It was noted that<lb/>
because of the financial<lb/>
risks, farming was no<lb/>
longer attracting many<lb/>
young people and that<lb/>
the average age of the<lb/>
farming population in<lb/>
the U.S. was continu-<lb/>
ing to rise. The average<lb/>
age of a U.S. farmer is<lb/>
now said to be between<lb/>
57 and 58 years.<lb/>
It was also noted that<lb/>
schools are no longer<lb/>
offering as much voca-<lb/>
tional training for<lb/>
future farmers as in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
Lack of markets for<lb/>
produced goods and<lb/>
the difficulty of acquir-<lb/>
ing funds were men-<lb/>
tioned as major pro-<lb/>
blems contributing to<lb/>
the difficulties facing<lb/>
farmers. Lending agen-<lb/>
cies presently consider<lb/>
loans to farmers too<lb/>
risky.<lb/>
On Thursday evenig<lb/>
the panalists included<lb/>
the Rev. B.B. Felder of<lb/>
Greenville's Cor-<lb/>
nerstone Baptist<lb/>
Church, former<lb/>
Superior Court Judge<lb/>
Robert D. Rouse Jr.<lb/>
and District Attorney<lb/>
Nancy Barnhill<lb/>
Aycock.<lb/>
Questions from the<lb/>
audience first took on a<lb/>
global scope which<lb/>
seemed to stymie the<lb/>
panalists who openly<lb/>
admitted their ig-<lb/>
norance. Later ques-<lb/>
tions concerning the<lb/>
plights of blacks and<lb/>
poor people who<lb/>
receive harsh treatment<lb/>
from the justice system<lb/>
were raised.<lb/>
Various members of<lb/>
the audience cited cases<lb/>
where rich people<lb/>
would use their in-<lb/>
fluences or money to<lb/>
circumvent the legal<lb/>
system, while<lb/>
minorities or poor peo-<lb/>
ple would in turn<lb/>
receive harsh sentences<lb/>
for similar or less<lb/>
severe offenses.<lb/>
Meeting" series is one<lb/>
of the Center's public<lb/>
affairs programs based<lb/>
on results of the annual<lb/>
ascertainment survey of<lb/>
community leaders to<lb/>
determine problems<lb/>
and needs which are of<lb/>
statewide concern.<lb/>
Similar town meeting<lb/>
programs are scheduled<lb/>
to be filmed in Raleigh<lb/>
and Boone.<lb/>
The<lb/>
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iuhic<lb/>
nmiii<lb/>
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While you re here, stop by the lively lounge<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
A<lb/>
j<lb/>
1<lb/>
Clark Heads Education Dept.<lb/>
By ANTHONY BOYD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A long time native of<lb/>
Greenville and<lb/>
graduate of ECU has<lb/>
been named chairman<lb/>
of the Department ipf<lb/>
Elementary Education. <lb/>
Dr. Amos Clark,<lb/>
who was appointed<lb/>
Oct. 1, says of his new<lb/>
position, "It's much<lb/>
more demanding; that<lb/>
fact means it's a<lb/>
challenge and that's a<lb/>
positive factor Dr.<lb/>
Clark has served as ac-<lb/>
ting chairman of the<lb/>
department since the<lb/>
retirement of Dr. Frank<lb/>
Arwood last May.<lb/>
As chairman, Dr.<lb/>
Clark plans to<lb/>
strengthen the elemen-<lb/>
tary education depart-<lb/>
ment's new six-year<lb/>
programs and develop<lb/>
new courses.<lb/>
He received his<lb/>
bachelors and masters<lb/>
degrees from ECU<lb/>
when it was called the<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College, in 1948. After<lb/>
serving 10 years as a<lb/>
teacher and principal in<lb/>
the Wilmington and<lb/>
New Bern school<lb/>
systems, Dr. Clark<lb/>
went on to Duke<lb/>
University where he<lb/>
Student Recipes Wanted<lb/>
For Campus Cookbook<lb/>
received his doctorate<lb/>
in education.<lb/>
The new chairman<lb/>
feels that, "Anyone<lb/>
(faculty) in the school<lb/>
of education should<lb/>
have had experience on<lb/>
the public school<lb/>
teaching level He<lb/>
says working in the<lb/>
classroom has changed<lb/>
in recent years. "If I<lb/>
went back I would find<lb/>
that it was quite dif-<lb/>
ferent. The department<lb/>
tries to give their<lb/>
students a realistic pic-<lb/>
ture of what it's like in<lb/>
the classroom.<lb/>
By PATRICK (SDA) in the Depart-<lb/>
O'NEILL ment of Food, Nutri-<lb/>
tion, Institution<lb/>
Staff Writer . ' .<lb/>
Management has an-<lb/>
The ECU Student nounced a recipe con-<lb/>
Dietetic Association test which will be used<lb/>
Fed Representative<lb/>
Speaks To Public<lb/>
On Future Banking<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Governors is a seven-<lb/>
man regulatory com-<lb/>
mission, independent<lb/>
of the three branches of<lb/>
government, that<lb/>
regulates United States<lb/>
monetary policy.<lb/>
Before Partee's ap-<lb/>
pointment to the<lb/>
board, he had been a<lb/>
member of the boards's<lb/>
staff. For six years<lb/>
before going to<lb/>
Washington, D.C he<lb/>
was associated with<lb/>
Northern Trust Com-<lb/>
pany of Chicago.<lb/>
Wardrep urges all<lb/>
faculty, staff, students<lb/>
and the general public<lb/>
to attend the lecture. "I<lb/>
feel it would be<lb/>
beneficial to all who at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
as a way to accumulate<lb/>
recipe selections to be<lb/>
published this spring in<lb/>
a cookbook titled<lb/>
"East Carolina's<lb/>
Favorite Recipes<lb/>
According to SDA<lb/>
President Vicki Marder<lb/>
"Anyone affiliated<lb/>
with the university" is<lb/>
eligible to submit an<lb/>
unlimited number of<lb/>
recipes for the contest.<lb/>
Ten entries will be<lb/>
chosen for a bake-off<lb/>
at a later date. "The<lb/>
recipes will be judged<lb/>
on originality, ap-<lb/>
pearence and taste<lb/>
said Marder.<lb/>
First prize in the<lb/>
Bake-off will be a din-<lb/>
ner for two at Darryl's.<lb/>
Recipe collection boxes<lb/>
are located at several<lb/>
spots around campus.<lb/>
Entries must be in by<lb/>
Nov. 12.<lb/>
"Enrollment is a<lb/>
third of what it was 10<lb/>
years ago Dr. Clark<lb/>
says. He attributes this<lb/>
to a lack of jobs, low<lb/>
salaries and the fact<lb/>
that women are going<lb/>
into different fields.<lb/>
Teaching, according to<lb/>
Dr. Clark, is basically a<lb/>
supply and demand<lb/>
field.<lb/>
"Job opportunities<lb/>
for intermediate educa-<lb/>
tion majors is good.<lb/>
Employment prospects<lb/>
for an early education<lb/>
major are not good.<lb/>
Despite the decline in<lb/>
department enrollment<lb/>
and lack of job oppor-<lb/>
tunities, Dr. Clark<lb/>
plans to increase the<lb/>
faculty and add some<lb/>
needed programs.<lb/>
One of the newest in-<lb/>
novations in the<lb/>
classroom is the micro-<lb/>
computer. Dr. Clark<lb/>
plans to hold<lb/>
workshops to prepare<lb/>
department members<lb/>
for working with com-<lb/>
puters. "Students are<lb/>
going to need to know<lb/>
more about this; it's<lb/>
one of the coming<lb/>
needs Dr. Clark says.<lb/>
"However, you can't<lb/>
replace the human fac-<lb/>
tor in the classroom<lb/>
IS MUS<lb/>
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ing and<lb/>
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Mike<lb/>
Somethyi<lb/>
Home T<lb/>
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An h<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057511_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4. 1982 Pate 7<lb/>
So Who's Coming To Campus?<lb/>
That's Right, Me, Al Franken<lb/>
ad<lb/>
rare no,<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
Old SNL comedy team Al Franken and Tom Davis.<lb/>
The irreverent comedywriting<lb/>
team of Al Franken and Tom Davis<lb/>
found an avid cult following in the<lb/>
early days of the old Saturday Nite<lb/>
Live. Since those days, their comedy<lb/>
has become slightly less accessible<lb/>
but no less irreverent.<lb/>
Franken and Davis now TV guest<lb/>
spots and college campuses, which is<lb/>
what brings them to Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre this Monday, November 8,<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
A representative of the Jack<lb/>
Daniels Distilleries lectures on What<lb/>
to Do If You're Drunk and You Ab-<lb/>
solutely Have to DriveDrive a<lb/>
big American car; put something<lb/>
substantial between you and<lb/>
whatever it is you're going to hit<lb/>
Two pregnant women meet on a<lb/>
TV commercial and discuss plans<lb/>
for their first meal after the birth ?<lb/>
to be, in fact, the afterbir-<lb/>
th "Placenta Helper lets you<lb/>
stretch your placenta into a tasty<lb/>
casserole<lb/>
World War II is announced on<lb/>
the Six O'clock News; 85 million<lb/>
Americans are dead, but the<lb/>
weather and sports are reported as<lb/>
usualWell, Barn, we think the<lb/>
knee's gonna be all right<lb/>
If the comic visions of Al Franken<lb/>
and Tom Davis seem a bit twisted,<lb/>
they're merely a shade more bent<lb/>
than the bleak tableaus that you see<lb/>
on the nightly news. Indeed,<lb/>
shading and subtlety are the finely<lb/>
honed tools that separate Franken<lb/>
and Davis from other comedians in<lb/>
the trade.<lb/>
Most people know Al Franken<lb/>
and Tom Davis from their five-year<lb/>
stint as writers and performers on<lb/>
NBC's original Saturday Nite Live.<lb/>
There they introduced viewers to the<lb/>
Coneheads, to Weekend Update's<lb/>
"Point-Counterpoint" ("Jane, you<lb/>
ignorant slut") and the Al Franken<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
They created most of SNL's<lb/>
political sketches ? "Nixon's Final<lb/>
Days the Three Mile Island<lb/>
"Pepsi Syndrome" parody and the<lb/>
Jimmy Carter phone-in (where the<lb/>
President receives a call from a<lb/>
young man in the throws of an acid<lb/>
trip and talks him down). They also<lb/>
wrote many of the show's parody<lb/>
commercials, including an ad for<lb/>
"Royal Deluxe II a car so smooth<lb/>
a rabbi can circumsize a baby in the<lb/>
back seat.<lb/>
Currently, Al and Tom have<lb/>
taken their act on .he road, perfor-<lb/>
ming their unique two-man sketches<lb/>
at nightclubs and college campuses<lb/>
around the country. Their style is<lb/>
dry and deadpan, in the sly, silly<lb/>
fashion of their comic idols Bob and<lb/>
Ray. But their subject matter tends<lb/>
to be more raw and controversial,<lb/>
'Lightning' Wells A Versatile<lb/>
Performer Who Enjoys Work<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff riler<lb/>
Mike "Lightning" Wells is a<lb/>
Greenville musician and ECU<lb/>
graduate who has won the respect of<lb/>
traditional music lovers and musi-<lb/>
cians throughout the state for his ex-<lb/>
tensive repertoire of songs in such<lb/>
diverse fields as blues, old-time<lb/>
music, bluegrass, gospel, western<lb/>
swing, and country. Mike and 1 got<lb/>
together for supper the other even-<lb/>
ing and talked about his involve-<lb/>
ment in music as a performer, a<lb/>
recreational therapist, and a collec-<lb/>
tor of old and rare recordings.<lb/>
Mike Wells will be playing in<lb/>
Durham on Nov. 13 at the<lb/>
Somethyme Restaurant and with<lb/>
Home Town Boys at the Opry<lb/>
House on Nov. 17 as part of the<lb/>
Tobacco Show.<lb/>
An Interview With<lb/>
Mike Wells<lb/>
EC: Mike, can you tell me about<lb/>
some of the places yoU've played<lb/>
out of the area?<lb/>
WELLS: Well, I've played at the<lb/>
West Point Military Academy this<lb/>
past January. 1 played by myself as<lb/>
part of a revue which included the<lb/>
Green Grass Cloggers, Phil and<lb/>
Gaye Johnson, Jay and Lynn<lb/>
Ungar, and the Hudson Valley Hot-<lb/>
shots. We also did a show at a<lb/>
pulbic school in Manhattan, and we<lb/>
did a show with Pete Secger, too.<lb/>
I also played at the South<lb/>
Carolina Peach Festival in Gaffney,<lb/>
S.C. this summer, as well as, at the<lb/>
Sunday in the Park in Asheville,<lb/>
N.C. I've played with the Home<lb/>
Town Boys the past two summers<lb/>
here in Greenville.<lb/>
EC: Haven't you played at the<lb/>
Eno River Folk Festival a few<lb/>
times?<lb/>
WELLS: No, I just played there<lb/>
this past summer for the first time.<lb/>
EC: Didn't you play at the<lb/>
Philadelphia Folk Festival one year?<lb/>
WELLS: No, I stayed up and<lb/>
jammed with Taj Mahal there,<lb/>
though. Not everyone stays up late<lb/>
at those festivals, but if you stay up<lb/>
late you can play with anyone ?<lb/>
which is one way that folk music is<lb/>
so neat because you can play with<lb/>
anybody ? everyone's ap-<lb/>
proachable.<lb/>
EC: Who are some of the acts you<lb/>
have opened for?<lb/>
WELLS: Well, I've done some<lb/>
shows for the Carolina Area Friends<lb/>
of Folkmusic, Bluegrass, and Blues.<lb/>
They're out of Durham. I've opened<lb/>
up for George Gritzbach once, and I<lb/>
opened up for James Cotten here in<lb/>
Greenville at the Roxy a few years<lb/>
back. The Home Town Boys just<lb/>
backed up Mac Wiseman at the<lb/>
Pender Park Bluegrass Festival a<lb/>
couple of weeks ago. I also warmed<lb/>
up for the Irish group, Touchstone,<lb/>
in 1981. This was aired on Village<lb/>
Cable in Chapel Hill and Durham.<lb/>
EC: Which are your favorite<lb/>
places to play, Ligntning?<lb/>
WELLS: I like to play in small<lb/>
places. I don't know, I guess I like<lb/>
McDibbs in Black Mountain, and<lb/>
the Trawl Door in Oriental. 1 also<lb/>
like the Somethyme in Durham and<lb/>
the New Deli and the Phoenix Room<lb/>
here in Greenville.<lb/>
EC: What are some of the<lb/>
memorable gigs you've had?<lb/>
WELLS: Hm, one time a guy<lb/>
stuck a $5 bill in my guitar and I<lb/>
said, "Wow, I ought to meet this<lb/>
guy Then when I met him I found<lb/>
out he was real crazy. I played at<lb/>
Sudi's in Durham one time and this<lb/>
girl requested "Death Letter Blues"<lb/>
and when I played it for her she<lb/>
started crying. I apologized, but she<lb/>
said it was OK. I made eight dollars<lb/>
that night plus the sole of someone's<lb/>
shoe for my soul music.<lb/>
WELLS: When I played in<lb/>
Chapel Hill they used to pass the<lb/>
hat. I got all kinds of stuff ? gold<lb/>
Burt Is Sharky, A Tough Cop With A Great Set Of Lips<lb/>
Rrt RpvnnirR one of today's most popular screen acton, stan In and unknown who hat taken over Atlanta's underworld. Seaotiful<lb/>
SmTimJSm Ttanday night at 7 p.m. and Frl- moaWactrem Rachel Ward (pictnred .hove with Reynold.) c<lb/>
TjjSSTr 5?7:15 and 9:30 p.m. in Mendenlnll Stn- The film b sponsored hy the Stndent Union Ftfu Co?itke.<lb/>
Seit Center'sHLdrixThetn Reynold, play, an nndercover cop ?. b free with ID and activity card or MSC nhanhip.<lb/>
demoted to the vice squad and hot on the trail of The Ace, an<lb/>
placing them in the vanguard of to-<lb/>
day's frank, irreverent comedy, so<lb/>
popular, as Al puts it "among to-<lb/>
day's gullible young poeple<lb/>
By hitting the road, Franken and<lb/>
Davis are, in a way, returning to<lb/>
their roots. They first met in 1968 as<lb/>
high school students in Minnestoa,<lb/>
where they teamed up and started<lb/>
doing stand-up comedy. Upon<lb/>
graduation, Al entered Harvard and<lb/>
majored in behavioral sciences ?<lb/>
anthropology, sociology,<lb/>
psychology. "What else you gonna<lb/>
major in at a party school?" he<lb/>
recalled.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Tom dropped out<lb/>
of school and majored in<lb/>
misbehavioral sciences, bumming<lb/>
around the world, working as a<lb/>
short order cook, assembling spray<lb/>
guns, occasionally playing Santa<lb/>
See ZANY, Page 8<lb/>
wedding rings, silver dollars, I got<lb/>
some other neat things that I can't<lb/>
remember.<lb/>
EC: How did you get started play-<lb/>
ing music?<lb/>
WELLS: I learned to play har-<lb/>
monica in the third grade, stuff like<lb/>
"Oh Susanna "Good Night<lb/>
Ladies "Old Black Joe" was a<lb/>
hard one. I played in my third grade<lb/>
talent show in Cleveland. I got ex-<lb/>
cited and swung my arm back and<lb/>
the harp flew out of my hand and<lb/>
hit the wall and broke.<lb/>
WELLS: When I was 13 I played<lb/>
harp and tambourine and sang in a<lb/>
group in Goldsboro called "The<lb/>
Unknowns After the band broke<lb/>
up I decided to learn to play the<lb/>
guitar.<lb/>
After that, I got more into folk<lb/>
music, into people like Bob Dylan,<lb/>
and Woody Guthrie. I learned<lb/>
fingerpicking from Dave Van Ronk.<lb/>
One of the first songs I learned to<lb/>
play on the guitar was "Baltimore<lb/>
to Washington" by Woody Guthrie.<lb/>
In fact, I just taught that song to a<lb/>
friend who's learning to play guitar.<lb/>
When I was in highschool in<lb/>
Goldsboro I played at coffeehouses<lb/>
at school and on the base.<lb/>
EC: Mike, when' did you first<lb/>
See SINGS, Page 8<lb/>
School of Music percussion ensemble hangs ont a little Debussy.<lb/>
Percussion Ensemble<lb/>
Features Suites By<lb/>
Debussy, Stravinsky<lb/>
A varied concert of percussion<lb/>
music will be presented by the ECU<lb/>
Percussion Ensemble Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 8, at 8:15 p.m. in the Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital Hall.<lb/>
Included on the program are<lb/>
"Fanfare for Double Percussion<lb/>
Trio" by George Frock, a Robinson<lb/>
transcription of Debussy's "The<lb/>
Girl with the Flaxen Hair "A La<lb/>
Nanigo" by Mitchell Peters, War-<lb/>
ren Benson's "Three Pieces for Per-<lb/>
cussion Quartet" and a Freeman<lb/>
transcription of four movements<lb/>
from Stravinsky's Suites Nos. 1 and<lb/>
2.<lb/>
The concert is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Bill Freeman, a graduate student<lb/>
at ECU from Coweta, Ok la is con-<lb/>
ductor of the Percussion Ensemble.<lb/>
Members include the following<lb/>
percussion students in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music:<lb/>
Shawn Carson and Darla<lb/>
Richards of Greenville, Phil Chap-<lb/>
man of Wingate, Stoney Crump of<lb/>
Hillsborough, Beth Faircloth of<lb/>
Stedman, Vannie Parker of Fayet-<lb/>
teville, David McCollum of East<lb/>
Bend, Lee Lane of Wilmington,<lb/>
Lorri Holland of Pittsboro and Jen-<lb/>
nifer Courtney of Lancaster, Va.<lb/>
A public reception scheduled for<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7, at 7:30 p.m. will<lb/>
open the annual exhibiton of ECU's<lb/>
faculty and student art in the Gray<lb/>
Gallery on campus.<lb/>
The reception will be catered ad<lb/>
feature music by performers from<lb/>
the ECU School of Music. All in-<lb/>
terested persons are invited to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
The facultystudent art exhibi-<lb/>
tion, a display of recent works in<lb/>
various media, will continue<lb/>
through Nov. 30.<lb/>
Gray Gallery, located in the east<lb/>
wing of the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center on the main campus, is open<lb/>
each weekday from 10 a.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. and on Sundays from 1 to 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee, in conjunction with Stewart-<lb/>
Everett Theatres, is now offering<lb/>
discount tickets to films shown in<lb/>
any North Carolina Stewart-Everett<lb/>
theatre.<lb/>
Campus Notes<lb/>
The tickets are $2 (at least one<lb/>
dollar less than the usual non-<lb/>
matinee price) and can be purchased<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The discount tickets are available<lb/>
to students, faculty, staff and the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
Playing here this week at Stewart-<lb/>
Everett owned Plaza Cinema is<lb/>
Jinxed, First Blood and Halloween<lb/>
HI: Season of the Witch. Starting<lb/>
Friday is Sorceress.<lb/>
At the Stewart-Everett owned<lb/>
Park Theatre this week is Sorceress.<lb/>
Starting Friday at the Park is Good-<lb/>
bye Cruel World the late show Fri-<lb/>
day and Saturday night at 11:15<lb/>
p.m. is Kung Fu Zombie.<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee sponsors Mule Train<lb/>
Gold this Friday night from 9 until<lb/>
11 in the Coffeehouse, located in the<lb/>
basement of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The band performs a reper-<lb/>
toire of old time tunes "guaranteed<lb/>
to make just about anyone<lb/>
nostalgic<lb/>
On Saturday night in the Cof-<lb/>
feehouse the committee presents<lb/>
well-liked blues artist Richard<lb/>
Henry. Henry will perform from 9<lb/>
until 11 p.m.<lb/>
Admission for each show is $.50.<lb/>
Jerry F. Lotterhos of Greenville<lb/>
has been named third place winner<lb/>
in a national poetry contest con-<lb/>
ducted by the magazine, The Pro-<lb/>
fessional Poet, for a poem entitled<lb/>
"Alone The poem was one of a<lb/>
selection of six submitted by Lot-<lb/>
terhos in the first poetry contest he<lb/>
has ever entered.<lb/>
A volume of Lotterhos poetry<lb/>
entitled People Tunes is to be<lb/>
published in November by<lb/>
Woodsmoke Publications.<lb/>
Lotterhos, native of Bogahim,<lb/>
Louisiana, is a professor in the<lb/>
School of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions at ECU tad hi director<lb/>
of ECU'S Center for Alcohol and<lb/>
<lb/>
. ,l II m 11 ?! "?" '? !j??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
<lb/>
Wells Sings The Blues<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
start to play the blues?<lb/>
WELLS: It was about the same<lb/>
time. I first got into leadbelly and<lb/>
then I got into people like Blind<lb/>
Lemon Jefferson, Blind Blake,<lb/>
Robert Johnson. In the city blues, I<lb/>
got into Muddy Waters and Howlin<lb/>
Wolf. I also got into Jimmie<lb/>
Rodgers around this time.<lb/>
EC: How did you find out about<lb/>
all these people?<lb/>
WELLS: I got started on the city<lb/>
folk music and followed it<lb/>
backwards to the roots. I used to<lb/>
ride to Raleigh an go to the Record<lb/>
Bar to pick up records. I went on a<lb/>
class trip to New York and got some<lb/>
records there. I started getting into<lb/>
collecting and listening to 78 s when<lb/>
I was in high school. A friend's dad-<lb/>
dy had several stacks of hillbilly 78 s<lb/>
that I got turned on to. At that time<lb/>
I didn't like western swing music<lb/>
because I thought it was too com-<lb/>
mercial.<lb/>
I used to pick up 78 s whenever I<lb/>
heard of anybody who had some. I<lb/>
guess I've been picking them up<lb/>
since then.<lb/>
EC: When did you first start play-<lb/>
ing in clubs?<lb/>
WELLS: I started when I was go-<lb/>
ing to school in Chapel Hill. I was<lb/>
supposed to play with a friend,<lb/>
Dave Childers, and he didn't show<lb/>
up for the job and so I did it myself<lb/>
and the manager asked me to come<lb/>
back, and pretty soon I was playing<lb/>
on Saturday nights. The name of the<lb/>
place was the "Endangered<lb/>
Species At that time I was listen-<lb/>
ing to a lot of blues in Chapel Hill<lb/>
because a fellow named Bruse<lb/>
Bastin, who came over from<lb/>
England, was putting on some big<lb/>
blues shows.<lb/>
EC: Did you come to Greenville<lb/>
from Chapel Hill?<lb/>
WELLS: No, I moved back to<lb/>
Goldsboro and worked in con-<lb/>
struciton for a couple of years. I<lb/>
played a lot of mandolin and was<lb/>
getting into bluegrass and old-time<lb/>
music. Rich Harkness and Fred<lb/>
Scott taught me a lot about old time<lb/>
music at that time. I moved to<lb/>
Greenville when I decided to get a<lb/>
degree in recreation therapy.<lb/>
EC: What made you get in-<lb/>
terested in recreation therapy?<lb/>
WELLS: I'd been playing for some<lb/>
senior citizens parties in Goldsboro<lb/>
and Tarboro and I enjoyed doing<lb/>
that type of thing.<lb/>
EC: How long did you study at<lb/>
ECU?<lb/>
WELLS: Two years, I got a BS in<lb/>
recreational therapy.<lb/>
EC: How did you like the rec.<lb/>
therapy dept. at ECU?<lb/>
WELLS: It's one of the best in<lb/>
the area. When 1 was in the depart-<lb/>
ment people were coming here from<lb/>
up north. It's a specialized field.<lb/>
The department said that people<lb/>
could find jobs all over the country.<lb/>
EC: Were you inspired by any of<lb/>
the professors?<lb/>
WELLS: Dr. Ralph Steele and<lb/>
Karen Hancock. She keeps in touch<lb/>
with what is going on in the field ?<lb/>
she stays current.<lb/>
EC: I know you're working as a<lb/>
rec. therapist out at Pitt Memorial.<lb/>
Just what do you do?<lb/>
WELLS: I'm the therapeutic<lb/>
recreation leader. I hold sessions<lb/>
during the day and I have one even-<lb/>
ing session. Our goal is to return the<lb/>
person to their normal leisure<lb/>
lifestyle as much as possible, or we<lb/>
teach new leisure skills or new at-<lb/>
titudes about leisure. You know, we<lb/>
have to teach some people how to<lb/>
appreciate leisure ? wf teach them<lb/>
to think aobut how they're using<lb/>
their time.<lb/>
EC: Do you relate your rec.<lb/>
therapy work with your perform-<lb/>
ing?<lb/>
WELLS: Yep, you're looking for<lb/>
response, and when something<lb/>
works, it clicks, and it's really sali<lb/>
fying. In both you try to do things<lb/>
that people can respond to. Ideally,<lb/>
at the hospital, we do things that<lb/>
people can do themselves as much as<lb/>
possible. Of course, music is kind of<lb/>
different.<lb/>
EC: Lightning, how do you like<lb/>
to think about your role as a musi-<lb/>
cian?<lb/>
WELLS: I like having a big reper-<lb/>
toire so I can sing all night ? sort of<lb/>
like a minstrel. I like being in any<lb/>
kind of audience and being able to<lb/>
do stuff that just about anybody can<lb/>
relate to. I like being able to ask for<lb/>
requests for old songs. When I start<lb/>
playing, I can sort of tell what the<lb/>
group wants to hear.<lb/>
EC: Do you ever think about<lb/>
moving to a city to play?<lb/>
WELLS: I don't know. I don't<lb/>
know if I could live in a city.<lb/>
EC: Who are some of your big-<lb/>
gest influences?<lb/>
WELLS: My two favorite<lb/>
guitarists are Rev. Gary Davis and<lb/>
Blind Blake, as far as ragtime ?<lb/>
Charlie Patton and Rovert Johnson<lb/>
for slide. I like Jimmie Rodgers as<lb/>
far as the blues influence on country<lb/>
music. I like to think of him as the<lb/>
man who brought blues into country<lb/>
music. All of those blues yodels he<lb/>
did are just blues lines. He recorded<lb/>
some with Louis Armstrong and<lb/>
with some of the black jug bands.<lb/>
I like Uncle Dave Macon for old-<lb/>
time music. The Stanley Brothers<lb/>
Zany Comics Al &amp; Tom<lb/>
Buzz In From Remulak;<lb/>
Earthlings In A Frenzy<lb/>
Mike 'Lightning Weils<lb/>
are my favorite bluegrass group,<lb/>
and I like Hank Williams and<lb/>
George Jones in the country music.<lb/>
Howlin Wolf and Muddy Waters<lb/>
arc my favorites for city blues. I like<lb/>
Elmore James and Sonny Boy<lb/>
Williamson and Little Walter, too.<lb/>
EC: I know you have a pretty ex-<lb/>
tensive record colection. Have you<lb/>
ever thought of doing a radio show?<lb/>
WELLS: I don't know ? it's so<lb/>
specialized ? I don't know about<lb/>
the marked for old music around<lb/>
here. Triangle Slim is doing a show<lb/>
in Chapel Hill, but he ususally has<lb/>
some kind of trouble with it.<lb/>
EC: Can you tell me something<lb/>
about your collection?<lb/>
WELLS: I have enough of certain<lb/>
kinds of music so I like to make<lb/>
tapes of certain old artists or old<lb/>
styles like old time fiddle music,<lb/>
western swing, R&amp;B, city blues,<lb/>
country musicSometimes I make<lb/>
tapes from my collection for other<lb/>
musicians.<lb/>
EC: What have you been listen-<lb/>
ing to lately?<lb/>
WELLS: I've been getting into<lb/>
rhythm and blues lately, and early<lb/>
jazz ? stuff I didn't like earlier like<lb/>
the Boswell Sisters and Cab<lb/>
Calloway.<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
Claus at Christmas. Each summer<lb/>
the boys returned to Minnesota and<lb/>
developed their act at a small club in<lb/>
Minneapolis.<lb/>
During Al's senior year, Tom hit-<lb/>
chhiked to Harvard where he hid<lb/>
out in his partner's dorm room and<lb/>
ate Salisbury steak pilfered from the<lb/>
dining hall. Since Tom attended no<lb/>
classes and lived mainly on borrow-<lb/>
ed money, stolen drugs, and easy<lb/>
women, he was usually mistaken for<lb/>
a student. On weekends the two<lb/>
drove to New York City and per-<lb/>
formed at the Improvisation. "We<lb/>
weren't famous, but the place was<lb/>
says Tom. "We were performing<lb/>
there at the same time as guys like<lb/>
Jimmy 'Dynomite' Walker, Andy<lb/>
'Taxi' Kaufman, Gabe 'Kotter'<lb/>
Kaplan and Freddie 'Blew His<lb/>
Brains Out' Prinze<lb/>
In 1973, Al and Tom moved to<lb/>
Los Angeles and devoted themselves<lb/>
to their act. They played the Com-<lb/>
edy Store, they played Vegas and<lb/>
Reno, they played every campus and<lb/>
concert that came their way. And<lb/>
when, in 1975, producer Lome<lb/>
Michaels hired them to write for an<lb/>
experimental late night comedy<lb/>
show he was putting together for<lb/>
NBC, Franken and Davis moved<lb/>
back East.<lb/>
Saturday Nite Live was a runaway<lb/>
smash. More important, it sent<lb/>
shock waves through the industry, it<lb/>
expanded the limits of television<lb/>
comedy and tapped a reservoir of<lb/>
young talents previously ignored by<lb/>
the networks. As principal writers,<lb/>
Franken and Davis played a major<lb/>
role in the show's success. Each won<lb/>
two Emmys for SNL and a third for<lb/>
a Paul Simon special produced by<lb/>
Michaels.<lb/>
Despite their appearance and a<lb/>
few annoying habits, Franken and<lb/>
Davis enjoy a close professional and<lb/>
personal relationship with Michaels,<lb/>
and when the producer decided to<lb/>
leave SNL after the 1979-1980<lb/>
? season, Al and Tom left with him.<lb/>
Michaels hired them along with<lb/>
fellow SNL writer Jim Downey, to<lb/>
write a feature-length movie for his<lb/>
new Broadway Pictures company<lb/>
and MGM. The film is entitled<lb/>
Nineteen Eighty-Five, and is to be<lb/>
directed by Michaels, his first major<lb/>
project since Saturday Nite Live.<lb/>
"It's a parody of grim, negative<lb/>
Utopia  Tom explains. "Like<lb/>
Logan's Run, 1984 and Soyient<lb/>
Green<lb/>
"And Ordinary People, " adds<lb/>
Al.<lb/>
Both Franken and Davis reside in<lb/>
Manhatten. Al, 30, lives on the Up-<lb/>
per West Side with his wife Franni<lb/>
and their baby daughter Thomasin<lb/>
Davis Franken. At press time, Tom,<lb/>
29, was still living in Greenwich<lb/>
Village with Emily Prager, former<lb/>
actress on The Edge of Night and<lb/>
currently a writer for Penthouse<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
Tickets will be available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, MSC,<lb/>
Monday-Friday, 10 a.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are $3 for students and $5<lb/>
for faculty and staff; all tickets sold<lb/>
at the door the night of the show<lb/>
will be $5.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
Tournament!<lb/>
See<lb/>
announcements<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
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758-1033<lb/>
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Jartran Rentals Available<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM?<lb/>
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WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN Atosnoitadmicutrdeo<lb/>
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the women of the Fleming Center Counselors are<lb/>
available day and night to support and under-<lb/>
stand you. Your safety, comfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured by the caring staff of the Fleming Center<lb/>
SERVICES: ? Tuesday ? Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1 st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up tc<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? Ail inclusive Fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 781-5550 DAY Ofi NIGHT ?<lb/>
Hearth care, counseling rtic CJ cuiMf<lb/>
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Soft Shell Crabs<lb/>
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Take Outs<lb/>
Wdc<lb/>
Catering Specialist<lb/>
W? Cater: Anything<lb/>
11:00 AM<lb/>
10:00 PM -?<lb/>
"TT?<lb/>
MEN OF ECU<lb/>
Do you want to be<lb/>
included in the upcoming<lb/>
calendar featuring the<lb/>
best looking males from<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University?<lb/>
If so come by the<lb/>
Buccaneer Office<lb/>
from 2-5 M-F<lb/>
and pick up an application.<lb/>
? You must be a full<lb/>
time male student<lb/>
atECU ?<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
757-6501 after 2:00<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
i<lb/>
B<lb/>
The e:<lb/>
unique si<lb/>
undefeau<lb/>
winters si<lb/>
As h<lb/>
being ev<lb/>
"Ho<lb/>
have yoj<lb/>
Emory n<lb/>
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cheon.<lb/>
claw thetl<lb/>
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do. '<lb/>
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of four<lb/>
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a quick<lb/>
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spree <lb/>
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touchcU<lb/>
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team fell<lb/>
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charged<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Bucs Head For The Lone Star State<lb/>
By KEN BOL TON<lb/>
Auislam Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU Pirates have been in a<lb/>
unique situation' all year, with an<lb/>
undefeated record at home and a<lb/>
winless slate en the road.<lb/>
As head coacn Ed Emory put it,<lb/>
being even is not too bad.<lb/>
"How many times in your life<lb/>
have you wanted to be even?'<lb/>
Emory rhetorically asked members<lb/>
of the media at his weekly press lun-<lb/>
cheon. "A lot of folks fight and<lb/>
claw their whole lives just trying to<lb/>
get back to even, and a lot never<lb/>
do<lb/>
The Pirates saw their record even-<lb/>
ed at 4-4 following Saturday's loss<lb/>
at West Virginia, which was the first<lb/>
of four away games in a row.<lb/>
The Mountaineers jumped out to<lb/>
a quick 21-0 lead after the first nine<lb/>
minutes of play. Big plays in the<lb/>
spree were a Pirate fumble deep in<lb/>
their own territory and a pass in-<lb/>
terference call which Emory felt<lb/>
shoudn't have been made.<lb/>
"The defense gave them one<lb/>
touchdown, the offense gave them<lb/>
one, and the officials gave them<lb/>
one Emory said. "But you have<lb/>
to remember that we played the last<lb/>
51 minutes without giving up a<lb/>
touchdown<lb/>
After returning to Greenville, the<lb/>
team fell victim to the Halloween at-<lb/>
mosphere Sunday night. While<lb/>
"horsing around" in their Belk<lb/>
dorm room, Steve Sellers was ac-<lb/>
cidentally shot in the abdomen by<lb/>
teammate Jeff Pegues.<lb/>
According to Emory, Pegues was<lb/>
charged by campus authorities with<lb/>
illegal possession of a weapon on<lb/>
campus and released on an<lb/>
unsecured bond. He was also asked<lb/>
to move out of the dorm and was<lb/>
suspended from the team indefinite-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
Defensive end Jody Schulz, who<lb/>
has worked with a rescue squad in<lb/>
his hometown the past seven, sum-<lb/>
mers, was on the scene quickly and<lb/>
wrapped Sellers in a blanket. Schulz<lb/>
then rushed him to Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
"It was very, very poor judge-<lb/>
ment on Pegues part said Emory.<lb/>
"But maybe a tragic accident like<lb/>
this will pull the team closer<lb/>
together<lb/>
Emory and the rest of the team<lb/>
will have to forget this weekend's<lb/>
accident, as well as the West<lb/>
Virginia game, and concentrate on<lb/>
Texas-Arlington, next week's oppo-<lb/>
nent in The Lone Star State.<lb/>
This will be the first time that<lb/>
ECU has travelled to Arlington. The<lb/>
two teams have met once, with the<lb/>
Pirates winning 23-17 in the 1978<lb/>
contest at Ficklen Stadium. In fact,<lb/>
ECU has travelled to the state of<lb/>
Texas only once in its history?in<lb/>
1970 when the Pirates lost to West<lb/>
Texas State 42-30.<lb/>
Before the season, Texas-<lb/>
Arlington was picked to defend<lb/>
their championship in the Southland<lb/>
Conference. But the Mavericks lost<lb/>
starting quarterback Craig Hopkins<lb/>
in the second game of the year and<lb/>
have been falling ever since, as<lb/>
shown by their present 2-6 record.<lb/>
Hopkins is expected to make his<lb/>
return against the Pirates, a fact<lb/>
which concerned Emory.<lb/>
The Mavericks feature a talented<lb/>
tailback in Scotty Caldwell, who<lb/>
Emory said "may be the best in the<lb/>
state of Texas So far this season,<lb/>
Caldwell has averaged over 100<lb/>
yards per game and has over 300<lb/>
yards in pass receptions.<lb/>
With a defensive line that<lb/>
averages 244 pounds per man, the<lb/>
Mavericks will be a tough test for<lb/>
the Pirates' offense.<lb/>
"They are the biggest football<lb/>
team that we have faced Emory<lb/>
stated. "The kids are impressive-<lb/>
looking and their stats are good. It's<lb/>
a situation where they could come<lb/>
alive at any time, and it scares me to<lb/>
death<lb/>
ECU interception leader Clint<lb/>
Harris has now picked off a pass in<lb/>
three consecutive games. Against<lb/>
West Virginia, Harris returned an<lb/>
interception 29 yards, leaving him<lb/>
24 yards off the school record for<lb/>
interception return yardage of 275<lb/>
held by Reggie Pinkney (1973-76).<lb/>
Harris has 12 career interceptions.<lb/>
Emory announced that Kevin In-<lb/>
gram, who did not play against<lb/>
WVU because of a bruised sternum,<lb/>
will start this week at quarterback in<lb/>
place of Greg Stewart. Ingram has<lb/>
had an excellent week of practice,<lb/>
according to the coaches, and will<lb/>
be looked for to provide some spark<lb/>
to the Pirate offense.<lb/>
Punting has been somewhat of a<lb/>
problem area for ECU this season.<lb/>
If a bright spot existed at West<lb/>
Virginia, in was in this area. Jeff<lb/>
Bolch, a freshman from Hickory,<lb/>
boomed six punts for an average of<lb/>
41.8 yards, including a SO-yarder.<lb/>
With the season coming down to<lb/>
the backstretch, Emory will be<lb/>
counting heavily on the Pirate<lb/>
seniors for leadership.<lb/>
ECU will start eight seniors this<lb/>
Saturday, which are: Carlton<lb/>
Nelson and Tom Carnes on offense;<lb/>
Jody Schulz, Mark Ervin, Amos<lb/>
Twitty, Gerald Sykes, Sam Norris<lb/>
and Smokey Norris on defense.<lb/>
"The seniors are very committed<lb/>
to having a winning season<lb/>
Emory responded. "They have been<lb/>
accepting a great deal of respon-<lb/>
sibility and are showing great<lb/>
leadership this year<lb/>
Branch Makes Change<lb/>
ECU SPORTS INFO.<lb/>
"A.C. Collins told me about a<lb/>
nephew of his down in Florida<lb/>
head coach Ed Emory recalled,<lb/>
"and naturally we were interested in<lb/>
any of A.Cs kin, so we took a look<lb/>
at him<lb/>
Anthony Collins was an outstan-<lb/>
ding back at ECU and now plays for<lb/>
the New England Patriots. His<lb/>
nephew, however, wasn't exactly<lb/>
what Emory was looking for at that<lb/>
time, but things soon changed. "I<lb/>
saw a guy who was about 5-10, 170<lb/>
pounds. We looked at some of his<lb/>
high school film, and at that time we<lb/>
made the decision not to recruit<lb/>
Reggie Branch.<lb/>
"About nine months later I was<lb/>
over in the weight-training center<lb/>
and I saw this guy that looked like<lb/>
Charles Atlas ? I didn't even<lb/>
recognize him, but it was Reggie<lb/>
Branch's story is definitely one of<lb/>
dramatic change. Graduating in<lb/>
1980 from Seminole High School in<lb/>
Sanford, Fla Branch was a block-<lb/>
ing back who never scored a<lb/>
touchdown in high school.<lb/>
This season against Florida State,<lb/>
he started against the Seminoles and<lb/>
tied with tailback Earnet Byner for<lb/>
top rushing yardage with 77 yards.<lb/>
In the homecoming game, Branch<lb/>
led all Pirate rushers against Illinois<lb/>
State with 109 yards and a<lb/>
touchdwon ? his first 100-yard<lb/>
game ever and first career<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
"When I first came up to ECU<lb/>
with my Uncle A.C, I was only<lb/>
weighing around 170. When ECU<lb/>
didn't recruit me, I went up to West<lb/>
Virginia State for a scholarship, but<lb/>
I broke my ankle before the season<lb/>
(1980), and WVS didn't have the<lb/>
caliber program I was looking for<lb/>
anyhow.<lb/>
"All this time I had really been<lb/>
working out with weights real hard.<lb/>
My high school weight coach Bill<lb/>
weights in the summer after I<lb/>
graduated<lb/>
After leaving WVS, Branch was<lb/>
all ready to attend New Mexico<lb/>
State with a scholarship. But before<lb/>
his departure, Branch made a stop<lb/>
in Greenville to see his uncle.<lb/>
"He (Collins) was getting ready<lb/>
McDaniel and running back coach<lb/>
Emory Blake got me into lifting<lb/>
Reggie Branch<lb/>
to go to the Patriot's camp, so we<lb/>
both were working out at the<lb/>
weight-training complex<lb/>
That's where Branch met Emory.<lb/>
"I didn't even know who he was<lb/>
he said. "He talked to me a while,<lb/>
and after he left Anthony asked me<lb/>
if i knew who that was. I said no,<lb/>
and he told me that that was the<lb/>
head coach.<lb/>
"Then Coach Emory asked me if<lb/>
I wanted to play ball for ECU. I was<lb/>
set to go to New Mexico, but since<lb/>
A.C. had come here, I decided to go<lb/>
to East Carolina. I'm glad I did<lb/>
Branch had to sit out a year as a<lb/>
red-shirt because he was a transfer,<lb/>
but he is still just a freshman<lb/>
eligibility-wise. He got the starting<lb/>
call against Florida State after both<lb/>
tailbacks went down with injuries<lb/>
and starting fullback Earnet Byner<lb/>
was moved to tailback to fill in.<lb/>
So far this season Branch is third<lb/>
among Pirate Rushers with 301 total<lb/>
yards, despite limited playing time<lb/>
during the first five games. He<lb/>
averages 5.5 yards per carry, and<lb/>
almost all of those yards have been<lb/>
up the middle, the kind of tough<lb/>
yards the coaches depend on Branch<lb/>
to get.<lb/>
"Reggie Branch has been one of<lb/>
our most pleasant surprises on of-<lb/>
fense offensive coordinator Larry<lb/>
Beck is h said. "He is the ideal<lb/>
fullback. He is helping to give us the<lb/>
inside running game we need.<lb/>
"He has the size, the strength<lb/>
(Branch bench presses 450 pounds)<lb/>
and the speed (4.5 in the 40)<lb/>
necessary to run inside the guards.<lb/>
That is the kind of bruising, hard-<lb/>
nosed running ? running through<lb/>
arm tackles, breaking tackles ? that<lb/>
is Reggie's forte<lb/>
Emory added that Branch has<lb/>
gotten so big and powerful that he<lb/>
has lost some of his flexibility as a<lb/>
result. "Yeah, I do think I need to<lb/>
work on flexibility Branch admit-<lb/>
ted. "In the Illinois State game, for<lb/>
example, I ran over to Ernie (Ernest<lb/>
Byner) and said 'Hey, I'm gonna<lb/>
break one today. I just know<lb/>
"Well, I did break loose for<lb/>
about 30 yards once, but a couple of<lb/>
times I broke through the line and<lb/>
really felt like I should have busted<lb/>
it, but I sort of tightened up, instead<lb/>
of stretching out and striding. That<lb/>
comes from being too tight, not<lb/>
flexible enough<lb/>
But after smoothing out a few<lb/>
areas in his game, Branch just may<lb/>
follow in his uncle's footsteps.<lb/>
n?l By GAMY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU eaarterfcack Kevin Ingram makes his move against WVU last weekend. Ingram is expected to<lb/>
start Saturday against Texas-Arlington.<lb/>
Autry: "A Great Technician"<lb/>
ECU SPORTS INFO.<lb/>
"Jeff Autry has good speed and<lb/>
agility ECU head football coach<lb/>
Ed Emory said. "He is a very<lb/>
dedicated weight-lifter and a good<lb/>
student. His only problem is his<lb/>
ability to hold his weight<lb/>
Autry, who started the first four<lb/>
games this season at offensive tackle<lb/>
for the Pirates, has had a long bout<lb/>
with a severe flu-type bronchitis.<lb/>
"I've lost about 20-25 pounds<lb/>
because of it. I feel better now than<lb/>
I have for a long time. You really<lb/>
miss those 25 pounds when you start<lb/>
running into 275-pound guys<lb/>
Autry is now weighing in at 228<lb/>
pounds ? down from the 250<lb/>
pounds he started with at the begin-<lb/>
ning of the season . He stands 6-3,<lb/>
so he is looking rather skinny beside<lb/>
280-pound Terry Long, who is the<lb/>
other starting tackle Autry lines up<lb/>
with.<lb/>
Although Autry is somewhat<lb/>
light, especially now for an offen-<lb/>
sive lineman, he has a lot of com-<lb/>
pensating factors, according to of-<lb/>
fensive line coach John Zernhelt.<lb/>
"Jeff is a great technician he<lb/>
said. "It's true, he's not that big,<lb/>
but for our type of offense he<lb/>
doesn't need to be that big. We run<lb/>
a Finesse type of offense. We trap<lb/>
and run outside a lot. So we almost<lb/>
never ask Jeff to block one-on-one.<lb/>
Jeff Autry<lb/>
Zernhelt said he wants the tackles<lb/>
to out-finesse their man, instead of<lb/>
trying to bowl them over. "Jeff has<lb/>
good speed and quickness but most<lb/>
importantly, he is a hard worker,<lb/>
especially on technique he added.<lb/>
Autry went to high school in Co -<lb/>
ington, Ga where he was mainly a<lb/>
linebacker. The ECU connection<lb/>
was made through Coach Emory<lb/>
when he was an assistant at Georgia<lb/>
Tech. Autry, who was named Best<lb/>
Offensive Lineman at Newton<lb/>
Country his senior year (1979),<lb/>
caught Emory's eye.<lb/>
Autry finished high school early<lb/>
and came to ECU in the spring of<lb/>
1980. He was injured and red-<lb/>
shirted that year. In 1981, Autry<lb/>
saw limited action as a freshman,<lb/>
playing on the second and third<lb/>
teams. But last spring he really came<lb/>
on, and this season he started the<lb/>
first four games at left tackle. Then<lb/>
he caught the flu.<lb/>
Autry, however, has recovered<lb/>
and whatever the outcome may be,<lb/>
he seems to be well on his way to<lb/>
having a bright future at ECU.<lb/>
Pirates Lose Closing Match<lb/>
All-America Candidate Jody Scfcabt<lb/>
The ECU men's tennis team<lb/>
travelled to Atlantic Christian Col-<lb/>
lege Monday and lost their first<lb/>
match of the fall season, 7-2.<lb/>
In singles, Pirate Don Rutledge<lb/>
won in a tough three-set match<lb/>
against Randy Pate; 6-7, 6-4 and<lb/>
6-3.<lb/>
In doubles, ECU's Paul Owen<lb/>
and Cole King edged past Chuck<lb/>
Burns and Pate, 9-8.<lb/>
"Playing ACC gave us an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to play against some of the<lb/>
best head coach Patricia Sherman<lb/>
said. "We found some things to<lb/>
work on and to be ready for ACC<lb/>
next spring.<lb/>
"I was very impressed this fall<lb/>
and was really pleased with the per-<lb/>
formance of the team. I'm looking<lb/>
forward to a super spring season<lb/>
Now 2-1, the Pirates do not have<lb/>
any more fall matches and will meet<lb/>
ACC again on March 1.<lb/>
In other singles matches, John<lb/>
Sturen (ACC) def. Ted Lepper, 6-4,<lb/>
6-2; Kristen Eriksson (ACC) def.<lb/>
Galen Treble, 6-4, 7-6; Frederick<lb/>
Teinstrand (ACC) def. Paul Owen,<lb/>
6-3, 6-3; and Chuck Burns def. Jeff<lb/>
Farfour, 6-3, 6-3.<lb/>
In the remaining doubles mat-<lb/>
ches, John Sturen and Greg de<lb/>
Freitas (ACC) def. Lepper and<lb/>
Rutledge. 8-2, and Feinstrand and<lb/>
Friksson (ACC) def. Trebel and<lb/>
Creech, 6-4, 6-1.<lb/>
Soccer Game At Ficklen<lb/>
The ECU-UNC-Wilmington soc-<lb/>
cer match will be played on Satur-<lb/>
day night, Nov. 6 at 7 p.m instead<lb/>
of the originally scheduled time for<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 7-9, will be at-<lb/>
tempting to break the school record<lb/>
for the most wins in a single season.<lb/>
The mark of seven was set in 1974<lb/>
(7-4), 1980 (7-14-1) and in 1981<lb/>
(7-9-1).<lb/>
The match is the team's season<lb/>
finale and was switched because of<lb/>
the enthusiastic response shown last<lb/>
season when ECU played North<lb/>
Carolina State in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
ECU students, children under 12<lb/>
years of age, and high school soccer<lb/>
players and coaches will be admitted<lb/>
free of charge. Adult admission is<lb/>
$1.00.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
Tar Heels To Face Tigers Classifieds<lb/>
CHARLOTTE,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) ? Last<lb/>
week's loss to<lb/>
Maryland changed a lot<lb/>
of things about North<lb/>
Carolina's football<lb/>
season, including the<lb/>
stakes in this weekend's<lb/>
game against Clemson.<lb/>
This was supposed to<lb/>
be the weekend for<lb/>
14th-ranked Clemson<lb/>
and 13th-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina to battle it out<lb/>
for the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference football<lb/>
championship. Instead<lb/>
the Tar Heels will be<lb/>
struggling to keep their<lb/>
hopes alive of at least<lb/>
getting a share of the<lb/>
conference title.<lb/>
With 17th-ranked<lb/>
Maryland in the<lb/>
driver's seat by virtue<lb/>
of a 4-0 league record,<lb/>
defending national and<lb/>
conference champion<lb/>
Clemson will attempt<lb/>
to increase its league<lb/>
record to 4-0. That<lb/>
would set the stage for<lb/>
a showdown between<lb/>
0<lb/>
the Tigers and<lb/>
Maryland next week<lb/>
that would likely decide<lb/>
the championship.<lb/>
With a win over the<lb/>
Tigers, North Carolina<lb/>
would have to wait for<lb/>
someone to defeat<lb/>
Maryland opening the<lb/>
way for a possible tie<lb/>
for the league title.<lb/>
"We're not out of<lb/>
the chase yet said Tar<lb/>
Heel Coach Dick<lb/>
Crum, whose team was<lb/>
thumped 31-24 by<lb/>
Maryland. "But we're<lb/>
certainly not in a great<lb/>
position. We've got to<lb/>
win the rest of our<lb/>
games and hope so-<lb/>
meone can knock off<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
In other conference<lb/>
action this weekend,<lb/>
Duke and Wake Forest<lb/>
meet in Durham in a<lb/>
game both teams need<lb/>
in the struggle for a<lb/>
winning season.<lb/>
Maryland, which has<lb/>
emerged in the top 20<lb/>
for the first time this<lb/>
CD<lb/>
.41<lb/>
. . . hours . . .days <lb/>
weeks . . . years.<lb/>
You've put a lot of time<lb/>
and care into your Senior<lb/>
Show to make it your best.<lb/>
We. at Morgan Printers, Inc.<lb/>
realize your poster will<lb/>
introduce and reflect your<lb/>
show. We also understand<lb/>
quality and believe our<lb/>
standards will meet yours.<lb/>
HUM<lb/>
MORGAN<lb/>
PRINTERS, Inc.<lb/>
211 W. Ninth St. ? 752-5151<lb/>
season, is at home<lb/>
against Miami, and<lb/>
Virginia travels to<lb/>
Georgia Tech. North<lb/>
Carolina State could<lb/>
secure itself a winning<lb/>
season with a victory at<lb/>
6th-ranked Penn State<lb/>
and possibly save the<lb/>
job of Coach Monte<lb/>
Kiffin.<lb/>
Among the in-<lb/>
dependents South<lb/>
Carolina tries to<lb/>
recover from a 33-3 loss<lb/>
to North Carolina State<lb/>
at home against 11th<lb/>
ranked Florida State.<lb/>
Last week's loss to<lb/>
Maryland is going<lb/>
down in the books at<lb/>
North Carolina as just<lb/>
"one of those days<lb/>
"Last Saturday was<lb/>
just one of those days<lb/>
where nothing went<lb/>
right said Crum.<lb/>
"We didn't play well<lb/>
and Maryland played<lb/>
great. Give them all the<lb/>
credit for a job well<lb/>
done. Now we've just<lb/>
got to pick ourselves<lb/>
back up and get ready<lb/>
for Clemson<lb/>
The Tar Heels<lb/>
rushing defense, rank-<lb/>
ed last week as the tops<lb/>
in the nation, broke<lb/>
down against<lb/>
Maryland's strong run-<lb/>
ning attack, and the<lb/>
Tar Heels could see<lb/>
more of the same<lb/>
Saturday. Led by<lb/>
tailback Cliff Austin,<lb/>
the Tigers are averaging<lb/>
272.3 yards per game<lb/>
against opponents on<lb/>
the ground and getting<lb/>
better every week.<lb/>
Clemson will also<lb/>
have the benefit of a<lb/>
week of to prepare as<lb/>
well as the homefield<lb/>
advantage although<lb/>
that hasn't accounted<lb/>
for much in this series.<lb/>
Since 1970, the Tar<lb/>
Heels are 4-2 in Death<lb/>
Valley.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WANTED: SOMEONE TO win a<lb/>
new FUJI Supreme Bicycle for<lb/>
Christmas. If this interests you.<lb/>
talk to any Phi Tau.<lb/>
VICTORIA WONDERS how you<lb/>
can smell roses in the sky.<lb/>
The crop is not done when Dec. is<lb/>
nigh.<lb/>
Crops are in a cycle which always<lb/>
has a season.<lb/>
Vicky wonders how such "tall"<lb/>
roses have grown beyond reason.<lb/>
JERRY HAS A MESSAGE FOR<lb/>
YOU: Tom, Jodi, Steve, Oave,<lb/>
Sue. Marsha, Elanor, Chris, Bob,<lb/>
Vernon, the Oak St. boys and Bob<lb/>
and Phil. The SKY WAS YELLOW<lb/>
and THE SUN WAS BLUE. 2:30<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
DAVID: WB wants you to go to<lb/>
AB; are Rose's red? I know a<lb/>
secret!<lb/>
LOST: OCT. 31, Jack; last seen<lb/>
rolling down Student Street with a<lb/>
smile on his face. Appeared to be<lb/>
pretty well lit. Any info concerning<lb/>
his whereabouts, please call<lb/>
7SI LOSERS<lb/>
ONLY LOSERS eat club sand-<lb/>
wiches for lunch.<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home. Reasonable rates;<lb/>
7St 340.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typing service<lb/>
experience, quality work, IBM<lb/>
typewriter. Call Lame Shivt.<lb/>
750-5301 or Gail Joiner 754-1041.<lb/>
TYPING TERM papers, resumes,<lb/>
thesis, etc. Call 753-4733.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL typing rush<lb/>
jobs done. Scientific symbol ele-<lb/>
ment. Call gMW after 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING: MANUSCRIPTS,<lb/>
papers, thesis, reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call 754-3740.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
FOUND: POCKET<lb/>
CALCULATOR; owner must ioen<lb/>
tify. call 757-4071 fee Applewhite.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WE BUY PLAYBOY. Railing<lb/>
Stone Mag. Quicksilver Record<lb/>
Book Exchange. 100 East Fifth St.<lb/>
WANTED: USED LP's.<lb/>
REWARD: CASH OR TRADE<lb/>
Quicksilver Records. MM Cast<lb/>
Fifth St.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
LAMM O ?CO - ???? ? ??<lb/>
ntMM an P? 3.<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT<lb/>
758-0530. <lb/>
HONEST)<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES<lb/>
TYPED AT A REASONABLE<lb/>
PRICE. 751-4035. ASK FOR JON!<lb/>
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID.<lb/>
NEED RIDE from Washington,<lb/>
NC to ECU MonFri 7:00<lb/>
a.m. 4:00 p.m. Call Joe. (010)<lb/>
?44447l collect, nights. Desire to<lb/>
share expenses.<lb/>
CRAZY ZACK'S ROAD TRIP PMrv<lb/>
tt (to includes reaed trip te Zaefcs<lb/>
and refreshment an the wary to<lb/>
Raleifjpv Half-price admlsslan !?<lb/>
Zaek's. Call AJaa $?? ?<lb/>
751-1073 before Hay. U. <lb/>
IT DONT Mean a ????? H ? ??<lb/>
got tfcat swing)- Sophisticated<lb/>
Latfias. Friday, av. ?? WnJt<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
SIR DUKE. I'll be the eae sashay-<lb/>
ing dawn the aisle at<lb/>
Sophist oca ted Lad res. Friday Nov.<lb/>
sth. sea r? JdQtttw.<lb/>
Take Mm "A" TRAIN, but get<lb/>
there Friday ???? Mr Owe Ell-<lb/>
ington's sogonstocaiad Laosas in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
40 DUKE ELlNGTON's tunes and<lb/>
big band sound, live from Broad-<lb/>
way. Sophisticated Ladies, Fri-<lb/>
day. November 5th. Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
FORSALE<lb/>
HAMO-CRAFT?0. rustic fur-<lb/>
niture ?t affordable student<lb/>
.rtcdS P?r mare information, call<lb/>
Kim at 753-5717.<lb/>
t FISHER SH?KI? ????? ?<lb/>
vieU tike M trad ?w cassane<lb/>
pec. Call 7S-?077 ? ? ??'<lb/>
Carolinian 7$7-J4 ?? Ma?e<lb/>
FURNISHED EFFICIENCY<lb/>
APARTMENT. Utlllttas Mchjddd -<lb/>
across from ciwaw. TSO-MBS.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1070 HONDA ISO XL<lb/>
DIRT OR STREET BIKE Call<lb/>
70-0700 Man Tnor.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha US. Great<lb/>
MPG law miHMHja axe. candltion<lb/>
S3S0. Call 750-30TI7.<lb/>
NICE GRAY AND WHITE RAB<lb/>
?IT FUR JACKET FOR SALE ?S0<lb/>
CALL 7Sn.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share furnished 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment energy efficient; half rent,<lb/>
half utilities. Call 754 4207.<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
presents<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
w?<lb/>
Fri Nov. 12<lb/>
With Special Guest ?<lb/>
Cimmaron<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30-8:15 for<lb/>
Advance Ticket Holders Only<lb/>
For Further Information ?<lb/>
Call 758-3943<lb/>
Every THURS. NIGHT<lb/>
is beat the clock nite<lb/>
with 25C beer.<lb/>
Monday, November 8,1982<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, ECU Campus<lb/>
j- - - i<lb/>
xi.<lb/>
mmvzmw&amp;Jii<lb/>
MM ???<lb/>
' ?aaaad -?J ?; ??<lb/>
Tickets: ECU Students $3.00<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Staff $5.00<lb/>
Public $5.00<lb/>
The Original Writers of Saturday Nite Live<lb/>
Originators of the Coneheads, Point-Counterpoint and the Al Franken Decade<lb/>
FRANKEN &amp; DAVIS<lb/>
Tickets Available At Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Tickets at the Door $5.00<lb/>
PnmntBd by ECU Special Bmm<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
'?"v<lb/>
mm.m<lb/>
 m<lb/>
?v: ?'?-?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0011"/><lb/>
Know a good<lb/>
M on ?a?t <lb/>
ALE<lb/>
ruitlC fur-<lb/>
c s e student<lb/>
n ormation call<lb/>
it US tiodfi WOs<lb/>
Lof lor ca??e"?<lb/>
I?' or Th East<lb/>
j and laave<lb/>
jonnson<lb/>
t ; 6 : C I BMCM<lb/>
ci included<lb/>
HONDA IM XL<lb/>
E BIKE Call<lb/>
ana US Grea'<lb/>
tic condition<lb/>
c whit sab<lb/>
It cqb sale ssc<lb/>
12<lb/>
est ?<lb/>
ron<lb/>
I: tor<lb/>
Only<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
IGHT<lb/>
ite<lb/>
?Oflt<lb/>
ice<lb/>
SAVE THIS<lb/>
lit<lb/>
MON. NOV. 8<lb/>
Auction at 7 piTI<lb/>
Auction Preview at 6 pm<lb/>
A PORTION OF<lb/>
500,000.<lb/>
WORTH OF BRAND NEW STEREO &amp; VIDEO<lb/>
EQUIPMENT WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION<lb/>
WITH BIDS STARTING AT A FRACTION OF<lb/>
RETAIL VALUE!<lb/>
RAM ADA INN<lb/>
Pagentry Hall - 301 E. Greenville Blvd. (US 264 By-pass)<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. CAROLINA<lb/>
?W<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
ALL MERCHANDISE IS BRANO NEW ANO<lb/>
CARRIES FULL MANUFACTURER'S<lb/>
WARRANTY SERVICE AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
MANY LOCAL WARRANTY CENTERS<lb/>
vfA<lb/>
n<lb/>
 <lb/>
NOME CASSETTES<lb/>
PORTABLE STEREOS<lb/>
Starting Bids at<lb/>
HOME TURNTABLES<lb/>
Cfl&amp;ITOftS<lb/>
DCMANDCIISH<lb/>
Cash. Certified checks<lb/>
or BenkctVdS Only<lb/>
NOME RECEIVERS<lb/>
AMPS-TUNERS<lb/>
<lb/>
Stirling Bids at<lb/>
Starting Bids at<lb/>
ana<lb/>
more:<lb/>
values to SONY HITACHI<lb/>
$229 95<lb/>
CAR SPEAKERS<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
JVC FISHER<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
Values fo$265<lb/>
CAR STEREOS<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
HITACHI<lb/>
OPTONICA<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
ana more:<lb/>
Values to $399.95<lb/>
HOME SPEAKERS<lb/>
Starting ? at<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
moMetzn<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
and more'<lb/>
Values to$499.95<lb/>
-l)WM<lb/>
VIDEO <lb/>
Values to Starting<lb/>
$169 95 pr Bids at<lb/>
JENSEN $<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
and more!<lb/>
r,<lb/>
p.orJtztzn<lb/>
boseO<lb/>
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pair pioiNiecn<lb/>
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Stanm9 , <lb/>
EA<lb/>
vaiuti to MMM aa<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
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STEREO<lb/>
LIQUIDATORS fl<lb/>
JKI<lb/>
Auctioneer Joe Tutrone, licensed and bonded. 209 S. Gaston, Carthage. Texas<lb/>
N C Lie. 2841 (Not responsible tor accidents). Auction Company Stereo Liquidators, 2521<lb/>
NW 9th, Corvallis, Oregon. 1-800 547 1203 N.C. Lie. 2840 AH Sales are FINAL All items in<lb/>
limited quantities. All products are similar to Illustrations<lb/>
RAMADA INN<lb/>
Pagentry Hall - 301 E. Greenville Blvd. (US 264 By-pass)<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. CAROLINA<lb/>
Some items adv. may not be available due to prior sale.<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4, 1982<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Intramural Tournaments Scheduled<lb/>
The Co-Rec Champions Crowned. .<lb/>
The World Series of Co-Rec Soft-<lb/>
ball was played last week between<lb/>
the Bombers and Lumber-N-<lb/>
Lightening. The Lumber-N-<lb/>
Lightening team, led by Bobby Hill<lb/>
and Maureen Buck, held true to<lb/>
their namesake by contributing hit<lb/>
after hit to pile up a total of 14 runs.<lb/>
The Bombers bombed the ball very<lb/>
deep into the outfield but always to<lb/>
an opposing team member. Con-<lb/>
gratulations to Lumber-N-<lb/>
Lightening on their 14-4 victory.<lb/>
The Super Bowl of Co-Rec Foot-<lb/>
ball<lb/>
The Super Bowl is about to hit the<lb/>
intramural flag football field.<lb/>
That's right, the playoffs for co-rec<lb/>
competition are about to begin.<lb/>
Some of the top poll picks include<lb/>
the Bod Squad, Elizabeth City<lb/>
Animals, Football Furies and The<lb/>
Spoilers. Play will begin on Wednes-<lb/>
day, November 3. Pick your<lb/>
favorite team and join the In-<lb/>
tramural Department in the Super<lb/>
Bowl.<lb/>
Soccer Update<lb/>
Several teams prove to be World<lb/>
Cup class as the intramural soccer<lb/>
season kicks its way into the second<lb/>
week of competition. The Umstead<lb/>
Jockettes appear to be standouts in<lb/>
the women's Division. In the men's<lb/>
Division, the Slay Hippies appear to<lb/>
be the team to beat among the<lb/>
residence halls, as do the Omni<lb/>
among the independents and the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha team among the<lb/>
fraternities.<lb/>
The Lanes Are Hot<lb/>
Many bowlers have hit the fast-<lb/>
paced lanes in the past week attemp-<lb/>
ting to prove that they are the best<lb/>
"pro-ams After two complete<lb/>
weeks of bowling, Alley Katz and<lb/>
Bull City Boat People No. 3 led the<lb/>
men's Independent Division while<lb/>
Scott Gutterballs and Jones Strikers<lb/>
tie the men's Residence Hall Divi-<lb/>
sion. The Fraternity Division sees<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau leading all other<lb/>
teams while Umstead Pinheads fin-<lb/>
sish out in top honors for the<lb/>
women.<lb/>
A High Scoring Affair<lb/>
If you want to see a fast-paced<lb/>
sport that involves intricate skills<lb/>
from almost every type of activity,<lb/>
come watch Team Handball being<lb/>
played at Memorial Gym. Action<lb/>
TRIM YOUR FIGURE<lb/>
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Programs for Men &amp; Women<lb/>
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SKIN CARE<lb/>
Individual Skin Analysis<lb/>
Deep Pore Cleansing<lb/>
Face &amp; Body Waxing<lb/>
Manicures and Pedicures<lb/>
Complimentary Consultation<lb/>
'Check phone book lor<lb/>
discount coupon.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 16<lb/>
WEtKS<lb/>
AT? rfTHEWEXPENSE<lb/>
$185 00 Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control and Problem Pregnan<lb/>
cy Counseling. For further infor<lb/>
malion call 832 0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 800 221-2568) between 9<lb/>
AM and 5 P M. Weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh. N. C.<lb/>
Modern<lb/>
Laundromats<lb/>
Close to<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
m<lb/>
10th St. Across from<lb/>
Krispy Kreme (752-6117)<lb/>
14th St. 1 Block from<lb/>
the "Hill" (752-9636)<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
?Large capacity washers<lb/>
?Lots Dryer<lb/>
?Color TV's with cable<lb/>
?Video Games<lb/>
?FluffFold Service<lb/>
? 10th St. ? Open24hrs.<lb/>
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FREE WASH wthis coupon<lb/>
Limit 1 coupon per visit.<lb/>
Coupon expires 1031<lb/>
?T<lb/>
I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
got under way this week and already<lb/>
several teams appear to be favorites.<lb/>
The Ballslingers and the Kappa<lb/>
Alpha "A" team are "Sneaker<lb/>
Sam's" picks to be in the finals on<lb/>
the men's championship. The<lb/>
Heartbreakers are devastating in the<lb/>
women's division. Come catch a<lb/>
glimpse of the high scoring affair.<lb/>
Tennis Tournament Finals Set<lb/>
In the semifinal match of the<lb/>
Men's Open Tennis Singles, Kevin<lb/>
Burke defeated Geoff Kokiko 6-2,<lb/>
2-6, 6-3. This sets the stage for the<lb/>
championship match to be played<lb/>
Friuay, November 5 at 1:00 on the<lb/>
Minges Courts. In the men's in-<lb/>
termediate singles, Tom Kiehl is<lb/>
undefeated as he advances into the<lb/>
final round.<lb/>
Racquetball Tournament Under-<lb/>
way<lb/>
A reminder that all entrants must<lb/>
play at least four matches prior to<lb/>
Monday, November 8 to be eligible<lb/>
for the single elimination tourna-<lb/>
ment to begin Tuesday, November<lb/>
9. Norman Dunn, Jack Crouch and<lb/>
Paul Hughes appear to be most<lb/>
competitive in the Men's Open Divi-<lb/>
sion; while Gary Owens and Lonnie<lb/>
Stafford are strong contenders in<lb/>
the Men's Intermediate Division. In<lb/>
the Women's Open, Amanda<lb/>
Wiscovitch and Carmen Greene lead<lb/>
the field, while Patti Hubbell and<lb/>
Michele Mascotti appear to be<lb/>
challengers in the Women's In-<lb/>
termediate. Stay tuned for tourna-<lb/>
ment progress and results.<lb/>
Adapted Recreation<lb/>
We are currently running three<lb/>
activities for the impaired students<lb/>
on campus. Recreational swimming<lb/>
is being held on Wednesday even-<lb/>
ings from 7:30 to 9:30. Swimming<lb/>
assistants are available for instruc-<lb/>
tion. Transportation is provided<lb/>
from Slay Residence Hall.<lb/>
On Tuesday afternoons from 4:00<lb/>
to 6:00, lanes 7 and 8 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center are<lb/>
reserved for handicapped students<lb/>
to enjoy bowling.<lb/>
Horseback riding is being offered<lb/>
at Ram Horn Stables on Monday<lb/>
afternoons from 5:30 to 6:00.<lb/>
Transportation is provided.<lb/>
If you would like more informa-<lb/>
tion on these activities, please con-<lb/>
tact the intramural office.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will scrimmage against Louisburg College at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
WE PAY IMMFOIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASS ? WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
? VCNDS<lb/>
AL: GO. Oi SliVER<lb/>
S?L ?RcOINS<lb/>
CHN J. CRYSTAL<lb/>
rINE WATCHES<lb/>
VV " 0t KEV SALES CO ,? Af<lb/>
40 E'NSST. OPE 9:30 5:30rVON. SAT.<lb/>
(hapmony house south) Pr ONF 752-3866<lb/>
YC PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALE<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS DRIVE THRU WINDOW<lb/>
Special:<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
2 ribs, fries, slaw &amp; biscuit<lb/>
on Wed. only<lb/>
11-2 p.m. and 5-9 p.m.<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED HOMEMADE<lb/>
BREAD PUDDING.<lb/>
only<lb/>
25C<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ? 752-1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
The Medical Store<lb/>
2205 W. 5th St. P.O. Box 59<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
MEDICAL STUDENTS<lb/>
BARBECUEBASH<lb/>
MONDAY, NOV. 8th<lb/>
4 P.MUNTIL<lb/>
FREE FOOD<lb/>
DIA G1WOS TIC SE T SHOW<lb/>
SHOW MED SCHOOL ID<lb/>
PHONE 757-3490 or 1-800-682-3633<lb/>
2 East Carolina Medical Supply Co.<lb/>
uV<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
MonFri. 8 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
aws<lb/>
FINE<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes ? Across from Girls' Dorms<lb/>
Inflation fighter. To help peo-<lb/>
ple's shrinking budgets, Pharo's has<lb/>
slashed their prices on the following<lb/>
items:<lb/>
Hamburgers 60C Cheeseburger 80C<lb/>
Big Boy 1.45 Bad Boy '2.45<lb/>
Hot DogsbOC Foot Longs $1.25<lb/>
Also featuring Pharo's famous 31 item salad bar and<lb/>
other fabulous sandwiches. Best food in town ? now<lb/>
with best prices!<lb/>
PARENTS NIGHT OUT<lb/>
Buy Large Pizza for the Kids and<lb/>
Get Smvll Pizza for Yourself FREE<lb/>
FEED 6 PEOPLE FOR ONLY $8.90<lb/>
Only SI .50 a Person. With free Cokes, Too!<lb/>
Offer Expires<lb/>
November 4<lb/>
Bead-bordered<lb/>
wedding bands -<lb/>
For her or for him.<lb/>
Sleekly narrow, smoothly wide.<lb/>
Available in 18K white gold,<lb/>
18K yellow gold,<lb/>
14K yellow gold<lb/>
or platinum.<lb/>
From ?7500<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
ResntKM Jewelers, Certified Gemotoeists<lb/>
414 Event Street<lb/>
We do not mm discount or<lb/>
promotional ievnriry.<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIIItlilllllllllllillllHilllllllllltHflHilltllflllltllllllltlllHIHIItllHHHIHHHIMnnMNHHHttl!<lb/>
s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057511_0013"/>
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