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<pb facs="00057512_0001"/>
?fte<lb/>
(Earultmmi<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No,?<lb/>
Tuesday, November 9,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
PCB A rrests<lb/>
ECU Student Released<lb/>
Charges of "impeding traffic"<lb/>
have been dismissed against ECU<lb/>
student Theresa Alston who was ar-<lb/>
rested last month during an anti-<lb/>
PCB protest in Warren County.<lb/>
Alston, 21, a senior in home<lb/>
economics, was among over 500<lb/>
people arrested during the six weeks<lb/>
of demonstrations opposing the<lb/>
Hunt administration decision to use<lb/>
the Warren County site for a PCB<lb/>
hazardous waste landfill.<lb/>
Alston, who appeared in court for<lb/>
about 90 minutes, said that the<lb/>
charges against most of the<lb/>
demonstrators were being dismiss-<lb/>
ed. She was arrested along with 85<lb/>
other demonstrators on Oct. 4 dur-<lb/>
ing a protest in which she attempted<lb/>
to block dump trucks full of PCB<lb/>
contaminated soil that had been<lb/>
scooped up from over 250 miles of<lb/>
N.C. highways. The PCB had been<lb/>
illegally dumped on the roadsides in<lb/>
1979. "<lb/>
According to Kenneth Ferruccio,<lb/>
president of Warren County<lb/>
Citizens Concerned About PCB,<lb/>
only nine people are still appealing<lb/>
their convictions while dozens of<lb/>
others have received fines of $25 or<lb/>
less and suspended sentences.<lb/>
Ferruccio, arrested on four dif-<lb/>
ferent occassions during the pro-<lb/>
tests, said thatthe community (of<lb/>
people living near the dump) has<lb/>
never accepted the dump and does<lb/>
not accept it now. There will be ten-<lb/>
sion and conflictuntil the dump is<lb/>
removed<lb/>
More recently, over 200 people<lb/>
took part in yet another protest<lb/>
against the dump Saturday.<lb/>
Under the theme "Hunt's experi-<lb/>
ment has already failed the group<lb/>
took part in a nine mile march from<lb/>
the Warrenton Courthouse to the<lb/>
landfill site. No one was arrested,<lb/>
Ferruccio said.<lb/>
The recent march was organized<lb/>
to protest the fact that 750,000<lb/>
gallons of water has accumulated in<lb/>
the landfill, putting what protestors<lb/>
claim is an extra six million pounds<lb/>
of stress on the Fill's liner.<lb/>
He further claims that "vast<lb/>
amounts" of more secluded state<lb/>
and federally owned land could<lb/>
have been used for the dump site in-<lb/>
'stead of picking an area so close to a<lb/>
populated area. "It was the worst<lb/>
possible site they could have chosen<lb/>
from the standpoint of scientific<lb/>
criteria Ferruccio said. "From the<lb/>
standpoint of political criteria, they<lb/>
thought it was an excellent choice<lb/>
Ferruccio is planning to go on a<lb/>
multi-state speaking tour with other<lb/>
people who have opposed the dump<lb/>
later this month. He hopes that the<lb/>
tour will transform the "public<lb/>
awareness that the situation has<lb/>
generated into "political concern"<lb/>
and "political pressure" to move<lb/>
the Warren dump and discourage<lb/>
the creation of others.<lb/>
No Leads In The<lb/>
Bizarre Shooting Of<lb/>
Greenville Policeman<lb/>
Who Is This Man?<lb/>
Photo By STANLEY LEAKY<lb/>
The football prognosticator, or is it? The man who is wearing the mask<lb/>
may be the guy to finally help you break your local bookie. Let's hope<lb/>
so.<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Slan Writer<lb/>
There are still no leads in the case<lb/>
of the bizarre shooting of a Green-<lb/>
ville Police officer last Friday night.<lb/>
C. Michael Futrell, 25, was shot in<lb/>
the leg by a group of cult-like<lb/>
assailants.<lb/>
The assailants chanted "Pigs<lb/>
must die" as they forced Futrell to<lb/>
accompany them to Greenville's<lb/>
Town Common near the Tar River<lb/>
where the shooting occurred.<lb/>
"We're basically at a total stand-<lb/>
still in the case said Greenville<lb/>
detective A.G. Whitaker, the officer<lb/>
assigned to the case.<lb/>
Whitaker said that there were no<lb/>
leads or information as to the identi-<lb/>
ty of the perpetrators. "To be total-<lb/>
ly honest, we have no earthly idea<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
Futrell, who was shot below the<lb/>
right knee-cap, was listed in<lb/>
satisfactory condition at Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty Memorial Hospital on Monday.<lb/>
He told The East Carolinian in a<lb/>
telephone interview that he was feel-<lb/>
ing better and expects to be released<lb/>
near the end of the week.<lb/>
He said that doctors wouldn't<lb/>
know the full extent of his injuries<lb/>
for a period of six to 10 weeks, but<lb/>
that presently they don't foresee any<lb/>
complications. 'It's just a matter of<lb/>
time said Futrell, who will have to<lb/>
wear a leg brace.<lb/>
Futrell was abducted at gunpoint<lb/>
by a group of four white males in a<lb/>
green, beat-up station wagon. They<lb/>
ordered him to get in their car at the<lb/>
corner of Fourth Street and the<lb/>
Evans Street Mall at approximately<lb/>
8:40 p.m. Friday evening, as he was<lb/>
reporting to his usual post with<lb/>
Greenville's "downtown squad<lb/>
The men had initially stopped<lb/>
Futrell to ask directions but then<lb/>
forced him into their car and drove<lb/>
him down to the Town Common<lb/>
near First Street.<lb/>
According to Futrell, he was then<lb/>
led by three of the men to a secluded<lb/>
area on the commons while the<lb/>
fourth suspect drove the car to the<lb/>
area near the Greene Street bridge.<lb/>
The three men, all identically<lb/>
dressed in Army fatigues with<lb/>
emblems showing a pig with a knife<lb/>
through it on the backs of the<lb/>
jackets, kept chanting "Pigs must<lb/>
die" as they led Futrell to the area<lb/>
where he was shot with his own ser-<lb/>
vice revolver.<lb/>
"I was afraid they would kill<lb/>
me Futrell said. "I didn't think<lb/>
See LOCAL, Page 5<lb/>
University Wasting Money Through Phone Misuse By Staff<lb/>
Recent reports have indicated that<lb/>
students, faculty and staff members<lb/>
have not been using the University's<lb/>
reduced-rate long distance<lb/>
telephone system properly, resulting<lb/>
in an increased cost of over 50 per-<lb/>
cent on some long distance calls.<lb/>
ECU's telephones are tied into<lb/>
what is called a DAIN (Dial Access<lb/>
Inter-city Network) which entitles<lb/>
users to discounts on both in-state<lb/>
and out-of-state long distance calls.<lb/>
Under the DAIN system, a person<lb/>
making a long distance call must<lb/>
ECU Athlete Gets Fine<lb/>
And Suspended Sentence<lb/>
For Pistol Possession<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
csKditor<lb/>
ECU football player Jeff Pegues<lb/>
pleaded guilty yesterday to illegal<lb/>
possession of a firearm on campus<lb/>
in Greenvillle District Court yester-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Pegues, 20, was given a six month<lb/>
suspended sentence, three years pro-<lb/>
bation and ordered to pay a fine of<lb/>
$100 plus court costs.<lb/>
Pegues, who has been suspended<lb/>
indefinitely from the football team,<lb/>
was charged last Sunday night<lb/>
following the accidental shooting of<lb/>
another Pirate football player, red-<lb/>
shirted, walk-on Steve Sellers.<lb/>
Sellers was listed in stable condi-<lb/>
tion yesterday after undergoing<lb/>
another operation for damage to his<lb/>
spleen, liver and colon, a hospital<lb/>
spokesperson said.<lb/>
According to police reports the<lb/>
gun, a .25 caliber pistol, was ap-<lb/>
parently given to him by his<lb/>
girlfriend and was not registered<lb/>
with the proper authorities in<lb/>
Pegues hometown of Laurinburg,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Head Football Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
has removed Pegues from the train-<lb/>
ing table, the special dining facility<lb/>
where scholarship athletes eat. ECU<lb/>
Sports Information Director Ken-<lb/>
neth Smith said no action has been<lb/>
taken on the condition of Pegues'<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
Associate Dean of Judiciary<lb/>
James B. Mallory said Pegues has<lb/>
been removed from the dorm, and<lb/>
as far as he is concerned the matter<lb/>
is officially closed.<lb/>
Pegues and Sellers were team-<lb/>
mates at Scotland County High<lb/>
School. Sellers, a third-year<lb/>
sophomore, attended Fayetteville<lb/>
State University for two years<lb/>
before coming to ECU.<lb/>
dial "8" not "9" if they want to<lb/>
receive the reduced charge. Anytime<lb/>
a person dials "9" before dialing<lb/>
the long distance number, the<lb/>
university is charged the same rate<lb/>
usually charged by Carolina<lb/>
Telephone.<lb/>
For example, a three-minute call<lb/>
to New York City between the hours<lb/>
of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. would cost<lb/>
$1.43 from Greenville if the caller<lb/>
uses a "9" before placing the call.<lb/>
If an "8" is dialed first, the caller is<lb/>
automatically tied into the DAIN<lb/>
system which only charges 30 cents<lb/>
per minute on out-of-state calls at<lb/>
all hours, thereby making the same<lb/>
call only 90 cents for a savings of<lb/>
almost 40 percent.<lb/>
Larger discounts are available on<lb/>
in-stale long distance calls when the<lb/>
DAIN system is used. A three<lb/>
minute call to Charlotte, N.C. dur-<lb/>
ing the same 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. time<lb/>
slot would cost $1.27, versus only 36<lb/>
cents with the DAIN discount,<lb/>
which costs only 12 cents per minute<lb/>
at all times.<lb/>
According to ECU Business<lb/>
Manager Julian Vainwright, who<lb/>
oversees use of the phones, the<lb/>
DAIN system is more economical in<lb/>
most cases except when Carolina<lb/>
Telephone's night rates are in effect<lb/>
from 11 p.m. until 7 a.m. on<lb/>
weeknights, all day Saturday and up<lb/>
until 5 p.m. Sunday. At those hours<lb/>
the rates are sometimes cheaper by<lb/>
dialing "9" than using DAIN.<lb/>
Vainwright encouraged long<lb/>
distance phone users to "take ad-<lb/>
vantage of the DAIN system and<lb/>
to refer to the instruction manual in<lb/>
the front of the ECU telephone<lb/>
directory if more information is re-<lb/>
quired.<lb/>
Vainwright also pointed out that<lb/>
anytime a call is made on the DAIN<lb/>
system, the call is put on a timer<lb/>
from the moment that the last digit<lb/>
is dialed, giving the caller only 29<lb/>
seconds to hang up the phone if a<lb/>
busy signal is heard or there is no<lb/>
answer. Vainwright noted that it<lb/>
would be better if the caller redialed<lb/>
a call as opposed to letting it ring<lb/>
beyond the 29 second limit and<lb/>
thereby be charged for a full one-<lb/>
minute call.<lb/>
"In order to terminate a call, the<lb/>
receiver needs to be hung up for<lb/>
over three seconds added Vain-<lb/>
wright.<lb/>
"With the programming<lb/>
capabilities, we can give or deny ac-<lb/>
cess to the DAIN system Vain-<lb/>
wright said. He added that the class<lb/>
of service for each department's<lb/>
phone is centrally controled at the<lb/>
system's main terminal in the base-<lb/>
ment of Joyner Library and that, if<lb/>
abused, the service could be discon-<lb/>
tinued.<lb/>
The DAIN system, as is the case<lb/>
with all university phones, is for<lb/>
"business purposes only<lb/>
Art School's Accreditation Reevaluated<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of Art is being<lb/>
reevaluated this week for its ac-<lb/>
creditation to the National Associa-<lb/>
tion of Schools of Art, one of the<lb/>
most important organizations for<lb/>
U.S. art schools. The school has<lb/>
been "on hold" for the last few<lb/>
years, according to Dean Richard<lb/>
H. Laing, because of major ad-<lb/>
ministrative changes in the school.<lb/>
Representatives from NASA have<lb/>
been evaluating the art school since<lb/>
Sunday but Laing does not expect<lb/>
the announcement of their decision<lb/>
to be made until April of next year.<lb/>
He doesn't predict any difficulty in<lb/>
the School of Art receiving the ac-<lb/>
creditation .<lb/>
"I don't see any problem in get-<lb/>
ting through the evaluation Laing<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The School of Art is currently<lb/>
ranked in Division One, the top<lb/>
division by the national association,<lb/>
and is the only accredited art school<lb/>
in North Carolina. Schools are nor-<lb/>
mally reevaluated for the first five<lb/>
years after acceptance by NASA<lb/>
and then at least once every 10<lb/>
years. ECU's art school has been ac-<lb/>
credited since 1962.<lb/>
The school has made some major<lb/>
changes since the association's last<lb/>
visit in 1976, including the appoint-<lb/>
ment of Laing as dean. They have<lb/>
reorganized the foundation or<lb/>
freshman level courses and switched<lb/>
from a two-day instructor schedule<lb/>
to a three-day plan.<lb/>
"That put the teachers in the<lb/>
classroom more than before.and put<lb/>
them in more contact with the<lb/>
students Laing said.<lb/>
He cited the art school's recent<lb/>
change from a nine department<lb/>
organization to a consolidation into<lb/>
two large unit departments of Fine<lb/>
Arts and Design as a positive factor.<lb/>
"They (NASA) are all very happy<lb/>
about that he said.<lb/>
The school also made some last<lb/>
minute preparations for the evalua-<lb/>
tion. For the first time in recent<lb/>
years, the annual faculty exhibition<lb/>
that opened Sunday in Grey Gallery<lb/>
included work by students. There<lb/>
has been more student artwork<lb/>
displayed throughout the Jenkins<lb/>
Fline Arts Building and a recent hec-<lb/>
tic clean up has improved the<lb/>
building's appearance.<lb/>
Surveys Permit Students To<lb/>
Voice Opinions On Instructors<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Students are once again getting a<lb/>
chance to evaluate their teachers.<lb/>
All this week "Student Opinion of<lb/>
Instruction Surveys" are being con-<lb/>
ducted in every undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate class with more than five<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"This is the students' opportunity<lb/>
to participate in matting their opi-<lb/>
nions known. Their opinions are<lb/>
valuable said Robert Ussery,<lb/>
director of the Department Institu-<lb/>
tional Research, the department<lb/>
conducting the survey.<lb/>
According to Ussery, the ECU<lb/>
governance codes require all faculty<lb/>
members to be evaluated.<lb/>
The results from each class survey<lb/>
will be given to the respective in-<lb/>
structors and their departmental<lb/>
chairpersons at the beginning of<lb/>
next semester.<lb/>
The surveys are not mandatory.<lb/>
Even so, Ussery reports that last fall<lb/>
90 percent of the students par-<lb/>
ticipated. Referring to last year's<lb/>
survey, Ussery saidThe students<lb/>
very seriously and very reliably pro-<lb/>
vided their honest and thoughtful<lb/>
opinions<lb/>
The surveys provide reliable in-<lb/>
formation about the quality of the<lb/>
classes to the instructors and depart-<lb/>
ment heads. "On specific courses, if<lb/>
the student responses indicated<lb/>
great dissatisfaction with a textbook<lb/>
or lab, for example, that might be<lb/>
used in evaluations Ussery said.<lb/>
"Each survey also acts as one fac-<lb/>
tor among others in determining in-<lb/>
structor's tenures, salaries, and pro-<lb/>
motions Ussery added.<lb/>
An estimate of the survey's cost<lb/>
to ECU was not available.<lb/>
However, Ussery said that surveys<lb/>
of this type usually cost the school<lb/>
between $15,000 and $20,000.<lb/>
The two faculty members who<lb/>
receive the best evaluations will<lb/>
receive awards of $500 each. The<lb/>
awards are paid for by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Alumni Reflations. Last<lb/>
year's winners were Madge<lb/>
McGreth, assistant professor of<lb/>
medical technology, and Dr. David<lb/>
Giles of special education.<lb/>
Oh! I Forgot It Was Cold Out<lb/>
MMto ?r CNA ????-?Y<lb/>
This prostrate ECU student doesn't know whether Its cold or not. I hope he will consnlt Ms local weatherman to<lb/>
find out if he's got the right scoop or not. Oh well!<lb/>
. t ?<lb/>
h ?<lb/>
 Tfmt.t i ?iJK i ?tM<lb/>
: te?"j)3Bsaafcs5e2?a<lb/>
m?'? A iy?ijy<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 9,1982<lb/>
f<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
S<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
tion manager.<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building.<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd-sized paper cannot be ac-<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
There is no charge tor an-<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce-<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity.<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 3 p.m. Monday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3 p.m. Wednesdayy for<lb/>
the Thursday paper. No an-<lb/>
nouncements received after these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed.<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
POSITION FOR<lb/>
INDT MAJOR<lb/>
There is an opening with Long<lb/>
Manufacturing Co. tor 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 Filinow in the Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979, for more information.<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
There is a bus route for students<lb/>
who wish to attend Sunday service<lb/>
at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church.<lb/>
The bus leaves the church and<lb/>
goes into the campus from W. 5th<lb/>
St. by Cotton, Fleming, and other<lb/>
dorms at 10:40 am; swinging back<lb/>
on 5th, going to main campus in<lb/>
back of dorms and swinging by<lb/>
Belk Dorm, it leaves and goes<lb/>
across campus to dorms on South<lb/>
Side (of campus) no later than<lb/>
10:50 am, arriving at church at<lb/>
11:00.<lb/>
SAB MEETING<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Student Athletic Board tonight,<lb/>
Nov 9, 1982 at 7:00 pm, in Rm 247<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Philosophy Club Wed Nov. 10, at<lb/>
7:00 pm. Jeff Whisnant will pre<lb/>
sent views on the philosophy of<lb/>
nature. All interested persons<lb/>
please attend this meeting.<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 Filinow in the Co-<lb/>
op office, ext. 6979.<lb/>
GEOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina Geology Club<lb/>
would like to invite all interested<lb/>
people to come hear Dr. Alan<lb/>
Glazner from UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
speak on "The Tertiary Volcanics<lb/>
of the Southwest U.S He will<lb/>
speak Friday, Nov. 12 at 2:00 in<lb/>
Graham Bldg. Rm. 301.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The positions of White Dorm<lb/>
Representatives and Graduate<lb/>
Vice-President are presently un-<lb/>
filled. If interested in filing for<lb/>
either position, pick up an applica-<lb/>
tion in the Mendenhall SGA office,<lb/>
interviews will be held Wednes-<lb/>
day. Nov. 10th at 7:00 pm.<lb/>
SIGMA BROTHERS<lb/>
Attention Sigma Big Brothers:<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting Thrusday, Nov. 11 at 7:30<lb/>
pm at the Sigma House.<lb/>
HKSKAJU H tWI'KUS<lb/>
Improve your (Tides! Ruth SI .00 for<lb/>
(he currcai. 306 pate, research<lb/>
catilof. 11.278 papers on Tile, all<lb/>
academic subjects.<lb/>
Rnterrk AaHHaau 11)21 Waho<lb/>
Avc. 706 Los Aaartcs. CA 90025<lb/>
(2I3I447-S226.<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
CADP will have a meeting<lb/>
Tues Nov. 9 at 500 pm in the se-<lb/>
cond floor conference room in Er-<lb/>
win. Old and new members are in-<lb/>
vited.<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS<lb/>
All P.E. majors and prospective<lb/>
majors are invited to attend our<lb/>
next Majors Club meeting Tues<lb/>
Nov. 9 at 4:30 in Rm. 13 Minges.<lb/>
Get involved and take pride in<lb/>
your major. Members in atten-<lb/>
dance last meeting were: Jill<lb/>
Cobb, Karen Lewis, Keith Cannon,<lb/>
Marc Scruggs, Lori Brann, Keene<lb/>
Samuels, Reggie Fly the, David<lb/>
Dean, Jeff Speight, Lee Goldberg,<lb/>
Vickie Biagini, Robert Jones,<lb/>
Stuart Briley, Wenday Taylor, Bil-<lb/>
ly Simmons and April Maxem.<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/>
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/>
BAPTIST STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
HEY! Do you enjoy friendly<lb/>
fellowship, good friends and food,<lb/>
and a chance to be yourself in this<lb/>
"rat race" environment at ECU?<lb/>
Then come join us at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union where we have din-<lb/>
ners on Tuesdays at 5:30 for only<lb/>
S1.75-PAUSE on Thursdays at<lb/>
7:00 to allow us to take a break<lb/>
after an almost fulfilling week,<lb/>
and lots of people just like you who<lb/>
enjoy others. Call 752-4646 if you<lb/>
have any questions. Bob Clyde -<lb/>
campus minister.<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/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
On Nov. 22, 1982 in room 129<lb/>
Speight at 4:00 there will 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/>
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/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
50,000 people die every day from<lb/>
starvation I If you would like to<lb/>
find out how YOU CAN HELP stop<lb/>
these tragedies from happening,<lb/>
you ere invited to an End Hunger<lb/>
Breifing to be held 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/>
355-6855.<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
Learn new disc skills, play<lb/>
ultimate, or just come to the bot<lb/>
torn of College Hill Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at 4:00 to throw frisbee<lb/>
and enjoy these remaining<lb/>
beautiful, warm autumn days.<lb/>
Club meetings are Mondays at<lb/>
8:00 in MSC, room 248. 1982<lb/>
Natural Light Flying Disc Classic<lb/>
Video will be shown at the Attic on<lb/>
Wed. Nov 10.<lb/>
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 tne above times.<lb/>
PRC MAJORS<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goldsboro, NC has an<lb/>
alternating Coop position<lb/>
available for Spring semester in<lb/>
the ir recreation department. The<lb/>
position reequires a 2.0 GPA and<lb/>
you must be wilting 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 81,000 per month<lb/>
gross. Contact Nancy Filinow in<lb/>
the Co-op office, 313 Rawl,<lb/>
757-6979, if you would like to apply<lb/>
or want more information.<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 8500 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/>
tie, media, and size) must accom-<lb/>
pany the scholarship application<lb/>
form. Application forms may be<lb/>
obtained from the School of Art Of-<lb/>
fice. The deadline for all com-<lb/>
pleted application material is<lb/>
November 30.<lb/>
THE EARLY<lb/>
YEARS<lb/>
The members of the Historic<lb/>
Sit and Museum Development<lb/>
Class of the Department of History<lb/>
cordially Invite you to view the ex-<lb/>
hibit "East Carolina: The Early<lb/>
Years, 1907-1934 The exhibit is<lb/>
located in the main lobby of the<lb/>
Spillman Building and can be<lb/>
viewed from November 4-18. It<lb/>
was created in celebration of the<lb/>
75th Anniversary of the Institution.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
There will be a Philosophy Club<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
November 10 at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
BD 313 The topic of discussion<lb/>
will be "The Heraclitean Doctrine<lb/>
of Flux" which will be presented<lb/>
by Jeff Whisnant.<lb/>
CO-OP POSITION<lb/>
The U.S. Naval Academy in An<lb/>
napolls, MD has a position open<lb/>
for a Co-op student to work as a<lb/>
programmer analyst. The student<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/>
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, lowa City, Iowa 52240. Ap-<lb/>
plications may be obtained from<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105<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/>
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/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75? per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Return lo MKDIA BOARD office (Ml EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN office) b 2 p.m. Monday before<lb/>
Tuesday paper aad Wednesday before Thursday<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
Njt. lines ?<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
,at 75 per line S.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<lb/>
?"1 7?'?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?'<lb/>
1<lb/>
!1?-<lb/>
?z?<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tion wiH 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/>
LADIES OF<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
You must know a good looking<lb/>
guy, then you should send him to<lb/>
the Buccaneer to fill out an ap-<lb/>
plication.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA<lb/>
PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi's<lb/>
National Honor Fraternity will<lb/>
hold its monthly business meeting<lb/>
on Wednesday, November 10 in 132<lb/>
Austin. The meeting will im-<lb/>
mediately follow the 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
pledge meeting. All brothers are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The Coop office has a job open<lb/>
ing for an accounting position<lb/>
avaible with a local manufactur-<lb/>
ing firm. Requires adding<lb/>
machine experience and accoun<lb/>
ting background. Interested<lb/>
students should inquire at the Co-<lb/>
op office, located in Rawl at room<lb/>
313.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi ew 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/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Scholarships are 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 - R325, Decision Sciences<lb/>
R238, Finance - R343; Manage<lb/>
ment - R137, Marketing R233. All<lb/>
applications must be submitted to<lb/>
Ruth Jones (R334), Chairman of<lb/>
School of Business Scholarhips<lb/>
Committee by November 30, 1982.<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 1-95) or any county west<lb/>
of Highway 1-95 in which Pittard<lb/>
and Perry, Inc maintains an of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
GREEKS<lb/>
Marajen! November 10, 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
FREE BEER<lb/>
Don't miss ECU'S last pep rally.<lb/>
Attend the William Mary vs ECU<lb/>
pep rally at Sportsworld, behind<lb/>
Fosdicks Seafood Thursday night<lb/>
Nov. 11 7:30-10:00 and receive a<lb/>
tree beer at the Elbo later on that<lb/>
night. There will be a bus pick-up<lb/>
in front of Belk Dorm at 7:00. Join<lb/>
ECU cheerleaders tor competi-<lb/>
tions, prizes and 'Heaven on<lb/>
Wheels' this Thursday at 7:30<lb/>
CANOE TRIP<lb/>
The outdoor recreation center<lb/>
operated by the Dept. of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational services<lb/>
is sponsoring a morning canoe trip<lb/>
on Sat Nov. 13. The trip is<lb/>
suitable for beginning or advanced<lb/>
canoers. Trip participants will<lb/>
meet behind Memorial Gym at<lb/>
9:00 am on the 13th. The trip wil be<lb/>
a leisurely paddle down the Tar<lb/>
River lasting approximately 2<lb/>
hours. Participants should arrive<lb/>
back at Memorial Gym by 12 30<lb/>
pm. Advance registration and<lb/>
payment is due by 4:00 pm on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 11. For registra<lb/>
tion and more info please call or<lb/>
stop by Rm. 183 in Memorial Gym<lb/>
(757-6911).<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/>
ticipafion 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 win<lb/>
be announced by November 24.<lb/>
Student papers directed toward<lb/>
the same theme are invited, two of<lb/>
which will be selected for a award<lb/>
of $100 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/>
HUNGER COALITION<lb/>
The Oxfam America "Fast for a<lb/>
World Harvest" is next week! if<lb/>
you would like to participate you<lb/>
are asked to go without eating on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 18, and donate<lb/>
your money to Oxfam American to<lb/>
support self help development pro<lb/>
jects in the poorest areas of<lb/>
Africa, Asia and Latin American.<lb/>
Look for the table in front of the<lb/>
Supply Store and the Boom in<lb/>
Mendenhall on the 17th and 18th.<lb/>
For more info call 752 4216.<lb/>
Together we can make the world a<lb/>
better place to live.<lb/>
PEACE COMMITTEE<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 the activities of<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Committee<lb/>
We meet Friday night at 6:30 pm<lb/>
at 610 So. Elm St. For more into<lb/>
call 758 4906.<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 individual 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/>
Raw' ex? 6979<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
1982 Natural Light Flying Disc<lb/>
Classic Video will oe shown at the<lb/>
Attic on Wed. Nov. 10. Free<lb/>
beverage tor 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 gen ing<lb/>
hot and an ultimate tournament is<lb/>
planned for a future date<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday ana<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ticial newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina university, owned<lb/>
operated, and published for ana<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $20yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the OM South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Old South Building, ECU Green<lb/>
ville, NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 7S7-4344. 437, 4309<lb/>
B KEITH<lb/>
Maff<lb/>
Russia<lb/>
using chemj<lb/>
in 1967<lb/>
"Yellov.<lb/>
Nu<lb/>
B PATRH<lb/>
Nineteen<lb/>
arrested Si<lb/>
ing a d?<lb/>
opposing<lb/>
tions surri<lb/>
launching<lb/>
States'<lb/>
nuclear<lb/>
?1<lb/>
MEN OF ECU<lb/>
Do not be left out of the upcom<lb/>
ing "Men of ECU" calendar<lb/>
Come by the Buccaneer office By<lb/>
5:00 pm. Friday, Nov 17 and pick<lb/>
up your application All photos w.n<lb/>
be taken on Sun , Nov 14 oetwee"<lb/>
12:00 and 4:30 Call 757 6501 tor<lb/>
more information<lb/>
FACILITIES<lb/>
CLOSED<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium facilities<lb/>
including the pool, equipmen<lb/>
check out room, weight room anc<lb/>
gymnasium will close at 6.00 pm<lb/>
on wed , Nov. 24th Minges Cci<lb/>
eseum weight room ano swimm<lb/>
mg pool will not ooen on Wed .<lb/>
Nov. 24th. All facilities win<lb/>
resume normal operations on<lb/>
Mon . Nov 29th<lb/>
s3.0(<lb/>
s2.00<lb/>
fl<lb/>
WOMl<lb/>
CAREI<lb/>
DEPEr<lb/>
rfts a<lb/>
? : '<lb/>
-I<lb/>
3SSUKM<lb/>
s evict1<lb/>
"??Q " 1<lb/>
SKI FLASH<lb/>
Snowski registration for<lb/>
Christmas Break Trip will be Nov<lb/>
9 at 4:00 PM in Memorial Gym 108.<lb/>
A $5 deposit will be accepted to<lb/>
reserve your space. Call Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757-6000 if you need<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Gl Camouflaged Fatigues and<lb/>
T Shirts, Sleeping Bags,<lb/>
Backpacks, Camping Equip<lb/>
ment. Steel Toed Shoes, Dtslte<lb/>
and Over 788 Different New and<lb/>
Used Items. Cowboy<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE "??<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
on the purchase of<lb/>
one of our lab coats!<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive. <lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
beI beef buy i<lb/>
in greenville! i<lb/>
22 ounce draft 85$, refill 50$; keep the cup. ?<lb/>
Wednesday night is college night at the Sandwich Game <lb/>
After your first beer at regular price, each 22 ounce Sandwich "<lb/>
Game Cup of draft is only 50c. Get your friends and come to <lb/>
the Sandwich Game?the best beer buy, cheapest games, ?<lb/>
and finest sandwiches in town. ft<lb/>
264 Bypass Behind Ramada Inn<lb/>
South Park Shopning Center ?Greenville<lb/>
John's Flowers &amp; Gifts<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
SALE 25 OFF<lb/>
on all gifts, plants and<lb/>
dried silk arrangements<lb/>
Buy now and<lb/>
SA VEfor Christmas<lb/>
Cash &amp; Carry Only<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Store Only<lb/>
GOLF SPECIAL<lb/>
Indian Trails<lb/>
Country Club<lb/>
Fairway Dr Griffon N.C.<lb/>
Please be our guest for<lb/>
18 holes of golf for only<lb/>
$6.00 for cart &amp;<lb/>
green fees<lb/>
Open MonFri.<lb/>
8 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
524-S48S<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS AT<lb/>
uBiU?)<lb/>
Famous Foot Long Sandwichos<lb/>
Ainu SHAK BMT (HAM, PEPPERONI, GENOA, BOLOGNA) &amp; CHIPS<lb/>
MON- AND A SMALL SODA FOR $2.09<lb/>
TUES SNAK ROAST BEEP, BAG OP CHIPS, AND A SMALL SODA<lb/>
1UB' POR $2.09<lb/>
WEB SNAK MEATBALL, BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL SODA POR<lb/>
THURS. SNAK H.4J, BAG OF CHIPS AND A SU SODA FOR $1.89<lb/>
cBi SNAK ALASKAN KING CRAB, BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL<lb/>
rKK SODA FOR $2.39<lb/>
SPECIALS RUN FROM 11 AM. UNTIL 2 P.M. DAILY.<lb/>
MUSIC TELEVISION EXPLOSION<lb/>
PRESENTED BY RECORD BAR Cr ROCK 93<lb/>
? ENTRY BLANK<lb/>
QUESTIONS<lb/>
1) Which Record Cham ha the most complete line of records tapes &amp;<lb/>
accessories1<lb/>
2a) Which FM Radio Station plays your favorite music 24 hours a day7<lb/>
2b) Which cable TV channel will be ptaymg your favorite muse m stereo<lb/>
starting Nov. 14<lb/>
3) In when Record Stow can you register to win a wild 93 second cassette<lb/>
PRIZES:<lb/>
Grand Pnze-93 second cassette run<lb/>
OTHER PRIZES:<lb/>
4 MTV Tour jackets. 10 MTV tote bags<lb/>
100 MTV T-shirts. 10 MTV sweat-<lb/>
shirts. 4 MTV baseball shirts<lb/>
DRAWING: Friday Nov. 19. 1982 onW!TN.<lb/>
Cassette Run: Sat Nov. 20. 1982 at 2 00 P<lb/>
at the Record Bar<lb/>
MTV is brought to you by: Tar Rwer Cable TV. Cable TV of GreenWte. New Bern<lb/>
NAME.<lb/>
ADDRESS.<lb/>
Washington. Kmsson t Onton<lb/>
 TtLt?<lb/>
Quarterilash Simulcast on MTV and Rock 93 Nov. 20. 1982<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0003"/><lb/>
Chemical Warfare<lb/>
KHIil<lb/>
1N<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Phillips, a policy Yellow Rain use by the Soviet us rh<lb/>
analyst tor the Heritage Soviets, rhe people ol weapon. low "pn<lb/>
tndation, has work Laos, Kampuchea It was stated that the w urned<lb/>
doseh with State (formerly Cambodia) term "Yellow Rain" Ii<lb/>
men! officials in and Afghanistan have came from the Hm ? I ?rered b<lb/>
reports on<lb/>
been the targets ot tribesmen in 1 a<lb/>
pei<lb/>
1 ti<lb/>
)S, A<lb/>
cited<lb/>
?<lb/>
i i<lb/>
uclear Sub Christened; Group Protests<lb/>
n t<lb/>
on those arrested were da rhe oth - -<lb/>
h the I s charged with disorderly told to app i<lb/>
?nducl and all but one on <lb/>
? e released Protest<lb/>
One person, who eluded people ti<lb/>
refused to give tier many states, oppose the<lb/>
name, was still being Indent because ol the<lb/>
teed<lb/>
needed ???<lb/>
ent ol<lb/>
 ? ' tarfa i<lb/>
.pur" I<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
h, ii is no<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
he com-<lb/>
leld at Niantic Prison<lb/>
Indent under the name lane I<lb/>
Doc, pending hei court targets<lb/>
appearance on Mon- powei<lb/>
W at kins<lb/>
Mac Ma<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
AKORIIONs<lb/>
MatJe 7 i<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
?? 4&amp; 4P :i???<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
GIANT PIZZA<lb/>
ARGEPIZZ<lb/>
,ii, ????????<lb/>
HEALTH PROFESSIONS<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
!f you're planning a career in<lb/>
medicine you owe it to yourself to<lb/>
find out about the Air Force's<lb/>
Health Professions Scholarship Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Qualified U.S. Citizens can<lb/>
receive scholarships for medical or<lb/>
osteopathic school.<lb/>
Our scholarships include:<lb/>
Tuition<lb/>
Require Books<lb/>
Required Lab Fees<lb/>
Required Equipment Rental<lb/>
and Mort Than $550 Monthly Stipend<lb/>
Ifso<lb/>
CHAMPAGNE JAM<lb/>
LADIES!<lb/>
 'The Four Seasons<lb/>
?<lb/>
 a<lb/>
ME FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
k<lb/>
AIM HIGH<lb/>
f ATTENTION <lb/>
? BSN CLASS OF<lb/>
-<lb/>
? I<lb/>
I<lb/>
sS<lb/>
AIM HJvri<lb/>
i<lb/>
5<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
AH Polo &amp;<lb/>
Lacoste Frames<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
with purchase ot<lb/>
prescription lens.<lb/>
s<lb/>
e<lb/>
 4<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
k<lb/>
oupon musf<lb/>
npan y o r d? r <lb/>
I<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
31 S Par Vie Commons<lb/>
Across from Doctors Park<lb/>
Open ?a m til 5 JO p m<lb/>
Monday thru f "day<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
Stan<lb/>
752 1446<lb/>
luamananai<lb/>
i<lb/>
invites you ladies to<lb/>
have all the "bubbly'<lb/>
you can drink FREE<lb/>
between 10-11 p.m.<lb/>
Beginning Thursday, Nov. 11<lb/>
Don't miss tbe "TOAST"<lb/>
at 10:00<lb/>
- . - . ? ? ?<lb/>
"The Four Seasons"<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Lounge<lb/>
301 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
(Corner of 3rd St. a Evans<lb/>
in basement of Minges Bldg.)<lb/>
752-5476<lb/>
SAV-A-TON<lb/>
$009<lb/>
ELF SERVICE<lb/>
612 West Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
six pk.<lb/>
Cigs<lb/>
60C pk<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
$209<lb/>
Anti-Freeze<lb/>
gal.<lb/>
OPEN 24 HRS.<lb/>
1- i <lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
v' Fast. Friendly Deliver<lb/>
v<lb/>
758-5982 or 5616<lb/>
All Small<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
$<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
NOT FOR DEI IN ER<lb/>
Happi Hour 2 Close<lb/>
1.99 Pitcher<lb/>
45C Mug<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0004"/><lb/>
2tfte Eaat (Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, craiMm<lb/>
Mike Hughes, ManamE.nior<lb/>
If<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, BtaMW l m?<lb/>
Robert Rucks, mm mw<lb/>
Ali Afrashteh, rrn<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, r n.rn mw<lb/>
JONI GUTHRIE, Teilwual Supenisor<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants, sports Editor<lb/>
Greg Rideout, jmw<lb/>
Steve Bachner, jam in?war<lb/>
Juliana Fahrbach, 99 ???-<lb/>
MlKE DAVIS, Production Manatter<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
November 9, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Noise Ordinance<lb/>
Kagwe Proposal Still In Question<lb/>
ITrtULD BE ?vGtfItiS&amp;<lb/>
INSULT TD the; iKroueEio.<lb/>
OFTKEAMERCrHPBDPLE<lb/>
r3RAPREiH:HTTDENY<lb/>
AWRERfl5?LWIcRcu?<lb/>
eft<lb/>
Yd) HWEtW<lb/>
rCPNUJRSEtF,<lb/>
Unlike its theoretical benefits,<lb/>
Greenville's newly-proposed city or-<lb/>
dinance, which calls for the imposi-<lb/>
tion of "enforceable' noise limita-<lb/>
tions on city events, may just be yet<lb/>
another exercise in futility.<lb/>
Despite the fact that the proposal<lb/>
has not yet been finalized, its pre-<lb/>
sent form calls for decibel limita-<lb/>
tions to be placed on "any activities<lb/>
where noise is a factor And<lb/>
although limits would be variable<lb/>
(inasmuch as time, location and<lb/>
other factors), at no time could the<lb/>
noise exceed 70 decibels ? the<lb/>
average noise level of a<lb/>
"heavy-traffic" situation ?<lb/>
without a permit.<lb/>
Naturally then, said permits<lb/>
would be made readily available to<lb/>
residents and students at a cost of $5<lb/>
to $25, depending on this, that and<lb/>
the other (several factors, many of<lb/>
which border on the insane).<lb/>
The purpose, in theory, of the or-<lb/>
dinance is to provide city officials<lb/>
with some absohite means of<lb/>
deteriming legal and illegal noise.<lb/>
With this in mind, however, it<lb/>
would be interesting to discover just<lb/>
how those officials plan to enforce<lb/>
such a seemingly-vague law.<lb/>
Will student social "functions"<lb/>
now be subjected to uninvited<lb/>
guests, crashing selected get-<lb/>
togethers around the campus area<lb/>
with an array of cords, meters and<lb/>
assorted citations?<lb/>
Will the city furnish the university<lb/>
with a list of proverbial "Dos and<lb/>
Don'ts" (perhaps a few examples or<lb/>
some rough estimate of what con-<lb/>
stitutes a noise level exceeding 70<lb/>
decibels), or will students be ex-<lb/>
pected to purchase their own party-<lb/>
meters?<lb/>
At this point, perhaps a few ex-<lb/>
amples will suffice:<lb/>
The noise rating for an<lb/>
"average" library is 40 decibels. A<lb/>
quiet office generally puts out 50<lb/>
decibels; normal conversation, 60<lb/>
decibels. Heavy trucks put out<lb/>
about 90 decibels, 20 more than the<lb/>
ordinance allows. So, provided no<lb/>
one accidentally flips on his hair<lb/>
dri?r, and no one's alarm goes off<lb/>
during a party, everything should be<lb/>
okay.<lb/>
To the ordinance's credit,<lb/>
however, it should be noted that<lb/>
Pirate fans will still be allowed to<lb/>
cheer at home sporting events. Also,<lb/>
emergency vehicles will still retain<lb/>
the right to use sirens; residents can<lb/>
leave their sickles in the garage and<lb/>
continue to cut their lawns with gas-<lb/>
powered mowers, and airplanes fly-<lb/>
ing over Greenville skies will<lb/>
likewise be exempt (provided there<lb/>
are no parties onboard).<lb/>
But it is also necessary to<lb/>
remember that ECU already has its<lb/>
own permit clause governing the<lb/>
noise levels on campus, a clause<lb/>
which thus far has worked efficient-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
With these considerations in<lb/>
mind, determining the relative<lb/>
benefits of the proposed ordinance<lb/>
has, hopefully, been made<lb/>
somewhat simpler.<lb/>
'Real-Life' Drama An Endangered Species<lb/>
Today's Television<lb/>
I guess if 1 had to choose the one thing I<lb/>
most like doing (excluding, of course, sing-<lb/>
alongs with Boxcar Willie or hacking away<lb/>
at the neighbors' trees with my amazing<lb/>
Ginsu), it'd have to be watching television.<lb/>
Hardly a day goes by that I don't relax in<lb/>
front of the tube with a luke-warm Bud<lb/>
and watch all my favorite stars.<lb/>
But unlike some "others who 1 won't<lb/>
mention (mainly because I don't know<lb/>
who the hell they are), my love for TV<lb/>
hasn't blinded me from realizing the<lb/>
serious limitations and faults of today's<lb/>
producers and directors. The problem is,<lb/>
television nowadays just isn't real.<lb/>
Take my favorite show, The Love Boat,<lb/>
for instance. Now, as much as I love to<lb/>
watch the hilarious antics of all the terrific<lb/>
actors on that program each week, I can't<lb/>
help but wonder who the producers think<lb/>
they're fooling. I mean, just stop and con-<lb/>
sider it for a minute: When was the last<lb/>
time you saw Isaac, the "trusty"<lb/>
bartender, steal a few bucks from<lb/>
Gopher's "mad-money" drawer to sup-<lb/>
port his $300-a-day heroin addiction?<lb/>
And when was the last time Doc, the<lb/>
bespectacled "stud" physician, performed<lb/>
unnecessary surgery on some unsuspecting<lb/>
Montezuma's Revenge victim?<lb/>
And how many times have you seen<lb/>
Julie, the bed-hopping cruise director, cry-<lb/>
ing over the results of a positive Herpes<lb/>
test?<lb/>
How often does Vicky, the Captain's<lb/>
prepubescent, illegitimate daughter, get a<lb/>
zit?<lb/>
Not too often, I'll bet.<lb/>
But it isn't just today's television, either.<lb/>
How about Leave it to Beaver, another TV<lb/>
classic? When was the last time you saw<lb/>
Eddie Haskell smuggle a joint upstairs past<lb/>
a naive June Cleaver and turn on Wally<lb/>
and the Beave?<lb/>
And what about Ozzie and Harriet, a<lb/>
couple who have two kids but who've slept<lb/>
in separate rooms ever since they were<lb/>
married?<lb/>
You know what? Just once, I'd like to<lb/>
see someone urinate on Tatoo or tell Mr.<lb/>
Roarke to "enunciate<lb/>
Just once, I'd like to see Gopher thrown<lb/>
in some low-life Mexican jail for dealing<lb/>
drugs to the little Puerto Vallarta locals.<lb/>
Just once, I'd like the Captain to steer<lb/>
the love boat off course and hit an iceberg.<lb/>
Just once, I'd like the Beaver to bring<lb/>
home one of Larry Mondello's father's<lb/>
Playboy magazines and ask his mother to<lb/>
elaborate.<lb/>
Just once, I'd like to see a love triangle<lb/>
with Doc, Isaac and Gopher.<lb/>
?And just once, I'd like to hear Ward<lb/>
Quaver say to his moroni? g?gia&amp;<lb/>
inquisitive wife, "Dammit, June, snut up.<lb/>
can't you see I'm watching a football<lb/>
game?"<lb/>
Just once.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes is a<lb/>
plumber's helper from Flush Twice, S.C<lb/>
where he also plays the auioharp in a local<lb/>
rock band. Recent East Carolinian surveys<lb/>
have revealed that he is a helluva nice guy.<lb/>
U.S. Urbanites Getting The Pentagon Shaft<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
 mr?K?n Journal<lb/>
If you live in an urban metropolitan<lb/>
area, as three out of four Americans do,<lb/>
you are probably being hurt directly by<lb/>
runaway Pentagon spending. According to<lb/>
a new economic report, 176 of the 266<lb/>
metropolitan areas in the United States pay<lb/>
more in tax dollars destined for the<lb/>
military than they get back in Pentagon<lb/>
spending in their areas.<lb/>
"The federal government says a study<lb/>
by Employment Research Associates of<lb/>
Lansing, Mich "acts as a giant syphon,<lb/>
draining tax money out of 176<lb/>
metropolitan areas into those which have<lb/>
large military bases or very high military<lb/>
contracts Hardest hit, according to a<lb/>
study titled Bankrupting American Cities,<lb/>
are municipalities in the industrialized<lb/>
Northeast and Midwest. New York City is<lb/>
expected to pay $9 billion more in military<lb/>
taxes than it will get back in fiscal year<lb/>
1983. Detroit will lose a cool $3 billion.<lb/>
Most of the one-third of American cities<lb/>
that gain more than they lose are in the<lb/>
South or West. Albuquerque, Denver and<lb/>
St. Loius, among others, benefit from con-<lb/>
centrated military spending. Even so, ac-<lb/>
cording to the ERA study, the gains are<lb/>
smaller than they seem, since the Pentagon<lb/>
largesse goes directly only to "a relatively<lb/>
narrow group of military contracters and<lb/>
employees Benefits to the communities<lb/>
at large are ambiguous, argues Dr. James<lb/>
Anderson, the report's author.<lb/>
Not so the losses for cities whose dollars<lb/>
are chewed up by the military maw. There<lb/>
is that much less to spend on building and<lb/>
maintaining roads, bridges, parks, schools<lb/>
and libraries. The products of defense<lb/>
spending ? bombs, bullets, tanks ? don't<lb/>
re-enter the economy as consumer goods,<lb/>
either. They benefit the average American<lb/>
only in abstract ? as ultra-expensive tools<lb/>
with which to defend our "national securi-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
"The simplest conclusion which one<lb/>
may draw about this military budget<lb/>
writes Anderson, "is that at a time of an<lb/>
acute and growing capital shortage in the<lb/>
U.S and at a time of declining U.S. pro-<lb/>
ductivity, more than $200 billion ? about<lb/>
$600 million per day ? of U.S. capital<lb/>
resources will be expended for unproduc-<lb/>
tive and destructive purposes in the name<lb/>
of national security<lb/>
In the meanime, 2,000 miles of the still-<lb/>
uncompleted interstate highway system<lb/>
crumble each year for lack of proper<lb/>
maintenance; nearly half of the bridges in<lb/>
the U.S. need shoring up, and public<lb/>
transportation systems are screeching to a<lb/>
halt. All this while the automobile, con-<lb/>
struction and steel industries suffer their<lb/>
worst reversals since the Great Depression.<lb/>
It is precisely those industries, of course,<lb/>
which are concentrated in cities hit hardest<lb/>
by the loss of tax dollars to the brass hats.<lb/>
And it is those cities in which a<lb/>
disproportionate share of poor Americans<lb/>
live ? both the underclass that has long<lb/>
festered in city and countryside alike and<lb/>
the New Poor of the Reagan era. Accor-<lb/>
ding to the Census Bureau, more than two<lb/>
million Americans fell below the poverty<lb/>
line in 1981. Eight hundred thousand of<lb/>
them were children.<lb/>
For the New Poor, life is hard and get-<lb/>
ting harder. Social services that could have<lb/>
helped them survive have already been<lb/>
sacrificed to the greater glory of the<lb/>
military budget. President Reagan has not<lb/>
cut federal spending ? as he claimed he<lb/>
would do ? merely shifted spending from<lb/>
human needs to the Pentagon. Military<lb/>
spending is the only major part of the<lb/>
budget that has grown in real terms ?<lb/>
beyond inflation ? since Reagan and his<lb/>
supply-side sidekicks took office.<lb/>
"The conclusion writes Anderson in<lb/>
Bankrupting the Cities, "is inescapable:<lb/>
Accelerated military spending will result in<lb/>
the impoverishment of major sectors of<lb/>
American society and worsening budget<lb/>
problems for most metropolitan areas<lb/>
Sustained high military budgets will make<lb/>
the U.S. a poorer, weaker and more divid-<lb/>
ed nation<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Student's Temporal Remembrances Off Base<lb/>
Last week, a letter was written to this<lb/>
column by James Aleo about an incident<lb/>
that occurred on the ECU intramural field<lb/>
last Monday night (11-1). He seemed very<lb/>
dissatisfied with the promptness of the ser-<lb/>
vice that was given to an injured player by<lb/>
the Greenville Rescue Squad and the ECU<lb/>
security department. Being the senior of-<lb/>
ficial in charge that night, I would like to<lb/>
correct a few statemets that were made by<lb/>
Mr. Aleo:<lb/>
? Aleo stated that the campus police "saw<lb/>
fit to send a policeman to the scene; this<lb/>
took nearly IS minutes I called the<lb/>
security department via the "blue light<lb/>
system" from Minges Coliseum at 9:49<lb/>
p.m. It took me less than two minutes to<lb/>
run back to the intramural field, which is<lb/>
only about 200 yards away. When I arrived<lb/>
back at the field, a security patrolman was<lb/>
at the location. I feel that two minutes is a<lb/>
very good response time.<lb/>
? Aleo also stated that it took the rescue<lb/>
squad 10 minutes to arrive at the scene.<lb/>
The rescue squad was called at 9:52 and ar-<lb/>
rived at the intramural field at 9:58. That's<lb/>
six minutes response time. Not bad for a<lb/>
rescue squad that has to drive through<lb/>
downtown traffic and five stoplights!<lb/>
? From the time I called the campus securi-<lb/>
ty (9:49) to the time the rescue squad<lb/>
departed with the injured party (10:03), a<lb/>
period of 14 minutes had elapsed. Mr.<lb/>
Aleo stated that it was at least 25 minutes.<lb/>
? Mr. Aleo's suggestion that a confidential<lb/>
code be given the intramural department<lb/>
for use in emergency situations may be<lb/>
good in theory, but how long will that code<lb/>
stay confidential when it must be known<lb/>
by virtually all staff, work-study students,<lb/>
self-help students, athletic trainers and<lb/>
security personnel employed by the in-<lb/>
tramural department? All employees<lb/>
would have to know the number, and they<lb/>
change every semester.<lb/>
I would like to thank the ECU security<lb/>
department for their prompt actions that<lb/>
night: first, as an intramural employee,<lb/>
and second, as a student of this university.<lb/>
I would also like to extend my appreciation<lb/>
to the Greenville Rescue Squad for their<lb/>
quick response that night and continued<lb/>
support of the university. As an employee<lb/>
and as a student, I feel that all parties in-<lb/>
volved in the situation acted promptly and<lb/>
correctly and I hope that if 1 am ever in<lb/>
the shoes of the injured soccer player, I am<lb/>
acted on in the same prompt manner.<lb/>
Duane Grooms<lb/>
GradPhys. Ed.<lb/>
Baha'i Clarified<lb/>
The Baha'i Association of ECU, and the<lb/>
larger Greenville Baha'i Community, wish<lb/>
to thank The East Carolinian for the<lb/>
publicity we have recently received through<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Members of the association felt that a<lb/>
few points in your most recent story (Oct.<lb/>
14) needed to be clarified, though. It was<lb/>
mentioned that Bill Jurney's parents are<lb/>
Baha'is, and that "he has been one all his<lb/>
life Unlike the children of the followers<lb/>
of other religions, a child born to Baha'i<lb/>
parents is not automatically a Baha'i. As<lb/>
the story mentioned, "Baha'u'llah<lb/>
established 15 as the age of maturity<lb/>
What this means is that Baha'i parents are<lb/>
to give their children a broad, spiritual<lb/>
education, exposing them to the existence<lb/>
and teachings of all the major prophets of<lb/>
God.<lb/>
Should the child desire to join the Baha'i<lb/>
community, heshe has the opportunity to<lb/>
do so once heshe reaches the age of 15.<lb/>
This broad based religious training which<lb/>
they receive enables children of Baha'is to<lb/>
more deeply appreciate the value and truth<lb/>
inherent in all the world's religions.<lb/>
It is not possible to be a Baha'i and re-<lb/>
ject Christ, or any of God's other<lb/>
messengers. Nor is it possible to be a<lb/>
Baha'i without first studying the faith and<lb/>
being familiar with other belief systems,<lb/>
then making an informed decision. This is<lb/>
the principle of "independent investigation<lb/>
of truth which Baha'is regard as essen-<lb/>
tial to spiritual maturity.<lb/>
Also, the decision to become a Baha'i<lb/>
does not end the process of "independent<lb/>
investigation" of other religions.<lb/>
Baha'u'llah taught that Baha'is should<lb/>
associate "with the people of religions with<lb/>
joy and fragrance so we welcome<lb/>
dialogue and cooperative ventures with<lb/>
other religions. We extend our invitation<lb/>
to students of other religious beliefs, as<lb/>
well as any other interested individuals, to<lb/>
come ot our meetings. We will meet at 5<lb/>
pm. in room 212 Mendenhall on Wed<lb/>
Nov. 17; and Wed Dec. 1, for our final<lb/>
general meeting of the semester. The board<lb/>
meets during alternate weeks.<lb/>
We also welcome invitations from other<lb/>
groups and classes on campus to attend<lb/>
their meetings and discuss the Baha'i<lb/>
teachings more broadly.<lb/>
Again, thank you for your extensive and<lb/>
accurate story.<lb/>
For the Baha'i Association,<lb/>
Karen S. Tarlo<lb/>
Grad. Student, Nursing<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing ali points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
Pu<lb/>
B MIKE<lb/>
On Tut<lb/>
noon, Nover<lb/>
"Ending Hui<lb/>
ing" will be I<lb/>
in the coft(<lb/>
Mendenhal<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
According<lb/>
Corley, h<lb/>
conductini<lb/>
meeting, "Tl<lb/>
gives the u<lb/>
on world hi<lb/>
Lod<lb/>
Sho<lb/>
Continued H<lb/>
Id get bac<lb/>
see mv wih<lb/>
! "<lb/>
Futrell<lb/>
assailants. <lb/>
 allet,<lb/>
members of <lb/>
of cult. r?<lb/>
didn't see<lb/>
their men-<lb/>
overlooked<lb/>
talkie in<lb/>
i<lb/>
?? mmm<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBERS 1982<lb/>
ihey were<lb/>
I'd like to<lb/>
r tell Mr.<lb/>
mer thrown<lb/>
for dealing<lb/>
trta locals.<lb/>
tain to steer<lb/>
an iceberg.<lb/>
,er to bring<lb/>
lo's father's<lb/>
Is mother to<lb/>
fove triangle<lb/>
near ard<lb/>
eternaUj-<lb/>
ne. shut up;<lb/>
a football<lb/>
txhes is a<lb/>
mice, v.C <lb/>
rp in a local<lb/>
'an surveys<lb/>
n a nice auv.<lb/>
igan and his<lb/>
tice.<lb/>
lAnderson in<lb/>
inescapable:<lb/>
will result in<lb/>
sectors of<lb/>
tiling budget<lb/>
tan areas<lb/>
:ts will make<lb/>
more divid-<lb/>
jdependent<lb/>
Ireligions.<lb/>
'is should<lb/>
igions with<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
Itures with<lb/>
invitation<lb/>
Ibeliefs, as<lb/>
iduals, to<lb/>
meet at 5<lb/>
on Wed<lb/>
ir our final<lb/>
 The board<lb/>
from other<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
Ihe Baha'i<lb/>
tensive and<lb/>
Issociation,<lb/>
rn S. Tarlo<lb/>
n. Nursing<lb/>
les tellers<lb/>
Mail or<lb/>
id South<lb/>
ibrarv.<lb/>
Public Invited To Hunger Briefing<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Tuesday after-<lb/>
noon, November 16, an<lb/>
"Ending Hunger Brief-<lb/>
ing" will be presented<lb/>
in the coffee-house at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
According to Marty<lb/>
Corley, who will be<lb/>
conducting the<lb/>
meeting, "The briefing<lb/>
gives the information<lb/>
on world hunger that<lb/>
has taken other people<lb/>
an incredible amount<lb/>
of time to put together.<lb/>
"People who are too<lb/>
busy to get all the facts<lb/>
on hunger can come to<lb/>
the briefing and be<lb/>
brought up to date on<lb/>
the current information<lb/>
on world hunger<lb/>
Corley said.<lb/>
According to Ms.<lb/>
Jennifer Baughn, a<lb/>
local Hunger Project<lb/>
coordinator who par-<lb/>
ticipated in a briefing in<lb/>
September, "The brief-<lb/>
ing comes from the<lb/>
viewpoint that hunger<lb/>
can be stopped and<lb/>
everyone can do a little<lb/>
something about it.<lb/>
"The briefing gives<lb/>
people a sense of their<lb/>
own power to make a<lb/>
difference in the<lb/>
world<lb/>
The briefing will run<lb/>
from 3:00 to 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
and, according to<lb/>
Local Officer Abducted;<lb/>
Shot On Town Common<lb/>
Baughn, "It's impor-<lb/>
tant to make the com-<lb/>
mitment to stay for the<lb/>
entire session because<lb/>
the briefing builds<lb/>
upon itself. The last<lb/>
half hour is the most<lb/>
important part because<lb/>
this is where people can<lb/>
make their own per-<lb/>
sonal commitment as to<lb/>
what they can do to and<lb/>
world hunger<lb/>
On Thrusday, Nov.<lb/>
18, the ECU Hunger<lb/>
Coalition is sponsoring<lb/>
this year's "Fast for a<lb/>
World Harvest The<lb/>
Hunger Coalition is<lb/>
asking persons to go<lb/>
without eating for one<lb/>
day, or to skip one<lb/>
meal, and donate their<lb/>
food money to Oxfam<lb/>
America to support<lb/>
"self-help development<lb/>
projects" in the poorest<lb/>
areas of Asia, Africa<lb/>
and Latin America.<lb/>
Other events relating<lb/>
to World Hunger will<lb/>
be conducted during<lb/>
the week of Nov. 15-19.<lb/>
Anyone wanting<lb/>
more information on<lb/>
the fast can call<lb/>
752-4216. Persons in-<lb/>
terested in the Ending<lb/>
Hunger Briefing should<lb/>
call 355-6855.<lb/>
How to follow Fellini.<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
I'd get back home to<lb/>
see my wife and fami-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
Futrell thinks the<lb/>
assailants, who took his<lb/>
wallet, might be<lb/>
members of some kind<lb/>
of cult, but that he<lb/>
didn't see robbery as<lb/>
their motive since they<lb/>
overlooked a walkie-<lb/>
talkie in his coat<lb/>
pocket, which he used<lb/>
to summon help after<lb/>
the shooting. Futrell's<lb/>
wallet and service<lb/>
revolver were both<lb/>
recovered near the<lb/>
scene fo the crime.<lb/>
Futrell, who has been<lb/>
with the Greenvelle<lb/>
Police since February,<lb/>
said that the men were<lb/>
very clam and didn't<lb/>
appear to be under the<lb/>
influence of drugs or<lb/>
alcohol. They also vow-<lb/>
ed to kill a policeman<lb/>
the next time. The<lb/>
twenty-five-year old of-<lb/>
fice is the first<lb/>
policeman to be shot in<lb/>
Greenville since the<lb/>
1950's.<lb/>
Detective Whitaker<lb/>
said the incident would<lb/>
probably serve as a<lb/>
motivation to other of-<lb/>
ficers to be more alert-<lb/>
 ? ? <lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
?????? 752-7303<lb/>
? BUDDY AND THE HITMEN ?<lb/>
Come To the ATTIC<lb/>
WED. NOV. 10th<lb/>
 And get your Buddy In FREE. Then when you <lb/>
 get inside go to the Qltt Shop tor a FREE Qlft <lb/>
 You guessed It and receive a discount. Then<lb/>
prepare yourself and your Buddy tor some of<lb/>
the best 60's music In the South.<lb/>
THURS NOV. 11th<lb/>
INCONCERT<lb/>
R.C.A. Recording Artist<lb/>
flanycke.<lb/>
WSTREET TALK<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT. - SUBWAY<lb/>
Talk it over, over a cup of Orange Cappuccino. Creamy-rich, with<lb/>
an orange twist, it's a little bit of la dolce into. And it's just one of six deliriously<lb/>
different flavors<lb/>
from General Foods<lb/>
International Coffees.<lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
1<lb/>
GENERAL FOODS' INTERNATIONAL COFFEES<lb/>
AS MUCH A FEELING AS A FLAVOR<lb/>
t 1962 Gene-al Fooos Corporation<lb/>
;????. xcm<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Eacri of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
qu.red to be readily available for<lb/>
sale m each Kroger Sev on e?cept<lb/>
as specifically noted m this ad H we<lb/>
do run out of an item we w.n offer<lb/>
vou your choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a ramchech wh.ch<lb/>
?iii entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
once withm 30 days<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Nov. 10.<lb/>
thru Sat Nov 13. 1982<lb/>
Copygnt 1982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rignts Reserved<lb/>
None Soid o Dealers<lb/>
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Y<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
NOVEMBERS 1982 Page 6<lb/>
Ballet Theatre<lb/>
Is Opening For<lb/>
'8283 Series<lb/>
A scene from American Ballet Theatre II production One in Five. The company is coming to campus Thursday, Nov. 18.<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Unions Theatre Arts Series is proud<lb/>
to begin its 1982-1983 season with<lb/>
the world acclaimed American<lb/>
Ballet Theatre II. The performance<lb/>
is scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 18<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
American Ballet Theatre II,<lb/>
originally Ballet Repertory Com-<lb/>
pany, is a showcase for talented,<lb/>
young dancers as a part of the<lb/>
American Ballet Theatre's commit-<lb/>
ment to bringing dance to a greater<lb/>
number of locations. Mikhail<lb/>
Baryshnikov, Artistic Director of<lb/>
American Ballet Theatre, describes<lb/>
American Ballet Theatre II "as<lb/>
transforming talents of excellent<lb/>
potential into performing artists<lb/>
Perform they do. Critics world-<lb/>
wide have praised the companies<lb/>
astonishing versatility and extremely<lb/>
consistent high quality perfor-<lb/>
mances. Their program might in-<lb/>
- elude a 19th century romantic<lb/>
ballet, a classical pas de deux, a<lb/>
modern dance work, and a contem-<lb/>
porary ballet newly choreographed<lb/>
specifically for the company. Since<lb/>
it is a small company (8 women, 7<lb/>
men), each member must be of<lb/>
soloist caliber. American Ballet<lb/>
Theatre II "alumni" comprise one-<lb/>
third of American Ballet Theatre.<lb/>
Others have gone on to dance with<lb/>
the Joffrey Ballet, the National<lb/>
Ballet of Canada, the New York Ci-<lb/>
ty Ballet, and the Alvin Ailey<lb/>
American Dance Comapny. No<lb/>
wonder Clive Barnes has called it,<lb/>
"The finest small classical company<lb/>
in the United States<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. Tickets are $4 for ECU<lb/>
students presenting their ECU ac-<lb/>
tivity card and student ID. Faculty,<lb/>
staff and public tickets are $8.<lb/>
Those age 14 and under have<lb/>
specially priced tickets at $5. All<lb/>
tickets at the door will be $8.<lb/>
For additional information con-<lb/>
tact the Central Ticket Office at<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. The hours of the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office are Monday-<lb/>
Friday 10a.m. to 4p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are also on sale for Julius<lb/>
Baker, well-known flutist.<lb/>
'Sophisticated Ladies' Another Video Venture<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
When I was fourteen years old, I talked two<lb/>
classmates of mine into hitchhiking five miles up to the<lb/>
Elks Club in Derby, Vermont, to hear the legendary<lb/>
Duke Ellington and his orchestra. This was in 'he days<lb/>
when the band was performing close to 300 dates a year,<lb/>
and most of the players had passed middle age a while<lb/>
back. Not too many people showed up, there may have<lb/>
been more folks across the road at the Derby Port<lb/>
Drive-In Theatre, but my friends and I knew that we<lb/>
were listening to the best live music we'd ever heard.<lb/>
Duke Ellington was a superb showman, even on such a<lb/>
slow night, and the band was tight, as only a band that<lb/>
played so much together could be tight. Even though 1<lb/>
ended up walking five miles back to home and a wor-<lb/>
ried, irate mother. That was an evening I'll never forget.<lb/>
And so I was intrigued when I saw posters around cam-<lb/>
pus advertising Sophisticated Ladies, a Broadway<lb/>
tribute to Duke Ellington.<lb/>
The show came to newly renovated Wright<lb/>
Auditorium this past Friday evening, live from the<lb/>
LaFontaine Theatre on Broadway. With its slick pro-<lb/>
motion, and with the music of the great Duke Ellington,<lb/>
the show had tremendous potential, which it did not en-<lb/>
tirely fullfiil in this video broadcast.<lb/>
The first half hour to forty-five minutes of the show<lb/>
were spent in telling the audience how happy the pro-<lb/>
ducers were to be doing a show revolving around Duke<lb/>
Ellington. The viewer was told that this was a story<lb/>
about a band. When the show did get underway,<lb/>
however, it became obvious that this was a current<lb/>
Broadway review,(is that the right word) and the band<lb/>
was very much in the background.<lb/>
This is not to say that the performances were not ex-<lb/>
cellent. The singing and dancing of Paula Kelly, Hinton<lb/>
Battle, Phyllis Hyman, Gregg Burge, Terri Klausner,<lb/>
Calvin McRae, Leeta Galway and Lorraine Fields were<lb/>
all of top quality and very stimulating. A couple of the<lb/>
dance duets featuring Hinton Battle and Gregg Burge<lb/>
were among the best that I have ever seen. Paula Kelly,<lb/>
Phyllis Hyman and Terri Klausner gave vocal perfor-<lb/>
mances that were professional.<lb/>
The sound quality of the video improved as the show<lb/>
developed. During the interviews at the beginning of the<lb/>
show the sound was very bassy (boomy), and in the first<lb/>
half of the show, some of the vocals were lost in the<lb/>
mix. But these problems seemed to have been taken care<lb/>
of after the intermission.<lb/>
According to John Zieman of Campus Entertainment<lb/>
Network, the video presentation comes in somewhere<lb/>
between film and a live performance. Many people left<lb/>
at the intermission. I don't know if they had expected<lb/>
something different or if they were not satisfied with the<lb/>
quality. For my part, the show did not compare with the<lb/>
live performance of the Duke Ellington Orchestra under<lb/>
the direction of Mercer Ellington in Hendrix Theatre a<lb/>
few years ago. As a supplement to normal concert pro-<lb/>
gramming, I think the video concerts are a good idea,<lb/>
but I feel that tftket prices need to be dowrVfftere with<lb/>
the movie prices and not up there with the concert<lb/>
prices. The show was definitely not worth the originally<lb/>
quoted price of $12 for a general admission ticket, een<lb/>
though it was reported that Showtime viewers had to<lb/>
pay up to $15 for a hookup for the play.<lb/>
It was interesting that viewers were not exactly sure of<lb/>
how to react to the show. Does one applaud the TV?<lb/>
The Ninth Returns<lb/>
Classic Performed For 75th Year<lb/>
The first Greenville performance<lb/>
of Beethoven's beloved Ninth Sym-<lb/>
phony was November 11, 1973.<lb/>
Now, nine years later, it will be<lb/>
heard again in honor of the 75th<lb/>
Anniversary of ECU.<lb/>
On Sunday, November 14, at 3:15<lb/>
p.m the East Carolina Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra, combined choruses of<lb/>
the ECU School of Music, the<lb/>
Greenville Choral Society, and four<lb/>
young professional soloists will join<lb/>
forces to present Beethoven's Ninth<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The outstanding quartet of<lb/>
singers engaged for this perfor-<lb/>
mance includes Jane Williams,<lb/>
soprano, and Gary Glaze, tenor, of<lb/>
New York City; ECU alumnus Jane<lb/>
Murray Dillard, mezzo-soprano, of<lb/>
Charlotte; and Joseph M. Pate,<lb/>
bass, of Philadelphia.<lb/>
The combined forces, under con-<lb/>
ductor Robert Hause, will number<lb/>
almost 300 people and will include<lb/>
music alumni returning to par-<lb/>
ticipate in this special event.<lb/>
According to Hause,<lb/>
"Performances of this symphonic<lb/>
masterwork are rare except in major<lb/>
urban areas. East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity is fortunate to have the quality<lb/>
and quantity of performers needed<lb/>
to produce this great masterpiece<lb/>
The "Choral Symphony" con-<lb/>
lcudes with a monumental move-<lb/>
ment which combines the soloists,<lb/>
chorus and symphony orchestra<lb/>
proclaiming two of Beethoven's<lb/>
ethical ideals: the universal<lb/>
brotherhood of man through joy<lb/>
and its basis in the love of an eternal<lb/>
heavenly Father.<lb/>
Tickets are $3 for adults, $2 for<lb/>
students and senior citizens, and will<lb/>
be available at the door or in ad-<lb/>
vance from the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(757-6611) between the hours of<lb/>
10a.m. and 4p.m.<lb/>
Gary Glaze has received interna-<lb/>
tional acclaim for his tenor opera<lb/>
roles with the New York City<lb/>
Opera, the Netherlands Opera, the<lb/>
Prague National Opera, and the<lb/>
Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires. He<lb/>
has appeared with the opera com-<lb/>
panies of Sante Fe, Philadelphia,<lb/>
San Antonio, Hawaii, Milwaukee,<lb/>
Pittsburgh, and Colorado. Recent-<lb/>
ly, he sang tne tenor roles in Ravel's<lb/>
. 'enfant et les Sortileges in a Balan-<lb/>
chine production premiering on<lb/>
NET in the fall of 1981. In concert,<lb/>
Glaze has sung as guest artist with<lb/>
symphony orchestras in several ma-<lb/>
jor American cities. In New York he<lb/>
has been featured at Avery Fisher<lb/>
Hall with the Little Orchestra Socie-<lb/>
ty and Mostly Mozart Festival, at<lb/>
Tully Hall with Calrion Concerts, at<lb/>
Caramoor Festival and with Musica<lb/>
Aeterna at the Metropolitan<lb/>
Museum.He has also sung at<lb/>
Carnegie Hall under the direction of<lb/>
Richard Westenburg. Born in Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh, Glaze earned his master's<lb/>
degree at the University of<lb/>
Michigan. He is a recipient of grants<lb/>
from the Martha Baird Rockefeller<lb/>
Foundation, Sullivan Foundation,<lb/>
Corbett Foundation and The<lb/>
Kathryn Long Trust of the<lb/>
Metropolitan Opera.The Amster-<lb/>
dam reviews named him "a<lb/>
discovery of importance; an agile<lb/>
lyric tenor with the silken-like<lb/>
brilliance of the pure bel-canto<lb/>
The credits of Jane Williams,<lb/>
soprano, include major roles with<lb/>
the Wolf Trap Opera Co the<lb/>
Bronx Opera Co Sante Fe Opera,<lb/>
Los Angeles Music Theatre Co<lb/>
and The Opera Studio, Inc. A<lb/>
graduate of California State Univer-<lb/>
sity at Northridge, she has also sung<lb/>
with the Los Angeles Lyric Ensem-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Jane Murray Dilliard, mezzo-<lb/>
soprano, holds degrees from ECU.<lb/>
She is currently Associate Professor<lb/>
of Creative Arts at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Charlotte where<lb/>
she is the Director of Opera<lb/>
Workshop and teaches voice. Mrs.<lb/>
Dillard has numerous performances<lb/>
with symphony orchestras in<lb/>
Europe and the U.S. including<lb/>
Radio RAI, Rome; Swiss Romande<lb/>
Orchestra, Geneva; Mulhouse Sym-<lb/>
phony Orchestra, Mulhouse,<lb/>
France; Tampa Symphony, Tampa,<lb/>
Florida; Charlotte Symphony, and<lb/>
the N.C. Symphony. She has also<lb/>
sung leading roles with many opera<lb/>
companies in the U.S. and Europe.<lb/>
Three Rockefeller grants, and<lb/>
AAUW scholarship for Foreign<lb/>
study, finalist in the Metropolitan<lb/>
Opera Auditions and Regional win-<lb/>
ner of the National Federation of<lb/>
Music Clubs Young Artists Audi-<lb/>
tions are among the awards that<lb/>
Mrs. Dilliard has received. She has<lb/>
been awarded the Outstanding<lb/>
Alumni Award from ECU and was<lb/>
selected as one of four outstanding<lb/>
women teachers at UNCC for 1982.<lb/>
Bass soloist Joseph M. Pate is a<lb/>
native of Nashville, Tennessee. He<lb/>
attended Trenton State College for<lb/>
two years, then was accepted as a<lb/>
full scholarship student at the<lb/>
Academy of Vocal Arts in<lb/>
Philadelphia. Mr. Pate has per-<lb/>
formed extensively in the<lb/>
Philadelphia area, both with the<lb/>
Opera Company of Philadelphia<lb/>
and in numerous roles at the<lb/>
Academy of Vocal Arts, where he<lb/>
will return this season as a guest<lb/>
graduate singer to perform the role<lb/>
of "CoUatinus" in The Rape of<lb/>
Luc re tic at Philadelphia's famous<lb/>
Walnut Street Theatre.<lb/>
JazzBlues Duo Maggie Ree &amp; Father Coming To Hendrix<lb/>
Spartanburg, S.Cs jazzblues revival duo, fifteea-year-oid Maggie Ree Hughey and her father Bobby,<lb/>
will perform in concert at Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre next Thursday, Nov. 18 at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Maggie, who plays piano and sings, is accompanied by her father on the bass. The two have been dunlins'<lb/>
as "an amazingly proficient team that sport the child prodigy-of-thc-century hi young Maggie Ree The<lb/>
concert b free to ECU students, faculty and staff, aad n sponsored by the Student Unto Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
 k<lb/>
form<lb/>
will<lb/>
Theaj<lb/>
Stud<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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Former Prisoner Lecturing<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER. 1982<lb/>
Victor Herman, a<lb/>
former Soviet prisoner,<lb/>
will speak in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center on<lb/>
Thursday, November<lb/>
11, 1982 at 8p.m. Her-<lb/>
man's appearance is<lb/>
under the sponsorhip<lb/>
of the ECU Student<lb/>
Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee and is part<lb/>
of the annual Jewish<lb/>
and International<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
Herman had the<lb/>
misfortune of being a<lb/>
foreigner in the Soviet<lb/>
Union during the start<lb/>
of the Stalin purges and<lb/>
shen war seemed im-<lb/>
minent. In order to pre-<lb/>
vent even the slightest<lb/>
possibility of foreign<lb/>
influence, Stalin<lb/>
developed the infamous<lb/>
Gulag system of forced<lb/>
labor camps; some<lb/>
three hundred of the re-<lb/>
maining American<lb/>
Ford employees were<lb/>
jailed in these camps,<lb/>
including Herman in<lb/>
1938. After spending<lb/>
World War II chopping<lb/>
down trees in remote<lb/>
deep Russia, he was<lb/>
released from the labor<lb/>
camp in 1948 and exiled<lb/>
to Krasnoyarsk, a town<lb/>
in Siberia. There he met<lb/>
a young gymnast, nam-<lb/>
ed Galina, training at<lb/>
the same athletic club<lb/>
where he trained box-<lb/>
ers; they were married<lb/>
shortly after they met.<lb/>
However, as a term in<lb/>
his release, Herman<lb/>
had been forbidden to<lb/>
marry; consequently,<lb/>
he was exiled further<lb/>
north in Siberia, to the<lb/>
Arctic village of<lb/>
Yeniseyk. Upon his ar-<lb/>
rival in this distant<lb/>
village, he was told that<lb/>
he would not be allow-<lb/>
ed to live in the village,<lb/>
but would have to sur-<lb/>
vive as best he could in<lb/>
the woods nearby. And<lb/>
so he carved his shelter<lb/>
out of the ice and sub-<lb/>
sisted on the rats which<lb/>
he managed to catch.<lb/>
One day, much to his<lb/>
surprise, his wife<lb/>
Galina and their infant<lb/>
daughter appeared at<lb/>
his door; the pair had<lb/>
made the trek from<lb/>
Krasnoyarsk to<lb/>
Yeniseyk on foot. The<lb/>
family lived together in<lb/>
the igloo for a year.<lb/>
Finally exonerated in<lb/>
1955, two years after<lb/>
the death of Stalin,<lb/>
Herman then faced a<lb/>
twenty year struggle<lb/>
through the serpentine<lb/>
Soviet bureaucracy to<lb/>
reclaim his American<lb/>
citizenship. In 1976<lb/>
Herman became the<lb/>
only one of the 300 im-<lb/>
prisoned Ford<lb/>
employees to leave the<lb/>
Soviet Union.<lb/>
However, it wasn't un-<lb/>
til 1979 that his wife<lb/>
and two daughters were<lb/>
allowed to join him in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Herman now lives in<lb/>
the Detroit area. He is<lb/>
the author of two<lb/>
books: Coming Out of<lb/>
the Ice and Realities:<lb/>
Wight and Paradox in<lb/>
Hte Soviet Russia.<lb/>
Coming Out of the Ice<lb/>
was the subject of a re-<lb/>
cent CBS dramatic<lb/>
presentation focusing<lb/>
on Herman's struggle.<lb/>
It starred John Savage,<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
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U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
Former Soveit prisoner Victor Herman.<lb/>
Willie Nelson, Ben<lb/>
Cross and Fracesca An-<lb/>
nis.In his lecture he<lb/>
discusses his ex-<lb/>
periences in Russia,<lb/>
how the Russian mind<lb/>
works, and how he<lb/>
feels many of<lb/>
America's problems<lb/>
could be solved if<lb/>
government officials<lb/>
understood how<lb/>
foreign leaders<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
Tickets for the lec-<lb/>
ture are on sale at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office<lb/>
and are priced at $2 for<lb/>
ECU students and $5<lb/>
for the public. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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LOT NEXT TO UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ARCADE BEHIND H.L. HODGES<lb/>
ANNOUNCING!<lb/>
The 2nd Annual<lb/>
Speedeating Contest!<lb/>
Can you beat our<lb/>
champ's record of 2:58?<lb/>
Stuff yourself on a<lb/>
Pirates Treasure Chest!<lb/>
(6 dips, 7 toppings, double works)<lb/>
Time:<lb/>
4:30 p.m. November 11th (Thurs.)<lb/>
Place:<lb/>
Heart's Delight<lb/>
(your ice cream shop)<lb/>
Prize:<lb/>
11 Your name on our board.<lb/>
2) Your enin fee returned! Be the winner!<lb/>
3) A Pirates Treasure Chest<lb/>
lo be eaten leisurel!<lb/>
4) A part for the winner and three fnends.<lb/>
.Please register by midnight Wednesday 1110!)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057512_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 9, 1982<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Heath, Pirates Stampede Mavericks<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
SpartofMMr<lb/>
The Pirates gave their best road<lb/>
performance of the season at the<lb/>
University of Texas-Arlington this<lb/>
past Saturday to top the Mavericks,<lb/>
40-24.<lb/>
Freshman standout Jeff Heath<lb/>
kicked a record-breaking 58-yard<lb/>
field goal late in the second quarter<lb/>
to surpass Chuck Bushbeck's<lb/>
49-yard mark, which was made in<lb/>
19ol. Heath also booted three more<lb/>
lengthy kicks of 53,48, and 42 yards<lb/>
to ease by the record ECU set in<lb/>
1978 for three field goals which, in-<lb/>
cidently, was at UTA ? the Pirates<lb/>
first meeting ever with the<lb/>
Mavericks.<lb/>
"Jeff Heath was just<lb/>
phemomenal said head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory. "He's done a great job<lb/>
kicking for us this year<lb/>
After the Pirates suffered losses<lb/>
at Missouri, Florida State and<lb/>
Missouri, Emory was in much<lb/>
higher spirits when the scrappy bout<lb/>
with UTA was finally over. "It's<lb/>
great to win that first one on the<lb/>
road he said. "It was one of those<lb/>
wild and woolly ones, but our of-<lb/>
fense came through for us<lb/>
ECU quarterback Kevin Ingram<lb/>
started in his second game this year<lb/>
and was apparently making up for<lb/>
lost time. The Philadelphia native<lb/>
completed 12 of 16 passes for 193<lb/>
yards and scored a touchdown.<lb/>
"Ingram played exceptionally<lb/>
well said Emory. "His execution<lb/>
was much better tonight (Saturday)<lb/>
than it has ever been<lb/>
The Pirates came out in the first<lb/>
quarter displaying the intensity it<lb/>
lacked against West Virginia. On<lb/>
the first play, Ingram hit Carlton<lb/>
Nelson for a 19-yard gain to more<lb/>
the Bucs to the 49-yard line. Tony<lb/>
Baker, who led the Pirates in<lb/>
rushing with 117 yards, then ran up<lb/>
midfield for six more yards.<lb/>
Another Ingram pass to Nelson and<lb/>
a pitch to Baker put the Pirates on<lb/>
UTA's 44-yard line. The twosome<lb/>
again penetrated toward the goal<lb/>
line, with Nelson catching an<lb/>
18-yard pass to land the Pirates on<lb/>
the 26-yard line. ECU's Ernest<lb/>
Byner then carried for eight yards to<lb/>
score one of several ECU<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Now up 7-0, the Mavericks began<lb/>
their surge to the other end of the<lb/>
field. After being sidelined for six<lb/>
pames with an injured knee, UTA's<lb/>
number one quarterback Kraig<lb/>
Hopkins was in calling the signals,<lb/>
but his return was to be a short one.<lb/>
Hopkins completed two of three<lb/>
passes before being sacked by<lb/>
ECU's Tony Smith for a 12-yard<lb/>
loss. Injured on the play, Hopkins<lb/>
was escorted off the field with a<lb/>
hyper-extended knee.<lb/>
Now with 4:42 remaining, Ingram<lb/>
delivered a 19-yard pass to split end<lb/>
Larry O'Roark to more the Bucs to<lb/>
UTA's 44. Carlton Nelson then<lb/>
caught an over-the-middle pass for<lb/>
13-yard gain. Speedster Jimmy<lb/>
Walden, making his presence know<lb/>
after being out all season with a<lb/>
knee injury, optioned around left<lb/>
for a 15-yard run. On UTA's four-<lb/>
yard line, Ingram kept to move the<lb/>
Pirates ahead, 14-0.<lb/>
ECU opened up the second<lb/>
quarter with a seond and five situa-<lb/>
tion on their own 25. Moving to the<lb/>
Mavericks' 24-yard line, Ingram<lb/>
found flanker Stuart Ramirez in the<lb/>
endzone for a 32-yard pass and a<lb/>
touchdown. A Heath kicked upped<lb/>
the Pirates lead to 21-0 with more<lb/>
than 13 minutes remaining in the<lb/>
first half.<lb/>
UTA battled to their 44-yard line,<lb/>
but flanker Byron Williams fumbled<lb/>
and ECU defensive end Jody Schulz<lb/>
recovered and returned 25 yards.<lb/>
The Mavericks, however, were<lb/>
not the only ones capable of making<lb/>
a mistake. On the very next play, In-<lb/>
gram's pass was intercepted by<lb/>
linebacker Noel Spraggins, who<lb/>
sprinted for a 17-yard return to<lb/>
ECU'S 32. Taking advantage of<lb/>
ECU's error, fullback Robert<lb/>
Johnson ran seven yards to put the<lb/>
Mavericks on the board.<lb/>
Now 21-7, the Pirates moved to<lb/>
the 41-yard line to set Heath up for<lb/>
a 58-yard field goal. Kicking in 16<lb/>
mile per hour winds, Heath scored<lb/>
three more points to make the score<lb/>
24-7. The kick tied the NCAA<lb/>
record for more field goals of 40 or<lb/>
more yards in a single game.<lb/>
"I just knew if I could get it up,<lb/>
the wind would do it Heath said.<lb/>
"I was relaxed and really did not<lb/>
think abou the distance. I've been<lb/>
trying to overpower the ball on<lb/>
kicks. This time, I just kept it<lb/>
smooth as with an extra point; the<lb/>
same type motion Heath was<lb/>
named as the ECAC Division-I co-<lb/>
Rookie of the Week for his play.<lb/>
UTA's kicker Scott Tennison also<lb/>
came through for the Mavericks,<lb/>
popping a 34-yard attempt to give<lb/>
UTA three more points.<lb/>
The Bucs wound up on UTA's<lb/>
36-yard line with only a few seconds<lb/>
left in the second quarter. Despite<lb/>
his first successful long-range ef-<lb/>
fort, Heath wasn't quite finished<lb/>
yet. He boomed a 53 yard kick right<lb/>
down the middle to give ECU a<lb/>
whopping 27-10 lead as the second<lb/>
quarter ended.<lb/>
The beginning of the second half<lb/>
appeared to be a complete reverse of<lb/>
the first quarter, with the Mavericks<lb/>
being the ones with fire burning in<lb/>
Freshman Jeff Heath kicked four field goals at UTA to break two ECU<lb/>
records.<lb/>
their eyes.<lb/>
UTA's Jlightower, along with<lb/>
tailback Scotty Cauldwell, bursted<lb/>
into an offensive explosion to place<lb/>
the Mavericks' on the three-yard<lb/>
line. Hightower faked a pitch and<lb/>
ran in for six points. UTA gained 85<lb/>
yards in just 10 plays on the scoring<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
Aware of the Mavericks' intensi-<lb/>
ty, the Pirates headed for the end-<lb/>
zone. Ingram connected with tight<lb/>
end Norwood Vann for a 15-yard<lb/>
gain, and Byner ran in two plays<lb/>
later to give the Pirates a 34-17 lead.<lb/>
With 6:51 seconds left in the third<lb/>
quarter, the Mavericks forged ahead<lb/>
to ECU's one-yard line, where<lb/>
Caldwell ran in to put Texas just 10<lb/>
points behind the Pirates, 34-24.<lb/>
But two Heath field goals in the<lb/>
second half secured ECU's lead,<lb/>
giving the Pirates a win that has<lb/>
been much needed and wanted.<lb/>
"The biggest happiness was finally<lb/>
getting that win on the road<lb/>
Emory said. "I hope it's the first of<lb/>
three road wins<lb/>
UTA head coach Bud Elliot prais-<lb/>
ed ECU for its execution. "That's a<lb/>
better football team than we played<lb/>
last week (McNeese State) he said.<lb/>
"I feel like we played a good game<lb/>
when you look at the whole thing.<lb/>
They've lost to four good division<lb/>
teams. . . .But the only division<lb/>
I-AA teams they've played, they've<lb/>
beaten. I feel like we battled them<lb/>
hard<lb/>
Offensively, the Bucs had 265<lb/>
yards rushing, 208 yards passing<lb/>
and 473 yards on total offense.<lb/>
Although Emory was pleased<lb/>
overall with the Pirates' offensive<lb/>
showing, he wasn't as satisfied with<lb/>
the defense. "Anytime you give up<lb/>
24 points he said, "you have to be<lb/>
disappointed with the defense. We<lb/>
had some individuals who played<lb/>
well, but we got a little nervous<lb/>
when they cut it to ten points<lb/>
All-America candidate Jody<lb/>
Schulz, who was one of a few<lb/>
players being observed by four pro-<lb/>
fessional scouts, had ten hits against<lb/>
UTA, a fumble and two quarter-<lb/>
back sacks for a 23-yard loss.<lb/>
The Bucs travel to William &amp;<lb/>
Mary this Saturday and after last<lb/>
year, Emory said he doesn't think<lb/>
the Pirates will have any difficulty<lb/>
in preparing for this game. "1<lb/>
believe our guys will remember that<lb/>
William &amp; Mary cost us a winning<lb/>
season last year he said,<lb/>
"something we had to live with for<lb/>
12 long months<lb/>
Gametime is 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
E. CarotinTnaa-Ari.<lb/>
23Fust Downs25<lb/>
51-256Rushuuj-Y"ds51-22<lb/>
208Passing Yards209<lb/>
(-3)Return Yards34<lb/>
17-13-2Passing34-15-0<lb/>
3-39.7Punts5-384<lb/>
1-0FUmbles Lost11<lb/>
6-41Penalties1-5<lb/>
East Carottaa14 137i?41<lb/>
Texat-Ariiagioa0 10149-24<lb/>
Scoring:<lb/>
ECU ? Byner. 8run (Heath kick)<lb/>
ECU ? Ingram.1 run (Heath kicki<lb/>
ECU ? Ramire. 32 pass from IngramHeath kick)<lb/>
UTA ? Ro. Johnson. " run (Tennison kickl<lb/>
ECU - Heath. 58 FC<lb/>
UTA ? Tennison. 34 FG<lb/>
ECU ? Heaih 53 FC<lb/>
UTA ? Hightower. 3 run (Tennion ki.ki<lb/>
ECU ? Byner.run (Heath kick)<lb/>
UTA ? Caldwell. 1 run (Tennison kick!<lb/>
ECU ? Heath. 42 FG<lb/>
ECU' ? Heath.?5 FG<lb/>
IndiMdual Main no<lb/>
Rushing - ECL Baker 14-11 Bner 10-75, Wi<lb/>
4-28. Branch 6-22. Ingram 13-12. Strwai: 2 3. Carat) 1 ?<lb/>
UTA: Cadell 21-84. Ro Johnson 10-S. Hopkins 2441,<lb/>
Hightower 11-22. Brooks 1-14. Jackson 4-8. Ra Johnson<lb/>
,1-7. Gray 1-3<lb/>
Passing ? ECL Ingram 16-12-2-193. Stewart 1-1-0-15.<lb/>
LTA Hopkins 3-2-0-0. Hightower 16-6-0-116. Ja.i- -<lb/>
150-93.<lb/>
Receiving ? ECL: Nelson 6-80. O'Roark 4-60. Ram na<lb/>
1-32. Vann 2-36; LTA Lewis 3-?3. ?'Shams J-66. Gray<lb/>
2-31. Young 1-13. Brooks 1-24. Ra Johnson 1-5<lb/>
Lady Basketball<lb/>
Q<lb/>
Squad<lb/>
Probably the most difficult deci-<lb/>
sion an accomplished athlete must<lb/>
face is deciding where to attend col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Hampered by phone calls, letters<lb/>
and visits, the recruit must finally<lb/>
choose the school that will be right<lb/>
for her during the next four years of<lb/>
her college life.<lb/>
But what happens if the student<lb/>
athlete finds out that she may not<lb/>
have selected the school best suited<lb/>
for her? Once again, she has to go<lb/>
through the decision-making pro-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
Last week, two former Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball players; Converse<lb/>
A11-America Bridget Jenkins and<lb/>
all-Southeastern Conference player<lb/>
Eunice Hargett announced that they<lb/>
would not be playing for ECU this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Both scholarship players stated<lb/>
different reasons for deciding to<lb/>
turn in their purple and gold jerseys.<lb/>
Jenkins, who was voted by the<lb/>
Associated Press as North<lb/>
Carolina's Basketball Player of The<lb/>
Year, said she made a "rush deci-<lb/>
sion" when she accepted an ECU<lb/>
scholarship offer. "My mind was<lb/>
set at Old Dominion she said,<lb/>
"and I was talked into going here<lb/>
(ECU) by friends and fans<lb/>
Jenkins' sister, Alphelia Jenkins, is<lb/>
presently playing basketball for<lb/>
ODU.<lb/>
Hargett, on the other hand, said<lb/>
her decision to attend ECU was not<lb/>
a hasty one. "It was my decision to<lb/>
come here she said. "I decided to<lb/>
quit because there was a personality<lb/>
conflict between me and the<lb/>
coach<lb/>
According to Hargett, she has<lb/>
been suffering abdominal pains the<lb/>
entire year, which caused her to miss<lb/>
several practices. "It didn't matter<lb/>
what my excuse was Hargett said.<lb/>
"She (Head baseketball coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi) said I was all talk<lb/>
and no action<lb/>
Andruzzi agreed that there was a<lb/>
personality conflict between she and<lb/>
Hargett. "She wanted to work and<lb/>
I didn't she said. "We expect the<lb/>
kids to give their best. We don't<lb/>
want them to live in a mediocre ex-<lb/>
istence. We want all they have to<lb/>
?give us. Some kids will be able to<lb/>
handle this while other kids won't<lb/>
be able to handle it<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
court. "I miss playing; the excite-<lb/>
ment and everything Jenkins said.<lb/>
"But I know I'm going the right<lb/>
way. 1 just have to live up to it (her<lb/>
decision) for a while until I can play<lb/>
again<lb/>
Hargett said that she will miss the<lb/>
involvement with the team, but she<lb/>
will not miss the practices.<lb/>
"Sometimes you can go and do<lb/>
everything right and somedays you<lb/>
can't do anything right she said.<lb/>
"I think they're (the players) are<lb/>
scared to make mistakes<lb/>
Jenkins added, "There's a dif-<lb/>
ference in being scared of a person<lb/>
and respectful of a person<lb/>
But Andruzzi said the players bet-<lb/>
ter be scared. "If you don't do your<lb/>
job, you better be scared she said.<lb/>
"There will not be any com-<lb/>
promises. The players know what's<lb/>
ahead of them and they must be<lb/>
dedicated. When they step on that<lb/>
court, it's all basketball. There ain't<lb/>
no free lunch.<lb/>
"We're human; everybody makes<lb/>
mistakes, but I can tell whether a<lb/>
person is taking her responsibility<lb/>
seriously or not. If anyone's selfish,<lb/>
the team deteriorates and we're not<lb/>
successful<lb/>
Last year, three players quit the<lb/>
team and Andruzzi was left with<lb/>
eight players. At the end of the<lb/>
season, the team attended the<lb/>
NCAA tournament. She now has 10<lb/>
players and Andruzzi said she is not<lb/>
worried at all about not having<lb/>
enough players. "We surived with<lb/>
eight, so you know we can survive<lb/>
with 10<lb/>
Hargett and Jenkins, meanwhile,<lb/>
will concentrate on their studies thi$.<lb/>
semester before transferring to<lb/>
another college. Hargett, who hadha"<lb/>
3.9 average in high school, said she<lb/>
often resented being referred to as<lb/>
the "smart athlete" on the team.<lb/>
"They (teammates) didn't look at<lb/>
me as a teammate, but they looked<lb/>
at me as being the smart one she<lb/>
said. "I just felt like an outsider<lb/>
Andruzzi said she believes both<lb/>
players would be able to fit into<lb/>
another basketball program if they<lb/>
so choose, but she is concentrating<lb/>
on this program. "I've been here<lb/>
four years and there are people who<lb/>
really care about me. the kids and<lb/>
the program she said. "They've<lb/>
been very supportive of me<lb/>
The coach said she wants a team<lb/>
that will go out and give all they've<lb/>
got. "I realize that we're very in-<lb/>
tense, but that's why people have<lb/>
been with us. They know that each<lb/>
kid out there is giving it all they've<lb/>
got. It's not a win-all situation with<lb/>
me. I just want them to learn ? to<lb/>
become the best they can be<lb/>
Unfortunately, two gifted athletes<lb/>
will have to make a major decision<lb/>
once again, and hopefully they will<lb/>
both find where they belong. "I<lb/>
didn't make the wrong decision<lb/>
Hargett said, "I had to come here<lb/>
and find out or else I would have<lb/>
been miserable<lb/>
Good luck to you both, Eunice<lb/>
and Bridget, with all sincerity.<lb/>
Hargett praised Andruzzi as being<lb/>
a good coach who knows basket-<lb/>
ball, but said she disagreed with her<lb/>
philosophy of the way a coach-<lb/>
player relationship should be. "I<lb/>
think a player should have a little<lb/>
say-so about what's going on<lb/>
Andruzzi said a player must first<lb/>
earn that right. "When you prove<lb/>
yourself on the court, you can have<lb/>
all the say you want. The door is<lb/>
wide open. No one has any say-so<lb/>
unless they earn the right both on<lb/>
and off the court<lb/>
After playing basketball for so<lb/>
many years, both players agree that<lb/>
they miss playing basketball, but<lb/>
hope they won't have to wait too<lb/>
long before they are back on the<lb/>
Head basketball coach Catby Andruzzi said "aint nobody gonna get a free Lnncb" on her team<lb/>
Carson Recruits Home - Grown Competitors<lb/>
By HORACE McCORMICK<lb/>
ECU Sports Info.<lb/>
ECU head track coach Bill Car-<lb/>
son is extremely optimistic about<lb/>
the 1982-83 track forecast as he<lb/>
enters his 17th season as head<lb/>
coach. Thus far, the 45 year-old<lb/>
coach has led his squad to three<lb/>
team championships, eight runner-<lb/>
up finishes, and one third-place per-<lb/>
formance last year, shattering<lb/>
ECU's long-standing 4 by 400 meter<lb/>
relay record.<lb/>
This year, coach Carson is quite<lb/>
confident that the record will be<lb/>
broken again with a few others,<lb/>
possibly after the first meet of the<lb/>
1982 indoor season.<lb/>
One reason that Carson is excited<lb/>
about the upcoming season is<lb/>
because "North Carolina produced<lb/>
its finest array of recruits ever this<lb/>
past season according to Carson.<lb/>
And although the head coach has<lb/>
only three returning veterans, he has<lb/>
managed to acquire the "cream of<lb/>
the crop" of North Carolina's most<lb/>
talented recruits; not just a few, but<lb/>
several.<lb/>
The three returning veterans who<lb/>
will be guiding the sixteen freshmen<lb/>
are juniors Keith Clark from San-<lb/>
dys, Bermuda, Ray Dickerson from<lb/>
Erie, Pa and senior Carlton Bell<lb/>
from Tarboro, N.C. "I expect Bell<lb/>
to break the present ECU 400-meter<lb/>
indoor record of 47.76 seconds, set<lb/>
by Calvin Austin in 1979 stated<lb/>
Carson.<lb/>
Bell has already participated on<lb/>
three record-breaking indoor mile<lb/>
relay teams. Veteran Keith Clarke<lb/>
will be expected to add experience to<lb/>
the mile relay team. Dickerson will<lb/>
be providing experience to 800<lb/>
meter races. "I also expect him to<lb/>
do extremely well in the 500 meters<lb/>
after recovering from an injury last<lb/>
season adds Carson.<lb/>
Coach Carson usually streamlines<lb/>
his team towards prominence in the<lb/>
relays and the quarter-mile. But<lb/>
after noticing the abundance of<lb/>
talent coming out of North<lb/>
Carolina, he has decided to expand<lb/>
his team into the field events,<lb/>
specifically the long and triple<lb/>
jumps.<lb/>
Some of those recruits who have<lb/>
now become Pirates are Chris<lb/>
Brooks from Raleigh, Arthur Burks<lb/>
of Fayetteville, and Donell Shep-<lb/>
pard from Robersonville. Carson<lb/>
added that the multi-talented<lb/>
Brooks will be expected to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the triple jump and con-<lb/>
tribute considerably to the relay<lb/>
teams, possibly as an anchor.<lb/>
Carson signed four of the state's<lb/>
premier hurdlers: Anthony White<lb/>
from Chinquapin, Bryan<lb/>
Southerland from Henderson and<lb/>
Reuben Pierce and Tony James,<lb/>
former teammates from Fayet-<lb/>
teville.<lb/>
As usual, Coach Carson was suc-<lb/>
cessful in landing some outstanding<lb/>
half and quarter milers and<lb/>
sprinters, as well as field com-<lb/>
petitors. 'Eddie Bradley from<lb/>
Fayetteville and Willie Fuller from<lb/>
Henderson will make tremendous<lb/>
contributions to the four by 400 and<lb/>
400 meter races stated Carson.<lb/>
Carson is particular ly excited<lb/>
about Bradley because of bis "come<lb/>
and catch me" style of running.<lb/>
Greg Richardson is expected to<lb/>
develop his potential in the half-mile<lb/>
by hanging onto the heels of veteran<lb/>
half-miler Ray Dickerson.<lb/>
The new Pirate sprinters will be<lb/>
Erskine Evans from Greenville,<lb/>
Rodney Blacknall from Henderson,<lb/>
Jerry Brown of Wilmington and<lb/>
Joseph Dingle. "All four are ex-<lb/>
pected to turn out their stiffest com-<lb/>
petition in the 200 meter races<lb/>
Carson replied. Nathan McCorkle<lb/>
will concentrate on the 60 meter<lb/>
races, while also lending talent to<lb/>
the 200 and 400 meters.<lb/>
Along with Carson is new assis-<lb/>
tant coach Wayne Miller to help<lb/>
guide the Pirate tracksters. Carson<lb/>
praised Miller as being highly<lb/>
qualified. Miller received his BA in<lb/>
Psychology from UNC at Chapel<lb/>
Hill. The Mount Olive native ran<lb/>
track for the Tar Heels for four con-<lb/>
secutive seasons, culminating the<lb/>
400 meter races in the ACC as an<lb/>
Ail-American in 1981.<lb/>
"Wayne is the kind of coach who<lb/>
can actually practice with the<lb/>
athletes and is going to be an impor-<lb/>
tant key in our team's success this<lb/>
season, and seasons to come Car-<lb/>
son said.<lb/>
"I've accumulated an abundance<lb/>
of raw talent that needs to be<lb/>
developed this year. There's going<lb/>
to be rough competition within the<lb/>
team itself for the open positions in<lb/>
the 82-83 events stated Carson.<lb/>
B<lb/>
By<lb/>
The<lb/>
team,<lb/>
tion o<lb/>
coach<lb/>
wrapi<lb/>
seasonl<lb/>
again!<lb/>
WilmiJ<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Esed<lb/>
lost tj<lb/>
3-2. tl<lb/>
not<lb/>
fine s<lb/>
had<lb/>
first<lb/>
Thel<lb/>
vicion<lb/>
schooi<lb/>
wins <lb/>
seen<lb/>
defeat!<lb/>
which<lb/>
and<lb/>
and 1'<lb/>
In<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
tempe<lb/>
appn<lb/>
bobsl<lb/>
cer<lb/>
temp?<lb/>
mid-tl<lb/>
stead <lb/>
the<lb/>
Seaha<lb/>
what<lb/>
game<lb/>
both<lb/>
Th<lb/>
2-2 at<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
it on<lb/>
Mike<lb/>
little<lb/>
the<lb/>
pe -<lb/>
Bot<lb/>
goal<lb/>
regul<lb/>
eoals<lb/>
t<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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m mm mmm ? ? ?<lb/>
Mil mm 'Tii " - - ? i" nn, t,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 9, 1982 9<lb/>
MS<lb/>
?dy<lb/>
few<lb/>
ko-<lb/>
Inst<lb/>
ter-<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
ast<lb/>
kink<lb/>
Itv<lb/>
?1<lb/>
at<lb/>
ung<lb/>
a.<lb/>
?or<lb/>
ri.<lb/>
41)<lb/>
24<lb/>
a team<lb/>
It.iey've<lb/>
j'ery m-<lb/>
le have<lb/>
t each<lb/>
hey've<lb/>
m with<lb/>
? to<lb/>
uhletes<lb/>
Itcision<lb/>
ley will<lb/>
ing. "I<lb/>
psion.<lb/>
le here<lb/>
Id have<lb/>
Eunice<lb/>
Itv<lb/>
fe<lb/>
his BA in<lb/>
at Chapel<lb/>
native ran<lb/>
r four con-<lb/>
linating the<lb/>
IaCC as an<lb/>
coach who<lb/>
with the<lb/>
an lmpor-<lb/>
Isuccess this<lb/>
tome Car-<lb/>
abundance<lb/>
leeds to be<lb/>
"here's going<lb/>
n within the<lb/>
positions in<lb/>
led Carson.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Booters Lose<lb/>
Mark Hardy and Chip<lb/>
Baker, with an assist by<lb/>
David Skeffington.<lb/>
Besides Lawrence's<lb/>
score, the Seahawks<lb/>
were led by Marcus<lb/>
Martin and Dave<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU soccer<lb/>
team, Under the direc-<lb/>
tion of first-year head<lb/>
coach Robbie Church,<lb/>
wrapped up another Karlson, who scored<lb/>
season of Pirate soccer one goal apiece,<lb/>
against UNC- Church was pleased<lb/>
Wilmington Saturday with the performance<lb/>
night. of his squad, but felt<lb/>
Even though ECU that this game was a<lb/>
lost to the Seahawks parallel of the Pirates'<lb/>
3-2, the defeat could entire year. "We<lb/>
not overshadow the played a great game<lb/>
fine reason the Pirates Church stated. "But we<lb/>
had during Church's came up short, which<lb/>
first term. seems typical of our<lb/>
The Pirates fell one season<lb/>
victory short of the With Church's<lb/>
school record for most guidance, the Pirates<lb/>
wins in a season. Their employed an ag-<lb/>
seven victories and ten gressive, attacking type<lb/>
defeats tied the record of game in 1982. This<lb/>
which was set in 1974 year's team broke the<lb/>
and matched in 1980 school record for most<lb/>
and 1981. goals in a season with<lb/>
In the game against 37. The old mark was<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, the 30, which was set last<lb/>
temperature was more year.<lb/>
appropriate for a Hardy, a sophomore<lb/>
bobsled run than a soc- from Morristown,<lb/>
cer match. With N.J was the Pirate's<lb/>
temperatures in the leader in goals scored<lb/>
mid-thirties and a this season with a total<lb/>
steady breeze blowing, of nine. Freshman<lb/>
the Pirates and Doug Kelly was not far<lb/>
Seahawks battled in behind with eight goals.<lb/>
what was the final<lb/>
game of the season for<lb/>
both teams.<lb/>
The score was tied<lb/>
2-2 at the end of regula-<lb/>
Coming into this<lb/>
season, one of Chur-<lb/>
ch's main concerns was<lb/>
the goalie position. The<lb/>
tion, and UNC-W won spot was shared by<lb/>
it on a goal by junior freshman Tony<lb/>
Mike Lawrence with a Rechner and Brian<lb/>
little over 1:00 to go in Winchell, a four-year<lb/>
the first overtime<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Both teams scored a<lb/>
starter for the Pirates.<lb/>
Winchell finished the<lb/>
year with 73 saves and<lb/>
goal in each half of two shutouts while<lb/>
regulation play. ECU Rechner had 54 saves<lb/>
goals were scored by and one shutout.<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
save big bucks on<lb/>
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STRUX3 SS Watts Per Ch. Receiver<lb/>
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ONKYO- CP1260F Fully Auto Turntable<lb/>
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TX-20 FM Receiver 30 Watts Per Ch.<lb/>
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FIRST COME-FIRST GETS<lb/>
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I White PitttiM tou. M59<lb/>
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Why Pay M 29<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057512_0010"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 9, 1982<lb/>
Swim Team Victorious, Bucs To Play<lb/>
The ECU swim team<lb/>
got their season off to<lb/>
an impressive start with<lb/>
a pair of victories over<lb/>
James Madison in Har-<lb/>
risonburg, Va. last Fri-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
The men's team won<lb/>
69-48 and the women<lb/>
won 61-52 with the aid<lb/>
of a victory in the final<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
For the men, Stan<lb/>
Williams was a double<lb/>
winner with victories in<lb/>
the 50-freestyle and the<lb/>
100-freestyle.<lb/>
Nan George was a<lb/>
double winner for the<lb/>
women as she took<lb/>
both the 50 and the 100<lb/>
freestyles. Even though<lb/>
the Pirate women lost 8<lb/>
of the 11 individual<lb/>
events, wins in the two<lb/>
relays enabled the<lb/>
Pirates to defeat the<lb/>
Dutchesses.<lb/>
"Anytime you can<lb/>
win at someone else's<lb/>
pool, you can be real<lb/>
pleased said first-<lb/>
year head coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe. "The men are<lb/>
ahead of themselves in<lb/>
terms of where they<lb/>
were last year, and dit-<lb/>
to for the women<lb/>
ECU opens its home<lb/>
schedule this Saturday<lb/>
aftenoon at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
when the Old Domi-<lb/>
nion Monarchs will in-<lb/>
vade Minges Aquatic<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
scrimmage against<lb/>
Louisburg College<lb/>
tonight at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi said the<lb/>
scrimmage will help her<lb/>
know more about the<lb/>
team. "I wish we had a<lb/>
crystal ball she said.<lb/>
"I'd like to see what<lb/>
will happen<lb/>
Andruzzi said the<lb/>
freshmen wil have to<lb/>
play this season.<lb/>
"We're young she<lb/>
said, "and teaching<lb/>
what they need to know<lb/>
has been a challenge for<lb/>
us.<lb/>
Head coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison will unveil<lb/>
this year's basketball<lb/>
team on Nov. 17 when<lb/>
the Pirates go up<lb/>
against Charleton<lb/>
University of Canada.<lb/>
The game is set for<lb/>
Minges Coliseum and<lb/>
will begin at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Overall, Harrison<lb/>
has been pleased with<lb/>
the team's showing so<lb/>
far. "As I've said<lb/>
before we have good<lb/>
quickness from six or<lb/>
seven players. After<lb/>
that, there is a major<lb/>
drop. So with what we<lb/>
have done so far, it is<lb/>
not too realistic under<lb/>
this condition.<lb/>
"I'm not surprised to<lb/>
date nor am I disap-<lb/>
pointed overall.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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WANTED: SOMEONE TO w? a<lb/>
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alcoholism alikef Michael<lb/>
PREPPY: WALKING Hi the pack<lb/>
Playing in tha laavas<lb/>
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and hopping down (taps<lb/>
Evan parents and the dance<lb/>
These n i?st a faw things<lb/>
That make you special to ma,<lb/>
 Lovo COWBOY<lb/>
TIM MONEYHad a area! time<lb/>
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FRED ASTAIRE: DUST off the<lb/>
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ENGLISH TUTOR:<lb/>
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POCKET<lb/>
Volleyball Team Suffers Defeat "iffesvicEs- wanted<lb/>
WE BUY PLAYBOY, Rolling<lb/>
By EDWARD<lb/>
NICKLAS<lb/>
Staff Wnler<lb/>
The ECU Lady<lb/>
Pirate volleyball team,<lb/>
possibly looking ahead<lb/>
to an important match<lb/>
tonight at N.C. State,<lb/>
dropped two out of<lb/>
three matches in the<lb/>
Duke Quad Tourna-<lb/>
ment Saturday.<lb/>
ECU, now 24-15,<lb/>
lost to Duke in the first<lb/>
match 15-10, 7-15,<lb/>
9-15. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
regrouped and won<lb/>
their second match<lb/>
against Virginia 15-5,<lb/>
14-6, 15-5. The<lb/>
momentum did not<lb/>
carry into the final<lb/>
match, though, as ECU<lb/>
lost to Georgia 15-7,<lb/>
15-11.<lb/>
Coach Lynn David-<lb/>
son was particularly<lb/>
disappointed with the<lb/>
loss to the Lady Blue<lb/>
Devils. "We lost our<lb/>
intensity a little she<lb/>
said, "and it allowed<lb/>
them to go ahead the<lb/>
last game<lb/>
Davidson thought<lb/>
that one reason why<lb/>
ECU did not win the<lb/>
tournament was that<lb/>
they might have been<lb/>
looking ahead to their<lb/>
showdown match with<lb/>
the Lady Wolf pack. At<lb/>
any rate, she said,<lb/>
"Overall these were<lb/>
good matches to<lb/>
prepare us for State. I<lb/>
think we will be<lb/>
ready<lb/>
After their match<lb/>
with N.C. State, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates will con-<lb/>
clude their season<lb/>
-a. ?, oe th.? PROFESSIOHAL Typist wants to stone Mag. Quicksilver Record<lb/>
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STROWS<lb/>
presents<lb/>
?u?. nov. i,iu2 roo-ioo m<lb/>
AMKOIMI I.So<lb/>
?2) ? m ?s?<lb/>
THE PHANTOM FORECASTER<lb/>
(the most accurate college football prediction sheet available)<lb/>
Available<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
at the<lb/>
following locations:<lb/>
Overton's<lb/>
Marsh's Surf-NSea<lb/>
AccuCopy<lb/>
J.Bs Island Seafood<lb/>
Varsity Barber Shop<lb/>
Sandwich Game<lb/>
Arcade Variety A Grill<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Piixa Transit Authority<lb/>
Sharp's Formal Wear<lb/>
Hodges<lb/>
Bonds<lb/>
Archie's Steaks<lb/>
Pantana Bobs<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Mr. Gatti's<lb/>
Arcade Variety<lb/>
Krispy Kreme<lb/>
Tinder Box<lb/>
Sharpe's<lb/>
ADVERTISE<lb/>
NOW!<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
isn 'tfar<lb/>
away<lb/>
ar Landing Seafi<lb/>
RasUwut<lb/>
105 Airport Road Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Re-Opens<lb/>
Wednesday, November 1.1<lb/>
Grand Re-opening<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Osdy<lb/>
; Shrimp<lb/>
tllie lEajat daroltman<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
Flounder C 9<lb/>
TrOUt Only J<lb/>
ad ??W? Frara Frtaa or Bafcad Potato. Cola Slaw and Huahpuppias<lb/>
(U-yUr Sunday Utru Thtiraday 11:MA.MI:MP.M.<lb/>
Hours Friday and Saturday 110 A.M. to 11:00 P.M<lb/>
105 Airport Road Groonvfilo. N.C.<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
paiaaahai totnvHaavaryonaout to anjoyafina<lb/>
Ha1b?laa1wl<lb/>
Banquot FacMitiGS Ava?abie 758-0327<lb/>
Bob Herring, Manager<lb/>
1982 Department of University Unions<lb/>
ACU-I All Campus Backgammon Tournament<lb/>
The Tournament will be concJct<lb/>
ECU, if sufficient participation permits, in the Association of Coflese Unkxts-lntemational<lb/>
regional face-to-face tournaments to be held at the University of Tennessee on<lb/>
February 10,11, and 12,1983.<lb/>
HOW TO ENTER:<lb/>
A registration form, available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, must be completed and submitted to<lb/>
tne Supervisor on duty at the Center by Tues-<lb/>
day, November 9.<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT<lb/>
SCHEDULE:<lb/>
?Thursday, November 11<lb/>
?6:00 p.m. ? MSC Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
?Double-elimination andor round-robin for<lb/>
mat<lb/>
?Each match will be played to a designated<lb/>
point total<lb/>
COSTS:<lb/>
An entry fee of 11.00 is required and payable<lb/>
at the tournament site.<lb/>
The participants who will be going to Ten<lb/>
nessee will have tha costs of lodging,<lb/>
transportation, meals, and entry tees paid by<lb/>
AAendenhatl Studet Center.<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS:<lb/>
Each participant will be required to snow<lb/>
hisher ECU ID or driver's license and activi<lb/>
ty card prior to the start of tt?e tournament.<lb/>
The ACU-I backgammon Tournament<lb/>
Rules win be used m the competition. Copies<lb/>
of the rules ?t available for use at the<lb/>
Billiards Center. It is highly recommended<lb/>
that all participants study the rules prior to<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Each participant must have a 2.0 GPA. This<lb/>
will be verified with the Registrar's Office.<lb/>
Each participant is requested to bring a<lb/>
backgammon board it possible.<lb/>
AWARDS:<lb/>
Trophies will be awarded to the first, se-<lb/>
cond and third place finishers.<lb/>
?"? ?mMm0&amp;9<lb/>
MsVPWNiw11<lb/>
:<lb/>
-<lb/>
' II IIM<lb/>
i'A<lb/>
i. v ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057512_0011"/>
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