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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057520_0001"/>
Bhz<lb/>
(Earolmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tuesday, December 7, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Chairman Of Trustees Steps Down From Post<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU Pholo<lb/>
Futrell Stepping Down<lb/>
Unanimous Vote Gives $600<lb/>
ByGREGRIDEOUT<lb/>
Ashley B. 1 utrell. Chairman of<lb/>
the ECU Board o Trustees since<lb/>
August of 1981, resigned from his<lb/>
post Saturday, citing personal<lb/>
reasons tor his decision. C. Ralph<lb/>
Kinsey, the ice chairman, was<lb/>
automatical!) appointed to fill the<lb/>
remainder ol Futrell's term, which<lb/>
expires June 30, 1983.<lb/>
Futrell has been a trustee since<lb/>
1969. when Gov. Bob Scott ap-<lb/>
pointed him to fill a vacancy. He<lb/>
was reelected chairman in August of<lb/>
1982.<lb/>
"The future of East Carolina is<lb/>
important to all oi us futrell said<lb/>
in tendering his resignation. "If we<lb/>
must fight for recognition, then let<lb/>
us be ready to do battle. The<lb/>
greatness we see ahead will only be<lb/>
stilled by the lack of greatness in the<lb/>
hearts of those in command. As you<lb/>
bleed purple and sweat gold, let<lb/>
each drop be an element of<lb/>
challenge and not a token of ac-<lb/>
complishment<lb/>
Futrell was himself at the head of<lb/>
this battle for recognition. In 1964<lb/>
he was elected to the North Carolina<lb/>
State Senate, and during his six year<lb/>
stay there, he fought a number of<lb/>
wars for ECU. Among them were<lb/>
the creation of the medical school<lb/>
and the seeking of university status<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
In 1969 Gov. Bob Scott offered<lb/>
Futrell a seat on the N.C. Board of<lb/>
Education, which he declined. But<lb/>
when a seat on ECU's Board of<lb/>
Trustees opened up, he accepted.<lb/>
Futrell, who is publisher of the<lb/>
Washington Daily News, was in-<lb/>
strumental in the university's search<lb/>
for a new chancellor following Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer's resignation in<lb/>
September of 1981. He supported<lb/>
Dr. John Howell's appointment to<lb/>
the chancellorship last January.<lb/>
"As I look back over almost 14<lb/>
years Futrell said, "there have<lb/>
been ups and downs, many happy<lb/>
moments and some trying ones, but<lb/>
there have been tew dull ones<lb/>
futrell's resignation was accepted<lb/>
by the board oi trustees, and a mo-<lb/>
tion was passed to "express deep ap-<lb/>
preciation to Mr. Futrell for his<lb/>
many years of service to Fast<lb/>
Carolina University and the board<lb/>
of trustees<lb/>
The new chairman, C. Ralph<lb/>
Kinsey. is a Charlotte attorney and a<lb/>
1964 graduate of ECU. He was a<lb/>
member of the board from 1972-73,<lb/>
and has been serving his present<lb/>
term since 1978.<lb/>
Kinsey praised futrell tor his<lb/>
"exemplary service" to the universi-<lb/>
ty. "Ashley Futrell has been a<lb/>
devoted missionary and spokesman<lb/>
for this university and its mission to<lb/>
serve the people<lb/>
Futrell said yesterday that he<lb/>
wished Kinsey well and cautioned<lb/>
him that there is still a lot left to be<lb/>
done at ECU. Futrell said the<lb/>
university has too often been the<lb/>
target of unwarranted criticism and<lb/>
that it has the potential tor<lb/>
greatness.<lb/>
futrell expects the board to re-<lb/>
appoint Kinsey when his term ends<lb/>
in June.<lb/>
Chancellor John M Howell<lb/>
thanked futrell tor the great deal ot<lb/>
support he had given him since<lb/>
becoming chancellor "I regret his<lb/>
leaving he said.<lb/>
A motion by trustee C lifton<lb/>
Moore was passed moving lames H<lb/>
Maynard to the position ol vice<lb/>
chairman. Maynard is a Raleigh<lb/>
resident and president and chairman<lb/>
ol the board ol Golden (<lb/>
Corp. Mavnard is a 1965 gradt<lb/>
ot ECU.<lb/>
SGA Funds Escort Service<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Muff Wrilrr<lb/>
The SGA cleared the wa tor a<lb/>
new campus escort service called<lb/>
"Pirate Walk" to begin on schedule<lb/>
this January.<lb/>
In a unanimous vote, the SGA<lb/>
voted to appropriate S6X) in initial<lb/>
funds, requested b the Student<lb/>
Resident Life Association, to begin<lb/>
the project.<lb/>
Atter hearing a descriptive over-<lb/>
view ol the proposal bv SRA Escort<lb/>
Committee head Paul Sumreil and a<lb/>
recommendation ol the protect b<lb/>
SGA President Eric Henderson, the<lb/>
appropriations request tor "the<lb/>
SGA-SRA escort service" was in-<lb/>
troduced on the Moor by legislator<lb/>
John Greer and quieklv won ap-<lb/>
proval. Henderson and Sumreil<lb/>
have boih been active in the pnic(<lb/>
from its inception. The othei<lb/>
members of the SRA Escortom-<lb/>
mittee and SRA President Iot<lb/>
Russo have also worked deligentl)<lb/>
on the project.<lb/>
Essentially Pirate Walk is to pro-<lb/>
vide an atter dark escort service to<lb/>
students walking from one on-<lb/>
campus location to another. Sumreil<lb/>
also noted that off-campus sorority<lb/>
houses would be included in the ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
Sumreil said that Pirate Walk,<lb/>
which is scheduled to begin Jan. 17,<lb/>
the week after spring classes begin,<lb/>
will be coordinated through a<lb/>
special telephone line which pro-<lb/>
spective escortees would use.<lb/>
Sumreil said the group had re-<lb/>
quested the number 757-WALK,<lb/>
but they still weren't sure if it was<lb/>
available.<lb/>
"We're dividing the campus into<lb/>
regions Sumreil said. Each region<lb/>
will have a central location. "The<lb/>
shortest time it's going to take for<lb/>
the escort to get to the girl is our<lb/>
mam concern Sumreil added. The<lb/>
three locations will be West Cam-<lb/>
pus. Central Campus, and College<lb/>
Hill. Sumreil also added that all of<lb/>
the women's and co-ed dorms<lb/>
would each have a dorm coor-<lb/>
dinator who would hei'p in the<lb/>
dispatching Ot escorts.<lb/>
ccording to Sumreil, all potental<lb/>
irters would go through a securi-<lb/>
ty check thai included being checked<lb/>
out bv the State Bureau ot ln-<lb/>
vestigatu �n r ;omputer tiles.<lb/>
Attei a ival, the escorter<lb/>
would be pui on a permanent time<lb/>
schedule, and issued an "escort<lb/>
badge" which they would be re-<lb/>
quired to show betore the escort<lb/>
began. A person using the special<lb/>
phone numbei would be told in ad-<lb/>
vance the name of the escorter who<lb/>
was assigned to the walk. The<lb/>
escorter would also be required to<lb/>
check back with the special operator<lb/>
after the escort is completed.<lb/>
In his address to the SGA,<lb/>
Henderson said that Pirate Walk<lb/>
was a modified version of a similar<lb/>
service being provided at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. He pointed out room<lb/>
224 in Mendenhall would probably<lb/>
be used as the headquarters for the<lb/>
new service.<lb/>
The S600 appropriation will be<lb/>
used for several purposes. Approx-<lb/>
imately SI00 would be needed for<lb/>
phone installation. Additional<lb/>
funds would be provided to fund<lb/>
three staff positions for director,<lb/>
assistant director and<lb/>
secretarytreasurer. The Pirate<lb/>
Walk director will receive SlOO per<lb/>
semester while the assitant directoi<lb/>
and secretarytreasurer will get $75<lb/>
each per semester.<lb/>
Sumreil said that because of the<lb/>
small salary they would be looking<lb/>
for people who felt a strong per-<lb/>
sonal dedication to the project.<lb/>
Other funds will also be needed for<lb/>
a major promotional campaign<lb/>
which will begin during the first<lb/>
week of the spring semester. Accor-<lb/>
See SGA. Page 5<lb/>
SRA Kscort C ommittee head Paul Sumreil Biex fln -  "o�� �� Stanley leabv<lb/>
of Ihe SC.A I he leK.sla.�rs -ppropri.led funding Jr.h� " CamPUS 'dt �  service to members<lb/>
inJanuarv. m ��� �he service b a unanimouv w ik . . <lb/>
�aiuinous vote. I nv-sstem is set to begin<lb/>
Law Board Approves Charns<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NUii -4�M MM�3<lb/>
uncer-<lb/>
iX'lron<lb/>
Motor Vehicles Division Lists<lb/>
Names For Draft Registration<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Slgff Wnlrr<lb/>
Ihe North Carolina Division ot<lb/>
Motor Vehicles has agreed to supply<lb/>
the Selective Service System with<lb/>
close to a quarter million names of<lb/>
North Carolina men between the<lb/>
ages ol IK and 22 to aid the SSS in<lb/>
their efforts to identify men who<lb/>
have failed to register for the<lb/>
military draft.<lb/>
According to the department's<lb/>
deputy commissioner, Bill Perry,<lb/>
the state's driver license file is a<lb/>
"complete public record" and was<lb/>
made available to the SSS at their<lb/>
request.<lb/>
"They (SSS) are paying us $4,000<lb/>
for this information Perry told<lb/>
The Last Carolinian during a<lb/>
telephone interview from his<lb/>
Raleigh office. The $4,000 payment<lb/>
was for the purpose of recouping<lb/>
the cost to the NC-DMV of process-<lb/>
ing the names on their computers.<lb/>
Babara Mann, a counselor with<lb/>
the Raleigh-based Draft Informa-<lb/>
tion Service which provides counsel-<lb/>
ing for draft-age men, said she saw<lb/>
no illegalities involved in the NC-<lb/>
DMV decision, but that she was<lb/>
"dismayed" by it.<lb/>
"We're dismayed that this is go<lb/>
ing to be done, especially with the<lb/>
current status of litigation related to<lb/>
draft registration Mann said.<lb/>
She was referring to last month's<lb/>
District Court case in California<lb/>
which declared former President<lb/>
Carter's 1980 draft registration law<lb/>
invalid on technical grounds. The<lb/>
California judge, Terry Hatten Jr<lb/>
also dismissed failure-to-register<lb/>
charges against David Wayte on the<lb/>
grounds that the federal government<lb/>
had selectively prosecuted him.<lb/>
Perry noted that the transfer of<lb/>
names to the SSS was completed this<lb/>
weekend. He added that the deci-<lb/>
sion to comply with the SSS request<lb/>
was made personally by N.C. Com-<lb/>
missioner of Motor Vehicles R.W.<lb/>
Wilkins.<lb/>
Mann believes that the NC-DMV<lb/>
decision to supply the names to SSS<lb/>
will put "even more pressure" on<lb/>
the individuals who are undecided<lb/>
about registration and those who<lb/>
conscientiously have chosen not to<lb/>
register. D1S is opposed to both<lb/>
draft registration and the military<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
Dean Bearden Appointed To<lb/>
Newly-Created Position As<lb/>
Assistant To The Chancellor<lb/>
By (,RK(. HIDEOUT<lb/>
Nf tdilor<lb/>
ECU School of Business Dean<lb/>
James Bearden was named yester-<lb/>
day to the newly-created post of<lb/>
assistant to the chancellor for public<lb/>
service, according to Chancellor<lb/>
John M. How ell. Bearden, who is<lb/>
stepping down as dean to assume<lb/>
the role of director of the Branch<lb/>
Banking and Trust Company Center<lb/>
for Management and Development,<lb/>
will begin work at his additional<lb/>
position immediately.<lb/>
The new job was suggested to the<lb/>
administration by the Southern<lb/>
Association of Colleges and Schools<lb/>
during a visit this fall. The associa-<lb/>
tion was here for reaccredidation of<lb/>
the univerisity.<lb/>
Bearden's new role will involve<lb/>
coordinating the activities of ECU's<lb/>
public service programs, such as the<lb/>
Regional Development Center and<lb/>
the Institute for Coastal and Marine<lb/>
Resources.<lb/>
Howell said that before the new<lb/>
position was created, public service<lb/>
projects were under two separate<lb/>
departments � Institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement and Planning, and<lb/>
Academic Affairs.<lb/>
Bearden, who is out of town, was<lb/>
unavailable for comment. His office<lb/>
confirmed the appointment.<lb/>
Bearden has been on the ECU<lb/>
faculty since 1959 and became dean<lb/>
of the business school in 1968. He<lb/>
will assume the directorship of the<lb/>
management center fulltime in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
ECU NIWS IU1EAU Photo<lb/>
Bearden To Fill New Post<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEII f<lb/>
SI.ft Wriler<lb/>
UNC law school graduate Mex<lb/>
C harns has been granted a license to<lb/>
practice law in North Carolina en<lb/>
ding a six month period ol<lb/>
tainty and struggle tor the<lb/>
native.<lb/>
The N.C. Board of La <lb/>
aminers V ednesdav rev�r<lb/>
� , " ,tc'scu an<lb/>
earlier decision by three ot<lb/>
members and ruled that Charns was<lb/>
morally fit to practice law.<lb/>
Charns, 26. who spent approx-<lb/>
imately 2 weeks in federal prison<lb/>
last summer for a civil disobedience<lb/>
conviction, was initially denied his<lb/>
license by a three-member morals<lb/>
panal which found that he didn't<lb/>
possess the "character and general<lb/>
fitness requisite for an attorney<lb/>
The panel originally said that<lb/>
Charns did not have the moral<lb/>
character needed "to be entitled to<lb/>
the high regard and confidence of<lb/>
the public<lb/>
"I feel ecstatic Charns said<lb/>
minutes after receiving the news of<lb/>
the board's reversal. "It's been six<lb/>
long months<lb/>
Charns was arrested along with<lb/>
three other students last March 27<lb/>
for "impeding traffic" during a<lb/>
demonstration at fort Bragg<lb/>
military base in Fayetteville, N.C.<lb/>
He was protesting the training of<lb/>
1000 El Salvadorean soldiers in the<lb/>
United States who were then being<lb/>
trained at the base.<lb/>
"I followed my conscience and<lb/>
took a stand against what my coun-<lb/>
try is doing in El Salvador Charns<lb/>
told The East Carolinian in an Oc-<lb/>
tober interview when he first receiv-<lb/>
ed news of his denial.<lb/>
During the waiting period for<lb/>
Wednesday's appeal to the full<lb/>
board, Charns' case gained<lb/>
statewide attention as numerous<lb/>
newspapers throughout the state<lb/>
gave him editorial support.<lb/>
Kenneth S. Broun, dean of the<lb/>
UNC law school, and former ECU<lb/>
Catholic chaplain Father Charles<lb/>
MulHolland were two of the six<lb/>
people who gave character witness<lb/>
testimony in Charns' behalf during<lb/>
the three hour closed hearing.<lb/>
Charns himself also took the stand.<lb/>
In its concluding notice to Charns<lb/>
the board said it was satisfied that<lb/>
Charns did possess "good moral<lb/>
character and that he is entitled to<lb/>
the high regard and confidence of<lb/>
the public and possesses the<lb/>
qualifications of character and<lb/>
general fitness requisite for any at-<lb/>
law m the<lb/>
torne and counselor ol<lb/>
state ol North Carolina '<lb/>
Robert S. Mahler, an attornev<lb/>
who works with Charns m tne<lb/>
Durham law offices ot Loflin and<lb/>
ofun and represented him m the<lb/>
hearing, said that the hearins<lb/>
ell and Ale answered hi<lb/>
lions well<lb/>
"I don't think there was anv<lb/>
d'Pute at all about his moral fitness<lb/>
Man<lb/>
ei �.i i<lb/>
to be a lawver<lb/>
the hearing<lb/>
"The tull hoard realized<lb/>
three-member panel had m ega<lb/>
justification tor denying<lb/>
C harns said<lb/>
me.<lb/>
went<lb/>
ques-<lb/>
ts hams said he is<lb/>
terested in pra<lb/>
civil rights law tor<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
espev ta  �<lb/>
enm<lb/>
�<lb/>
due<lb/>
Campus Studs Highlight<lb/>
New Buccaneer Calendar<lb/>
very sexy.<lb/>
That's how u ��<lb/>
Buccaneer editor L<lb/>
Coleman describee ,k <lb/>
ri- rr.068 the Men of ECU<lb/>
isa<lb/>
Calendar which will hi.<lb/>
D. 13. "I think ,h Campus on<lb/>
-I. be very .msed-W�men here<lb/>
The calendar, which � im-<lb/>
printed and sold bv the vearL "g<lb/>
E�' ia.es, exanVpXfe<lb/>
While there have been other<lb/>
calendars teatunng ECU students<lb/>
this is the first produced by a cam-<lb/>
pus organization.<lb/>
"We needed some way to make<lb/>
money for the Buccaneer besides<lb/>
student fees, and this seemed like a<lb/>
good idea Coleman explained.<lb/>
"It's definitely sexist she said<lb/>
of the calendar which will feature 17<lb/>
East Carolina men. "It was design-<lb/>
ed totally with girls in mind<lb/>
Coleman said that 4,000 copies of<lb/>
the calendar are being printed and<lb/>
will sell for $4. She added that<lb/>
anyone who places an order before<lb/>
next week will receive a one dollar<lb/>
discount.<lb/>
According to Coleman, the 17<lb/>
men featured in the calendar were<lb/>
selected from more than 60 ap-<lb/>
plicants. The calendar covers 14<lb/>
months, from December 1982<lb/>
through January 1984. One man<lb/>
will be used for each month, with<lb/>
three on the cover.<lb/>
The judging took place in early<lb/>
November and was conducted by a<lb/>
panel of eight women representing<lb/>
various campus organizations. Ap-<lb/>
plicants were judged on a scale of<lb/>
one to ten in 14 categories ranging<lb/>
from smile to charm to body and<lb/>
looks. "Looks was the primary<lb/>
criteria, though Coleman said.<lb/>
"When 1 looked at the guys, I<lb/>
judged them on personality and<lb/>
then"total appearance said -Xnita<lb/>
Jng- a tinman nurs,nc<lb/>
Steve"an:n,eOMhe,Ude<lb/>
teve Deal, who �,� he "M,<lb/>
April was her favonte<lb/>
He was a ten "<lb/>
On their applications<lb/>
ere asked such<lb/>
majot<lb/>
asci<lb/>
Vtr<lb/>
contestant<lb/>
s and what<lb/>
the men<lb/>
�he,r,av�rn7ghrrP:rn,asvha'<lb/>
SPIVS ���'��-p.<lb/>
sMfnena ua8Pend"m "�. .�<lb/>
�he experience?Z� d� � �n<lb/>
stage again in mv<lb/>
The calendar<lb/>
girl on<lb/>
life<lb/>
Mitch Perkins ZeViJ�1 b<lb/>
art ma,or mELT-T"? commercial<lb/>
1 an excellent<lb/>
"So<lb/>
art major. "Mitch<lb/>
job Coleman commented<lb/>
many of the guys look like thev sten<lb/>
ped out of GQ. Like I said fif<lb/>
it's very sexy.<lb/>
said before.<lb/>
The Inside<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Just The Way It Is<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
7<lb/>
10<lb/>
The East Carolinian deeply<lb/>
regrets the omission of page 5 in<lb/>
last Thursday's issue. The error<lb/>
was due to technical difficulties.<lb/>
The stories that were lost are<lb/>
reprinted in their entirety on page<lb/>
t<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 7, 1982<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
l� 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/>
oHice 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 (or publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
is 3 p m Monday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3 pm 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/>
ZETABETA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
All members be at the front of<lb/>
Aycock Dorm at 5 00 to be in<lb/>
tiated The dress is very casual<lb/>
Be sure to wear pledge pins<lb/>
Jerseys will be m Monday<lb/>
BILL OF<lb/>
RIGHTS DAY<lb/>
On Wednesday. December 15. in<lb/>
the Willis Building on First Street<lb/>
on the ECU campus, citizens ana<lb/>
professional groups will observe<lb/>
Bill of Rights Day The<lb/>
ceremonies are scheduled to begin<lb/>
at 7 IS p m<lb/>
Featured speakers include ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John M Howell who<lb/>
will be concerned with "Humar<lb/>
Rights on the International<lb/>
Scene Dr Gene D Lanier,<lb/>
Chairman of the North Carolina<lb/>
Library Associations intellectual<lb/>
Freedom Committee arid recipient<lb/>
of the 1982 Hugh M Hefner First<lb/>
Amendment Award m Education,<lb/>
speaking on "intellectual<lb/>
Freedom update 1982 ana<lb/>
Gene Puckett, editor of The<lb/>
Biblical Record discussing "The<lb/>
Separation of Church and State "<lb/>
The general public � cordially<lb/>
mvitea to participate in this an<lb/>
nual affair sponsored this year by<lb/>
the Greenville ana Pitt N C. Civil<lb/>
Liberties union the League of<lb/>
Women Voters, the ECU Depart<lb/>
ments of Community Health<lb/>
Library Science, and Politica'<lb/>
Science, ana Deita Sigma Theta<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/>
eserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75C per line or traction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Return u, MHH HOKI offire (noi UNI<lb/>
( UKN IMAN ffiirl In 2 p.m. Mundat brfi.fr<lb/>
lurda pap, i and vkrdnesda brfnrr I hursdm<lb/>
puhlii jtiiin<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
Ntr. -lines <lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
at 75C per line $.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
.encloseu.<lb/>
T<lb/>
fl<lb/>
impukiptg<lb/>
ITALIAN BUTT<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
Wyt Qerlte BrMd $"QQ<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
with all you<lb/>
can eat soap<lb/>
aad salad<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
FRIDAY ONLY<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT!<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
There is a manaatory meeting<lb/>
tor all Women's Soccer Club<lb/>
players at 5 00 p m Tuesday<lb/>
December 7. on the upper level<lb/>
lobby at MSC Any woman who is<lb/>
interested in playing on the learn<lb/>
is invited to come also<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Listen in to WZMB S contem<lb/>
porary gospel show every Sunday<lb/>
morning trom 6 to 10 a m For<lb/>
your favorite gospel artists ana<lb/>
hght'n up<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
The Regional Development In<lb/>
slitute ana the Rural Education<lb/>
Institute will host an open house in<lb/>
celebration ot the Christmas<lb/>
season Thursday December 9<lb/>
from 10 00 a.m until 6 00 p m<lb/>
Faculty, staff, students, col<lb/>
leagues, and friends A the In<lb/>
stitutes are invited to drop by the<lb/>
Willis Building during the hours of<lb/>
the open house<lb/>
C.A.D.P.<lb/>
A reminder All members<lb/>
please come by Erwm office room<lb/>
306 and cast your vote for presi<lb/>
dent Nominations are posted in<lb/>
room 303 Erwm Hall Voting ends<lb/>
at 3 00 p m Decembers.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA<lb/>
PI<lb/>
Fourteen new brothers were n<lb/>
tiated mto Phi Sigma Pi's Tau<lb/>
chapter during the tall semester<lb/>
pledge period Ricky Creech.<lb/>
Sylvia Bittle, Sherne Western, Ken<lb/>
Scruggs, Andy Johnson, Deryck<lb/>
Jones, Kerry Rodabaugh. Mario<lb/>
Harrell Clayman Norfleet. Jim<lb/>
Lamb. Penny Boyette, Lloyd Gar<lb/>
chner, Susan Tacker, ana Tammie<lb/>
King Congratulations ana<lb/>
welcome to the brotherhood of Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi.<lb/>
S. R. A.<lb/>
Escorts are needed for the<lb/>
Escort Service Anyone interested<lb/>
m bemg an escort please contact<lb/>
your dorm director If you are a<lb/>
dorm resident of if you live off<lb/>
campus contact the SGA office<lb/>
MARCHING PIRATES<lb/>
Hawiaan Christmas Luau is<lb/>
Tuesday, Dec 7 from 8 00 I 00 at<lb/>
the American Legion Post (across<lb/>
from the Beef Barn $1 tor Bano<lb/>
Members ana 2 for guests accom<lb/>
paniea by a bana member Check<lb/>
the Marching Pirates Boara tor<lb/>
more details Be there Aloha<lb/>
PRISBEE<lb/>
The team plays at the bottom of<lb/>
the hill Tuesaay ana Thjrsday at<lb/>
4 00 Club meetings are Monaay<lb/>
nights at 8 00 in MSC room 248<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
SGA presently has the positions<lb/>
ot W.nte Dorm Rep ana Graduate<lb/>
Vice Pres unfilled If interested<lb/>
tor applying, please pick up ap<lb/>
plications m the Menoenhall SGA<lb/>
office or contact Gma Lynch at<lb/>
752 90S8<lb/>
WOMENS SOCCER<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Womens Soccer Club<lb/>
needs an advisor Would any facul<lb/>
ty member or graduate student<lb/>
that is interested please contact<lb/>
Tonya Goldsmith at 756 44V1 or<lb/>
Donna Zekonis at 752 9209<lb/>
PHYE<lb/>
AH students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a major dur<lb/>
ing change of maior week for the<lb/>
Fall Semester, should report to<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum from 12:00 2:00<lb/>
p m on Thursday, December 9,<lb/>
for a motor and physical fitness<lb/>
test Satisfactory performance on<lb/>
this test is required as a pre<lb/>
requisite for official admittance ot<lb/>
the program<lb/>
Any student with a medical con<lb/>
dition that would contraindicate<lb/>
participation in the testing pro<lb/>
gram should contact Dr Israel at<lb/>
757 6497 For more information<lb/>
call the above number<lb/>
S. A. B.<lb/>
LET'S PARTY SAB We re hav<lb/>
mg our Christmas Party<lb/>
TONIGHT at Pam s house If you<lb/>
don't know the way. meet at<lb/>
mmges at 5 00 and bring your iunk<lb/>
food And it's bring your own<lb/>
beverage<lb/>
SNOWSKI<lb/>
Those skiers who want to take<lb/>
Snowsknng for credit during Spr<lb/>
mg Semester should add PHYE<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
The Brothers, pledges and the<lb/>
little sisters of the Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity would like to extend a<lb/>
warm welcome to the newest<lb/>
brother in our Brotherhood, Geoff<lb/>
Hudson We would like to also in<lb/>
vite the ENTIRE ECU STUDENT<lb/>
BODY to party with us down at the<lb/>
Elbo Room with Santa Clause<lb/>
Santa will be giving out door<lb/>
prizes, so please come early and<lb/>
be ready to have a Christmas<lb/>
Blow out before begining to<lb/>
prepare for those exams<lb/>
BAPTIST STUDENT<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
HEY! Do you enjoy friendly<lb/>
fellowship, good friends and food,<lb/>
and a chance to be yourself in this<lb/>
"rat race" environment at ECU?<lb/>
Then come join us at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union where we have din<lb/>
ners on Tuesdays at 5 30 for only<lb/>
$1.75 PAUSE on Thursdays at<lb/>
7 00 to allow us to take a break<lb/>
after an almost fulfilling week,<lb/>
ano lots ot people iust like you who<lb/>
enjoy others. Call 752 4646 it you<lb/>
nave any questions Bob Clyde<lb/>
campus minister<lb/>
FINANCIAL<lb/>
AID<lb/>
The annual Student Financial<lb/>
Aid meeting will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, December 8 at 3 00<lb/>
p m. and at 400 p.m in Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre All students who an<lb/>
ticipate applying for financial aid<lb/>
tor the 1983 84 schol year are<lb/>
strongly urged to attend<lb/>
CATHOLIC<lb/>
NEWMAN CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
join m 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/>
KSSPP fKNCH FRS �OU SLAW. TARTAF<lb/>
SAUCE a HUSHPUPPIf s<lb/>
5H0NEYS<lb/>
S3M<lb/>
264 By-Pass<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
Includes initial eye examination, lenses, care<lb/>
kit, instructions and follow up visits for one<lb/>
month. ECU student I.D. required.<lb/>
99<lb/>
00<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Servtnit the campus commumv<lb/>
am I9!f<lb/>
Published every Tuesaay ana<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ng the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for ana<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
PILOT TRAINING<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
vi <lb/>
The Navy rr. sontly has several openings tor the<lb/>
tics' ex itmci and challenging job in the world<lb/>
NAVY PILOT II you quality, wc will Quarantec<lb/>
�ou a sea' in the most prestigious flight school<lb/>
anywhere ftt-tne completion of framing you will<lb/>
tiy the Na. :� performance aircraft<lb/>
Qualifier �'�<lb/>
� Bachelors degree<lb/>
� Less than 28' ; years old<lb/>
� 2020 uncorrected vision<lb/>
� Excellent health<lb/>
-US OIiumi<lb/>
it you " - uualify ano would like to earn<lb/>
a starling salary ot S18.000 with S28,0O0 � in four<lb/>
years, s I qualifications to<lb/>
NAVY PILOT PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27609<lb/>
or call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
RIGHT<lb/>
BROTHERS<lb/>
BIKE SHOP<lb/>
207 B East 5th St.<lb/>
Open 11-7<lb/>
6 days a week<lb/>
752-6181<lb/>
We carry<lb/>
Univega, Kabuki,<lb/>
Columbia and BMX<lb/>
bikes. ALL at<lb/>
very modest prices.<lb/>
We also offer<lb/>
Parts &amp; Service<lb/>
' 7 we don V have it<lb/>
we'll get it<lb/>
l383000008<lb/>
OnOMETMC<lb/>
�Y�CAWEOEH1�R<lb/>
228 GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
TIPTON ANNEX<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
Dr. Peter Holils<lb/>
NOW LOOKING GOOD<lb/>
COSTS LESS<lb/>
&amp;mmirz<lb/>
for Christmas<lb/>
A shop long known<lb/>
for having those unique<lb/>
&amp; special gifts.<lb/>
P.S. Order your personalized<lb/>
fraternity &amp; sorority<lb/>
items bejore Dec. 15th.<lb/>
Open 10:00-10:00 p.m.<lb/>
4<lb/>
r�A<lb/>
!j����S�i��!C<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
<lb/>
p)K BUY BACK<lb/>
 BONANZA A<lb/>
1<lb/>
The Alamo<lb/>
Resturant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Coming:<lb/>
Wed Dec. 8th<lb/>
BAND OF OZ<lb/>
7:00-11:00<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
�<lb/>
Dec. 9th<lb/>
CATALINAS<lb/>
band starts at 9<lb/>
10-1:00 late night HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Friday, Dec. 10th<lb/>
FANTASTIC SHAKERS<lb/>
Hour;run- Wed. Sat. 5:30pm-10:00pm<lb/>
� Sun. 5:30pm-9:00pm<lb/>
Use the coupons you get when<lb/>
you sell your textbooks for<lb/>
COSH to purchase UBE Sportswear<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
for<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
OOK<lb/>
arn<lb/>
9<lb/>
117 E FIFTH ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C. 27834<lb/>
U.B.E?<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
Use the coupons you get<lb/>
when you sell your textbooks<lb/>
for CASH to<lb/>
purchase any<lb/>
�tern in the Book Barn<lb/>
� �<lb/>
for<lb/>
V<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
Do your Christmas Shopping<lb/>
before you go home<lb/>
Bonanza ends Fri Dec. 18th<lb/>
I<lb/>
'Mi<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
Approximal<lb/>
dozen hCL<lb/>
and faculty,<lb/>
gathered last<lb/>
evening at th<lb/>
V'man Cer<lb/>
memorial<lb/>
honoring<lb/>
omen m;<lb/>
murdered<lb/>
Salvador i<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The tvk<lb/>
-ded a re?<lb/>
the lives of<lb/>
women and<lb/>
� .c 1 the ii<lb/>
fcl Saiva<lb/>
pus M<lb/>
Shonde: <lb/>
�vas<lb/>
b � a stu: <lb/>
ap and a<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Esco<lb/>
Conlirued r - <lb/>
�<lb/>
tlOHu<lb/>
ma<lb/>
gcd b<lb/>
D ear.<lb/>
James B M,<lb/>
1 "<lb/>
Russd u d<lb/>
SG A -<lb/>
uru: <lb/>
SR and S<lb/>
w� r ked<lb/>
- "<lb/>
"V a<lb/>
Sumr c <lb/>
 orked<lb/>
<lb/>
Tui<lb/>
Decei<lb/>
with<lb/>
m<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
F<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0003"/><lb/>
ERY WEDS.<lb/>
with all you<lb/>
can eat soup<lb/>
and salad<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
EAT!<lb/>
NNER<lb/>
. $369<lb/>
<lb/>
�e, N.C<lb/>
F'�<lb/>
as<lb/>
 t<lb/>
'CtY<lb/>
PUfs<lb/>
�?.� ?'�5S8@�fe<lb/>
sJ<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�e?ee�<lb/>
'Martyrs Honored<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 7, J982<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Surff Writer<lb/>
Approximately two<lb/>
dozen ECU students<lb/>
and faculty members<lb/>
gathered last Thursday<lb/>
evening at the Catholic<lb/>
Newman Center for a<lb/>
memorial service<lb/>
honoring four U.S.<lb/>
women missionaries<lb/>
murdered in El<lb/>
Salvador two years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The two-hour service<lb/>
included a reflection on<lb/>
the lives of the four<lb/>
women and an over-<lb/>
view of the situation in<lb/>
El Salvador presented<lb/>
by ECU Catholic Cam-<lb/>
pus Minister Sr. Helen<lb/>
Shondell. A series of<lb/>
songs was performed<lb/>
by a student musical<lb/>
group and a documen-<lb/>
tary film on the life of<lb/>
Jean Donovan, one of<lb/>
the murdered women,<lb/>
was shown.<lb/>
"On December 2,<lb/>
1982 we commemorate<lb/>
the second anniversary<lb/>
of the assassination of<lb/>
four U. S. women mis-<lb/>
sionaries in El<lb/>
Salvador Shondell<lb/>
told the group during<lb/>
her opening remarks.<lb/>
"As we focus on these<lb/>
women, let us not<lb/>
overlook the thousands<lb/>
and thousands of un-<lb/>
named and faceless<lb/>
martyrs of El<lb/>
Salvador<lb/>
Shondel added that<lb/>
the number of people<lb/>
killed in the last two<lb/>
years in El Salvador<lb/>
was estimated to be<lb/>
35,000.<lb/>
SGA Approves<lb/>
Money For New<lb/>
Escort Service<lb/>
Three of the<lb/>
murdered women, Ita<lb/>
Ford, Maura Clark and<lb/>
Dorothy Kazel, were<lb/>
Catholic nuns doing<lb/>
missionary work for<lb/>
their U.S. orders.<lb/>
ECU students Mike<lb/>
Hamer, Theresa Dulski<lb/>
and Jim Roberts along<lb/>
with Greenville resident<lb/>
Jeff Roberson provided<lb/>
a musical acompani-<lb/>
ment to the service.<lb/>
Roberson sang a solo<lb/>
entitled "Upbeat Blues<lb/>
for Innocent Victims"<lb/>
which he wrote about<lb/>
the life of Donovan.<lb/>
The Documentary en-<lb/>
titled "Roses in<lb/>
Decenber originally<lb/>
shown on public televi-<lb/>
sion, was also shown.<lb/>
Shondell said she<lb/>
organized the memorial<lb/>
service because she did<lb/>
not want the deaths of<lb/>
the four women to be in<lb/>
vain. "There's still a<lb/>
great need for change<lb/>
in U.S. policy toward<lb/>
El Salvador in par-<lb/>
ticular, and all of Cen-<lb/>
tral America.<lb/>
She added that she<lb/>
wanted to call attention<lb/>
to what actually hap-<lb/>
pened to the four<lb/>
women, to the hopes of<lb/>
the poor people in El<lb/>
Salvador and what<lb/>
they're struggling for.<lb/>
Similar services for<lb/>
the four women were<lb/>
conducted nationwide.<lb/>
Shondell said that<lb/>
because she works in<lb/>
the church, she has<lb/>
friends who are mis<lb/>
sionaries and has been<lb/>
to Honduras herself.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ding to Sumrell, the<lb/>
SRA will be conducting<lb/>
most of the selection<lb/>
work for potential<lb/>
escorters and addi-<lb/>
tional promotion funds<lb/>
may come from an ap-<lb/>
propriation to be ar-<lb/>
ranged by Associate<lb/>
Dean of Judiciary<lb/>
James B. Maliory.<lb/>
"I feel very happy<lb/>
Russo said after the<lb/>
SGA vote. "We're go-<lb/>
ing to get this thing<lb/>
underway and it will be<lb/>
ready by Jan. 17. The<lb/>
SRA and SGA have<lb/>
worked together in see-<lb/>
ing this need<lb/>
"I'm glad it passed<lb/>
Sumrell said. "We've<lb/>
worked hardand<lb/>
we're glad to see that<lb/>
the SGA saw the need<lb/>
for the service<lb/>
Henderson was also<lb/>
pleased and noted that<lb/>
he had received a lot of<lb/>
positive feedback from<lb/>
ECU students on the<lb/>
proposal. "There's not<lb/>
as many attacks as peo-<lb/>
ple think there are<lb/>
Henderson said. "I'd<lb/>
like to play that part<lb/>
down But there are<lb/>
many potential pro-<lb/>
blems when students<lb/>
walk alone or in dark<lb/>
places, Henderson add-<lb/>
ed. "This will help with<lb/>
those problems. If<lb/>
you're walking with<lb/>
somebody, especially a<lb/>
guy, you're less likely<lb/>
to be attacked<lb/>
PWMBBBBBWBMMBBBPm<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
I<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
i CARL ROSEN j<lb/>
l��adm. for students<lb/>
65CH.H. until 10:30<lb/>
THURS. &amp; FRI.<lb/>
BRICE ST.<lb/>
with<lb/>
THURS DEC. 9th<lb/>
9th Annual Brice Street<lb/>
CHRISTMAS PARTY<lb/>
m<lb/>
�K<lb/>
Balloons Over<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Taking Orders now<lb/>
for Christmas bouquets.<lb/>
Large selection of<lb/>
Mylar Christmas<lb/>
balloons.<lb/>
Also bouquets available<lb/>
for all occasions.<lb/>
Call Mrs. Tabor<lb/>
ami i me � day or night:<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
over $1,000 m Christmas Presents 1<lb/>
including vacation for two C t<lb/>
to Busch Gardens C 0<lb/>
H111I111��J �<lb/>
Student Golf Special<lb/>
Indian Trails<lb/>
Country Club<lb/>
Fairway Dr Griffon, N.C.<lb/>
Cart (2 riders) &amp; Green Fees<lb/>
for 18 holes only<lb/>
'6.00<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
� a.m. -5p.m.<lb/>
524-5485<lb/>
:<lb/>
:�:�:�:<lb/>
tfn<lb/>
m<lb/>
eek Jerseys are great<lb/>
Christmas gifts for your favorite guy<lb/>
or gal.<lb/>
This season get your jerseys at<lb/>
H.L. Hodges Bonds Sporting<lb/>
Goods. We have a large selection of<lb/>
jerseys in every color imaginable.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Tuesday November 30 through Saturday!<lb/>
December 4 we are offering free lettering 1<lb/>
with the purchase of a jersey at $10.95<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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FREE LETTERING<lb/>
w purchase of greek jersey<lb/>
atMO95<lb/>
BRING THIS COUPON<lb/>
T<lb/>
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I<lb/>
TUESDAY DEC. 7 ADMISSION<lb/>
WCfiN PORJLAR DEMAND!<lb/>
4 s 41<lb/>
 SPONSORED "By! book BAi&amp;aec<lb/>
WEST'S DEL�GMr; SU6WAV, PHARO'S, ATTicA<lb/>
TOE MOUSE, MAPPV STORE, tlmu D(Sr; 'V" N<lb/>
EL TbROyPEP5 PEKlKJG OJPPEJ2, LOD6�S<lb/>
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SPoers WORLD, SUB STA. IE,<lb/>
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ftR WEADS only7 I v ly flk iPlft<lb/>
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EPX 1590YS<lb/>
Dioinond-Sapphire<lb/>
RING<lb/>
Reg. Price '99.97<lb/>
SALE PRICE<lb/>
79<lb/>
m<lb/>
GUZBWl<lb/>
Size 7<lb/>
White or Yellow<lb/>
COLO MOTHERS<lb/>
RING<lb/>
Reg. Price '53.00<lb/>
SALE PRICE<lb/>
W7<lb/>
HOPt<lb/>
DDX121818<lb/>
1� ROPE CHAIN - II"<lb/>
Reg Pnce'79 97<lb/>
DDX 121820<lb/>
14K ROPE CHAIN 20"<lb/>
Reg Price '89 97<lb/>
DDX 121824<lb/>
14K ROPE CHAIN 24"<lb/>
Reg Price'109 97<lb/>
DDX-121830<lb/>
141 ROPE CHAIN 30"<lb/>
Reg Pnce 29 97<lb/>
SALE PRICE 69<lb/>
SALE PRICE 7V<lb/>
. SALE PRICE T<lb/>
SALE PRICE 109<lb/>
3 SIRAWD 8RAIDIP<lb/>
DDX-119316<lb/>
UK BRAIDED CHAIN<lb/>
16"<lb/>
Rec Price 32 97<lb/>
SALE PRICE <lb/>
DDx rW3<lb/>
if<lb/>
oex us2<lb/>
3 DIAMOND LADIES' RING<lb/>
Req139.50<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
W7<lb/>
W0� 40M-<lb/>
KCU 40S4P<lb/>
WDX 40S4S<lb/>
SAPPHIRE A DIAMOND RINGs 2e 6<lb/>
Reg. '64.97 $Q95<lb/>
SALE 97<lb/>
Wl' 4054<lb/>
RUBY &amp; DIAMOND RING<lb/>
Reg. 64.97<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
$3995<lb/>
tt<lb/>
FVX-OM3S4<lb/>
fVX DM384<lb/>
CROSS STUDS<lb/>
Reg. Ml.97<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
$997<lb/>
DOX222860<lb/>
14K<lb/>
FLOATING HEART<lb/>
Reg. Price'7.97<lb/>
SALE PRICE<lb/>
J. D. DAWSON COMPANY<lb/>
SHOWROOMS AND WAREHOUSE<lb/>
4<lb/>
�fife<lb/>
1021. Mom St. jilt 1.10 St.<lb/>
BcRMvtn, NC 27810 fr��,i, w n�xt<lb/>
(tl9) 943-1121 (tli)7sJl<lb/>
Hot: 1:00-5.00 (MS) h t.JM: Out Sat. 7 M P M.)<lb/>
"GIADUATE GEMOIOGIST AVAIIAIU TO ASSIST IN TOUR DIAMOND SEIECTIOMS<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU PtICES GOOD THIU SATURDAY MOVEMtft 27tfc<lb/>
SAT DEC. 11,1982 FOR MAIL ORDERS CALL l-tOO-612-2121 TOLL FREE<lb/>
DOX-7093<lb/>
LEAF EARRINGS<lb/>
Reg. Ml.97<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
D0X 22122<lb/>
FLOATING HEART<lb/>
Reg. Price M .97<lb/>
SALE PRICE<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0004"/><lb/>
2tt� iEaat (Earolbiian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, GmmM.<lb/>
Mike Hughes, Managingwmm<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. DirevoroJ Advtnvng ClNDY PLEASANTS. Sports Editor<lb/>
Robert Rucks, busm Manage Greg Rideout, n,� Editor<lb/>
All AFRASHTEH, Crtdtt Managtr STEVE BACHNER, Enlerlainmtnl Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Gr(xn. (wu ����� Juliana Fahrbach. ammm<lb/>
Chip Gideons, rm,MirTnim�i�, Mike Davis, production Manager<lb/>
December 7, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Ashley Futrell<lb/>
Best Wishes For A Tireless Worker<lb/>
"The future of East Carolina<lb/>
University is important to all of us.<lb/>
If we must fight for recognition,<lb/>
then let us be ready to do battle. The<lb/>
greatness we see ahead will only be<lb/>
stilled by a lack of greatness in the<lb/>
hearts of those in command. As you<lb/>
bleed purple and sweat gold, let<lb/>
each drop be an element of<lb/>
challenge and not a token of ac-<lb/>
complishment. May you serve living<lb/>
humanity. "<lb/>
With these words, ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees Chairman Ashley Futrell<lb/>
announced his resignation Satur-<lb/>
day. Perhaps his statement came as<lb/>
a shock to some board members<lb/>
present; but without a doubt, it sad-<lb/>
dened the hearts of all those who<lb/>
have worked with him.<lb/>
It's far too easy to pin com-<lb/>
plementary titles on a man who has<lb/>
fought tooth-and-nail for nearly 14<lb/>
years as a board member. Time and<lb/>
time again, he has proven himself a<lb/>
"great" and "worthy" man. But<lb/>
shallow and overused titles cannot<lb/>
begin to pay tribute to this<lb/>
gentleman who has been a tireless<lb/>
workhorse in the advancement and<lb/>
expansion of East Carolina as a ma-<lb/>
jor state university.<lb/>
Since being appointed to the<lb/>
board in 1969, after serving three<lb/>
terms in the North Carolina Senate,<lb/>
Futrell has seen ECU through many<lb/>
of its most dramatic changes and<lb/>
additions. He was instrumental,<lb/>
both as senator and trustee, in the<lb/>
fight for the nursing school, the<lb/>
School of Medicine and in achieving<lb/>
university status for ECC.  Let<lb/>
me say proudly Futrell asserted,<lb/>
"that I was in the midst of every<lb/>
legislative fight for this institution<lb/>
And anyone familiar with ECU's<lb/>
history during the past 10 to 20<lb/>
i-Campus Forum<lb/>
years knows the legislative struggles<lb/>
the school has seen.<lb/>
Nothing worthwhile comes easy;<lb/>
certainly Mr. Futrell knows this �<lb/>
if not before, he knows it now.<lb/>
Nevertheless, he has worked ECU<lb/>
through some of the most trying<lb/>
times in her history. He has stood<lb/>
by the university through thick and<lb/>
thin, despite the many occasions<lb/>
when vogue dictated otherwise.<lb/>
Vice Chairman C. Ralph Kinsey<lb/>
Jr who will replace Futrell as<lb/>
chairman, spoke highly of his<lb/>
predecessor at Saturday's meeting.<lb/>
"He has filled the positions of vice<lb/>
chairman and chairman in some of<lb/>
the most significant times in the<lb/>
history of the university, in terms of<lb/>
growth and program expansion<lb/>
change. His wisdom has been a stea-<lb/>
dying influence for these many<lb/>
years<lb/>
Despite undergoing heart surgery<lb/>
in July, Futrell assured the board<lb/>
that health was not a factor in his<lb/>
decision to resign. The fact is, he<lb/>
cited no particular reasons in his<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
At this time, we wish to con-<lb/>
gratulate and thank Ashley Futrell<lb/>
for his many years of dedicated ser-<lb/>
vice to East Carolina University. It<lb/>
saddens us to see him resign, but<lb/>
we, like the board members, accept<lb/>
it "with deep appreciation" for his<lb/>
tireless work.<lb/>
We also wish the best of luck for<lb/>
Mr. Kinsey, who has likewise pro-<lb/>
ven himself a dedicated alumnus,<lb/>
spokesman and trustee. Without a<lb/>
doubt, he will be faced with many<lb/>
of the same uphill battles as his<lb/>
loyal predecessor. But hopefully,<lb/>
the wisdom he has both seen and<lb/>
shown in the past will continue to<lb/>
make itself manifest in his work.<lb/>
Fan Questions Andruzzi<lb/>
First of all, I would like to say that I<lb/>
am a loyal Lady Pirate basketball fan,<lb/>
but 1 am beginning to wonder about he<lb/>
validity of the reasons given to the press<lb/>
for so many players quitting the team<lb/>
(this year, last year and the year before<lb/>
last).<lb/>
Miss Andruzzi said, "Darlene would<lb/>
not fulfill her responsibility and obliga-<lb/>
tion as a studentathlete in our pro-<lb/>
gram The News and Observer carried<lb/>
the quote about Darlene Chaney, who<lb/>
recently quit the team. I'm sure this will<lb/>
tarnish Darlene's name and un-<lb/>
justifiably so. This makes it sound like<lb/>
Darlene was asked to leave the team, but<lb/>
this wasn't the case at all. She quit as a<lb/>
result of an argument with Coach An-<lb/>
druzzi which took place at Tuesday's<lb/>
practice. How will it look for coaches at<lb/>
other schools to see that Darlene wasn't<lb/>
performing as a studentathlete? 1 have<lb/>
sympathy for Miss Chaney because I<lb/>
know she loves basketball, and she did<lb/>
love being a Pirate. I also know that she<lb/>
performed as a studentathlete in my<lb/>
eyes and in the eyes of a lot other people.<lb/>
Then there's the case of Miss Jenkins<lb/>
wanting to go to ODU; this makes me<lb/>
wonder why she didn't do so to begin<lb/>
with. After all, she was the most<lb/>
valuable player in the state while in high<lb/>
school. I'm sure she was offered a<lb/>
scholarship to go there. The fact of the<lb/>
matter is that Miss Jenkins and Miss<lb/>
Hargett get couldn't get along with An-<lb/>
druzzi. They even stated this to a<lb/>
newspaper reporter. It's irrelevant where<lb/>
they decide to go to school now, whether<lb/>
it be ODU or elsewhere.<lb/>
The list of people quitting over the last<lb/>
three years would make up an impressive<lb/>
starting Five for somebody, not to men-<lb/>
tion a good bench. This list contains<lb/>
three high school all-Americas (Chaney,<lb/>
Jenkins and Fernill). The best of<lb/>
recruiting could hardly replace these<lb/>
people.<lb/>
I think it's time the Lady Pirates' fans<lb/>
be given an explanation. I know several<lb/>
fans who would love to have this pro-<lb/>
blem resolved. These girls who come<lb/>
here and quit can't continue to be sub-<lb/>
jected to the same treatment as the ones<lb/>
listed above. Maybe the problem lies<lb/>
elsewhere � that is, not in the girls who<lb/>
quit but in the elements which made<lb/>
them quit. After all, it's not like this is a<lb/>
new problem.<lb/>
I just hope that the problem can be<lb/>
rectiFied and these girls who have quit<lb/>
can go elsewhere and prove themselves<lb/>
as the great people and athletes they<lb/>
really are.<lb/>
Lloyd Jordan<lb/>
Senior, Accounting<lb/>
Escort Service<lb/>
The Society of Physics Students<lb/>
would like to point out that we have<lb/>
been providing a volunteer escort service<lb/>
for the 1081 (astronomy lab) students<lb/>
throughout the semester. The East<lb/>
Carolinian had interviewed our faculty<lb/>
adviser on the system in early October,<lb/>
but for some reason, the information<lb/>
never got into print. Obviously, the<lb/>
editor never got word of it either.<lb/>
The SGA proposal is a noble idea, but<lb/>
as yet is only a proposal. Our service is<lb/>
active, successful and cost-free. We will<lb/>
continue the service as long as it is need-<lb/>
ed. Hopefully, the SGA system will soon<lb/>
be active. However, those lab students<lb/>
needing an escort now can rely on the<lb/>
SPS for help.<lb/>
David Windsor, V.P.<lb/>
Shawn Kelly, Sec.Treas.<lb/>
Society of Physics Students<lb/>
Editor's Note: We regret that we never<lb/>
received the information about your<lb/>
program. The purpose of the Dec. 2<lb/>
editorial, however, was not to praise or<lb/>
condemn whoever may have come up<lb/>
with the idea first but to air our opinion<lb/>
on what we feel is an excellent idea.<lb/>
Nonetheless, we congratulate you on<lb/>
your dedication to such a worthwhile<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
YOU HCARD MWAN, i'VE 60TAN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW<lb/>
WITH A WAN WHO CLAMS TO HAVE RECEIVE JH6<lb/>
FIRST ARTIFICIAL HEART<lb/>
Evil, Subversive Messages<lb/>
The Side Of Slim You Never Knew<lb/>
Remember a few years back, when the<lb/>
big new thing was to play your records<lb/>
backwards to see if there were any subver-<lb/>
sive or demonic messages? Well, being that<lb/>
I somehow missed out on that craze, I<lb/>
decided I'd try it out the other day<lb/>
The first album I put on was Slim H hit-<lb/>
man's Greatest Hits, a double-album from<lb/>
everyone's favorite yodeling fool. Being a<lb/>
firm believer in the sanctity of fine music, I<lb/>
wasn't really expecting to hear anything<lb/>
Little did I know what lay in store<lb/>
Right there, in between the second and<lb/>
third verses of "Red River Valley"<lb/>
(actually, what I was playing was "yellaV<lb/>
reviR deR"), I heard it � a subversive,<lb/>
demonic, background yodeler droning out<lb/>
his camouflaged message like a muttled<lb/>
stevedore: "Don't do it he warned eeri-<lb/>
ly. "Don't brush your teeth Pick your<lb/>
nose in public K-Tel owes me money<lb/>
Boxcar Willie is gay<lb/>
At that point, I couldn't take any more.<lb/>
If I'd let the record continue to spin, who<lb/>
knows, I may have lost all faith in humani-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
I quickly shoved the disc back into its<lb/>
velour jacket and pulled out my Sing<lb/>
Along With Mitch album, what 1 consider<lb/>
to be Mitch Miller's finest effort. A quick<lb/>
run through "This Old Man, He played<lb/>
Three" revealed nothing, as did "Row,<lb/>
Row, Row Your Boat; Yellow Rose of<lb/>
Texas" and "Hit Me, Beat Me, Love Me,<lb/>
Buy Me a Burger<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The N ay Is<lb/>
 t I �<lb/>
But just as I was about to lift the needle<lb/>
from "How Much is that Doggy in the<lb/>
Window having restored my faith in the<lb/>
human race, I heard it again � only much<lb/>
worse: "Sing along the low, evil voice<lb/>
chanted. "Sing along, dammt C'mon,<lb/>
you lazy asses, SING<lb/>
I lowered my head in disgust. To think<lb/>
that even Mitch had sunk to these<lb/>
despicable depths was too much to bear<lb/>
After regaining my composure with<lb/>
some day-old bread brought back to life<lb/>
with my bamboo steamer, I was ready to<lb/>
continue my bitter search. It had already<lb/>
been a trying experience, but I vowed to<lb/>
move onward.<lb/>
1 fumbled through my vast record collec-<lb/>
tion for my Jim Morrison Christmas<lb/>
album, Gold, Frankincense and Two Hits<lb/>
of Myhr, but it was nowhere to be found.<lb/>
Damn the luck!<lb/>
Next on the test list was my .Stairway to<lb/>
Heaven album by the Day of Discovery<lb/>
singers. I put it on. and everything was<lb/>
okay, until all of a sudden, dunng a two-<lb/>
minute lead guitar lick, I heard another<lb/>
voice � but unlike before, this time, it was<lb/>
the devilish droning of a woman (a<lb/>
soprano, I think). "Rn-rrrT she growled,<lb/>
"My collar's too tight Ernest Angley's<lb/>
behind in the ratings� How come we<lb/>
can't dance when we sing this? I'm not<lb/>
wearing anything under my chastity belt<lb/>
rrrrrr<lb/>
"Blasphemy! Blasphemy I screamed,<lb/>
burying my head in my hands "Ah,<lb/>
humanitv<lb/>
Editor's Sole: Mike Hughes is a senior<lb/>
from Swollen Colon, .V.C where he<lb/>
works summers in the "stun line" at a<lb/>
local slaughterhouse. He hopes one day to<lb/>
use his degree in oriental music psychology<lb/>
to open a chain of fishing bait shops in<lb/>
Ahoskie.<lb/>
Civil Disobedience: A History Of Success<lb/>
Charns Admitted To Bar<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
"If Alex Charns lacks the moral<lb/>
character requisite of aspiring North<lb/>
Carolina lawyers, then it would seem the<lb/>
term 'moral character' itself is ill-<lb/>
defined. "<lb/>
Well, it seems the N.C. Board of Law<lb/>
Examiners agreed with the above editorial<lb/>
quote (and many others like it), because<lb/>
Alex Charns is now a licensed attorney in<lb/>
the state of North Carolina. He fought<lb/>
hard and won because he was right.<lb/>
It's important not to lose sight of the<lb/>
reason why Charns had to go through what<lb/>
he did � he spent two weeks in a federal<lb/>
prison � and that he most assuredly does<lb/>
possess the "moral character" requisite of<lb/>
an attorney.<lb/>
I was arrested with Alex Charns for<lb/>
"impeding traffic I went to prison with<lb/>
him. We clearly knew what might happen<lb/>
to us for our act of civil disobedience. Alex<lb/>
knew very well it might keep him out of the<lb/>
bar. Nevertheless, we went through with<lb/>
our plans. We did this because we knew the<lb/>
risk we were taking was negligible com-<lb/>
pared to the suffering of the people of El<lb/>
Salvador. We knew that U.S. support of<lb/>
the murderous ruling junta in that country<lb/>
was an example of our nation's "lack of<lb/>
moral character<lb/>
Our nation is a great one, but I truly<lb/>
believe that if it weren't for people of high<lb/>
moral character who speak out against in-<lb/>
justice, we would not be where we are to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Civil disobedience has been a precedent<lb/>
in this country; it has helped change some<lb/>
of the most oppressive laws and practices<lb/>
ever seen. Perhaps one of the best-known<lb/>
cases of civil disobedience was the Boston<lb/>
Tea Party.<lb/>
During another era of history, the law of<lb/>
this land said women coundn't vote, but<lb/>
women got together and fought for justice.<lb/>
Some chained themselves to the Statue of<lb/>
Liberty; many went to jail, but now, the<lb/>
right to vote is theirs.<lb/>
According to the U.S. Constitution,<lb/>
black people used to count as three-fifths<lb/>
of one human being; they couldn't eat,<lb/>
drink or travel as they pleased � only as<lb/>
they were allowed. But thousands of<lb/>
blacks protested � went to jail for justice<lb/>
� and the plight of the American black<lb/>
has improved.<lb/>
You see, the actions of Alex Charns are<lb/>
nothing new; sure, his struggle for justice<lb/>
is over, but the world is still full of people<lb/>
who follow the status quo, who won't take<lb/>
the risks. To me, it's good to know there<lb/>
are still people who don't ignore the<lb/>
world's many issues of injustice.<lb/>
'Ope<lb/>
�  - - mem<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
Prop<lb/>
For<lb/>
B PA I � I V<lb/>
sun �<lb/>
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�I rtMtal Am ta am<lb/>
(. arH.na y m:n:mw. agt<lb/>
!<lb/>
FOR MERCHJMNG,Of COURSEJE STILL LIKE TO KEEP UP<lb/>
THE IMJ6E BUT 1 HAD TO ffi RIP OF THOSE ELVES YEARS AGO<lb/>
;<lb/>
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:<lb/>
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(<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057520_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN1AN<lb/>
DEC EMBER 7. 1982<lb/>
-H-<lb/>
wm<lb/>
ges<lb/>
'W<lb/>
n vast record collec-<lb/>
klornson Christmas<lb/>
lu ease and Two Hits<lb/>
jowhere to be found.<lb/>
was my Stairway to<lb/>
Day of Discovery<lb/>
land everything was<lb/>
dden, during a two-<lb/>
. 1 heard another<lb/>
fore, this time, it was<lb/>
ot a woman (a<lb/>
ittttt she growled,<lb/>
t Ernest A-nley's<lb/>
,S Ho come mass.<lb/>
sing this. .1 I'm not<lb/>
er mv chastitv belt<lb/>
Ipnemy I screamed,<lb/>
my hands "Ah,<lb/>
Huzhes is a senior<lb/>
V C where he<lb/>
e "stun line" at a<lb/>
He hopes one day to<lb/>
tal music psychology<lb/>
ishing bait shops in<lb/>
ar<lb/>
ms of Alex Charns are<lb/>
jhis struggle for justice<lb/>
id is still full of people<lb/>
quo, who won't take<lb/>
, good to know there<lb/>
mo don't ignore the<lb/>
Is of injustice.<lb/>
TO KEEP UP<lb/>
5 YEARS AgL<lb/>
���<lb/>
BE2<lb/>
The Stories You Missed<lb/>
'Operation Santa' Helps Disabled<lb/>
�� EMILi CASEV<lb/>
Staff Winer<lb/>
The Mental Health Association in<lb/>
1'itt Counts has begun theu annual<lb/>
Operation Sianta I laus Drive which<lb/>
collects gifts and mono to provide a<lb/>
happs t'hnsimas for people living at<lb/>
( aswrll Center for the mentallv retard<lb/>
ed in kinslon and in Cherry Hospital in<lb/>
Coldsboro<lb/>
Birrula Orav. the eiecutive director<lb/>
of the MHA. is especially enthusiastic<lb/>
ahout ihe "tremendous support" the<lb/>
projeci is receiving fiom ECU students<lb/>
All fifteen of ECU'S residence halls are<lb/>
lending their help to the protect, as are<lb/>
a doen of the university's fraternities<lb/>
and sororities<lb/>
"We're very pleased with all the sup-<lb/>
port we're getting from the campus<lb/>
community (-ray said. "Students<lb/>
from East Carolina have become more<lb/>
mvoi.ed this year than every before<lb/>
"Oc mi,in purpose is to provide<lb/>
Christmas gifts for the patients at<lb/>
Cherry Hospital and Ihe clients at<lb/>
Caswell Center Gray told The East<lb/>
Carolinian "There are no state funds<lb/>
available for any gifts or Christmas<lb/>
parties "<lb/>
The Mental Health Association has<lb/>
branches nationwide and is funded<lb/>
through United Way and ihe contribu-<lb/>
tions of members The MHA chapter in<lb/>
Put County, which has more than 7?0<lb/>
members, is "one of the largest<lb/>
chapters in the state according to<lb/>
Gray. North Carolina has 52 chapters<lb/>
statewide.<lb/>
The Operation Santa Claus Cam-<lb/>
paign, which was first instituted in Pitt<lb/>
County in 1958. has received much<lb/>
praise for the joy it brings to people<lb/>
who must spend their Christmas holi-<lb/>
day in institutions, often without fami-<lb/>
ly support or friends<lb/>
Besides Caswell Center and Cherry<lb/>
Hospital, Operation Santa Clause also<lb/>
provides Christmas gifts to people in<lb/>
'community based programs"<lb/>
throughout Pitt County. These com-<lb/>
munity based programs generally serve<lb/>
people recently discharged from menial<lb/>
health facilities as they are going<lb/>
through the "dc-institutionaltzation<lb/>
process" and readjusting to the outside<lb/>
Proposal To Raise Age<lb/>
For Drinking Endorsed<lb/>
Bv fslKKkHMIIl<lb/>
Siaf f W rim<lb/>
On Monday Transportation<lb/>
"wieiarv Andrew 1 "Drew" lewis<lb/>
endorsed proposals made in the recent<lb/>
lv released Presidential Commission on<lb/>
Drunken Driving report that urged<lb/>
nijics to raise the minimum drinking<lb/>
age 10 21<lb/>
National statistics have shown that<lb/>
alcohol abuse is a contributing lactor in<lb/>
more than hail of ihe 30,000 highwav<lb/>
totalities lhal occur in the I nited States<lb/>
ra.h sear<lb/>
Ihis lactor has caused 18 states,<lb/>
which had previously lowered their<lb/>
minimum dunking age to 18. to recon-<lb/>
sider and reverse their minimum age<lb/>
U� back to ihe 20- and 21 sear old age<lb/>
leveK<lb/>
Lewis said he would support recom<lb/>
mendationv b the commission calling<lb/>
on s states, the District ot Columbia<lb/>
and Puerto Rico ro raise the minimum<lb/>
ajte on all alcohol products, including<lb/>
reer and wine, to 2 I<lb/>
Norcn Carotins, has a drinking age re-<lb/>
 rrment of 18 tor beer and wine pro-<lb/>
ducts and 21 for liquor i urrentlv state<lb/>
officials aie studving ihe possibility of<lb/>
raising the minimum age on beer and<lb/>
wine products<lb/>
According to Breni Hackney, a<lb/>
spokesperson in ijcn Hum's executive<lb/>
" .e in Raleigh. Hum is in lavor of<lb/>
raising North Carolina's minimum<lb/>
drinking age tor wine and beer products<lb/>
lo "al leasl Is) "<lb/>
He hasn I fulls made up his mind<lb/>
fet Hackney sanj but Hum has nor<lb/>
ruled our rhe possibilnv of raising it to<lb/>
20 or 21<lb/>
Hum appointed a Governor's Task<lb/>
Force on Drunken Drrwng last<lb/>
rebruars whkh made a recommend<lb/>
Eton to raise ihe age requirement lo 19<lb/>
Although Hun' has not otficiallv<lb/>
responded lo ihe ommision's conclu<lb/>
sions Hjtkrvrv said lhal Hum "has<lb/>
jeajv rnjoisej" wimr of rhe pto-<lb/>
r�.sai- maJr hs :he UUl force<lb/>
Or Jerrv LotMriMS. professor arvd<lb/>
jsJtUtstfk't.1 inc ul.MM atnua<lb/>
Prwf rmiA. mitcn a nnnter wl ijueMtofu<lb/>
regardina live �ac issue and ihe problem<lb/>
of alcohol abuse, in an interview with<lb/>
The I si Carolinian<lb/>
' Atcohol is alcohol said Loiterhot<lb/>
referring lo ihe difference in North<lb/>
Carolina's minimum age requirements<lb/>
for beer and wine as compared to hard<lb/>
liquor "Sixty percent of the alcohol<lb/>
consumed in North Carolina is consum-<lb/>
ed as beer and wine which is not con-<lb/>
trolled by our ABC laws" he con-<lb/>
tinued "That's part of our legacy of<lb/>
misconstrued notions about booze "<lb/>
"The problem we have in our culture<lb/>
is much larger than just changing the<lb/>
drinking age I otterhos said He add<lb/>
ed lhal alcohol is important "in<lb/>
American society, yet "we're extremely<lb/>
contused about what appropriate or<lb/>
responsible alcohol consumption<lb/>
should be<lb/>
Lotterhos pointed out that his<lb/>
statistics show that 75 percent of the<lb/>
students who drink at ECU say their<lb/>
average age of "first consumption" of<lb/>
alsohol is 14 9 years.<lb/>
"If the law at age 18 is not working,<lb/>
whv do we assume the law at age 21 will<lb/>
work1" lotterhos said "If age works<lb/>
is a deterrent lo consumption then why<lb/>
is 14 9 the average age1 That's the ques-<lb/>
tion we should ask<lb/>
1 otterhos noted that the number-one<lb/>
sause of death in the 16-to 21 year-old<lb/>
age group was alcohol related traffic-<lb/>
accidents and that raising the drinking<lb/>
age reduced the rates of "alcohol<lb/>
related negative consequences "<lb/>
He said 40 percent of the drinking by<lb/>
the I.VI" age group is done in the car<lb/>
"The data is Py incontrovertible �<lb/>
it's hard data, sou can't play with it "<lb/>
Other factors which Lotterhos<lb/>
discussed included some of the negative<lb/>
aspects of raising the minimum age<lb/>
"What dots this do to the value system<lb/>
of our 16 ro 21 year-old population?"<lb/>
Lotterhos said, referring to the person's<lb/>
self-image while entering adulthood in<lb/>
a society where he can vote for the<lb/>
President and Tight in a war. but not be<lb/>
trusted lo dnnk responsibly.<lb/>
Lotterhos was also concerned that an<lb/>
increase in the drinking age could also<lb/>
cause an increase in the abuse of other<lb/>
drugs<lb/>
"We think we become more<lb/>
masculine, more feminine, more seiy<lb/>
� whatever we want to be � by drink-<lb/>
ing alcohol Lotterhos said. "1 think<lb/>
we tend to believe that if a little alcohol<lb/>
is good, than a whole lot of alcohol is<lb/>
better " He added that drinking is per-<lb/>
cieved as "fun behavior" and<lb/>
"drunkenness is acceptable in<lb/>
American culture "<lb/>
"I'm also aware that it's a very com<lb/>
plicated issue Lotterhos added "I'm<lb/>
arguing a counter point; perhaps we<lb/>
need to work on some of the styles,<lb/>
manners, attitudes and values we have<lb/>
towards drinking in our society rather<lb/>
than looking for magic answers in<lb/>
terms of age changes "<lb/>
"I would prefer to see dollars, time,<lb/>
effort and energy spent toward evolving<lb/>
positive educational activities relative<lb/>
to alcohol use and abuse Lotterhos<lb/>
said<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"They have done a superb job for a<lb/>
number or years said Edith Blanton.<lb/>
Cherry Hospital director of volunteer<lb/>
services said of the local group. "We<lb/>
can always depend on Pitt County to be<lb/>
one of our most generous counties.<lb/>
"We have many patients here that<lb/>
would not be remembered at Christmas<lb/>
lime if it were not for donations con-<lb/>
tinued Blanton referring to the Opera-<lb/>
tion Santa Claus Drive "We can<lb/>
always depend on the Mental Health<lb/>
Association to meet the needs of<lb/>
Caswell residents during the Chnsuna<lb/>
holidays added Val Carmine, an<lb/>
employee at Caswell. Carmine is also a<lb/>
director of volunteer services.<lb/>
According to Gray, the Christmas<lb/>
holiday season is a particularly difficult<lb/>
and lonely time for institutionalized<lb/>
mental health patients. "There are<lb/>
many who have no living relatives,<lb/>
some have been forgotten after years of<lb/>
being in an institution; others have<lb/>
families who are financially unabie to<lb/>
provide for their loved one she said<lb/>
"Holidays seem to make the<lb/>
loneliness even more real and we try to<lb/>
alleviate that as much as possible<lb/>
Mrs. Zula Rouse of Greenville is the<lb/>
Pitt County chairperson of this year's<lb/>
Operation Santa Claus Drive. Mrs.<lb/>
Gladys Howell. the wife of ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell. has<lb/>
volunteered to be honorary chairperson<lb/>
for the drive.<lb/>
Various collection points for poeple<lb/>
wishing to donate gifts have been set up<lb/>
throughout the community.<lb/>
The Mental Health Association re-<lb/>
quests that donated gifts be "new"<lb/>
because this may be the only package<lb/>
some of the residents will receive<lb/>
The suggestions for gifts vary from<lb/>
jars of instant coffee and hair dryers to<lb/>
table games and televisions Specific<lb/>
gifts for women can include jewelry,<lb/>
cosmetics, clothes, pantyhose and other<lb/>
useful items. For men, sweaters, belts,<lb/>
wallets, sponshirts and ties are sug-<lb/>
gested gift ideas Toys, records and<lb/>
record players can also be used for the<lb/>
recreation and training programs.<lb/>
Gray mentioned that individuals and<lb/>
groups were welcome to join the<lb/>
MHA's adoption program which is<lb/>
geared toward "forgotten patients<lb/>
those who have had no family member<lb/>
contact in over three months Anyone<lb/>
who wishes to participate is asked to<lb/>
make an annual S26 donation so a<lb/>
forgotten patient can receive 50 cents<lb/>
each week of the year as spending<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Anyone wishing more information<lb/>
regarding Operation Santa Claus or the<lb/>
adoption program is asked to call the<lb/>
Mental Health Association at 752-7448<lb/>
or slop by their offices al 315 Evans St<lb/>
Mall (Room 202) They ask thai all gifts<lb/>
be in by December 7.<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
. Each of ttiaaa advartisad items it raquirad to bo roodtiy availabta for soio at or<lb/>
bolow tho aOVarttaad prlco In aactt UP Stora. aicapt �� apocrtlcalry notod<lb/>
In this ad <lb/>
0<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT DEC. 11, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
Raises Urged<lb/>
Gov. James B Hunt Jr said Monday<lb/>
night that the N.C. Legislature should<lb/>
lift the freeze on salary raises for<lb/>
teachers and stale employees when it<lb/>
meets in January. Hunt originally sup-<lb/>
ported the freeze that has been in effect<lb/>
since last summer<lb/>
"Lifting lhal freeze should be at the<lb/>
top of our list of priorities when you<lb/>
legislators return to Raleigh next year<lb/>
Hunt's statement came in wake of<lb/>
reports that the pay freeze was harming<lb/>
ihe UNC-CH School of Medicine as un<lb/>
competitive salaies encouraged pro-<lb/>
fessors to take jobs al higher paying<lb/>
schools. The pay freeze could harm the<lb/>
ECU medical school and other N C<lb/>
public universities in general if<lb/>
leachers' salaries fall significantly<lb/>
below other schools<lb/>
Hum noted that it is difficult to<lb/>
maintain adequate funding in schools<lb/>
during the current economic recession<lb/>
but thai North Carolina must support<lb/>
it's educational institutions to maintain<lb/>
high standards and remain competitive<lb/>
for industrial development<lb/>
James Bcardcn. dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Business, said that the salary<lb/>
freeze could hurt his department if<lb/>
salaries are not allowed to increase<lb/>
soon<lb/>
"Our big problem is that you fall<lb/>
behind and then you have to catch up<lb/>
Bearden said referring to ihe pay scale<lb/>
in comparison to other schools<lb/>
He said that the business school has<lb/>
not lost many faculty members yet<lb/>
because of uncompetitive salaries due<lb/>
to the freeze because other stales are<lb/>
having similar problems He added that<lb/>
they needed to keep salaries competitive<lb/>
in order to keep good leachers and that<lb/>
being unable to raise salaries in some<lb/>
cases has hurt the school's efforts in<lb/>
recruiting new teachers<lb/>
�i now and Dae 11, taatrigl<lb/>
rid�m .H national manufactur<lb/>
ar "a canta-off coupon up to SO<lb/>
tor doubt, thatr vaJcssj ONar good<lb/>
on national manufacturors'<lb/>
canta-off coupon only. (Food<lb/>
ratallai coupons not accaptad.)<lb/>
Cuatornar mutt purcnaaa cou-<lb/>
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Explrad coupons will not ba<lb/>
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tornar par Ham. No coupons ac-<lb/>
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Offar doaa not apply to A4P or<lb/>
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tha ratail prtca.<lb/>
CNp the Manufacturers' "Cents-Off"<lb/>
Coupons from your mail, newspapers<lb/>
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your A P Food Store!<lb/>
Savings are Great with A&amp;P's DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS!<lb/>
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U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
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6 lbs. or<lb/>
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Student At AntUKlan Rally<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An ICC student was among the par<lb/>
ricipams in fast weekend's Urge ami<lb/>
Man demonstration thai toot Disuse in<lb/>
Vfcashington. D C . lo cewnotse wifh the<lb/>
ku aJus titan's first rally m thr tiM<lb/>
lion's sapstaJ in 37 years, which �ever<lb/>
t�sd EUtt. an ECU drama aaajoe.<lb/>
was w VVaaaaaujson. DC. loe the<lb/>
Ibar.hajjjsing howsay. when he and<lb/>
tome of his f nettd. decided to jean �<lb/>
anii-kUan gathering in McPhenon<lb/>
Park.<lb/>
Thai decision thrust Ellis and his<lb/>
companions into the midst of what<lb/>
became, in his opinion, "a life<lb/>
threatening" situation when violent<lb/>
slashes broke out heiwern protesiori<lb/>
and potjee<lb/>
"The whole xira behind the ku klui<lb/>
klan i which is basically white<lb/>
supremacy � represents a threat lo<lb/>
what our whotr country stands for<lb/>
Liita taviat. r�stein uL iujiuii.<lb/>
freedom of cavotce. the MB of guajhu �<lb/>
our whole Constitution<lb/>
Ellis denounced the vioktnot that<lb/>
erupted and said he "totally disagreed"<lb/>
with people who look advantage of the<lb/>
situation and looted nearby stores-<lb/>
He said that the violence occurred for<lb/>
a number of reasons and that there<lb/>
were a lot of varied interest groups,<lb/>
most of which were peaceful rJlit<lb/>
noted that people were very angry.<lb/>
some because ihey were out of work<lb/>
and others hecause they view ad the<lb/>
Klan aa threat lo iheu sm-unly "There<lb/>
was 4 iw of aau-SXcaaaa aiaiianwi<lb/>
Oar tloftn the demonstrators were<lb/>
taoiiimg saw 'Banana earn taw kaan aw<lb/>
' ' stead- " Eika said.<lb/>
"that a group can discriminate on the<lb/>
basis of religion, race, national origin<lb/>
or seaual preference � I feh they have<lb/>
u be slopped<lb/>
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According lo I Ihs Iba<lb/>
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Ellis voHiataerad to tarry a banner<lb/>
wsth a group called the Ail Peoples<lb/>
Congress which was not advotatina<lb/>
violence or confrontation with police<lb/>
"It defies moral decency Elba said.<lb/>
Mwtcd off a Iwo-hsock area where the<lb/>
throw bncksaad bottles al ponce, they<lb/>
responded by firing tear gas laamiri<lb/>
into the demonstration. Ellis sasd.<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
Wall<lb/>
Graduating Seniors<lb/>
cMEFARV<lb/>
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All graduating seniors are entitled to receive<lb/>
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Club. Simply fill out the form below and send<lb/>
to:<lb/>
ECU Educational Foundation<lb/>
Pirate Club<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
or call (919) 757-6178<lb/>
Pirate Club membership entitles you to<lb/>
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PIRATE CLUB MEMBERSHIP '83<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057520_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
DEC EMBER 7, 1982<lb/>
-�1<lb/>
ges<lb/>
!W<lb/>
15 ast record collec-<lb/>
lorrisoo Christmas<lb/>
cense and Two Hits<lb/>
here to be found.<lb/>
as my Stairway to<lb/>
Day of Discovery<lb/>
ind eerythng was<lb/>
Iden, during a two-<lb/>
Ik, I heard another<lb/>
ore. this time, it was<lb/>
ot a woman (a<lb/>
rrrTTT she growled,<lb/>
k Ernest ArtftVey's<lb/>
IS �o-sw come -��<lb/>
sing this.I'm not<lb/>
er mv chastity belt<lb/>
nemy I screamed,<lb/>
mv hands "Ah,<lb/>
Hughes is a senior<lb/>
m N.C, where he<lb/>
te "stun line" at a<lb/>
He hopes one day to<lb/>
tal music psychology<lb/>
I; king bait shops in<lb/>
ar<lb/>
ms of Alex Charns are<lb/>
struggle for justice<lb/>
i is still full of people<lb/>
is quo, who won't take<lb/>
good to know there<lb/>
Jho don't ignore the<lb/>
ot injustice.<lb/>
ITOKEEPUP<lb/>
3 YEARS AGO<lb/>
h��<lb/>
�<lb/>
�2<lb/>
The Stories You Missed<lb/>
'Operation Santa9 Helps Disabled<lb/>
�� EMIL CAS Y<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Menial Health Association in<lb/>
Put Countv has begun then annual<lb/>
Operation Stanta Claus Drive which<lb/>
collects gilts and mono to provide a<lb/>
happv Christmas for people living at<lb/>
Caswell Center for the mentallv retard<lb/>
ed in kinsion and in Cherry Hospital in<lb/>
CWdsboro<lb/>
Bienda Cirav, the eieculive direcloi<lb/>
o4 the MHA. is especially enthusiastic<lb/>
about the "tremendous support" the<lb/>
pioievi is receiving fiom ECl students<lb/>
All fifteen of ECU'S residence halls are<lb/>
lending their help to the project, as are<lb/>
a doen oj the university's fraternities<lb/>
and sororities<lb/>
"We're very pleased with all the sup-<lb/>
port we're getting from the campus<lb/>
community Cray said "Students<lb/>
from East Carolina have become more<lb/>
invol.ed this year than every before<lb/>
IK main purpose is to provide<lb/>
Christmas gifts for the patients at<lb/>
Cherry Hospital and the clients at<lb/>
Caswell Center Gray told The East<lb/>
Carolinian "There are no state funds<lb/>
available for any gifts or Christmas<lb/>
parties "<lb/>
The Mental Health Association has<lb/>
branches nationwide and is funded<lb/>
through United Way and the contribu-<lb/>
tions of members The MHA chapter in<lb/>
Put County, which has more than 7?0<lb/>
members, is "one of the largest<lb/>
chapters in the state according to<lb/>
Gray. North Carolina has 52 chapters<lb/>
statewide<lb/>
The Operation Santa Claus Cam-<lb/>
paign, which was first instituted in Pitt<lb/>
County in 1958, has received much<lb/>
praise for the joy it brings to people<lb/>
who must spend their Christmas holi-<lb/>
day in institutions, often without fami-<lb/>
ly support or friends.<lb/>
Besides Caswell Center and Cherry<lb/>
Hospital. Operation Santa Clause also<lb/>
provides Christmas gifts to people in<lb/>
'community based programs"<lb/>
throughout Pitt County These com-<lb/>
munity based programs generally serve<lb/>
people recently discharged from menial<lb/>
health facilities as they are going<lb/>
through the "de-institutionaliulion<lb/>
process" and readjusting to the outside<lb/>
Proposal To Raise Age<lb/>
For Drinking Endorsed<lb/>
By PA1RK kOMil I<lb/>
suf f V riler<lb/>
On Monday Transporiai ion<lb/>
�vrcretarv Andrew I "Drew" Lewis<lb/>
endorsed proposals made in the reccnt-<lb/>
lv released Presidential Commission on<lb/>
Drunken Driving report (hat urged<lb/>
suie? to raise (he minimum drinking<lb/>
age to :i<lb/>
National statistics have shown rhat<lb/>
auohol abuse is a contributing (actor in<lb/>
more than half ot ihe VI.000 highwav<lb/>
fatalities that occur in (he I ruled Sidles<lb/>
each vear<lb/>
I hn factor has caused 18 sutes.<lb/>
� hich had previously lowered (heir<lb/>
minimum drinking age to 18. to recon-<lb/>
sider and reverse (heir minimum age<lb/>
u�s bask to the 20- and :i vear old age<lb/>
levels<lb/>
lewis said he would support recom<lb/>
mendadons hs the commission calling<lb/>
on U sijtcs. ihe Disinci of Columbia<lb/>
and Puerto Rico to raise the minimum<lb/>
ae on all alcohol products, including<lb/>
beer and wine, to cl<lb/>
North Carolina has a drinking age re<lb/>
ii.rement of 18 tor beer and wine pro-<lb/>
jects and Ti for liquor C urrentls state<lb/>
o((ivi�. � studving the possibihts of<lb/>
ra,Mng rhc jm age on beer and<lb/>
wine products<lb/>
According to Brent Hjcknes a<lb/>
spokesperson :n dos Hunt's execudse<lb/>
��  in Raleigh, Hunt is m favor of<lb/>
raising North Carolina's minimum<lb/>
drinking Age tor wine and beer products<lb/>
to "at least 19 "<lb/>
He hasn : fully made up his mind<lb/>
vet Hacknes xaid, but Hunt has not<lb/>
ruled out the posutMltf) of raising u 10<lb/>
29 or 21<lb/>
Hunt appointed a (overrun s Task<lb/>
fore on D'unken Driving last<lb/>
februarv which made a recommenda<lb/>
don lo raise ihe age requirement 10 19<lb/>
Although Han: has nor oflicaaS)<lb/>
responded lo the cOmmoion s corwlu<lb/>
�aoM Hacfcsstj Mad "tai Hum "has<lb/>
a.eadt rnjortfd ' vcime of Ihe pro<lb/>
p. a- mJe hs :he Uil gave<lb/>
tr Irrrr I otlcrlfcaa. professes, and<lb/>
a in i - kxU. ajsvajaal aau�<lb/>
t �l�a rcrt a lAambcr �f quastmtM<lb/>
regarding itvc age issue and ihe problem<lb/>
of alcohol abuse, in an interview with<lb/>
The Basal C aiobnian<lb/>
kVcohert is alcohol said l.ottnhca<lb/>
rctetring to ine dillcTence in North<lb/>
Carolina's minimum age requirements<lb/>
for beer and wine as compared to hard<lb/>
liquor "Sixty percent of the alcohol<lb/>
consumed in North Carolina is consum-<lb/>
ed as beer and wine which is not con-<lb/>
trolled by our ABC laws" he con-<lb/>
tinued "That's part of our legacy of<lb/>
misconstrued notions about booze "<lb/>
"The problem we have in our culture<lb/>
is much larger than just changing the<lb/>
drinking age 1 oiterhos said He add<lb/>
cd thai alcohol is important "in<lb/>
American society, yet "we're extremely<lb/>
confused about what appropriate or<lb/>
responsible alcohol consumption<lb/>
should be "<lb/>
Lotterhos pointed out that his<lb/>
statistics show that 75 percent of the<lb/>
students who drink at ECU say their<lb/>
average age of "first consumption" of<lb/>
alcohol is 14 9 years<lb/>
"If the law at age 18 is not working,<lb/>
whs do we assume (he law at age 21 will<lb/>
work7" Lotterhos said "If age works<lb/>
as a deterrent (o consumption then why<lb/>
is 14 9 the aserage age1 Thai's theques<lb/>
tton we should ask "<lb/>
I otterhos noted that the number-one<lb/>
cause of death in the 16-to 2 year-old<lb/>
age group was alcohol related traffic<lb/>
accidents and that raising (he drinking<lb/>
age reduced the rates of "alcohol<lb/>
related negative consequences "<lb/>
He said 40 percent of the drinking by<lb/>
the 13-11 age group is done in the car<lb/>
"The data is pretty incontrovertible �<lb/>
us hard data, you can't play with it "<lb/>
Other factors which Lotterhos<lb/>
discussed included some of the negative<lb/>
aspects of raising the minimum age<lb/>
"What does this do to the value system<lb/>
of our 18 to 21 year-old population?"<lb/>
Lotterhos said, referring to the person's<lb/>
self-image while entering adulthood in<lb/>
a society where he can vole for the<lb/>
President and fight in a war, but not be<lb/>
trusted to dnnk responsibly.<lb/>
Loiierhos was also concerned that an<lb/>
increase in the drinking age could also<lb/>
cause an increase in the abuse of other<lb/>
drugs<lb/>
"We think we become more<lb/>
masculine, more feminine, more sexy<lb/>
� whatever we want to be � by drink-<lb/>
ing alcohol Lotterhos said "I think<lb/>
we tend to believe that if a little alcohol<lb/>
is good, than a whole lot of alcohol is<lb/>
better " He added that dnnking is per<lb/>
cieved as "fun behavior" and<lb/>
"drunkenness is acceptable in<lb/>
American culture "<lb/>
"I'm also aware that it's a very com-<lb/>
plicated issue Lotterhos added. "I'm<lb/>
arguing a counter point: perhaps we<lb/>
need to work on some of the styles,<lb/>
manners, attitudes and values we have<lb/>
towards dnnking in our society rather<lb/>
than looking for magic answers in<lb/>
terms of age changes "<lb/>
"I would prefer to see dollars, time,<lb/>
effort and energy spent toward evolving<lb/>
positive educational activities relative<lb/>
to alcohol use and abuse Lotterhos<lb/>
said<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"They have done a superb job for a<lb/>
number of years said Edith Blanton.<lb/>
Cherry Hospital director of volunteer<lb/>
services said of the local group. "We<lb/>
can always depend on Pill County to be<lb/>
one of our most generous counties<lb/>
"We have many patients here thai<lb/>
would not be remembered at Christmas<lb/>
time if ii were not for donations con-<lb/>
tinued Blanton referring lo the Opera-<lb/>
tion Santa Claus Drive "We can<lb/>
always depend on the Menial Health<lb/>
Association to meet the needs of<lb/>
Caswell residents during the Christmas<lb/>
holidays added Val Carmine, an<lb/>
employee at Caswell. Carmine is also a<lb/>
director of volunteer services.<lb/>
According to Gray, the Christmas<lb/>
holiday season is a particularly difficult<lb/>
and lonely time for institutionalized<lb/>
mental health patient- "There are<lb/>
many who have no living relatives,<lb/>
some have been forgotten after years of<lb/>
being in an institution, others have<lb/>
families who are financially unable to<lb/>
provide for their loved one she said.<lb/>
"Holidays seem to make the<lb/>
loneliness even more real and we try to<lb/>
alleviate that as much as possible<lb/>
Mrs. Zula Rouse of Greenville is the<lb/>
Pitt County chairperson of this year's<lb/>
Operation Santa Claus Drive. Mrs.<lb/>
Gladys Howell, the wife of ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell, has<lb/>
volunteered lo be honorary chairperson<lb/>
for the drive.<lb/>
Various collection points for poeple<lb/>
wishing lo donate gifts have been set up<lb/>
Ihroughoul (he community<lb/>
The Menial Health Association re-<lb/>
quests (hat donated gifts be "new"<lb/>
because this may be the only package<lb/>
some of the residents will receive.<lb/>
The suggestions for gifts vary from<lb/>
jars of instant coffee and hair dryers lo<lb/>
(able games and televisions. Specific<lb/>
gifts for women can include jewelry,<lb/>
cosmetics, clothes, pantyhose and other<lb/>
useful items. For men, sweaters, belts,<lb/>
wallets, sponshirts and lies are sug-<lb/>
gested gift ideas. Toys, records and<lb/>
record players can also be used for the<lb/>
recreation and training programs.<lb/>
Gray mentioned thai individuals and<lb/>
groups were welcome lo join the<lb/>
MHA's adoption program which is<lb/>
geared toward "forgotten patients<lb/>
those who have had no family member<lb/>
contact in over three months Anyone<lb/>
who wishes to participate is asked to<lb/>
make an annual $26 donation so a<lb/>
forgotten patient can receive 50 cents<lb/>
each week of ihe year as spending<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Anyone wishing more information<lb/>
regarding Operation Santa Claus or the<lb/>
adoption program is asked to call the<lb/>
Mental Health Association al 752-7448<lb/>
or stop by their offices at 315 Evans St<lb/>
Mall (Room 202) They ask that all gifts<lb/>
be in by December 7.<lb/>
Raises Urged<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr said Monday<lb/>
night that the N.C. Legislature should<lb/>
lift the freeze on salary raises for<lb/>
teachers and state employees when it<lb/>
meets in January. Hunt originally sup-<lb/>
ported the freeze that has been in effect<lb/>
since last summer.<lb/>
"lifting that freeze should be at the<lb/>
top of our list of priorities when you<lb/>
legislators return to Raleigh next year<lb/>
Hunt's statement came in wake of<lb/>
reports that the pay freeze was harming<lb/>
the UNC-CH School of Medicine as un<lb/>
competitive salaies encouraged pro-<lb/>
fessors to take jobs at higher paying<lb/>
schools. The pay freeze could harm the<lb/>
ECU medjcal school and other NO<lb/>
public universities in general if<lb/>
teachers' salaries fall significantly<lb/>
below other schools.<lb/>
Hunt noted that it u difficult lo<lb/>
maintain adequaie funding in schools<lb/>
during the current economic recession<lb/>
but that North Carolina must support<lb/>
it's educational institutions to maintain<lb/>
high standards and remain competitive<lb/>
for industrial development.<lb/>
James Beardcn. dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Business, said that the salary<lb/>
freeze could hurt his department if<lb/>
salaries are not allowed to increase<lb/>
soon<lb/>
"Our big problem is thai you fall<lb/>
behind and then you have to catch up<lb/>
Bearden said referring to the pay scale<lb/>
in comparison lo other schools<lb/>
He said that the business school has<lb/>
not lost many faculty members yel<lb/>
because of uncompetitive salaries due<lb/>
lo the freeze because other slates are<lb/>
having similar problems He added that<lb/>
they needed (o keep salaries competitive<lb/>
in order to keep good teachers and that<lb/>
bang unable to raise salaries in some<lb/>
cases has hurt the school's efforts in<lb/>
recruiting new teachers.<lb/>
Student At AntUKlan Rally<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An ECU student was among ihe par<lb/>
ticipanii in last weekend's Urge and<lb/>
Man demonstration that look piace in<lb/>
Washinjlon. P I to coincide wtih the<lb/>
Ku k.lu� Man i firii rally is the aa<lb/>
iKvti'i capital in 97 years, wftach ncvet<lb/>
laod fcitii. an ECU draswa a�is.<lb/>
was ua WassMgajsajaja. DC. lot isw<lb/>
Thanksaiviac holiday, whea he and<lb/>
some of hu (ntndi deexdad to join the<lb/>
anu-sClan gathering in McPhenon<lb/>
Park<lb/>
Thai decision thrust Elks and hu<lb/>
companions into ihe midst of what<lb/>
became, in his opinion, "a life<lb/>
threatening" situation when violent<lb/>
clashes broke out between protestors<lb/>
and police<lb/>
"The whole idea behind ihe ku SChu<lb/>
a. Ian a. which ii basically white<lb/>
supremacy � represent a ihreai to<lb/>
what our whole lountrv Hands few<lb/>
b4 V- ' ��dons oi. laaavon.<lb/>
Tiaagnai of estate, the awn of BtgHu �<lb/>
our whole Const it ut ion<lb/>
Elks denounced the vvottno thai<lb/>
erupted and said he "lotaUy dtaaaraad"<lb/>
�un people who took axtvaatagst of the<lb/>
situation and looted nearby stores.<lb/>
He sasd thai the violence occurred for<lb/>
a number of reasons and that there<lb/>
were a lor of varied interest groups,<lb/>
most of which were peaceful Elks<lb/>
noted that people were very aagry.<lb/>
some because they were out of work<lb/>
and others herauie they viewed ihe<lb/>
Kian as threat to iheu m-uni, "There<lb/>
was � lot of ipi Rriau<lb/>
Owe iiofin ihe demonaireaor<lb/>
fchmiimg<lb/>
- em. mi<lb/>
"thai a group can discriminate on the<lb/>
basn of religion, race, national origin<lb/>
or sexual preference � 1 fen they havt<lb/>
lo be stooped "<lb/>
According to t-IWi the<lb/>
erupted when a group of ISO<lb/>
violence or confrontation with poise.<lb/>
"It defies moral decency Elks said.<lb/>
throw brickj and boot at police, they<lb/>
responded by firing tear gas canisters<lb/>
into the demonstration. Elks said.<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
to all<lb/>
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All graduating seniors are entitled to receive<lb/>
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to:<lb/>
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Pirate Club<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
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Pirate Club membership entitles you to<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057520_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
g THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DEChMBER7. 1982<lb/>
1<lb/>
Alternatives To Prison Encouraged<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Seventy-six percent<lb/>
of the people who are<lb/>
admitted to North<lb/>
Carolina state prisons<lb/>
have been sentenced for<lb/>
non-violent crimes. Ac-<lb/>
cording to the findings<lb/>
of the "Citizens Com-<lb/>
mission on Alternatives<lb/>
to Incarceration"<lb/>
report, many of these<lb/>
non-violent offenders<lb/>
should be given<lb/>
"community-based<lb/>
penalties" instead of<lb/>
being sent to prison.<lb/>
"As North<lb/>
Carolina's prison<lb/>
population expands<lb/>
and the cost of in-<lb/>
carcerating so many of-<lb/>
fenders in state prisons<lb/>
rises sharply, the state<lb/>
should reassess its<lb/>
policies that favor in-<lb/>
carceration as a penal-<lb/>
ty the report said.<lb/>
"Community-based<lb/>
penalities as an alter-<lb/>
native to prison are<lb/>
feasible for many non-<lb/>
violent offenders<lb/>
Some of the<lb/>
community-based alter-<lb/>
natives recommended<lb/>
by the commission in-<lb/>
clude restitution to the<lb/>
victims of crime, a<lb/>
reexamination of the<lb/>
length of certain prison<lb/>
sentences and sentenc-<lb/>
ing of non-violent of-<lb/>
fenders to community<lb/>
service work.<lb/>
"For government to<lb/>
dismiss these proposals<lb/>
as soft on crime would<lb/>
be inaccurate and a<lb/>
costly mistake, said<lb/>
state Court of Appeals<lb/>
Judge Willis P.<lb/>
Whichard of Durham<lb/>
who was the chairman<lb/>
of the two-year study<lb/>
commission.<lb/>
Whichard, named to<lb/>
the bench by Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr ad-<lb/>
ded that the recommen-<lb/>
dations made by the<lb/>
study applied only to<lb/>
non-violent offenders<lb/>
and that the commis-<lb/>
sion was not ad-<lb/>
vocating soft treatment<lb/>
of criminals.<lb/>
The commission,<lb/>
which is made up of<lb/>
judges, attorneys,<lb/>
legislators, former<lb/>
prisoners and civic<lb/>
leaders, released their<lb/>
report at a time when<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
prison population has<lb/>
reached a record high.<lb/>
The state's prison<lb/>
population currently<lb/>
stands at approximate-<lb/>
ly 17,400 inmates,<lb/>
while the state's<lb/>
facilities are only<lb/>
designed to hold 14,800<lb/>
inmates. The Prison<lb/>
and Jail Project, a<lb/>
Durham-based<lb/>
organization working<lb/>
for alternatives to in-<lb/>
carceration, claims<lb/>
prison overcrowding<lb/>
will cause "severe pro-<lb/>
blems" to both inmates<lb/>
and guards.<lb/>
The Project is also<lb/>
opposed to any addi-<lb/>
tional prison construc-<lb/>
tion. "Instead of con-<lb/>
structing new prisons<lb/>
said Leo Rubert, a staf-<lb/>
fperson with the pro-<lb/>
ject, "policy makers<lb/>
should look very<lb/>
carefully at alter-<lb/>
natives Rubert added<lb/>
that "there are many<lb/>
prisoners for whom<lb/>
alternatives would be<lb/>
more appropriate<lb/>
"We've got to<lb/>
recognize that we can't<lb/>
continue to construct<lb/>
more prisons said<lb/>
Delano Berry, an ECU<lb/>
accounting lecturer and<lb/>
former Department of<lb/>
Corrections employee.<lb/>
"It's going to bankrupt<lb/>
us<lb/>
Berry warned that<lb/>
further prison con-<lb/>
struction would have a<lb/>
double negative impact<lb/>
on society. He believed<lb/>
the funds appropriated<lb/>
for prison construction<lb/>
could be better utilized<lb/>
for altei natives and<lb/>
that "society is going to<lb/>
have to pay additional<lb/>
costs from (increased)<lb/>
crime "because prisons<lb/>
are not rehabilitating<lb/>
inmates<lb/>
The Willis Commis-<lb/>
sion report recom-<lb/>
mended that ail people<lb/>
convicted of misde-<lb/>
meanors or non-violent<lb/>
felonies such as<lb/>
burglary or larceny be<lb/>
sentenced to do com-<lb/>
munity service work in-<lb/>
stead of going to<lb/>
prison.<lb/>
A statewide<lb/>
community-based<lb/>
penalty program also<lb/>
would be established to<lb/>
plan alternatives to<lb/>
prison. The program<lb/>
would be designed on a<lb/>
case-by-case basis.<lb/>
" i he commission<lb/>
realizes after two years<lb/>
of research that the<lb/>
state is really at a<lb/>
crucial decision makipg<lb/>
point Rubert said.<lb/>
"It can either continue<lb/>
past policies of increas-<lb/>
ed prison construction,<lb/>
high costs and severe<lb/>
overcrowding pro-<lb/>
blems, or it can change<lb/>
its policies<lb/>
Rubert noted North<lb/>
Carolina had the<lb/>
highest per-capita in-<lb/>
carcertion rate in the<lb/>
nation and that many<lb/>
states were already<lb/>
benefiting from the im-<lb/>
plementation of prison<lb/>
alternative programs.<lb/>
During official<lb/>
ceremonies last week,<lb/>
Willis officially<lb/>
presented a copy of the<lb/>
commission's report to<lb/>
Gov. Hunt who praised<lb/>
the work of the com-<lb/>
mission but told its<lb/>
members not to expect<lb/>
him to agree with all<lb/>
their findings.<lb/>
"My policy remains<lb/>
the same: swift, certain<lb/>
and severe punishment<lb/>
for the criminal Hunt<lb/>
said. "I will read this<lb/>
report and analyze very<lb/>
carefully whether these<lb/>
recommendations meet<lb/>
that test. If an alter-<lb/>
native form of punish-<lb/>
ment will best provide<lb/>
that protection we<lb/>
ought to use it.<lb/>
"If prison will be<lb/>
best to protect our peo-<lb/>
ple, we should use<lb/>
prison and build as<lb/>
many as we have to<lb/>
Hunt said.<lb/>
In addition to Hunt,<lb/>
the report will be<lb/>
presented to Attorney<lb/>
General Rufus L. Ed-<lb/>
misten, Chief Justice<lb/>
Joseph Branck of the<lb/>
State Supreme Court<lb/>
and Corrections<lb/>
Secretary James C.<lb/>
Woodard.<lb/>
"The commission<lb/>
has concluded that<lb/>
North Carolina can<lb/>
change its policies with<lb/>
no risk to the public<lb/>
safety Rubert said.<lb/>
"Prison doesn't best<lb/>
protect our people<lb/>
because over 90 percent<lb/>
of the people come<lb/>
back to the communi-<lb/>
ty where, she con-<lb/>
tinued, ex-offenders<lb/>
will be unable to adjust<lb/>
or find adequate<lb/>
employment and pro-<lb/>
bably return to crime.<lb/>
"The commission<lb/>
has clearly identified<lb/>
and researched a pro-<lb/>
blem and has posed<lb/>
possible solutions<lb/>
concluded Rubert.<lb/>
"It's the responsibility<lb/>
of state officials to take<lb/>
a close look at that, and<lb/>
Hunt said he would do<lb/>
that<lb/>
$oco!id$<lb/>
ishing everyone<lb/>
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JUNIOR EXECS<lb/>
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Immediate openings on both coasts �nJ the Gulf of Mexico � We<lb/>
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Two locations to better serve you III!<lb/>
Downtown:<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
DECEMBER 7, 1982 Page 7<lb/>
Shadow Box'<lb/>
A Successful<lb/>
Term Finale<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Managing 1 .In r<lb/>
"There are Jive different stages<lb/>
that a person will go through when<lb/>
he J aces the J act oj his own death:<lb/>
denial, anger, bargaining, depres-<lb/>
sion and acceptance. These stages<lb/>
will last for different periods of<lb/>
time; they will replace each other or<lb/>
exist at times side by side hut the<lb/>
one thing that usually persists<lb/>
through all these stages is hope. "<lb/>
t. Kubler-Ross, M.D.<lb/>
If, indeed, the modern entertain-<lb/>
ment industry no longer pays heed<lb/>
to any of the taboos which once<lb/>
governed theatre � and it really<lb/>
doesn't � it has, nevertheless,<lb/>
strangely kept one subject in the<lb/>
proverbial closet: death.<lb/>
Ah, death the inevitable. The<lb/>
end. The terrifying end. 1 he one<lb/>
thing we all hae in common<lb/>
And more importantly for the pur-<lb/>
poses of this review, the subject of a<lb/>
fascinating ECU Playhouse produc-<lb/>
tion, The Shadow Box.<lb/>
Perhaps it would be all too easy to<lb/>
dwell on the psychological and, in-<lb/>
deed, philosophical ramifications (if<lb/>
they can be called that) of death and<lb/>
dying. And if space allowed. I<lb/>
would surely hae a heydey. But it<lb/>
that philosophizing should come at<lb/>
the expense of comment on the ex-<lb/>
cellent performances that would<lb/>
surely be a travesty.<lb/>
Under the outstanding direction<lb/>
of Cedric Winchell, The Shadow<lb/>
Box explores three terminally-ill pa-<lb/>
tients living out the rest of their days<lb/>
in a sort of hospice and dealing with<lb/>
the frightening reality ol death.<lb/>
They come from diverse<lb/>
backgrounds; their outlooks on the<lb/>
awaiting inevitabilities vary. In fact,<lb/>
it is doubtless whether each even<lb/>
knows of the other's existence.<lb/>
Nonetheless, they seem somehow<lb/>
bound together by a transcendent<lb/>
wisdom, a common love of life, a<lb/>
genuine acceptance of death. They<lb/>
are, at the same time, alone and<lb/>
together.<lb/>
Dick St. George, who played a<lb/>
middle-aged husband and father,<lb/>
gave an excellent (Yes, I know that<lb/>
word stinks, but it was excellent),<lb/>
stirring performance, uniquely cap-<lb/>
tivating both interest and intrigue.<lb/>
Perhaps his role best exemplifies the<lb/>
irony of terminal illness: how those<lb/>
faced with the prospect of death<lb/>
gradually gain acceptance of their<lb/>
own plight, while for those left<lb/>
behind, dying remains the ultimate<lb/>
fright.<lb/>
For his wife, Maggie, played by<lb/>
Susan Netznik, death proves an in-<lb/>
surmountable opponent. Her con-<lb/>
cerns, although heartfelt and very<lb/>
real, are worldly. Her biggest worry,<lb/>
in her husband's waning days, is<lb/>
how to tell their son, Steve (played<lb/>
by "guitarist" Jeff Benningofen),<lb/>
that his father is dying. Both mother<lb/>
and son are wonderful.<lb/>
In Cottage Two, next door and<lb/>
yet somehow a world away, lives<lb/>
dies another middle-aged man.<lb/>
Seemingly disillusioned by his past<lb/>
with a nymphomaniac wife<lb/>
(Catherine Rhea), his present with a<lb/>
live-in homosexual prostitutecon-<lb/>
fidante (Robert John Willie) and his<lb/>
tuture (with who knows whom),<lb/>
Brian (played by Gregory Watkins)<lb/>
See SHADOW, Page 8<lb/>
POto By G�v PATTERSON<lb/>
Robert John Willie and Catherine Rhea in The Shadow Box. Monday marked the final performance of a successful ran.<lb/>
Eagles' Ex A Soporific Singer<lb/>
Don Henley<lb/>
 Can't .Stand Still<lb/>
As lead singer and drummer for<lb/>
the Eagles, Don Henley has built a<lb/>
solid following that will probably<lb/>
SIW-<lb/>
Coretta Scott King Due On Campus In January<lb/>
Coretta Scott King, wife of the late civil rights activist Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr will<lb/>
appear in Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre on Monday, January 31, at 8<lb/>
p.m. Her appearance is under the sponsorship of the Department of University Unions<lb/>
Lecture Series Committee and is being held in conjunction with the Black Arts Festival.<lb/>
The subject of the lecture will be "The Living Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr Tickets<lb/>
are on sale at the Central Ticket Office at $2.50 for students, $3.50 for faculty and staff,<lb/>
and $5 for the public. Tickets may be purchased in groups of 20 or more for $3.50 each.<lb/>
All tickets sold at the door will be $5. For more information concerning the lecture, call<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266, between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.<lb/>
remain solid until the end of his<lb/>
career. The Eagles were perhaps the<lb/>
most popular American band of the<lb/>
Seventies, with countless platinum<lb/>
albums and sold-out tours each time<lb/>
out. But they were a studio band,<lb/>
finely tuned and slickly produced.<lb/>
Many critics panned their concerts,<lb/>
and labeled their recording as New<lb/>
Bubblegum, bland and uninspired.<lb/>
I don't know it 1 agree with them<lb/>
about the Eagles, but if they feel the<lb/>
same way about Don Henley's<lb/>
album, I'm with them. Most likely,<lb/>
I'll be lynched, but this album is<lb/>
boring What a waste of vinyl.<lb/>
Many, many people will listen to it<lb/>
over and over, but some people's<lb/>
idea of a good time is a cup of cocoa<lb/>
and a game of whist. Bring on the<lb/>
marshmallows.<lb/>
Linda Ronstadt<lb/>
Get Closer<lb/>
Poor Linda. She's had her heart<lb/>
broken by every man she ever knew.<lb/>
Or so it would seem, according to<lb/>
her usually woeful records. Get<lb/>
Closer continues in much the same<lb/>
vein, but with a strong rhythm and<lb/>
blues treatment. Five R&amp;B greats,<lb/>
including my favorite, Billy Joe<lb/>
Royal's T Knew You When' makes<lb/>
Linda Gets Her Heart Broken;<lb/>
George's Destroyers Deliver;<lb/>
Didley Lends Helping Hand<lb/>
this her best album in a long time.<lb/>
Old pals Lmnv. lou Harris and Dolly<lb/>
Parton are aion�i gr . the nde.<lb/>
There's even a duet with James<lb/>
Taylor a la 'Mockingbird<lb/>
ElektraAsylum mainstay sidemen<lb/>
Russ Kunkel and Danny Kortchmar<lb/>
are tops as usual, as is Peter Asher's<lb/>
producing. One day Linda will find<lb/>
a man to treat her right, (take heed,<lb/>
Jerry Brown) but I'd rather she<lb/>
didn't just yet.<lb/>
George Thorogood and<lb/>
The Destroyers<lb/>
Bad to the Bone<lb/>
Now, here's a band. Since hitting<lb/>
the music scene a few years ago,<lb/>
George Thorogood has assaulted<lb/>
rock 'n' roll like a hurricane. He's<lb/>
rougn, tough, and knows the stuff.<lb/>
Rock 'n' roll is, essentially, an an-<lb/>
them to teenage anarchy. Elvis scan-<lb/>
dalized the nation with his gyrations<lb/>
and pink jackets. Little Richard is<lb/>
sull one ol the moi bizarre people<lb/>
in the world. They were rock 'n'<lb/>
roll. George Thorogood is rock "n'<lb/>
roll. The listen-to-this-and-jump<lb/>
quality of the early rock pioneers is<lb/>
reborn in his distortion-heavy, fran-<lb/>
tic playing. The grit in his voice is<lb/>
the shading of the message. And the<lb/>
message is a group of tunes by the<lb/>
Isley Brothers, Jimmy Reed, John<lb/>
Lee Hooker, Chuck Berry, and<lb/>
Thorogood himself. The Destroyers<lb/>
are the consumate East Coast party<lb/>
band, greatly enhanced by the addi-<lb/>
tion of saxphonist Hank Crawford.<lb/>
This album is a must for all keg par-<lb/>
ties, beach trips, and happy hours.<lb/>
Catch the MTV video of 'Bad to the<lb/>
Bone' if for no other reason than an<lb/>
appearanace by one of Thorogood's<lb/>
idols, the great Bo Didley.<lb/>
� Zack Perkinson<lb/>
Domestic Squabble<lb/>
Who Fighting To The Finish<lb/>
By STEV E POND<lb/>
Rolling Sioae<lb/>
LOS ANGELES � The Who wrapped up the first leg<lb/>
of their North American tour in Phoenix, Arizona, on<lb/>
Halloween night, playing an oldies-laden, two-and-a-<lb/>
half-hour show to a packed stadium of cheering, shov-<lb/>
ing teenagers. The performance was not remarkably dif-<lb/>
ferent from the twenty-four that had preceded it, and on<lb/>
the following day, the band members, who had begun<lb/>
squabbling and bickering, reutnred home to London for<lb/>
what one entourage member called a "major rest<lb/>
The group will return to the U.S. for another thirteen<lb/>
or fourteen concerts beginning November 27th in Orlan-<lb/>
do, Florida. A live cable-television broadcast similar to<lb/>
the Rolling Stones' show last year is planned for the se-<lb/>
cond leg of the tour. A live album and a TV special may<lb/>
also be in the offing.<lb/>
The tour's First leg attracted more than a million fans<lb/>
and yielded a box-ofFice gross of close to $17 million.<lb/>
Just about every indoor arena show sold out, and most<lb/>
of the larger outdoor stadium dates either did the same<lb/>
or came within a few thousand seats of capacity.<lb/>
Outdoor-attendance Figures ranged from the approx-<lb/>
imately 55,000 who saw the band in San Diego's Jack<lb/>
Murphy Stadium to the tour-topping 93,000 who came<lb/>
to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on the afternoon<lb/>
of October 29th (a school day, much to the chagrin of<lb/>
the Los Angeles school board).<lb/>
On the West Coast swing, at least, the Who didn't<lb/>
create as much hoopla as the Stones had last year; while<lb/>
the Stones played two shows at the L.A. Coliseum and<lb/>
another two in San Francisco's Candlestick Park, the<lb/>
Who settled for one outdoor and one indoor show in<lb/>
Oakland and a single date in Los Angeles (where their<lb/>
backstage visitors included Bruce Springsteen, Pat<lb/>
Benatar, Jack Nicholson and Francis Coppola).<lb/>
Music<lb/>
"There's a bit of a crush down front. If everyone<lb/>
would just shuffle back a bit, it would help out an-<lb/>
nounced Roger Daltrey near the beginning of the First<lb/>
Oakland show and for the most part, the crowd com-<lb/>
plied. Unlike the New York area shows, the security<lb/>
problems on the West Coast were relatively minor. At<lb/>
the outdoor shows, some fans still had to be lifted over<lb/>
the stage-front barricades by security personnel, but<lb/>
nothing approached the level that had caused the Sew<lb/>
York Post to brand the group's first Shea Stadium show<lb/>
a "riot<lb/>
Appearing with opening acts that were alternately<lb/>
challenging (the Clash and T-Bone Burnett in Oakland<lb/>
and L.A.) and predictable (Loverboy and John Cougar<lb/>
in San Diego), the Who had their share of problems as<lb/>
the tour leg neared its end. In Portland, Oregon,<lb/>
Daltrey walked offstage halfway through the set, com-<lb/>
plaining of sound problems; the problem was corrected,<lb/>
and Daltrey came back onstage after the impromptu<lb/>
fifteen-minute intermission.<lb/>
And at the Oakland Coliseum (an indoor arena, and<lb/>
the second Bay Area concert), fans were treated to a<lb/>
touch of old-style Peter Townshend pyrotechnics. Dur-<lb/>
ing "Won't Get Fooled Again he knocked his guitar<lb/>
See WHO'S, Page 9<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 7, 1982<lb/>
'Shadow Box'<lb/>
Rendered<lb/>
Successfully<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
contends daily with both the physical and emo-<lb/>
tional traumas of dying. His true-to-life perfor-<lb/>
mance (no pun intended, whatsoever) was truly<lb/>
mciteful, instilling in the audience a sense of<lb/>
common empathy, of sadness, even of hope.<lb/>
Still, somewhere above that hope looms<lb/>
tragedy death � it may come slow or fast, but<lb/>
the anguish remains constant. Perhaps that<lb/>
anguish is no more evident than in Cottage<lb/>
Three, where an aging woman (Hazel Stapleton)<lb/>
suffers tremendous pains from sunrise to sunset.<lb/>
She has struck a pseudo-bargain with the In-<lb/>
finite, her "one last request" as it were.<lb/>
However, her sole reason for not letting go has<lb/>
been a crumbled dream all along.<lb/>
And as her daughternurse Agnes (Allison<lb/>
Thompson) watches her mother deteriorate both<lb/>
physicallv and mentally, she is overcome by an<lb/>
impending sense of guilt. The realization that she<lb/>
has only prolonged the suffering by playing<lb/>
along with what has become a cosmic joke proves<lb/>
too much for her.<lb/>
Up to this point, one might think the play is<lb/>
merely a loosly-strung series of unrelated events.<lb/>
Not at all. The dying characters are in constant<lb/>
interaction with The Interviewer (Paul B. Jar-<lb/>
rett), a sort of omnipotent, all-knowing voice<lb/>
whose questions and comments to the characters<lb/>
coincide with the doubts and fears the audience<lb/>
feels. A dramatic deice, yes, but a unique unify-<lb/>
ing tool as well.<lb/>
To omit Gregory Buch (scenery designer).<lb/>
David F. Downing (lighting) and Patrice Alex-<lb/>
ander (costumes) would be entirely unfair, for<lb/>
without their fabulous-yet-subtle efforts, the<lb/>
play's success would be in jeopardy.<lb/>
In summation. I must apologize for the unen-<lb/>
ding references above to "excellence" and its<lb/>
ihesauratic companions. It's a shame the word<lb/>
has taken on such cliched connotations<lb/>
because the pla was truly excellent.<lb/>
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Rendered<lb/>
Successfully<lb/>
( ontinut'd From Page 7<lb/>
contends daily with both the physical and emo-<lb/>
tional traumas of dying. His true-to-life perfor-<lb/>
mance (no pun intended, whatsoever) was truly<lb/>
inciteful, instilling in the audience a sense of<lb/>
common empathy, of sadness, even of hope.<lb/>
Still, somewhere above that hope looms<lb/>
tragedy death � it may come slow or fast, but<lb/>
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impending sense of guilt. The realization that she<lb/>
has only prolonged the suffering by playing<lb/>
along with what has become a cosmic joke proves<lb/>
too much for her.<lb/>
Up to this point, one might think the play is<lb/>
merely a loosly-strung series of unrelated events.<lb/>
Not at all. The dying characters are in constant<lb/>
interaction with The Interviewer (Paul B. Jar-<lb/>
rett), a sort of omnipotent, all-knowing voice<lb/>
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first dose of<lb/>
diencc ent i<lb/>
been perl -�<lb/>
"Baba O Ril<lb/>
compan.r i<lb/>
when rowi<lb/>
about "<lb/>
instrumer.<lb/>
quick, j: .<lb/>
As ua<lb/>
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be jjusl �'<lb/>
road<lb/>
ano'vhe<lb/>
Roger Da<lb/>
t xaminer<lb/>
the n<lb/>
When<lb/>
thai Da<lb/>
Tov<lb/>
aJcoho.<lb/>
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descr.<lb/>
Rogc<lb/>
ver t I<lb/>
Roger -<lb/>
"1<lb/>
don't lil<lb/>
true I :<lb/>
i afc .<lb/>
grea: B c<lb/>
band-<lb/>
forward I I<lb/>
despc<lb/>
-r<lb/>
I've I<lb/>
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n .<lb/>
ourser.e. v<lb/>
ou-<lb/>
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Who's Final Days Spent Playing Games<lb/>
( ontinued From Pane 7<lb/>
neck against an amplifier; when the amp broke,<lb/>
he wheeled around and began smashing the<lb/>
guitar into the top ot the amps It was the tour's<lb/>
first dose ot onstage destruction, and the au-<lb/>
dience went into hysterics But the Who have<lb/>
been performing "Won't Gel Fooled Again<lb/>
"Baba O'Riley" and "S ho Ate You" to the ac-<lb/>
companiment oi prerecording backing tapes, and<lb/>
when lownshend realized that the tape wasn't<lb/>
about to wait foi him to finish demolishing his<lb/>
instrument, he cut his hashing short and made a<lb/>
quick change ol ae<lb/>
As usual, the band also began to air its<lb/>
arguments in public 1 he hottest issue seemed to<lb/>
be just whs the group was bidding farewell to the<lb/>
road. "Petei vis one thing one minute and<lb/>
another thing the next griped a disgruntled<lb/>
Roger Daltre to the m Angeles Herald-<lb/>
t xaminer "You don't know where you are with<lb/>
the man<lb/>
When the tour started, the prevailing stoi �j<lb/>
that Daltre) had called a halt to touring to keep<lb/>
lownshend from killing himsell with drugs and<lb/>
alcohol, and that Pete himself vehemently dislik-<lb/>
ed the road But within a month, lownshend was<lb/>
describing his reasons differently "The idea ol<lb/>
Roger b � up the band to save m life is<lb/>
erv noble and all that, but it's a load ol crap.<lb/>
Roger was incredibly supportive, but it didn't go<lb/>
hat extent<lb/>
he W ho are stopping because 1<lb/>
ad Id :ik that's quite<lb/>
eall like he hand that's what<lb/>
1 he Who on the road I think is<lb/>
great. But everybody is so enthused about the<lb/>
band's past, and that prevents us from nuning<lb/>
forward 1 feel that 1 haven't been allowed to<lb/>
evolve at ail for a g, long, long time, and I'm<lb/>
despei it it.<lb/>
"it - no; the road and it's not performing that<lb/>
I've g ' ai . iment with it's the froen<lb/>
nature ol the band Rogei savs that the Who<lb/>
must stop before ve become a parody ol<lb/>
ourselves Well, I think we've been parodying<lb/>
ourselves for a long, long time<lb/>
lownshend was similarly disenchanted with<lb/>
his band when he told the os Angeles limes he<lb/>
thought the Who had "peaked a long time ago<lb/>
e putting tar too much importance on<lb/>
r he said, "in terms ot rock<lb/>
s de from the fad that we sell large<lb/>
ol tickets, we are fairly insignificant<lb/>
and Daltrey were hardly talking to each other,<lb/>
and the singer was vocal when the os Angeles<lb/>
Herald-t.xaminer approached him between<lb/>
shows. "This has been one ol the most miserable<lb/>
tours of my life he said. "Maybe 1 shouldn't be<lb/>
saying this, because then I'll start going on like<lb/>
(Pete) does, but it just hasn't been an enjoyable<lb/>
tour. 1 mean, we've been playing well, but it<lb/>
hasn't been happyI'll tell you. Pete is a total<lb/>
enigma at the moment<lb/>
But two nights later, things were looking more<lb/>
cordial, at least onstage, finishing "Young Man<lb/>
Blues" with some fancy bits of singing. Daltrey<lb/>
brought a broad gnu iii lownshend's face, and<lb/>
the guitarist reached out to pat him on the back<lb/>
as fie walked bv, Daltre) turned, and the two<lb/>
shared a quick handshake before lurching into<lb/>
" I w ist and Shout<lb/>
A tew such moments will likely be preserved<lb/>
Win) producei Glyn Johns has recorded every<lb/>
show so tar and is said to be planning a live dou<lb/>
ble aiubm (the band's last inconcert 1 P was<lb/>
170's live at I eeds)<lb/>
I he band also videotaped shows in Detroit,<lb/>
New York ity, 1 os Angeles. San Francisco, San<lb/>
Diego and Seattle, with plans reportedly being<lb/>
�<lb/>
bak'<lb/>
,i c e<lb/>
i<lb/>
diaii netwoi k tele i<lb/>
In the meantime. I h ,et i :<lb/>
conclude with i broad<lb/>
show is slated to star' �<lb/>
tune on Dei 1 7th and will h �� �<lb/>
ol the same pa<lb/>
Stones' show last Dee. I i be I<lb/>
on radio stations,<lb/>
a six and a-haif-l<lb/>
band's histoi �<lb/>
Film Explores Mennonite Philosophy<lb/>
don't like th<lb/>
true. 1 d<lb/>
it's all about<lb/>
1NDIANAPOI IS<lb/>
(AP) � The people<lb/>
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tire with their tale ol<lb/>
young M e n n o n i t e s<lb/>
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1 he movie involves<lb/>
tour high school<lb/>
youths, including the<lb/>
son ot a Mennonite<lb/>
minister, and how they<lb/>
deal with dating, drink<lb/>
ing, goals in life, dnf<lb/>
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friends and the draft<lb/>
Mennonites, one ol<lb/>
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"It's really a kind ol<lb/>
coming-of-age film<lb/>
said producer Ron<lb/>
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PRODUCED BY HOWARD W KOCH WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY KEN EINKLEMAN A PARAMOUNT PICTURE i<lb/>
PG PARENTAL GUCANCE SUGGESTED -3E-<lb/>
SOME MATERIAL MAY NOT BE SurTABlE FOB CHILDREN<lb/>
Opens December lOth at a theatre near you.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0012"/><lb/>
1 Ht I S 1 i KiIM <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
DkC I Mhi k<lb/>
.<lb/>
Basketball Teams Win Clutch Games<lb/>
La<lb/>
H i INm I'll - sms margin At one point, the Pirates<lb/>
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tiisi victor In the second half, Sam ford<lb/>
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Pho'o Ov 6A8 Pfi - - <lb/>
fI forwardhark- (,rten (top) puts up jumper in the lane; 1 oraim<lb/>
hosier (bottomI dries during earlier I ady Pirate contest.<lb/>
Why Chaney Quit The Squad<lb/>
BvIM)N PI f s is<lb/>
W a-<lb/>
U A<lb/>
<lb/>
. ru hiding he<lb/>
nd, Va<lb/>
: it 1<lb/>
ii I'd<lb/>
Ihursday, Head i Ca , : - ,<lb/>
: fatement say it M<lb/>
"Dai iid not<lb/>
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: the Nai<lb/>
! asi basketb<lb/>
nil nei nepl<lb/>
i as ,i attended<lb/>
l,n,et : 'Ui program had a tot on her mind<lb/>
I net reasons foi rhat's whei<lb/>
had nothing to do curred betweei Chanev and Ai<lb/>
� i<lb/>
lesday, she<lb/>
ement rx<lb/>
academics. "It was something druzzi "I was<lb/>
think c<lb/>
up<lb/>
1 didn'<lb/>
nd.  I: as a spi<lb/>
Darlenehanev decided to leave the I adv<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Pirate team last week.<lb/>
ol the moment thing. I didn't talk to<lb/>
anybod) about it, including the<lb/>
coach. 1 thought I could handle it<lb/>
Ills sell .<lb/>
"When she said something to me. I<lb/>
know, I shouldn't have blown up like<lb/>
that. It was a mistake, and 1 regret<lb/>
it<lb/>
Chaney Added thai hei decision<lb/>
tor leaving was not because ol<lb/>
Coach Andruzzi. "Since I made it<lb/>
through last year, 1 fell like 1 could<lb/>
make it 1 his year I knew what to<lb/>
expect, and I felt like 1 could handle<lb/>
it. She's a tough coach, a discipline<lb/>
coach, but she is a good coach<lb/>
Andruzzi said she had no idea<lb/>
that Chaney was having family pro-<lb/>
blems. "Instead oi coming to us,<lb/>
she tried to handle things herself<lb/>
she said. "She showed a great lack<lb/>
of respect tor me and 1 won't<lb/>
tolerate that. I have an obligation to<lb/>
this school and to this program, and<lb/>
the players have certain rules thev<lb/>
must abide by. Our door is always<lb/>
open to listen it they have a pro<lb/>
Mem<lb/>
I ast week, Chaney said returning<lb/>
home was all she could think about.<lb/>
"I've jus( been thinking about my<lb/>
family she said. " I know it's hard<lb/>
tor my sister right now, and I<lb/>
haven't spent any time with mv<lb/>
family since my father died.<lb/>
(Chanev father died trom cancer<lb/>
last year).<lb/>
"I guess all that wishing made me<lb/>
act ttic way 1 did 1 didn't listen to<lb/>
her while 1 was taikmg. I was hurt<lb/>
mey said she<lb/>
� �� - ball -<lb/>
i v e i t. 1<lb/>
think I made 11<lb/>
ny lite w hen I quit Now, I think 1<lb/>
sho iid ked i<lb/>
N' mv .hanev a .<lb/>
d id<lb/>
I tl it ' basl<lb/>
� � ?ol<lb/>
Plans to tran; I vever, are<lb/>
not in the making. "1 would I<lb/>
anywhere else she said, "and I<lb/>
wouldn't wan: to play ball<lb/>
anybody else either<lb/>
Chanev. aonverse All-America<lb/>
in high school, has accepted what<lb/>
she has done, and said she hopes<lb/>
others will understand what promp-<lb/>
ted her actions now<lb/>
"I understand what I've put the<lb/>
tans through she said. "It's<lb/>
strange, you realize things after you<lb/>
do it, rattier than thinking before<lb/>
vou do it<lb/>
Bv KhA BOI ION<lb/>
court j<lb/>
6 2<lb/>
1(1 head ach Cat Iruzzi B tl tl i P<lb/>
celebrated her 30th birthday m fine tour<lb/>
on Saturda , � the 1 Ad:<lb/>
P ates defeated 'he Si Peter's Col I<lb/>
the<lb/>
11k helped offset the Pirates<lb/>
Pirates' 1 hui I ehl loss to N (umpei ��<lb/>
State. The Woltpack v<lb/>
-c '�' pite a 24-1 I w traij<lb/>
pon ne Foster a<lb/>
20-point, 11 Mary<lb/>
Dei<lb/>
i � Lady Pi hurl<lb/>
ire the N Mate by th<lb/>
an:  sop'<lb/>
Da: len . . ' V �<lb/>
the ' EC!<lb/>
squad ' <lb/>
membi <lb/>
In Saturday<lb/>
Lady Pira<lb/>
�<lb/>
V 2 of 14 f<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I l<lb/>
� ��<lb/>
�<lb/>
Si P<lb/>
'<lb/>
�<lb/>
ed with 22 �.<lb/>
ly. Debbie Anderson ha ime-<lb/>
high total of 1 1 rebounds<lb/>
I he Il starters scored all 81 ol<lb/>
the lady Pirate points. I he other<lb/>
iteer o1 the starting sqtrad were<lb/>
I ' � Mr S ��� ts anJ ft re<lb/>
b iunds are I i uske, 10 :<lb/>
Delpl Ma<lb/>
� ��<lb/>
Pirate Cagers Prepare To<lb/>
Battle 18th-Ranked Wolf pack<lb/>
Jody Schulz<lb/>
In Blue-Gray<lb/>
! he I l I men's basketba<lb/>
a i ist ACC opj -nen:<lb/>
lay<lb/>
North Cai<lb/>
 2-1, I<lb/>
i facel i I<lb/>
State<lb/>
� ee ! �<lb/>
.<lb/>
:t quite well it seems<lb/>
Now 2-0, N.( State fias so<lb/>
100 ts Ol more in its first <lb/>
' ' � VV pack, who hai<lb/>
evei scored more than 70 points<lb/>
year, beat Western Carolina.<lb/>
100-66, and North Carolina A I<lb/>
mo i<lb/>
I eading the Pack is guard Sidney<lb/>
I owe. a 6-1, 195-pound trom<lb/>
Washington, DC 1 owe scored 16<lb/>
points in State's last game, and is<lb/>
averaging 11 points per game<lb/>
already this season. But 1 owe's real<lb/>
talent lies in his ability to assisi. He<lb/>
already has 13.5 assists m two<lb/>
games, with nine in the game against<lb/>
the ;1 dint with 6.8 1<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
I<lb/>
rebounds McQuee<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
Loren<lb/>
ai d �<lb/>
N.Y is also expected i<lb/>
W ednes<lb/>
u " is  � a<lb/>
 � " � Piratt<lb/>
C ind Pleasants<lb/>
J ook Inside<lb/>
Last Carolina University defen-<lb/>
sive end Jody Schulz has been<lb/>
selected to play in the annuai Blue<lb/>
Citay All-Star Came, set for<lb/>
Christmas Day in Birmingham, Ala.<lb/>
I he honot is the second foi<lb/>
Schulz as tar as all-star games is<lb/>
concerned. He was earlier picked to<lb/>
play in the Japan Bowl, to be held<lb/>
Jan Yokohama, Japan.<lb/>
Schulz, along with ECU offensive<lb/>
guard lorn Carries, was selected to<lb/>
the LC AC Division I All-Star team<lb/>
Schulz was also named to the first<lb/>
team All-South Independent<lb/>
I he Blue-Gray game will be<lb/>
televised over CBS, starting at 12<lb/>
noon on Dec. 25.<lb/>
N. A&amp; 1 l as! year, 1 owe shat-<lb/>
tered State's career assist record, ac<lb/>
cumulating 491 assists after only his<lb/>
thud year.<lb/>
Another guard setting the pace is<lb/>
seniot Dereck Whittenburg. l his<lb/>
veat, Whittenburg is averaging 21<lb/>
points per game to lead the Pack in<lb/>
scoring.<lb/>
Averaging 13 4 points per game last<lb/>
season. Whntenbuig's long range<lb/>
shooting and leaping skills led him<lb/>
to several ACC honors.<lb/>
One detinue advantage State has<lb/>
over the Pirates is sie. Enter Thurl<lb/>
Bailey and Coell McQueen. Bailev.<lb/>
a 6-11, 214 pound forward, was the<lb/>
Pack's leading scorer last year with<lb/>
a 13.7 game point average, and led<lb/>
the Wolfpack? "Pray<lb/>
coach i riarhe Harrison <lb/>
're p t <lb/>
eli. In fact, Stau -<lb/>
Playing better than .<lb/>
because they've go-<lb/>
exceptional talent on th<lb/>
Harrison said the Pa -<lb/>
nig real loose this v.<lb/>
!uo gifted guards<lb/>
leaders. "They piav very in-<lb/>
telligent he sa d<lb/>
In order to be competitive -<lb/>
State. Harrison said the P<lb/>
ff �o d, quit. a feM<lb/>
Defensively, we've got to j<lb/>
"andC�Z!<lb/>
and eliminate then: <lb/>
We ve got to limit thei<lb/>
shot it we possibh t<lb/>
"Offensively, wC � . v<lb/>
every single time We doi .<lb/>
to get mto a helte, I<lb/>
ottnrme0"<lb/>
Now M, the Pi,<lb/>
road ahead of them. Aft<lb/>
ate game, the Pirat w, , '<lb/>
the Bayou C lassie m i .<lb/>
��e l7-lT(Fcu tfalttC<lb/>
ana New MS�Utnwest<lb/>
Grambling sVatef S' l!e'<lb/>
rneet SouThweSern I � " <lb/>
Rt i- vls(-rti 1 ouisiana<lb/>
'W"g He711- dT abo" �<lb/>
� -I th'rk ,iC'K h'<lb/>
td,n san iio weh "<lb/>
<lb/>
11<lb/>
Ch<lb/>
be<lb/>
heal<lb/>
7 'hi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0013"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
THE fcAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ames<lb/>
pcd to a quick<lb/>
� m o minutes<lb/>
- came back vith<lb/>
k. - in the middle<lb/>
. i 20-12 lead<lb/>
tie hot hand at<lb/>
and the Lady<lb/>
ol the ke<lb/>
a ; 26 lead at<lb/>
bs Hooks<lb/>
a stea b Mabr<lb/>
a ' St Peter's<lb/>
- a ere forced<lb/>
44 with I c L<lb/>
e i ad) Pirates<lb/>
V  � ex<lb/>
e sometimes<lb/>
because<lb/>
lose instead<lb/>
'Bui we mo -<lb/>
J took<lb/>
' ei squad is<lb/>
' recent<lb/>
ave been<lb/>
the<lb/>
New York,<lb/>
- a  the N C<lb/>
ill contributed to<lb/>
on. On top of<lb/>
around<lb/>
the oppor-<lb/>
! ad Pirates<lb/>
See I m . pa;e 11<lb/>
. .<lb/>
t � (<lb/>
?<lb/>
!S II I<lb/>
-ft 4 '�<lb/>
1 4-<lb/>
pare To<lb/>
id Wolfpack<lb/>
6.8 for<lb/>
per rj<lb/>
I<lb/>
li<lb/>
KOueen.<lb/>
t on<lb/>
what<lb/>
t<lb/>
- �<lb/>
in one<lb/>
'he Pack are play-<lb/>
and have<lb/>
to ere as<lb/>
la very smart, in-<lb/>
��- ainst<lb/>
Alii<lb/>
feu thu<lb/>
fcontr  , c<lb/>
I , � tie said<lb/>
eliminate them  h()<lb/>
lmit ' ,<lb/>
� "icui to iust one<lb/>
ii we i11 j n<lb/>
(ffenj musJ<lb/>
ngle tin We don't �<lb/>
 kelterge!<lb/>
Pe too big and experienced<lb/>
nEnetthem,ontrolthctem<lb/>
Pirates have a tough<lb/>
fiem. After the (<lb/>
Hjejthe Pirates wiU travel to<lb/>
J- wssicin latavette la<lb/>
1 �� ew Mexico State<lb/>
H State), and w, ;<lb/>
louthwesten, Louisiana<lb/>
P�pite havmg to make a few<lb/>
DECEMBER 7, 1982<lb/>
11<lb/>
Lady Pirates Defeat Peahens<lb/>
Cont'd from page 10<lb/>
with the victory over<lb/>
the Peahens.<lb/>
ECU converted on 43<lb/>
percent of their ball<lb/>
possessions, the best<lb/>
percentage of the year<lb/>
so far. While scoring<lb/>
on 33 of their 77<lb/>
possessions, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates shot 62 percent<lb/>
from the field.<lb/>
"We have to be very<lb/>
proud of our girls com-<lb/>
ing back from our first<lb/>
road trip up North and<lb/>
playing one of the big-<lb/>
gest games of the year<lb/>
against 14th ranked<lb/>
N.C. State stated<lb/>
Andruzzi.<lb/>
"We played in front<lb/>
of one of the biggest<lb/>
crowds of the year.<lb/>
State jumped out to an<lb/>
early lead, but we came<lb/>
back with guts and<lb/>
determination<lb/>
In the contest with<lb/>
N.C. State, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates were led by<lb/>
Foster's 24 points and<lb/>
Denkler's 20 points and<lb/>
11 rebounds.<lb/>
The ECU coaching<lb/>
staff awards "Rat Of<lb/>
The Game" honors<lb/>
after each contest, with<lb/>
the award going to the<lb/>
player who exemplifies<lb/>
all the qualities of a rat<lb/>
- quick and tenacious.<lb/>
"Rat Of The Game"<lb/>
honors went to Denkler<lb/>
and Mabry for the<lb/>
N.C. State game.<lb/>
Mabry, the 5-4 guard<lb/>
from Rocky Mount,<lb/>
leads the Lady Pirates<lb/>
in assists (17), steals<lb/>
(11), and hustle. The<lb/>
freshman jumping-jack<lb/>
forced several N.C.<lb/>
State turnovers while<lb/>
guarding one of the<lb/>
best guards in the coun-<lb/>
try in Angie Arm-<lb/>
strong.<lb/>
For the St. Peter's<lb/>
game, the award went<lb/>
to Hooks and Truske.<lb/>
Truske played the en-<lb/>
tire 40 minutes and<lb/>
Hooks played with a<lb/>
dislocated finger.<lb/>
"Fran is the type of<lb/>
individual we are proud<lb/>
to have on this team<lb/>
commented Andruzzi.<lb/>
"Against State, she<lb/>
came to the bench with<lb/>
her finger hanging<lb/>
down, trainer Liz<lb/>
White puts it back in,<lb/>
and the kid is back in<lb/>
there within a minute<lb/>
Denkler continues to<lb/>
be the team leader of<lb/>
the Lady Pirates. Her<lb/>
32 points against St.<lb/>
Peter's marked the 38th<lb/>
straight game in which<lb/>
she has scored in dou-<lb/>
ble figures. Denkler is<lb/>
currently averaging<lb/>
26.2 points-per-game<lb/>
and nine rebounds.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
now have a 2-0 record<lb/>
at home and a 3-2<lb/>
record overall.<lb/>
A bright spot already<lb/>
this year, as in previous<lb/>
years, has been the<lb/>
committment of the<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased<lb/>
with the crowds we've<lb/>
had the last few<lb/>
games responded<lb/>
Andruzzi. "Our fans<lb/>
have been tremendous<lb/>
and very supportive of<lb/>
this team. We carried a<lb/>
couple of hundred peo-<lb/>
ple to State and that's a<lb/>
compliment to our<lb/>
�'<lb/>
rattf<lb/>
it's<lb/>
the fun<lb/>
place to eat<lb/>
Best Pizza<lb/>
in town. Honest!<lb/>
(l LUNCH BUFFET<lb/>
Daily ll-2pms289<lb/>
3 EVENING BUFFET<lb/>
i Mon.&amp; Tues. 5-8om 2"<lb/>
VIDEOGAME CONTEST 3!<lb/>
every Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7-10pm<lb/>
? prizes for all winners (<lb/>
iWed Thurs. 9:00 Current Movies<lb/>
"jvFri.JSat. 7-9 <lb/>
Open daily 11:00am � 11:00pm<lb/>
10th ' Cotanche<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
NOT<lb/>
THE U S U A L . . . i n<lb/>
Christmas china, teddy<lb/>
bears, candles, teddy<lb/>
DvaiS. greeting cards, teddy bears, gift wrap,<lb/>
teddy bears, swings, teddy bears, decorations, teddy bears,<lb/>
bafej gifts. iedd bears Located in the 600�roup of<lb/>
The Gazebo Ar,in9,on B,vd shops<lb/>
Hours: MonFri. 10a.m9p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10 a.m6p.m.<lb/>
A SHOP FOR ALL SEASONS<lb/>
Ohe Qtuebo <lb/>
614 ARLINGTON BLVD � GREENVILLE. N.C. 27834<lb/>
1919) 766-0771<lb/>
girls, our community<lb/>
and our school<lb/>
The Lady Pirates'<lb/>
next game is at home<lb/>
on Saturday night<lb/>
against Appalachian<lb/>
State.<lb/>
When asked about<lb/>
the Lady Apps, An-<lb/>
druzzi stated, "They<lb/>
are big and they have a<lb/>
good scoring punch<lb/>
from Kay Hampton<lb/>
and Susan Cameron. 1<lb/>
think you'll see a good<lb/>
game Saturday<lb/>
Saturday night is<lb/>
WRQR-Radio High<lb/>
School Night. WRQR<lb/>
of Farmville (94.3 FM)<lb/>
is sponsoring High<lb/>
School Night Saturday<lb/>
as students 18 and<lb/>
under will be admitted<lb/>
for SI. Albums, movie<lb/>
passes, food and video<lb/>
game tokens will be<lb/>
given away during the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Tipoff is set for 7:30.<lb/>
IOET<lb/>
Attention Christmas Shoppers<lb/>
Men's IZOD Sweaters$17.95<lb/>
We have old fashioned ear mutts and C.B. Jackets<lb/>
Golf Balls, including 1 S-pack top Hireonly $15.95<lb/>
We also have the largest selection<lb/>
of SKI EQUIPMENT and APPAREL<lb/>
in eastern N.C.<lb/>
IZOD Lacoste Shirts<lb/>
in sizes remaining,<lb/>
medium &amp; largeonly $12.00<lb/>
Large selection of<lb/>
� IZOD down filled jackets.<lb/>
GORDON FULP<lb/>
GOLF, TENNIS and SKI SHOP<lb/>
Located at Greenville Country Club, off Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Open 7 days a week<lb/>
inn<lb/>
123 E. 5th Str.<lb/>
immiiiinmiiiiiiiiinf<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET � $2.79 all you can eat 5-9<lb/>
LADIES' NITE with Kenny Shore<lb/>
Ladies admitted free � free draft for the ladies.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SALAD BAR SPECIAL � $2.15 all you can eat 5-9<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI SPECIAL � $2.49 all you can eat 5-9<lb/>
COMING FRI. &amp; SAT. � LAHN &amp; LOFTON<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
MEW CMflSTMAS SPECIAL PBC�S<lb/>
FKDIA NOW TILL CUJ3STMA9<lb/>
AllCm 4HL11M<lb/>
" � 70t 11-00 TIL.<lb/>
'We have T-Shirts on sale<lb/>
niiiiimnn�nmimm�'i��TTTT<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Dec 8,<lb/>
thru Wed. Dec 15. 1982<lb/>
Copygri! 1982<lb/>
Kroge- Sa� on<lb/>
Quai'i, Rights Reser�ec!<lb/>
Nonp Sold<lb/>
Dealers<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9am to 9 p m<lb/>
ADVE�TSED tem POLICY<lb/>
Eacn o tnese adert sed 'tems 5 �.<lb/>
Quirwl io te -eao t �.a �: � �o'<lb/>
saie n eac Kroge' Sa on �icec<lb/>
as specica" noted .i this �j � e<lb/>
do run out o' a" 'tem � � ?�<lb/>
you yo�jr cno'ce o a com&amp;arac e<lb/>
tem rn available 'e'ec 'e<lb/>
same sa. gs o� a 'a ncnec wti <lb/>
 ent.t.e �Ou to Du'case "��e<lb/>
adve sed lajnn a' 'he ader� 5e<lb/>
pi :e iri - 3C aa,s<lb/>
� <lb/>
f�<lb/>
-7g W<lb/>
<lb/>
��7�<lb/>
FROM THE DELI<lb/>
ALL WHITE MEAT<lb/>
Gourmet<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
$369<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Beer1<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
20<lb/>
2 Lowfat Milk<lb/>
$465<lb/>
Gai I<lb/>
KROGER FRESH<lb/>
ScW'rtz<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
V2-Gal<lb/>
Jug<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
99<lb/>
MELLO VELLO<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
AUNT JEMIMA<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
16-Oz<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
DEPOSITS<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Catsup<lb/>
24-Oz<lb/>
BtL<lb/>
89<lb/>
10-02.<lb/>
Box<lb/>
kStokelyi<lb/>
STOKELY<lb/>
Fruit<lb/>
Cocktail<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Peanut<lb/>
Butter<lb/>
$419<lb/>
8-oz. <lb/>
Jar<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
17-Ct.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
49<lb/>
 is:sic<lb/>
V v<lb/>
v<lb/>
v QOLOEN RIPE<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
99<lb/>
VAC PAC<lb/>
COUNTRY BRAND<lb/>
Sliced Bacon<lb/>
ik<lb/>
j<lb/>
ftMl<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057520_0014"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 7,<lb/>
1982<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Swim Team Drops Dual Contest<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
M.ff Hrilrr<lb/>
T he ECU swimming<lb/>
team showed great im-<lb/>
provement over last<lb/>
year's meet with N.C.<lb/>
State, but neverthless,<lb/>
the Pirates lost both<lb/>
meets to the Wolfpack<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The men and women<lb/>
were defeated 79-34<lb/>
and 68-45, respectively.<lb/>
Head coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe, despte the im-<lb/>
provement, felt the<lb/>
team as a whole was<lb/>
lackluster as a result of<lb/>
the Thanksgiving vaca-<lb/>
tion layoff. "We had a<lb/>
bad meet he said.<lb/>
"We've had four good<lb/>
ones, but we were flat<lb/>
for State. We scored<lb/>
more points than last<lb/>
vear, but if you're<lb/>
looking for something<lb/>
good, that's about it.<lb/>
"I don't know<lb/>
whether it was the kids<lb/>
going home for<lb/>
Thanksgiving, finals,<lb/>
the end of the term or<lb/>
what. State didn't swim<lb/>
well either<lb/>
Although the team<lb/>
did not compete up to<lb/>
par, it did improve<lb/>
drastically over last<lb/>
year's meet with State.<lb/>
The women, for exam-<lb/>
ple, doubled their score<lb/>
while participating in<lb/>
four less events this<lb/>
year. Last season, The<lb/>
Lady Pirates scored 28<lb/>
points in 17 events.<lb/>
This year, the women<lb/>
scored 28 points in just<lb/>
13 events.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs'<lb/>
200-yard medley team<lb/>
of Luanne Peura, Kaky<lb/>
Wilson, Nancy James<lb/>
and Nan George was<lb/>
outstanding, finishing<lb/>
first by just barely<lb/>
"touching out" the<lb/>
State relay team.<lb/>
Also placing first in<lb/>
the meet were Nan<lb/>
George in the 50-yard<lb/>
freestysle, Kaky<lb/>
Wilson in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke, and the<lb/>
800-yard freestyle relay<lb/>
team of Nancy Rogers,<lb/>
Nancy Ludwig, James<lb/>
and George. In addi-<lb/>
tion, Ludwig qualified<lb/>
for the nationals with<lb/>
her time in the 100-yard<lb/>
fly.<lb/>
In an exciting race,<lb/>
the men's 400-medley<lb/>
relay team gallantly at-<lb/>
tempted to upset State,<lb/>
but were edged out by<lb/>
Pirate Club Offers Membership<lb/>
To ECU Graduating Seniors <lb/>
one-hundredths of a se<lb/>
cond.<lb/>
Individual first place<lb/>
finishes were obtained<lb/>
by Stan Williams in the<lb/>
100-yard freestyle and<lb/>
Kevin Richards in the<lb/>
200-yard backstroke.<lb/>
In diving, Scott<lb/>
Eagle flew high,<lb/>
finishing second on<lb/>
both boards.<lb/>
According to Kobe,<lb/>
the team will par-<lb/>
ticipate next in the<lb/>
Holiday Training Pro-<lb/>
gram on Dec. 26 in<lb/>
North Palm Beach,<lb/>
Fla. "We're looking<lb/>
forward to going down<lb/>
to Florida. The swim-<lb/>
mers will be putting in<lb/>
16,000 to 20,000 meters<lb/>
a day plus weights.<lb/>
We're going to come<lb/>
back ready<lb/>
The Pirates next<lb/>
meet will be against<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HEY FRED. I wanna party with<lb/>
you! I remember when I had my<lb/>
first gin-and-tonic and that's all<lb/>
I remember' Don't you hate it (or<lb/>
mar B and W was wild! Thanks,<lb/>
your co-Alpha Sig Alchic, FRED<lb/>
OY.<lb/>
JCB It'll be a blue XMas without<lb/>
you. I hope Harry doesn't get too<lb/>
lonely. I love you, your HILLBIL-<lb/>
LY.<lb/>
EUNICE: You remind me of an<lb/>
elephant's ss. You're always<lb/>
high, and you always stink. Love,<lb/>
ED<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
11 utilities RIVER BLUFF apts.<lb/>
Cell 7H-I71S.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share Apt. 1 mile from campus M0<lb/>
VI ��� Call ist-Mtt.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share apartment. MOM per month<lb/>
11 utilities. Available Jan. I. Call<lb/>
Karen at 7J4-7S11. Non-smoker,<lb/>
serious student preferred.<lb/>
1 FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
wanted Ml per month plus ll<lb/>
utilities. Pets ok 7M-S114.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED 1 or 1<lb/>
preferably female 1 block off cam<lb/>
pus 7M-4W7.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted<lb/>
to share large house near campus.<lb/>
Call 1SS-MS7 after 500 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 1 or 1 females to share<lb/>
apartment close lo campus Ml.11<lb/>
mo. plus 11 utilities. Call 7MM�<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
for net semester, non smoker.<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Sllft V-rilci<lb/>
The ECU Educa-<lb/>
tional Foudation,<lb/>
known as the Pirate<lb/>
Club, is once again of-<lb/>
fering a free basic<lb/>
membership to all<lb/>
graduating seniors.<lb/>
A basic membership<lb/>
in the Pirate Club en-<lb/>
titles one to receive the<lb/>
Purple Report, the<lb/>
Pirate Club's monthly<lb/>
newsletter, decals, a<lb/>
certificate and a<lb/>
membership card.<lb/>
The Pirate Club is a<lb/>
private corporation<lb/>
whose primary respon-<lb/>
sibility is to raise the<lb/>
funds for all athletic<lb/>
scholarships. "We're<lb/>
giving the student a<lb/>
means to get an educa-<lb/>
tion through a scholar-<lb/>
ship donation in ex-<lb/>
change for his donating<lb/>
his athletic ability to<lb/>
the university said<lb/>
Richard Dupree, ex-<lb/>
ecutive director of the<lb/>
Pirate Club.<lb/>
Over the next five<lb/>
years the Pirate Club<lb/>
hopes to expand its<lb/>
membership from its<lb/>
current level of 1,800<lb/>
members to 5,000, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dupree.<lb/>
"The next five years<lb/>
will be very important<lb/>
to ECU athletics he<lb/>
said. Almost 50 percent<lb/>
of the Pirate Club<lb/>
members are alumni.<lb/>
The Pirate Club has<lb/>
between 45 and 50<lb/>
chapters in many<lb/>
states.<lb/>
Navy On Jan. 15. pr.��r.b.V Chris�.n 75 rent plus<lb/>
1,1ATTIC<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typist wants to<lb/>
type at home Reasonable rates;<lb/>
7So-34o.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typing service-<lb/>
experience, quality work, IBM<lb/>
typewriter. Call Lanie Shive.<lb/>
75 5301 or OaiJoiner 7M 101<lb/>
TYPING TERM papers, resumes,<lb/>
thesis, etc. Call 751711.<lb/>
TYPING: TERM PAPERS,<lb/>
THESIS, etc Call 757 1M1 before<lb/>
? 00 p.m.<lb/>
BUSINESS TUTOR Ex Grad stu<lb/>
dent and business instructor will<lb/>
tutor most business classes. Get<lb/>
help before FINAL EXAMS. Call<lb/>
WMBBj m 75 5177 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
ENGLISH TUDOR HELP with<lb/>
writing, re-writing and editing<lb/>
papers. Also proofreading and typ-<lb/>
ing Call 7S7-W07 after 5.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Great<lb/>
service. Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
between 1 and � p.m 757-1170.<lb/>
NEEO HELP PREPARING for<lb/>
your Spanish final? Tutoring<lb/>
available on all tljrels. Call<lb/>
757 11M.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME!<lb/>
M0.00 per hundred. No experience.<lb/>
Part- or full-time. Start im-<lb/>
mediately. Details, send self-<lb/>
addressed, stamped envelope<lb/>
Haiku Distributors, 115 Waipalani<lb/>
Rd, Haiku. HI U7M.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Assistant buyer<lb/>
position open for assistant ladies'<lb/>
sportswear buyer. Must have good<lb/>
feel for fashion and the ability to<lb/>
handle heavy paperwork ����<lb/>
pedient manner fmeerieeco ?<lb/>
retail preferred Good salary and<lb/>
opportunity tor advancement<lb/>
Send resume to P O Box lf7,<lb/>
Greenville. N C 170M<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
1 FISHER SPEAKERS model 510s<lb/>
would like to trade tor cassette<lb/>
deck Call 7S-0�77 or The East<lb/>
Carolinian 75714 and leave<lb/>
message for Gee Johnson<lb/>
FOR SALE 170 HONDA 1M XL<lb/>
DIRT OR STREET BIKE Call<lb/>
7S0-V7O0 Men Thor.<lb/>
NICE GRAY ANO WHITE RAB<lb/>
BIT FUR JACKET FOR SALE M5<lb/>
CALL ISt-HO.<lb/>
WATERBEOS and Bedding one<lb/>
half off! DON'T pay retail! �<lb/>
have complete waferbeds as low<lb/>
as tl� tS Also bedding sets as low<lb/>
as �7� S Come by Factory Mat<lb/>
tress and Watertoed Outlet 710<lb/>
Greenville Blvd next to <lb/>
Carolines 155-Ml<lb/>
AVAILABLE JAN 1 btdraon<lb/>
duplex near campus CM 355 ��-<lb/>
after 5<lb/>
FOR SALE l�0 Coacwmen '�<lb/>
jl foot Trailer h� A�r Kormi<lb/>
Oeck and is underpinned on io� on<lb/>
Ayden Trailer Park Call '� Bel<lb/>
FOR RENT Georgetown Ap M<lb/>
of Jan 1 Can '53 J of '5 Ml<lb/>
FOR SALE Durst color eaOarget<lb/>
SIMM can after 1 niiiar<lb/>
TWIN SIZE bed wtt ociick -<lb/>
and metal frame G xi'iw C4<lb/>
FRAN Fritigerald 75 :�<lb/>
FURNISHED BEOB.OO lot one<lb/>
Accross from college Pncn�<lb/>
7M1M5<lb/>
MOVING' MUST vale Faoxw<lb/>
guitar good condition u� i<lb/>
bag chair rust color �soati � M<lb/>
items, clothes pic'urei M �c ��<lb/>
bike, can 7M H05<lb/>
FOR SALE YAMAHA OeSMCi<lb/>
Guitar with case Eice'ien' cona<lb/>
tion $115 Phone 7SJ H01<lb/>
lV<lb/>
$<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Dine in or Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
Hot oven subs, Lasgna, Spaghetti, Hamburgers,<lb/>
 HAPPY HOUR 2-CLOSE<lb/>
$225 pitcher 58C mugs<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Small Pepperoni Pizza $225<lb/>
NOT FOR DELIVERY 758 5982 j<lb/>
Pizza JLcui<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large ana giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL 753-6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(i<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hasting's Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potattf,<lb/>
Tossed salad may be substituted<lb/>
tor Slaw35c extra<lb/>
'Zc&amp;coc&amp;c rtuxtstito<lb/>
Live and in concert at the ATTIC on DEC. 7th. Admission is<lb/>
�3.91 for the General Public M.91 for the first 400 ECU<lb/>
students. Wear your VZMB T-SHIRT AND RECEIVE<lb/>
YOl R FAVORITE BEVERAGE FREE!<lb/>
The door is open at 8:30pm. Come on out and hear your<lb/>
favorite Doors tunes performed by the Back Doors.<lb/>
WZMB will receive partial proceeds from the concert in the<lb/>
form of a grant from the ATTIC<lb/>
HAMSTER<lb/>
&amp; At<lb/>
ERBIL SPECIAL<lb/>
Starts Sat. Dec. 4th<lb/>
Hamster or Gerbil food, wood shavings<lb/>
and water bottle.<lb/>
PKT<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
ALLFORs18"<lb/>
plus 1 FREE Hamster or Gerbil<lb/>
Complete line of small animal supplies<lb/>
tmmmmmmmmmammmmmissmssmmmsmmsmmmimmmmsmm<lb/>
8<lb/>
�<lb/>
Pepsi taste<lb/>
it's caffeine free!<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
Anytxx can make a cateine<lb/>
freecota, but there's only one<lb/>
wt posittvety Pep�i taste<lb/>
Awilabio) In regctar or<lb/>
 moor I<lb/>
SUGAR FRH<lb/>
1H SAVE SO V� 1 ��1 On any muft-pac or 2 ft. YjtTzA � bom o� aoo Iroo Pop ftoo logutar or wgar ��� i i I 1 i i I I I 1 !<lb/>
HAIR GALLERY<lb/>
236 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(Behind Tipon Annex)<lb/>
335-2076<lb/>
Holiday Special<lb/>
Haircuts<lb/>
$coo<lb/>
The Shoe Outlet<lb/>
201 West 9th Street<lb/>
NAME BRANDS at<lb/>
DISCOUNT PRICES<lb/>
50-75<lb/>
Off Regular Price<lb/>
Men's &amp; Ladies' SHOES<lb/>
Dingo BOOtS<lb/>
Hanover<lb/>
Name Brand Leather Clogs<lb/>
S4.95-S10.95<lb/>
Ladies' Dress &amp; Western Boots<lb/>
S10-S27.95<lb/>
"FAMOUS MAKER<lb/>
SHOES AT SUPER LOW<lb/>
DISCOUNT PRICES<lb/>
<lb/>
Next door to<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
ar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
1M Airport Road Greerwille. N.C.<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tues Wed &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
I Shrimp<lb/>
 Oysters �"cM-n"<lb/>
Flounder E 9<lb/>
TrOUt Only J<lb/>
I<lb/>
FnftCJtFrtM0�<lb/>
!<lb/>
���� trnrm<lb/>
1W Airport Road f �i, N.C.<lb/>
75841327<lb/>
Helhfttatfte<lb/>
�ft, SocmowbyendMy<lb/>
'VVV , A Vx<lb/>
Vx<lb/>
Bartquet Facttttos Available 758-0327<lb/>
Vvxv<lb/>
I<lb/>
' .<lb/>
fr<lb/>
pj �<lb/>
iawBHJeoiHi.it<lb/>
nmm<lb/>
mimt MMwe�majii<lb/>
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