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<pb facs="00057527_0001"/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
T<lb/>
?he iEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.J5-<lb/>
Thursday, January 20, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Campus Supply Funds Frozen<lb/>
By DARRY L BROWN<lb/>
A tight state budget has hit ECU<lb/>
in the form of a curtailment of<lb/>
general supply purchases until fur-<lb/>
ther notice, according to Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Business Affairs C.<lb/>
G. Moore.<lb/>
A memorandum from Moore ad-<lb/>
dressed to all deans, directors and<lb/>
department heads Jan. 13 states<lb/>
that, effective immediately, "all<lb/>
purchases made from state-<lb/>
appropriated funds be limited to<lb/>
emergencies or justified essential<lb/>
needs<lb/>
The order calls the condition of<lb/>
state funds for university accounts<lb/>
payable "extremely critical and<lb/>
apparently strengthens a curtail-<lb/>
ment of spending from Dec. 1,<lb/>
directed from Moore's office, to the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Requests for funds from the<lb/>
university must now be accom-<lb/>
panied by written justifications of<lb/>
need, a policy not normally<lb/>
necessary for such everday items as<lb/>
paper and copy machine<lb/>
maintenance.<lb/>
The tightening of the university's<lb/>
budget comes at the time when Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr and the General<lb/>
Assembly are foreseeing one of the<lb/>
tightest state budgets in recent<lb/>
history, and the lifting of a salary<lb/>
freeze for state teachers is still<lb/>
uncertain.<lb/>
Dr. William Bloodworth, chair-<lb/>
man of the Department of English,<lb/>
says his department is experiencing<lb/>
only some inconviences at present,<lb/>
but more serious problems could<lb/>
arise if the freeze continues.<lb/>
"If (the curtailment) continues,<lb/>
we're going to be hurting Blood-<lb/>
worth said. He cited copy machines<lb/>
and the duplication of faculty<lb/>
manuscripts or classroom handouts<lb/>
as areas that are hurt by the lack of<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
In the School of Business, chair-<lb/>
man of the marketing department<lb/>
Dr. Edward Wheatley noted a<lb/>
similar situation in his department.<lb/>
"We're going to be all right for<lb/>
now Wheatley said. "We're hop-<lb/>
ing it's a short-term situation. The<lb/>
amount of curtailment is something<lb/>
we can live with as long as it doesn't<lb/>
get worse<lb/>
Wheatley cited a departmental<lb/>
brochure, handouts to students and<lb/>
the maintenance of copy machines<lb/>
as projects that will have to be<lb/>
postponed. "Direct communication<lb/>
to majors" in the department from<lb/>
the faculty may be curtailed as<lb/>
printed matter will be in shorter sup-<lb/>
ply, according to Wheatley.<lb/>
The Executive Committee of the<lb/>
chemistry department noted at their<lb/>
Friday meeting "that all funds have<lb/>
been frozen by the university except<lb/>
for needs absolutey vital" and made<lb/>
adjustments in the budget, such as<lb/>
transfer of funds from one area to<lb/>
another to cover shortfalls.<lb/>
"What's occurring in the<lb/>
chemistry department is occuring all<lb/>
over campus said chairman of the<lb/>
committee Wayne Ayers, referring<lb/>
to the transfer of funds within the<lb/>
departmental budget as some areas<lb/>
run low.<lb/>
No date has been given for the<lb/>
end of the freeze by the office of<lb/>
business affairs.<lb/>
Economy Pushes Up Spring Enrollment<lb/>
?"? f T w m i r- ?? a ?r ill fir tit tll? rtuninnimi r f Ii.t  I' Ul. L ? i . i ?  .<lb/>
B STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Slaff Wnirr<lb/>
The nation's economy is a con-<lb/>
tributing factor to ECU's record<lb/>
enrollment of 12,415 students this<lb/>
spring, according to Dr. Susan J.<lb/>
McDaniel, acting director of admis-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
According to Registrar J. Gilbert<lb/>
Moore, 1983 spring semester<lb/>
registration surpassed last spring's<lb/>
total by 83 students. ECU had<lb/>
12,332 students last spring.<lb/>
Moore said there was a slight in-<lb/>
crease in the number of pre-<lb/>
registered students. A total of<lb/>
10,774 students had pre-registered<lb/>
prior to the beginning ot registra<lb/>
tion on Jan. 5.<lb/>
McDaniel credited the higher-<lb/>
than-anticipated enrollment to "the<lb/>
superb efforts of the faculty toward<lb/>
retention of successful students<lb/>
McDaniel also cited a higher<lb/>
number of re-admitted students<lb/>
which could be attributed to the na-<lb/>
tion's economy.<lb/>
This spring semester enrollment<lb/>
exceeded pre-registration estimates.<lb/>
Because of retention efforts and on<lb/>
the basis ot activity and traffic in<lb/>
the university admissions office,<lb/>
McDaniel had predicted a spring<lb/>
enrollment of 12,36). which was<lb/>
slightly higher than last year.<lb/>
Medical school enrollment for<lb/>
1982-83 now stands at 199 com-<lb/>
pared to 172 for 1981-82.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Dianna Mar-<lb/>
ris, associate director of institu-<lb/>
tional research, enrollment during<lb/>
1967-68, the first year of ECU's<lb/>
university status, was 9,360. That<lb/>
figure rose to 10,286 in 1974.<lb/>
ECU is currently the third largest<lb/>
public university in North Carolina.<lb/>
N.C. State replaced UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill as the most populated public<lb/>
university in the state last year.<lb/>
According to Marris, this<lb/>
semester's male-to-female ratio is<lb/>
very similar to last semester's, when<lb/>
56 percent of the student population<lb/>
was female.<lb/>
The average age of the<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate student<lb/>
population is "gradually going up<lb/>
according to Marris. In 1976, 46<lb/>
percent of the entire ECU popula-<lb/>
tion were over 21; in 1982, 53 per-<lb/>
cent were over 21.<lb/>
Unlike the current trend at many<lb/>
universities, ECU's black student<lb/>
population is also increasing, accor-<lb/>
ding to Marris. In 1974, four per-<lb/>
cent of the population was black.<lb/>
Last year 10.1 percent were black<lb/>
This year 10.3 percent of the enroll<lb/>
ment is black.<lb/>
?? B, CIMOV WALL<lb/>
The curtailment of expenditures for campus supplies used b all depart-<lb/>
ments hopes to conserve what is still left on the shelves before spending<lb/>
money for more. Funding shortages on campus are evidence of a statewide<lb/>
revenue pinch.<lb/>
Two Students Arrested<lb/>
For November Break-Ins<lb/>
Legislature Likely To Postpone Funds<lb/>
Budget Dims Hopes For ECU Building<lb/>
By DARRY L BROWN<lb/>
One of the tightest state budgets<lb/>
in recent years makes it unlikely that<lb/>
the N.C. General Assembly will ap-<lb/>
propriate funds for the proposed<lb/>
new arts and sciences building on<lb/>
the ECU campus, according to<lb/>
Charles R. Blake, assistant to the<lb/>
chancellor at ECU.<lb/>
A funding request for the propos-<lb/>
ed building, controversial on cam-<lb/>
pus because of its suggested location<lb/>
behind Rawl which some groups<lb/>
claim is one of the last remaining<lb/>
undeveloped areas on campus, has<lb/>
been submitted to the state<lb/>
legislature, which appropriates all<lb/>
money for projects on public<lb/>
university campuses.<lb/>
The building proposal is included<lb/>
in an overall budget request by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina system<lb/>
for the upcoming biennium. The<lb/>
legislature makes out the state<lb/>
budget every two years.<lb/>
Blake did not express much hope<lb/>
that the $13.5 million needed for the<lb/>
project could be approved in the<lb/>
current economic conditions.<lb/>
"It's unlikely that a capital im-<lb/>
provement project of that<lb/>
magnitutude will be possible to<lb/>
fund Blake said. "It would be<lb/>
unusual for capital improvement<lb/>
projects, other than small ones, to<lb/>
be approved in the tight budget<lb/>
situation<lb/>
Chairman of the English depart-<lb/>
ment Dr. William Bloodworth,<lb/>
whose department would move into<lb/>
the new facility and be provided of-<lb/>
fice space for faculty who are cur-<lb/>
rently sharing rooms, was more<lb/>
Pirate Walk Endorsed By All<lb/>
New Escort Service Praised<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SMI Wrtlcr<lb/>
Monday marked the beginning of<lb/>
ECU's new escort service, Pirate<lb/>
Walk. Now that the service is in<lb/>
operation, The East Carolinian ask-<lb/>
ed students their opinions on the<lb/>
service, and if they planned to use it.<lb/>
Al Smith ? Sophomore, Business<lb/>
? " think it's a good idea,<lb/>
especially Jor the girls. They<lb/>
shouldn 't have to stay home because<lb/>
they think it's unsaje to walk alone<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
Laura McClellan ? Freshman,<lb/>
Medical Technology ? "I plan to<lb/>
use the service. Many times I have to<lb/>
go to the library by myself. Last<lb/>
semester, there was some guy who<lb/>
would stand out in the woods near<lb/>
my dorm (White) and he frightened<lb/>
a lot of people<lb/>
Gail Goodrich ? Freshman,<lb/>
General College ? " definitely<lb/>
plan to use the escort service. I think<lb/>
it's a great idea. IJ I go to see some<lb/>
friends on the hill, there's a lot of<lb/>
dark spots where I'd like to be<lb/>
escorted<lb/>
Mark Brown ? Sophomore,<lb/>
Business ? "I don't plan to<lb/>
volunteer, and I don't plan to use<lb/>
the service, but I highly recommend<lb/>
it to girls who have to walk around<lb/>
late at night on or off campus<lb/>
Photos BY STANLEY LEAHY<lb/>
hopeful, but still unsure what the<lb/>
legislature's decision would be.<lb/>
"I don't know what their<lb/>
priorities are going to be ? my<lb/>
guess is even in these hard economic<lb/>
times, the state is going to build<lb/>
some buildings Bloodworth add-<lb/>
ed he did not know how the<lb/>
legislators will perceive the need for<lb/>
the building, especially in propor-<lb/>
tion to other demands on the state<lb/>
revenue.<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr has call-<lb/>
ed the current budget crunch one of<lb/>
the tightest in modern history, and<lb/>
many state lawmakers are predicting<lb/>
lower revenues for the year than<lb/>
earlier expected.<lb/>
Blake noted that due to the<lb/>
unclear economic picture, the state<lb/>
may not be able to allocate funding<lb/>
for the building in the first half of<lb/>
the 1983-85 budget, but money for<lb/>
the new ECU classroom facility in<lb/>
the second year of the budget was a<lb/>
possibility.<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
Two ECU students have been<lb/>
charged with three felonies in con-<lb/>
nection with the Nov. 14 and Nov.<lb/>
21 break-ins and property thefts in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum and Scales Field<lb/>
House.<lb/>
Jerry Allen Hcdrick. a senior, and<lb/>
freshman Berate Vanbenthem. both<lb/>
residents of Scott dormatory, were<lb/>
charged on Monday and indicted on<lb/>
Tuesday with the November rob-<lb/>
beries of five ECU staff offices, in-<lb/>
cluding the offices of head football<lb/>
coach Ed Emory and the Pirate<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Public Safety Investigators Lt.<lb/>
Gene McAbee and Capt. Earl Wig-<lb/>
gins were on a routine patrol outside<lb/>
Scott dorm last week when they<lb/>
noticed a Domino's pizza sign hang-<lb/>
ing in Vanbenthem's dorm room.<lb/>
While questioning Vanbenthem's<lb/>
roommate about that and several<lb/>
other signs, they noticed a pair of<lb/>
golden scissors and a letter opener<lb/>
that fit the description of the stolen<lb/>
articles.<lb/>
After Vanbenthem arrived, he<lb/>
and the officers went to Hedrick's<lb/>
room and were questioned by the<lb/>
officers. A short while later, accor-<lb/>
ding to the public safety depart-<lb/>
ment, they confessed to the crimes.<lb/>
The total value of the stolen items<lb/>
is said to be in the thousands Many<lb/>
office supplies, appliances, and<lb/>
miscellaneous items were stolen<lb/>
from the offices of the Pirate Club,<lb/>
assistant professor Gay Blockcr's<lb/>
office and athletic director ti.cn<lb/>
karr's office. All the items are said<lb/>
to have been recovered.<lb/>
Also stolen was a computer ter-<lb/>
minal vaJued at $750. When the two<lb/>
students reportedly could not<lb/>
operate the terminal it was<lb/>
deposited in a nearby garbage<lb/>
dumpster. The terminal is said to be<lb/>
inoperable.<lb/>
Both Hedrick and Vanbenthem<lb/>
deny having stolen nearly $3,000<lb/>
dolars worth of jewlery from Ed<lb/>
Emory's offices. They also deny<lb/>
stealing other items from some of<lb/>
the same offices they allegedly<lb/>
entered. Wiggins said that those<lb/>
items have not been recovered and<lb/>
that they may have been stolen in<lb/>
other crimes.<lb/>
Both students could face a max-<lb/>
imum sentence of five years.<lb/>
Although, they may be placed on<lb/>
probation, be given a fine and or<lb/>
have to perform a community ser-<lb/>
vice, according to Wiggins.<lb/>
Wiggins said the department of<lb/>
Campus Security has been "very<lb/>
lucky" with recovering stolen items<lb/>
this vear.<lb/>
'How Do You Like Them Apples?'<lb/>
Machine Of The Year Hits Campus<lb/>
Goodrich<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
(COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE) ? Iowa State junior<lb/>
John Sutton is finishing his last papers of the term, hun-<lb/>
ched over his Apple II Plus microcomputer. Conspiring<lb/>
with a word processing program, he scans his work by<lb/>
touching a few more keys, rearranges a few sentences<lb/>
and makes some minor last-minute changes.<lb/>
And when he prepares to turn the homework in, he<lb/>
doesn't put his papers into plastic report covers or pull<lb/>
on boots to trudge through the snow to his instructors'<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
Instead, he simply tells the computer to send his<lb/>
papers to the university's main computer. In the morn-<lb/>
ing, his teachers will ask the main computer for Sutton's<lb/>
work, and then grade it. Electronically.<lb/>
At Idaho State, music majors compose and analyze<lb/>
songs on microcomputers. Art students "paint" with<lb/>
special computer graphics tablets that allow them to<lb/>
create video art projects.<lb/>
At Carnegie-Mellon University, aspiring poets and<lb/>
playwrights consult computer programs to help them<lb/>
with English.<lb/>
By next fall, you won't be able to enroll at Carnegie-<lb/>
Mellon unless you agree to buy your own IBM Personal<lb/>
Computer.<lb/>
The long-anticipated campus computer revolution, in<lb/>
other words, has finally begun to reach students.<lb/>
Computers have been nosing into college libraries and<lb/>
offices for years now, and have been increasingly<lb/>
available to students on many campuses. But just last<lb/>
spring. Harvard students still caught administrators<lb/>
unaware when they lugged word processsors into class<lb/>
to take finals. Harvard administrators, like counter-<lb/>
parts around the country, had to scramble to draw up<lb/>
ways of regulating student personal computer use,<lb/>
which is quickly outstripping the centralized computer<lb/>
centers becoming common at Harvard.<lb/>
Indeed, with falling microcomputer costs, more and<lb/>
better software available, and lighter, more-streamlined<lb/>
hardware on the market, 1983 promises to be the year in<lb/>
which micros will begin to change substantially the way<lb/>
students go to college.<lb/>
"At the risk of being trite, the personal computer will<lb/>
become as much a part of life as the telephone, if not<lb/>
more so predicts Bruce Schimming, IBM's education<lb/>
industry administrator.<lb/>
Students are already using computer work stations<lb/>
and their own units to play remote games, carry on elec-<lb/>
tronic conversations, send jokes and even arrange dates<lb/>
as well as do their work in new ways.<lb/>
Iowa State's Sutton does his homework on the<lb/>
microcomputer his fraternity ? Delta Tau Delta ? pur-<lb/>
chased for its members to use for personal as well as<lb/>
fraternity business.<lb/>
"We use it for just about anything you can imagine<lb/>
Sutton boasts. "By spending eight hours of work at the<lb/>
computer, I save 40 hours of study time. And when it<lb/>
comes to doing budget and financial reports for the<lb/>
fraternity, I can do in 20 minutes what used to take days<lb/>
to do manually<lb/>
Like many other microcomputers. Delta Tau Delta's<lb/>
is connected through regular telephone lines to the<lb/>
university's main computer, as well as to other national<lb/>
See APPLES, Page 3<lb/>
t-t-<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0002"/><lb/>
THE fc AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 20,1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
I yow or yoyr organization<lb/>
would like to nave an item printed<lb/>
in the announcemenr column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
term and send t to The East<lb/>
Carolinian m care ot me produc<lb/>
' n manage!<lb/>
A n nou ncemen t torms are<lb/>
available at ie fcast Carolinian<lb/>
office m the Pubi't at'Ons Building<lb/>
F Wers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sued paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
There 'S no i large tor an<lb/>
nouncements not space s otte"<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you wan'<lb/>
aid suggest mat you do not relv<lb/>
solely on this column tor publicity<lb/>
Tne deadime for announcements<lb/>
is 3 p m Monday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
trtper anci 3pm VYednesoayy for<lb/>
t'e Thursdv paper No an<lb/>
runceme"ts reie ved after these<lb/>
oeadlmes w?ll be prmteo<lb/>
This space s available to all<lb/>
campus rgarwa' ens ano depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta will hold a<lb/>
meeting on January 27, 1983 a'<lb/>
' 00pm m the Vendenhaii Coffee<lb/>
Shop DR Peter Makuck will give<lb/>
a reading from n,s book of poetr,<lb/>
hrr ?e wt- All members are en<lb/>
c our aged t0 attend, guests are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
RESIDENCE<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken for Resident Advisor posi<lb/>
lions m the residence halls Any<lb/>
student who has at least a 2 2<lb/>
average clear iudicai record<lb/>
enrolled fun time ana has lived in<lb/>
a residence na'i is eligible to app<lb/>
fy<lb/>
information and application<lb/>
torms may be obtamea from any<lb/>
Residence Director Area Coor<lb/>
onator, or the Residence Lite Ot<lb/>
t'ce They should be turned into<lb/>
the Resiaerxe i?e Oft'ce. 214<lb/>
hichard Building<lb/>
SIGMA GAMMA RHO<lb/>
Rush for Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
will be held lf?i? Thursday at 7 00<lb/>
m the Coffee House An interested<lb/>
v-urtg ladies should attend<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
DISABILITY<lb/>
? Ou have a learning disability<lb/>
and or dyslexia ad ou are win<lb/>
mq to talk about it can 757 3205<lb/>
P' Penny will use 'his mforma<lb/>
ton for an ar'icie in a professional<lb/>
lOurnal Confiaen'iahty assured<lb/>
P'ease can evenings or weekends<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
Career by Choice Not Chance A<lb/>
two part mini series offered at no<lb/>
cost by the Un.versify Councehng<lb/>
Center Series are to be held<lb/>
January 24 and 25 and February 7<lb/>
and 8 m Aright Anne? Room 305<lb/>
from 3 00 to 5 00 No advance<lb/>
registration necessary<lb/>
ECU CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K Mtftll oe mee' ng every<lb/>
Tuesday night at 7 30 p m in<lb/>
Room 221 in Menoennaii S'udent<lb/>
Center Circle K is a coed service<lb/>
organization which works to im<lb/>
prove life on our campus and com<lb/>
- unify if you are interested in<lb/>
helping others are meetings on<lb/>
Tuesday nights a' 7 00<lb/>
ONE DAY<lb/>
COMPUTER<lb/>
PROGRAMS<lb/>
The SrWall Computer<lb/>
Revolution Saturday. February<lb/>
24. 1983 Word Processing<lb/>
Saturday, March 5. 1983<lb/>
Pre requisite The Small Com<lb/>
puter Revolution or equivalent in<lb/>
troduction to Programming M<lb/>
BASIC. Saturday March 26. 1983<lb/>
Pre requisite The Small Com<lb/>
puter Revolution or equivalent<lb/>
Contact the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. 757 613<lb/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
vVant to be a part ot Leadership,<lb/>
Friendship and Service' Do you<lb/>
also want to xiaiize and nave<lb/>
fun' APO is tne National. Coed<lb/>
Service Fraternity Come and iom<lb/>
us tor APO s Spring Rush See ad<lb/>
later m today s paper<lb/>
S. R. A.<lb/>
Escorts are needed for the<lb/>
Escort Service Anyone interested<lb/>
in being an escort please contact<lb/>
your dorm director If you are a<lb/>
dorm resident ot it you live oft<lb/>
campus contact tne SGA office<lb/>
US CHAMBER OF<lb/>
COMMERCE<lb/>
TheU S Chamber ot Commerce<lb/>
has internships available tor a<lb/>
variety ol majors They are<lb/>
located m Washington DC All m<lb/>
ternshtps are non paid Contact<lb/>
the Co op Office<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
SKI<lb/>
Sk. Snowshoe West Virginia spr<lb/>
mg break Registration and<lb/>
deposits are due on February 1 at<lb/>
4 00 p m in Memorial Gym room<lb/>
108 Contact jo Saunders at<lb/>
757 6000 tor information concern<lb/>
.ng the ski packages that are<lb/>
available<lb/>
FACULTY AND<lb/>
STAFF AEROBICS<lb/>
Faculty ano s'aff aerobic dance<lb/>
mee's a' 12 00 noon Monday,<lb/>
Wednesday ano Friday in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 108 There is<lb/>
no charge and you de not need tc<lb/>
nave any previous exper.ence<lb/>
Come out ano get yourself in sr-ape<lb/>
and have fun while you re at it<lb/>
ContaC Jo Sauncers a' 757 600C tor<lb/>
further information<lb/>
CO?OP<lb/>
Represen'a'ives from ramps<lb/>
Don Lee Seafarer, ano Cnerno<lb/>
among others arecorrng tc Eas'<lb/>
Carolina to interview s'udents for<lb/>
summer ,obs Tney will be a'<lb/>
Menoenhan Room 248<lb/>
cnFebruary 7 m'erv.ew appo.nt<lb/>
ments mus' be rnaae a' UK Cc op<lb/>
Office Raw' 3U Pnone 757 e<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
This is to remind an Am<lb/>
bassadors that our meeting on<lb/>
Wed January 26 has been<lb/>
cancelled and in its place our in<lb/>
ducation Ceremony has been<lb/>
scheduled This special even win<lb/>
ake place on Thursday January<lb/>
27 at 6 4i n Menpennali s mul'i<lb/>
purpose room All Amoassaoors<lb/>
will be enoue'ed and neat aress is<lb/>
reaqured A reception at tne E Ibo<lb/>
Room wilt follow the ceremony<lb/>
and an Ambasseoors are mvifeo ro<lb/>
attend<lb/>
BLOOD MOBILE<lb/>
The Biology Club will sponsor<lb/>
the Red Cross Blooomobile Tues<lb/>
day and Wednesday January 25<lb/>
and 26 Hours ot collection will be<lb/>
10 00 am to 4 00 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall room 244<lb/>
CO?OP CLUB<lb/>
Tnere will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Co op Club on Thursday. January<lb/>
27 1983 at 4 00 p m in 313 Rawl<lb/>
All Co op students and any student<lb/>
interested in a Cooperative Educa<lb/>
tion internship should attend<lb/>
NEW STUDENT<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
The Office of the Associate Dean<lb/>
of Student Life, located in<lb/>
Whichard Building, Room 210. is<lb/>
now taking applications for the<lb/>
New Student Orientation Program<lb/>
held in June and July Applicants<lb/>
should have a good scholastic<lb/>
average, and should not be piann<lb/>
mg on attending Summer School<lb/>
interviews of the applicants will<lb/>
begin around the middle ot March<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
January 19. American Society of<lb/>
Personnel Aqmimis'rators will<lb/>
meet in Rawls. room 207 a' 3 00<lb/>
p m This is an important meeting<lb/>
tor charter memoers io find out<lb/>
where and when initiation will be<lb/>
held individuals wno want to iom<lb/>
or obtain more information come<lb/>
ano participate<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
AH students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior our<lb/>
.ng change ot maior week for the<lb/>
Spring Semester should report to<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum from 1 00 3 00<lb/>
p m on Wednesday Feb 9 1983<lb/>
tor a motor and physical fitness<lb/>
test Satisfactory performance on<lb/>
this test is required as a pre<lb/>
requisite tor official admittance to<lb/>
tne physical education maior pro<lb/>
gram More detailed information<lb/>
concerning the test is available by<lb/>
calling 757 6497<lb/>
Any student with a medical con<lb/>
dition that would contramdicate<lb/>
participation in the testing pro<lb/>
gram should contact Dr Israel at<lb/>
757 649- Examples would include<lb/>
heart murmurs, congenital heart<lb/>
disease respiratory disease or<lb/>
significant muscuioskeletal pro<lb/>
biems If you nave ana significant<lb/>
medical conditions please notify<lb/>
Dr Israel even if you plan to be<lb/>
tested<lb/>
ECU LAW<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
ECU Law Society will meet at<lb/>
7 00 in Room 241 or Mendennall<lb/>
Student Center, Thursday<lb/>
January 20. 1983 Finalize plans<lb/>
for trip ro Washington, DC<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
CO OP internship available with<lb/>
the Dept of Agriculture Students<lb/>
with a background m entomology,<lb/>
botany. plant pathology,<lb/>
nematology, horticulture, ana<lb/>
related fields should apply at 313<lb/>
Rawl, COOP office Phone<lb/>
757 6979<lb/>
COMMUNICATE<lb/>
Learn to develop assertive com<lb/>
munication skills Tell others what<lb/>
you want feel and believe Asser<lb/>
tiveness can open new doors tor<lb/>
you Assertive Communication<lb/>
Tuesday March 15 April S.<lb/>
7 00 9 30 p m Contact the Divl<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education.<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use me form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
'All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75C per tine or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Rrt.ni to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office by 3:00 Teesday before<lb/>
Wednesday pobMcatioao.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
' Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
Np. lines<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
.at 75c per line S.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
 enclosed<lb/>
f??<lb/>
<lb/>
??? ?? ? ? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
7?'f?'?1?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?? -<lb/>
<lb/>
sptlw??<lb/>
ECU POETRY FORUM<lb/>
The ECU Poe'ry Forum will<lb/>
hold its first meeting of tne new<lb/>
,ear this Thursday evening a' 8 00<lb/>
in Menoenhan Room 212 The<lb/>
Forum is ooen to anyone who<lb/>
would nke an appreciative bu'<lb/>
crittca' audience tor his or ner<lb/>
poetry Those attending are asked<lb/>
'o bring s? or eigh' copies of work<lb/>
o be read and discussed The<lb/>
f- orum is a student organisation<lb/>
also unoer rne sponsorship of tne<lb/>
Engi sh aepar'ment Fourm<lb/>
regularly meets on 'he first or<lb/>
'hiro Thursday of each month of<lb/>
the school year<lb/>
BASIC SAILING<lb/>
Two classroom sessions and<lb/>
three weekend afternoons on 19 26<lb/>
toot baots on the Pamnco River<lb/>
join in the Fun Regis'ration is<lb/>
i.mited to 16. so register early<lb/>
Mee's Thursday. April 7. 21.<lb/>
7 30 9 30 p m , Saturday April 9<lb/>
16 23 1 30 4 30 P m Contact the<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education,<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
JUNK NEEDED<lb/>
Are you throwing out any old<lb/>
furniture, unusual obiects drapes<lb/>
etc if you are the art school will<lb/>
pick it up tor you ano take it off<lb/>
your hands tree Lamps chairs<lb/>
solas stools, anytnmg - ooes not<lb/>
nave to be in working order (will<lb/>
be used tor props m art classes)<lb/>
Call 757 665 weekdays and ask for<lb/>
Mr Wes Crawley<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
Foxtrot. Rhumba Disco Wal'l<lb/>
and Bop the bas.es and their<lb/>
variations Beginning Ballroom<lb/>
Dancing Friday. February 18<lb/>
April 29. 1983 trom 7 00 8 00 p m<lb/>
intermediate Ballroom Dancing<lb/>
Friday February 18 April 29.<lb/>
1983 from 8 00 9 00 p m ContaC<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Educa<lb/>
tion. 757 6143<lb/>
IRA<lb/>
The International Students<lb/>
Association will hold its first<lb/>
mee'ing on Saturday. January 22.<lb/>
at the international House. 306<lb/>
East 9th Street, at 5 00 p m All<lb/>
members are encouraged to come<lb/>
ano interested individuals are<lb/>
welcome We will discuss the ac<lb/>
tivities for this semester<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning ano Place<lb/>
ment Service in the Bic?ton Mouse<lb/>
is ottering tne following one hour<lb/>
sessions to help you prepare your<lb/>
own resume Tuesday. Jan is at<lb/>
2 00 p m Monday. Jan 24 at 4 00<lb/>
p m , Tuesday. Feb i at 7 00<lb/>
p m ' Wednesday Feb 2 at 2 30<lb/>
p m Those seniors or graouate<lb/>
s'udents finishing tn,s year and<lb/>
planning to register with us are<lb/>
urged '0 a'tend V ou may come to<lb/>
tne BiOKton House at any of tne<lb/>
above times<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Chi offer 2 scholarships tor<lb/>
students whose studies are in<lb/>
Psychology Applica'ions can be<lb/>
picked up at the Psychology office.<lb/>
Room 105 ano at the Psi Chi<lb/>
Library Last day applications<lb/>
will be accepted is April 1, 1983<lb/>
Pst Chi wilt hold its first mee'ing<lb/>
on Thursday January 27 1983 a'<lb/>
7 30 p m m Room 129 Speight<lb/>
Topic win be tocuseo on going to<lb/>
graduate school in Psychology<lb/>
This is open to an interested peo<lb/>
pie Welcome back Psi Chi<lb/>
members'<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
Physical Education Club<lb/>
meetings will be held at the follow<lb/>
mg times and dates January 18 at<lb/>
5 15. and January 20 at 4 00<lb/>
NATIONAL PARK<lb/>
CONCESSIONS INC<lb/>
National Park Concessions, inc<lb/>
otters employment opportunities<lb/>
tor seasonal employees tor the<lb/>
period of approximately June 1<lb/>
through Labor Day to be con<lb/>
sidered This is a condition ot tne<lb/>
employment A variety of posi<lb/>
tions are available Apply at the<lb/>
Co op Office<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
ECU Biology Club meeting will<lb/>
be held Monday January 24 1983<lb/>
at 7 30pm mroomBN!02 Nancy<lb/>
Fninow from the Cooperative<lb/>
Education office on campus will<lb/>
be the featured speaker The talk<lb/>
will include current ioO oppor<lb/>
tunities available through the<lb/>
Coop office An interested persons<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
SCUBA<lb/>
Basic NAUi or PADi Scuba Cer<lb/>
titication Section i Tuesday anc<lb/>
'hursday March 15 April 7<lb/>
7 00 10 00 p m Section n Tues<lb/>
day and Thursday April 12 Ma.<lb/>
5, 7 00 10 00 p m These courses<lb/>
are designed to introduce begin<lb/>
ners to SCUBA d'ving ith basic<lb/>
instruction in the tundarnen'a1<lb/>
skills and safe'y procedures<lb/>
Register early ! Contact'he Divi<lb/>
Sion of Continuing Education,<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
HONORS<lb/>
SIMINAR TOPICS<lb/>
Faculty members ano current<lb/>
Honors students are reminded of<lb/>
'he opportunity to propose 'opics<lb/>
tor Honors Seminars tor tan and<lb/>
spring semesters 1983 84 These<lb/>
seminars are ideally inter<lb/>
disciplinary ano problem or topic<lb/>
oriented See pp 87 88 of the<lb/>
1982 84 catalogue for general<lb/>
categories Seminars meet once a<lb/>
week and give 3 sn credit<lb/>
towards G E requuiremen's<lb/>
To be considered proposals<lb/>
must be submitted in writing D<lb/>
January 20 1983 '0 Or Dana<lb/>
Sanders. Coordinator of the<lb/>
Honors Program c. 0 English<lb/>
Dep' Austin Bldg Campus For<lb/>
further information call 757 6548<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
PROGRAMS<lb/>
Camera I Tuesday February<lb/>
22 March 29 7 00 9 00 p m The<lb/>
Dance Factory Tuesday.<lb/>
February 27 May 3 5 30 30<lb/>
p m Guitar Tuesday February<lb/>
22 April 19, 6 30 7 45 p m Ciogg<lb/>
? ng Wednesday February 23<lb/>
April 6 8 00 10 00 p m Speed<lb/>
Reading Thursday February 24<lb/>
Apr.i 21 7 009 00 p m Yoga<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday. March 15<lb/>
April 7 6 30 7 30 p m Contact the<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Eiectnc Rainbow Radio<lb/>
Show runs 3 pm to 6 pm Friday<lb/>
and 12 midnight to 4 am Saturday<lb/>
mghts Album specials are aired<lb/>
4pm and 2am respectively Fr,oay<lb/>
the album will be by the rock<lb/>
group "Saxon' ana is entitled<lb/>
The Eagle Has Landed Satur<lb/>
day will feature a tribute to ' Led<lb/>
Zeppelin' including tracking of<lb/>
the soundtrack to "The Song Re<lb/>
mams The Same Tune in tc<lb/>
WZMB and play it loud<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Serv.ce m the Bio?ton House<lb/>
is offering tnese one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you in developing De"er in<lb/>
terviewmg skills tor use in your<lb/>
10b search The workshops a'Mon<lb/>
day. Jan 17at2 00pm Tuesday<lb/>
Jan 25 at 4 00 p m Wednesday<lb/>
Feo 2 a' 4 00 p m . Wednescay<lb/>
Feb 2 a' 7 00 p m<lb/>
A mm ana d'SCussion of inter<lb/>
viewing through 'he Career Piann<lb/>
mg and Placemen' Service will be<lb/>
shared<lb/>
FBI<lb/>
700 positions win be available<lb/>
m the Federal Bureau of in<lb/>
ves'igation later this year, states<lb/>
Chuck Richards of 'he North<lb/>
Carolina Regional office He wn<lb/>
De on campus to talk with maiors<lb/>
from an disciplines interested m<lb/>
the F-Bi Three information ses<lb/>
sions are being coordinated by tne<lb/>
Career Planning and Piacemenr<lb/>
Service and will be held as<lb/>
follows Jan 24,4 00 pm in Rawl<lb/>
130 Accounting Society Jan 25,<lb/>
10 30 a m in Mendennall Cot<lb/>
teenouse An welcome jan 25<lb/>
! 00 pm ;n Brews'er B 30! All<lb/>
students welcome<lb/>
NEEDATUTOR<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi. National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity has tutors for a variety<lb/>
of General College Jubiects For<lb/>
more information can 752 3022<lb/>
MINI COURSES<lb/>
Several non credit, mini courses<lb/>
are now being offered By the<lb/>
Department of university unions<lb/>
individuals who would nke to par<lb/>
ticipate in a mini course must<lb/>
register In person at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Central Ticket Office<lb/>
between 'he hours of 10 00 A M<lb/>
and 4 00 P M . Monday through<lb/>
Friday Registration tees win be<lb/>
accepted through the day prior to<lb/>
the firs'class meeting<lb/>
Each mini course has a max<lb/>
? mum and a minimum enrollment<lb/>
No refunds of course tees will be<lb/>
made atter the registration<lb/>
deadline unless the course s<lb/>
cancelled<lb/>
Each registrant mus' show<lb/>
n s. her ECU ID or drivers license<lb/>
and ECU Activity Card or<lb/>
Mendenhau Student center<lb/>
Membership, with the exception of<lb/>
a spouse or a guest who mus' be<lb/>
registered by the par'iopang<lb/>
card holder<lb/>
CLIXK.INO -???? m Jjjar m<lb/>
Mondays ? Jan 31 Fet 7. 14. 21.<lb/>
28<lb/>
Instructor Nancy Spamnour<lb/>
MSC Mult. Purpose Room Fee<lb/>
S10 00<lb/>
Learn basic ciogg.ng s'eps "o<lb/>
music 'hat makes you want tc<lb/>
move it's iust plain hard to S't<lb/>
still once you ve learned a tew<lb/>
steps Free s'yie as wen as coup'e<lb/>
oancmg will be taught Coggng s<lb/>
a wonderful aerobic exercise ana<lb/>
a tension release mechanism<lb/>
unclog your mind and body and<lb/>
enioy tr,stolk dance<lb/>
t fUJUGKAPsn 7 to r m ? ?o p m<lb/>
Wednesdays ? Jan 26 Fee 2 9.<lb/>
16 23<lb/>
?nsh-uc'of Karen Pociesiwa<lb/>
MSC Room 221 FeeSlOOC<lb/>
Students can be expee'ed 'o<lb/>
come away from this course with a<lb/>
working knowledge ot the<lb/>
Chancery italic me most popular<lb/>
style of writing I fs appeal is based<lb/>
on its usable s'yie that is graceful<lb/>
personable, and confemporer y<lb/>
Chancery once mas'ered will be<lb/>
the bass on which to learn the<lb/>
otner styles<lb/>
For further information can Lin<lb/>
da Barkano, Crat's and Recrea<lb/>
tion Director at 757 6611 ex 260 or<lb/>
'he Central Ticke' office a' ex-<lb/>
266<lb/>
AMERICAN<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
OF UNIVERSITY<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
There wni be a meet'ng of It<lb/>
branch of American Association o<lb/>
Uhiversi'r Women ?"a- sorganil<lb/>
? ng m "e Greenvie a'ea jr 'ues<lb/>
day. jan is a' MO c " a" IHa<lb/>
First American Savings 1 LOS<lb/>
community room The prog'an-<lb/>
wni be given oy ju?? Pa'?' o<lb/>
Snepparo Memor.ai Lram<lb/>
SENIOR CLASS<lb/>
The Career Piannng anq Pace<lb/>
ment Service s a service<lb/>
ava.iabie to those s'uoen's -c<lb/>
are gradua' ng and who choose tc<lb/>
establish a credent.ais fie co"<lb/>
pie'e with a resume ano 'hree e<lb/>
ters Of reference<lb/>
The Sen.or Class Ott.cers and<lb/>
the ECU Amoassaoors pian to be<lb/>
avanaoie on. Wednesday janua'i<lb/>
26.1983 trom 7 g 30 PM tc a .e<lb/>
tours of the Career P'a ng ano<lb/>
Placement Serv ce in In Biox'on<lb/>
House We win heip "ij-  I<lb/>
Seniors Night' to snow you 'he<lb/>
facility ano ntcmation available<lb/>
tha' is designed for your use on a<lb/>
seit service bass<lb/>
This is one ot me mos valuable<lb/>
services ottered 'o students trf<lb/>
at ECU<lb/>
HISTORY MAJORS<lb/>
pn. Alpha The presen'Dr<lb/>
Robert &amp;owe wm an niormawe<lb/>
diScuS'On ano 5i.de presen'acm<lb/>
entitled. Beh.nd 'he Japanese<lb/>
Mystique Some mages anaCc ?<lb/>
men's T ne prese'a' zn m " be<lb/>
Monday j?n 24 at 7 30 p m<lb/>
Spe.gh 129 gr- 'eresne's<lb/>
will be served m "he Rc"a'd C<lb/>
Tod! room otiow.ng 'e prog'a<lb/>
Eve'rne s -? MM  a"end<lb/>
SCUBA<lb/>
Ae eres'ec - s'ar'ng a<lb/>
Scuta C'jb1 p.ease a"?-c<lb/>
meengs on januarr 3 arc<lb/>
February ' a' i X m Room 105 B<lb/>
Memorial Gtm<lb/>
NC GOVERNMENT<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
a variety of totos are avaabe<lb/>
Pay s S3 75 per hour tor ui' ? me<lb/>
positons Beginning June 1<lb/>
Augus 5 Students mus' nave<lb/>
finished 'heir sophmore ?ear ard<lb/>
nave a 2 5 GPA Gradua'e<lb/>
s'uden's are aiso engib'e 'c appw<lb/>
Appi ca on deac i? s Fecruar?<lb/>
7 Con'ac" me Cc op o? ce<lb/>
The Last C arolinian<lb/>
UKl - '<lb/>
PjO i"?Off'i tuesoa. a-c<lb/>
sea. djr"g t aci?G c<lb/>
eg' ac e.m Weones-1 ?<lb/>
ng 'ne Mfnftttt<lb/>
TH Eas' Car jtin ?'  Of<lb/>
-esc?ner .? Eas-<lb/>
. . nversilf -y<lb/>
?ce-at re pub sec ? - an<lb/>
Oy me s'joen-s c Eas' Ca- . n<lb/>
e" '?<lb/>
Subscription Bate UC ?ea- ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian otnees<lb/>
are located m the Old Sou'f<lb/>
Bu'idmg on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
POSTMASTI ? - ' acid'ess<lb/>
c-Vges 10 Tfi<lb/>
C'd jOo" Buii -g ECL Green<lb/>
. M NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 834 ?3?- ?J0<lb/>
BOOK OF MORMON<lb/>
E  n, enc ling Crna-<lb/>
slrucifonfromTnaWwi ? II  -<lb/>
twttnex rnunift' n' Jru - <lb/>
" is a non tic'ion sac-ec<lb/>
t sr, o' ? people  a- <lb/>
Amerca from 600 B C to 400 A D<lb/>
? s a seesr 'ong c'ass Itii<lb/>
n-ee's n Brews'e' 6u -cng 'oc?<lb/>
2C3 8 every "h.jrsca- n,gh- .r0-<lb/>
6 30 linltl 8 00 P m There s no<lb/>
c-a'ge si ce?e asx sues- sns<lb/>
ano hear the Gospei as II .as<lb/>
?augh' Or 'he proc-e  .r <lb/>
f e' ca 2O0C years age<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Can-9 S g?a Sigma Na' ta<lb/>
Ser. ce Sore '? -ves .ov.<lb/>
u.Snr .a"jar ? 25 a-c 26 a 5 3C<lb/>
a-c 6 00 'espec? . e ? a'<lb/>
vr:t"t te' nvovec m ?<lb/>
;a"c.s ?"c ? ' <lb/>
?ore ? ? a' ? a  V.<lb/>
-5 8S35<lb/>
INVESTMENT<lb/>
STRATEGIES<lb/>
Bas v Commodity Hedging<lb/>
Tuesday and T"ursda? Feorjar.<lb/>
5 24 " 00 9 00 p m nves" "S "<lb/>
?ne 80 s Wednesday February 23<lb/>
Aprn 6. 6 X 9 10 p m These<lb/>
courses<lb/>
tc-maionl<lb/>
on no expernce Hi .nves'mg Con<lb/>
'ac In D v.son or Continuing<lb/>
Education. 75T 6143<lb/>
nill provid vaiyj?Jje-<lb/>
i lar those nntitkayt ilrlse<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
i A A i<lb/>
rs.?. is<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
All cans 45C<lb/>
til 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
70C till :00 a.m.<lb/>
Adm. 1.00<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
8 ?<lb/>
I <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
AOTT AX pledge class<lb/>
invites you to<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
AAon. Nite<lb/>
Jan. 24th<lb/>
8:30 to 11:00<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
$1 admission<lb/>
25$ Draft<lb/>
Door Prizes<lb/>
IfcdG<lb/>
123 E. 5th Str<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
&amp;SSSSSSSSS5<lb/>
i<lb/>
ASSSSSSSSSS<lb/>
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSffi<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
Hodges<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Substation 11<lb/>
Blue Moon Cate<lb/>
Tapscott Design<lb/>
International Foods &amp; Gifts<lb/>
Pharos<lb/>
Marsh's<lb/>
Book Barn<lb/>
Hearts Deliaht<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
Thurs. Spaghetti Special<lb/>
Sunday - Lasagna Special<lb/>
Monday - Pizza &amp; Pasta<lb/>
Friday Happy Hour 4-7<lb/>
Dollar Specials<lb/>
Coming Tuesday Brian Huskey<lb/>
Watch for our daily Luncheon Specials,<lb/>
ow have a new head chef serve your needs.<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Fast, Friendly Delivery<lb/>
Hot oven subs,<lb/>
Spaghetti,<lb/>
Lasagna<lb/>
SPECIA L<lb/>
Lasagna $2.99<lb/>
with Salad<lb/>
&amp; Garlic Bread<lb/>
H.H. 2-Close<lb/>
Pitcher $2.25<lb/>
MUG 58C<lb/>
Mot for Delivery<lb/>
758-5982 758-5616<lb/>
! OIL CHANGE<lb/>
; LUBE AND<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
FILTER<lb/>
$<lb/>
10<lb/>
Major Brand Multigrade Oil Up To 5 Qts.<lb/>
EXPIRES 1108)<lb/>
COUPON ? - m m ?<lb/>
S TRANSMISSION<lb/>
! SERVICE<lb/>
- Includes New Filler<lb/>
' A Fluid. Torque Converter<lb/>
I Extra. Most US &amp; Foreign Cars<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
28<lb/>
EXPIRES 1J0S3<lb/>
? COUPON<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
.i<lb/>
<lb/>
BUSY ?;<lb/>
s<lb/>
PPT<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
.8<lb/>
511 S. EVANS<lb/>
756-9222<lb/>
! WGOOOfYEARl J<lb/>
I ??????TIRE CEniTESHHHHm ,<lb/>
 OFFICIAL NC INSPECTION STATION <lb/>
? DOWNTOWN WEST END1<lb/>
 7? DICKINSON AVE SHOPPING CENTER I<lb/>
! 752-4417<lb/>
756-9371!<lb/>
DON'T<lb/>
FORGET YOUR CAR!<lb/>
A Special<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
15 Discount on all<lb/>
stock thru Jan.21<lb/>
for ECU Students with I.D.<lb/>
Applel<lb/>
( onlinurd Iro<lb/>
computer networks and data<lb/>
nity members to communici<lb/>
across campus and acr I<lb/>
Now, virtual!) eer ulleg<lb/>
"computer literacy" course<lb/>
camp computing centers,<lb/>
micros in dorms, libraries,<lb/>
houses<lb/>
Marquette, lor instance,<lb/>
the school's two main compi<lb/>
Duke Universii ha j<lb/>
Computers in residence h;<lb/>
around campus to given stu<lb/>
computers<lb/>
Baylor, North Carolina<lb/>
linois State, among many<lb/>
dorm computers.<lb/>
Students do use thei<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Two LC!<lb/>
announced<lb/>
participate n next<lb/>
M ?nda'i-<lb/>
the State Departim<lb/>
protest in Washingl<lb/>
D C.<lb/>
S t u d <lb/>
Darwin and Glenn<lb/>
Waughan plan : "<lb/>
to Washington D C<lb/>
with a group ot i<lb/>
i m a t e 1 50 N<lb/>
Carolinians ?<lb/>
ticipate in the i<lb/>
demonstrate-<lb/>
held to opp<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Student<lb/>
A gr  " t.C L<lb/>
students, under<lb/>
guidan<lb/>
the vice chai  r 1<lb/>
!<lb/>
ner, hae<lb/>
-? jd p ipt<lb/>
tne sec od irafi I ?<lb/>
proposed pa<lb/>
on war. arm am.<lb/>
peace The documei<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEAcTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN M<lb/>
DEPEND ON<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
SBrVICB ?<lb/>
? - - ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
IICM1W<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
rK<lb/>
j<lb/>
Al<lb/>
355 2<lb/>
Januar<lb/>
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nAon ? Tues Ar:<lb/>
Bring E.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057527_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 20 198?<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
Ii cttioni.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
f 'i? "<lb/>
i<lb/>
T 1<lb/>
i i.<lb/>
<lb/>
.i- ?i<lb/>
- - T;<lb/>
I<lb/>
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L -Ii?L ,? J<lb/>
IrVtRlCAN<lb/>
JSOCIATION<lb/>
DIVERSITY<lb/>
I' MEN<lb/>
IIOR CLASS<lb/>
1 he Fast Carolinian<lb/>
a. rjnesdav ft<lb/>
Subscription Rate ?20yejriy<lb/>
?"? tji' Ca-oinun oHices<lb/>
a' ixa'ed p h? 0I? iouth<lb/>
rt . . .n 'ht .a-pus o ECU<lb/>
Telephone S<lb/>
e3?? .3 ?30'<lb/>
BOOK OF MORMON<lb/>
,K Y MAJORS<lb/>
? s " J from<lb/>
- ? . - rn?re t&amp; no<lb/>
? ? M ' as<lb/>
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RUSH<lb/>
i ?a s ga Na'ionai<lb/>
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respectively a ?<lb/>
? -? -v. .er r , Mr<lb/>
- -?  H;i or<lb/>
KMRA<lb/>
OvERNMENT<lb/>
Iternsh?ps<lb/>
INVESTMENT<lb/>
STRATEGIES<lb/>
Bas v ComnoCv neag g<lb/>
noav j"flT"i'?n, February<lb/>
'14 7 00 9 00 p " nves'ng .n<lb/>
"e 8C s Wedrtevaav eOruarv<lb/>
Apr i 6 6 30 9 'C p ? nese<lb/>
?rou-ses ?v:ii p?-ov.ae vd.uacit v<lb/>
? r-atro" 'or os ?w?o hav? i(?tia<lb/>
nnocxM ? " "?' "0 Con<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
??<lb/>
itS5<lb/>
?52-7483<lb/>
Cial All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
lecial All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
'asta All You Can Eat 5-9<lb/>
lappy Hour 4-7<lb/>
r Specials<lb/>
lay Brian Huskey<lb/>
ly Luncheon Specials.<lb/>
ad chef serve your needs.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
me Back<lb/>
jscount on all<lb/>
thru Jan.21<lb/>
udents with I.D.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Apples Not Just For The Teacher Anymore<lb/>
Continued From Panel<lb/>
computer networks and data bases, allowing the frater-<lb/>
nity members to communicate with other computers<lb/>
across campus and across the nation.<lb/>
Now. virtually every college requires students to take<lb/>
"computer literacy" courses. Most schools now have<lb/>
campus computing centers, and many are installing<lb/>
micros in dorms, libraries, classrooms and fraternity<lb/>
houses.<lb/>
Marquette, for instance, is linking dorm computers to<lb/>
the school's two main computers.<lb/>
Duke University has installed some 200 IBM Personal<lb/>
Computers in residence halls and other buildings<lb/>
around campus to given students "unlimited access to<lb/>
computers<lb/>
Baylor, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, and Il-<lb/>
linois State, among many others, are also installing<lb/>
dorm computers.<lb/>
Students do use them. The University of Oregon has<lb/>
to keep its 15 dorm computer stations open 24-hours-a-<lb/>
day to meet demand.<lb/>
But the idea of making computers available only in<lb/>
certain areas ? computer centers, dorm stations or even<lb/>
in fraternity houses ? is fast becoming a thing of the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
Instead, observers say, there will soon be a computer<lb/>
for every student. And colleges will become "wired" so<lb/>
that personal computers can be plugged in and used vir-<lb/>
tually everywhere on campus.<lb/>
"In the last five years the number of computer ter-<lb/>
minals on campus has gone from under 400 to nearly<lb/>
1000 says Dartmouth computer center Director<lb/>
William Arms, "and we expect that to increase to over<lb/>
4000 within the next five years<lb/>
Dartmouth, like many other schools, is "getting away<lb/>
from the idea of clustering computers together, and<lb/>
moving toward the idea that each individual should<lb/>
have his or her own computer in their dorm or office<lb/>
"And when that happens says IBM's Schimming,<lb/>
"when you suddenly go to a situation where a student<lb/>
can be sitting at a keyboad of his or her own, not just<lb/>
spending four hours per week in a computer at the<lb/>
library or computer center, then you're going to see<lb/>
some dramatic differences in the way things are done<lb/>
In a joint experiment with IBM, Carnegie-Mellon is<lb/>
one of the front-runners in the race to become the na-<lb/>
tion's first "wired campus CMU freshemn will be re-<lb/>
quired to buy their own computers next fall at an<lb/>
estimated cost of $750 per year, in addition to their an-<lb/>
nual $10,000 tuition.<lb/>
"By 1985, our goal is to build a network of 7500 per-<lb/>
sonal computers on campus says CMU spokesman<lb/>
Don Hale. "Each student will purchase his or her own<lb/>
computer and take it with them when they leave<lb/>
Drexel University, too, will require all entering<lb/>
freshmen to buy their own computers next year.<lb/>
"A kid who comes to us next year explains Bernard<lb/>
Sagik, drexel vice president ot academic attairs, "will<lb/>
graduate in 1988, and will be working in a world that<lb/>
will be totally involved in information and computer<lb/>
technology. It would be an injustice to den our<lb/>
students the opportunity to learn how to use this new<lb/>
technology<lb/>
But not everyone is convinced computer Itteracv<lb/>
should be ranked with reading, writing and arithmetic<lb/>
as one of education's basic aims.<lb/>
"I just don't think it's necessarv tor evervbod<lb/>
need to know how to assemble and program a com<lb/>
puter says Robert kelman. Colorado States com-<lb/>
puter science chief. "You don't have to know how a<lb/>
television set works to turn it on and watch a pro, m<lb/>
and you don't have to know how to program a com-<lb/>
puter to keep recipes and balance vour checkbook or.<lb/>
one<lb/>
Students To Take Part In Demonstration<lb/>
Two ECU students<lb/>
announced plans to<lb/>
participate in next<lb/>
Monday's "Blockade<lb/>
the State Department"<lb/>
protest in Washington<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
Students Suzanne<lb/>
Darwin and Glenn<lb/>
Maughan plan to travel<lb/>
to Washington D.C.<lb/>
with a group of approx-<lb/>
i m a t e 1 y 50 North<lb/>
Carolinians to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the national<lb/>
demonstration being<lb/>
held to oppose further<lb/>
U.S. military aid to<lb/>
Central America.<lb/>
Monday is the<lb/>
deadline for which<lb/>
President Reagan must<lb/>
certify for the third<lb/>
time that human-rights<lb/>
conditions in El<lb/>
Salvador are improv-<lb/>
ing. Congress requires<lb/>
Reagan to support his<lb/>
request for further<lb/>
military aid to the<lb/>
strife-torn Central<lb/>
American nation every<lb/>
six months before it is<lb/>
given.<lb/>
Both Darwin and<lb/>
Maughan expect to be<lb/>
arrested for their parts<lb/>
in the blockade at-<lb/>
tempt. "By our actions<lb/>
we are sending a<lb/>
message to the govern-<lb/>
ment of the United<lb/>
States said Maughan,<lb/>
an Intermediate Educa-<lb/>
tion student. "We are<lb/>
saying 'No' to the lie of<lb/>
certification and 'No'<lb/>
to U.S. war moves in<lb/>
Central America<lb/>
"I believe that we<lb/>
don't need to send<lb/>
more arms to El<lb/>
Salvador to allow them<lb/>
to kill themselves<lb/>
Darwin said, a junior in<lb/>
English. "There's a<lb/>
statement in physical<lb/>
numbers. When other<lb/>
people see all of us in-<lb/>
volved at this level and<lb/>
willing to be arrested,<lb/>
they may realize that<lb/>
there is something go-<lb/>
ing on that they need to<lb/>
think about for<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
"Through my ac-<lb/>
tions I'm saying to the<lb/>
governemnt that I'm no<lb/>
longer in agreement<lb/>
with their policies<lb/>
Maughan said. "The<lb/>
situation in all of Cen-<lb/>
tral America is at such<lb/>
a critical level at this<lb/>
time that everyone<lb/>
needs to become more<lb/>
involved and aware of<lb/>
the situation<lb/>
The national protest<lb/>
is being sponsored by<lb/>
the New York based<lb/>
Committee in Solidari-<lb/>
ty with the People of El<lb/>
Salvador and locally by<lb/>
the Carolina Coalition<lb/>
for Justice in Central<lb/>
America.<lb/>
"I'm not going up<lb/>
there to be arrested<lb/>
Maughan said. "I'm<lb/>
going up there to make<lb/>
a statement. I don't<lb/>
consider this civi<lb/>
disobedience, I con-<lb/>
sider this to be my duty<lb/>
as a citizen of this<lb/>
country<lb/>
ICYttC<lb/>
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530 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville 757-3616<lb/>
SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE<lb/>
Student Group Studies Peace Document<lb/>
A group of ECU<lb/>
students, under the<lb/>
guidance of assistant to<lb/>
the vice chancellor for<lb/>
student life John Gard-<lb/>
ner, have formed a<lb/>
study group to examine<lb/>
the second draft of a<lb/>
proposed pastoral letter<lb/>
on war, armaments and<lb/>
peace. The document is<lb/>
from the National Con-<lb/>
ference of Catholic<lb/>
Bishops ad hoc com-<lb/>
mittee on war and<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
The group, which<lb/>
meets on Tuesday even-<lb/>
ings at 7:30 in the<lb/>
Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center is open to<lb/>
anyone, on or off cam-<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
lO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
HtS 00 Pregnancy Tnl. Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
ajj OS35 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
aoo 271 2Sa) between ? A M<lb/>
and i P M Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 Wesl Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh N C<lb/>
pus, interested in par-<lb/>
ticipating<lb/>
"The document calls<lb/>
for study by all<lb/>
Catholics and others<lb/>
Gardner said. "It iden-<lb/>
tifies the threat of<lb/>
nuclear war and the<lb/>
arms race as the<lb/>
supreme crisis of our<lb/>
time, and I agree with<lb/>
that premise<lb/>
Gardner stressed that<lb/>
the study group is not a<lb/>
lecture; it's a group<lb/>
participation and<lb/>
discussion and study.<lb/>
SHOOT BIU.IARD&amp;-<lb/>
ft<lb/>
We Are Now Open 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 900 p.m.<lb/>
ams<lb/>
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WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN ABORTION: a difficult deo-<lb/>
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stand you vour safety comfort dnd privacy are<lb/>
assured Dv tnecarng staff of the Fleming Center<lb/>
SERVICES ? 'uesdav  Saturday AporTion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Aportions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? P,ee Pregnancy Tests ? Very Eariv<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? nc usi.e fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CAU 761-5550 DAY OR NIGHT ?<lb/>
Health care counseling THE FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
and educa'on tor r<lb/>
merofaiQes<lb/>
A<lb/>
rL<lb/>
HAIR GALLERY<lb/>
WEEKLY PttZES Ftf? Ml6WSO6<lb/>
ON VIDEO P1N6AU- GAMES<lb/>
MOW OPEN SUNDAYS WOO-<lb/>
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Unbeatable Friday Happy Hour<lb/>
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All Day Saturday Ladies Day<lb/>
Wine cooler sl .00 Glass of Wine ? 75C<lb/>
Every Mon Thurs.<lb/>
All Domestic Beer To Take Out<lb/>
?2.75 per 6 pac. sales tax<lb/>
We feature a 31 item salad bar<lb/>
along with fabulous soups, chili<lb/>
fresh ground hamburgers and hotdogs<lb/>
and other special sandwiches.<lb/>
Located in Georgetown snoppes<lb/>
Across From tne Highrise Dorms.<lb/>
For Take Out Call 752-4761<lb/>
420 COTVKHE ST. ACROSS FtfOM ELBO<lb/>
355-2076<lb/>
January Special<lb/>
Haircuts 5 reg. $7.50<lb/>
Mon. ? Tues. ? Wed. ? ALL MONTH<lb/>
Bring ECU I.D. for special.<lb/>
236 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(Behind Tipton Annex)<lb/>
blancmange (blamanj')<lb/>
1. a pink, molded, jellylike dessert<lb/>
from England, a favorite of<lb/>
children. 2. a colorful<lb/>
dance-rfeck band frorti England, a<lb/>
favorite of MTV viewers across<lb/>
America. 3. a twelve-inch single<lb/>
well be happy to.pfay foryou in<lb/>
the store, whether you cah'say<lb/>
the name or not.<lb/>
fa&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
Coupon:<lb/>
Chicken Pastry<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
2 Veggies &amp; Bread<lb/>
for H.99<lb/>
Open 11-8 ?7 days a week<lb/>
752-0476 512 E. 14th St.<lb/>
Located 2 blocks west H 9?Y'? <lb/>
Join Mickey and<lb/>
Minney for fun and<lb/>
excitement in<lb/>
Disney WorldFt.<lb/>
Lauderdale during<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
(March 4 - March<lb/>
13, 1983). Applica-<lb/>
tions are being ac-<lb/>
cepted now until<lb/>
February 1, 1983.<lb/>
For more informa-<lb/>
tion call the Central<lb/>
??. <lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
?tc ?ast (Earoltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Mili i r. (????.?,????.?<lb/>
Mikj Hughes, im?rw"<lb/>
WAVERLY MFRRI n . Dm rr ???? ClNDY PLEASANTS, Sjm td.wr<lb/>
SCOTT LlNDlEY. Aee? !???? GREG RlDEOUT. Nm Etftor<lb/>
?l I AFRASHTEH ? W STEVE BACHNER, hmtriammtni tdnor<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. tw ,?? Juliana Fahrbach, so??<lb/>
(-I . v Thornton j - , . Todd Evans, production Manager<lb/>
Januarv 20, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Choking Out Education<lb/>
As legislators in Raleigh continue<lb/>
to tighten the belt on state funds,<lb/>
the students and faculties at North<lb/>
Carolina's 16 constituent univer-<lb/>
sities will now be feeling the pinch<lb/>
more than ever.<lb/>
One such pinch was the introduc-<lb/>
tion on Jan. 13 of a restructuring of<lb/>
university supply purchasing. In a<lb/>
memorandum to all deans, directors<lb/>
and department heads, Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Business Affairs C.<lb/>
G. Moore announced that until fur-<lb/>
ther notice  all purchases made<lb/>
from state-appropriated funds must<lb/>
be limited to emergencies of<lb/>
justified essential needs<lb/>
This new order not only applies to<lb/>
the rare luxuries involved in the<lb/>
school's operation, luxuries like<lb/>
guest speakers, symposia, etc. It<lb/>
also puts restrictions on several<lb/>
elements of education which have<lb/>
become veritable bare necessities,<lb/>
like paper, stencils and copy-<lb/>
machine maintenance.<lb/>
What the order, or rather, the<lb/>
"tightened" state budget, poses is<lb/>
not a mere inconvenience for<lb/>
students and faculty but a genuine<lb/>
threat to tried-and-truc teaching<lb/>
patterns and methodologies.<lb/>
The order marks the end ? at<lb/>
least for now ? of such teaching<lb/>
aids as explicatory handouts and<lb/>
selective parallel readings (at least<lb/>
those in mimeograph form), two of<lb/>
the best monotony breakers and<lb/>
educational tools at a professor's<lb/>
disposal.<lb/>
At the present time, the primary<lb/>
area affected by the restrictive order<lb/>
has been office supplies; hence, the<lb/>
temporary curtailing of classroom<lb/>
handouts. However, since Gov.<lb/>
Hunt and other key North Carolina<lb/>
officials agree this will be one of the<lb/>
tightest state budgets in recent<lb/>
history, it is inconceivable that we<lb/>
have seen the worst.<lb/>
Not to question the intentions of<lb/>
Dr. Moore in issuing the order ?<lb/>
his was only a subsequent action of<lb/>
the state budget reassessment and<lb/>
the pending state teachers' pay-<lb/>
freeze issue. But when colleges and<lb/>
universities are forced to function<lb/>
without these necessities, an angry<lb/>
finger must be pointed in some<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
Perhaps, just perhaps, the same<lb/>
state legislature which conveniently<lb/>
boasts of its "superior" constituent<lb/>
university system should reassess its<lb/>
priorities when doling out the funds<lb/>
to maintain it as such.<lb/>
The Perils Of Copying<lb/>
To all those students and faculty<lb/>
members who think photocopying<lb/>
copyrighted material is legal andor<lb/>
safe, a warning:<lb/>
Over the holidays, the Associa-<lb/>
tion of American Publishers, a New<lb/>
York-based publishers group, filed<lb/>
suit against New York University,<lb/>
10 of its faculty and a nearby copy<lb/>
center as part of "an ongoing<lb/>
crackdown" on colleges that allow<lb/>
students and staff to photocopy<lb/>
copyrighted articles, manuscripts<lb/>
and other published works.<lb/>
According to present copyright<lb/>
laws, which were amended by Con-<lb/>
gress in 1976 to specifically protect<lb/>
materials against unauthorized<lb/>
photocopying, instructors can only<lb/>
make copies of copyrighted material<lb/>
under certain extenuating cir-<lb/>
cumstances:<lb/>
The copied material must be<lb/>
brief; there must be clear evidence<lb/>
that the instructor did not have time<lb/>
to secure permission from the<lb/>
publisher before copying the<lb/>
material, and "most importantly,<lb/>
the copying shall not be used to<lb/>
create or replace purchasing the<lb/>
book or materials copied<lb/>
In the NYU case, which is by no<lb/>
means unique to that institution,<lb/>
reports indicate that professors were<lb/>
having chapters of certain books<lb/>
photocopied regularly, often on a<lb/>
semester-by-semester basis, "with<lb/>
the clear intent of copying the<lb/>
materials rather than purchasing<lb/>
them from the publishers<lb/>
The suit, as well as a promise by<lb/>
the AAP to begin a full-scale in-<lb/>
vestigation of campus libraries and<lb/>
copy centers throught the country,<lb/>
have already prompted many major<lb/>
colleges and universities to institute<lb/>
policy changes with regards to copy-<lb/>
ing practices.<lb/>
At Ohio State, for example, the<lb/>
university's own copy center now<lb/>
requires instructors and students to<lb/>
produce letters of approval from<lb/>
publishers before they are allowed<lb/>
to copy any copyrighted material.<lb/>
However, several institutions<lb/>
throughout the country are main-<lb/>
taining their own favorable inter-<lb/>
pretations of current copyright<lb/>
legislation, despite the AAP's<lb/>
previous court record of successful-<lb/>
ly challenging at least 10 large com-<lb/>
panies and independent copy<lb/>
centers nationwide.<lb/>
AAP spokeswoman Carol Risher<lb/>
admitted that NYU, by no means<lb/>
the worst offender of copyright<lb/>
laws, is the first university to be<lb/>
sued by the association. But, she ad-<lb/>
ded, by the same token, it won't be<lb/>
the last.<lb/>
Afte<lb/>
SH? PlWfr START GlOWM UMMimi<lb/>
WE FLEW 0V?R A TOXIC WASTE PUMP<lb/>
Citywide Response 'Overwhelming'<lb/>
All To Save A Life<lb/>
B PA I O'NEILL<lb/>
No, this isn't another editorial about<lb/>
nuclear weapons, military spending or the<lb/>
Department of War. It's not about world<lb/>
hunger or the injustice of prison either.<lb/>
But it is about people ? the good people<lb/>
? who were told a tragic storv about<lb/>
human suffering last week and opted to<lb/>
take action.<lb/>
The plight ot Douglas Moore, a<lb/>
10-month-old Greenville child who is<lb/>
stricken with leukemia, came to light last<lb/>
week when ECU Catholic Chaplain Rev<lb/>
Jerry Sherba asked his parishioners at St.<lb/>
Gabriel's and the students at ECU's Sun-<lb/>
day service to give whatever they could to<lb/>
help defray the child's medical expenses.<lb/>
At first, doctors thought Douglas' case<lb/>
was hopeless. They gave him very little<lb/>
time to live. But after checking the blood-<lb/>
type and chromosome structure of the<lb/>
Moore's other child, Latasha. it was<lb/>
discovered that she met the requirements<lb/>
to donate bone marrow to her younger<lb/>
brother. Doctors say that if successful, this<lb/>
operation increases Douglas' chances tor<lb/>
survival from 20 to 80 percent.<lb/>
Latasha is 22 months old; the operation<lb/>
is highly specialized and very painful. A<lb/>
long needle must be inserted in the<lb/>
backbones o the young children to per-<lb/>
form the bone marrow transplant. The on-<lb/>
ly open hospital equipped to handle the<lb/>
delicate operation is in Florida. The Moore<lb/>
family is destitute.<lb/>
Although Douglas Moore Sr. is<lb/>
employed by the military, his insurance<lb/>
benefits do not cover the high cost of the<lb/>
operation, since his son would have to re-<lb/>
main hospitalized for several months.<lb/>
Sherba's appeal touched the hearts of all<lb/>
who heard it.frhe response was incredible.<lb/>
More than $1,000 was collected at St.<lb/>
Gabriel's, and on campus, students (who<lb/>
had no prior knowledge of the collection)<lb/>
donated a total of S363. "I'm just over-<lb/>
whelmed Sherba responded.<lb/>
Throughout the Greenille communitv,<lb/>
the need was heard and the response was<lb/>
made. A local motel manager made ar-<lb/>
rangements tor the Moore familj to stav<lb/>
free in a Florida motel. The schoolchildren<lb/>
of St. Gabriel's, where the Moore oldest<lb/>
child attends first grade, promised to i<lb/>
more than $1,000 by going door to door,<lb/>
and the Greenville Ministerial Association<lb/>
also vowed its support.<lb/>
The Moore tamily is now is Honda.<lb/>
Douglas' operation is scheduled tor Satur-<lb/>
day, and the concerned who remain in<lb/>
Greenville wait and hope.<lb/>
"The Gospel calls us to action, and we<lb/>
have responded Sherba commented.<lb/>
?'My faith in people's sensitivitv to others'<lb/>
needs has been fortified once again<lb/>
It's nice to hear good news" tor i<lb/>
change. It's nice to hear about people ?'<lb/>
ing people. It's nice to have our faith in<lb/>
one another fortified. Yes. nowadays, we<lb/>
hear a lot of sad stories about a lot of un-<lb/>
necessary suffering. 1 only hope that all 0<lb/>
us will embrace the jo and beauty ot the<lb/>
story of Douglas Moore and that we are<lb/>
able to apply this vision ot hope to all our<lb/>
life's work.<lb/>
A JAMESWATT<lb/>
UNPEYELOPEP<lb/>
WILDERNESS<lb/>
AREA<lb/>
???$<lb/>
My<lb/>
I was watching my favorite one-two<lb/>
punch on TV (The Ernest Angley Hour<lb/>
and The Charlie Harrison Show) last Sun-<lb/>
day morning, trying to get inspired one<lb/>
way or the other about something<lb/>
anything, when it occurred to me: I've<lb/>
never really written a column about the<lb/>
issues I feel strongest about. Sure, I've<lb/>
covered a lot of big, timely topics (Ronco<lb/>
technology, Cathy Rigby's brilliant acting<lb/>
career, Slim Whitman's latest musical ven-<lb/>
tures, etc.), but never really anything that<lb/>
could be considered a life-and-death topic.<lb/>
Well, I did a lot of soul searching, con-<lb/>
templated the relative importance of a few<lb/>
controversial issues, popped another onion<lb/>
bagel into the toaster oven and came up<lb/>
with this a comprehensive listing of the<lb/>
really big issues my pet peeves:<lb/>
First of all, let's get the ball rolling with<lb/>
a topic that bugs me like nothing else:<lb/>
cliches. I hate cliches; I've always hated<lb/>
cliches, and I'll hate them forever and a<lb/>
day. They're so contrived so<lb/>
phoney so cliched. I guess I've got a chip<lb/>
on my shoulder or something, but they<lb/>
really get me hot under the collar.<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Way It Is<lb/>
One that really burns me up is when<lb/>
some self-proclaimed weatherman passes<lb/>
by on the way to class and boasts his<lb/>
superior intellect by cursing the chilly air.<lb/>
?'It's cold as hell quoth he, as if reveal-<lb/>
ing some unparalleled brain power.<lb/>
"Cold as hell?" I rather doubt it.<lb/>
And worse yet, cliches can be painful<lb/>
too. But don't just take my word for it;<lb/>
just try to "tickle the fancy" of a buxom<lb/>
blonde with a 220-pound boyfriend. 1<lb/>
guarantee you'll never find it.<lb/>
Or how about, "A bird in the hand is<lb/>
worth two in the bush Well, 1 don't<lb/>
know about you, but personally, I<lb/>
wouldn't hold a damn pigeon for all the<lb/>
tea in China. Who knows what he may<lb/>
have just eaten.<lb/>
But whereas some cliches are just plain<lb/>
dumb, some others are just plain stupid.<lb/>
For instance, I was walking with my friend<lb/>
Ned the other day, when a beautiful red-<lb/>
head coed strutted by in the same pair of<lb/>
jeans she'd probably worn as a child.<lb/>
"Whew Ned exclaims, "did you see<lb/>
that? She was pretty as sh<lb/>
And that's just the tip of the iceberg.<lb/>
Casual and uniquely collegiate scatalogical<lb/>
references and comparisons have virtually<lb/>
become the staple of 20th-century<lb/>
vocabulary. Everything we see nowadays is<lb/>
hot as, cold as, big as, small as, tall as,<lb/>
short as, fat as, thin as, dark as, light as,<lb/>
drunk as, sober as, flat as, developed as,<lb/>
well-developed as, well-endowed as, soft<lb/>
as, loud as, low as, high or stoned as<lb/>
caca. (Aw c'mon. A lot of peoples' parents<lb/>
read this!)<lb/>
Not only can one "cut the caca. He<lb/>
can also be full of it, shoot it or smoke it<lb/>
with friends or beat it out of enemies. He<lb/>
can sing like it, talk like it and play basket-<lb/>
ball, football or jai alai like it.<lb/>
One can put up with "just about<lb/>
enough" of it, be fed up with it, up to his<lb/>
head in it or losing it. Students often cry it<lb/>
out because they have "too much" of it to<lb/>
do and can't go downtown. Teachers can<lb/>
only take so much of it from students<lb/>
because they've heard it all before.<lb/>
And then there's food. Food, of course,<lb/>
can smell like it, look like it, feel like it<lb/>
and, depending on where it is you like to<lb/>
eat, taste like it.<lb/>
Old cars frequently run like it. Old bums<lb/>
<lb/>
?fOHMMMMM<lb/>
?nm<lb/>
frequently smell like it, and old cafeteria<lb/>
chefs can't seem to cook worth it<lb/>
Personally, I never knew the word was<lb/>
so complex, that there was so much to it,<lb/>
so to speak. I mean, to me, it's alwas<lb/>
meant one thing, something to avoid get-<lb/>
ting on my shoes.<lb/>
But just as my Mom always told me.<lb/>
nothing can ever be all that bad. "Jeb<lb/>
she always told me (We had 14 kids, and<lb/>
she forgot our names from time to time),<lb/>
"nothing can ever be all that bad And 1<lb/>
suppose she was right. I suppose even<lb/>
cliches have a place in our society. After<lb/>
all, without them, 500 American sport -<lb/>
scasters would be out of business.<lb/>
Que sera sera.<lb/>
Editor's NoterWDceHMghl&amp;7o senior<lb/>
Jrom OutoJ Town. N.C is editor emeritus<lb/>
of Mooa Pie Quarter-ly, a local vending<lb/>
machine catalogue. He is intrigued by<lb/>
challenges but rarely meets them. (Rejer to<lb/>
the above.)<lb/>
mm<lb/>
it<lb/>
- I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Rv P1RI( r<lb/>
O'NCU I<lb/>
. ? ? -<lb/>
Sdturdav ma'Ks the<lb/>
10th anniversary ol the<lb/>
Supreme Court r<lb/>
making abortu<lb/>
in the Lmtec<lb/>
Despite the court<lb/>
ing on the , k<lb/>
Rowe Wade<lb/>
issue rema-ins con-<lb/>
troversial<lb/>
In North (. <lb/>
people on both<lb/>
the issue are geai nji<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Reaction from E I<lb/>
students to abortion on<lb/>
the 10th annivc<lb/>
its legalization - :<lb/>
troversial<lb/>
Ruth raj<lb/>
graduate studen-<lb/>
seven monr<lb/>
said she is not mo-<lb/>
opposed to a- -<lb/>
"I don't disagree ?<lb/>
abortion. I'd <lb/>
people have an u-<lb/>
tion than an unwa<lb/>
child<lb/>
S an War,<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
agreed ??<lb/>
advocate<lb/>
Wahi said<lb/>
Helms' ? <lb/>
j . .<lb/>
! believe <lb/>
tor women<lb/>
"The n<lb/>
sion lying<lb/>
whv,<lb/>
. to define wli<lb/>
when it bej<lb/>
1 ayloi ask<lb/>
SH<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
with <lb/>
Suni<lb/>
PI<lb/>
Entry ton<lb/>
C<lb/>
ALL ENTRA?<lb/>
DOORS<lb/>
1st<lb/>
2nd<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
? m<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST( AROl INIAS.<lb/>
IANI AK 20, l?S<lb/>
i at until<lb/>
MP?,<lb/>
ife<lb/>
ncl:<lb/>
iMSWATT<lb/>
iHWYELQPED<lb/>
ILDERUESS<lb/>
?'?<lb/>
Cliche<lb/>
md ld .atetena<lb/>
t k nev ?? ? r j was<lb/>
?-?.? a j o much to it,<lb/>
me, it's always<lb/>
mething to aoid get-<lb/>
n m .<lb/>
just a mj Mom alwa told me,<lb/>
. ai evci he all that bad. "Jeb<lb/>
told me (Wc had U kids, and<lb/>
ur names from time to time).<lb/>
I iing can eer be all that bad And I<lb/>
vise she was right I suppose even<lb/>
Ir es have a place in our society. After<lb/>
vsithout them. 500 American sport-<lb/>
sters would be out ot business.<lb/>
)ue sera sera. <lb/>
Iditor's Note fike Hughes, a senior<lb/>
OutoJ Town, V.C is editor emeritus<lb/>
Moon Pie Quiirter-K. a local vending<lb/>
:hine catalogue. He is intrigued by<lb/>
I ct'v but rarely meets them. Refer to<lb/>
above.)<lb/>
After Ten Years, Disagreement Still Heated<lb/>
Rv PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
Slall V.mer<lb/>
Saturday marks the<lb/>
10th anniversary of the<lb/>
Supreme Court ruling<lb/>
making abortion legal<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
Despite the court's rul-<lb/>
ing on the issue in<lb/>
Rowe vs. Wade, the<lb/>
issue remains con<lb/>
troversial.<lb/>
In North Carolina,<lb/>
people on both sides of<lb/>
the issue are gearing up<lb/>
for week of varying<lb/>
demonstrations. Sun-<lb/>
day approximately 100<lb/>
people turned out in<lb/>
Raleigh at a special<lb/>
worship service com-<lb/>
memorating the<lb/>
Supereme Court's deci-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"1 personally believe<lb/>
abortion is morally<lb/>
wrong and sinful said<lb/>
Ms. Motlalepula<lb/>
Chabaku to the Raleigh<lb/>
church group. "But<lb/>
there come times when<lb/>
women have to have it,<lb/>
and they should be able<lb/>
to get safe medical and<lb/>
surgical practices to<lb/>
have it Chabaku is an<lb/>
interdenominational<lb/>
minister from South<lb/>
Africa who teaches<lb/>
women's studies at<lb/>
Greensboro's Bennett<lb/>
College. The afternoon<lb/>
worship service was<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
Religious Coalition for<lb/>
Abortion Rights.<lb/>
Outside the church,<lb/>
fifteen people stood<lb/>
silently in protest<lb/>
holding anti-aboriton<lb/>
placards. "Over 10<lb/>
million abortions since<lb/>
1973 Praise be to<lb/>
God stated one of the<lb/>
placards.<lb/>
In Greenville the<lb/>
response to the abor-<lb/>
tion issue was no less<lb/>
controversial. "It is<lb/>
regrettable and shock-<lb/>
ing that a worship ser-<lb/>
vice, attended by ap-<lb/>
proximately 100 pro-<lb/>
abortionists to com-<lb/>
memorate the Supreme<lb/>
Court decision, was<lb/>
held in Raleigh said<lb/>
Greenville resident<lb/>
Mildred Murphy.<lb/>
Murphy is eastern<lb/>
coordinator for North<lb/>
Carolina Right to Life,<lb/>
an anti-abortion<lb/>
organization that con-<lb/>
ducts educational and<lb/>
political activities on<lb/>
the abortion issue. "It<lb/>
(the worship service) is<lb/>
not a terribly upsetting<lb/>
event. The upsetting<lb/>
event was the legaliza-<lb/>
tion of the killing of<lb/>
unborn children by<lb/>
seven justices of the<lb/>
Supreme Court in<lb/>
1973<lb/>
Murphy said the con-<lb/>
sequences of that deci-<lb/>
sion resulted in the kill-<lb/>
ing of over ten million<lb/>
unborn children and<lb/>
"the errosion of all the<lb/>
values America is sup-<lb/>
posed to stand for<lb/>
"I think the women<lb/>
(who are pro-choice)<lb/>
are not celebrating the<lb/>
use of abortion said<lb/>
Fredrica Jacobson,<lb/>
president of the<lb/>
Women's Political<lb/>
Caucas, "but (they) are<lb/>
relieved that abortion<lb/>
has been ruled legal,<lb/>
and they have the<lb/>
choice to govern their<lb/>
own bodies<lb/>
"Abortion has<lb/>
always been and always<lb/>
will be Jacobson<lb/>
said. "Nobody ap<lb/>
proves of abortion, but<lb/>
until we do something<lb/>
to orevent pregnancv,<lb/>
then it's an absolute<lb/>
necessity that women<lb/>
have a choice<lb/>
Jacobson also feels<lb/>
abortion is an issue<lb/>
w here men are<lb/>
legislating what women<lb/>
can do with their<lb/>
bodies. "This is whv<lb/>
women are working so<lb/>
hard to get political<lb/>
representation in their<lb/>
state legislat ures<lb/>
Jacobson said "We<lb/>
must elect people who<lb/>
represent women as<lb/>
well as men<lb/>
"I haven't round anv<lb/>
pro-choice women in<lb/>
that area Murphv<lb/>
said. She added that<lb/>
there is a "tremendous<lb/>
need" tor more educa<lb/>
tion on the abortion<lb/>
issue<lb/>
Campus Debates A bortion<lb/>
Reaction from ECU<lb/>
students to abortion on<lb/>
the 10th anniversary of<lb/>
its legalization was con-<lb/>
troversial.<lb/>
Ruth Taylor, a<lb/>
graduate student who is<lb/>
seven months pregnant<lb/>
said she is not morally<lb/>
opposed to abortion.<lb/>
"1 don't disagree with<lb/>
abortion, I'd rather<lb/>
people have an abor-<lb/>
tion than an unwanted<lb/>
child<lb/>
Susan Wahl, also a<lb/>
graduate student,<lb/>
agreed with Taylor. "I<lb/>
advocate abortion<lb/>
Wahl said. "Jesse<lb/>
Helms' fight (to outlaw<lb/>
abortions) is ridiculous<lb/>
1 believe in free-choice<lb/>
tor women<lb/>
"The medical protes<lb/>
sion is slaving out ot n,<lb/>
so why is Congress try -<lb/>
ing to define what lite is<lb/>
or when it begins<lb/>
Iavlor asked.<lb/>
"I'm against abor-<lb/>
tion said Mary Linda<lb/>
Grant ham, an<lb/>
undergraduate at fcCU.<lb/>
"I do not believe in<lb/>
taking someone else's<lb/>
life and that's what<lb/>
abortion is Gran-<lb/>
tham recommended<lb/>
that women plan ahead<lb/>
if they don't want to<lb/>
get pregnant. Gran-<lb/>
tham also said she<lb/>
favored adoption as an<lb/>
alternative for mothers<lb/>
who didn't want to<lb/>
keep their babies.<lb/>
"All I've got to say is<lb/>
I'm pro-choice said<lb/>
LCI political science<lb/>
sophomore Jay Dunn.<lb/>
"Since abortion is safe<lb/>
and legal, I feel like a<lb/>
woman who desires to<lb/>
"I'm tor it said<lb/>
business junior John<lb/>
McCall. "I think peo-<lb/>
ple should have the<lb/>
right to make a choice<lb/>
ot whether thev want to<lb/>
have a child or not<lb/>
"I think abortion is<lb/>
acceptible only in a case<lb/>
where the mother's or<lb/>
child's life is in<lb/>
danger said Dawn<lb/>
Williams, a sophomore<lb/>
in nursing. "Just to<lb/>
have one for conve-<lb/>
nience is wrong. Life is<lb/>
too serious to play with<lb/>
like a toy and that's<lb/>
what I think abortion<lb/>
is<lb/>
"I am a Catholic and<lb/>
my upbringing has in-<lb/>
fluenced my feelings<lb/>
about abortion said<lb/>
freshmen psychology<lb/>
student Laurie Beck.<lb/>
"Morally I'm opposed<lb/>
(to abortion) because<lb/>
it's the taking of<lb/>
another human life<lb/>
"If people would use<lb/>
birth control properly<lb/>
the problem could be<lb/>
solved added<lb/>
Jack Crouch.<lb/>
Another business<lb/>
student, freshman<lb/>
Susan Barret said it<lb/>
depended on the cir-<lb/>
cumstances whether she<lb/>
herself would have an<lb/>
abortion. "If people<lb/>
want to have abortions,<lb/>
that's their right<lb/>
"I feel like it's the<lb/>
person's choice said<lb/>
Michelle Werhan, a<lb/>
freshmen in general<lb/>
college. "It's their own<lb/>
body. I feel like it's (the<lb/>
abonton question)<lb/>
basically men who are<lb/>
making a law and don't<lb/>
have to go through<lb/>
this added Wer-<lb/>
chan. "I feel like if<lb/>
men were put in the<lb/>
position of making that<lb/>
choice themselves,<lb/>
perhaps this would not<lb/>
be such a complicated<lb/>
issue said accounting<lb/>
junior Tom Alligood.<lb/>
SHAG CONTEST<lb/>
by<lb/>
BETA LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
with John Moore as Emcee<lb/>
Sunday January 23 at<lb/>
PAPPA KATZ<lb/>
$5.00 entry fee<lb/>
Entry forms available at PAPPA KATZ<lb/>
CONTEST STARTS AT 8:00<lb/>
ALL ENTRANTS SHOULD BE READY AT 7:30<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 7:00 W25 DRAFT<lb/>
$1.00 ADMISSION<lb/>
$50 plus dinner for 2 at<lb/>
Four Seasons<lb/>
H.L Hodges Gift Certificate<lb/>
Dinner for 2 at Pharo's<lb/>
- 2 Playmate Coolers<lb/>
2 Budweiser Lights<lb/>
Dinner for 2 at Subway<lb/>
PAPPA KATZ IS A PRIVATE CLUB<lb/>
FOR MEMBERS AND GUESTS<lb/>
p$i.(<lb/>
A1st Prize<lb/>
P<lb/>
A2nd Prize -<lb/>
K3rd Prize<lb/>
ASponsored by: Aeruoofry<lb/>
TPour lm? HL HodfM Pham'i<lb/>
Zrlfrw fttn i Win.<lb/>
KINGS ISLAND<lb/>
KINGS DOMINION<lb/>
CAROWINDS<lb/>
CANADA S WONDERLAND<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Aj Fletche-Mj? B'?ir)ing Recital Hall<lb/>
Tuesday. Feb"jarv i 3 00-6 00 PM<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
Eihot University Center<lb/>
Alexander and Philips Rooms<lb/>
rhursdaj 'ora ? r or. " oopm<lb/>
Singers ? Dancers ? Instrumentalists ? Technicians<lb/>
Variety Performers ? S180 250week<lb/>
. ?. nn ?v<lb/>
'tems and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Jan 19<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each o these advertised items s re-<lb/>
quired to be r??ciiy available for<lb/>
sale m each Kroger Sav on except<lb/>
as specifically noted m this ad it we<lb/>
do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a ramchecK whicn<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
MAYBELLINE<lb/>
GREAT LASH. FRESH<lb/>
LASH. ULTRA BIG<lb/>
ULTRA LASH OR<lb/>
Magic Mascara<lb/>
vw129<lb/>
Choice ?<lb/>
CHICKEN OF THE SEA<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk Light<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
6'2-Oz<lb/>
Can<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
HAMBURGER OR<lb/>
Hot Dog Buns<lb/>
?s 49<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
BEEF OR MEAT (<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
- ? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0006"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
THl IrASTC AROl 1NIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
JANUARY 20. 1983<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
A Happy Way Of Life<lb/>
Campus Nun Keeps Ministry Hopping<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Stall ?nirr<lb/>
"After his trip to Guatamala,<lb/>
President Reagan claimed the<lb/>
General Rios Montt is 'totally<lb/>
dedicated to democracy in<lb/>
Guatemala despite the fact that the<lb/>
mass murders of the Indian popula-<lb/>
tion of that country are being car-<lb/>
ried out by his troops. Because of<lb/>
these human rights violations, we<lb/>
must urge Congress not to certify<lb/>
Guatemala for aid for water, food,<lb/>
medical care and roads, but we con-<lb/>
tinue to give more and more military-<lb/>
aid to this poorest of nations. We<lb/>
must urge our leaders at every level<lb/>
to stop military aid to El Salvador<lb/>
The above comments, which ap-<lb/>
peared in a letter-to-the-editor to<lb/>
The East Carolinian on December 9<lb/>
were not made by a political science,<lb/>
history or sociology professor. Nor<lb/>
were they written by one of our<lb/>
political representatives in<lb/>
Washington D.C. No, they're also<lb/>
not the words of a communist<lb/>
subversive, but rather they are the<lb/>
words of Sister Helen Shondell, the<lb/>
always well dressed, attractive<lb/>
woman in her 40's who just happens<lb/>
to be Campus Minister to ECU'S ap-<lb/>
proximately 1500 Catholic students.<lb/>
Who is this woman"1 And why<lb/>
does she seem to get her name in<lb/>
print and her face on the television<lb/>
news speaking about subjects rang-<lb/>
ing from United States policy in<lb/>
Central America to the counseling<lb/>
of women and men who have lost a<lb/>
spouse to divorce or death? And<lb/>
how come people call her Sister<lb/>
Happy? She is a Catholic nun born<lb/>
and raised in Toledo, Ohio who<lb/>
joined the Immaculate Heart of<lb/>
Mary (IHM) Convent.<lb/>
In 1976, Sister Happy came to<lb/>
Greenville to work in pastoral<lb/>
ministry in Greenville's two<lb/>
Catholic Churches, St. Peter's and<lb/>
St. Gabriel's. She also did some<lb/>
work with ECU students. Eventual-<lb/>
ly her interest in Campus Ministry<lb/>
grew and now Sister Happy is the<lb/>
full time person, authorized by the<lb/>
Catholic Diocese of Raleigh, doing<lb/>
Catholic (and often non-Catholic)<lb/>
Campus ministry at ECU.<lb/>
Some of Sister Happy's direct<lb/>
work with the students includes<lb/>
operating a ministry out of the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center on 10th<lb/>
street. Students come to the<lb/>
Newman Center every Wednesday<lb/>
evening for Catholic Mass, a<lb/>
meeting and a supper with people<lb/>
who participate in the activities of<lb/>
the Newman Club. ECU student<lb/>
Mary Rider is the Club's President.<lb/>
Father Girard Sherba, ECU's<lb/>
Catholic Chaplain and the pastor of<lb/>
St. Gabriels's Church, comes on<lb/>
Wednesdays to say the Mass which<lb/>
is usually heard by 40 to 50 students.<lb/>
On the wall of the Chapel. Happy<lb/>
has hung several posters and pic-<lb/>
tures that exemplify the areas ol<lb/>
ministry she feels are important.<lb/>
One poster is red, black and white<lb/>
and written in Spanish. On it are<lb/>
drawn the face of five Catholic<lb/>
Churchwomen ? four of them<lb/>
nuns- who were killed in El<lb/>
Salvador's violence. "The mis-<lb/>
sionary martyrs of El<lb/>
Salvadorproclaim the words on<lb/>
the poster. Another picture is of<lb/>
Martin Luther King and still<lb/>
another is a colorful poster bearing<lb/>
a loaf of bread and a fish put out by<lb/>
"Bread for the World a Christian<lb/>
citizens lobby group that is trying to<lb/>
stop the spread of world hunger.<lb/>
Obviously one of Happy's messages<lb/>
to her students is of the importance<lb/>
of peace and social justice. The<lb/>
Newman Club also gets together for<lb/>
other meetings and social events.<lb/>
Some students come together for<lb/>
what is called "sharing a time<lb/>
when they can discuss their lives as<lb/>
they relate to each other and God.<lb/>
Others organize trips to local nurs-<lb/>
ing homes to visit their residents,<lb/>
while still others get together to<lb/>
discuss social issues or perhaps an<lb/>
upcoming demonstration.<lb/>
On Sunday Happy and Sherba<lb/>
hold a Mass in the biology building<lb/>
for about 200 people. The Newman<lb/>
Club music group, under the<lb/>
guidance of FCU student Mickey<lb/>
Skidmore, provides a nice touch.<lb/>
Anyone who visits the Newman<lb/>
Center on any evening shouldn't be<lb/>
surprised if several meetings are go-<lb/>
ing on simultaneously in different<lb/>
rooms There may also be a few<lb/>
students doing homework in the<lb/>
dining room while several other may<lb/>
be watching TV in the living room.<lb/>
It's also not unusual to walk in on a<lb/>
heated discussion that may last for<lb/>
hours. Most of the time Sister Hap-<lb/>
py is not too far away from any of<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Happy also provides individual<lb/>
and group counseling to all who re-<lb/>
quest it. She counsels students on<lb/>
subjects ranging from roommate<lb/>
and scholastic problems, to advising<lb/>
women students who get pregnant,<lb/>
to men who can't decide whether or<lb/>
not to register for the military draft.<lb/>
Justifying her work in the area of<lb/>
peace and social justice is no pro-<lb/>
blem. Happy claims it's all just a<lb/>
part of her faith as a Christian.<lb/>
"The Judeo-christian heritage that<lb/>
is found in the scriptures, especially<lb/>
the Gospels, calls us to do the works<lb/>
of justice Happy says, "So<lb/>
because there are many situations<lb/>
where there is no justice, our (all<lb/>
campus ministers) work in campus<lb/>
ministry helps us to be people who<lb/>
point out injustices and it helps<lb/>
other people to see unjust systems<lb/>
and unjust institutions<lb/>
Happy also points out that as a<lb/>
campus minister she's in the perfect<lb/>
position to do justice work because<lb/>
she has no authortanan strings at-<lb/>
tached to her work. "I think cam-<lb/>
pus ministry, because it is not direct-<lb/>
ly tied into the university, has the<lb/>
opportunity to stand in criticism of<lb/>
existing power structures<lb/>
Shondell saidWe recieve no<lb/>
university support, no state support<lb/>
and no support from big business.<lb/>
We're not beholden to anybody<lb/>
Her work with the ECU students<lb/>
is not where Happy's work stops.<lb/>
Catholic Campus Minister Sister Helen 'Happy' Shondell<lb/>
When asked what she hopes the<lb/>
mark of success in her work will be,<lb/>
Happy replies that she hones "that<lb/>
people have a deeper conviction that<lb/>
they are loved and Unable<lb/>
Recently Sister Happy celebrated<lb/>
her Twenty-fifth Jubilee as a nun<lb/>
The theme of her jubilee was "His<lb/>
oc will endure ? God's love is<lb/>
taithtul The many people who<lb/>
have met, loved, and worked with<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell also know<lb/>
something else ? "Sister Happy's<lb/>
love will endure for them<lb/>
Held<lb/>
By MlkKHAMKR<lb/>
NUff Unlrr<lb/>
This Saturday evening, January<lb/>
22, WNCT-TV, Channel 9 will<lb/>
telecast this area's first Telethon for<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy. The telethon<lb/>
is being called "Celebrate with the<lb/>
StarsI It will be held at the Green-<lb/>
ville Moose Lodge from 11p.m<lb/>
Saturday to 7p.m Sunday, and the<lb/>
public is invited to attend the event.<lb/>
Two stars, Frank Runyeon, who<lb/>
portravs Steve Andropoulous on As<lb/>
The it orld Turns and Margaret<lb/>
Colin, who portrays Margo Mon-<lb/>
tgomery on the same program, will<lb/>
be hosting the local telethon. John<lb/>
Ritter, who plays Jack on Three's<lb/>
( ompany will be the national hosts<lb/>
on CBS. The national telethon will<lb/>
be telecast for 40 minutes out of<lb/>
every hour and the local telethon<lb/>
will be telecast for the remaining 20<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
Seventy-five percent of the<lb/>
amount collected from the telethon<lb/>
will go to the United Cerebral Plasy<lb/>
Developmental Center located on<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. in Greenville. The<lb/>
remaining twenty-live percent goes<lb/>
to the National United Cerebral<lb/>
Palsy Association.<lb/>
Barbara Thurber, director of the<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy Center in<lb/>
Greenville, said this week that the<lb/>
money received from the telethon<lb/>
will be used to buy adaptive equip-<lb/>
ment for the children at the center<lb/>
? tricycles, chairs, toilets, prone<lb/>
standers and walkers. It will also be<lb/>
used for speech therapy, physical<lb/>
therapy, occupational therapy,<lb/>
school supplies and teachers'<lb/>
salaries.<lb/>
The local UCP Center is the<lb/>
largest in the state and it is growing.<lb/>
They have children from one to six<lb/>
years old coming from Pitt. Greene.<lb/>
Lenoir, Edgecombe and Beaufort<lb/>
counties. Ms. Thurber stated that<lb/>
the goal of the UCP Center is to<lb/>
prepare the physically handicapped<lb/>
to enter the public school system.<lb/>
Thurber spoke about the value of<lb/>
ECU students to the center1 really<lb/>
don't know what we'd do without<lb/>
the ECU studentsshe said "We<lb/>
consider the experience that the<lb/>
ECU students provide at the center<lb/>
to be extremely valuable. A lot of<lb/>
the students are volunteers and they<lb/>
come to monitor the nap rooms<lb/>
Various groups around campus<lb/>
have been staging benefits for<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy in the past<lb/>
week. The National Honor Coed<lb/>
Fraternity, Phi Sigma Pi. raised<lb/>
over $500 at a dance contest at Papa<lb/>
Katz this past Saturday night.<lb/>
Januarv 14 Ricky Creech, an ECU<lb/>
student who has cerebral palsy and<lb/>
is in a wheelchair won third place in<lb/>
the tree style competition.<lb/>
Volunteers from campus and<lb/>
from the community will be mann-<lb/>
ing the phones for the telethon Ms.<lb/>
Nita Raspberry is coordination<lb/>
Cinema Society Gets Show<lb/>
Rolling For Spring Semester<lb/>
After a temporary lull in the fall of 1982, the Cinema<lb/>
Society of Greenville is once more bringing classic,<lb/>
rarely-shown American and foreign films to eastern<lb/>
North Carolina. The spring lineup includes comedy,<lb/>
drama, and romance from a variety of national<lb/>
cinemas.<lb/>
As before, the films will be shown in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
Meeting Soon<lb/>
All<lb/>
Lazar Gosman Conducts Soviet Orchestra<lb/>
The East Carolina University Unions Artists Series Committee has announced that the Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra ORPHEUS has cancelled its Southeastern tonr, including its performance Feb. 7 here a<lb/>
ECU Replacing ORPHEUS is the highly-acclaimed Soviet Emigre Orchestra, an excellent<lb/>
chamber orchestra, under the direction of Lazar Gosman. The ensemble is comprised of the finest<lb/>
or recently-arrived Soviet Emigre musicians from the Moscow and Leningrad Philharmonic and<lb/>
Chamber Orchestras. <lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff ?rti?<lb/>
The ECU Poetry Forum will hold its first meeting of<lb/>
the year this evening at 8p.m. in Mendenhall 212. The<lb/>
Forum is open to anyone who would like an ap-<lb/>
preciative but critical audience for hisher poetry.<lb/>
Those attending are asked to bring 6-8 copies of work to<lb/>
be read and discussed.<lb/>
The Poetry Forum is a student organization which is<lb/>
also under the sponsorship of the English Department.<lb/>
The Poetry Forum meets on the first and third Thursday<lb/>
of each month of the school year. Students do not have<lb/>
to read to attend the meeting.<lb/>
According to Dr. Peter Makuck, who is moderator ot<lb/>
the forum, the purpose of the meeting is to provide a<lb/>
forum for criticism and discussion, as well as apprecia-<lb/>
tion of local poetry. Anyone is invited and persons do<lb/>
no have to read to attend the meeting. Speaking of the<lb/>
forum Makuck said earlier this week'There is room in<lb/>
the forum for beginning writers. We've had people who<lb/>
have just come in off the street. I think they have to find<lb/>
it helpful. For beginners, the forum is longer on en-<lb/>
couragement. "Don BaU, a poet and graduate student at<lb/>
ECU had this to say about the Poetry ForumThe<lb/>
forum gives me a chance to display a working poem and<lb/>
I generally get some very good criticism about it. It gives<lb/>
the writer a chance to see what others are doing and<lb/>
there are several really good writers in Greenville.<lb/>
Sometimes you bounce off other poet's techniques and<lb/>
sometimes you get instructed. It's also a lot of funI<lb/>
would encourage young wtiters to listen and to see what<lb/>
it's likeBall saidits a very professional at-<lb/>
mosphere<lb/>
(Mendenhall Student Center) on the ECU campus<lb/>
films will start at 7 p.m. on Sundays.<lb/>
The features for the spring are as follows:<lb/>
January 23 The N orld oj Apu (India. 1959). Directed<lb/>
by Satyajit Ray.<lb/>
Ray is the most tamous and celebrated of Indian<lb/>
directors. This film concludes the trilogy describing the<lb/>
life of APU, who, after achieving manhood, has decid-<lb/>
ed to become a writer. But his life takes an unexpected<lb/>
turn when he is invited to the wedding of a friend's<lb/>
cousin and he finds himself taking the place of the<lb/>
bridegroom (who has had a nervous breakdown just<lb/>
before the ceremony) so the bride-to-be will not be<lb/>
doomed to spinsterhood and the family disgraced. The<lb/>
consequences of the unexpected liason result in some of<lb/>
the most emotionally moving scenes ever made, with a<lb/>
score composed and played by Ravi Shankar.<lb/>
February 6 Lgetsu (Japan, 1953). Directed by Kenl<lb/>
Miaoguchi.<lb/>
Along with Kurosawa, Ozu. and Ichikawa,<lb/>
Mizoguchi is one of the giants of Japanese cinema. With<lb/>
his characteristic dream-like images, he retells the 16th<lb/>
century legend of two men, a potter and a farmer, who<lb/>
leave their families and journey to the city to fulfill their<lb/>
greatest desires. The potter dreams of wealth while the<lb/>
farmer wants to become a samurai and attain military<lb/>
glory. Both achieve their goals but find that their lives<lb/>
have changed in unforeseen ways, ewswetk announc-<lb/>
ed, "the genius of the film rests on the superb<lb/>
photography which transforms the acting, the story,<lb/>
and the background into a flow of insistently haunting<lb/>
images; it is difficult to remember where reality stops<lb/>
and hallucination begins Winner of the Silver Lion<lb/>
Award at the Venice Film Festival.<lb/>
February 20 The Cranes Are Flying (Russia. 1957).<lb/>
Directed by Mikhail Kalatoiov.<lb/>
One of the most highly acclaimed Soviet films of all<lb/>
time. The Cranes Are tiying won the Grand Prize for<lb/>
Best Picture and the Gold Palm for best Director and<lb/>
Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival. Set during<lb/>
World War II, the film is a tragic story of the shattering<lb/>
of youthful ambitions and love by war. The lovers,<lb/>
Veronica and Boris, are certain they will marry and live<lb/>
happily ever after. But Boris volunteers for the Army,<lb/>
See CINEMA, Page 7<lb/>
: ? ? M<lb/>
t<lb/>
The Indl<lb/>
A rms<lb/>
Mayer<lb/>
Strong<lb/>
i <lb/>
Bv PX1RI<lb/>
gre i<lb/>
' I<lb/>
thev d<lb/>
men I eer met I<lb/>
imr<lb/>
and thoughtful<lb/>
talk- plavej a role in hi<lb/>
no; to u-e violence<lb/>
man . I<lb/>
a TSS. - id in an.<lb/>
Botl V<lb/>
on n<lb/>
W i<lb/>
cult<lb/>
tc May ?<lb/>
tha: l<lb/>
or wii!<lb/>
can sootieho?<lb/>
structive wea<lb/>
- .<lb/>
mas .<lb/>
- he refus<lb/>
?<lb/>
In his<lb/>
 May h open:<lb/>
cerned So.<lb/>
to take action<lb/>
i t<lb/>
a!<lb/>
He goes oi<lb/>
d sobedience a <lb/>
m a nuck ? H<lb/>
he nee I<lb/>
mem His list fia j<lb/>
world tha: 5<lb/>
destruct<lb/>
M.i<lb/>
will live or die bv -<lb/>
i. C<lb/>
this earth seems<lb/>
inc ent:<lb/>
a thouf<lb/>
human, species<lb/>
that conscious mt <lb/>
. stuped, dUil w<lb/>
IB al! n.<lb/>
doomsday<lb/>
In his post let<lb/>
S coad 1 aw ol R<lb/>
mutable force end ess<lb/>
and situations . ' - - -1,<lb/>
I homav goes<lb/>
change. Of a: I i<lb/>
S vietv ble? him away<lb/>
Society does<lb/>
T U'lmam'v were a<lb/>
 ie Persons, pernajj<lb/>
Moninc them.<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECU D<lb/>
on all pi<lb/>
eyegi<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0007"/><lb/>
Page t<lb/>
V,<lb/>
<lb/>
l? r Heltn Happ" Nhondell<lb/>
?! her jubilee was "His<lb/>
dure ? God's love is<lb/>
1 he man people who<lb/>
ivcd, and worked with<lb/>
-Nhondell also know<lb/>
"Sister Happy's<lb/>
. aure tor them<lb/>
Held<lb/>
orre to monitor the nap rooms<lb/>
Various groups around campus<lb/>
have been staging benefits for<lb/>
ted Cerebral Palsy in the past<lb/>
week The Vinona! Honor Coed<lb/>
Fraternity, Phi Sigma Pi. raised<lb/>
s?ii a: .1 dance contest at Papa<lb/>
rhi past Saturday night.<lb/>
lanuary i4 Kick Creech, an ECU<lb/>
ij- cerebral palsy and<lb/>
hair won th'rd place in<lb/>
npetmon.<lb/>
cerv trom campus and<lb/>
. rnmunity will be mann-<lb/>
er tor the telethon. Ms<lb/>
Kapberrv is coordination<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Imester<lb/>
lent Center) on the ECU campus. All<lb/>
p.m. on Sundays.<lb/>
lor the spring are as follows:<lb/>
n nrld of pu (India, 1959). Directed<lb/>
lamous and celebrated of Indian<lb/>
concludes the trilogy describing the<lb/>
lo. after achieving manhood, has dead-<lb/>
wnter But his lite takes an unexpected<lb/>
mited to the wedding of a friend's<lb/>
I' Is himself taking the place of the<lb/>
Jo has had a nerous breakdown just<lb/>
ris so the bride-to-be will not be<lb/>
kterhood and the family disgraced. The<lb/>
the unexpected liason result in some of<lb/>
Inallv mowng scenes ever made, with a<lb/>
 and placed b Ravi Shankar.<lb/>
?tsu (Japan. 1953). Directed by Kenji<lb/>
Kurosawa, Ozu, and Ichikawa,<lb/>
ot the giants ot Japanese cinema. With<lb/>
c dream-like images, he retells the 16th<lb/>
t two men, a potter and a farmer, who<lb/>
ies and journey to the city to fulfill their<lb/>
I he potter dreams of wealth while the<lb/>
become a samurai and attain military<lb/>
feve their goals but find that their lives<lb/>
unforeseen ways. Sewsweek announc-<lb/>
is of the film rests on the superb<lb/>
licit transforms the acting, the story,<lb/>
?und into a flow of insistently haunting<lb/>
fricult to remember where reality stops<lb/>
n begins Winner of the Silver Lion<lb/>
?nice Film Festival.<lb/>
? (. ranes Are Hying (Russia, 1957).<lb/>
(hail kalatoiov.<lb/>
ost highly acclaimed Soviet films of all<lb/>
H Are Hying won the Grand Prize for<lb/>
the Gold Palm for best Director and<lb/>
the Cannes Film Festival. Set during<lb/>
he film is a tragic story of the shattering<lb/>
ibitions and love by war. The lovers,<lb/>
ris, are certain they will marry and live<lb/>
ler But Boris volunteers for the Army,<lb/>
sw CINEMA, Page 7<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 20. 1983<lb/>
Cinema Society Has Full Slate<lb/>
The Indian girl from The World Of Apu.<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
and Veronica, in despair, is seduced by Boris'<lb/>
cousin. Kalatozov directed Cranes in the kind of<lb/>
visually extravagant style that had been pro-<lb/>
hibited by the Stalinist dogma since the silent era.<lb/>
Considered a turning point in Soviet Cinema, it<lb/>
recalls the content and film language of the best<lb/>
of Eisenstein.<lb/>
March 27 Harold Lloyd Double Feature ? Hot<lb/>
Haferi924) and Safety Lastl923)<lb/>
Harold Lloyd is considered by many critics to<lb/>
be the premiere silent film comedian, rivalled on-<lb/>
ly by Chaplin and Keaton. His films were not<lb/>
widely available for years, but now a whole new<lb/>
audience is rediscovering the hilarious world of<lb/>
Lloyd. His screen person is a typical young<lb/>
American ? full of ambition and ingenuity ?<lb/>
who embroils himself in outlandish situations, in<lb/>
Hot Water, Harold takes a live turkey on a<lb/>
trolley ride. Then he takes his in-laws for an<lb/>
equally hysterical ride in his new car.<lb/>
In Safety last, he goes to the big city to make<lb/>
his fortune. Among his misadventures is the<lb/>
famous, precariuos and hilarious sequence of<lb/>
Lloyd hanging from the clock ? "the funniest<lb/>
HlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllitllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIHUH?ltltflltttt?nMtHtllftlttlWP<lb/>
comic sequence on film Sneak Previews. As a<lb/>
special bonus feature, we will also screen the<lb/>
short, An Interview wth Harold Lloyd (1962),<lb/>
Lloyd's last interview, in which he speaks of his<lb/>
screen days, the dangerous stunts he always per-<lb/>
formed himself, and contemporary comedy. This<lb/>
rare work is highlighted by his favorite clips from<lb/>
his movies.<lb/>
April 25 Sundays and Cybele (France 1962).<lb/>
Directed by Serege Bourguigon.<lb/>
Hardy Kruger and Patricia Gozzi give remark-<lb/>
ble performances in this widely-acclaimed film<lb/>
that won the Academy Award for Best Foreign<lb/>
Film. Kruger is Pierre, a pilot during the Indo-<lb/>
china war who is burdened with guilt over the<lb/>
death of a little girl due to his plane crash. In<lb/>
spite of the efforts of Madeleine, a nurse who<lb/>
cares for him, Pierre has made little pro-<lb/>
gress until he encounters a little girl whose<lb/>
father is going to leave her at a girl's school with<lb/>
ever coming back to see her. A friendship<lb/>
develops between the shattered Pierre and the<lb/>
unhappy Cybele. But the friendship is doomed<lb/>
by those who don't understand. Bosley Crowther<lb/>
of the New York Times called it "A cinematic<lb/>
miraclemasterpiecesheer magic and Ar-<lb/>
cher Winsten declared it "a jewel ot priceless<lb/>
worth among French films<lb/>
Attendance at all films is by subscription only<lb/>
(due to arrangement with distributors). The cost<lb/>
of a membership to attend all five films is ten<lb/>
dollars. For further information, contact Glen<lb/>
Brewster or Alex Albright at the English Depart-<lb/>
ment ot ECU (757-6412 or 757-6041).<lb/>
Arms Protestor<lb/>
Mayer Shared<lb/>
Strong Views<lb/>
This is the second oj two parts.<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Sl?fl Wnlrr<lb/>
Thomas also warned Mayer that innocent<lb/>
people could be killed by such an act, but at first<lb/>
Mayer believed that some sacrifice of human life<lb/>
would be acceptable if it helped prevent the<lb/>
greater evil of the nuclear arms race.<lb/>
Thomas counseled Mayer to drop the plan and<lb/>
they discussed it frequently during their White<lb/>
House vigils Norman was one of the wisest<lb/>
men 1 ever met Thomas said adding that Mayer<lb/>
believed "wisdom and honesty" to be the most<lb/>
important aspects of one's character.<lb/>
Thomas believed that Mayer listened carefully<lb/>
and thoughtfully to his suggetsions. "I think our<lb/>
talks played a role in his (Mayer's) final decision<lb/>
not to use violence said Thomas. Of course,<lb/>
many people connote the threat to use v lolence as<lb/>
a 1ftbnV'act in ahfc of itself, but Thomas did feel<lb/>
that perhaps Mayer at least scraped his dynamite<lb/>
plans because of their conversations.<lb/>
Both Mayer and Thomas had similar opinions<lb/>
on many aspects of the nuclear arms race.<lb/>
"We are several diverse civilizaitons of many<lb/>
cultures on the brink of genocide and suicide<lb/>
wrote Mayer. "Anyone that takes exception to<lb/>
that statement, is just plain ignorant of the facts<lb/>
or willing to gamble that flawed, bumbling men<lb/>
can somehow manage 30,000 megatons of totally<lb/>
destructive weaponry. Historically the odds are<lb/>
against that gamble<lb/>
Thomas comments in similar fashion when he<lb/>
says he refuses "to be part of a system that's go-<lb/>
ing to protect itself at the expense of all life on<lb/>
earth Anyone who meets Thomas can attest to<lb/>
his honesty, his life's witness is indicative of his<lb/>
refusal to compromise on his beliefs.<lb/>
In his article titled "Anyone for a Boston Tea<lb/>
Party Mayer opens by saying that "the Con-<lb/>
cerned Sovereign Citizen has a fundamental right<lb/>
to take action to relieve the constant stress im-<lb/>
posed on him by a culture, a civilization, a<lb/>
growth situation, that threatens all life<lb/>
He goes on to discuss his belief that civil<lb/>
disobedience is acceptabe and necessary to pre-<lb/>
vent a nuclear war From a moral point of view<lb/>
he need not be concerned about law or govern-<lb/>
ment. His justification is his desire to live in a<lb/>
world that is not steadily creeping into self-<lb/>
destruction<lb/>
Mayer ends the article with a warning: "We<lb/>
will live or die by the results of our willful actions<lb/>
or miscalculations. Conscious intelligent life on<lb/>
this earth seems to be an aberration amongst liv-<lb/>
ing organisms and entities. It appears, in making<lb/>
a thoughtful, broad, over-view analysis of the<lb/>
human species one has no choice but to deduce<lb/>
that conscious intelligent life can also be very,<lb/>
very stupid, and self-destructive. As an act of<lb/>
sanity, ban all nuclear weapons or have a nice<lb/>
doomsday<lb/>
In his post letter, Thomas quotes Norman's<lb/>
Second Law of Reality: "Change is the only im-<lb/>
mutable force endlessly continuous. All things,<lb/>
and situations consistently alter and rearrange<lb/>
Thomas goes on to say, "Norman demanded<lb/>
change, or at least the opportunity to discuss it,<lb/>
Society blew him away.<lb/>
Society doesn't like change.<lb/>
If Humanity were capable of recognizing their<lb/>
Wise Persons, perhaps Humanity would stop<lb/>
stoning them.<lb/>
15<lb/>
ECU DISCOUNT<lb/>
on all prescription<lb/>
eyeglasses<lb/>
315 Park View Commons<lb/>
Across from Doctors Park<lb/>
Open? 5:30<lb/>
Mon. Fri.<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
'OE<lb/>
?<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
Little Sister Rush<lb/>
Monday 24th of January<lb/>
Tuesday 25th Of January<lb/>
iWHERE: Mendenhall Coffeehouse!<lb/>
lllllllllllMlinillHIMIIIIIIIItlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHtlllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllll<lb/>
Ol C??MM Fatig.es ane)<lb/>
T-Sfcirts. SUtpmt ??fi.<lb/>
?ackpacks C.mpmg E?uie-<lb/>
mcni Stael Tee SIMM. DIlNi<lb/>
an Ovtf it Different Oee? mmt<lb/>
use item, bstn ln'i,<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE -Mr<lb/>
IF YOU ARE HAVING PROBLEMS WITH DRUGS OR ALCOHOL ?<lb/>
WE CAN HELP ? "STUDENTS HELPING STUDENTS"<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOLS DRUG CENTER ? 757 73<lb/>
IN RECENT MONTHS. THE ARRESTS OP COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
INVOLVED IN DRUG RELATED INCIDENTS HAS INCREASED<lb/>
DRAMATICALLY Br ause of our concern ana in our quest tor<lb/>
RESPONSIBILITY, we would like it known to all the student the new<lb/>
drug laws now in effect These are the laws and hence will be enforced!<lb/>
- minimum<lb/>
minimum prison sentence o 7<lb/>
1. Possession ot SO lbs and less than 100 lbs. of maniuana<lb/>
prison sentence ol 5 years<lb/>
2 Possession of 100 lbs and less than 3.000 lbs. of maniuana<lb/>
years.<lb/>
). Possession of J OOC lbs and less than 10,000 lbs of maniuana ? minimum prison sentence of U<lb/>
years<lb/>
4 Possession ol 10.000 or more lbs. ol maniuana ? minimum prison sentence of 35 years along<lb/>
wit fines.<lb/>
S. Possession with, or intention to sell 70 grams or less ol cocaine ? presumptive sentence of 1-10<lb/>
years along with lines.<lb/>
i Possession with or intention to sell 2 grams or more, but less than NO grams of cocaine ?<lb/>
presumptive sentence of 7 years along with fines.<lb/>
7. Possession of 1.000, but less than S.000 dosage units of mettiaqualone (qvalutfes) ? 7 year art<lb/>
sentence along with a $35 0OC dollar line.<lb/>
I. Possession ot 5.000. but less than icooe dosage units of mettiaqualone (quaiudes) ? 14 year<lb/>
prison sentence along witn a ISO.000 dollar fine.<lb/>
t. Possession of 4 grams, but leu than 14 grams of opium ? 14 year prison sentence, along with a<lb/>
svo.ooo dollar fine.<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
134 week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Mad 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 BOO-371 0575<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
We hove the hoc<lb/>
tl i price that9 right<lb/>
forVOU<lb/>
At H.L Hodge students receive a 10 dis-<lb/>
count on everything in the store ? ot anytime<lb/>
? with the presentation of a student ID<lb/>
But to celebrate New Balance Week at H. L.<lb/>
Hodges -<lb/>
Bring in your ECU ID. and you will receive a<lb/>
20 discount on ony New Balance shoe in<lb/>
stock.<lb/>
Men's R?g- Sale Women'sReg. Sale<lb/>
420 S46.95 $37.56 2803. 95 $25.56<lb/>
460 $47.95 $38.36<lb/>
555 $51.95 $41-56<lb/>
660 553 95 $43.16<lb/>
730 $65 95 $52.76<lb/>
990 $83.95 $67.16<lb/>
'(ladies' aerobic shoes)<lb/>
420 95 537.56<lb/>
0 S47 95 $38.36<lb/>
555S5195 $41.56<lb/>
60 $52 95 $42.36<lb/>
Offer good TuesWedThursFriSat.<lb/>
January 18-22<lb/>
new batance Iff<lb/>
CAROLINA OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
PRESENTS IN CONCERT<lb/>
The South's Hottest Honky Ton Jeers<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
COWBOY BAND<lb/>
lit A BfciaU B?n?f It (<lb/>
tFojr<lb/>
MEAL DEAL!<lb/>
United Cerebal Palsey<lb/>
Thursday, January 20<lb/>
n<lb/>
The Reno Brothers<lb/>
rggiTm?mUsOf<lb/>
UrsUiiilii 1C1 ugHi<lb/>
For Further Information Call<lb/>
758-3943<lb/>
You know PTA delivers great<lb/>
hot pizza. But did you know that<lb/>
with every pizza PTA delivers cold<lb/>
Cokes too7 Free 14-ouncers.<lb/>
Its the Meal Deal.<lb/>
Savings for real.<lb/>
When it comes to pizza,<lb/>
PTA comes to you. t 1 j d7zb<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
At P. T.A. We Give YOU the Deal!<lb/>
Ok<lb/>
I<lb/>
? '<lb/>
in ii ? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0008"/><lb/>
MI KMt kil IM s's<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Snea<lb/>
Pirates Bring Back Winning Spirit'<lb/>
u iiin i'mMM<lb/>
ivei the game I dwards made anoti<lb/>
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I si shai p shooiei (iame ?cl m ra i<lb/>
Haw made a three l S played nan ahead. 12-11, their fii<lb/>
a and ed in tw Ie1 igamsf tl Bucs game<lb/>
jumpsh t tl thinj Ha nson was surprised l l nevei bi ki ia<lb/>
 .  A ? " tx itient the fit minutes ot the half<lb/>
! ? vhen Robin on dro in I<lb/>
 .e seen man V i 11 d :? ??? ??<lb/>
i : ? 60 minute; loi quite a pumped in three point the<lb/>
t-XL wl ites a 24-20 advant t<lb/>
Of I Ha aid USC's Hawthoi I witl<lb/>
the were not I<lb/>
in and a I i Bu ? I 24 22<lb/>
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Ian<lb/>
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Lady Pirates Secure<lb/>
On-The-Road Win<lb/>
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fi,<lb/>
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Edwards Fills Role<lb/>
As ECU'sTeam Leader<lb/>
 K<lb/>
Km<lb/>
I in l.ad Rats huddle before pre-gami action<lb/>
l a. S <lb/>
Buccaneers Head For Classic<lb/>
Nike-Carolu<lb/>
kicks<lb/>
I f I ? ? . t he Gi<lb/>
I ?? ? v- A<lb/>
w standing 5-<lb/>
ist sutl<lb/>
 ? .<lb/>
tda<lb/>
eigl<lb/>
Bu 1 ' ?<lb/>
U ?<lb/>
1.2  - ' '<lb/>
? . : 5 -1 1 t" i<lb/>
i <lb/>
! 2 4 ; md 2.6<lb/>
c ruard V" in now<lb/>
ing ; '<lb/>
( k rani<lb/>
?? "<lb/>
. ? i erage ol 45<lb/>
I .<lb/>
In scoring 11 ?<lb/>
Build i 10 in ti.<lb/>
in<lb/>
i<lb/>
B<lb/>
In fad B<lb/>
 h<lb/>
in ODI<lb/>
: 12-2 reci rd, (<lb/>
LCI A in<lb/>
ri-ra n I<lb/>
eek, na Build<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ling to A ?tant Sp rt I:<lb/>
? ? mati I) Norm<lb/>
At" :? 27 26<lb/>
? ? ? it halftimi<lb/>
?? ? ? md pel "<lb/>
:?? 12 of ?3 h(its t<lb/>
i?erage<lb/>
I a net Harris, G rg<lb/>
md el <lb/>
. the<lb/>
I time tl "ted<lb/>
than I I ti 6- <lb/>
soph re 1<lb/>
19.6 point md 12.9<lb/>
i ? Han was nam<lb/>
it Ml-A<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? . Hai i  ? Georgia<lb/>
p an '2 lunioienter Rhon<lb/>
11 h illi ?wa avei iging 1f 4 points<lb/>
9 5 rebounds, 1 isa )'( onnor, a<lb/>
6 1 treshman who is now pumping<lb/>
Cinch Pleasants<lb/>
1 intk Inside<lb/>
i : "Wc- ha -v on<lb/>
v<lb/>
ivei 'link they 'Te in high<lb/>
the can sv ore at w ill,<lb/>
but at evel, in general, offense<lb/>
doesn't come this ea<lb/>
" I  tl nl oui players have<lb/>
 important e<lb/>
is<lb/>
1 he head k oac I<lb/>
teach the Bulldog l inderstand,<lb/>
Reilh b<lb/>
has been<lb/>
? ? nse Reilh said.<lb/>
Southai ? ilina will und'<lb/>
be the other dominant u: in the<lb/>
ne I he w il take on Mei<lb/>
I edd Hear - following the<lb/>
1I C i<lb/>
1 ad i.HikMK ks are now<lb/>
7-4, with mai ginal wins ovet (<lb/>
State. lemson and sn . I S<lb/>
beal Penn State this week, 66-63,<lb/>
g i?i n g t i . .<lb/>
. .iie<lb/>
Leading<lb/>
art<lb/>
McAlistei<lb/>
is avera<lb/>
 pun I<lb/>
idinj<lb/>
with 7.5 and 5- II Sei<lb/>
I lyn Johnson is now a ? ei ?.<lb/>
1 2 4 point and ft.1 rel<lb/>
Mei cer is now 8 6 ovei<lb/>
Georgia pre<lb/>
the 1 edd Beai ? <lb/>
seniors Nona i eathei s, K.<lb/>
I rne and Emma Mumpher<lb/>
I he I c I t reorgia gan<lb/>
6 p.m and South. Carolina will<lb/>
meet Mercei at 8 p m. (n Saturday,<lb/>
the consolation game will stari<lb/>
p m and the t hampionship game<lb/>
will be played at 7 p.m.<lb/>
W<lb/>
Vand<lb/>
??1<lb/>
t ' ?<lb/>
SBA<lb/>
?feJ<lb/>
Y h<lb/>
H<lb/>
?V :<lb/>
ling<lb/>
ndy I andt i<lb/>
now I ourth yea i<lb/>
. ? : i 76-36 i<lb/>
first NCAA<lb/>
,i:nen' la I e ison.<lb/>
i St at? u<lb/>
?<lb/>
? i andei has i ompletel) tui i<lb/>
this program around Reillv<lb/>
I. ha ikei it from a mediocre<lb/>
pi igi in i! d ma le it ini onal<lb/>
powei<lb/>
I he Pirates, who are known tor<lb/>
being a stronf<lb/>
being taken too lightly b I andei<lb/>
"We know that 1(1 is going to<lb/>
ome in there and scrap loi fort<lb/>
minutes he said, and it we don't<lb/>
do '? ? ! aren't ready to play,<lb/>
then that spells trouble tor us<lb/>
 e will have to find a way to<lb/>
. Denklei (Mary I dow<lb/>
Presently, I andei i yinj to gel<lb/>
the Bulldogs' offensive game ba k<lb/>
,n ordei aftet a relapse against I en<lb/>
nessee "I think thine have gone<lb/>
eas tor us on offense<lb/>
Football Staff Stresses Academic Performance<lb/>
B KIN KOI ION<lb/>
?n important function ol an ol<lb/>
lege football slafi is to stress<lb/>
academics as well as athletics I he<lb/>
I c l program is no exception<lb/>
I in coaches, alone with Athletic<lb/>
cademic Coordinatoi Robert<lb/>
lallo, work towatd success in the<lb/>
classroom as well as on the football<lb/>
field<lb/>
1 he academic gameplan includes<lb/>
tie hmen orientation programs,<lb/>
studs sessions, tutor programs and<lb/>
academic awards An academic<lb/>
playbook is also made available to<lb/>
the football players at ECl . one ol<lb/>
the tew schools in the country to of<lb/>
fei this guideline.<lb/>
"We stress the pursuit ol both<lb/>
athletics and academies head<lb/>
coach Ed Lmoi said "We want to<lb/>
ere every player the opportunity to<lb/>
graduate from ECl<lb/>
1 he desire for better academic<lb/>
performance has spread throughout<lb/>
the country. On Jan 11. in a con<lb/>
vention ol the N( A and the CI<lb/>
( American Council on Education), a<lb/>
proposal was passed that toughened<lb/>
admission requirements foi athletes<lb/>
I he by-law, which was known as<lb/>
Proposal No. 48. calls tor a core<lb/>
curriculum of math. English, social<lb/>
and physical sciences, along with a<lb/>
minimum SA 1 score ol 700.<lb/>
lallo doesn't anticipate any pro<lb/>
blems with the new regulations "1<lb/>
don't think they ill seriously hurt<lb/>
ECU he said<lb/>
I his year's Pirate football squad<lb/>
had six members ruled academically<lb/>
ineligible tor the spring semestei<lb/>
Ihev will be able to return tor the<lb/>
grades a<lb/>
It's hai I enough I<lb/>
entering<lb/>
lifest<lb/>
footb ?<lb/>
da 's ageni<lb/>
1 he 1982 U 1<lb/>
freshmei<lb/>
Pirau ? ?<lb/>
"Our 1<lb/>
best perl<lb/>
that I've been here<lb/>
I allo "(Kerall, we a t<lb/>
shape than in the past<lb/>
s tor the sis members who <lb/>
ha e to mis- spi ing pra I<lb/>
knows that the loss will hi felt<lb/>
?? l hai hurl us a great d ?<lb/>
Emory stated "We had at east 2( I<lb/>
sea's ol experience 'here ou nevei<lb/>
anticipate losing kids that are still<lb/>
i<lb/>
I he r? .<lb/>
For H<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0009"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 20. 1983<lb/>
rit'<lb/>
<lb/>
l<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
PWO 6v STANLEY LC?V<lb/>
t hi?. thretpoint pla against<lb/>
ills Role<lb/>
earn Leader<lb/>
d s altei l)a;v<lb/>
Vfter high school. Edwards<lb/>
? two seasons at Laurin-<lb/>
 ere he averaged<lb/>
 d 16 rebounds. In his<lb/>
ne, he played quarter-<lb/>
i . I r the 1 igei football team.<lb/>
fans are certainly glad<lb/>
lecided to attend ECU,<lb/>
en to be the leader<lb/>
ght's I SC contest.<lb/>
!i) points in a<lb/>
pan in the second<lb/>
iling tl ictory for the<lb/>
He m . i effective on the<lb/>
i, w here he was pit-<lb/>
USCs hij 'ring<lb/>
Jimn I line into<lb/>
- and<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ip center<lb/>
hold<lb/>
ci goals<lb/>
-<lb/>
. ? post in<lb/>
ffensive scheme.<lb/>
he pay-<lb/>
l h Charlie Har-<lb/>
ar, L.duards was<lb/>
ike the 15-tooter<lb/>
. eases vvere otfer-<lb/>
-<lb/>
)oi<lb/>
nfidencehas<lb/>
imulated to the point<lb/>
: hesitate to take<lb/>
In the USC<lb/>
ur shots from<lb/>
ng range.<lb/>
-hen I've been going to the<lb/>
been putting three<lb/>
me hdwards respond-<lb/>
on starting to move to<lb/>
more<lb/>
I dward" continues his pro-<lb/>
E L tans will have a lot of<lb/>
ng basketball action to<lb/>
l in the future.<lb/>
b-formance<lb/>
eligible<lb/>
en Emory credited reeenuy-departed<lb/>
the offensive coordinator Larry Beekish<lb/>
kn with his work towards scholastic<lb/>
?r achievement.<lb/>
"Beckijh has done a great job<lb/>
he said. "He and the assistant<lb/>
coaches meet everyday and hold a<lb/>
staff meeting discussing academic<lb/>
progress<lb/>
The requirements, which were<lb/>
designed to toughen eligibility as<lb/>
well as challenge the athletes, do not<lb/>
concern Tallo a great deal.<lb/>
the<lb/>
ted<lb/>
tter<lb/>
r<lb/>
l"<lb/>
20<lb/>
ver<lb/>
till<lb/>
As he puts it, "The reason that<lb/>
athletes are successful is because<lb/>
they are competitive, and if they<lb/>
find out that they have to reach cer-<lb/>
tain goals, they will be willing to<lb/>
work towards them<lb/>
<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Team Captains'<lb/>
Meetings<lb/>
The team captains'<lb/>
meetings for upcoming<lb/>
activities include:<lb/>
Basketball-January 20,<lb/>
7:00 p.m Biology<lb/>
Building 103; Roller<lb/>
Hockey-January 20,<lb/>
4:00 p.m 102<lb/>
Memorial Gym. The<lb/>
captains of all teams<lb/>
entered are required to<lb/>
attend their respective<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
Arm Wrestling<lb/>
Receive a T-shirt and<lb/>
have some fun by enter -<lb/>
ing in the In-<lb/>
tramural Bud weiser<lb/>
Arm Wrestling Tourna-<lb/>
ment. Sign up for this<lb/>
powerhouse event at<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
New Weight Equip-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The weight room in<lb/>
Memorial Gym has a<lb/>
new look. This past<lb/>
week several new peices<lb/>
of Universal weight<lb/>
equipment were install-<lb/>
ed giving the avid lifter<lb/>
an opportunity for a<lb/>
more thorough<lb/>
workout. Memorial<lb/>
Gym weight room<lb/>
hours are: Monday ?<lb/>
Thursday, 9 a.m6<lb/>
p.m and Saturday ?<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Personal Defense<lb/>
Class<lb/>
The Intramural<lb/>
Department is offering<lb/>
a self-defense class for<lb/>
men and women.<lb/>
Registration deadline is<lb/>
January 21 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sign up in Room 204,<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Know<lb/>
Shoe Talk<lb/>
what's going<lb/>
on in the world of in-<lb/>
tramurals by listening<lb/>
to the Tennis Shoe Talk<lb/>
Show, which is aired<lb/>
every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday at 2:30 on<lb/>
WZMB, 91.3 on your<lb/>
FM dial.<lb/>
Horseback Riding<lb/>
The Outdoor Recrea-<lb/>
tion Center is sponser-<lb/>
ing horseback riding<lb/>
trips to Jarman Stables.<lb/>
Reservations and<lb/>
payments for the<lb/>
Thursday afternoon<lb/>
trips<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
are due by 3:00 o<lb/>
each Thursaday. 0<lb/>
?ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo?<lb/>
Treat the crew and we'll treat you<lb/>
Rates are $5.00 per g<lb/>
hour. Transportation is 0<lb/>
provided with the shut- o<lb/>
tie leaving Memorial O<lb/>
Gym at 3:30 p.m. g<lb/>
sharp. For more infor- o<lb/>
mation or reservations O<lb/>
call or stop by the In- q<lb/>
tramural Recreational c<lb/>
Services Outdoor O<lb/>
Recreation Center (113) ?<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Phone q<lb/>
757-6911. Hours are O<lb/>
Monday and Friday, 1 ?<lb/>
p.m5 p.m and Tues-<lb/>
day, Wednesday, and<lb/>
Thursday, 2 p.m4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Miller Sparks Virginia<lb/>
To Victory Over Hokies<lb/>
RICHMOND, Va.<lb/>
(UPI) - Reserve for-<lb/>
ward Jimmy Miller<lb/>
scored 15 of his 18<lb/>
points in the second<lb/>
half Wednesday night<lb/>
to power sixth-ranked<lb/>
Virginia to an easy<lb/>
74-64 victory over<lb/>
intra-state rival<lb/>
Virginia Tech at the<lb/>
Richmond Coliseum.<lb/>
The Cavaliers, 14-2<lb/>
and coming off Satur-<lb/>
day's loss to North<lb/>
Carolina, were ex-<lb/>
pected to have dif-<lb/>
ficulties with the<lb/>
Hokies, 14-2.<lb/>
But the Cavaliers<lb/>
raced to a 37-26<lb/>
halftime lead behind 9<lb/>
first-half points from<lb/>
both Ralph Sampson<lb/>
and Rick Carlisle. The<lb/>
Hokies, who defeated<lb/>
then No. 1 Memphis<lb/>
State 10 days ago, were<lb/>
paced by freshman Dell<lb/>
Curry with 17 points<lb/>
and Perry Young with<lb/>
15.<lb/>
Virginia trailed 20-18<lb/>
at 9:49 to play in the<lb/>
first half on three con-<lb/>
sectuive baskets by<lb/>
Perry Young, Curry<lb/>
and Al Young.<lb/>
But VPI went<lb/>
scoreless for the next 54<lb/>
minutes and Virginia<lb/>
ripped off 12 points -<lb/>
seven by guard Ricky<lb/>
Stokes - to lead 30-20<lb/>
with 5:11 left in the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Sampson scored 12<lb/>
points for the game as<lb/>
he was used sparingly<lb/>
and sat out most of the<lb/>
second half as Virginia<lb/>
stretched its 11-point,<lb/>
37-26 halftime lead to<lb/>
18 at 61-43.<lb/>
Tech freshman Bob<lb/>
by Beecher scored t<lb/>
points, but was saddle<lb/>
with early foul troubl<lb/>
and picked up hi<lb/>
fourth with 18 minute<lb/>
remaining in the game.<lb/>
With both Sampson<lb/>
and Beecher out, Miller<lb/>
worked himself free in-<lb/>
side the Tech defense<lb/>
for easy bank shots and<lb/>
12-foot jumpers. Dur-<lb/>
ing a five-minute run.<lb/>
Miller scored nine<lb/>
points and capped his<lb/>
evening by giving the<lb/>
Cavaliers their last<lb/>
21-point lead at 74-53<lb/>
with 3:48 remaining.<lb/>
With the victory,<lb/>
Virginia extended its<lb/>
domination over in-<lb/>
state teams to 28<lb/>
straight victories.<lb/>
tth st.<lb/>
MISSING PERSONS<lb/>
BOBSEGER<lb/>
STRAY CATS<lb/>
BRUCE SPRINGSTEIN<lb/>
DIRE STRAITS<lb/>
MEN AT WORK<lb/>
LED ZEPPELIN<lb/>
OEOROE TMOROOOOO<lb/>
4pp&amp; ecoltctfi<lb/>
$8.98 List mI priced rt<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
NEIL YOUNG<lb/>
BILLY SQUIRE<lb/>
RICK SPRINGFIELD<lb/>
LINDA RONSTADT<lb/>
and many more<lb/>
unaxivertised specials.<lb/>
PILOT 1MIIII<lb/>
?Twmics<lb/>
fit mrt<lb/>
O<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
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o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
Every Monday and Tuesday night, every week<lb/>
of the year, order any large 2 ex more topping<lb/>
pizza for the crew, ask for the "Family Night Special"<lb/>
and we'll treat you to your own small pizza with the same<lb/>
number of toppings. FREE, and delivered tree in our<lb/>
service zone, I" 30 minutes or less<lb/>
Or pick up two pizzas in 15 minutes<lb/>
Two pizzas for the price of one  Now that s a treat you can t beat!<lb/>
When it comesro f pizza, pta comes to vou<lb/>
Notgood with any other special <lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
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o<lb/>
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o<lb/>
o<lb/>
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0<lb/>
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0<lb/>
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o<lb/>
King Chosen<lb/>
Th? N??y pr?ntly h? Itufi' Ofll?1?9?<lb/>
for the ant tc!tln$ ?nd c??l lofll"<lb/>
Job in X? world - ?AVT HIQT. II you<lb/>
qualify. ?? will 9u?rnt?? you st?t In<lb/>
tht ?OJt pr?tl9iou? fl9"t ?cl?oo!<lb/>
?yvhrc. ?t th? coaplftloa of training<lb/>
you mil fly tut IUvy'1 nig ptrfor?"C?<lb/>
?lrcrjft.<lb/>
0?Mftct1?M r?<lb/>
B?cn?lors dey,rt?<lb/>
IM tnn 2b IJ ywrs old<lb/>
MJ0 gncorr?ct?fl ?U1on<lb/>
lutilmt MiUk<lb/>
U.S. Cttlion<lb/>
If you thin, you c?n qualify vc ?oula<lb/>
li?t to trn t Harting ulary of<lb/>
S18.000 ?1tn in.OOD- In four yri.<lb/>
st tn? H??y lfflctr Prjgrcas Tt??.<lb/>
Thy'll b or ctapul 18-W JjBHQ ?<lb/>
't ?QO St Of I. If you can't W ? It .<lb/>
tend your r35?l or traoicnpti to:<lb/>
res cism ami<lb/>
1001 toaH Dr.<lb/>
t?l?1t. K Z7?Ot<lb/>
or uii i-mo-mi-roi<lb/>
CHARLOTTE,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) - Winfred<lb/>
King, the 6-foot-10<lb/>
center who sparked<lb/>
East Tennessee State to<lb/>
wins over Appalachian<lb/>
State and Davidson,<lb/>
was named Southern<lb/>
Conference player-of-<lb/>
the-week Wednesday.<lb/>
King, who became<lb/>
eligible for play in mid-<lb/>
December, was selected<lb/>
for the honor by a<lb/>
panel of the Southern<lb/>
Conference Sports<lb/>
Media Association.<lb/>
King powered East<lb/>
Tennessee to a 78-58<lb/>
win over Appalachian<lb/>
State and a 67-66 win<lb/>
over Davidson last<lb/>
week. He scored 36<lb/>
points while shooting<lb/>
52 percent from the<lb/>
floor, grabbed 27 re-<lb/>
bounds and con-<lb/>
tributed four blocks in<lb/>
the two wins.<lb/>
The victories moved<lb/>
East Tennessee's league<lb/>
mark to 3-1 and its<lb/>
overall record to 9-3.<lb/>
Leaders<lb/>
Friendship &amp;G<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
n<lb/>
P fi - p?<lb/>
I e' ? r h 2<lb/>
?rPCSe.<lb/>
?0 T<lb/>
mega<lb/>
AlpkaPh, 0<lb/>
Motiona I ,Co-ed,Se r vi ce<lb/>
Fraternifu<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
Ladies Light Night with<lb/>
Bill Blue<lb/>
Ladies'free Till 10:30<lb/>
50- Bev. Till 11:00<lb/>
&amp;oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo$<lb/>
FOSDICK'S 1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
NIGHTLY SPECIALS<lb/>
Monday Large Shrimp Dinner<lb/>
(fried or boiled)<lb/>
french fries, slaw$5.95<lb/>
Tuesday Choice of: Shrimp<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
with baked potato and salad$5.50<lb/>
Wednesday Large Flounder Dinner<lb/>
(fried or broiled)<lb/>
french fries, slaw$5.95<lb/>
Thursday 12 lb. Steamed Shrimp<lb/>
french fries, slaw$6.50<lb/>
Ffl, In Concert<lb/>
MCA Recording Artist<lb/>
Catholic Girls<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Avalanche<lb/>
All ECU Dorm Students<lb/>
free with Proper l.D.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
The Brains<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
S.<lb/>
I<lb/>
CAROLINA OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
PRESENTS IN CONCERT<lb/>
The Souths Hottest Honky Tonkers<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
COWBOY BAND<lb/>
In A lydal Benefit Concert For<lb/>
United Cerebal Palsey<lb/>
Thursday, January 20<lb/>
ft<lb/>
i?<lb/>
tl<lb/>
With I<lb/>
The Reno Brothers<lb/>
roM The Hills Of VlrftKia'<lb/>
Ut.1<lb/>
? ?IWBTC<lb/>
For Further Information Call<lb/>
758-3943<lb/>
1<lb/>
 <lb/>
V<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057527_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI I M l AROl 1SIAS<lb/>
I AM Ri 20, 1983<lb/>
Littleton Hurts Knee<lb/>
KNOXVILLE,<lb/>
Term (I PI) Ien-<lb/>
nessee reserve guard Ed<lb/>
Littleton has<lb/>
undergone surger to a<lb/>
knee he iniured in a<lb/>
game against I ouisiana<lb/>
State and will be lost<lb/>
tor the season, school<lb/>
officials said Wednes-<lb/>
day .<lb/>
I i 111 e t o n . a b - 2<lb/>
senior who averaged<lb/>
2.9 points per game and<lb/>
1.2 rebounds, injured<lb/>
his left knee in a scram-<lb/>
ble for a loose ball in<lb/>
Tennessee's 59-58 ic-<lb/>
tor at Baton Rouge<lb/>
Jan.10.<lb/>
Littleton's season<lb/>
last ear was ruined<lb/>
when he was booted ofl<lb/>
the team tor bad<lb/>
grades.<lb/>
He re-entered the<lb/>
school and made the<lb/>
Dean's list. He was a<lb/>
scrappy d e t e n s i e<lb/>
player in the Yols' first<lb/>
12 games of this season<lb/>
and had more playing<lb/>
time<lb/>
starters<lb/>
than some<lb/>
"He had surgery for<lb/>
removal of torn car-<lb/>
tilage and ligaments<lb/>
school spokesman Bud<lb/>
Ford said. "The<lb/>
surgery revealed the<lb/>
nature of the injury,<lb/>
and he will not be play-<lb/>
ing for the rest of the<lb/>
season. Since he's a<lb/>
senior that ends it for<lb/>
him<lb/>
Mac In tyre Top Coach<lb/>
Who will survive<lb/>
and what<lb/>
will be<lb/>
left of<lb/>
them?<lb/>
? i<lb/>
ATLANTA (I PI) -<lb/>
George Maclntyre,<lb/>
who led Yanderhilt to<lb/>
its first winning season<lb/>
in seven years in 1982,<lb/>
received the Bobbv<lb/>
Dodd Coach of the<lb/>
Year award Wednesday<lb/>
from the American<lb/>
Sportsmanship Coun-<lb/>
cil.<lb/>
Maclntyre is the<lb/>
seventh coach to win<lb/>
the Dodd award, given<lb/>
annually to a coach<lb/>
who combines winning<lb/>
m ith a philosophy that<lb/>
football should be kept<lb/>
in perspective with col-<lb/>
lege life in general.<lb/>
"This shows ander-<lb/>
bilt is trying to make<lb/>
strides in the football<lb/>
world said Macln-<lb/>
tyre, who guided the<lb/>
Commodores to an 8-3<lb/>
record and the Hall ol<lb/>
Fame Bowl where the)<lb/>
b wed io ii Force<lb/>
36-28 in their first bow<lb/>
game in eight years<lb/>
Maclntyre, finishing<lb/>
his fourth vear at<lb/>
academically tough<lb/>
Yanderhilt, said he<lb/>
thought college foot-<lb/>
ball "has been malign-<lb/>
ed a bit over the vear 1<lb/>
think Yanderhilt toot-<lb/>
ball stands right where<lb/>
college football<lb/>
should<lb/>
"Winning and losing<lb/>
is very important to the<lb/>
players and to us as<lb/>
coaches but it has to he<lb/>
put into perspective.<lb/>
It's not the all-fired<lb/>
most important thing<lb/>
Maclntyre told a<lb/>
news conference he en-<lb/>
dorses recent NC A <lb/>
rules changes toughen-<lb/>
ing academic re-<lb/>
quirements tor football<lb/>
grants-in-aid.<lb/>
"It is something that<lb/>
will not affect Yander-<lb/>
hilt he said. "But 1<lb/>
think if is time we did<lb/>
something to keep a<lb/>
youngster from coming<lb/>
to school just to be a<lb/>
tootball player I think<lb/>
it demeans a college<lb/>
education when you<lb/>
just keep players eligi-<lb/>
ble to play football.<lb/>
"At Yanderhilt. we<lb/>
go right by the houses<lb/>
of some verv good<lb/>
players that we can't<lb/>
even talk to but we<lb/>
know we will he playing<lb/>
against in the future<lb/>
 hat 1 hope happens is<lb/>
that the high school<lb/>
coaches will see these<lb/>
10th graders that are<lb/>
going to be college pro-<lb/>
spects and that thev will<lb/>
get them interested in<lb/>
academics<lb/>
Maclntyre, stressing<lb/>
the need to see that<lb/>
players graduate, was<lb/>
critical of the new<lb/>
United States Football<lb/>
1 eague, which will<lb/>
dratt players and open<lb/>
play in the spring<lb/>
before they finish their<lb/>
senior years<lb/>
"I know they have in<lb/>
their contrasts that it<lb/>
you make the team they<lb/>
will give you the money<lb/>
to go back to school<lb/>
noted Maclntyre,<lb/>
"But w hat about the<lb/>
ones that leave school<lb/>
but don't make the<lb/>
team Those are the<lb/>
ones that I am worried<lb/>
about. My teeling is<lb/>
they should wait a year<lb/>
' work out with weights<lb/>
and run ' and turn pro<lb/>
the next January after<lb/>
they graduate<lb/>
Maclntyre, who has<lb/>
doubled his victories<lb/>
each season in his tour<lb/>
years at anderbilt,<lb/>
said that wasn't hard to<lb/>
do "when you only win<lb/>
one game the first<lb/>
vear<lb/>
Although the Com-<lb/>
modores were a sur-<lb/>
prise team last tall,<lb/>
Maclntyre said the pro-<lb/>
gram "is established on<lb/>
solid ground" and he<lb/>
expects the C'om-<lb/>
modores to "detinitelv<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SEB<lb/>
VICE experience qual ty work<lb/>
IBM Selectnc typewriter Call<lb/>
Lame Sh.ve 758 5301 or GAIL<lb/>
JOYNER 754 1042<lb/>
TYPINr" "fiy papers thesis<lb/>
etc Call K, unn, 7SJ 4733<lb/>
to YEARSTYPING -Reasonable<lb/>
rates Spelling punctuation and<lb/>
grammar corrections pro<lb/>
dreading Cindy I a m to 9 p m<lb/>
J5S 2?68<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
NICE GRAY AND WHITE RAN<lb/>
NIT FUR JACKET FOR SALE 545<lb/>
CALL 7S? 3?44<lb/>
SALE 8 ft blue green high back<lb/>
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7S4 ?1?7 or 754 074?<lb/>
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POTTERY items (or resale on<lb/>
commission basis only Land and<lb/>
Sea Outlet, Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Ph 754 4770 Open 11 4<lb/>
MS<lb/>
be competitive" in the<lb/>
Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference in coming<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"Defensively, we<lb/>
should be in good<lb/>
shape next season with<lb/>
nine starters return-<lb/>
ing he said. "Our en-<lb/>
tire offensive line will<lb/>
be back and it should<lb/>
be the best offensive<lb/>
line we've ever had<lb/>
He said the biggest<lb/>
problems will be replac-<lb/>
ing quarterback Whit<lb/>
Taylor, punter Jim Ar-<lb/>
nold, receiver Allama<lb/>
Matthews and fullback<lb/>
Lrnie Coolsby<lb/>
"What we have to do<lb/>
is recruit us a bona fide<lb/>
running back who can<lb/>
come in and help us as<lb/>
a freshman said<lb/>
Maclntyre. "We will be<lb/>
recruiting skill posi-<lb/>
tions this year<lb/>
Maclntyre joins<lb/>
Perm State's Joe Pater-<lb/>
no. who won the award<lb/>
last vear. Georgia's<lb/>
Y 1 n c e Doo ley,<lb/>
Michigan's Bo<lb/>
Schembechler,<lb/>
Nebraska's Tom<lb/>
Osborne, Bngham<lb/>
Young's Lavell Ed-<lb/>
wards and Florida<lb/>
State's Bobby Bowden<lb/>
as a Dodd awardw in-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
With<lb/>
Burt &amp; Dolly<lb/>
this much fun<lb/>
just couldn 7<lb/>
be legal!<lb/>
THE<lb/>
TEXAS<lb/>
CHAINSAW MASSACRE<lb/>
What happened is true.<lb/>
Now the motion picture that s just a?<lb/>
real<lb/>
? ??? -s " Suva's! ? ? - r.<lb/>
t?' SuNWI -Avis n .ra'v j'r  ? s<lb/>
3cjc? k; Dxtctrt e, 'Ott WOW<lb/>
<lb/>
? MM r - ??<lb/>
, w s?- - - ?<lb/>
R<lb/>
FREE Late Show ? Fri &amp; Sat<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, MSC<lb/>
Thurs 7 PM Fri &amp; Sat 5,7,9 PM<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, MSC Admission<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Richmond. Va<lb/>
either Thursday Jan 27 or Thurs<lb/>
day. Feb 3 Leave in the late<lb/>
afternoon Please call Steve at<lb/>
752 ?'?4 Will pay for gas<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WE BUY USED MUSICAL IN<lb/>
STHUMENTS: CALL 75404 or<lb/>
7S4W77 <lb/>
LEARN TO FLY. Call Jot<lb/>
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Ribs<lb/>
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all<lb/>
hrs.<lb/>
SPECIAL:<lb/>
Rib or Fish Dinner with<lb/>
tries, slaw or hush puppies<lb/>
ONLY 2.99 for Ribs<lb/>
$1.99 tor Fish<lb/>
8olde.<lb/>
n Q)taam<lb/>
olelautan<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Special<lb/>
is<lb/>
available<lb/>
on<lb/>
119<lb/>
1011 Charles Street ? 752 1373 l Block from Campus<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Luncheon<lb/>
and Dinner<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Sat. &amp; Sun.<lb/>
Luncheon<lb/>
Buffet<lb/>
12-3 p.m.<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
5.25<lb/>
children under 4 FREE<lb/>
Open<lb/>
7 Days<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mon. Thurs.<lb/>
11:30a.m9:30p.m.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
11:30a.m10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
12:00-10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
12:00-9:00 p.m.<lb/>
756-3844<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
TAKEOUT<lb/>
Look for us in our new location<lb/>
Z<lb/>
rattr<lb/>
It's<lb/>
the fun<lb/>
place to eat<lb/>
LUNCH BUFFET<lb/>
Daily 1 l-2pm s28'<lb/>
 EVENING BUFFET ?r.<lb/>
Mon.&amp;Tues. 5-8pmS2"<lb/>
VIDEOGAME CONTEST<lb/>
every Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7-10pm<lb/>
prizes for all winners<lb/>
MrVed.yiThurs. 9:00 Current Movies<lb/>
"ix. Fri. ? Sat. 7-9 rfk<lb/>
Be<lb/>
C<lb/>
ft<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
PETEY Georgia is alive and liv<lb/>
mg in N C Peaches or the Big Ap<lb/>
pie. who cares' Happy b'day. Go<lb/>
German Glockenspeil I Love AJ,<lb/>
DF. JS EMR<lb/>
TARZAN Happy birthday 5 mon<lb/>
ths down 18 to go Dinner will be<lb/>
at t 00 but come earlier for your<lb/>
present JANE<lb/>
REX LIKES SEX Just ask TEX<lb/>
Love LEX<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
NEEDED MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
to share 4 bedroom house on<lb/>
Biltmore St Hall block from cam<lb/>
pus Rent MS 00 plus one fourth<lb/>
utilities 757 1448<lb/>
ROOMATE WANTED M7 a month<lb/>
plus one third utilities Private<lb/>
room 75 5044<lb/>
NEED A FEMALE ROOMATE<lb/>
? mediately Furnished 2 BDRM<lb/>
apt a few blocks from campus All<lb/>
you need is a bed Monthly rent<lb/>
1240 to be shared equally Call<lb/>
Dons Moyo at 75 444S<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to share : bedroom<lb/>
apartment Rent J1J7 SO Conve<lb/>
ment tor ECU and Pitt students<lb/>
Also halt utilities 754 12?<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE to share<lb/>
apartment at no cost to her her, in<lb/>
eluding room, meals, etc Call<lb/>
754 1475 7 lo a m to 00 am or<lb/>
5 30pm to 1 oo p m daily<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM FOR RENT<lb/>
3 bdr apt Its month HBO.<lb/>
Showtime Pool 752 0079<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
SISmonth plus 13 utilities<lb/>
7 minute walk to campus Private<lb/>
bedroom! Call 7S1 il?.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE to share 2 bdrm<lb/>
'ownhouse Rent IDS month plus<lb/>
half utilities Available now, call<lb/>
Jamie 7S? 4547<lb/>
:pendail 11:00am-11 :(N)pm<lb/>
10th ' Coiatvhe<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
A COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Get Your Act Together,<lb/>
And Bring it to<lb/>
The<lb/>
Coffeehouse Auditions<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Feb. 11 &amp;12<lb/>
'IT-<lb/>
m<lb/>
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ffOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO<lb/>
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BREAKFAST BAR OFFERINGS!<lb/>
? Freshly Scrambled Eggs ? Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits ? Bacon<lb/>
? Country Milk Gravy ? Home Fried Potatoes ? Southern Style Grits ?<lb/>
Homemade Muffins ? Link and Patty Sausage ? A Choice of<lb/>
"Shoneys" Own Special Fruit Toppings ? Grated American Cheese ?<lb/>
PLUS The Fruit Bar featuring a variety of fresh fruit and tomatoes<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
MONDAY-FRIDAY<lb/>
6 00 AM 11 00 A.M.<lb/>
SATURDAY-SUNDAY<lb/>
 HOLIDAYS<lb/>
6:00 A.M2:00 P.M.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Leother Belt Strips<lb/>
Reg. 3.00 now 2.00<lb/>
also a group Reg. 2.00<lb/>
now 150<lb/>
203 EAST5TH STREET<lb/>
Tops ? Buy one at Reg. price<lb/>
-get one Free<lb/>
Pants ? Buy one at Reg. price<lb/>
-get one Free<lb/>
Skirts ? Buy one at Reg. price<lb/>
-get one Free<lb/>
Blouses ? Buy one at Reg. price<lb/>
-get one Free<lb/>
Dresses ? V to V2 Suits ? !6 to V2<lb/>
price price<lb/>
<lb/>
000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000<lb/>
o<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057527_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>