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<pb facs="00057513_0001"/>
?be<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 NorM<lb/>
Thursday, November 11,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Democrats Claim Advantage In '84 Elections<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last week's elections, in which<lb/>
the Democrats gained two more<lb/>
congressional seats, was a "big<lb/>
blow" to Sen. Jesse Helms and his<lb/>
National Congressional Club<lb/>
organization, according to the<lb/>
chairman of the Pitt County<lb/>
Democratic Party.<lb/>
"We laid the groundwork for<lb/>
1984 said George Saleeby, the<lb/>
local leader for the Democrats.<lb/>
Saleeby was making a reference to<lb/>
the Senate race that is almost certain<lb/>
to take place between Helms and<lb/>
N.C. Gov. James B. Hunt, a race<lb/>
that many insiders predict will bring<lb/>
a lot of national attention to North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"The Republicans were figuring<lb/>
on winning one or two seats said<lb/>
Saleeby, who warned that the<lb/>
Democrats should not "let their<lb/>
guard down but instead keep<lb/>
working towards greater gains and a<lb/>
higher voter turn-out in 1984.<lb/>
Pitt County Republican party<lb/>
chairman, Henry Smith of Foun-<lb/>
tain, disagreed with Saleeby and<lb/>
said he didn't think the recent elec-<lb/>
tion results were major blow to the<lb/>
GOP. "The Reagan administration<lb/>
is still strong Smith said, adding<lb/>
that he felt sure that Helms would<lb/>
not go down to defeat against Hunt<lb/>
in the upcoming Senate battle.<lb/>
Now that the damage can be<lb/>
assessed, N.C. Democrats certainly<lb/>
have reason for optimism. The Con-<lb/>
gressional Club backed four<lb/>
Republican congressional<lb/>
challengers aginst democratic in-<lb/>
cumbent seats, one republican for<lb/>
an open seat and GOP incumbents<lb/>
for re-election ? all seven lost last<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
The Congressional Club raised<lb/>
and spent over $9 million on the re-<lb/>
cent campaign and also benefited<lb/>
from a personal visit from President<lb/>
Reagan during the closing days of<lb/>
the campaign.<lb/>
The Republicans backed Bill<lb/>
Cobey in the 4th District race<lb/>
against incumbent Ike Andrews,<lb/>
which some thought would be an<lb/>
easy victory. Cobey, who spent over<lb/>
$500,000 on his campaign, lost in a<lb/>
close race. That lose coupled with<lb/>
the defeat of the two Republican in-<lb/>
cumbents left the GOP with two out<lb/>
of the 11 congressional seats in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Democratic National Committee<lb/>
Executive Director Eugene<lb/>
Eidenberg gave a lot of credit for<lb/>
the strong Democratic gains to Hunt<lb/>
himself. "What Hunt did in the<lb/>
congressional election was tanta-<lb/>
mount to the first real shots of the<lb/>
Mtoto By STANLEY LEAHY<lb/>
Sitting On The Corner Watching All The Girls<lb/>
ECU students have to take a break now and then between classes. In front of the Student Store is a popular place<lb/>
to do it.<lb/>
Enrollment Of Foreign Students Up<lb/>
Across The Country And At ECU<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Assistant News f dilor<lb/>
U.S. colleges and universities<lb/>
have a record number of foreign<lb/>
students enrolled this year, accor-<lb/>
ding a recent report by the Institute<lb/>
of International Education. There<lb/>
are over 326,300 students from<lb/>
abroad currently studying in the<lb/>
United States, a six percent increase<lb/>
over last year's number.<lb/>
The number of foreign students at<lb/>
ECU has also increased, over 25<lb/>
percent in comparison to last year.<lb/>
The nationwide increase was ap-<lb/>
proximately six percent over last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
However, while foreign students<lb/>
make up 2.6 percent of the overall<lb/>
student population in this country,<lb/>
they represent less than one percent<lb/>
of ECU enrollment.<lb/>
In many European countries, in-<lb/>
cluding Switzerland, France, Britain<lb/>
and Germany, foreign student<lb/>
enrollment counts for 20 percent of<lb/>
the campus population.<lb/>
Iranian students make up the<lb/>
largest group from any one country<lb/>
studying in the United States.<lb/>
However, since the inception of the<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini's Islamic<lb/>
government there has been a drastic<lb/>
decline in the number Iranians stu-<lb/>
dying in the United States.<lb/>
"Since the revolution, the govern-<lb/>
ment isn't giving money for students<lb/>
to come here said Douglas Boy an,<lb/>
editor of the HE report, in a College<lb/>
Press Service interview. "The Shah<lb/>
of Iran had a lot of money and was<lb/>
 encouraging Iranians to study<lb/>
here<lb/>
There has been a 25 percent<lb/>
decrease in the number of Iranians<lb/>
enrolled at U.S. colleges since last<lb/>
year. Iranians formally represented<lb/>
20 percent of all foreign students in<lb/>
the United States. They now repre-<lb/>
sent only eight precent.<lb/>
Only two Iranian students are<lb/>
Federal Reserve Board Puts<lb/>
Fewer Constraints On Banks<lb/>
1984 campaign he said.<lb/>
The chairman of the DNC,<lb/>
Charles Manatt, went one step fur-<lb/>
ther predicting the defeat of Helms<lb/>
in 1984. "The Prince of Darkness<lb/>
(Helms) is going to be retired by a<lb/>
leading democrat Manatt said.<lb/>
The Congressional Club, which<lb/>
was formed from the remnants of<lb/>
Helm's 1972 campaign organiza-<lb/>
tion, is considered to be the<lb/>
wealthiest and most skillful political<lb/>
action committee (PAC) in the na-<lb/>
tion. Helms and North Carolina's<lb/>
junior Senator John East are both<lb/>
honorary chairmen of the commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Saleeby was obviously pleased<lb/>
with the democratic victories but<lb/>
was also disappointed with what he<lb/>
thought was a low voter turnout. "I<lb/>
wish more democrats had voted<lb/>
Saleeby said. "The Pitt Counts<lb/>
Democratic party spent aproximate-<lb/>
ly $4,000 in newspaper and radio<lb/>
advertising to help turn out the<lb/>
democratic vote The democratic<lb/>
voter turnout was under 50 percent.<lb/>
Saleeby expressed his confidence<lb/>
in Hunt saying "He's definitely go-<lb/>
ing to run and he's definitely going<lb/>
to beat Helms<lb/>
Saleeby said the Helms-Hunt race<lb/>
would be "one of the toughest in the<lb/>
history of North Carolina ? and<lb/>
the highest priced<lb/>
Charges Disputed<lb/>
Arcade Owners Respond To Surgeon General<lb/>
currently enrolled at ECU.<lb/>
There has been a significant in-<lb/>
crease in the number of students<lb/>
from OPEC nations studying in the<lb/>
United States in recent years, as well<lb/>
as from Mexico and developing<lb/>
Asian nations. Students from Iran,<lb/>
Tawain and Nigeria make up the<lb/>
largest national groups of foreign<lb/>
students studying in this country.<lb/>
ECU currently has 93 foreign<lb/>
students enrolled on cam-<lb/>
pus,according to Lucy Wright, ad-<lb/>
visor to foreign students at ECU.<lb/>
The largest national delegation is<lb/>
from the OPEC nation of Kuwait,<lb/>
which has 17 students on campus.<lb/>
ECU has students from 37 different<lb/>
countries currently enrolled, Wright<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We're expecting a large increase<lb/>
next semester" Wright said. She is<lb/>
expecting a group of 24 students<lb/>
from Malasia next term if all goes<lb/>
according to plan.<lb/>
FROM STAFF AND<lb/>
WIRE REPORTS<lb/>
The Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. C.<lb/>
Everett Koop, said Tuesday that video games may be<lb/>
hazardous to the mental and physical health of young<lb/>
people who are addicted to them.<lb/>
"They are into it body and soul, Koop told an au-<lb/>
dience of the Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic at<lb/>
the University of Pittsburgh. " Their body language is<lb/>
tremendous and everything is zap the enemy. There's<lb/>
nothing constructive in the games<lb/>
"There are educational video games, but the kind the<lb/>
kids like and the kind they are addicted to are martians<lb/>
coming in that have to be killed Koop said.<lb/>
"Everything is to eliminate, kill, destroy; let's get up<lb/>
and do it fast<lb/>
Koop noted that symptoms brought on by the video<lb/>
games included "tensions, sleeplessness in kids and<lb/>
dreams that have to do with the things they've been do-<lb/>
ing all day<lb/>
Bobo Thompson, manager of the Sandwich Game, a<lb/>
combination sandwich shop-video arcade in Greenville<lb/>
disagreed with the conlcusions of Koop. He said that<lb/>
video games often provide a way for people to get relief<lb/>
from their tensions and anxieties.<lb/>
Thompson mentioned the case of an ECU instructor<lb/>
who is writing a book, who comes to his shop to play<lb/>
video games so she can get "good and relaxed" before<lb/>
she does her writing. "She's plays for a couple of<lb/>
hours Thompson added.<lb/>
A spokesperson for downtown Greenville's Barrel of<lb/>
Fun Arcade also disagreed with Koop's remarks. "I see<lb/>
no evidence of that, (health hazards or addiction) said<lb/>
the spokesman" It's (playing video games) more of a<lb/>
fascination. It's exciting; it's something unique<lb/>
"To me it's just entertainment, pure entertainment<lb/>
he continued, equating video games to things like record<lb/>
albums, movies or other types of entertainment kids<lb/>
By KEITH BRITTAIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Federal Reserve Board of<lb/>
Governors is currently phasing out<lb/>
three major constraints on the bank-<lb/>
ing industry, according to J. Charles<lb/>
Partee, who spoke at a banking<lb/>
forum Tuesday in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Partee, speaking to a packed<lb/>
house, said the board is in the pro-<lb/>
cess of deregulating interest rate<lb/>
ceilings and laws regulating in-<lb/>
terstate banking, and are trying to<lb/>
protect banks from the encroach-<lb/>
ment of savings and loans.<lb/>
"(It's) a wind of change said<lb/>
Partee, referring to the phase out to<lb/>
be completed by 1986.<lb/>
Non-banking financial institu-<lb/>
tions have recently been capitalizing<lb/>
on laws that allow them to compete<lb/>
with banks. Partee said that the<lb/>
Federal Reserve Board will continue<lb/>
to view banks as unique.<lb/>
Partee said that the policy of the<lb/>
board has continued to control<lb/>
"stagflation a combined dose of<lb/>
low economic growth and high in-<lb/>
flation. The late 1970s was plagued<lb/>
by stagflation.<lb/>
Kelly S. King and Thomas I.<lb/>
Stores also spoke at the forum. King<lb/>
is senior vice president of Branch<lb/>
Banking and Trust Company. He<lb/>
spoke on banking in the future.<lb/>
Stores is the Chairman of the<lb/>
Board of North Carolina National<lb/>
Bank Corporation. He described the<lb/>
would spend their money on. He said he saw no<lb/>
evidence of addiction.<lb/>
Thompson also said he was unaware if any of his<lb/>
young customers were addicted and that if he became<lb/>
aware of any situations where he thought kids were<lb/>
stealing money to play the games, he would notify their<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand, head of ECU's Counseling<lb/>
Center said that he personally had not seen any research<lb/>
on the use of video games, but that being addicted to<lb/>
anything is not too good.<lb/>
Dr. Rosina C. Lao, chairperson of the ECU<lb/>
psychology department, also said she had not seen any<lb/>
studies on video game use and abuse, but that she felt<lb/>
there were numerous other factors to take into ensidera-<lb/>
tion in diagnosing health problems related to the use of<lb/>
video games by young people.<lb/>
Lao said that the child's relationship to his parents,<lb/>
his peers and the amount of time he spends at the arcade<lb/>
were related factors.<lb/>
She noted that use of video games by children had<lb/>
been totally banned in some countries because they were<lb/>
spending too much time at the arcades and not doing<lb/>
their school work. "Obviously, the child spends a lot of<lb/>
time at the arcade, they spend less with homework or<lb/>
with their families learning about their social environ-<lb/>
ment Lao said.<lb/>
Lao, who has two children that use video games, said<lb/>
she keeps close supervision on her children and rarely<lb/>
lets them go to the arcade. She added supervision was<lb/>
the key condition for parents w ho were concerned about<lb/>
their child's video game use. "Addiction can take many<lb/>
forms<lb/>
"They sort of sit back because they are used to seeing<lb/>
this on a screen Koop said. "What they saw last night<lb/>
on television is being re-enacted. In fact, it's a little bit<lb/>
more fun because it's real and vou're right there<lb/>
UBE Awards Six Scholarships<lb/>
By BOB MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
banks of the future as "not being<lb/>
able to be all things to all people<lb/>
The event was attended by about<lb/>
200 local bankers, students and<lb/>
members of the finance faculty. It<lb/>
was described as "a red letter day<lb/>
for the university and community"<lb/>
by Dr. James H. Bearden, dean of<lb/>
the School of Business.<lb/>
The banking forum was spon-<lb/>
sored by the Department of<lb/>
Business' finance section. Bruce<lb/>
Wadrip, the chairman, organized<lb/>
the event. This was the first time, he<lb/>
said that a man of Partee's stature<lb/>
has spoken at ECU.<lb/>
The Federal Reserve Board of<lb/>
Governors regulate the nation's<lb/>
monetary policy. It consists of seven<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The University Book Exchange,<lb/>
Inc ECU's largest off-campus<lb/>
bookstore, is donating money to the<lb/>
university for a scholarship program<lb/>
in the name of the family-owned<lb/>
business.<lb/>
The UBE was opened in 1968 by<lb/>
ECU alumnus Jack Edwards. The<lb/>
store is presently under the co-<lb/>
ownership and management of his<lb/>
son Don Edwards.<lb/>
Beginning last year five $500<lb/>
scholarships were awarded to<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate students<lb/>
by the UBE. Recipients were<lb/>
selected on the same basis as the<lb/>
Alumni Association Scholars Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
The Edwards specified that last<lb/>
year's scholarships be designated<lb/>
for two students enrolled in the<lb/>
School of Art, one each in the<lb/>
School of Business and in the<lb/>
Department of Home Economics,<lb/>
one in the math department and one<lb/>
as a general merit scholarship.<lb/>
This year the UBE has given six<lb/>
$500 scholarships to the university.<lb/>
Five are specified to the same areas<lb/>
as last year with the additional one<lb/>
going to the School of Business. Ac-<lb/>
cording to the younger Edwards, the<lb/>
goal is to increase the number of<lb/>
scholarships by at least three per<lb/>
year beginning in 1983.<lb/>
In previous years, the Edwards<lb/>
have donated money to the universi-<lb/>
ty through the Pirate Club. "We are<lb/>
very excited about the academic<lb/>
scholarship program said the<lb/>
younger Edwards. "We've always<lb/>
given to ECU athletics, but we<lb/>
thought that Pieties isn't all. We<lb/>
thought, well, all of our business is<lb/>
coming from academics<lb/>
"We intend for this program to<lb/>
grow said Edwards. "In fact,<lb/>
growth has been the key word in our<lb/>
business, largely because of the<lb/>
students. It is our goal to increase<lb/>
the number of scholarships.<lb/>
"I personally feel that we owe this<lb/>
to the university because our<lb/>
business has been so good said<lb/>
Edwards. "We want the students to<lb/>
know that we appreciate their<lb/>
business<lb/>
?y ?AK Y PATTCI<lb/>
That's Right, AlAnd Tom In Greenville<lb/>
Al Franken and Ton Davis were a big hit Monday night at ECU. For<lb/>
?ore on the Saturday Night Live comedians, see Style, page 6.<lb/>
Mt?gWMIp?ifff?nirniri??ixgi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057513_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 11,1982<lb/>
Announcements<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 tor<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/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
The Career Planning and place-<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering these one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you in developing better in-<lb/>
terviewing skills for use in your<lb/>
job search. The next session is<lb/>
November 11 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
A film and discussion of inter-<lb/>
viewing th-ough the Career Plann<lb/>
ing and Pla Service will be<lb/>
shared.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The co-op office has available an<lb/>
opportunity with the Federal Law<lb/>
Enforcement Training Center in<lb/>
its Criminal Justice Intern Pro<lb/>
gram. The internship runs from<lb/>
January 3 through March 11 and is<lb/>
located in Glynco, Georgia, for<lb/>
more information contact Nancy<lb/>
Fillnow in the Coop office, ext.<lb/>
6979.<lb/>
CO?OP JOB<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in Green-<lb/>
ville has an alternating Co op posi<lb/>
Tion open in its Validation Depart<lb/>
'ment. The job will be for two<lb/>
terms beginning in January, 1983.<lb/>
INDT students with some<lb/>
background in math, physics,<lb/>
computers, electricity, ana<lb/>
chemistry and who hav good<lb/>
writing skills should contact Nan<lb/>
cy Fillnow in the Co op office, ext.<lb/>
6979.<lb/>
CHEMISTRY MAJORS<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome in<lb/>
Research Triangle Park has an<lb/>
alternating co-op position open for<lb/>
a chemistry major The job will in-<lb/>
volve working with chemistry<lb/>
researchers and begins in January<lb/>
1983 running for about six months.<lb/>
All interested chemistry majors<lb/>
with at least two semesters of<lb/>
organic chemistry should contact<lb/>
Nancy Fillnow in the Co-op office.<lb/>
ext. 6979.<lb/>
CAMPUS SERVICE<lb/>
There will be a Sunday Morning<lb/>
Worship service, November 14 at<lb/>
11:00 a.m. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium in the art bulding.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Fountain of Life<lb/>
Christian Fellowship. Come wor-<lb/>
ship the Lord with us.<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 530 tor only<lb/>
$1.75 PAUSE on Thursdays at<lb/>
7.00 to allow us to take a break<lb/>
after an almost fulfilling week,<lb/>
and lots of people lust like you who<lb/>
enjoy others. Call 752 4646 if you<lb/>
have any questions. Bob Clyde<lb/>
campus minister.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Automatic Data Processing in<lb/>
Charlotte has a co-op position open<lb/>
for a CSCI major, undergraduate<lb/>
or graduate. The job will involve<lb/>
technical support and operating<lb/>
systems. Students should have<lb/>
analytical skills and a background<lb/>
in Assembler, Compiler, Cobol,<lb/>
and RPG languages. The alter<lb/>
nating position will run from<lb/>
January May. For more info con-<lb/>
tact Carolyn Powell in the Co-op<lb/>
of ice, ext. 6979, Rawl 313.<lb/>
WINNERS<lb/>
Congratulations to the following<lb/>
artists in the following categories<lb/>
who placed in the REB.EL art con-<lb/>
test: Painting Ellen Avendolava,<lb/>
Printmaking Ed Migett,<lb/>
Ceramics Steve Jones. Sculpture<lb/>
- Gregory Sheinett, Design - Paula<lb/>
Moffitt Poppe, Mixed Media<lb/>
Diane Maisel, Graphic Art and Il-<lb/>
lustration - Keith Simmons,<lb/>
Photography Rochel Roland,<lb/>
Drawing Bob Ray. Their work<lb/>
can be seen at the Greenville<lb/>
Museum of Art and will be publish<lb/>
ed in Rebel '83.<lb/>
MORE WINNERS<lb/>
Congratulations to the following<lb/>
writers who placed in the REBEL<lb/>
prose ad poetry contests: First<lb/>
Place Carlyn Ebert, Second<lb/>
Place Brian Rangeley, Third<lb/>
Place Keith Stallings for prose<lb/>
Poetry winners: Firsl Place<lb/>
Katharine Kimberly, Second<lb/>
Place - Edith Jeffreys, Third<lb/>
Place Don Ball Look tor their<lb/>
worK in REBEL '83.<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/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
There will be a seminar by the<lb/>
Department of Chemistry on<lb/>
"Coplymers and Coplymer Pro-<lb/>
perties" by Dr.Michael Theil. Dr.<lb/>
Theii if from the department of<lb/>
Textile Chemistry at North<lb/>
Carolina State University. The<lb/>
seminar is on Friday, November<lb/>
12, 1982 at 2:00 p.m. in room 201,<lb/>
Flanagan Building. Refreshemtns<lb/>
will be served in the conference<lb/>
room following the seminar.<lb/>
ZETABETATAU<lb/>
There will be a meeting at 6:00<lb/>
p.m. on Tnursday, November 11.<lb/>
in Mendenhall Conference room,<lb/>
executive board must be there at<lb/>
5.30. All members should try to at<lb/>
tend. There will be a pledge test on<lb/>
Chapter one.<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Society tor the Advance<lb/>
ment of Management will be hav-<lb/>
ing a meeting on November 17, at<lb/>
3:00 in Rawl 104. The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Terry Martin, Vice<lb/>
President of Salaired Personnel<lb/>
tor Burlington Industries. Mr.<lb/>
Martin will be speaking on<lb/>
employment opportunities in Burl-<lb/>
ington Industries. All members<lb/>
and interested guests are invited<lb/>
to come. Further information call<lb/>
7585258.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL<lb/>
SORORITIES<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau slave auction<lb/>
tonite ? Be There It will be<lb/>
more than an auction, a fun party.<lb/>
9:00 kegs<lb/>
DUKE POWER<lb/>
Duke Power in Charlotte has a<lb/>
co-op position open for a program<lb/>
mer analyst. The job is alternating<lb/>
for two periods, the first beginning<lb/>
January 3. 1982 Interested CSCI<lb/>
or math majors, preferably<lb/>
juniors with a GPA of at least 2.0<lb/>
and a fairly strong computer<lb/>
background, chouid contact<lb/>
Carolyn Powell in the Co-op office.<lb/>
ext. 6979, Rawl 313.<lb/>
PRC MAJORS<lb/>
Seymour jonnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goldsboro, NC has an<lb/>
alternating Co-op position<lb/>
available for Spring semester in<lb/>
the ir recreation department. The<lb/>
position reequires a 2.0 GPA and<lb/>
you must be willing to work for<lb/>
two terms. II is an excellent opor<lb/>
tunity tor anyone interested in<lb/>
gaining valuable work experience<lb/>
in the area of recreation. Salary:<lb/>
approximately $1,000 per month<lb/>
gross. Contact Nancy Fillnow in<lb/>
the Coop office, 313 Rawl.<lb/>
757-6979, if you would like to apply<lb/>
or want more information<lb/>
IBM CO?OP<lb/>
IBM in Charlotte and Greenville<lb/>
have alternating coop positions<lb/>
for CSCI or math majors. The<lb/>
work in Charlotte involves pro<lb/>
gramming while the Greenville<lb/>
job includes general training with<lb/>
the company. The positions are to<lb/>
start in January. Contact Carolyn<lb/>
Powell in the Co-op office, ext.<lb/>
6979, Rawl 313, for more into<lb/>
YHDL<lb/>
Young Home Designer's League<lb/>
meets Tuesday, November 16th at<lb/>
5:00 in the Van Landingham room.<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 Chapei Hill<lb/>
speak on "The Tertiary volcamcs<lb/>
of the Southwest U.S He will<lb/>
speak Friday, Nov. 12 at 2:00 in<lb/>
Graham Bldg. Rm. 301.<lb/>
MEN OF ECU<lb/>
Do not be left out of the upcom-<lb/>
ing "Man of ECU" calendar.<lb/>
Come by the Buccaneer office by<lb/>
5:00 pm, Friday, Nov. 11 and pick<lb/>
up your application. Judging will<lb/>
be held at 7:30 in Jenkins Aud. For<lb/>
more information call 757-6501.<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 Booth in<lb/>
Mendenhall on the 17th and 18th.<lb/>
For more into 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 info<lb/>
call 758 4906<lb/>
FACILITIES<lb/>
CLOSED<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium facilities<lb/>
including the pool, equipment<lb/>
check-out room, weight room and<lb/>
gymnasium will close at 6:00 pm<lb/>
on wed Nov. 24th. Minges Col<lb/>
eseum weight room and swimm-<lb/>
ing pool will not open on Wed<lb/>
Nov. 24th. All facilities will<lb/>
resume normal operations on<lb/>
Mon Nov. 29th.<lb/>
TWIRLERS<lb/>
The Tar River Twirlers invite<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and staff to<lb/>
the weekly square dance instruc<lb/>
tion on Thursdays from 7:30 9:30<lb/>
at Welcome Middle School (on<lb/>
highway 1113 toward Bethel).<lb/>
Beginning level dance instruction<lb/>
will provide an opportunity for<lb/>
anyone interested to be oriented to<lb/>
square dancing, so come on out<lb/>
and swing your partner There will<lb/>
be no fee or obligation for atten-<lb/>
ding in November. Further infor<lb/>
mation is available by calling G.<lb/>
Hamilton at 757 6961.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75C per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Beii.rn to MIDI A BOARD office (aM EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN office) by 2 ?.?. Moaday before<lb/>
Taesday piper and Weearseay before Tbanday<lb/>
pubkcilion<lb/>
t?<lb/>
 Nante<lb/>
1 Aadres<lb/>
 CityState.<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75? per line $.<lb/>
No. insertions.<lb/>
? $.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
j s?rr? " ?-????? - -? - jL<lb/>
 .?.?. ? ? ?j ? ??? .  . ,?? ? ? 1 1 i r 1 1 1 1 1 1 "1 t j 1 j"1 4 4 i 1 1 j?J?????j?f?j?J?r ??? v , L L JJMill<lb/>
c<lb/>
(CPSl<lb/>
their us<lb/>
textbot<lb/>
catalogs<lb/>
sche<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The School of Art is offering ten<lb/>
scholarships for undergraduate<lb/>
art students of the junior and<lb/>
senior rank. Eight scholarships<lb/>
are in the amount of $250 each.<lb/>
Two scholarships, established by<lb/>
Don and Jack Edwards of the<lb/>
University Book Exchange, are in<lb/>
the amount of S500 each. To<lb/>
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/>
pieted application material is<lb/>
November 30.<lb/>
THE EARLY<lb/>
YEARS<lb/>
The members of the Historic<lb/>
Site 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 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 witn<lb/>
the future, has been issued. In an-<lb/>
ticipation of the new millennium,<lb/>
papers are invited to deal with a<lb/>
wide range of topics ranging from<lb/>
discussions of the near future will<lb/>
or may hold. Faculty are invited,<lb/>
at this time, to submit abstracts of<lb/>
approximately one page with a<lb/>
deadline for submission of<lb/>
November 15 Papers selected will<lb/>
be announced by November 24<lb/>
Student papers directed toward<lb/>
the same theme are invited, two of<lb/>
which will be selected tor 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/>
PARTY WITH<lb/>
THE POMS!<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pon girls are nav<lb/>
ing a happy hour Sunday.<lb/>
November 14th at Pantana Bobs,<lb/>
it starts at 9:00 with reduced<lb/>
prices on beer all nigni<lb/>
CANOETRIP<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 regisfra<lb/>
tion and more info please call or<lb/>
stop by Rm. 113 in Memorial Gym<lb/>
(757-6911).<lb/>
FREE BEER<lb/>
Don't miss ECU'S last pep rally.<lb/>
Attend the William ? Mary vs ECU<lb/>
pep rally at Sportsworrd, behind<lb/>
Fosdicks Seafood Thursday night<lb/>
Nov. 11 7:30-10:00 and receive a<lb/>
free 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 for competi<lb/>
tions, prizes and 'Heaven on<lb/>
Wheels' this Thursday at 7:30<lb/>
SIGMA BROTHERS<lb/>
Attention Sigma Big Brothers:<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting Thrusday, Nov. 11 at 7 JO<lb/>
pm at the Sigma House.<lb/>
PRINT AUCTION<lb/>
The seventh Annual Print Auc-<lb/>
tion, sponsored byt he ECU print<lb/>
group, will be held, November 21<lb/>
at 7 pm There will be original<lb/>
rints by ECU students, faculty.<lb/>
Alumni-Intaglios, woodcuts, paper<lb/>
castings, collographs, lithographs,<lb/>
serigraphs. Bidding prices on ail<lb/>
prints start at $5. So the public can<lb/>
purchase some good prints at<lb/>
bargain rates at the same time<lb/>
help us provide tor studio needs,<lb/>
workshops guest lectures. All<lb/>
prints go on preview outside the<lb/>
Auditorium from 2-7 pm the night<lb/>
of the auction.<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 win 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/>
750-3272 or 757 1920. Come on ECU-<lb/>
get involved.<lb/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
50,000 people die every day from<lb/>
starvation! If you would like to<lb/>
find out how YOU CAN HELP stop<lb/>
these tragedies from happening,<lb/>
you ?rt 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/>
752 878 or Jennifer Baugham at<lb/>
355 6855<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
Mark your calendars for our<lb/>
General Meeting on Wednesday.<lb/>
Nov. 17 at 5:00 It will be in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
We have aiot of important and<lb/>
"fun" items to talk about, so<lb/>
ptease make plans to attend this<lb/>
important meeting.<lb/>
BETA KAPPA<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha, the banking<lb/>
and finance fraternity, will have<lb/>
its next meeting Tuesday.<lb/>
November 16 in Rawl Bldg. Room<lb/>
130. Mr. Bill Reagan from North<lb/>
State Savings and Loan will speak<lb/>
on thrift intstitution's operating<lb/>
environment and employment op-<lb/>
portunities. Membership is open to<lb/>
all business majors and a"<lb/>
members are encouraged to at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
1<lb/>
AHEA<lb/>
Will hold irs monthly meeting<lb/>
on Monday. November 15. 198J2 at<lb/>
5:00 in the Vanlandingham room<lb/>
in the Home Economics Building<lb/>
Guest speaker will be Ms Cookie<lb/>
Chandler on "Creating Your Own<lb/>
Job All members are urged to<lb/>
attend. Dont forget to bring a can-<lb/>
ned food for the Thanksgiving<lb/>
Basket for a needy family.<lb/>
RESIDENCE LIFE<lb/>
The Department of Residence<lb/>
Life is accepting applications for<lb/>
Resident Advisors for Spring<lb/>
Semester Applications can be ob<lb/>
tained from me Residence Ha"<lb/>
Directors, r? Coordinators and<lb/>
the Residence Life Office The<lb/>
deadline for completed appiica<lb/>
tions is November 19.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tion will be offerea 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 96 R. Princeton. NJ<lb/>
08540. Applications may be obtain-<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing Center.<lb/>
Room 105. Speight Building.<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
On November 16. Circle K will<lb/>
meet at me Boy's Club at 6 X to<lb/>
discuss the Boy's Club project.<lb/>
Other topics to be covered include<lb/>
the elec'ion of a new vice-<lb/>
president and the drawing for the<lb/>
dinner at the Beef Bam All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
?rt urged to attend Plan to meet<lb/>
in front of Mendenhall at 6 00 and<lb/>
we will go as a group<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
On Nov. 22, 1912 in room 129<lb/>
Speight at 4:00 there win 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 meir<lb/>
system and job requirements<lb/>
Please attend it win be to your ad<lb/>
vantage<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Published every Tuesoa? a"C<lb/>
Thursday during me acaoe .<lb/>
year and every Weonescav Our<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is me ot<lb/>
ficiai newspaper c4 Eas<lb/>
Carolina University. ow?ec<lb/>
operated- anc puonsneo Mr arx:<lb/>
by me students of Eas' Ca-oi.na<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate ?? yearly<lb/>
Toe East Carolmtan office<lb/>
arw located i? the OM Soum<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes ?o The Eas' Car - m<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green-<lb/>
ville. NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 7S7-6J66. 637 ???<lb/>
ApD<lb/>
CA.<lb/>
Bl CM<lb/>
1 S<lb/>
BacM<lb/>
t-e : ?<lb/>
u ?<lb/>
ST<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
On Nov X. 1982 Student Counc!<lb/>
for Exceptional Cmwren will hos'<lb/>
the Casweii Sp.r.f S.ngers tor a<lb/>
Christmas concert The conce?-<lb/>
wiii begin at 3 34 p m<lb/>
Auditorium 244 Menoenhait Shj<lb/>
aent Center Everyone is invited<lb/>
and welcome! 11 Come out anc ge<lb/>
into me Christmas spirit early<lb/>
illlHIIIM<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SHELL1 SERVICE<lb/>
610 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-3023 ?24 HRS.<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
I-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
ECUMed Students Auxiffiary<lb/>
YARD &amp; BAKE SALE<lb/>
Sat Nov. 13<lb/>
7:00 A.M12:00<lb/>
110 FARMHOUSE PLACE<lb/>
SINGLETON SUBDIVISION<lb/>
J. A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
Bring this ad for<lb/>
107o 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/>
SEND A BALLOON!<lb/>
SEND A SMILE!<lb/>
O<lb/>
V<lb/>
IRTHt<lb/>
Choose from an assortment of<lb/>
?ate aad mylar balloons Pmc<lb/>
Mm, Saoooy to Sanffette!)<lb/>
Qr mail a balloon in ? box!<lb/>
We'll ship aaywhere in the<lb/>
USA ? SM.9S<lb/>
Jefferson<lb/>
Florist. Inc.<lb/>
West 5th St. Ext.<lb/>
Near Hospital<lb/>
752-6195<lb/>
MJUUUQonuuui.M moon<lb/>
muni<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Ladies' Nite<lb/>
Ladies-Free All Night<lb/>
5C Draft while it<lb/>
lasts-55?t Special<lb/>
'til 11:30<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
??<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
Maw it comae to the food at Taco<lb/>
Bell there's really only one echool<lb/>
of thought What a difference!<lb/>
To begin with, your order's made<lb/>
up freeh from the best ingredients<lb/>
ThaTs different And irs all served<lb/>
up piping hot to be sure you get all of<lb/>
the delicious flavor Thafs different<lb/>
You also get served fast, which<lb/>
means that our schedule will keep<lb/>
you on your That's different.<lb/>
And you get it all at the terrific<lb/>
Taco Be price ThaTs realty different<lb/>
Plus, where efse do you find food<lb/>
with deliciously different names like<lb/>
Taco Supreme- Burrito Supreme,<lb/>
and Enchirito.? Each one a far cry<lb/>
from the usual fast food fare (not to<lb/>
mention whatever that is they serve<lb/>
m the cafeteria)<lb/>
So cut out the coupon, then cut<lb/>
out for Taco Sell and see for your-<lb/>
self what a difference we make<lb/>
??S&amp;iES?<lb/>
????1U1IM1<lb/>
AHOfHR<lb/>
WMN<lb/>
STOWING.<lb/>
&amp; FreeTaco<lb/>
?? mwllmPmcmaOrOmMKKUMFaKX<lb/>
cma J ? " ???????<lb/>
TflCOhBEIili<lb/>
JUNG<lb/>
CMDOHHiat<lb/>
gOUTH<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Students are invited to attend Bible<lb/>
Studies of I John with Prof. Grace<lb/>
Eilenburg ? Monday, November<lb/>
15, 8 to 10 P.M Room 247<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Refreshments served each meeting.<lb/>
KYF meets bi-weekly ?<lb/>
For information call 756-2080<lb/>
Sponsored by area Full Gospel Churches<lb/>
t<lb/>
-??? ? ?IhOTtfW<lb/>
'h.W.a?M -?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057513_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER II. 1982<lb/>
Corny Catalog<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
MILWAUKEE, WI<lb/>
(CPS) ? In addition to<lb/>
their usual armful of<lb/>
textbooks, course<lb/>
catalogs, and new class<lb/>
schedules, students at<lb/>
Mount Mary College<lb/>
are also toting around<lb/>
curious little red books<lb/>
these days.<lb/>
The admissions of-<lb/>
fice at the private, all-<lb/>
women, Roman<lb/>
Catholic college also<lb/>
keeps several copies of<lb/>
the small paperback on<lb/>
hand, as does the cam<lb/>
pus minister.<lb/>
But the book,<lb/>
Welcome to Mount<lb/>
Merry College, is hard-<lb/>
missm<lb/>
I:<lb/>
One of the best films<lb/>
I've ever seen;<lb/>
you'll never forget it<lb/>
-Jeffrey Lyons,<lb/>
CBS RadioWPIX-TV<lb/>
PG<lb/>
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE<lb/>
C 1962 UNIVERSAL ClTV STUDIOS INC<lb/>
FRI &amp; SAT 5, 7:15, 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
ADMISSION: ID &amp; ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
OR MSC MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
ly official. Outlining<lb/>
courses ranging from<lb/>
Gastronomical<lb/>
Geometry to Playboy<lb/>
Philosophy and<lb/>
describing a faculty<lb/>
made up of burnt-out<lb/>
academicians and sex-<lb/>
ual deviants, it isn't ex-<lb/>
actly something the Mt.<lb/>
Mary's staff ordinarily<lb/>
uses to guide the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
In fact, the book<lb/>
comes from far-away<lb/>
New York and its<lb/>
authors, trying to pro-<lb/>
duce a parody of Mt.<lb/>
Mary's catalog, had<lb/>
never heard of the real<lb/>
Mount Mary College.<lb/>
The authors ? two<lb/>
of the original people<lb/>
who started to write<lb/>
The Official Preppy<lb/>
Handbook but who<lb/>
sold their interests in<lb/>
the project to Lisa<lb/>
Birnbach early on ?<lb/>
concocted their Mount<lb/>
Merry College as a<lb/>
private, eastern school.<lb/>
But the fictional cam-<lb/>
pus, all concerned, is<lb/>
not unlike the real,<lb/>
small Wisconsin private<lb/>
school whose name is<lb/>
mocked in the title.<lb/>
"We just decided to<lb/>
set out and do a spoof<lb/>
of the traditional col-<lb/>
lege catalog explains<lb/>
co-author Mason<lb/>
Wiley. "We read<lb/>
through every college<lb/>
catalog we could get<lb/>
our hands on, looked at<lb/>
course titles and<lb/>
descriptions, and then<lb/>
just went crazy creating<lb/>
something of our<lb/>
own<lb/>
Co-author Carol<lb/>
Wallace remembers<lb/>
"really getting into the<lb/>
swing of it" when she<lb/>
read through the<lb/>
catalog for Brigham<lb/>
Young University and<lb/>
spotted some courses<lb/>
on "the selection of<lb/>
large and small ap-<lb/>
pliances and choosing<lb/>
the right cookware<lb/>
Sometimes, Wiley<lb/>
explains, writing a<lb/>
satirical course title was<lb/>
as easy as changing a<lb/>
word in the original<lb/>
version. One school,<lb/>
for instance, "offered a<lb/>
course titled 'Women<lb/>
In Antiquity and all<lb/>
we did was come up<lb/>
with a course titled<lb/>
'Women and Antiquity<lb/>
? an examination of<lb/>
the causes and dynmics<lb/>
of the affinity between<lb/>
women and antiques<lb/>
"After we got some<lb/>
ideas for courses<lb/>
Wiley says, "we decid-<lb/>
ed to create a model<lb/>
college to build the<lb/>
catalog around. It<lb/>
seemed a private,<lb/>
Catholic school that<lb/>
took itself too seriously<lb/>
would be perfect<lb/>
The authors picked<lb/>
the all-too-real name<lb/>
for their book<lb/>
"because we wanted<lb/>
something that had sex-<lb/>
ual connotation,<lb/>
something a litle<lb/>
religious and something<lb/>
humorous Wiley<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Peppered with black<lb/>
and white snapshots of<lb/>
students making out,<lb/>
nuns playing guitars,<lb/>
and physical education<lb/>
teacher Mary Dyche<lb/>
nonchalantly messag-<lb/>
ing a female student's<lb/>
breast while pinning a<lb/>
medal on her, the book<lb/>
lampoons just about<lb/>
every thing that<lb/>
private, religious col-<lb/>
leges have always held<lb/>
sacred.<lb/>
"In a way Wilev<lb/>
admits, "the book<lb/>
became not so much a<lb/>
arodv, but also a<lb/>
small little novel about<lb/>
this mythical college<lb/>
somewhere. V e try to<lb/>
suggest a relationship<lb/>
between the instru -<lb/>
and their classes. It<lb/>
seemed appropriate to<lb/>
have a lesbian teach<lb/>
physical education. 01<lb/>
to have the camj-<lb/>
chaplam having an ?<lb/>
fair with the prev<lb/>
dent<lb/>
Wiley says college . I<lb/>
ficials are typical I <lb/>
little intimidated<lb/>
when they first look<lb/>
through Welcome to<lb/>
Mount Merry, but mos<lb/>
"end up chucklin<lb/>
after they really get ii<lb/>
it<lb/>
WE CUT IT<lb/>
FRESH,<lb/>
EVERYDAY.<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
 ?4 wMk ermn?tions<lb/>
App ts. Matte 7 Days<lb/>
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JONI GUTHRIE, r?mco Supervisor MIKE DAVIS, Production Manager<lb/>
November 11, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
New Diseases For The '80s<lb/>
Some of us have been expecting it<lb/>
for a long time. And now, it has<lb/>
come?<lb/>
Speaking before a group of<lb/>
psychiatrists and clinicians at the<lb/>
University of Pittsburgh (in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania), U.S. Surgeon General C.<lb/>
Everett Koop revealed Tuesday that<lb/>
the nation's latest heart-throb,<lb/>
video games, may just be<lb/>
"hazardous to the health" of<lb/>
America's youth.<lb/>
"More and more people are<lb/>
beginning to understand" the<lb/>
adverse effects video games on pre-<lb/>
teen and teenagers, Koop said.<lb/>
"They are into it body and soul.<lb/>
Their body language is tremendous,<lb/>
and everything is 'zap' the enemy.<lb/>
There's nothing constuctive in the<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"Everything is eliminate, kill,<lb/>
destroy; let's get up and do it fast<lb/>
He described the video-game<lb/>
symptoms as<lb/>
tensions,<lb/>
sleeplessness in kids and dreams<lb/>
that have to do with the things they<lb/>
have been doing all day<lb/>
Although Koop's adverse<lb/>
estimates may ? in some minds ?<lb/>
be accurate, his knowledge of the<lb/>
primary purpose of video games is,<lb/>
to say the least, questionable. In<lb/>
fact, I wonder if he even<lb/>
understands what the games are all<lb/>
about.<lb/>
Would he have the nation's youth<lb/>
lay back unprepared, like proverbial<lb/>
sitting ducks, just awaiting the im-<lb/>
pending galactic disaster?<lb/>
What happens in 10, maybe 20<lb/>
years, when martians and other<lb/>
alien invaders actually do invade<lb/>
our humble planet? Would Koop<lb/>
prefer that we be caught with our<lb/>
asbestos pants down? Well, not me.<lb/>
I consider a few bucks worth of<lb/>
tokens a week as a fairly reasonable<lb/>
price to pay for future security.<lb/>
Think about it: Say it's 1993, and<lb/>
one day, you're traveling home to<lb/>
your family unit and your warm,<lb/>
cozy double-wide MCP cone, when<lb/>
all of a sudden, you find yourself<lb/>
caught in the crossfire of three,<lb/>
maybe four enemy star-fighters.<lb/>
What would happen if you didn't<lb/>
know how to hyperspace? I don't<lb/>
even want to think about it.<lb/>
And as if that's not enough, Dr.<lb/>
Koop has the audacity to maintain<lb/>
that video games have "no con-<lb/>
structive" value whatsoever.<lb/>
Presumably, then, he fails to grasp<lb/>
the chivalric concept of Donkey<lb/>
Kong, or even Frogger. Or,<lb/>
perhaps, he would rather see Fay<lb/>
Wray condemned to a life of pro-<lb/>
stitution at the lusty hands of a<lb/>
gigantic gorilla, or a lovely young<lb/>
female toad squashed under the<lb/>
monstrous Good-Year Arriva of a<lb/>
road-hog milk truck:<lb/>
Personally, I think his attitude is<lb/>
sick.<lb/>
Furthermore, Dr. Koop's<lb/>
knowledge of the symptomology of<lb/>
video games leaves much to be<lb/>
desired. Sure, there are kids who<lb/>
can't sleep at night after a full day<lb/>
at the arcades. But, unlike Koop's<lb/>
theories, sleeplessness is not due to<lb/>
some fear of fuseballs, mutants or<lb/>
spiders. These baggy-eyed kids are<lb/>
merely going through the natural<lb/>
stage of lamentation over low<lb/>
scores, which Dr. Koop, a pediatri-<lb/>
cian, should realize is just part of<lb/>
growing up.<lb/>
And to have the -nerve to say<lb/>
video games offer no socially-<lb/>
redeeming value is, at best, absurd.<lb/>
Why, the tactical and strategic<lb/>
lessons to be learned from<lb/>
Defender, Zaxxon and Galaga alone<lb/>
are practically overwhelming.<lb/>
Besides, they all beat the hell out<lb/>
of checkers.<lb/>
One would think Dr. Koop<lb/>
should be proud of the preparedness<lb/>
of today's youth and of their will-<lb/>
ingness to take to heart this coun-<lb/>
try's ? and this world's ? defense.<lb/>
After all, they could be out smok-<lb/>
ing cigarettes.<lb/>
i-Campus Forum<lb/>
The Kremlin Payroll<lb/>
Over the past few months, I've grown<lb/>
incessantly tired at reading the pro-<lb/>
Soviet propaganda in The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian. One should notice how they always<lb/>
follow the mainstream of the Kremlin.<lb/>
The one underlying factor of all com-<lb/>
munist propaganda is to blame the U.S.<lb/>
always, and enthrone the Soviet Union<lb/>
as the "prince of peace The writings<lb/>
of Patrick O'Neill and Jay Stone should<lb/>
cause anyone with at least one ounce of<lb/>
patriotism to turn sick.<lb/>
From their pens come forth writings<lb/>
that would rile any KGB agent. The<lb/>
main thrust of the Russian plan is to<lb/>
destroy the neutron bomb, the B-l<lb/>
bomber, the MX missile, etc Why do<lb/>
all the peace groups only criticize the<lb/>
U.S. and never the Soviets? This fact<lb/>
alone should make one ask whose side<lb/>
the peace group is on.<lb/>
The Russians are using slave labor to<lb/>
build the Siberian pipeline, and their<lb/>
arms buildup is the greatest in history.<lb/>
Why don't Pat, Jay and the peace<lb/>
groups write on this? I'll tell you why:<lb/>
They're too busy writing on "U.S.<lb/>
atrocities In my opinion, trying to<lb/>
keep the world free of Soviet com-<lb/>
munism is no atrocity.<lb/>
I'm tired of our way of life and our<lb/>
country being assaulted by this paper.<lb/>
Our country is correct in rebuilding its<lb/>
military might. This might will be need-<lb/>
ed to protect the world against the ever<lb/>
growing Soviet threat. A final note: If<lb/>
the Greenville Peace Committee, Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill and Jay Stone like Russia so<lb/>
much, why don't they move there? I'm<lb/>
more than willing to buy their airline<lb/>
ticket.<lb/>
Paul S. Hamilton<lb/>
Senior, Business<lb/>
Fifty-thousand people die each day<lb/>
from dramatic starvation; this should be<lb/>
the concern of everyone.<lb/>
I'm glad to see that some people on<lb/>
ECU'S campus are taking action to stop<lb/>
this tragedy. I will be getting involved by<lb/>
taking part in the "Ending Hunger<lb/>
Briefing" on Nov. 16. I urge others to<lb/>
join me.<lb/>
Theresa Dulski<lb/>
Junior, Occupational Therapy<lb/>
No Real Increase<lb/>
The East Carolinian of Nov. 4carried<lb/>
an article about my becoming chairman<lb/>
of the Department of Elementary<lb/>
Education. I thank you for a well-<lb/>
written article. I appreciate The East<lb/>
Carolinian's interest in university facul-<lb/>
ty members and department heads.<lb/>
I hope you will allow me to point out<lb/>
that it is somewhat misleading to say<lb/>
that I plan "to increase the faculty<lb/>
The Department of Elementary Educa-<lb/>
tion has a quota of IS faculty members,<lb/>
including the chairman. At present, two<lb/>
positions are vacant. During the last two<lb/>
years, the department has lost four peo-<lb/>
ple through retirement and one through<lb/>
resignation. It would be appropriate,<lb/>
therefore, to say that we are still in the<lb/>
process of '?replacing" faculty<lb/>
members. No increase in faculty allot-<lb/>
ment is anticipated. New programs, such<lb/>
as a proposed middle school master's<lb/>
degree, would utilize current faculty<lb/>
allotments.<lb/>
Dr. Amos Clark, Chairman<lb/>
Department of Elementary Ed.<lb/>
rercKHYHAMAlESSTDYDURHEAUH<lb/>
19m mmmrMN commission<lb/>
ftrtttOWWttWfc<lb/>
Soviets In Control Of Peace Movement<lb/>
Out For World Takeover<lb/>
By KEITH BRITTAIN<lb/>
The Soviet Union is, to put it simply, out<lb/>
to take over the world. Its current method<lb/>
of achieving this goal is the peace move-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It is a well known fact that the peace and<lb/>
nuclear freeze movements are part of a<lb/>
brilliantly-orchestrated campaign by the<lb/>
KGB. The Russians have recognized that<lb/>
they cannot defeat America because of its<lb/>
current military buildup. The Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration is on a realistic and steadfast<lb/>
course to ensure world peace. The current<lb/>
U.S. re-armament is the means by which<lb/>
peace can be achieved.<lb/>
America is, at present, planning to<lb/>
deploy 572 Pershing II missiles in Europe<lb/>
to counter the Soviet SS-20s. If the KGB<lb/>
can bring about a nuclear freeze, Russia<lb/>
will retain its nuclear superiority.<lb/>
An example: Vadim Leonov (who was<lb/>
posing as a journalist) was recently<lb/>
deported for being the link between the<lb/>
Kremlin and the "peace groups" in<lb/>
Holland. On being deported, Leonov<lb/>
made a very embarassing statement: "If<lb/>
Moscow decides that 50,000 demonstrators<lb/>
must take to the streets in Holland, they<lb/>
will take to the streets Do they also have<lb/>
this power in Washington?<lb/>
The Soviets fear new American<lb/>
weaponry and have made necessary ad-<lb/>
justments to destroy them. The neutron<lb/>
bomb, MX missile and the B-l bomber<lb/>
have been the targets.<lb/>
The driving force in the Russian pro-<lb/>
paganda campaign is peace groups. The<lb/>
World Peace Council is a communist front<lb/>
group. Its.president is Indian Communist<lb/>
Romesh Chandra. The council has been<lb/>
expelled from France and Austria because<lb/>
of subversive activities. The WPC has<lb/>
never waivered from the Kremlin<lb/>
mainstream.<lb/>
The U.S. Peace Council is led by<lb/>
Michael Myerson, a longtime communist<lb/>
functionary. The USPC has lobbied exten-<lb/>
sively against the B-l bomber. Russia<lb/>
understands that the B-52s are archaic and<lb/>
cannot deliver an effective nuclear attack.<lb/>
When the B-l was scrapped, Soviet Presi-<lb/>
dent Breznev awarded Myerson a "medal<lb/>
of peace Thus, chalk another victory for<lb/>
the KGB under the Carter administration.<lb/>
Even the grassroots, or local peace<lb/>
groups, strictly adhere to Kremlin pro-<lb/>
paganda. One should notice that they<lb/>
never criticize Russia, only the United<lb/>
States. In the last few years, NATO has<lb/>
deployed no new middle-range weapons.<lb/>
NATO even went a step further, and as a<lb/>
peace initiative, withdrew 1,000 nuclear<lb/>
weapons. The Soviets answered this peace<lb/>
initiative by deploring more than 750 new<lb/>
nuclear warheads and advanced SS-20s.<lb/>
At latest count, Russia has 1,398<lb/>
ICBMs, compared to the United States'<lb/>
1,052. The U.S.S.R. has 5,540 warheads<lb/>
on these missiles, compared to 1,052 for<lb/>
the U.S It is very apparent that now is the<lb/>
time to build our nuclear arsenal and con-<lb/>
ventional weapons. In fact, it has been<lb/>
estimated that the Soviets could have<lb/>
possibly blackmailed the U.S. by 1990.<lb/>
Despite the massive Soviet build-up, the<lb/>
U.S. is always portrayed as the aggressor.<lb/>
This is a major focal point of Soviet<lb/>
policy, enhanced by excellent use of pro-<lb/>
paganda. This "distorted reality" has suc-<lb/>
ceeded in enlisting the support of such<lb/>
liberals as Edward Kennedy, who supports<lb/>
the nuclear freeze ? not realizing the<lb/>
Soviet benefits of this noble cause.<lb/>
Russia has termed peace protestors and<lb/>
nuclear freeze activists as "unwitting<lb/>
dupes They confuse morals and self-<lb/>
righteousness with reality. They do not see<lb/>
that they are simply puppets of the KGB.<lb/>
In a recent speech, the Secretary of<lb/>
Defense Casper Weinberger warned<lb/>
against the nuclear freeze. He said it would<lb/>
lessen both the determent against a Soviet<lb/>
first strike and the Russians' incentive to<lb/>
agree to deep cuts in nuclear weapons<lb/>
Reagan has proposed.<lb/>
In fact, the U.S. did freeze its force<lb/>
levels during detente (the 1970s). From<lb/>
1966 to 1982, the Soviets built 60 new<lb/>
ballistic missile submarines, while the U.S.<lb/>
built none. A Russian negotiator for the<lb/>
SALT I treaty suggested to his superiors<lb/>
that they start some nuclear reductions. He<lb/>
was shocked when he was told "the weak<lb/>
Americans have signed this treaty to cut<lb/>
their weapons; it is now time to build<lb/>
ours<lb/>
A major victory for the KGB was the<lb/>
cancellation of the neutron bomb. Tass<lb/>
(the Soviet news agency) issued the state-<lb/>
ment: "Baptist ministers in Russia are<lb/>
against the neutron bomb This state-<lb/>
ment was issued to play on President<lb/>
Carter's sympathy.<lb/>
On Feb. 23, 1981, Breznev issued an im-<lb/>
mediate call for a nuclear freeze that would<lb/>
leave Western Europe vulnerable to the<lb/>
relentlessly expanding communist forces.<lb/>
Common logic tells one that anything sup-<lb/>
ported by Russia is only for the benefit of<lb/>
Russia. The Kremlin fears the U.S. build-<lb/>
up and will do anything to thwart it.<lb/>
Closer to home, the nuclear freeze is<lb/>
supported by Edith Webberand ttw Green-<lb/>
ville Peace (3mTiiitex.rteyT shotld kno<lb/>
that our country and our way of life is<lb/>
threatened by this proposal. It would<lb/>
literally sign our dependents' death war-<lb/>
rants. All the activists parading under the<lb/>
"banner of Christianity" should also<lb/>
realize that their right to public worship<lb/>
would be denied by a communist govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Recently, some Western tourists were ar-<lb/>
rested in Red Square for unfurling a peace<lb/>
banner. The fact that Russia is behind the<lb/>
peace and nuclear freeze movement is fully<lb/>
documented. (Yuri S. Kaprolov represents<lb/>
himself as a counselor at the Soviet Em-<lb/>
bassy in Washington. Actually, he is<lb/>
known to be a KGB agent as well as a ma-<lb/>
jor organizer of the U.S. peace movement.<lb/>
These two facts alone should cause one to<lb/>
ask questions.)<lb/>
It is time for us to stand up against these<lb/>
activists and fight to preserve our way of<lb/>
life.<lb/>
It is estimated that there are at least<lb/>
5,000 KGB agents here in the United<lb/>
States. Why are the peace groups making<lb/>
their work so much easier?<lb/>
U.S. Economy Slipping, Thurow Says<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
I was happy to note that in last Tues-<lb/>
day's edition, Sam Silva's letter pointed<lb/>
out that there is, indeed, more to Lester<lb/>
Thurow's ideas than a return to Keynesian<lb/>
economics. The original article failed to go<lb/>
into the specifics of Thurow's proposals<lb/>
for reasons of space; however, because of<lb/>
Mr. Silva's inquiry, this space is now<lb/>
available to elaborate.<lb/>
To begin with, Thurow maintains:<lb/>
"Where the U.S. economy had once<lb/>
generated the world's highest standard of<lb/>
living, it is now well down the list and slip-<lb/>
ping farther each year. Leaving the rich<lb/>
Middle East shiekdoms aside, we stood<lb/>
fifth among the nations of the world in<lb/>
per-capita GNP in 1978, having been sur-<lb/>
passed by Switzerland, Denmark, West<lb/>
Germany and Sweden. Switzerland, which<lb/>
stood first, actually had a per-capita GNP<lb/>
45 percent higher than ours. And on the<lb/>
outside, the world's fastest economic run-<lb/>
ner, Japan, was advancing rapidly with a<lb/>
per-capita GNP of only seven percent<lb/>
below ours. In our entire history, we have<lb/>
never grown even half as rapidly as the<lb/>
Japanese.<lb/>
"The time has come when we must begin<lb/>
to study these countries and learn from<lb/>
their successes. Every one of them has<lb/>
more government involvement in their<lb/>
economy than we do in ours<lb/>
Some of the specific forms that Thurow'<lb/>
recommends for government involvement<lb/>
are:<lb/>
? The foundation of a national investment<lb/>
committee, which will channel funds into<lb/>
"sunrise" industries (those which show<lb/>
promise of benefitting the national<lb/>
economy), and out of "sunset" industries<lb/>
(those which are failing, obsolete or ineffi-<lb/>
cient),<lb/>
? Government jobs to provide for full<lb/>
employment, and<lb/>
? Closing of tax loopholes as well as a pro-<lb/>
gressive income tax, which would be levied<lb/>
to move us toward our general equity<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
As a solution to environmental pollu-<lb/>
tion, Thurow has proposed a system of<lb/>
taxes which would raise the price of<lb/>
polluting goods and services to a level con-<lb/>
sistent with the "shadow price" we place<lb/>
on a clean environment and, hence,<lb/>
discourage their production.<lb/>
As with pollution efforts, an increase in<lb/>
health and safety will raise the price of<lb/>
those goods which are dangerous to pro-<lb/>
duce. He also recommends generously<lb/>
compensating individuals who legitimately<lb/>
lose when projects are undertaken in the<lb/>
public interest. Otherwise, their only<lb/>
recourse will be to stop government from<lb/>
carrying out the programs that threaten<lb/>
them<lb/>
Hunger Greatest Peace Threat<lb/>
"The day that hunger is eradicated from<lb/>
the earth, there will be the greatest spiritual<lb/>
explosion the world has even known.<lb/>
Humanity cannot imagine the joy that will<lb/>
burst into the world on the day of that<lb/>
great revolution<lb/>
Federico Garcia Lorca<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
Lorca, Spanish poet and dramatist,<lb/>
lived in the early 1900s, yet his dream that<lb/>
a "great revolution" would take place to<lb/>
feed the starving masses has never come.<lb/>
Today, the problem of world hunger is<lb/>
more apparent than ever; according to UN<lb/>
statistics, 50,000 people die each day from<lb/>
starvation, and the prospects of a hunger-<lb/>
free world are not hopeful.<lb/>
Unfortunately, hunger, starvation and<lb/>
the death of children (The Hunger Project<lb/>
reports that 28 people ? 21 of them<lb/>
children ? die each minute from hunger)<lb/>
are usually ones most of us would rather<lb/>
ignore than confront.<lb/>
In 1980, the Presidential Commission<lb/>
Report on World Hunger concluded that<lb/>
hunger represents the greatest threat to<lb/>
world peace that exists today. As the<lb/>
schism between the haves and the have-<lb/>
nots widens, the pressure becomes greater.<lb/>
At present, the U.S. uses more than 75<lb/>
percent of the grain it produces to feed its<lb/>
livestock. Most animals in the United<lb/>
States eat better than half the population<lb/>
of the world.<lb/>
Next Tuesday and Thursday the ECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition and the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Project will be sponsoring events<lb/>
calling attention to this "hidden<lb/>
holocaust" and looking for ways to end it.<lb/>
All of us are welcome to join them in their<lb/>
efforts to make the "spiritual explosion"<lb/>
that Federico Lorca spoke of more than 50<lb/>
years ago a reality.<lb/>
'a<lb/>
??? m.ta:tnm??mr,mesRMiiiS. i<lb/>
? - . r M'rirgi-nfii,?? ?- ' fijifpr;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057513_0005"/><lb/>
flDBE EALTH SION<lb/>
ver<lb/>
.ed to his superiors<lb/>
11 .iear reductions. He<lb/>
was told "the weak<lb/>
ltd this treat) to cut<lb/>
now time to build<lb/>
H r :ne KGB was the<lb/>
r:utron bomb. Tass<lb/>
?icy) issued tht state-<lb/>
 :rs in Russia are<lb/>
"?omb This state-<lb/>
on President<lb/>
It ?vne issued an im-<lb/>
lear freeze that would<lb/>
e uinerable to the<lb/>
Ig communist forces.<lb/>
jne that anything sup-<lb/>
nl for the benefit ot<lb/>
lears the U.S. build-<lb/>
line to thwart it.<lb/>
nuclear freeze is<lb/>
f'ebberand ttor Green-<lb/>
je.T&amp;ey shotjld know-<lb/>
Id our way o' life is<lb/>
proposal. It would<lb/>
Icendents' death war-<lb/>
p parading under the<lb/>
anit" should also<lb/>
:t to public worship<lb/>
communist govern-<lb/>
ern tourists were ar-<lb/>
t :r unfurling a peace<lb/>
Russia is behind the<lb/>
'zq movement is fully<lb/>
Kaprolov represents<lb/>
?r at the Soviet Em-<lb/>
)n. Actually, he is<lb/>
igent as well as a ma-<lb/>
il. S. peace movement.<lb/>
should cause one to<lb/>
tand up against these<lb/>
preserve our way of<lb/>
there are at least<lb/>
here in th?. United<lb/>
)eace groups making<lb/>
kasier?<lb/>
Says<lb/>
Idow price" we place<lb/>
jnment and, hence,<lb/>
)uction.<lb/>
rfforts, an increase in<lb/>
raise the price of<lb/>
re dangerous to pro-<lb/>
)mmends generously<lb/>
luals who legitimately<lb/>
Ire undertaken in the<lb/>
jherwise, their only<lb/>
fop government from<lb/>
grams that threaten<lb/>
Threat<lb/>
t of us would rather<lb/>
sidential Commission<lb/>
unger concluded that<lb/>
ie greatest threat to<lb/>
fxists today. As the<lb/>
haves and the have-<lb/>
Isure becomes greater.<lb/>
IS. uses more than 75<lb/>
it produces to feed its<lb/>
mals in the United<lb/>
half the population<lb/>
Thursday the ECU<lb/>
ind the Greenville<lb/>
I be sponsoring events<lb/>
to this "hidden<lb/>
ng for ways to end it.<lb/>
to join them in their<lb/>
spiritual explosion"<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057513_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
NOVEMBER II, 1982 Page6<lb/>
AI And Tom Thriving<lb/>
InPostSNL' TV Era<lb/>
Stall Photos By GAkY PATTERSON<lb/>
Clockwise from top: Tom Davis (foreground) interviews gay male prostitute Al Franken; Franken's Pete<lb/>
Tagliani slings mud during campaign; East Carolinian Managing Editor Hughes chums with Franken.<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER and<lb/>
MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
TtratcM<lb/>
A surging crowd of tastefully-attired comedy fanatics<lb/>
had considerable trouble pushing through the narrow<lb/>
doors of Hendrix Theatre Monday night to witness<lb/>
show-biz history in the making They were not disap-<lb/>
pointed.<lb/>
Those irreverent, multi-talented, merrymakers Al<lb/>
Franken and Tom Davis, combined their multi talents<lb/>
and thrilled a sitting-room-only audience (of about 200)<lb/>
with a barrage of recipes, interviews, political debates,<lb/>
film clips, multiple-choice quizzes, surveys and plenty<lb/>
of that home-spun charm and "warpth" that have<lb/>
become the staple of the duo.<lb/>
The team thrilled students and a few community folk<lb/>
alike, with routines ranging from old Saturday Nite Live<lb/>
schtick (Al Franken's horrendous rendering of a<lb/>
terminally-ill stand-up comic), to their latest efforts, in-<lb/>
cluding material previously showcased during guest ap-<lb/>
pearances on Late Night with David Letterman (Advice<lb/>
on How to Drive While Drunk and the Bob-and-Ray-<lb/>
inspired "An Human Echo") and a few bits even we<lb/>
hadn't seen.<lb/>
At 8 p.m the comedy commenced abruptly with the<lb/>
grand entrance of two empregnated housewives discuss-<lb/>
ing the benefits of "stretching" a family food dollar by<lb/>
devouring the afterbirth, a parody of TV's infamous<lb/>
Hamburger Helper commercials.<lb/>
Interspersed with diverse film clips of routines written<lb/>
for the original Saturday Nite Live by the two (a send-<lb/>
up dramatization, depicting a rabbi-performed circum-<lb/>
cision in the back seat of an automobile that sports the<lb/>
ultimate "smooth ride"), were: a down-on-his-luck<lb/>
male prostitute working the Kinston, "gay district" and<lb/>
Franken's impressive impersonations of PTLTGIF's<lb/>
Jim Bakker and STONES' Mick Jagger, a gag that<lb/>
depended perhaps too heavily on Al Franken's uncanny<lb/>
resemblance to the rock legend.<lb/>
Closing out the show in a familiar 60s tradition, the<lb/>
duo encouraged the audience to join hands and voices in<lb/>
singing "We Shall Overcome However, turned off by<lb/>
a calculated lack of participation, Franken and Davis<lb/>
exited in mock disgust.<lb/>
But even after a full day of travelling, eating, drink-<lb/>
ing, using the bathroom and just plain being funny, the<lb/>
comedic pair were still looking forward to a night on the<lb/>
town (almost as much as we were).<lb/>
A trip to their motel revealed some pretty startling<lb/>
differences between the two. Aside from some really<lb/>
amazing physical dissimilarities, Al likes to relax after<lb/>
the show with a chocolate malt and his favorite aerobic<lb/>
dancing record. Tom does recreational drugs and listens<lb/>
to Van Morrison tunes on his ghetto blaster.<lb/>
Al likes waffles; Tom prefers recreational drugs.<lb/>
Al plays racketball and tries to stay in shape; Tom<lb/>
prefers recreational drugs.<lb/>
Al boasts constantly of his 21-month-old daughter,<lb/>
readily showing pictures to friends, relatives and dierse<lb/>
passers-by. Tom prefers pop-up books based on<lb/>
X-Rated films and rarely gives his real name to co-eds.<lb/>
"1 do things to excess Tom explains, "but<lb/>
somehow I don't get addicted<lb/>
"Yeah Al agrees.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Naturally, at one time or another, comersation had<lb/>
to turn to "the good of days" in New York with the<lb/>
cast of the original Saturday Site Live. Although<lb/>
Franken and Davis aren't generally recognized as hav-<lb/>
ing gotten in on the ground floor, they were among the<lb/>
show's first writers.<lb/>
"We were out in L.A Al explains, "working at the<lb/>
Comedy Store, when we heard Lome Michaels was get-<lb/>
ting together a comedy show for NBC. We submitted a<lb/>
demo tape And the rest is history<lb/>
After the original cast unanymously decided to leave<lb/>
the show in 1980 for other ventures, Franken and Davis<lb/>
soon went on the college circuit, where they have con-<lb/>
sistently entertained before full houses, making ther<lb/>
ECU appearance a bit of a disappointment.<lb/>
Both agree with the thousands of other Americans<lb/>
who feel the new SNL is only a shell of its former self.<lb/>
"We don't watch it Tom reveals.<lb/>
"Yeah Al adds.<lb/>
Finally, when asked what, by now, must be a familiar<lb/>
question, "Would you ever consider a reunion with the<lb/>
original cast?" Davis summed up their positions suc-<lb/>
cinctly: "Only if John Belushi'll do it<lb/>
ECGC Speaks Out With Answers To Questions<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff U riler<lb/>
Last year Mark Zumbach, one of the founding<lb/>
members of the East Carolina Gay Community (ECG<lb/>
C) noted that the American Medical Association (AM A)<lb/>
had removed homosexuality from its list of diseases, but<lb/>
that homophobia; the irrational fear of homosexuality<lb/>
was still considered a disease.<lb/>
The ECGC has responded to homophobia by forming<lb/>
a speakers bureau which offers gay men and women,<lb/>
most of them ECU students, as speakers to lead discus-<lb/>
sions at meetings or in classrooms about the subject of<lb/>
hmosexuality. They hope to dispel the myths that many<lb/>
people attach to homosexuality by giving them the op-<lb/>
portunity to meet and speak to gay adults.<lb/>
Christine O'Donnell, an ECU instructor, took a vote<lb/>
in her Introduction to Sociology class and by a "clear<lb/>
consensus" her students opted to invite speakers from<lb/>
the ECGC to their class.<lb/>
Despite the fact that it was a Friday class, the atten-<lb/>
dance was much higher than usual when the ECGC<lb/>
representatives came to do their program. There was an<lb/>
obvious air of tension and lots of nervous energy as the<lb/>
students were awaiting Christine's introduction of the<lb/>
two women whoicagrie to adrfrjessher class For the next<lb/>
50 minutes the whispered rimarkslfiterspersecl with gig-<lb/>
gles could be heard every few seconds as one student<lb/>
after another student used laughter to deal with a<lb/>
sometimes uncomfortable situation.<lb/>
Ginger and Robin, both dressed in female attire<lb/>
(possibly to the shock of some of the students who had<lb/>
stereotyped images of gay women looking and behaving<lb/>
like men) looked just like everybody else. It was doubt-<lb/>
ful that anyone in the classroom would have been able<lb/>
to pick them out of a crowd as being gay.<lb/>
Robin opened by randomly asking three studnts to<lb/>
tell a little something about themselves and she and<lb/>
Ginger followed by doing the same thing. The object of<lb/>
the exercise was to show that for the most part, all<lb/>
students ? including gay ones ? had similar<lb/>
backgrounds, similar hopes and anxieties about the<lb/>
future, and similar interests. Except for sexual<lb/>
preference, Robin and Ginger told the students that they<lb/>
were just like everyone else.<lb/>
"Nothing happened, that I know of, to make me<lb/>
gay said Robin, "All I know is that I am (gay) and<lb/>
I'm happy<lb/>
Ginger said being gay was not a matter of choice for<lb/>
her, but that it was liberating when she made her choice<lb/>
and finally admitted her gayness to herself. She added<lb/>
that living a "split role" ? living as a straight but really<lb/>
being gay was very difficult. Ginger admitted to liking<lb/>
sports, but noted that this was not the case with many<lb/>
gay women she knew.<lb/>
Both pointed out the results of a Kinsey study that<lb/>
concluded that very few people were 'totally straight' or<lb/>
'totally gay' and that gay people numbered over 20<lb/>
million in the United States.<lb/>
"Have you ever dated a man?" was the first question<lb/>
from the audience. Ginger and Robin both said yes, but<lb/>
admitted to being happier now that they were both<lb/>
dating women.<lb/>
Another student asked if they would ever like to have<lb/>
families and if so would they adopt children? Yes was<lb/>
the answer to both questions:<lb/>
"God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Adam<lb/>
said one female student who identified herself as a<lb/>
Catholic. She added that her religion did not approve of<lb/>
homosexuality and she wanted to know if Ginger or<lb/>
Robin just "dropped out" of their religions because<lb/>
they were gay<lb/>
Ginger, who was also raised a Catholic, said she<lb/>
didn't feel as if she or any gay person should stop prac-<lb/>
ticing their faith because they were gay. Neither she nor<lb/>
Robin wanted to discuss the religious question at length<lb/>
because both felt it was a personal individual matter.<lb/>
One student wanted to know how their parents had<lb/>
reacted to the fact that their child was gay. Robin<lb/>
responded, "1 told them about two years agoit caused<lb/>
a lot of problems. My mom couldn't deal with it she<lb/>
said adding that her father was able to handle the news<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Statistics show that most children raised by gay<lb/>
parents grow up to be heterosexual, said Ginger respon-<lb/>
ding to another question about the family environment.<lb/>
"My parents are both straight and look at me Ginger<lb/>
added causing a round of laughter.<lb/>
"How did you know you were gay?" came another<lb/>
question which Ginger answered first, "I dated men for<lb/>
a long time she said, "I didn't understand what I was<lb/>
See ECGC, Page 7<lb/>
Orthomolecular Medicine Valid<lb/>
New Treatment Shunned By Old Professionals<lb/>
This is the first of two parts. Watch<lb/>
for the second installment in next<lb/>
Thursday's Style section.<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
According to Nobel Laureate<lb/>
Linus Pauling: "Orthomolecular<lb/>
medicine is the treatment of disease<lb/>
by varying the concentrations in the<lb/>
human body of substances that are<lb/>
normally present in the human body<lb/>
and are required for health, such as<lb/>
the vitamins and essential<lb/>
minerals<lb/>
At the present time or-<lb/>
thomolecular medicine is exploring<lb/>
a wide range of applications. In<lb/>
light of a work entitled Nutrition,<lb/>
Crime, and Delinquincy by Alex-<lb/>
ander Schauss, Los Angeles County<lb/>
is applying orthomolecular prin-<lb/>
ciples to juvenile delinquincy and<lb/>
criminal behavior. In conjunction<lb/>
with this development researchers in<lb/>
Illinois, New Jersey, and New York<lb/>
have recently conducted studies<lb/>
focusing on the connection between<lb/>
nutrition and criminal behavior. In<lb/>
Palo Alto, California Linus Pauling<lb/>
is involved in research with vitamin<lb/>
C and Cancer. Pauling claims,<lb/>
among other things, that in a con-<lb/>
trolled test, "Terminally ill cancer<lb/>
patients receiving vitamin C lived an<lb/>
average of seven times as long as pa-<lb/>
tients not receiving vitamin C<lb/>
therapy, after reaching the terminal<lb/>
stage Other researchers are apply-<lb/>
ing orthomolecular principles to<lb/>
such diseases as arthritis, autism,<lb/>
and even alchoholism. In addition it<lb/>
is now accepted among much of the<lb/>
medical profession that many, if not<lb/>
most hyperactive children are suf-<lb/>
fering from allergic reactions to cer-<lb/>
tain foods or food additives. But<lb/>
perhaps the most compelling facet<lb/>
of orthomolecular medicine is the<lb/>
treatment of schizophrenia and<lb/>
other emotional disorders by the use<lb/>
of vitamins, minerals, and a<lb/>
prescribed diet. This mode of treat-<lb/>
ment has, in fact, inspired a seperate<lb/>
rubric-orthomolecular psychiatry ?<lb/>
under which it is housed.<lb/>
Orthomolecular psychiatry,<lb/>
however, like the field of or-<lb/>
thomolecular medicine itself is a<lb/>
subject of controversy. It has receiv-<lb/>
ed a hail of criticism from establish-<lb/>
ed organizations like the American<lb/>
Psychiatric Association and the Na-<lb/>
tional Institute of Mental Health. In<lb/>
fact, in 1973 the APA formed a<lb/>
special task force to investigate or-<lb/>
thomolecular psychiatry and report<lb/>
on its efficacy. This task force con-<lb/>
lcuded that orthomolecular techni-<lb/>
ques have no therapeutic value for<lb/>
schizophrenia or other mental il-<lb/>
lnesses. Orthomolecular doctors,<lb/>
however, denounced the report as<lb/>
biased and fraught with error. To<lb/>
lend weight to their criticisms they<lb/>
promptly issued a reply to the<lb/>
"American psychiatric Association<lb/>
Task Force Report On Or-<lb/>
thomolecular Medicine and<lb/>
Megavitamin Therapy" in which<lb/>
they pointed to evidence of bias<lb/>
among the members of the task<lb/>
force and discussed errors in its<lb/>
research and conclusions point by<lb/>
point and page by page.<lb/>
Promised Rethinking<lb/>
This indictment of the task<lb/>
force's findings has, orthomolecular<lb/>
physicians point out, never been ad-<lb/>
dressed or substantially refuted by<lb/>
the APA or NIMH. In fact, accor-<lb/>
ding to orthomolecular practitioner<lb/>
Humphrey Osmonds, the NIMH<lb/>
was promising to rethink its position<lb/>
with regard to orthomolecular<lb/>
medicine until their recent financial<lb/>
crisis forced them to postpone doing<lb/>
further research.<lb/>
It is, however, the opinions of the<lb/>
APA which have shaped the<lb/>
outlooks of the professors at ECU<lb/>
and the people who author the tex-<lb/>
tbooks which students read.<lb/>
For instance, a textbook entitled<lb/>
Brain &amp; Behavior which is used in<lb/>
the psychology department says:<lb/>
"From time to time, the chronic<lb/>
and poorly understood nature of<lb/>
schizophrenia has led to unfor-<lb/>
tunate therapeutic fads and<lb/>
misleading claims, and sometimes to<lb/>
extreme measures taken to assist<lb/>
desperate families of patients with<lb/>
chronic schizophrenia. There have<lb/>
been claims that massive doses of<lb/>
vitamins C and B, and prticularly of<lb/>
nicotinic acid, may be of some<lb/>
benefit. There is no compelling<lb/>
scientifically acceptable evidence<lb/>
that such treatments are effective,<lb/>
an their long-term safety is not<lb/>
established<lb/>
Another textbook which is<lb/>
employed in the first level nutrition<lb/>
course in the nutrition department,<lb/>
Understanding Nutrition states:<lb/>
"The hope that large doses of<lb/>
niacin would cure schizophrenia has<lb/>
led to some important research and<lb/>
a whole new area of study-<lb/>
orthomolecular psychiatry ? but<lb/>
the results so far have been disap-<lb/>
pointing. There is no evidence that<lb/>
large doses of niacin have any effect<lb/>
whatever on mental disease other<lb/>
than the dementia of pellegra<lb/>
In response to the allegations<lb/>
made by the authors of these texts<lb/>
Aibrecht A. Meyer, Executive<lb/>
Director of The Huxley Institute for<lb/>
Biosocil Research said:<lb/>
"These statements are simly in-<lb/>
correct. There is a wealth of scien-<lb/>
tifically sound research that has<lb/>
been done substantiating the prin-<lb/>
ciples that orthomolecular doctors<lb/>
employ beginning with the work of<lb/>
Abram Hoffer and Humphrey<lb/>
Osmonds in the 1950s.The authors<lb/>
of these textbooks have simply read<lb/>
the work of the APA and the NIMH<lb/>
and neglected to look any further<lb/>
than that. What is more, the per-<lb/>
jorative tone of some of their<lb/>
writing would lead the reader to<lb/>
believe that they do not even leave<lb/>
the subject open to question. That is<lb/>
very unscientific<lb/>
Flutist Baker Performing Next Week<lb/>
World-class flutist Julius Baker wiH perform on campus oa Mon-<lb/>
day, November IS at t p.m. ia MeadeaaaM Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre, laker is the third perfonaer ia the University Uaioas<lb/>
'82-83 Artiste Series. Tickets far the New York Philharmonic<lb/>
musician's prograai are available at the Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
MeadeahaH at $2.5f far stadeats, $7.50 for faculty, staff aad<lb/>
pabtk; ail tickets wiH he $7.5f at the door.<lb/>
'el<lb/>
Hei<lb/>
It has<lb/>
admissu<lb/>
prisoner <lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
LAU<lb/>
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staff and<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 11. 1982<lb/>
ECGC Establishes Campus Speakers' Bureau<lb/>
Herman Lecture Free<lb/>
It has been announced that there will be no<lb/>
admission charge for former Soviet<lb/>
prisoner Victor Herman's lecture tonight at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
feeling I denied it<lb/>
(my gayness) at first<lb/>
Robin said she knew<lb/>
from about the time she<lb/>
was in first grade that<lb/>
she was gay. "I knew<lb/>
inside ? I had the same<lb/>
feelings that I have<lb/>
now The other girls<lb/>
would talk about Tom-<lb/>
my (and say) 'he's so<lb/>
cute' and I'd be think-<lb/>
ing about Suzy<lb/>
Robin recalled.<lb/>
Another female stu-<lb/>
dent told a story of her<lb/>
brother being chased by<lb/>
a 45 year-old man who<lb/>
she said was gay.<lb/>
"These gays can get<lb/>
pretty violent A 45<lb/>
year-old man chasing a<lb/>
16 year-old boy ?<lb/>
that's kind of sick<lb/>
said the student. No<lb/>
question followed her<lb/>
statement, but Ginger<lb/>
interjected and<lb/>
responded, "You're<lb/>
right, that is sick She<lb/>
went on to tell some<lb/>
stories about times<lb/>
when she had en-<lb/>
countered straight men<lb/>
who she said had<lb/>
treated her in demean-<lb/>
ing and degrading ways<lb/>
when she was in a bar<lb/>
and at other times.<lb/>
The next student ask-<lb/>
ed if there were any<lb/>
biological factors, such<lb/>
as chromosomes, that<lb/>
could explain homosex-<lb/>
uality. Ginger and<lb/>
Robin didn't know of<lb/>
any. "If someone came<lb/>
to me and said they<lb/>
would give me a pill<lb/>
that would make me<lb/>
straight ? I wouldn't<lb/>
take it said Ginger.<lb/>
"Do you show any<lb/>
affection in public?"<lb/>
came another question.<lb/>
"No came the<lb/>
answer from both<lb/>
women. "Basically,<lb/>
because I value my<lb/>
life added Ginger.<lb/>
Someone else asked<lb/>
if either of the women<lb/>
had ever had a problem<lb/>
with their roommates<lb/>
because they were gay.<lb/>
Ginger said yes that one<lb/>
"non-gay" roommate<lb/>
she had, had moved<lb/>
out. "My roommates<lb/>
were very understan-<lb/>
ding Robin said.<lb/>
"Is it hard to admit<lb/>
you're gay?" asked<lb/>
another student. "For<lb/>
me it's easier to tell a<lb/>
male said Ginger<lb/>
because men would not<lb/>
feel as threatened as a<lb/>
woman would.<lb/>
Both women said<lb/>
they knew other gay<lb/>
people who maintained<lb/>
heterosexual relation-<lb/>
ships to avoid the dif-<lb/>
ficulties of being gay in<lb/>
a straight world.<lb/>
Ginger responded to<lb/>
a question about bi-<lb/>
sexuality. "Bi-sexuality<lb/>
is a cop-out she said.<lb/>
"A person says they're<lb/>
bi-sexual instead of<lb/>
really sitting down and<lb/>
working on a relation-<lb/>
ship Ginger felt that<lb/>
a person would often<lb/>
use bisexuality as an ex-<lb/>
cuse for not forming a<lb/>
lasting relationship<lb/>
with a person.<lb/>
"Why do you come<lb/>
out of the closet?" ask-<lb/>
ed another student.<lb/>
"When I finally realiz-<lb/>
ed who I was, I got<lb/>
tired of hiding said<lb/>
Robin. "It's not so<lb/>
much that I kept lying<lb/>
to other people, but I<lb/>
kept lying to myself<lb/>
added Ginger.<lb/>
Both women said<lb/>
they were doing the<lb/>
"talks as they call<lb/>
them, to help build a<lb/>
sense of "unity" bet-<lb/>
ween straights and gays<lb/>
and to try to dispel<lb/>
some of the<lb/>
stereotypical images<lb/>
associated with<lb/>
homosexuality.<lb/>
"Being gay is not my<lb/>
life ? it's just a part of<lb/>
it said Ginger. "The<lb/>
only difference<lb/>
(between gays and<lb/>
straights) is the sexual<lb/>
preference added<lb/>
Robin.<lb/>
Both women ended<lb/>
their "talks" to a<lb/>
round of applause and<lb/>
thanked the audience.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057513_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 11, 1982 Page 8<lb/>
Vengeful Pirates Ready To Prevail<lb/>
B KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU Pirates should have a<lb/>
definite motive going into this<lb/>
weekend's game with William and<lb/>
Mary ? revenge.<lb/>
The Indians came to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium last year and pulled off an<lb/>
upset in ECU's last game of the<lb/>
year, 31-21. The Pirates were 5-5<lb/>
coming into the game, and the loss<lb/>
denied ECU a winning season.<lb/>
In the 1981 game, senior quarter-<lb/>
back Chris Garrity led the Indians<lb/>
with 399 yards passing and four<lb/>
touchdowns. Along the way, Garri-<lb/>
ty completed 34 of 44 passes, in-<lb/>
cluding a 41-yard touchdown strike<lb/>
to Jeff Sanders on the last play of<lb/>
the first half.<lb/>
This year, the Pirates will travel<lb/>
to Williamsburg, Va. to take on the<lb/>
Indians, who currently have a<lb/>
record o' 2-7.<lb/>
William and Mary is similar to<lb/>
ECU's last opponent, the Texas-<lb/>
Arlington Mavericks, in that they<lb/>
were predicted to have a good year<lb/>
before the season started.<lb/>
With 38 lettermen and 18 starters<lb/>
returning from last year's team, the<lb/>
Indians were predicted to have the<lb/>
best team in their history and were<lb/>
considered capable of beating<lb/>
anyone on their schedule.<lb/>
"William and Mary has had a<lb/>
very disappointing season head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory said at his weekly<lb/>
press luncheon. "They felt before<lb/>
the year began that they were ready<lb/>
to have a great, great season. I'm<lb/>
sure that they will try to do<lb/>
something against us to regain some<lb/>
respectability<lb/>
One of Emory's main concerns is<lb/>
the fact that the Indians have com-<lb/>
pleted 59.2 percent of their passes.<lb/>
Even though Garrity has graduated,<lb/>
they have still passed for over 1600<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"William and Mary does best<lb/>
what we do worst defensively ?<lb/>
pass the football stated Emory.<lb/>
"Our pass defense has not been one<lb/>
of our strong points<lb/>
They have two quarterbacks<lb/>
(Yagiello and Murphy) who can<lb/>
really throw the football. A lot of<lb/>
points have been scored in our last<lb/>
two games and I expect the same<lb/>
will be true Saturday<lb/>
In last week's game against<lb/>
Texas-Arlington, Jeff Heath set two<lb/>
school records for field goals.<lb/>
Emory was quick to point out the<lb/>
importance of the support elements:<lb/>
the holder, the snapper and the rest<lb/>
of the offensive line.<lb/>
According to Emory, one person<lb/>
who has not gotten enough credit is<lb/>
snapper Whitley Wilkerson, who<lb/>
Emory said "would give anybody<lb/>
confidence<lb/>
"If there was such a thing as an<lb/>
All-American snapper, Whitley<lb/>
would be it responded Emory.<lb/>
"I've never seen the guy make a bad<lb/>
snap<lb/>
As much as the placekicker posi-<lb/>
tion has been solid all year, kickoff<lb/>
returns have not been a strong part<lb/>
of the Pirates' game all season.<lb/>
The loss of Jimmy Walden was<lb/>
felt as much in this area as at<lb/>
tailback. But Walden returned<lb/>
kickoffs against UTA, and ECU<lb/>
had some of its best field position of<lb/>
the entire season.<lb/>
"Jimmy's long return (44 yards)<lb/>
when we were up only 10 points in<lb/>
the second half may very well have<lb/>
been a turning point in the game<lb/>
said Emory.<lb/>
The Pirates will take 66 players to<lb/>
Williamsburg, and all who were<lb/>
here last year definitely remember<lb/>
the 1981 contest.<lb/>
"I believe our guys will remember<lb/>
that they cost us a winning season<lb/>
last year, something we had to live<lb/>
with for 12 long months com-<lb/>
mented Emory. "I believe we have<lb/>
the type of young men who are<lb/>
totally committed to a winning<lb/>
season and we can get that with a<lb/>
victory over William and Mary<lb/>
Photo By STANLEY LEAHY<lb/>
1982-83 ECU Men's Basketball Team<lb/>
Wyatt's Emergence Lifts Pirate Defense<lb/>
To the good fortune of ECU's<lb/>
defense, defensive end Curtis Wyatt<lb/>
has emerged at the right place at the<lb/>
tight time.<lb/>
Two weeks ago at West Virginia,<lb/>
Wyatt made a spectacular intercep-<lb/>
tion and raced 73 yards from ECU's<lb/>
own goal line, to the West Virginia<lb/>
27, to stop a Mountaineer scoring<lb/>
possibility. Wyatt referred to that as<lb/>
fulfilling a big fantasy.<lb/>
Last week against Texas-<lb/>
Arlington, Wyatt suddenly found<lb/>
himself in the starting lineup. And<lb/>
he took the opportunity to make big<lb/>
things happen.<lb/>
"I thought Curtis Wyatt did some<lb/>
line things for us noted coach Ed<lb/>
Emory. "It was nice to see him step<lb/>
right in ior Pegues and play so<lb/>
well<lb/>
Credited with nine hits, including<lb/>
a major quarterback sack of minus<lb/>
ten yards, one would have to say<lb/>
that Wyatt had a successful start.<lb/>
"Curtis is one of the most rapidly<lb/>
improving players on our team<lb/>
said defensive coordinator Norm<lb/>
Parker. "I would have to say that<lb/>
his forte is his great speed, combin-<lb/>
ed with his strength. He has a<lb/>
tendency to make the big play<lb/>
Against the Mavericks, Wyatt in-<lb/>
deed made one of those big plays.<lb/>
Just before the first half ended,<lb/>
UTA drove to the ECU seven yard<lb/>
line. With second down and goal,<lb/>
Wyatt burst through the offensive<lb/>
line to dump UTA quarterback<lb/>
Doyle Hightower for a big ten-yard<lb/>
loss. That play, coupled with a third<lb/>
down missed pass, resulted in UTA<lb/>
getting only three points instead of a<lb/>
possible seven.<lb/>
The 6-2, 215-pound native of<lb/>
Compton, CA, came to ECU by<lb/>
way of Long Beach Junior College.<lb/>
And even is just a reserve role until<lb/>
the UTA game, Wyatt had worked<lb/>
himself up to eighth on the overall<lb/>
ECU tackle list.<lb/>
"I personally feel that Wyatt<lb/>
might have been the steal of the<lb/>
1981-82 junior college crop noted<lb/>
Emory. After Christmas last year, I<lb/>
flew out to California and met Cur-<lb/>
tis and his family. I immediately saw<lb/>
that he was a young man of outstan-<lb/>
ding character who is aiming for<lb/>
high places in the world<lb/>
But Wyatt is putting only one<lb/>
thing first in his mind at present.<lb/>
 V-nf<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory And Snapper Whitle Wilkerson<lb/>
Harrison Cites<lb/>
Identity Crisis<lb/>
With the upcoming season just<lb/>
around the corner, new head coach<lb/>
Charlie Harrison has begun chisel-<lb/>
ing the ice away and attempting to<lb/>
warm up a team which is completely<lb/>
new to his style of coaching and<lb/>
system of play.<lb/>
Harrison is confronting several<lb/>
problems, but cited the major<lb/>
stipulation as being the lack of iden-<lb/>
tity the team has at this point.<lb/>
"We're just 12 guys out there prac-<lb/>
ticing right now he said, "but<lb/>
after we begin defining certain roles,<lb/>
our identity should emerge<lb/>
The head coach only has two<lb/>
seniors on the team this year, with<lb/>
four juniors, three sophomores and<lb/>
fouf'f reshmen making up this year's<lb/>
roster.<lb/>
Offensively, Harrison said the<lb/>
players must learn to respect the<lb/>
value of the basketball and treat it<lb/>
as a valuable possession.<lb/>
"Everybody wants to do the spec-<lb/>
tacular he said. "You don't win<lb/>
games by being flashy, you win<lb/>
them by being sound<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
"We just want to take one game<lb/>
at a time said Wyatt. "We are<lb/>
closer now than ever, and we all<lb/>
have dedicated ourselves to trying<lb/>
for a 7-4 season<lb/>
Two games remain, and if Wyatt<lb/>
continues to play as he has the last<lb/>
two weeks, he and his teammates<lb/>
are likely that 7-4 record as a reality.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Stop<lb/>
Canes In Exhibition<lb/>
The Lady Pirates scrimmaged<lb/>
against Louisburg College Tuesday<lb/>
night and blew the Hurricanes<lb/>
away, 68-54.<lb/>
According to head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi, the Bucs played well in<lb/>
spurts, but have a great deal more to<lb/>
work on before opening the season<lb/>
against Fayetteville State on Nov.<lb/>
22. "We're still not in shape she<lb/>
said. "At the end of the game where<lb/>
we were pulling away, we should<lb/>
have been a lot more in control of<lb/>
the game<lb/>
A true believer in a strong defen-<lb/>
sive game, Andruzzi was somewhat<lb/>
disappointed in the Pirates' execu-<lb/>
tion during the scrimmage. "We<lb/>
were opening the sidelines too<lb/>
much. We let them set the tempo in-<lb/>
stead of setting it ourselves<lb/>
Senior Lorraine Foster led the<lb/>
Pirates in scoring with 20 points.<lb/>
She also had seven assists. All-<lb/>
America candidate Mary Denkler<lb/>
popped in 18 points, while Loletha<lb/>
Harrison finished with 10.<lb/>
Freshman Sylvia Bragg scored nine<lb/>
points, and Darlene Chancy added<lb/>
six.<lb/>
Louisburg's Clara Faison was the<lb/>
Hurricanes' high scorer with 16<lb/>
points to her credit.<lb/>
n?to By OA?V PATTMSOM<lb/>
ECU's Lorraine Foster Takes A Jumpshot<lb/>
Harrison has especially been<lb/>
pleased with sophomore guard<lb/>
Barry Wright, a 6-5, 195-pound<lb/>
native of Portsmouth, Va. "Wright<lb/>
has been one of our most consistent<lb/>
players he said.<lb/>
And consistency is exactly what<lb/>
Harrison is looking for. "Our kids<lb/>
are gonna have to work at a consis-<lb/>
tent pattern he said. "We're just<lb/>
not consistent as this point<lb/>
On defense, Harrison said the<lb/>
team has a long ways to go. "We<lb/>
just don't complete the plays, and<lb/>
that includes rebounding he said.<lb/>
"If you can ever get a team to play<lb/>
defense for 20 seconds at a time,<lb/>
that's all you have to do.<lb/>
"We're not very big to begin<lb/>
with, but I believe rebounding is just<lb/>
going to get a loose ball. You have<lb/>
to realize how precious that ball is.<lb/>
"If you don't respect that ball,<lb/>
you're gonna give up lay-ups<lb/>
The Pirates open the season at<lb/>
Duke University and play five of the<lb/>
next seven ball games away, in-<lb/>
cluding bouts at N.C. State and<lb/>
Samford. "Our schedule is tough<lb/>
he said. "There's no doubt about<lb/>
that. Duke is talented but they're<lb/>
very young. Samford went 10-1 last<lb/>
year and we're playing them on their<lb/>
homecoming<lb/>
What about N.C. State? "We'll<lb/>
always have the chance to win any<lb/>
ball game Harrison said. "Maybe<lb/>
we'll beat State, maybe we won't.<lb/>
But I sure as hell want to be com-<lb/>
petitive when we go up there<lb/>
Harrison described himself as be-<lb/>
ing a coach who not only expects<lb/>
but demands the most out of his<lb/>
players. "Some of these kids have<lb/>
never been yelled at he said.<lb/>
"When I do yell at them,it's nothing<lb/>
personal. 1 just want them to be a<lb/>
better basketball player.<lb/>
"When I quit yelling, that's when<lb/>
they should be worried. I won't yell<lb/>
at anybody anymore if I don't think<lb/>
there's any reason to<lb/>
Point guard Tony Robinson aid<lb/>
he has a lot o respect for coach<lb/>
Harrison and returning guard Bruce<lb/>
Peartree had nothing but praise for<lb/>
his new coach. "Harrison is the type<lb/>
of coach that ECU students and<lb/>
fans hae been waiting for he<lb/>
said. "He is a er exciting coach<lb/>
and makes the team exciting to<lb/>
watch<lb/>
Harrison said he hopes the fans<lb/>
will be supportive this year. "The<lb/>
can come to the game and then go to<lb/>
the Elbo or Papa Katz or<lb/>
wherever he said. "If we could<lb/>
just get 20-percent o the student<lb/>
body to come out and watch, no<lb/>
team's gonna want to come in here.<lb/>
"If the fans come, our kids can<lb/>
refuse to play if there are people out<lb/>
there pulling for them<lb/>
Coach Harrison said he is tired of<lb/>
hearing that this is ACC countrv.<lb/>
"East Carolina is the third largest<lb/>
institution in this state he said.<lb/>
"I'm proud of that, and 1 would<lb/>
think others would take pride in<lb/>
that.<lb/>
? "What in the hell is everyone<lb/>
ashamed of? There is nothing more<lb/>
irritating to me than to see someone<lb/>
support L'NC-Chapel Hill more<lb/>
than they do ECU. It's just astoun-<lb/>
ding to me. I don't understand wh<lb/>
anyone would come to a school that<lb/>
they weren't willing to support<lb/>
Harrison said he felt like voung<lb/>
people today hae changed. "Thev<lb/>
are more soft and spoiled he said.<lb/>
"Not many kids are that hungry.<lb/>
"I grew up in a middle class home<lb/>
and I usually got what I wanted<lb/>
before I even asked, but 1 became<lb/>
competitive because of my leg<lb/>
(Harrison suffered from polio as a<lb/>
child).<lb/>
"When you're looked at dif-<lb/>
ferently in a group situtation. it<lb/>
makes you want to fight. You tr to<lb/>
live vicariously. When 1 see a kid<lb/>
that doesn't play hard, it makes me<lb/>
sick.<lb/>
"I always wanted to be an athlete<lb/>
but I couldn't. He has two legs, and<lb/>
it's not that I'm jealous. That's not<lb/>
it at all, but if he has what it takes,<lb/>
he should use it.<lb/>
"He has to have more than poten-<lb/>
tial because that means nothing<lb/>
more to me than he just hasn't done<lb/>
it yet<lb/>
Harrison said he wants his players<lb/>
to have more than memories, more<lb/>
than "ambiguous victories and<lb/>
vague defeats<lb/>
"I want him to be successful, and<lb/>
I want to have an effect on his life<lb/>
he said. I know my coaches have<lb/>
touched my life personally<lb/>
There's no doubt that Harrison<lb/>
has already begun to be an influen-<lb/>
tial person in the lives of 13 players<lb/>
and will continue to direct them<lb/>
toward one common goal ? to be<lb/>
the ultimate competitor.<lb/>
"They have to believe in<lb/>
themselves he said. "We've got to<lb/>
strive to get better in every game we<lb/>
play.<lb/>
"Success isn't gonna come over-<lb/>
night<lb/>
Wei<lb/>
B I M<lb/>
PKH<lb/>
Even ihoi<lb/>
this country<lb/>
voile I<lb/>
from the w<lb/>
ECL r.<lb/>
Daudson<lb/>
she<lb/>
look ai<lb/>
right he<lb/>
Da<lb/>
P i a<lb/>
'a-ev W :<lb/>
one '<lb/>
Sc<lb/>
$<lb/>
s<lb/>
' ll<lb/>
5<lb/>
?<lb/>
?M<lb/>
.1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057513_0009"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 11, 1982<lb/>
Weitzel One Of The Most Feared Hitters In The Country<lb/>
By TAMMY<lb/>
PARHAM<lb/>
K'l Sports Info<lb/>
Even though most of<lb/>
this country's powerful<lb/>
volleyball players come<lb/>
from the west coast,<lb/>
ECU head coach Lynn<lb/>
Davidson knows that<lb/>
she doesn't have to<lb/>
look any farther than<lb/>
right here in Greenville.<lb/>
Davidson considers<lb/>
L ady Pirate spiker<lb/>
Stacey Weitzel to be<lb/>
one of the strongest hit-<lb/>
ters in this area.<lb/>
"Stacey is one of the<lb/>
few players that I've<lb/>
seen who can hit<lb/>
through a block the<lb/>
coach explained. "I<lb/>
think she can probably<lb/>
hit as hard as the weast<lb/>
coast players<lb/>
During a 1981 Invita-<lb/>
tional at N.C. State, a<lb/>
study was taken on the<lb/>
efficiency of hitters.<lb/>
Weitzel's spike was<lb/>
clocked at more than 45<lb/>
m.p.h.<lb/>
"I like hitting a<lb/>
volleyball because it's<lb/>
just you putting the ball<lb/>
to the floor, not a bat<lb/>
or a racquet. That's a<lb/>
good feeling Weitzel<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Pirate captain is<lb/>
often referred to as the<lb/>
team's most feared hit-<lb/>
ter. "I'd rather be call-<lb/>
ed a feared hitter than<lb/>
just a power hitter,<lb/>
because it takes finesse<lb/>
and skill to put the ball<lb/>
down Weitzel com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
But the 5-9, Severna<lb/>
Park, MD native is not<lb/>
just a hitter.<lb/>
"Stacey is an all-<lb/>
around player. She<lb/>
does a good job in<lb/>
every facet of the<lb/>
game Davidson said.<lb/>
The coach considers<lb/>
Weitzel to be one of the<lb/>
most consistent servers<lb/>
on the team. "Her<lb/>
serve is not easy to<lb/>
return. She has good<lb/>
control on the ball and<lb/>
she places it well, too<lb/>
Although Weitzel's<lb/>
defensive and passing<lb/>
skills are not as strong<lb/>
as her offensive play,<lb/>
Davidson feels that<lb/>
Weitzel makes up the<lb/>
difference with her<lb/>
court intelligence.<lb/>
. "Stacey is a gifted<lb/>
athlete. She's a quick<lb/>
learner and very in-<lb/>
telligent player. That is<lb/>
why she has become<lb/>
one of our prominent<lb/>
players<lb/>
"I feel like I've final-<lb/>
ly become a complete<lb/>
player Wietzel said.<lb/>
"I've been working a<lb/>
lot harder this year. I<lb/>
feel like I'v come a long<lb/>
way<lb/>
As a freshman,<lb/>
Weitzel was named as<lb/>
the team's outstanding<lb/>
newcomer. Then, as a<lb/>
sophomore, she was<lb/>
named as the most<lb/>
outstanding offensive<lb/>
player when her role as<lb/>
a hitter became more<lb/>
important.<lb/>
But for the last two<lb/>
seasons, the senior has<lb/>
taken on a leadership<lb/>
position as the team<lb/>
captain. "The players<lb/>
look at her as a role<lb/>
model. That's a big<lb/>
responsibility David-<lb/>
son explained. "She's<lb/>
the type of player who<lb/>
makes her presence felt<lb/>
not only on the court<lb/>
but off the court too.<lb/>
That is why she was last<lb/>
year's most valuable<lb/>
player. She's a heart<lb/>
player<lb/>
Volleyball came to<lb/>
an end Wednesday for<lb/>
the Pirate standout,<lb/>
and Davidson must fill<lb/>
the empty spot, which<lb/>
will be difficult.<lb/>
"Stacey's position on<lb/>
the team is going to be<lb/>
hard to recruit for.<lb/>
We're losing her offen-<lb/>
sive power, her leader-<lb/>
ship and her ex-<lb/>
perience Davidson<lb/>
said. "She will definite-<lb/>
ly be missed<lb/>
es<lb/>
is<lb/>
r 1,11ison<lb/>
ueni t?m ' be<lb/>
heein<lb/>
gi" to<lb/>
.gari we<lb/>
1meiier-<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Open 11-8 MonFri.<lb/>
12 8 Sat. Sun.<lb/>
$1.99 DAILY<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
(plus drink and tax)<lb/>
of 1 meat &amp; 2 vegetables<lb/>
PILOT TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
FLY NAVY<lb/>
ie avy presently has several openings<lb/>
? r tne nost exciting and challenging<lb/>
b in the world - NAVY PILOT. If you<lb/>
: ify, we will guarantee you a seat in<lb/>
st prestigious flight school<lb/>
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i will fly the Navy's high performance<lb/>
Qualifications Are:<lb/>
Bachelors degree<lb/>
Less than 28 12 years old<lb/>
2020 uncorrected vision<lb/>
Excellent health<lb/>
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f you think you can qualify and would<lb/>
ike to earn a starting salary of<lb/>
. ,000 with $28,000 in four years,<lb/>
send a letter of qualifications to:<lb/>
NAVY PILOT PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
or call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
BSN CLASS OF<lb/>
B3<lb/>
The Air Force has a<lb/>
special program for<lb/>
BSNs. If selected,<lb/>
yon can enter active<lb/>
duty soon after gradu-<lb/>
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for the results of your<lb/>
State Boards. To quali-<lb/>
fy you must have an<lb/>
overall 3.0 CPA.<lb/>
After commissioning,<lb/>
you'll attend a five-<lb/>
month internship at a<lb/>
major Air Force facility.<lb/>
It's an excellent way to<lb/>
prepare for the wide<lb/>
range of experiences<lb/>
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For more information,<lb/>
contact:<lb/>
AIM HIGH<lb/>
?<lb/>
AH You Can Eat<lb/>
Seafood Bonanza<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday<lb/>
4-10:00 P.M.<lb/>
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?3<lb/>
The best 'izza<lb/>
?- in Town ? Honest r<lb/>
LUNCH BUFFET Mon thru Fri 11-2 only 2.89<lb/>
&amp; EVENING BUFFET Mon and Tues 5:30 8pm only 2.991<lb/>
SPAGHETTI Wed all you can eat Compare at only 2.25<lb/>
'<lb/>
z<lb/>
Your Choice of<lb/>
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Flounder<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
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Includes Beverage &amp; Tax<lb/>
and 2 Vegetables<lb/>
(14 to Choose From)<lb/>
$<lb/>
?1<lb/>
Ittl<lb/>
?AH new game room and game machines?<lb/>
P 'Drive up window for 'to go' orders.<lb/>
BIGSCREENTV<lb/>
"Enjoy the SOAPS with lunch or<lb/>
CURRENT MOVIES(PG) Sat 7pm 9pm<lb/>
ki? Open Mon Thurs 1130 a m 11pm<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. - 11.30a m 12pm<lb/>
300 E 10th St -<lb/>
Li. 758 6121 Si<lb/>
It's the fun<lb/>
place to eat.<lb/>
(<lb/>
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Sunday-<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
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SWEATS BY RUSSELL<lb/>
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OVER 15 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM: YELLOW,<lb/>
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BLUE, NAVY, GOLD, PURPLE, CARDINAL, KELLY,<lb/>
DARK GREEN, TURQUOISE, ROSE, ARMY GREEN,<lb/>
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ALL SWEAT PANTS - REG. $8.95<lb/>
ELASTIC WAIST WITH DRAWSTRING,<lb/>
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It's a<lb/>
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ALL CREWNECK SWEATSHIRTS - REG. $8.95 <lb/>
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$2.00 OFF WITHJTHIS COUPONi<lb/>
CUP THESE COUPONS FOR YOUR NEXT PURCHASE.<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES 111382<lb/>
"The Four Seasons<lb/>
in vites 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 the "TOAST'<lb/>
at 10:00<lb/>
"The Four Seasons"<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Lounge<lb/>
301 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
(Corner of 3rd St. &amp; Evans<lb/>
in basement of Minges Bldg.)<lb/>
752-5476<lb/>
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j<lb/>
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m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057513_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 11, 1982<lb/>
Volleyball Players<lb/>
Lose To Wolfpack<lb/>
By EDWARD<lb/>
NICKLAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"I know we outplayd<lb/>
them said ECU<lb/>
volleyball coach Lynn<lb/>
Davidson, reflection on<lb/>
last night's loss to N.C.<lb/>
State.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates,<lb/>
who were beaten 15-11,<lb/>
10-15, 15-12, 15-13, re-<lb/>
mained close the entire<lb/>
match, losing the last<lb/>
two games by a total of<lb/>
only five points.<lb/>
"When we were down<lb/>
in tight situations<lb/>
Davidson said, "we<lb/>
hung in there and kept<lb/>
fighting back She<lb/>
added, "State didn't<lb/>
play as well as they<lb/>
could, but I think it was<lb/>
because we did not let<lb/>
them<lb/>
According to David-<lb/>
son, the match could<lb/>
have easily turned out<lb/>
differently. She said,<lb/>
"We just couldn't get<lb/>
the breaks at the crucial<lb/>
points<lb/>
Despite the loss,<lb/>
Davidson paid tribute<lb/>
to her team's effort.<lb/>
"All of our kids played<lb/>
an exceptional match.<lb/>
Especially Dale La-<lb/>
vant<lb/>
The Lady Pirates,<lb/>
now 24-16, closed out<lb/>
their season Wednes-<lb/>
day night when they<lb/>
took on UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte and the<lb/>
University of South<lb/>
Carolina at Lancaster.<lb/>
CHAMPION OF THE SOAPS<lb/>
The first soap opera trivia contest turned out<lb/>
to be quite interesting as nine teams ended up<lb/>
competing for the title of "Champion of the<lb/>
Soaps In the preliminary rounds, teams com-<lb/>
peted against each other in three different<lb/>
heats. Teams showed much mental agony as<lb/>
they racked their brains to remember who was<lb/>
who and who did what when. The three teams<lb/>
to make the finals are: Marie Wells and Lynn<lb/>
Thornton; Celia Daniels and Karen Moore; and<lb/>
the only male team to enter, Elton Boney and<lb/>
Paul Sumrell. In the end, however, the real TV<lb/>
buffs and Soap Opera Trivia Champions were<lb/>
Marie Wells and Lynn Thornton.<lb/>
Records Broken<lb/>
Not only did the<lb/>
ECU swim team begin<lb/>
their season with a big<lb/>
win over James<lb/>
Madison Friday, but<lb/>
two varsity records<lb/>
were set as well.<lb/>
The women's 400<lb/>
medley relay team,<lb/>
which consists of<lb/>
Luanne Peura, Joanne<lb/>
McCulley, Kaky<lb/>
Wilson and Nan<lb/>
George, set a new<lb/>
school record with a<lb/>
time of 4:09.7, which is<lb/>
five seconds under the<lb/>
national standard and<lb/>
beat the old school<lb/>
record by more than<lb/>
two seconds.<lb/>
One of the members<lb/>
of the relay, Joanne<lb/>
McCulley, also set a<lb/>
varsity record in the<lb/>
100 breaststroke.<lb/>
"The James<lb/>
Madison meet was a<lb/>
fantastic win for us<lb/>
said Pirate head coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe. "Last year<lb/>
the men only beat them<lb/>
by six points, but this<lb/>
year they won by 20<lb/>
points<lb/>
Besides the two varsi-<lb/>
ty records, a number of<lb/>
national cut times were<lb/>
bettered during the<lb/>
meet. Both the 400<lb/>
freestyle and and 400<lb/>
medley teams surpassed<lb/>
the cuts.<lb/>
Individually, Nan<lb/>
George ? 50 and 100<lb/>
breaststroke, Kaky<lb/>
Wilson ? 100 fly and<lb/>
100 breaststroke,<lb/>
Joanne McCulley ?<lb/>
100 breaststroke, Nan-<lb/>
cy James ? 100<lb/>
freestyle and Nancy<lb/>
Ludwig ? 200 IM,<lb/>
were able to post times<lb/>
better than the national<lb/>
cuts.<lb/>
CROWNING OF THE SWINGERS<lb/>
Intramural tennis finally came to an end as<lb/>
the final game in the men's independent divi-<lb/>
sion was played.<lb/>
Overall, 95 people participated in the event<lb/>
this year. Winners were: LoraLee Linquist ?<lb/>
women's intermediate; DeAnna Morris ?<lb/>
women's open; Geoff Kokiko ? men's open;<lb/>
and Tom Kiehl ? men's intermediate.<lb/>
FINALE SET<lb/>
The intramural co-rec flag football finals will<lb/>
be played Thursday, Nov. 11 at 6:00. Several<lb/>
teams still remain but Bod-Squad and Third<lb/>
Regiment appear to be the spectators' picks for<lb/>
the final game.<lb/>
DAVE WEBER WATCH OUT<lb/>
After three weeks of competiton, intramural<lb/>
bowlers are still smashing the pins. Just for the<lb/>
record, the defending champs, Alley Katz are<lb/>
ranked No. 1 in the men's independent division<lb/>
while Kappa Sigma and Jones Tin Pins round<lb/>
out the top slot for the fraternity and residence<lb/>
hall divisions respectively.<lb/>
SOCCER PLAYOFFS BEGIN<lb/>
The regular season of intramural soccer is<lb/>
almost over, with the playoffs drawing near.<lb/>
The finalized times on Nov. 15 and 16, which<lb/>
are used as make-up days for rainouts are<lb/>
posted. Playoff drawsheets will be up Wednes-<lb/>
day morning with playoffs beginning Wednes-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
BUMP PLUS SET EQUALS CO-REC<lb/>
SMASH<lb/>
Co-rec volleyball got off to a smashing start<lb/>
on Nov. 1. Games are played at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum from 8:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Monday-<lb/>
Thursday. Playoffs will begin Nov. 23 and<lb/>
finish after Thanksgiving break on Nov. 29th<lb/>
and 30th.<lb/>
RACQUETBALL TOURNAMENT SET<lb/>
The times and pairings for the racquetball<lb/>
singles tournament have been set. Play will con-<lb/>
tinue for the next week and a half, with the<lb/>
finals scheduled for Nov. 22.<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center, located in<lb/>
113 Memorial Gym, is providing an opportuni-<lb/>
ty for everyone to go horseback riding with<lb/>
Sneaker Sam. Transportation is provided for<lb/>
the Monday and Thursday afternoon trips,<lb/>
which leave the gym at 3:40 p.m. and return at<lb/>
5:30 p.m. The rates are $5.00 per hour, and due<lb/>
by 2:30 p.m. on Monday and 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday for the Thursday trip.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
MIL A MO MBLL.O HOM ALL<lb/>
the smutts oucs in the<lb/>
LAB (MA, CMrK ane Susie tee).<lb/>
An a wary Haaj Ma-a nnnn<lb/>
tog front mm. Bnieyed wr vaca-<lb/>
Men Mi Joa-ejH? las miimi<lb/>
Map Nm ala green Down to still<lb/>
cruising. Leaks Uka Ma ??<lb/>
will aaaa ? taw ?art a Mil Lava<lb/>
ya mm than Keuacnrome. Yea,<lb/>
G.f?. Is ate up wit it. Sac ya on<lb/>
Hill Straat.<lb/>
MIKQMIWC.<lb/>
HCV HCNOI: DUMP! Was it<lb/>
ceMT Lav ya, H.r? C.P. O.H.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at Man. Reasonable rates;<lb/>
m-Mat.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typingservice-<lb/>
a-perianca quality work. IBM<lb/>
typewriter. Call Laala Shiva.<lb/>
gJHg ar Oall Jeiuer gMRfA<lb/>
TYPINO TEAM papers.<lb/>
ate Can 7SJ-47U.<lb/>
WE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
?UV PLAYBOY, Belling<lb/>
Ma?, Ouicatltver Record<lb/>
EuftMMja. it Bast FRtk St.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
HELP WANTED EARN tra<lb/>
travel andextra taaay ascampus<lb/>
representative far student travel-<lb/>
Call Mm at 417-m-tSss daily<lb/>
417-S4S-MM.<lb/>
HAND CRAFTED, rastie fur<lb/>
eitwre at afterOaale stuUent<lb/>
prices. For more iufomaatieu, can<lb/>
Kias at 7SJ-S717. <lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
TYPING: MANUSCRIPTS,<lb/>
papers, thesis. raaieaaMe rates.<lb/>
Call 7S4-J7ML<lb/>
li YEARS TYPING<lb/>
rates, spaaing, punctuation and<lb/>
trimmer corrections ere-<lb/>
ef reaping Cindy t ?m. p.m<lb/>
3SS-M4A.<lb/>
CRAZY ZACK S ROAOTRIP Nov.<lb/>
I SW inc ludas reaad trip to Zacfcs<lb/>
and laliashmanli an the way to<lb/>
Rate. Half-price admission to<lb/>
Zack's. Call Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
gjEjj halers Nov. it<lb/>
THERE WILL BE aa Ending<lb/>
Warld Hunger Briefing en<lb/>
November uth and a fast an the<lb/>
lttli. Far more details call Jen<lb/>
niter at 3S5-4SSS.<lb/>
WANT TO HAVE FUN AND STAY<lb/>
IN SHAPE at the same time?<lb/>
Then he at the Meadanhall patie at<lb/>
f:M p.m. on Taesday and<lb/>
Tharsdays.<lb/>
ECU FACULTY MEMBER seeks<lb/>
mature housemate ta share<lb/>
1 bedroom house two blacks from<lb/>
campus. Own roam and bank- Rant<lb/>
HMmontti plus shared utilities.<lb/>
Available front 1 January Far in-<lb/>
formation, write ta: 3M1 "O"<lb/>
Street N.W. Wasbinntea, O.C.<lb/>
7. FISHER SPEAKERS ml del SMs<lb/>
lake to trade far cassette<lb/>
Can 7J4-?77 ar The East<lb/>
Carotiaiaa 7S7-SM4 and leave<lb/>
THE FAST IS NEXT WEEK<lb/>
SEE the announcements on pane<lb/>
two for moe details.<lb/>
FOR SALE: l?7l HONDA ?? XL<lb/>
DIRT OR STREET BIKE. Call<lb/>
nmajaj man Thar.<lb/>
NICE CRAY AND WHITE RAB-<lb/>
BIT FUR JACKET FOR SALE $M<lb/>
CALL WMgjL<lb/>
WATERBEDS and heddaaa- one<lb/>
half off! DON'T pay retail! We<lb/>
have complete waterbeds as tow<lb/>
as Slet.tS. Also bedding sets as law<lb/>
as $7?.?S. came by Factory Mat<lb/>
tress and Waterbed Outlet 7M<lb/>
GreeaviHe Blvd. next to Sweet<lb/>
Caroftnes. 3S5-7AM-<lb/>
TWO GRE PREPARATION beaks<lb/>
and one mat book lor sale T?-eo7.7<lb/>
FOR SALE: 11 Caachman<lb/>
31-foot trailer, excellent condition<lb/>
All gas appliances, underpinned<lb/>
avn. utilities S25. storms. Avail<lb/>
Jan 1st price S2SW. Great for stu<lb/>
dent call 7?-2S2 or l-?34-04J7 aft<lb/>
.<lb/>
FOR SALE IWS CHEVY IM<lb/>
PALA. For more info, call<lb/>
ISAdRSB.<lb/>
missm<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM?<lb/>
NEED INFORMATION?<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention,<lb/>
24 HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
312 E. 10th Street<lb/>
758-HELP Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
v<lb/>
?&amp;m<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
TRIM YOUR FIGURE<lb/>
YOUR BEST<lb/>
LOOK, INC.<lb/>
355 W4?<lb/>
Lose 12-IS Pounds in 3 Weeks<lb/>
Programs for Men A Women<lb/>
? Medical Weight Control ?<lb/>
Nutritional Counseling<lb/>
SKIN CARE<lb/>
Individual Skin Analysis<lb/>
Deep Pore Cleansing<lb/>
Face A Body Waxing<lb/>
Manicures and Pedicures<lb/>
Complimentary Consultation<lb/>
Check phone book for<lb/>
discount coupon.<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN AJOaTTION: a difficult decl-<lb/>
DEPENDON. sion that's mode easier by<lb/>
the women of the Fleming Center. Counselors are<lb/>
available day and night to support and under-<lb/>
stand you. Your safety, comfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured by the caring staff of the Homing Center.<lb/>
SERVICES: ? Tuesday ? Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1 st 8c 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? All Inclusive Fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 781-5550 DAY Oft NIGHT ?<lb/>
Health care, counseling TUP FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
and education for wo<lb/>
men of all ages.<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Dine in or Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
HOT OVEN SUBS.<lb/>
Lasagne. Spaghetti, Hambuigen<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 2 - Close I99<lb/>
Pitcher 4Se Mugs<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
ALL SMALL SUBS<lb/>
NOT FOR la<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
LET'S MAKE<lb/>
A<lb/>
DEAL.<lb/>
ON<lb/>
tOpr<lb/>
SHIRTS &amp; SWEATERS<lb/>
AVDEN GOLF &amp; CX. 746-3389<lb/>
758-5982<lb/>
2704 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758-1033<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Automotive Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
Jartran Rentals Available<lb/>
The Gifts Students. Faculty, Families<lb/>
And Friends will all enjoy!<lb/>
Praised by all reviews and readers!<lb/>
The Hell You Say<lb/>
By Charles Edwards (ECTC '35)<lb/>
Best quality hardback Illustrated<lb/>
Autographed Available at Student Store and<lb/>
Book Barn (12.95) or (13.95) Mailed<lb/>
anywhere from:<lb/>
Old Sparta Press Box 6363, Raliegh, NC<lb/>
27628 Third printing in first year!<lb/>
Fun stories including ECTC ECC &amp; ECU<lb/>
and others you'll know or wish you had.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM IJ-U<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
SltS.OO Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem Pregnan-<lb/>
cy Counseling. For further infor-<lb/>
mation call S32-0S3S (Toll Free<lb/>
Number esO-211 Mae) between t<lb/>
A.M. and 5 P.M. Weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
f 17 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N. C.<lb/>
Student 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/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
8a.m5p.m.<lb/>
524-5485<lb/>
$3<lb/>
00<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
On Any Large Pizza With<lb/>
Two Or More Topping<lb/>
Expires November 30. 1982<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
703 E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
(New K Mart)<lb/>
PHONE 756-9600<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
SAVE BIG BUCKS ON<lb/>
ONE OF A KINDS<lb/>
LAST YEAR'S<lb/>
MODELS-DEMOS<lb/>
6302 6L, Trim Car Sneakers $75.00<lb/>
AIWA-<lb/>
HSPiY<lb/>
7 Band 3 Watt Graphic<lb/>
rtiio.ao<lb/>
?203 6V? Con Car Sneakers S5 00<lb/>
P<lb/>
7111 la Deeh AM FM Caaaette<lb/>
Dole Aato Bee $219 00<lb/>
AD 3200 Hoaae Caaaetti Delbv B ft<lb/>
C (240.00<lb/>
ADRSO01 Hoca CeaestU Dolby<lb/>
Auto Reverse $325 00<lb/>
Walt ? an Player at Phone $109 00<lb/>
AUDIO CONTROL 1X52<lb/>
$9900<lb/>
Hmi Equalizer<lb/>
JUNIOR EXECS<lb/>
ENJOY YOUR J06 AND SPARE TIME TOO<lb/>
SALARY<lb/>
Starts $17,200 - $24,100 increasing<lb/>
annually to $28,600 - $44,800 in four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
8<lb/>
A11F1CATI0HS<lb/>
ollege grads, all degrees and degree<lb/>
levels considered. Recent grads looking<lb/>
for first job as well as those<lb/>
contemplating a job change (under age<lb/>
34) are encouraged to apply. Required<lb/>
to pass nental and physical exams.<lb/>
BENEFITS<lb/>
Club benefits including 18 hole golf<lb/>
courses, swimming pools, beaches,<lb/>
sailing and flying clubs. Full medical.<lb/>
dental, unlimited sick leave. 30 days<lb/>
annual paid vacation, post grad<lb/>
education programs and retirement in 20<lb/>
years!<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
"Positions are still available in the<lb/>
following areas: Management (technical<lb/>
and non-technical). Engineering,<lb/>
Nuclear, Teaching, Intelligence,<lb/>
Aviation Management, Diving, Pilots,<lb/>
Finance, Personnel Management.<lb/>
LOCATION<lb/>
Immediate openings on both coasts and<lb/>
the Gulf of Mexico - He pay relocation<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
?AVY OFFICER PMKnHS<lb/>
1001 atvaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh. K 27W9<lb/>
Call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
ar Landing Seafood;<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
vVv<lb/>
HEALTH PROFESSIONS<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
If you're planning a career I<lb/>
medicine you owe It to yourself 1<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/>
osteopathlc school.<lb/>
Our scholarships Include:<lb/>
Tuition<lb/>
Require Books<lb/>
Required Lab Fees<lb/>
Required Equipment Rental<lb/>
and More Than $550 Monthly Stlpenc<lb/>
USAF Heanh Priliialiai ?1-7SS-4134<lb/>
1 "i tv i rtiTiinvr c Trrrr<lb/>
105 Airport Road Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
i:<lb/>
!<lb/>
I<lb/>
 <lb/>
' <lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EATjJ<lb/>
V5 <lb/>
Or Combination of Any 2<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
Flounder 3 C9<lb/>
TrOUt only J<lb/>
I ujitti Frnjnjdi Ftfoo Or<lb/>
Potato. Coin<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
L.<lb/>
Sunday rhniThuraday llJtA.nl. -MP M.<lb/>
Fitoeyanq Saturday 11:H A.M. to toM P.M<lb/>
1? Airport Rood GroonviHo, M.C.<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Ha'MfMkntlw<lb/>
Oft, So COM oy oVtO oUry Hollo.<lb/>
ACCOM-<lb/>
caowN-<lb/>
JENSEN<lb/>
JVC-<lb/>
GFA-i 100 Watts Per Ch Pover Aaap<lb/>
? 320 00<lb/>
GFPPreaomp3O0 0O<lb/>
CSC9S0 AM FM Caaaette Portable<lb/>
$240 00<lb/>
L-150A Toena 2 12" 3 Way Home<lb/>
Speaker. 1525 00 e?<lb/>
R-133 Tower 2-10 3 Way Home<lb/>
vw .a- v<lb/>
'vvvv<lb/>
Bortquot FocHltioo Avoilable 758-0327<lb/>
BobHorring,<lb/>
KENWOOD-<lb/>
SONV-<lb/>
ONKYO-<lb/>
RE-425 FM Caaaitte In Daaa Auto<lb/>
Reverse Doibe $27 00<lb/>
RE 518 Digital Caaaette Do I bv<lb/>
A?toRe?er??SN5 00<lb/>
KD-D4 Home Caaaette Dolby<lb/>
Specteopenck Ind $255 00<lb/>
KO-D3 Home Caaaette Doibs Music<lb/>
Scan $175 00<lb/>
RC-M60 FM Caaaette Portable 6 ?,<lb/>
Spa. $197 00<lb/>
RX-40 40 Warts Per Ch Eq.M FM<lb/>
Receiver $250 00<lb/>
KT-tlSAM FM Teaser $175 00<lb/>
KR 730 AM FM Receiver S4 Watts<lb/>
$249 00<lb/>
PS-LX4 Quartz Direct Drive Aato<lb/>
Return Turntable159 00<lb/>
TC-FX5 Caaaette Deck DoHh 2<lb/>
Motor $210 00<lb/>
PSFL5 Drawer Direct Drtve Tnm-<lb/>
taMeStM.OO<lb/>
STKUX3 SS Wotta Per Ch. Recetvet<lb/>
$225.00<lb/>
CP1260F FulK Auto Turntable<lb/>
?2S7.M<lb/>
TX 20 FM Receiver 30 Watts Per Ch<lb/>
$249 00<lb/>
AH Atari Video Carts $20 00<lb/>
FIRST COME-FIRST GETS<lb/>
Open Night!?TU 8:00<lb/>
.aW - Jk ?<lb/>
Troao SfPhooo 754-2293<lb/>
Sea-en Snun Saaaa<lb/>
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