<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057564_0001"/>
Ms<lb/>
Carnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 NoM ?<lb/>
Wednesday July 13,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Campus Rapist Receives 35-Year Sentence<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Vmiuhi Sou EditiM<lb/>
A Farmville man was convicted<lb/>
day in Pitt County Superior<lb/>
Court of second degree rape in<lb/>
connection with the March 4 rape<lb/>
of an ECU student. Billy Ray<lb/>
Warren, 27, was sentenced to 35<lb/>
years in prison after an eight-<lb/>
hs omen, four-man jury took 45<lb/>
minutes to find him guilty.<lb/>
Warren's 35-year ser?ence is<lb/>
onl five years less than the max-<lb/>
imum he could have received for<lb/>
:he crime. In handing out the<lb/>
har.h sentence, Superior Court<lb/>
Judge Charles B. Winberrv called<lb/>
Warren's act a "severe crime. It's<lb/>
ihe type of crime from which<lb/>
coeds in our state must be pro-<lb/>
tected<lb/>
Warren had entered the lobby<lb/>
area of Clement dorm after the 1<lb/>
a.m. curfew. He forced his victim,<lb/>
an ECU senior, into the lobby<lb/>
bathroom where the rape took<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Second degree rape is defined as<lb/>
a rape without the use of a<lb/>
weapon and with no serious injury<lb/>
to the victim, said Det. Lt. Gene<lb/>
McAbee of the ECU Public safety<lb/>
Department, one of the in-<lb/>
vestigators who worked on the<lb/>
Warren case.<lb/>
Warren's trial began Wednes-<lb/>
day and lasted into Thursday<lb/>
afternoon. During the pro-<lb/>
ceedings, several ECU students ?<lb/>
some of whom came from out of<lb/>
town ? testified to having seen<lb/>
Warren around the dorm the<lb/>
night of the attack. The victim's<lb/>
boyfriend also testified during the<lb/>
trial.<lb/>
Testimony was given by the<lb/>
State Bureau of Investigation,<lb/>
hospital staff members who ex-<lb/>
amined the victim, four ECU<lb/>
police officers, including<lb/>
McAbee, and the victim.<lb/>
"The thing that impressed me<lb/>
most about this case was the will-<lb/>
ingness of the ECU students who<lb/>
came down and testified<lb/>
McAbee said. "If we had more<lb/>
students involved like that, it<lb/>
would be a lot easier to control the<lb/>
crime rate on campus<lb/>
McAbee noted that Warren had<lb/>
been tried on four other occas-<lb/>
sions and convicted once for<lb/>
similar offenses. Judge Winn-<lb/>
berry found Warren's previous<lb/>
record to be an "aggravating fac-<lb/>
tor" in the case, McAbee said.<lb/>
Prior to his trial, Warren had<lb/>
been free on a $10,000 bond.<lb/>
Warren filed notice of appeal in<lb/>
open court and has been denied an<lb/>
appeal bond.<lb/>
ECU students who testified, in-<lb/>
cluding the victim, said they knew<lb/>
Warren because he often sold blue<lb/>
jeans to students on campus. At<lb/>
the time of his arrest for the rape,<lb/>
Warren had been ordered b' the<lb/>
court not to come on ECU pro-<lb/>
perty. "I knew I had seen him<lb/>
before it (the attack) had happen-<lb/>
ed, and I wanted him proven guil-<lb/>
ty said one of the women who<lb/>
testified at the trial. "I wouldn't<lb/>
feel right knowing what had hap-<lb/>
pened<lb/>
"We saw him in the dorm after<lb/>
hours said another student<lb/>
witness. "We knew he was<lb/>
violating the dorm regulations,<lb/>
and plus I had heard that he<lb/>
(Warren) wasn't supposed to be<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
"I never expected him to do<lb/>
something like this said one stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
McAbee said physical evidence<lb/>
processed at the scene of the crime<lb/>
aided the prosecution in the case.<lb/>
An analysis of semen samples<lb/>
taken from the victim's clothing<lb/>
and from the bathroom floor in<lb/>
Clement were determined to be<lb/>
from a person having the same<lb/>
blood type as Warren. McAbee<lb/>
praised the fast and efficient work<lb/>
of the SB1 Mobile Crime Lab in<lb/>
processing the evidence.<lb/>
Greenville Law Firm Donates<lb/>
Law Books To ECU Library<lb/>
ECL's University<lb/>
bv the Greenville<lb/>
Attorney David Stephens browses through one of the law books given to the university<lb/>
law firm of James, Hite, Cavendish and Blount. Firm member Wayne Hardee looks on.<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville law firm of<lb/>
James, Hite, Cavendish and<lb/>
Blount has donated complete sets<lb/>
of legal reference works to Joyner<lb/>
Library. The collections are the<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court Reporter and<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court Digest, both<lb/>
published by Lawyers<lb/>
Cooperative Publishing Co. The<lb/>
works contain citations and an-<lb/>
notations on all Supreme Court<lb/>
decisions and rulings.<lb/>
"This fine gift will complement<lb/>
substantially and materially the<lb/>
legal research capability in our<lb/>
library said Dr. David Stevens,<lb/>
university attorney and associate<lb/>
professor of social work and cor-<lb/>
rectional services.<lb/>
Stevens expressed his apprecia-<lb/>
tion to the firm. He added that the<lb/>
new material will be available not<lb/>
only to students in such fields as<lb/>
pre-law, social work and correc-<lb/>
tional services, but to members of<lb/>
the legal profession in the region<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ruth Katz,<lb/>
director of Joyner Library, the<lb/>
library is interested in increasing<lb/>
its collection of law materials and<lb/>
its services to attorneys. Stevens<lb/>
and Phillip Dixon, a Greenville at-<lb/>
torney and past-president of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association, have<lb/>
agreed to take a leadership role in<lb/>
this effort.<lb/>
Katz said Ed Harper, an ECU<lb/>
alumnus and incoming president<lb/>
of the Pitt County Bar Associa-<lb/>
tion, has indicated that the library<lb/>
project will be one of the highest<lb/>
priority goals during his term of<lb/>
office.<lb/>
According to Katz, she and the<lb/>
library's reference department<lb/>
will work with Stevens, Dixon and<lb/>
Harper to determine which legal<lb/>
research materials not at present<lb/>
in Joyner's collection are needed<lb/>
by local attorneys. They will also<lb/>
consider how the library might<lb/>
develop a cooperative arrange-<lb/>
ment with Pitt Community Col-<lb/>
lege and the Pitt County Bar<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Katz hopes the donation will in-<lb/>
spire other attorneys in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina to donate<lb/>
materials or funds to form a<lb/>
regional law library.<lb/>
Katz expressed her appreciation<lb/>
to James, Hite, Cavendish and<lb/>
Blount and added that the library<lb/>
is looking forward to ongoing<lb/>
cooperative efforts with local at-<lb/>
torneys.<lb/>
According to Katz, the library<lb/>
is unsure if they will continue the<lb/>
subscription to the law books.<lb/>
The price of the continuation is<lb/>
estimated at $300 per month.<lb/>
Moral Majority, Helms Register N.C. Voters<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
A national campaign by the Moral Majority to<lb/>
register 2 million new voters by October 1984 was<lb/>
vtarted last week in North Carolina.<lb/>
According to Harold Knowles of Fayetteville,<lb/>
special assistant to the Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder<lb/>
and head of the Moral Majority, North Carolina<lb/>
was picked as the lead-off state because Jesse<lb/>
Helms, its senior U.S. Senator and an ally of the<lb/>
Moral Majority, is expected to face a stiff re-<lb/>
election fight with Democratic Governor James<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
"Jerry shares the conservative ideals of Jesse<lb/>
Helms Knowles said of Falwell, "and so he felt<lb/>
that North Carolina would be a good state to kick<lb/>
off the drive<lb/>
The effort is aimed at conservative Christian<lb/>
voters; therefore, it will be conducted through<lb/>
sponsoring churches. Local boards of elections will<lb/>
make available special, at-large registrars to sign<lb/>
up people before and after church services.<lb/>
Knowles says that his organization hopes to<lb/>
enroll 200,000 people in North Carolina "to get the<lb/>
ball rolling" on Helms' re-election bid. He adds<lb/>
that the Moral Majority "will do whatever it can<lb/>
to help Helms<lb/>
Federal laws passed in the mid-1960s gave all<lb/>
adult citizens a legal right to vote. Since then, only<lb/>
slightly more than half have gone to the polls, and<lb/>
many have yet to register.<lb/>
Knowles explained that members of Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority have known for some time that the Helms-<lb/>
Hunt contest would be a battle, and both sides<lb/>
would have outside-the-state help and funds. So,<lb/>
they planned to stage voter registration drives in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
But, registered Democrats in the state out-<lb/>
number Republicans by almost 3'2-l. Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority believes that many of the Democrats ? and<lb/>
non-registered persons too ? traditionally con-<lb/>
sider themselves "yaller-dawg" Democrats. If they<lb/>
are given a choice between the liberal Hunt and the<lb/>
conservative Helms, they would go for the<lb/>
Republican. In addition, Falwell suspected that<lb/>
among the non-registered an especially rich harvest<lb/>
of Helms voters could be found.<lb/>
As the Moral Majority made final plans, another<lb/>
nationwide drive, this one aimed at eligible blacks<lb/>
who are expected to vote solidly Democratic, was<lb/>
launched bv the Rev. Jesse Jackson of the People<lb/>
United to Save Humanity (PUSH). When the<lb/>
Moral Majority went public with its plan, some of<lb/>
the media accused it of spiteful racial bias.<lb/>
Knowles insists that the campaign is not a reac-<lb/>
tion to Jackson's drive. As proof, he mentions his<lb/>
organization's national efforts, which since 1979<lb/>
have enrolled more than 4,000,000 people. "He<lb/>
always plans well in advance to prepare for<lb/>
predicted backlashes" by the media, Knowles<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Knowles complains that he was, "disgusted at<lb/>
the media's treatment of the Moral Majority and<lb/>
its registration drives He points out that the<lb/>
media "never says anything about the need for<lb/>
separation of church and state when talking<lb/>
about the Rev. Jackson, "but. . .they say Jerry-<lb/>
should stick to preaching and stay out of politics<lb/>
The purpose of the Moral Majority, says<lb/>
Knowles, is to register voters and educate them<lb/>
about candidates and issues. As an example of the<lb/>
lack of voter familiarity with office-seekers, he<lb/>
points to the public shock at the strong second-<lb/>
place showing in .he 1980 Democratic primary for<lb/>
Attorney General by a candidate who was revealed<lb/>
after the election to be a Nazi.<lb/>
So from now until October 1984, registrars<lb/>
across the country will find an entirely new place to<lb/>
work: in front of the nation's churches.<lb/>
Controversy Surrounds Slavery Measure<lb/>
North Carolina farm worker<lb/>
rights advocates expressed their<lb/>
disappointment regarding the<lb/>
heavily-amended anti-slavery bill<lb/>
which passed the N.C. Senate Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"The version that the Senate<lb/>
voted on is much weaker than the<lb/>
original bill said Joan Preiss, a<lb/>
member of the staff of National<lb/>
Farm Worker Ministry, a Durham<lb/>
based farm worker rights ad-<lb/>
vocacy group.<lb/>
At the center of the controversy<lb/>
was the removal from the bill of<lb/>
an amendment that would have<lb/>
made it a felony for a fanner to<lb/>
knowingly and willfully higher<lb/>
slaveholders. Many Senators and<lb/>
lobbyists from the N.C. Farm<lb/>
Bureau objected to this amend-<lb/>
Vernon E. White, D-Pitt, head<lb/>
of the Senate Agricultural Com-<lb/>
mittee, said he thought the<lb/>
amended version of the measure<lb/>
was one which everyone could live<lb/>
with and go along with and that<lb/>
further delays of the bill could<lb/>
Bureau does not want employers possibly keep it from passing at all<lb/>
to be responsible for what goes on this year.<lb/>
on their farms Preiss said she and other sup-<lb/>
The amendment making it a porters of farm worker rights<lb/>
felony for farmers who higher groups had "very mixed feelings"<lb/>
originally<lb/>
ment and worked for its removal.<lb/>
After the amendment was omit-<lb/>
ted, the bill passed by a 44-1 vote.<lb/>
"The Senate version of the bill<lb/>
says, in essence, that it's okay to<lb/>
hire a slaveholder, just don't be<lb/>
one Preiss said. "The Farm<lb/>
regarding the amended version of<lb/>
the bill. "Certainly we need the<lb/>
protection of an anti-slavery<lb/>
law Preiss said. "What we in-<lb/>
itially had was a strong bill com-<lb/>
parable to a two-by-four. We've<lb/>
had the strong bill wittled down so<lb/>
that all we have now is a<lb/>
toothpick. It's certainly disap-<lb/>
pointing The new Senate ver-<lb/>
sion of the bill has now been<lb/>
returned to the House.<lb/>
slaveholders originally was ap- ?? ? ? ?<lb/>
Fall Tuition Increase Certain;<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
AnnouncementsPage 2<lb/>
EditorialPage 4<lb/>
Just The Way It IsPmt? 4<lb/>
1 EntertainmentPage 5<lb/>
I SportsPafe 7<lb/>
I ClassifiedsPar 8<lb/>
proved in the House. It is ex-<lb/>
pected that the House will now<lb/>
vote to adopt the new format.<lb/>
Those opposed to the amendment<lb/>
argued that it unfairly placed<lb/>
farmers in criminal jeopardy for<lb/>
acts beyond their control.<lb/>
Although slavery cases are<lb/>
covered under federal laws, the<lb/>
Total Amount Still Unknown<lb/>
Tuition bills for the fall<lb/>
semester, which were scheduled to<lb/>
be mailed this week, will be<lb/>
large number of slavery cases in delayed and sent with only<lb/>
North Carolina has convinced estimated figures according to<lb/>
many people that a state statute is ECU Business Manager Julian<lb/>
badly needed to help law enforce- Vainnght.<lb/>
ment agents better deal with the A stalemate in the General<lb/>
problem. There have been 10 Assembly's state budget process is<lb/>
sets tuition rates for all state cam-<lb/>
puses, in accordance with ap-<lb/>
propriations by the legislature.<lb/>
An increase in tuition rates is<lb/>
expected for all campuses in the<lb/>
UNC system in 1983-84. Rates for<lb/>
in-state students will go up $70 to<lb/>
out-of-state<lb/>
cases of slavery prosec ted in<lb/>
North Carolina in the la two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"The bill would also mak a<lb/>
public statement from the General<lb/>
Assembly that we will not tolerate<lb/>
slaveiy in North Carolina Preiss<lb/>
said.<lb/>
$85, while out-of-state tuition<lb/>
o r should increase between $340 and<lb/>
blamed for the delay. State expen- $390, according to UNC President<lb/>
ditures, including appropriations William C. Friday.<lb/>
for the UNC system, have not<lb/>
been Finalized, leaving education<lb/>
officals in the dark as to how<lb/>
much tuition rates will be this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
Vainright said tuition bills will<lb/>
be mailed with the most accurate<lb/>
estimate possible, and any dif-<lb/>
ference will be made up in the Spr-<lb/>
ing semester tuition bill.<lb/>
?av parraasow-acv<lb/>
Wheelin9 Around<lb/>
ECU student Brian Rangdey catches a ride from the ECU<lb/>
ped student van. The van takes whuk halrfd-ttodeats to and from<lb/>
where they need to go.<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0002"/><lb/>
?he iEaat Caruitntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 Nojft 'V<lb/>
Wednesday July 13,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Campus Rapist Receives 35-Year Sentence<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Auisum No?? KdiUM<lb/>
A Farmville man was convicted<lb/>
Friday in Pitt County Superior<lb/>
court of second degree rape in<lb/>
connection with the March 4 rape<lb/>
of an ECU student. Billy Ray<lb/>
Warren, 27, was sentenced to 35<lb/>
ears in prison after an eight-<lb/>
women, four-man jury took 45<lb/>
minutes to find him guilty.<lb/>
Warren's 35-year sentence is<lb/>
only, five years less than the max-<lb/>
imum he could have received for<lb/>
:he crime. In handing out the<lb/>
harsh sentence, Superior Court<lb/>
Judge Charles B. Winberrv called<lb/>
Warren's act a "severe crime. It's<lb/>
ihe type of crime from which<lb/>
coeds in our state must be pro-<lb/>
tected<lb/>
Warren had entered the lobby<lb/>
area of Clement dorm after the 1<lb/>
a.m. curfew . He forced his victim,<lb/>
an ECU senior, into the lobby<lb/>
bathroom where the rape took<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Second degree rape is defined as<lb/>
a rape without the use of a<lb/>
weapon and with no serious injury<lb/>
to the victim, said Det. Lt. Gene<lb/>
McAbee of the ECU Public Safety<lb/>
Department, one of the in-<lb/>
vestigators who worked on the<lb/>
Warren case.<lb/>
Warren's trial began Wednes-<lb/>
day and lasted into Thursday<lb/>
afternoon. During the pro-<lb/>
ceedings, several ECU students ?<lb/>
some of whom came from out of<lb/>
town ? testified to having seen<lb/>
Warren around the dorm the<lb/>
night of the attack. The victim's<lb/>
boyfriend also testified during the<lb/>
trial.<lb/>
Testimony was given by the<lb/>
State Bureau of Investigation,<lb/>
hospital staff members who ex-<lb/>
amined the victim, four ECU<lb/>
police officers, including<lb/>
McAbee, and the victim.<lb/>
"The thing that impressed me<lb/>
most about this case was the will-<lb/>
ingness of the ECU students who<lb/>
came down and testified<lb/>
McAbee said. "If we had more<lb/>
students involved like that, it<lb/>
would be a lot easier to control the<lb/>
crime rate on campus<lb/>
McAbee noted that Warren had<lb/>
been tried on four other occas-<lb/>
sions and convicted once for<lb/>
similar offenses. Judge Winn-<lb/>
berry found Warren's previous<lb/>
record to be an "aggravating fac-<lb/>
tor" in the case, McAbee said.<lb/>
Prior to his trial, Warren had<lb/>
been free on a $10,000 bond.<lb/>
Warren filed notice of appeal in<lb/>
open court and has been denied an<lb/>
appeal bond.<lb/>
ECU students who testified, in-<lb/>
cluding the victim, said they knew<lb/>
Warren because he often sold blue<lb/>
jeans to students on campus. At<lb/>
the time of his arrest for the rape,<lb/>
Warren had been ordered by the<lb/>
court not to come on ECU pro-<lb/>
perty. "I knew I had seen him<lb/>
before it (the attack) had happen-<lb/>
ed, and I wanted him proven guil-<lb/>
ty said one of the women who<lb/>
testified at the trial. "I wouldn't<lb/>
feel right knowing what had hap-<lb/>
pened<lb/>
"We saw him in the dorm after<lb/>
hours said another student<lb/>
witness. "We knew he was<lb/>
violating the dorm regulations,<lb/>
and plus I had heard that he<lb/>
(Warren) wasn't supposed to be<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
"I never expected him to do<lb/>
something like this said one stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
McAbee said physical evidence<lb/>
processed at the scene of the crime<lb/>
aided the prosecution in the case.<lb/>
An analysis of semen samples<lb/>
taken from the victim's clothing<lb/>
and from the bathroom floor in<lb/>
Clement were determined to be<lb/>
from a person having the same<lb/>
blood type as Warren. McAbee<lb/>
praised the fast and efficient work<lb/>
of the SBI Mobile Crime Lab in<lb/>
processing the evidence.<lb/>
Greenville Law Firm Donates<lb/>
Law Books To ECU Library<lb/>
ECL's University Attorney David Stephens browses through one of the law books given to the university<lb/>
bv the Greenville law firm of James, Hite, Cavendish and Blount. Finn member Wayne Hardee looks on.<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville law firm of<lb/>
James, Hite, Cavendish and<lb/>
Blount has donated complete sets<lb/>
of legal reference works to Joyner<lb/>
Library. The collections are the<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court Reporter and<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court Digest, both<lb/>
published by Lawyers<lb/>
Cooperative Publishing Co. The<lb/>
works contain citations and an-<lb/>
notations on all Supreme Court<lb/>
decisions and rulings.<lb/>
"This fine gift will complement<lb/>
substantially and materially the<lb/>
legal research capability in our<lb/>
library said Dr. David Stevens,<lb/>
university attorney and associate<lb/>
professor of social work and cor-<lb/>
rectional services.<lb/>
Stevens expressed his apprecia-<lb/>
tion to the Firm. He added that the<lb/>
new material will be available not<lb/>
only to students in such Fields as<lb/>
pre-law, social work and correc-<lb/>
tional services, but to members of<lb/>
the legal profession in the region<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ruth Katz,<lb/>
director of Joyner Library, the<lb/>
library is interested in increasing<lb/>
its collection of law materials and<lb/>
its services to attorneys. Stevens<lb/>
and Phillip Dixon, a Greenville at-<lb/>
torney and past-president of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association, have<lb/>
agreed to take a leadership role in<lb/>
this effort.<lb/>
Katz said Ed Harper, an ECU<lb/>
alumnus and incoming president<lb/>
of the Pitt County Bar Associa-<lb/>
tion, has indicated that the library<lb/>
project will be one of the highest<lb/>
priority goals during his term of<lb/>
office.<lb/>
According to Katz, she and the<lb/>
library's reference department<lb/>
will work with Stevens, Dixon and<lb/>
Harper to determine which legal<lb/>
research materials not at present<lb/>
in Joyner's collection are needed<lb/>
by local attorneys. They will also<lb/>
consider how the library might<lb/>
develop a cooperative arrange-<lb/>
ment with Pitt Community Col-<lb/>
lege and the Pitt County Bar<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Katz hopes the donation will in-<lb/>
spire other attorneys in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina to donate<lb/>
materials or funds to form a<lb/>
regional law library.<lb/>
Katz expressed her appreciation<lb/>
to James, Hite, Cavendish and<lb/>
Blount and added that the library-<lb/>
is looking forward to ongoing<lb/>
cooperative efforts with local at-<lb/>
torneys.<lb/>
According to Katz, the library<lb/>
is unsure if they will continue the<lb/>
subscription to the law books.<lb/>
The price of the continuation is<lb/>
estimated at $300 per month.<lb/>
Moral Majority, Helms Register N.C. Voters<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
A national campaign by the Moral Majority to<lb/>
register 2 million new voters by October 1984 was<lb/>
started last week in North Carolina.<lb/>
According to Harold Knowles of Fayetteville,<lb/>
special assistant to the Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder<lb/>
and head of the Moral Majority, North Carolina<lb/>
was picked as the lead-off state because Jesse<lb/>
Helms, its senior U.S. Senator and an ally of the<lb/>
Moral Majority, is expected to face a stiff re-<lb/>
election Fight with Democratic Governor James<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
"Jerry shares the conservative ideals of Jesse<lb/>
Helms Knowles said of Falwell, "and so he felt<lb/>
that North Carolina would be a good state to kick<lb/>
off the drive<lb/>
The effort is aimed at conservative Christian<lb/>
voters; therefore, it will be conducted through<lb/>
sponsoring churches. Local boards of elections will<lb/>
make available special, at-large registrars to sign<lb/>
up people before and after church services.<lb/>
Knowles says that his organization hopes to<lb/>
enroll 200,000 people in North Carolina "to get the<lb/>
ball rolling" on Helms' re-election bid. He adds<lb/>
that the Moral Majority "will do whatever it can<lb/>
to help Helms<lb/>
Federal laws passed in the mid-1960s gave all<lb/>
adult citizens a legal right to vote. Since then, only<lb/>
slightly more than half have gone to the polls, and<lb/>
many have yet to register.<lb/>
Knowles explained that members of Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority have known for some time that the Helms-<lb/>
Hunt contest would be a battle, and both sides<lb/>
would have outside-the-state help and funds. So,<lb/>
they planned to stage voter registration drives in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
But, registered Democrats in the state out-<lb/>
number Republicans by almost 3 Vi -1. Moral Ma-<lb/>
jority believes that many of the Democrats ? and<lb/>
non-registered persons too ? traditionally con-<lb/>
sider themselves "yaller-dawg" Democrats. If they<lb/>
are given a choice between the liberal Hunt and the<lb/>
conservative Helms, they would go for the<lb/>
Republican. In addition, Falwell suspected that<lb/>
among the non-registered an especially rich harvest<lb/>
of Helms voters could be found.<lb/>
As the Moral Majority made final plans, another<lb/>
nationwide drive, this one aimed at eligible blacks<lb/>
who are expected to vote solidly Democratic, was<lb/>
launched bv the Rev. Jesse Jackson of the People<lb/>
United to Save Humanity (PUSH). When the<lb/>
Moral Majority went public with its plan, some of<lb/>
the media accused it of spiteful racial bias.<lb/>
Knowles insists that the campaign is not a reac-<lb/>
tion to Jackson's drive. As proof, he mentions his<lb/>
organization's national efforts, which since 1979<lb/>
have enrolled more than 4,000,000 people. "He<lb/>
always plans well in advance to prepare for<lb/>
predicted backlashes" by the media, Knowles<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Knowles complains that he was, "disgusted at<lb/>
the media's treatment of the Moral Majority and<lb/>
its registration drives He points out that the<lb/>
media "never says anything about the need for<lb/>
separation of church and state when talking<lb/>
about the Rev. Jackson, "but. . .they say Jerry<lb/>
should stick to preaching and stay out of politics<lb/>
The purpose of the Moral Majority, says<lb/>
Knowles, is to register voters and educate them<lb/>
about candidates and issues. As an example of the<lb/>
lack of voter familiarity with office-seekers, he<lb/>
points to the public shock at the strong second-<lb/>
place showing in the 1980 Democratic primary for<lb/>
Attorney General by a candidate who was revealed<lb/>
after the election to be a Nazi.<lb/>
So from now until October 1984, registrars<lb/>
across the country will find an entirely new place to<lb/>
work: in front of the nation's churches.<lb/>
Controversy Surrounds Slavery Measure<lb/>
North Carolina farm worker<lb/>
rights advocates expressed their<lb/>
disappointment regarding the<lb/>
heavily-amended anti-slavery bill<lb/>
which passed the N.C. Senate Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"The version that the Senate<lb/>
voted on is much weaker than the<lb/>
original bill said Joan Preiss, a to be responsible for what goes on<lb/>
member of the staff of National on their farms '<lb/>
Farm Worker Ministry, a Durham<lb/>
based farm worker rights ad-<lb/>
vocacy group.<lb/>
At the center of the controversy<lb/>
was the removal from the bill of<lb/>
an amendment that would have<lb/>
made it a felony for a farmer to<lb/>
knowingly and willfully higher<lb/>
slaveholders. Many Senators and<lb/>
lobbyists from the N.C. Farm<lb/>
Bureau objected to this amend-<lb/>
regarding the amended version of<lb/>
the bill. "Certainly we need the<lb/>
protection of an anti-slavery<lb/>
law Preiss said. "What we in-<lb/>
itially had was a strong bill com-<lb/>
parable to a two-by-four. We've<lb/>
had the strong bill wittled down so<lb/>
that all we have now is a<lb/>
toothpick. It's certainly disap-<lb/>
On The<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Just The Way It Is<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Page<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
S<lb/>
ment and worked for its removal. Vernon E. White, D-Pitt, head<lb/>
After the amendment was omit- of the Senate Agricultural Com-<lb/>
ted, the bill passed by a 44-1 vote, mittee, said he thought the<lb/>
"The Senate version of the bill amended version of the measure<lb/>
says, in essence, that it's okay to was one which everyone could live<lb/>
hire a slaveholder, just don't be with and go along with and that<lb/>
one Preiss said. "The Farm further delays of the bill could<lb/>
Bureau does not want employers possibly keep it from passing at all<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Preiss said she and other sup- pointing The new Senate ver-<lb/>
The amendment making it a porters of farm worker rights sion of the bill has now been<lb/>
felony for farmers who higher groups had "very mixed feelings" returned to the House,<lb/>
slaveholders originally was ap-<lb/>
proved in the House. It is ex-<lb/>
pected that the House will now<lb/>
vote to adopt the new format.<lb/>
Those opposed to the amendment<lb/>
argued that it unfairly placed<lb/>
farmers in criminal jeopardy for<lb/>
acts beyond their control.<lb/>
Although slavery cases are<lb/>
covered under federal laws, the<lb/>
Fall Tuition Increase Certain; <lb/>
Total Amount Still Unknown <lb/>
Tuition bills for the fall<lb/>
semester, which were scheduled to<lb/>
be mailed this week, will be<lb/>
large number of slavery cases in delayed and sent with only<lb/>
North Carolina has convinced<lb/>
many people that a state statute is<lb/>
badly needed to help law enforce-<lb/>
ment agents better deal with the<lb/>
problem. There have been 10<lb/>
cases of slavery prosec ed in<lb/>
North Carolina in the la two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"The bill would also mak a<lb/>
public statement from the General<lb/>
Assembly that we will not tolerate<lb/>
slaveiy in North Carolina Preiss<lb/>
said.<lb/>
estimated Figures, according to<lb/>
ECU Business Manager Julian<lb/>
Vainright.<lb/>
A stalemate in the General<lb/>
Assembly's state budget process is<lb/>
sets tuition rates for all state cam-<lb/>
puses, in accordance with ap-<lb/>
propriations by the legislature.<lb/>
An increase in tuition rates is<lb/>
expected for all campuses in the<lb/>
UNC system in 1983-84. Rates for<lb/>
in-state students will go up $70 to<lb/>
$85, while out-of-state tuition<lb/>
should increase between $340 and<lb/>
blamed for the delay. State expen- $390, according to UNC President<lb/>
ditures, including appropriations William C. Friday<lb/>
for the UNC system, have not<lb/>
been finalized, leaving education<lb/>
officals in the dark as to how<lb/>
much tuition rates will be this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
Vainright said tuition bills will<lb/>
be mailed with the most accurate<lb/>
estimate possible, and any dif-<lb/>
ference will be made up in the Spr-<lb/>
ing semester tuition bill.<lb/>
MIT f?ATTaow-acu<lb/>
Wheelin9 Around<lb/>
ECU student Brian Rangeley catches a ride from the ECU<lb/>
ped student van. The van takes waeekhaired-ctooents to and front<lb/>
where they need to go.<lb/>
-?-1?<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
 .<lb/>
? ??? ???"? ? ' . I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0003"/><lb/>
mi EAS1 CAROl IS1AN J<lb/>
inn ws JiMHWWiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiimiiiiiimmmimiimiiiimiminiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniHMmiiiin?iMMiiiiHHHMHiUMi?iMi<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
BUCK'S GULF<lb/>
 2704 E. 10th St. 752-3228 <lb/>
BIBLE STUDY AT ECU<lb/>
11 ? I V a r v t y Christian<lb/>
PeMowship sponsors a bible<lb/>
s'udy on Monday nights Come<lb/>
to 108 Jarvs Hall at 8 Kip m tor<lb/>
a time or spiritual fellowship<lb/>
and ton Prayer is also ottered<lb/>
eery night at 1U Pletcher Han<lb/>
I I5pm TaKe a break trom<lb/>
StuOv<lb/>
WZMB PRESENTS<lb/>
WZMI presents . assical<lb/>
x ?? -1. .  Sunday,<lb/>
to six p re Aatch in<lb/>
.x - -  t as' roi "as<lb/>
CATHOLICS<lb/>
s ?? S? K)ay va?<lb/>
me<lb/>
 t <lb/>
v  if St I ? Kl 51<lb/>
v . ?- ? hes<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ted n<lb/>
Pf RSONAt Ci?t<lb/>
rTENOENTS " ?"? <lb/>
. . mos<lb/>
? . ies ? issisi<lb/>
 activities ol<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
? ? . ? - . ?.<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Want a central place tor three<lb/>
letters ot reference from yCHjr<lb/>
professors If you are<lb/>
graduating this summer then<lb/>
you complete a registration<lb/>
packet available from the<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service It you will finish in the<lb/>
tall spring or summer of<lb/>
academic year 1983 84 you may<lb/>
Puk up a packet and prepare it<lb/>
to return in August or<lb/>
Septemte'<lb/>
WATERMELON<lb/>
"EAST<lb/>
The Department of Universi'v<lb/>
unions will sponsor another<lb/>
lvpc .r Watermelon Feast a'<lb/>
I 30 p m on Monde) July, t8fr<lb/>
? ? ?? Everyone Is<lb/>
At on e .v I s tree' EniOv<lb/>
m? le k ous colod melons and<lb/>
me beautif) urea fter Tell a<lb/>
GREENVILLE PEACE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Onem ondc at v per minute<lb/>
5 tM no i(H " " -? on ,he<lb/>
? ?? . - ? ? ? em (lie Peace<lb/>
   . reiects me nol om<lb/>
mat ? i?? ? weapons brings us<lb/>
? ??. , ? , a. n eel every<lb/>
? . ? ihi it a N p m tor a<lb/>
? ?? ' "eet.ng<lb/>
 ? i j tni - - - . ? f have<lb/>
several activ lies P anned and<lb/>
,?. need ? r hell oma 'Oin us<lb/>
our plans tor june 20th<lb/>
n - D DISARMAMENT<lb/>
p.w Trie meetings are heia a'<lb/>
v F ' more infor<lb/>
mation ca '58 406 or 752 524<lb/>
??? 1 ,<lb/>
Across from Villa Roma,<lb/>
We do minor repairs, tune ups, brake<lb/>
alignments, and air conditioner maintoinance.<lb/>
We have a road wrecker service and do<lb/>
service calls. 24 hr. number is 758-1033.<lb/>
Keep your car looking good<lb/>
Free car wash with each fill up!<lb/>
We rent Jartran trucks and trailers for your<lb/>
moving needs.<lb/>
Come by today for your complete car needs.<lb/>
"We pull for ECU not from"<lb/>
Medical<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
itEM POuC<lb/>
i , ia raadilv ivlillblt to' tale ai 0<lb/>
Each oi that advaMiaad Kimi ?? required 10 be '???"y ?? ? no.ma<lb/>
te.o? Hi? advart.aad pr.ee m each AP Store cept a "ot.d<lb/>
m thu ad <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU Sot. July 1 AT Ap IN v!IU ?4C WHOLESALERS<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL utMLCnj<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
I7lIIIIIIIIIllflCillf IIIIilllllllllIifillllllIlllilllllllllIlltllllIIIIllltlIililllttflftlitilllitilliiiiilittMWM?Mlt??fJ??????t?iiilL.<lb/>
20,?)<lb/>
Now Playing<lb/>
Top Forty and<lb/>
Dance Music<lb/>
YOUR 1L&amp;P COUNTRY STORE<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY S10.00 YOU SPEND. KjMiMMLE<lb/>
3 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE rn?,2Sf0HS<lb/>
S20 PURCHASE 6 COUPONS. S100 PURCHASE Mf<lb/>
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE<lb/>
Between now and July 16 we will redeem national<lb/>
manufacturer s cents-off coupons up to 5C tor<lb/>
double their value Offer good on national manu-<lb/>
facturers cents-off coupons only (Food retailer<lb/>
coupons not acceptedCustomer must purchase<lb/>
coupon product in specified size Eipired coupons<lb/>
will not be honored One coupon per customer per<lb/>
item No coupons accepted for free merchandise<lb/>
Offer does not apply to A&amp;P or other store coupons<lb/>
whether manufacturer is mentioned or not When<lb/>
the value ot the coupon eiceeds SO' or the retail<lb/>
of the item this offer is limited to the retail price<lb/>
Savings are Great with A&amp;P s<lb/>
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS!<lb/>
MFC S<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
COUPON A<lb/>
COUPON B<lb/>
COUPON C<lb/>
COUPON D<lb/>
MM<lb/>
CINTS Off<lb/>
75'<lb/>
A&amp;P 4<lb/>
IS'<lb/>
25<lb/>
S1 oc<lb/>
z<lb/>
l Will,am E.<lb/>
Laupus, vice<lb/>
chancellor and dean<lb/>
of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, has been<lb/>
elected president-elect<lb/>
of the American<lb/>
Board of Medical<lb/>
Specialties.<lb/>
I aupus will serve a<lb/>
one-year term as<lb/>
president elect and<lb/>
automatically will<lb/>
become president for<lb/>
a two-year term at the<lb/>
group's annual<lb/>
meeting in March<lb/>
1984<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Board of Medical<lb/>
Specialties is a federa<lb/>
tion of the 23 medical<lb/>
and surgical boards<lb/>
which hae establish-<lb/>
ed the national educa-<lb/>
tional standarui<lb/>
training require<lb/>
for certificati<lb/>
euh of the sj <lb/>
Spec iaii<lb/>
provide the<lb/>
p r e h e n m  e w<lb/>
and oral exammj<lb/>
which c a n d<lb/>
must pass be!<lb/>
ing "certified<lb/>
United Si<lb/>
tificatioD of<lb/>
cian-<lb/>
procedure and<lb/>
separate<lb/>
medical hcens<lb/>
civil au<lb/>
-BM<lb/>
ble for appr. <lb/>
specia ? <lb/>
this counl<lb/>
ing ne-<lb/>
tificai<lb/>
and '<lb/>
Happy Hour TuesFri 5-7<lb/>
TuesBeach Night<lb/>
ThursLadies Night<lb/>
Free A dm. Free Draft for L adies<lb/>
8:30-10:00<lb/>
FriJuly 15th<lb/>
Wet T-Shirt Contest<lb/>
$100.00 Cash Prize<lb/>
Every SatPenny Draft for All<lb/>
200 West Tenth Street 752-1493<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN BUFFET<lb/>
5 P.MCLOSE<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
?LASAGNA<lb/>
?SPAGHETTI<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
'Vs<lb/>
With all you can eat soup and fa lad 4.W<lb/>
? vhoice of 3 Sauces)<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
BICYtt<lb/>
POS<lb/>
 i<lb/>
EVCBA F?!DA -t<lb/>
ALL-YOl-CAN-EAT "3<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
also Open Fri. and Sat<lb/>
nights midnight am<lb/>
(Breakfast Bar open 6:00am.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
QUALITY BIKE<lb/>
SALES 8c SERVICE<lb/>
"Greenville's Most<lb/>
Complete Bicycle Shop"<lb/>
?Fuji .TREK<lb/>
?Puegeot ?Raleigh<lb/>
AP<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY WITH COUPON AND ADDITIONAL 10 00 PURCHASE<lb/>
'GOOD THRU SAT. JULY 16 AT A&amp;P -671<lb/>
"? ??? fcaajaaMrta' ar.cn<lb/>
vkV 1<lb/>
' Transit<lb/>
Authority.<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
THE PRICE OF<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
WITH tmiS CO. ?<lb/>
Call U? Now' W-ltM<lb/>
we DaltvtK<lb/>
10 sp?ed$129 ond up<lb/>
CRUISERS $149.95 and up<lb/>
We hove<lb/>
Peugot Pipclin Cruiser $149.95<lb/>
205<lb/>
Rlrd.<lb/>
S30 CONTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27U4<lb/>
757-361<lb/>
Pizza Trai<lb/>
5<lb/>
i.<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
StMLFAJ<lb/>
With Quality<lb/>
WEDNESDAY.<lb/>
NITE<lb/>
Head LettuceNH Juicy Grapes<lb/>
CALIFORNIA ICEBERG<lb/>
CALIFORNIA RED &amp; THOMPSON<lb/>
SEEDLESS<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 8:30-10:00<lb/>
FREE DRAFT<lb/>
SPECIALS ALL NIGHT<lb/>
v <lb/>
ill<lb/>
Ruasifig<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB<lb/>
MEMBERS AND GUESTS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 13,1913<lb/>
c be eaj- ? ????&amp;?? ?or tale at or<lb/>
I eicept a apeoitcaliy noted J<lb/>
U HC<lb/>
AL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
iq Center<lb/>
? He, N.C<lb/>
RY STORE<lb/>
PONS<lb/>
WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
URCHASE 3 COUPONS<lb/>
IASE 30 COUPONS<lb/>
AT FACE VALUE!<lb/>
Medical Board Elects Laupus<lb/>
re Great with A&amp;P's<lb/>
sASiHGS COUPOHS!<lb/>
At<lb/>
is- fcOOCO COUPON<lb/>
EMTSOFI ?1 A4.P<lb/>
25<lb/>
50-<lb/>
18- 36-<lb/>
SO- Si 00<lb/>
25 $1 00<lb/>
 Dr. William E.<lb/>
Laupus, vice<lb/>
chanceUor and dean<lb/>
of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, has been<lb/>
elected president-elect<lb/>
of the American<lb/>
Board of Medical<lb/>
Specialties.<lb/>
Laupus will serve a<lb/>
one-year term as<lb/>
president-elect and<lb/>
automatically will<lb/>
become president for<lb/>
a two-year term at the<lb/>
group's annual<lb/>
meeting in March<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Board of Medical<lb/>
Specialties is a federa-<lb/>
tion of the 23 medical<lb/>
and surgical boards<lb/>
which have establish-<lb/>
ed the national educa-<lb/>
tional standards and<lb/>
training requirements<lb/>
for certification in<lb/>
each of the specialties.<lb/>
Specialty boards<lb/>
provide the com-<lb/>
prehensive written<lb/>
and oral examinations<lb/>
which candidates<lb/>
must pass before be-<lb/>
ing "certified In the<lb/>
United States, cer-<lb/>
tification of physi-<lb/>
cians is a voluntary<lb/>
procedure and is a<lb/>
separate process from<lb/>
medical licensure by<lb/>
civil authorities.<lb/>
ABMS is responsi-<lb/>
ble for approving new<lb/>
specialty boards in<lb/>
this country, review-<lb/>
ing new types of cer-<lb/>
tification processes<lb/>
and resolving dif-<lb/>
ferences among and<lb/>
between specialty<lb/>
boards. It monitors<lb/>
the organization and<lb/>
operation of the<lb/>
boards to maintain<lb/>
professional stan-<lb/>
dards and avoid<lb/>
duplication of effort.<lb/>
Laupus has been an<lb/>
active member of<lb/>
ABMS for the last 10<lb/>
years, serving as vice<lb/>
president and member<lb/>
of the executive com-<lb/>
mittee and as one of<lb/>
the representatives for<lb/>
the American Board<lb/>
of Pediatrics, the<lb/>
specialty organization<lb/>
for which he served as<lb/>
president for two<lb/>
terms.<lb/>
He is a member of<lb/>
the Council for<lb/>
Medical Affairs, a<lb/>
forum for represen-<lb/>
tatives from five<lb/>
medical organizations<lb/>
to discuss mutual con-<lb/>
cerns in medicine and<lb/>
medical education.<lb/>
He also is a member<lb/>
of the Liaison Com-<lb/>
mittee for Specialty<lb/>
Boards, a group<lb/>
which reviews all new<lb/>
applications for<lb/>
specialty boards and<lb/>
recommends action to<lb/>
the American Board<lb/>
of Medical<lb/>
Specialties.<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
coin?.?.<lb/>
AT BARRE,ltd.<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
422 ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
(919) 756-470<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. OPEN t:S5:??lON. SAT.<lb/>
lHARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
'4<lb/>
K:tti<lb/>
?j ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
???????????<lb/>
??????1<lb/>
ADDITIONAL 10 00 PURCHASE<lb/>
671<lb/>
fer<lb/>
ARMT SURPLUS<lb/>
CAMPING SPUMl.NG<lb/>
MlLlT AHV GOODS<lb/>
o.p. I00U Oifcnl i(?ms<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
4<lb/>
licy Grapes<lb/>
IFORNIA RED &amp; THOMPSON<lb/>
SEEDLESS<lb/>
III<lb/>
range Juice<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
I<lb/>
12 gal<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Authority.<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
THE PRICE OF<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
WITH THS COUPON<lb/>
FREE COKES TOO<lb/>
Now Available ? Mat Coke<lb/>
Call Ua Now! 757-1955<lb/>
We Deliver!<lb/>
SUV ANVLAMOC<lb/>
ewMEmeMT pizza and osr<lb/>
AMOTHtS BJtJM. II ?<lb/>
WMUKOCNTMZZA<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY AWE<lb/>
MOT VAUO WUUn OTMU COUPON<lb/>
GOOO TmBCXKX ? 2S-S3<lb/>
awmni rtr-tMt<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
400pm-i00am ? Sun -ThufS<lb/>
4 00 p iw -2 00 ? m ? Fn 4 Sat<lb/>
? " ; i<lb/>
ON-PAC<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
eK Greenville atvw.<lb/>
754-3023 ? 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Haul Rental<lb/>
Available<lb/>
FJucatiaial Caatar 2a34 Chapel Hill Blvd.<lb/>
tut picpabatiom Suite 112<lb/>
Durham, N.C. 27707<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1IM<lb/>
eat<lb/>
f lajawefjaa??I?wSwawj 1-800-672-5919<lb/>
I tton Tkaa 109 rx US Cttiw I wvul<lb/>
Outs NY SUtt CALL TaU mil: HtR) 1 T?3<lb/>
Shrimp lovers<lb/>
Why travel 100 miles<lb/>
to the beach and pay<lb/>
high prices for<lb/>
fresh shrimp?<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
W Shrimp<lb/>
TL<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
REAL DEAL!<lb/>
FREE COKES TOO! 11<lb/>
Now Available ? Met Coke<lb/>
Stan Thurt<lb/>
M -Sal -<lb/>
mou?s<lb/>
? ? 00 o a? -1 OC ? <lb/>
? 4 00 p m i!0C?<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
11.00 OFF SMALL 2-OR-MORE INGREDIENT PIZZA or<lb/>
$2 00 OFF LARGE 2-OR-eiORE INGREDIENT PIZZA or<lb/>
$2.00 OFF ANY PIZZA LiTE? ?? n-???<lb/>
EXPIRES 8-2S-?3<lb/>
a4hJ<lb/>
ON-PAC<lb/>
?j $3.25<lb/>
ttaHrau<lb/>
A WHALE OF A MEAL<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
-Support?<lb/>
the<lb/>
Businesses<lb/>
that<lb/>
?support?<lb/>
The<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Tarlanding seafood<lb/>
is offering a special<lb/>
popcorn shrimp dinner<lb/>
at only $3.25<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday Only<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
7584)327<lb/>
HL. HODGES CO.<lb/>
SERVING THE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
OF<lb/>
' E.CU.<lb/>
THE SHOE CLUB<lb/>
1 st pair of shows bought at regular price<lb/>
2nd pair of shoos 10 off<lb/>
3rd pair of shoos 20 off<lb/>
SALE SHOES AND TEAM SHOES ARE EXCLUDED<lb/>
PURCHASE OF SHOES MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY<lb/>
THE SHOE CLUB CARD<lb/>
ALL SHOES IN STORE INCLUDED<lb/>
THE STUDENT DISCOUNT<lb/>
10 DISCOUNT ON ANYTHING IN THE<lb/>
STORE WITH COLLEGE I.D. SALE ITEMS EXCLUDED<lb/>
THE SIKSCREEN SHOP<lb/>
SILKSCREEN AND LETTERING SERVICES<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR YOUR ORGANIZATION OR CLUB<lb/>
JACKETS, GOLF SHIRTS, T-SHIRTS, JERSEYS<lb/>
ALL GREAT FOR FUND RAISERS!<lb/>
XL<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0005"/><lb/>
3Ilje iEaHt (Earnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fitt ding Miller, omi um?<lb/>
Mike Hughes, Mmulym<lb/>
NN fcVERI Mt-RRITT. Dnaoroj Ww?m? ClNDY PLEASANTS, ?p?rtt?iar<lb/>
Hi MIR FlSHLR. imm Mm GREG HIDEOUT. MwUw<lb/>
Al 1 AFRASHTEH,wtfu Wj-w- CARLYN EBERT. CnmtainmfHtEdUw<lb/>
Stephanii Groon, cirorf?MMmm? Lizanne Jennings, &amp;????<lb/>
v n iiioRNios, ;Mia,taw David Gordon, i mm<lb/>
JuU IV 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Campus Rape<lb/>
Student Action Gains Conviction<lb/>
On JuK 6 and 7, Billy Ray War-<lb/>
ren of Farmville was tried in Pitt<lb/>
counts Superior Court for the<lb/>
second-degree rape of an ECU stu-<lb/>
And thanks to the<lb/>
testimonies o a handful of other<lb/>
U students. Warren was con-<lb/>
victed to 35 years in prison.<lb/>
The charges stem from an inci-<lb/>
vient which occurred in Clement<lb/>
dorm in the wee hours of March 4.<lb/>
According to' testimony, Warren<lb/>
was a pretty familiar face around<lb/>
he dorm after visitation hours.<lb/>
Students said they'd seen him on<lb/>
campus from time to time peddling<lb/>
blue 'cans.<lb/>
What these and other students<lb/>
t have known before,<lb/>
eer. was that Warren had<lb/>
.nned from campus by a<lb/>
- ourt order. He had been<lb/>
tour other occasions for<lb/>
similar offenses and had even been<lb/>
convicted once of assaulting a<lb/>
woman.<lb/>
Bur ecu with his seemingly<lb/>
erw helming past record of<lb/>
lilar offenses and the findings<lb/>
ii to the court by the SB1<lb/>
other investigative bodies,<lb/>
Warren's case was no open-close<lb/>
Anyone familiar with the<lb/>
U.S. legal system knows that no<lb/>
e cases ever are. And according<lb/>
to Detective It. Gene McAbee (an<lb/>
investigator working on the<lb/>
e), was the voluntary<lb/>
timon) of the woman's fellow<lb/>
udents which proved to be a<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
decisive factor in Warren's convic-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Those students and others who<lb/>
took time out to testify in the trial<lb/>
against Warren deserve our com-<lb/>
mendation and respect. Far too<lb/>
often, we opt for the easier route<lb/>
of issuing idle complaints about<lb/>
"the way things are never ac-<lb/>
tually caring enough about the in-<lb/>
justice to move a muscle.<lb/>
Indeed, rape must be a horrify-<lb/>
ing experience. Fortunately, it's<lb/>
also an experience that most of us<lb/>
will never encounter. But equal to<lb/>
that fortune is the misfortune<lb/>
should we disregard rape and other<lb/>
serious crimes simply because <lb/>
it didn't happen to me<lb/>
It's probably pretty safe to say<lb/>
that none of us enjoys hearing<lb/>
news of a crime of this nature.<lb/>
Rape, assault and other serious of-<lb/>
fenses are ? to say the least ?<lb/>
unpleasant subjects. The dif-<lb/>
ference, it would seem, is that<lb/>
some people care enough about<lb/>
putting the crime to an end-to do<lb/>
something about it.<lb/>
Perhaps McAbee summed up<lb/>
the whole situation best when he<lb/>
commented on the Warren trial:<lb/>
"The thing that impressed me<lb/>
most about this case McAbee<lb/>
said, "was the willingness of the<lb/>
ECU students who came down and<lb/>
testified If we had more<lb/>
students involved like that, it<lb/>
would be a lot easier to control the<lb/>
crime rate on campus<lb/>
Our Continuing Saga<lb/>
Reply to Mr. Baker:<lb/>
Since you left yourself open for a<lb/>
repl. even though you "won't read it<lb/>
anyway" (and you said I was<lb/>
spiteful), I won't feel inhibited in do-<lb/>
ing so, and I'm sure someone will be<lb/>
kind enough to tell you about it. Ob-<lb/>
viously, you have exaggerated andor<lb/>
onceived the point behind my con-<lb/>
tctive criticism of Mr. Hughes'<lb/>
editorials.<lb/>
I'm al! for humor ? yes, even banal<lb/>
humor at times. It will probably amaze<lb/>
you that I am about to admit, before<lb/>
multitudes of readers, that I have even<lb/>
voluntarily seen Blazing Saddles not<lb/>
once, not twice, but three times! To<lb/>
this day. I cannot open a can of pork-<lb/>
and-beans without a chuckle.<lb/>
But let's face it, Mr. Baker, Mike<lb/>
Hughes is no Art Buchwald. True,<lb/>
even professionals, as you say, may<lb/>
have their own "disgusting fixations"<lb/>
but they generally don't publish them<lb/>
on the editorial page, do they? I enjoy<lb/>
satire and parody as much as the next<lb/>
person, but consistent crudity is not ex-<lb/>
actly what I'd call "dry wit<lb/>
Nav as you would say, Mr.<lb/>
Baker, spitefulness was not the motive<lb/>
for mv comments on the quality (or<lb/>
lack of it) in Mr. Hughes' articles. I ap-<lb/>
preciate freedom of the press as much<lb/>
as the next First Amendment advocate.<lb/>
Further, I did not implore the paper<lb/>
to shut down on a permanent basis<lb/>
because of my "inability to accept<lb/>
another person's views Rather, if<lb/>
lack of material andor summer staff<lb/>
prohibit quality journalism during<lb/>
summer school editions, then tem-<lb/>
porarily closing the press during sum-<lb/>
mer school would be a viable option.<lb/>
ECU wouldn't be the First campus<lb/>
without a summer press. However, I<lb/>
don't think there is a problem with the<lb/>
entire staff. In fact, 1 have no quibble<lb/>
with the rest of the staffs efforts to<lb/>
produce an end product that is<lb/>
respected and sought after. For exam-<lb/>
ple, Patrick O'Neill would make an ex-<lb/>
cellent candidate for the next managing<lb/>
editor opening. Lord knows, he has the<lb/>
flair and the diversified background re-<lb/>
quired for intelligent editorials.<lb/>
"Penmanship as you put it, Mr.<lb/>
IHl I<lb/>
Baker, is not the same as quality.<lb/>
Anyone can develop penmanship, but<lb/>
not anyone can achieve the maturity<lb/>
and journalistic excellence inherent to<lb/>
an editorial position.<lb/>
Melanie Bentley-Maughan<lb/>
Alumnus, English<lb/>
You Done Good<lb/>
I'd like to take some time to offer<lb/>
my praise the medical staffs of the<lb/>
ECU Student Health Center and the<lb/>
emergency room of Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital. Normally, I try to<lb/>
keep my distance from these folks, but<lb/>
I sure did need them last week.<lb/>
Not one known for bicycle safety, 1<lb/>
managed to wreck my bike last<lb/>
Wednesday night. In the process, I<lb/>
picked up a face-full of asphalt that<lb/>
had to be scrubbed out. An ECU nurs-<lb/>
ing student (thanks, Diana) working in<lb/>
the PCMH emergency room did a fine<lb/>
(though not painless) job.<lb/>
I'd also like to thank the staff of the<lb/>
campus SHC as well as the several peo-<lb/>
ple who aided me at the scene. I must<lb/>
admit, I've forgotten all your names,<lb/>
but please know that I'm grateful.<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
Can I Say That Word On TV?<lb/>
The Evolution Of Sex<lb/>
Recently, a lot of people have come<lb/>
up to me and asked my views on sex.<lb/>
Well, actually, no one really asked<lb/>
me. In fact, no one ever asks my opinion<lb/>
on anything. I guess I just thought it was<lb/>
a good way to start this thing off. You<lb/>
know, a good attention-getter. Hell, 1<lb/>
don't want to write about sex anyway;<lb/>
it's a little too controversial for my taste.<lb/>
MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
My Sexpertise<lb/>
Besides, what could 1 possibly say<lb/>
about sex that hasn't already been ade-<lb/>
quately discussed on a Calvin Klein com-<lb/>
mercial? Whew! Not a whole lot.<lb/>
But just say, for instance, 1 did want<lb/>
to write about sex ? which I don't. But<lb/>
if I did, I'd probably say something<lb/>
about sex being the single most decisive<lb/>
factor in the evolution of modern man. 1<lb/>
think even you bible-belters would have<lb/>
to agree with that one.<lb/>
In the history of mankind, there has<lb/>
probably never been an issue ? or more<lb/>
precisely, an event ? with as much im-<lb/>
pact on society. Quite literally, we<lb/>
Americans eat, drink and sleep sev<lb/>
But it wasn't always that way. Think<lb/>
back to your favorite television shows oi<lb/>
the 60s. Talk about your taboo subject!<lb/>
1 mean, even America's "favorite cou-<lb/>
ple Ozzie and Harriet, had separate<lb/>
beds. And in Father Knows Best, which<lb/>
ran for five or six years, it seems even<lb/>
father knew very little about some<lb/>
things, like just where in the hell Kitten.<lb/>
Princess and oV Bud came from.<lb/>
But I guess it was best that way. 1<lb/>
mean, just try to imagine Ward Cleaver<lb/>
swapping wives with Lumpy Ruther-<lb/>
ford's father for a holiday weekend. Or<lb/>
how about June Cleaver in a skimpy<lb/>
tiger-skin negligee, waiting by the door<lb/>
to pounce on her husband when he came<lb/>
home from a tough day at the office?<lb/>
Somehow, without the familiar milk-<lb/>
and-cookies greeting, the show just<lb/>
wouldn't have been the same.<lb/>
Super-Maughan Trades In<lb/>
Phone Booth For Flagpole<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
ECU education student Glenn<lb/>
Maughan is at it again. It appears that<lb/>
Maughan has become quite a powerful<lb/>
figure in Pitt County and Greenville city<lb/>
politics. And he's done it all for the price<lb/>
of a few postage stamps and some well-<lb/>
researched letters.<lb/>
As a result of Maughan's letters to of-<lb/>
ficials, the county of Pitt has agreed to<lb/>
remove the segregated listings that ap-<lb/>
pear above the names of non-whites<lb/>
from the war memorial on the lawn of<lb/>
the Pitt County Courthouse.<lb/>
The word "colored" appears twice on<lb/>
the monument to denote blacks killed in<lb/>
both the Korean War and World War II.<lb/>
In his letter to county officials last<lb/>
March, Maughan called the segregated<lb/>
listings an "ultimate insult to the black<lb/>
men and women who served and died,<lb/>
but because of their race, are not allow-<lb/>
ed the dignity, even in death, of being<lb/>
recognized as equal citizens<lb/>
More recently, the city of Greenville,<lb/>
under the authority of City Manager<lb/>
Gail Meeks, has agreed to stop flying the<lb/>
Confederate and British flags over the<lb/>
town common. Again, Maughan's let-<lb/>
ters prompted the action.<lb/>
"Looking deep into history<lb/>
Maughan wrote, "one may realize that<lb/>
this symbol (the Confederate flag) is not<lb/>
and can never be a true representation of<lb/>
the South The Confederate flag, he<lb/>
said, is more a symbol of violence and<lb/>
racism.<lb/>
Meeks, who referred to Maughan as<lb/>
"a very persistent young man decided<lb/>
to simply remove the Confederate and<lb/>
British flags without checking the validi-<lb/>
ty of Maughan's contentions. It seems<lb/>
she wanted to take care of the problem<lb/>
before it "ballooned<lb/>
Meeks was, indeed, right; Maughan is<lb/>
a very persistent young man. He is also a<lb/>
man of principle who is willing to take<lb/>
the time to be a responsible citizen. For<lb/>
this I laud him. As a matter of fact, since<lb/>
Maughan has managed to convince of-<lb/>
ficials to remove a few symbols of the<lb/>
Old South, I'd like to suggest he branch<lb/>
out. Perhaps Maughan can convince of-<lb/>
ficials to improve housing and health<lb/>
care for the poor. How about better<lb/>
roads and schools, more jobs, etc.? The<lb/>
possibilities are unlimited.<lb/>
Go get 'em, Glenn!<lb/>
Nowadays, of course, it's a different<lb/>
story. Not only is sex no longer a taboo<lb/>
subject, but it's big business. It sells<lb/>
everything: jeans, 18-hour bras.<lb/>
decafinated coffee, diet colas,<lb/>
weapons even toilet cleaners.<lb/>
The fact of the matter is. society has<lb/>
been perverted. Now, I'm not saying<lb/>
perversion is bad or good. 1 mean. I'm<lb/>
no saint (sorry for the shock, mom). I<lb/>
suppose 1 adhere to a few liberal biases<lb/>
myself. Nevertheless, 1 do find it a little<lb/>
hard to accept some of our sexual ex-<lb/>
ploitations nowadays.<lb/>
Take movies, for example. Remember<lb/>
when the big money makers were the<lb/>
likes of Cone with the Wind, The<lb/>
H izard of Oz or even more recently The<lb/>
Sound of Musicl Well, needless to say.<lb/>
things are different today. Nowaday,<lb/>
the big blockbusters, the films that rake<lb/>
in the cold cash, are the likes of I'm Just<lb/>
a love Machine. Have Whip, Will<lb/>
Travel, Measure for Pleasure (a moder-<lb/>
nized version of the Shakespeare classic)<lb/>
and Irene, I.averne and what the Parrot<lb/>
Saw. Granted, a lot of heavy<lb/>
breathing but definitely no Gilbert &amp;<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
Remember when the big pictures were<lb/>
filmed entirely on location in scenic set-<lb/>
tings, like Vienna, Zurich, Paris and<lb/>
London, to give an audience the total<lb/>
emotive impact? Well, today's big pic-<lb/>
tures are also filmed on location<lb/>
mostly in the garage of some guy named<lb/>
Zeb when his wife's not home.<lb/>
And it seems to say something about<lb/>
our society when a book titled The Joy<lb/>
of Lesbian Sex rests high atop the na-<lb/>
tion's best-seller list for four months?<lb/>
Imagine June Cleaver reading that one<lb/>
while Wally and Beaver are at school!<lb/>
And what trip to the supermarket<lb/>
would be complete without a gaze at Sex<lb/>
Lives of the Stars magazine in the check<lb/>
out line? And did you ever wonder what<lb/>
would happen to a Cosmopolitan cover<lb/>
girl if she so much as coughed?<lb/>
Yes, society is not well not well at<lb/>
all. We've got sex aids in supermarkets,<lb/>
"love" stimuli in drug stores and so<lb/>
many other back-of-the-book (er<lb/>
magazine) devices that it makes one<lb/>
wonder how did we ever survive<lb/>
without them?<lb/>
But like I said before, I don't want to<lb/>
write about sex; it's just too controver-<lb/>
sial.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, a senior<lb/>
library science major from Udder-Pull,<lb/>
N. C (just east of Hoglips), sometimes<lb/>
wonders if scientists in the late 17th cen-<lb/>
tury considered dodo bird droppings<lb/>
endangered feces?<lb/>
'Night<lb/>
B MULEHAMEH<lb/>
MiDAMRY BROUN<lb/>
"How complicated the<lb/>
state seems to be<lb/>
virginal wife Anne ii<lb/>
Sondheim's A I ittle tthi 1uu<lb/>
which opened Monda<lb/>
the Fa' arolina<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
The exclamation<lb/>
the understatemei I<lb/>
ing. The musical, wl<lb/>
six Tony awards and rai<lb/>
600 performances on Broadw<lb/>
proves to be half roma<lb/>
edy, half bitterwee: exan<lb/>
of the pitfalls, compile i<lb/>
disillusions of mar-<lb/>
fidelity. Inspired b B<lb/>
Smiles of a Summer Xigl<lb/>
in turn-of-the-sc: .<lb/>
I ittle ight Wusii<lb/>
study of contempt<lb/>
ships and fickle, wh<lb/>
nature a - other s<lb/>
musicals, especially lollit-<lb/>
Companx<lb/>
SondheitT<lb/>
lyrics and hi<lb/>
Living It<lb/>
Basks In<lb/>
BARl W 1B1RI<lb/>
New Jersev ?<lb/>
soaked up the nai<lb/>
and the ra-<lb/>
the white cement<lb/>
Hirschorn and the M<lb/>
Historv and Techn -<lb/>
Forth of Jul weekei<lb/>
state that pirated cheese<lb/>
of Philadelphia a<lb/>
singlehandedl) inven<lb/>
Jewish merican Pi ncess<lb/>
ed us due oi<lb/>
Washington. D.C as the '<lb/>
nual Festival of Amc<lb/>
saluted the culture<lb/>
The Festival also honored the<lb/>
tributions of France on mei -<lb/>
folklife. but esca<lb/>
cream paled in the<lb/>
Springsteen and ej<lb/>
inc.<lb/>
TACKY<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
New J e r s e <lb/>
synonvmous. .<lb/>
of 60 Minutes and V<lb/>
with toxic wasu<lb/>
and hucksters .<lb/>
tion ckages<lb/>
guff and a lot oi<lb/>
spits it right back in t<lb/>
Jersey tough trad x-<lb/>
Jersey native thai<lb/>
New Jersev Tump fc<lb/>
fart cut by Divine (a<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
f<lb/>
u:<lb/>
' :3N?:<lb/>
r<lb/>
'?:?<lb/>
Wltk $40,000 worth of maritime<lb/>
Base beads into Swansboro H?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0006"/><lb/>
BRIEFING<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
7<lb/>
fCWf<lb/>
unm<lb/>
)f Sex<lb/>
Nowadays, of course, it's a different<lb/>
r. Not only is sex no longer a taboo<lb/>
Subject, but it's big business. It sells<lb/>
everything: jeans, 18-hour bras,<lb/>
lecafinated coffee, diet colas,<lb/>
.eapons even toilet cleaners.<lb/>
The fact of the matter is, society has<lb/>
een perverted. Now, I'm not saying<lb/>
erersion is bad or good. I mean, I'm<lb/>
K) saint (sorry for the shock, mom). I<lb/>
?uppose 1 adhere to a few liberal biases<lb/>
nyself. Nevertheless, I do find it a little<lb/>
hard to accept some of our sexual ex-<lb/>
loitations nowadays.<lb/>
Take movies, for example. Remember<lb/>
Iwhen the big money makers were the<lb/>
Hikes of Gone with the Hind, The<lb/>
H izard of Oz or even more recently The<lb/>
Sound of Music? Well, needless to say,<lb/>
things are different today. Nowadays,<lb/>
the big blockbusters, the films that rake<lb/>
in the cold cash, are the likes of I'm Just<lb/>
a love Machine, Have Whip, Will<lb/>
Traxel, Measure for Pleasure (a moder-<lb/>
nized version of the Shakespeare classic)<lb/>
and Irene, Laverne and what the Parrot<lb/>
Sa? Granted, a lot of heavy<lb/>
breathing but definitely no Gilbert &amp;<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
Remember when the big pictures were<lb/>
filmed entirely on location in scenic set-<lb/>
tings, like Vienna, Zurich, Paris and<lb/>
ondon, to give an audience the total<lb/>
?motive impact? Well, today's big pic-<lb/>
ures are also filmed on location<lb/>
mostly in the garage of some guy named<lb/>
Zeb when his wife's not home.<lb/>
And it seems to say something about<lb/>
our society when a book titled The Joy<lb/>
of I eshian Sex rests high atop the na-<lb/>
 ion's best-seller list for four months?<lb/>
Imagine June Cleaver reading that one<lb/>
while Wally and Beaver are at school!<lb/>
And what trip to the supermarket<lb/>
would be complete without a gaze at Sex<lb/>
I ives of the Stars magazine in the check-<lb/>
out line? And did you ever wonder what<lb/>
would happen to a Cosmopolitan cover<lb/>
girl if she so much as coughed?<lb/>
Yes, society is not well not well at<lb/>
all. We've got sex aids in supermarkets,<lb/>
"love" stimuli in drug stores and so<lb/>
many other back-of-the-book (er<lb/>
magazine) devices that it makes one<lb/>
wonder how did we ever survive<lb/>
without them?<lb/>
But like I said before, I don't want to<lb/>
write about sex; it's just too controver-<lb/>
sial.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, a senior<lb/>
library science major from Udder-Pull,<lb/>
N.C. (just east of Hoglips), sometimes<lb/>
wonders if scientists in the late 17th cen-<lb/>
tury considered dodo bird droppings<lb/>
endangered feces?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 13, 1983<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
 Night Music Orchestrates Marriage Pitfalls<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
and DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
"How complicated the marital<lb/>
state seems to be concludes the<lb/>
virginal wife Anne in Stephen<lb/>
Sondheim's A Little Night Music,<lb/>
which opened Monday night at<lb/>
the East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
The exclamation proves to be<lb/>
the understatement of the even-<lb/>
ing. The musical, which garnered<lb/>
six Tony awards and ran for over<lb/>
600 performances on Broadway,<lb/>
proves to be half romantic com-<lb/>
edy, half bittersweet examination<lb/>
of the pitfalls, complications and<lb/>
disillusions of marriage and in-<lb/>
fidelity. Inspired by Bergman's<lb/>
Smiles of a Summer Night and set<lb/>
in turn-of-the-century Sweden, A<lb/>
Little Night Music is as much a<lb/>
study of contemporary relation-<lb/>
ships and fickle, whimsical human<lb/>
nature as other Sondheim<lb/>
musicals, especially Follies and<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
Sondheim's astringent, acrid<lb/>
lyrics and his dazzling gift with<lb/>
words rarely give modern life a<lb/>
break. He is responsible, really,<lb/>
for bringing a realistic, contem-<lb/>
porary vision to American<lb/>
musical theater, abandoning the<lb/>
old escapist, romantic idylls of,<lb/>
say, Rogers and Hammerstein.<lb/>
Sondheim looks at life more<lb/>
through the eyes of John Updike<lb/>
or John Cheever than Lerner and<lb/>
Loewe. A Little Night Music is a<lb/>
modern comedy of manners, not-<lb/>
withstanding the turn-of-the-<lb/>
century setting.<lb/>
Marriage and infidelity have, it<lb/>
seems, as many consequences as<lb/>
rewards. The aging leading man<lb/>
Fredrik Egerman, confronting a<lb/>
mid-life crisis, is "busily renewing<lb/>
his unrenewable youth" by mar-<lb/>
rying Anne, an 18-year-old who is<lb/>
still a virgin after 11 months of<lb/>
marriage, and rekindling an old<lb/>
affair with stage actress Desiree<lb/>
Armfeldt. His grown son Henrik,<lb/>
meanwhile, is unsuccessfully stav-<lb/>
ing off carnal desires with his<lb/>
studies for the priesthood. Petra<lb/>
the maid has no such compunc-<lb/>
tions as she enjoys an active love<lb/>
life and tries to lure Henrik out of<lb/>
his guilt-induced impotency. The<lb/>
pompous hypocrite Count<lb/>
Malcolm, moreover, is outraged<lb/>
when he discovers Fredrik with his<lb/>
mistress Desiree. One can tolerate<lb/>
infidelity, he says, from one's<lb/>
wife, but never from one's<lb/>
mistress. The entire scenario is<lb/>
overseen by Desiree's aged<lb/>
mother, a veteran adulteress who<lb/>
"has numbered kings among her<lb/>
lovers<lb/>
To make a delightful story<lb/>
short, the two chaste youths Anne<lb/>
and Henrik elope, Desiree and<lb/>
Fredrik discover their true love<lb/>
for one another, and the Count,<lb/>
somehow, returns to his wife. The<lb/>
ending is happy, at any rate, if a<lb/>
touch bittersweet.<lb/>
Special plaudits go to the<lb/>
leading players, Lee Evans and<lb/>
Amanda Muir, who charmed their<lb/>
way into the hearts of the au-<lb/>
dience and turned in strong per-<lb/>
formances as Fredrik and Desiree.<lb/>
Also deserving special recognition<lb/>
are Susan Marrash-Minnerly as<lb/>
Mme. Armfeldt and Sharon<lb/>
Lawrence as Anne, Babs Winn as<lb/>
Petra, John Kuhn as Count<lb/>
Malcolm and Jane Barrett<lb/>
Underbill as his wife.<lb/>
The lavish sets by Gregory Buch<lb/>
were somewhere between effective<lb/>
and dazzling, and the production<lb/>
crew ran them flawlessly. Stage<lb/>
and musical directors Edger R.<lb/>
Loessin and Joe Distefano,<lb/>
respectively, deserve praise for a<lb/>
well-paced production.<lb/>
The show's music, all in waltz<lb/>
time, includes many wonderful<lb/>
songs, the most famous being<lb/>
"Send In The Clowns which,<lb/>
incidentally, was written in one<lb/>
night during rehearsal and put in<lb/>
the show just before the opening.<lb/>
It has become perhaps Son-<lb/>
dheim's best-known number; even<lb/>
K-Mart muzak can't seem to ruin<lb/>
it.<lb/>
A Little Night Music is certainly<lb/>
an improvement over last week's<lb/>
Pippin, and we highly recommend<lb/>
it. The production runs through<lb/>
Saturday in McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Tickets may be purchased at the<lb/>
box office or reserved by calling<lb/>
757-6390. Most performances<lb/>
play to near-capacity houses, so<lb/>
hurry.<lb/>
Living It Down Up North: Garden State<lb/>
Basks In Glory At D.C. Folklife Fest<lb/>
By CARLYN EBERT<lb/>
EatertaimMX fctor<lb/>
New Jersey ? yes, Joisey ?<lb/>
soaked up the national spotlight<lb/>
and the rays of sun refracting off<lb/>
the white cement walls of the<lb/>
Hirschorn and the Museum of<lb/>
History and Technology over the<lb/>
Forth of July weekend. The noble<lb/>
state that pirated cheesesteaks out<lb/>
of Philadelphia and almost<lb/>
singlehandedly invented the<lb/>
Jewish American Princess receiv-<lb/>
ed its due on the Mall in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. as the 17th an-<lb/>
nual Festival of American Folklife<lb/>
saluted the culture of New Jersey.<lb/>
The Festival also honored the con-<lb/>
tributions of France on American<lb/>
folklife, but escargot and ice<lb/>
cream paled in the wake of Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen and legalized gambl-<lb/>
ing. <lb/>
TACKY<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
New Jersey ? a place<lb/>
synonymous, at least to avid fans<lb/>
of 60 Minutes and Newsweek,<lb/>
with toxic waste dumps flambe<lb/>
and hucksters selling bogus vaca-<lb/>
tion packages ? takes a lot of<lb/>
guff and a lot of ribbing, but it<lb/>
spits it right back in time-honored<lb/>
Jersey tough tradition. Tell a New<lb/>
Jersey native that you think the<lb/>
New Jersey Turnpike smells like a<lb/>
fart cut by Divine (a Baltimore<lb/>
gal, by the way) and you'll reel<lb/>
under a blanket of insults to your<lb/>
state highway system that would<lb/>
make Jim Hunt's mother blush.<lb/>
Mention that you think of the<lb/>
culture of New Jersey as a con-<lb/>
tradiction in terms, and you can<lb/>
kiss your eardrums goodbye.<lb/>
The Garden State, as its licence<lb/>
plates proclaim it, boasts the<lb/>
varied cultural influence of nearly<lb/>
100 ethnic groups who came from<lb/>
nearby New York and faraway<lb/>
Puerto Rico and Italy to make<lb/>
New Jersey a leading producer of<lb/>
blueberries, Jersey corn, silk,<lb/>
ships, pharmaceuticals and shop-<lb/>
ping malls. Not to mention a<lb/>
thriving industry in<lb/>
"persuaders the carved clubs<lb/>
fearless New Jerseyans carry<lb/>
under bucket seats on a drive into<lb/>
the city.<lb/>
But the Festival, with its happy<lb/>
demonstrations of lobster trap<lb/>
making and glass blowing, missed<lb/>
the real cultural flavor of New<lb/>
Joisey. Jersey's shoreline does<lb/>
dish up succulunt lobster, but a<lb/>
more typical shore town lunch is<lb/>
stromboli with peppers served by<lb/>
a sweating, shouting, rude Sicilian<lb/>
muscle man in an apron. If it<lb/>
isn't, it's not authentic, or not<lb/>
very good. And its urban in-<lb/>
dustrial centers, like Newark and<lb/>
Trenton ? towns a foot of snow<lb/>
does little to beautify ? feed a<lb/>
steady stream of stinky sludge in-<lb/>
to Jersey's rivers and send up<lb/>
puffs of charcoal haze visible<lb/>
from jets aiming for LaGuardia.<lb/>
But cities, on the whole, are<lb/>
unpleasant and ugly: overcrowd-<lb/>
ed, polluted, noisy. It's just that<lb/>
New Jersey is proud of hers,<lb/>
strung together as they are by<lb/>
asphalt and toll booths. Few<lb/>
travelers dare glance out of their<lb/>
air-conditioned Honda Preludes<lb/>
to the jeweltone swamps along the<lb/>
shore, the bird sanctuaries and<lb/>
abandoned orchards between<lb/>
overpasses.<lb/>
Had the Folklife Festival cap-<lb/>
tured the true spirit of New<lb/>
Jersey, it wonld have<lb/>
reconstructed the state's real<lb/>
cultural heartbeats and gathering<lb/>
places: the Carvel stores, the<lb/>
diners, the casinos, the drive-ins.<lb/>
Instead of nodding politely to a<lb/>
concert of Afro-Puerto Rican<lb/>
bomba music, folklife fans could<lb/>
have practiced making a left-hand<lb/>
turn by following signs to the<lb/>
right of the roadway, prating that<lb/>
iuck and centrifugal force would<lb/>
land them at their left-turn<lb/>
destination. New Jerseyans like<lb/>
their pastimes tough, and the<lb/>
right-hand left-hand turn makes<lb/>
driving ? a sport of high impor-<lb/>
tance ? more difficult and ex-<lb/>
citing.<lb/>
New Jersey has long suffered<lb/>
the fate of being labeled New<lb/>
York City's nasty little next door<lb/>
neighbor. Its punishment ?<lb/>
ultimate suburbia ? just flowed<lb/>
in naturally with the spillover<lb/>
from New York's crowded<lb/>
suburbs, and New Jersey started<lb/>
to sound like a pretty funny place.<lb/>
Maybe that's why Festival<lb/>
organizers decided to fete the<lb/>
seafaring traditions and the truck<lb/>
farmers who spawned the current<lb/>
media misconception of the Jersey<lb/>
dolt.<lb/>
Or maybe they just did it as a<lb/>
joke<lb/>
?????? by CHUIS ?EMMCTT<lb/>
"It's intolerable being tolerated Henrik, patronized by everyone as<lb/>
a lustless saint and bound by his dedication to the priesthood, con-<lb/>
templates his rising carnal desires in 'A Little Night Musk<lb/>
Mercy Me! Roaring Twenties Tap<lb/>
Onstage In Effervescent 'Nanette9<lb/>
One of the most spectacular Broadway stage suc-<lb/>
cesses in the early 1970s was not a new show, but a<lb/>
sassy new version of an old one ? the outstanding<lb/>
musical hit of the fabulous 1920s, No,No, Nanette.<lb/>
It is this modernized version of carefree America<lb/>
that is to be presented by the East Carolinia Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre on the ECU campus in Greenville for<lb/>
six performances ? Monday, July 18, through<lb/>
Saturday, July 23, at 8:15 each evening.<lb/>
Teaming up to double in brass for this splashy<lb/>
musical of tap dancing and song will be two<lb/>
veteran Broadway performers who are also no<lb/>
strangers to theatre-goers in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina: Mavis Ray, who will perform the lead<lb/>
role made famous by Ruby Keeler, also serves as<lb/>
the production's choreographer; and Jay Fox, who<lb/>
will not only play the male lead but also direct.<lb/>
Miss Ray's role is that of the exuberant tap-<lb/>
dancing wife of a cheerful manufacturer of Bibles<lb/>
whose eagerness to make everybody happy gets<lb/>
him into some tight squezes. Fox plays this<lb/>
generous fellow, who gets trapped in embar-<lb/>
rassments by his willingness to be an innocent<lb/>
sugar-daddy to three trollops.<lb/>
Miss Ray has been with the East Carolina Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre on and off since its inception and has<lb/>
choreographed most of the productions. She has<lb/>
appeared in the Broadway production of<lb/>
Ballroom, the national tour of DA, ABC's All My<lb/>
Children, My Body, My Child starring Vanessa<lb/>
Redgrave and the highly acclaimed movie-musical<lb/>
Annie.<lb/>
Fox captivated Summer Theatre audiences last<lb/>
year as the Emcee in Cabaret, a role he has played<lb/>
with equal success on Broadway. Previously, New<lb/>
York audiences had seen him in Applause, The<lb/>
Magic Show and Fiddler On The Roof.<lb/>
Also starred is Susan Marrash-Minnerly as a<lb/>
comic housemaid constantly grumbling as she<lb/>
heads for the door or the telephone, one of which is<lb/>
ringing all the time. Melodie Wolford will be seen<lb/>
as the demure Nanette everyone says no to and<lb/>
Scott Evans (star of the recent Summer Theatre<lb/>
production of Pippin) as a gallant suitor pursuing<lb/>
her with an engangement rin.<lb/>
No, No, Nanette is an endearing slice of<lb/>
musicanna from the Roaring '20s, a glossy bubble<lb/>
full of flappers with fluttering eyelids.boys wearing<lb/>
knickers and pasted-on smiles, pretty girls n knee-<lb/>
length bathing suits balancing on oversized<lb/>
See NANETTE, Page 6<lb/>
Underwater Digs<lb/>
ECU Students, Faculty In Search<lb/>
Of Sunken Wrecks In Harbor<lb/>
With $40,000<lb/>
into<lb/>
of maritime equipment<lb/>
Swansboro Harbor.<lb/>
ob board, ECU<lb/>
robin Avnns<lb/>
's Murphy<lb/>
ByPHERRING<lb/>
Mi Writer<lb/>
For many, summer is a time<lb/>
when academic studies are put on<lb/>
the back burner until regular<lb/>
classes resume in the fall, but this<lb/>
is not the case with East<lb/>
Carolina's School of Maritime<lb/>
History and Archaeology. During<lb/>
the warmer months of the year,<lb/>
both students and their teachers<lb/>
can be found combing the waters<lb/>
off the East Coast in search of<lb/>
sunken vessels and evidence of<lb/>
piers or wharfs that have been<lb/>
reclaimed by the sea in the past<lb/>
centuries.<lb/>
The Maritime History program<lb/>
has been offered at East Carolina<lb/>
for five years after it was discon-<lb/>
tinued from UNC-Wilmington's<lb/>
curriculum in 1978. Right now,<lb/>
Dr. William Still and his associate<lb/>
Dr. Gordon Watts direct their<lb/>
students' research and the proper<lb/>
maintenance of the equipment us-<lb/>
ed during their long hot days on<lb/>
the water.<lb/>
Twenty-two students are now<lb/>
enrolled in the program, with 14<lb/>
of them taking part in graduate<lb/>
studies and field work. Most of<lb/>
the students involved have<lb/>
backgrounds in history, an-<lb/>
thropology or marine science.<lb/>
Last week I was fortunate<lb/>
enough to watch Watts and some<lb/>
of his students at work in<lb/>
Swansboro Harbor, where for the<lb/>
past three weeks they have been<lb/>
searching for artifacts at the re-<lb/>
quest of the Swansboro 200th An-<lb/>
niversary Committee. So far their<lb/>
efforts have not revealed any<lb/>
evidence of a shipwreck site, but<lb/>
there is always a chance that<lb/>
something could turn up. "A har-<lb/>
bor bottom is like a garbage<lb/>
dump said Still. "There's all<lb/>
kinds of junk down there<lb/>
One may think that the<lb/>
possibility of discovering gold or<lb/>
chests of pirate booty would be an<lb/>
incentive for entering this unique<lb/>
field of study. But archaeology<lb/>
and treasure hunting are two<lb/>
totally different things.<lb/>
"Everything we do explained<lb/>
Watts, "is in the interest of<lb/>
history<lb/>
Of course, it takes sophistical d<lb/>
equipment to detect a sunken<lb/>
vessel buried deep in water and<lb/>
silt. Along with sonar depth<lb/>
recorders, one of the most<lb/>
valuable pieces of equipment used<lb/>
to detect sunken wrecks is the pro-<lb/>
ton magnetometer, which locates<lb/>
metal or porcelain by measuring<lb/>
the disturbances they create in the<lb/>
Earth's magnetic field.<lb/>
Watts and his students placed<lb/>
the magnetometer on the deck of<lb/>
a fiberglass boat. Watts then guid-<lb/>
ed the boat over a predetermined<lb/>
area by an electronic tracking<lb/>
system, an infrared light transmit-<lb/>
ted by a computerized beacon<lb/>
located on an island across the<lb/>
harbor. As the magnetometer<lb/>
scanned the harbor bottom, it<lb/>
recorded its findings with peaks<lb/>
and valleys on a strip of graph<lb/>
paper. Unfortunately, the<lb/>
readings gathered on my trip did<lb/>
not show any promise of a find.<lb/>
When a reading does indicate the<lb/>
possible location of a wreck, a<lb/>
diver is usually sent down to in-<lb/>
vestigate.<lb/>
The Maritime History Depart-<lb/>
ment owns two vessels used exten-<lb/>
sively in its research: the Murphy<lb/>
Base, stored in Washington,<lb/>
N.C and the Privateer, which is<lb/>
kept on campus. The Murphy<lb/>
Base, a modified army landing<lb/>
craft, was purchased from army<lb/>
surplus for a modest sum and then<lb/>
outfitted with over $40,000 worth<lb/>
of equipment. In the past five<lb/>
years, the Murphy and its crew<lb/>
have explored harbors and inlets<lb/>
from Bath, Edenton and New<lb/>
Bern, N.C. to the coastal waters<lb/>
of Virginia and Georgia.<lb/>
If funding allows, future plans<lb/>
include research in locations such<lb/>
as Bermuda. A separate grant<lb/>
must be obtained for each field<lb/>
school project, so there is always a<lb/>
possibility that a project may have<lb/>
to be tabled until proper financial<lb/>
backing can be obtained. "We<lb/>
were lucky to have grants for each<lb/>
of our field school projects said<lb/>
Watts.<lb/>
Still and colleagues hope to<lb/>
continue to obtain grants to keep<lb/>
their research going. Through the<lb/>
Maritime History Department's<lb/>
efforts, historians have been able<lb/>
to enrich their knowledge of the<lb/>
nautical history behind the col-<lb/>
onization of North Carolina and<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
r4p-<lb/>
??,?m m inn<lb/>
 ?? - -4b- m ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CARP 1 1NIAN<lb/>
II I 13, IYM<lb/>
from the people whu brought you "Animal House<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
IAMPMNS<lb/>
to class<lb/>
has less class<lb/>
than this class<lb/>
Bizarre fare from<lb/>
AAendenhall this week:<lb/>
Tonight at 8.00, attend<lb/>
National Lampoon's<lb/>
'Class Reunion Next<lb/>
Monday at 9 p.m join<lb/>
Malcolm McDowell and<lb/>
the rest of the droogs for<lb/>
Stanley Kubrick's 'A<lb/>
Clockwork Orange<lb/>
Admission, as usual, is<lb/>
by student ID and ac<lb/>
tivity card or MSC<lb/>
membership, and both<lb/>
films will rol I in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
en ??<lb/>
R<lb/>
.o 3<lb/>
BEST FILM<lb/>
OF THE YEAR<lb/>
BEST DIRECTOR<lb/>
OF THE YEAR<lb/>
? I Ml<lb/>
tanics<lb/>
From Afcrner BOS<lb/>
'No, No, Nanette'<lb/>
Brings Tap Dancing<lb/>
To McGinnis Stage<lb/>
( ont. from Page 5<lb/>
oranges, and people<lb/>
exclaiming "Mercy<lb/>
me and "What's<lb/>
rhe diH"<lb/>
This show brings<lb/>
back such dances as<lb/>
the Castle Walk, the<lb/>
Bunny Hug, the Max-<lb/>
ie, the Tango and the<lb/>
Charleston. There is,<lb/>
of course, a good deal<lb/>
 jubilant tap danc-<lb/>
performed by the<lb/>
npeding herd of 25<lb/>
ipers and sheiks as<lb/>
the show chorus.<lb/>
The winner of four<lb/>
Ion Awards, No,<lb/>
So, Sanette<lb/>
sports two o the most<lb/>
famous show tunes<lb/>
ever written: "Tea<lb/>
lor Two" and "1<lb/>
Want To Be Happy<lb/>
The Fast Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theatre<lb/>
follows this produc-<lb/>
tion with They're<lb/>
Playing Our Song,<lb/>
scheduled for six<lb/>
evening performances<lb/>
(Jul 25 through July<lb/>
30, all at 8:15) and<lb/>
one matinee at 2:15<lb/>
p.m. on Thursday,<lb/>
ul 28.<lb/>
Tickets niav be pui -<lb/>
chased at McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre in Greenville,<lb/>
corner of Fifth and<lb/>
Eastern Streets, Mon-<lb/>
day through Satur-<lb/>
day, or reserved b<lb/>
calling 757-6390.<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
Any Foot Long Sub or Saladj<lb/>
with Purchase of a Medium Drink<lb/>
this coupon good<lb/>
July 13th thru July 20thj<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
208 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Copyright 1963<lb/>
Kroger Savor<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Nona Sold To Dealers<lb/>
II.<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
AOVERTiSED ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of these adver<lb/>
tised items ,s re<lb/>
quired to be '?ac ?<lb/>
a?a at e for sae <lb/>
each Kroner Sa or<lb/>
eicept as speoficaJ ?<lb/>
noted th.s ad II e<lb/>
do rjr 0t of an item<lb/>
e mU offer yoo fOm<lb/>
items and Prices choice of a com<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat July 16 1983 DafaQ,e !err ?"<lb/>
aaiiab;e e act n g<lb/>
the same sangs or a<lb/>
ramchec fi.ci <lb/>
entitle yOu 'C Our<lb/>
chase the ad.e't sed<lb/>
? lem at the ad?esed<lb/>
pr.ee ? " V 3arS<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Cottage<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
July Dinner Specials<lb/>
Mon-Thurs. 5pm-10pm<lb/>
Buy any Steak at Reg. Price and<lb/>
pay only half price for second steak<lb/>
of same or less value<lb/>
All Meals Served With King Idaho Baked<lb/>
Potato or French Fries and Texas Toast<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
Lunch Specials<lb/>
Mon-Sat. Mam-5pm <lb/>
4 l2oz. Jr. Sirloin $2.19 with Salad Bar $3.19 J<lb/>
8oz. Chopped Sirloin $2.49 with Salad Bar $3.49<lb/>
All Meals<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries and Texas Toast<lb/>
L<lb/>
2 Locations to Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W.Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
!4-0z.<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
wise<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
7-OZ.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
MT. DEW,<lb/>
PEPSI FREE OR<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
$-119<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Miller Beer<lb/>
$239<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Hamm's Beer<lb/>
$909<lb/>
?<lb/>
j<lb/>
GINGER ALE,<lb/>
CLUB SODA OR<lb/>
Schweppe's<lb/>
Tonic<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Multigrain<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
28-Oz.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
1VH.D.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
Luncheon<lb/>
Meat<lb/>
?ZZU<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
ectv<lb/>
1-Lb<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
him t <lb/>
ssSS<lb/>
Bakeim<lb/>
PUFF<lb/>
PASTRY<lb/>
iSySfS MEAT ENTREE,<lb/>
2 VEGETABLES AND ROLL<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
Eclairs Luncheon Special<lb/>
2.89<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$219<lb/>
Pir<lb/>
Pira '<lb/>
arolina<lb/>
to rq<lb/>
the V<lb/>
Johi<lb/>
la <lb/>
World<lb/>
ll-<lb/>
l<lb/>
I -<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
Cow be<lb/>
k<lb/>
ha<lb/>
pla<lb/>
VCTC<lb/>
te<lb/>
d stra<lb/>
me a a<lb/>
h<lb/>
pla<lb/>
h<lb/>
-<lb/>
da<lb/>
LUC <lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
ol<lb/>
 I<lb/>
M1<lb/>
 S<lb/>
i<lb/>
These FCT studenj<lb/>
courts beside Belk<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0008"/><lb/>
oumtrv Cowcine<lb/>
. 2 t I 4ch Street<lb/>
iviiie North Carolina<lb/>
U- Haiti Mntij ?5<lb/>
Doily Special<lb/>
Meat<lb/>
eoetables<lb/>
1 Bread<lb/>
U:OfkinV:OOrrn Diiiiv<lb/>
lllllllirTTT<lb/>
AlHfc it 5th and E<lb/>
4SM<lb/>
Glamorous U?o "A Weekend in the<lb/>
tm turn ot this century, during on of those<lb/>
set and people go joyfully mad with music<lb/>
ERT SET ?M<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each cri "ese adver<lb/>
? sea ,tems ,5 re<lb/>
9u -e3 to be rgadtiy<lb/>
a?a aDie :or sale in<lb/>
eac Kroger Sav on<lb/>
e?cept as speci'icaiiy<lb/>
oteo m th!s ac if we<lb/>
Oc run cat ot an item<lb/>
?e otter you yovir<lb/>
choice ot a com<lb/>
jjj s'ate ism when<lb/>
?tMd reflecting<lb/>
Je sa? ngs or a<lb/>
- <lb/>
I e " sea<lb/>
 advertised<lb/>
  ' " -a.s<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Her Beer<lb/>
239<lb/>
ERVE N SAVE<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
cheon<lb/>
eat<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
 - ? '?<lb/>
M:AT ENTREE,<lb/>
IS AND ROLL<lb/>
ILY<lb/>
Special!<lb/>
19<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 13. 1983<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Pirate Recruit In Friendship Games<lb/>
Pirate News<lb/>
Steve Sides, who will attend<lb/>
East Carolina this fall on a<lb/>
baseball grant-in-aid, was chosen<lb/>
to represent the United States in<lb/>
the World Friendship Games in<lb/>
Johnstown, Pa from Julv 9<lb/>
through July 17.<lb/>
The United States, Canada and<lb/>
Taiwan posted victories Mondav<lb/>
night in the third round of the<lb/>
World Games. The U.S. had 14<lb/>
hits in five innings en route to an<lb/>
11-0 romp over Holland.<lb/>
Sides, who played his high<lb/>
school ball at Eastern Wayne in<lb/>
Goldsboro, became one of only 18<lb/>
U.S. players selected from the 72<lb/>
participants at the National<lb/>
Sports Festival games, which were<lb/>
held last week in Colorado Spr-<lb/>
ings, Co.<lb/>
Sides was five-for-nine, with<lb/>
four runs batted in and a double<lb/>
in leading the South squad to a<lb/>
berth in the finals. The Gold<lb/>
Glove-winning second baseman<lb/>
did not commit an error during<lb/>
the games.<lb/>
The World Friendship Games<lb/>
will include eight teams, with the<lb/>
United States and the Korean Na-<lb/>
tional teams expected to reach the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
"We're just absolutely thrilled<lb/>
about the news concerning<lb/>
Steve said ECU baseball coach<lb/>
Hal Baird. "He was our first<lb/>
recruit for 1984, and we were ex-<lb/>
cited about his prospects then.<lb/>
Now, he's playing some of the<lb/>
best ball in the country for his age<lb/>
group<lb/>
National Update<lb/>
Two lop University of South<lb/>
Carolina officials have renewed<lb/>
efforts to have a 75 million-dollar<lb/>
libel suit against them and Sports<lb/>
Illustrated thrown out of court.<lb/>
The suit was filed by former<lb/>
women's basketball coach Pam<lb/>
Parsons. She claimed that the<lb/>
University President, James<lb/>
Holderman, and one of his<lb/>
assistants made accusatory lesbian<lb/>
statements about her to Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated.<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
In legal briefs filed in a Colum-<lb/>
bia court, the two officials deny<lb/>
making the statements. Their<lb/>
lawyers also claim that as public<lb/>
officials, they are immune from<lb/>
libel suits in matters pertaining to<lb/>
the public interest, and asked that<lb/>
the suit be dismissed.<lb/>
Parsons resigned from the<lb/>
university under pressure in 1982<lb/>
after an article in the sports<lb/>
magazine depicted her as a les-<lb/>
bian.<lb/>
Soviet Diver Sergei Shlibashvili<lb/>
is reportedly in critical condition<lb/>
after suffering multiple head in-<lb/>
juries at the Wold University<lb/>
Games in Edmonton, Alberta.<lb/>
The 21-year-old Soviet under-<lb/>
went brain surgery following his<lb/>
accident Saturday in the men's<lb/>
10-meter platform dives.<lb/>
British distance stars Sebastian<lb/>
Coe and Steve Ovett want to run<lb/>
in both the 800 and 1500-meter<lb/>
events in next month's World<lb/>
Track and Field Championships<lb/>
in Helsinki.<lb/>
This gives the selectors a major<lb/>
problem. Britain's top track starts<lb/>
want to repeat their double-up of<lb/>
three years ago at the Moscow<lb/>
Olympics. Ovett upset his rival in<lb/>
the 800-meter race, and Coe then<lb/>
won the longer event.<lb/>
The pair's decision is a<lb/>
headache for the selectors, who<lb/>
must pick the bulk of the team on<lb/>
Cowboys On Drugs?<lb/>
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.<lb/>
(AP) ? Dallas Cowboys veterans,<lb/>
who report for training camp in<lb/>
less than two weeks, probably<lb/>
have been distracted by news of a<lb/>
federal investigation linking five<lb/>
players with cocaine use. Cowboy<lb/>
coach Tom Landry said.<lb/>
"If I was in a player's shoes,<lb/>
sure I'd be distracted Landry<lb/>
said. "I wouldn't be able to put<lb/>
my complete concentration on<lb/>
business<lb/>
Training camp began Sunday<lb/>
and reports that running backs<lb/>
Tony Dorsett and Ron Springs<lb/>
and defensive ends Harvey Martin<lb/>
and Larry Bethea have been men-<lb/>
tioned by federal officials in con-<lb/>
nection with cocaine use. Wide<lb/>
receiver Tony Hill and Martin<lb/>
were subpoenaed last week to<lb/>
testify in a trial of a man indicted<lb/>
on charges of cocaine smuggling.<lb/>
Landry himself admitted being<lb/>
distracted by the reports and<lb/>
media attention. He said,<lb/>
however, he doesn't plan to<lb/>
discipline or dismiss any of the<lb/>
players, only to closely monitor<lb/>
the situation.<lb/>
"Obviously, I don't plan to<lb/>
take any action against them at<lb/>
this time Landry said. "Really,<lb/>
I don't have much reaction to<lb/>
this. There isn't much here that I<lb/>
didn't really already know<lb/>
The New York Times reported<lb/>
the players' connection in Satur-<lb/>
day's editions. Cowboys Presi-<lb/>
dent Tex Schramm later confirm-<lb/>
ed it.<lb/>
The Dallas Times Herald<lb/>
reported Su. day federal agents<lb/>
also threatened to charge Dorsett,<lb/>
the team's star running back, with<lb/>
possession of cocaine unless he<lb/>
testified against his teammates.<lb/>
Dorsett refused to cooperate.<lb/>
Landry said he had been aware<lb/>
of cocaine use on his team<lb/>
through NFL Security last season,<lb/>
when Cowboy names were men-<lb/>
tioned in connection with con-<lb/>
victed cocaine dealer John Russell<lb/>
Webster Jr. and Elias Murback, a<lb/>
Brazilian who pleaded guilty to<lb/>
drug smuggling in Dallas.<lb/>
"It was a few days after the<lb/>
NFL championship game Lan-<lb/>
dry said. "NFL Security sent us a<lb/>
list of names. That was the begin-<lb/>
ning of the program we've<lb/>
established to take care of our<lb/>
own house. But we've known<lb/>
about this problem for some<lb/>
time<lb/>
On Wednesday, Hill and Mar-<lb/>
tin were subpoenaed by U.S. Mar-<lb/>
shall Clint Peoples to appear as<lb/>
witnesses in next month's case of<lb/>
Lauriberto Ignacio, who was in-<lb/>
dicted by a federal grand jury in<lb/>
April on charges of allegedly con-<lb/>
spiring to smuggle cocaine from<lb/>
Brazil to Texas.<lb/>
For all of Landry's efforts to<lb/>
get to the root of the possible drug<lb/>
use by his team, he had doubts<lb/>
about how much he could help.<lb/>
"Obviously you say to yourself<lb/>
that you could have done more<lb/>
he said. "If we would have been<lb/>
set up to handle it, we might have<lb/>
been able to prevent it. Hopefully<lb/>
we're now in a position in which<lb/>
we can do that.<lb/>
"Bigger people than me can't<lb/>
handle it in this country. They<lb/>
can't even keep it (cocaine) from<lb/>
coming over the border he said.<lb/>
Landry has also done his<lb/>
homework, but admits he has a<lb/>
lot to learn.<lb/>
"According to my bried educa-<lb/>
tion there are recreational users<lb/>
and then there is a group that is<lb/>
very close to being dependent on<lb/>
it. Then there are the chemical<lb/>
dependents.<lb/>
"There is nothing here that<lb/>
would make me believe that any<lb/>
of our players would need to go<lb/>
into a rehabilitation clinic for the<lb/>
28-day program he said. "But I<lb/>
don't know all of the mechanics<lb/>
of how this drug situation still<lb/>
works. I'm still learning<lb/>
It's not the first time past or<lb/>
present Cowboy players have been<lb/>
associated with drug use. Bob<lb/>
Hayes was convicted of<lb/>
distributing cocaine and spent six<lb/>
months in prison. Former<lb/>
linebacker Thomas Henderson<lb/>
admitted to having a heavy co-<lb/>
caine habit, spending up to $1,000<lb/>
a day.<lb/>
"I think the public must be<lb/>
thinking right now that there are a<lb/>
bunch of Cowboys on drugs<lb/>
Landry said. "But I don't think<lb/>
that is true. It may be the other<lb/>
players have used drugs recrea-<lb/>
tionally. But 1 don't even know<lb/>
how many of my players even<lb/>
drink beer<lb/>
Saturday. Observers feel Coe<lb/>
should concentrate on the<lb/>
800-meter event, while Ovett<lb/>
should compete in the 1500-meter<lb/>
race. That would mean that Bri-<lb/>
tain's other wold class middle-<lb/>
distance runners could take part<lb/>
in the championships.<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steeler Terry Brad-<lb/>
shaw was placed on the NFL's<lb/>
physically unable to perform list<lb/>
yesterday. Bradshaw is slow to<lb/>
recover from off-season elbow<lb/>
surgery, but can return to the ac-<lb/>
tive roster later in the season.<lb/>
Quarterback Doug Williams<lb/>
was expected to be a no-show<lb/>
when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers<lb/>
open the NFL training camp<lb/>
Thursday night.<lb/>
Williams and the Bucs are in-<lb/>
voled in a salary dispute. The star<lb/>
quarterback reportedly asked for<lb/>
$875,000 a year originally but<lb/>
lowered that figure to $600,000.<lb/>
The Bucs say they have two of-<lb/>
fers on the table, but both will be<lb/>
withdrawn if Williams doesn't<lb/>
sign and practice Friday.<lb/>
The NCAA suffered another<lb/>
setback in its bid to retain e<lb/>
elusive control over college foot-<lb/>
ball telecasts when the 10th C i:<lb/>
cuit Court of Appeals in Denve'<lb/>
refused to stay an order that void-<lb/>
ed $281.1 million in television<lb/>
contracts and would allow col<lb/>
leges to make their own deals<lb/>
Clemson Senior Jane Forman is<lb/>
off to a good start as a tennis pro<lb/>
fessional.<lb/>
In her first pro tournament,<lb/>
unseeded Forman upset eight-<lb/>
seeded Heather Ludloff, 6-4. 7-6,<lb/>
6-4, in the first round of the<lb/>
Virginia Slims S 100.000 Hall<lb/>
Fame Tournament at Newpn<lb/>
Rhode Island.<lb/>
Yaz Nearing End Of<lb/>
Spectacular Career<lb/>
Carl Yastremski, who broke in-<lb/>
to the major leagues during John<lb/>
Kennedy's first year as President,<lb/>
is currently in the midst of what<lb/>
he says will be his last season in<lb/>
baseball. At the end of the 1983<lb/>
season, "Yaz" will have played 23<lb/>
years for the Boston Red Sox,<lb/>
making his No. 8 as familiar a<lb/>
sight in Boston as The Old North<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
Yastremski began his career in<lb/>
1959 playing for Raleigh in the<lb/>
Carolina League. That year, he<lb/>
was named the league's MVP<lb/>
after batting .377 and driving in<lb/>
100 runs. Two years later,<lb/>
Yastremski was replacing Ted<lb/>
Williams in left field for the Red<lb/>
Sox.<lb/>
KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Baseball Today<lb/>
OAEY PATTERSON-ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
On The Move<lb/>
This gentleman is just one of many joggers seen around Greenville and<lb/>
the ECU campus. Most people seem to agree that jogging is certainly<lb/>
one of the top recreational activities in the summertime. If nothing<lb/>
else, running is a sure way to release all that tension from summer<lb/>
school classes.<lb/>
Even though he has announced<lb/>
that he will retire at the end of the<lb/>
1983 season, Yastremski has not<lb/>
let up in his final season. As of<lb/>
Tuesday, Yaz had hit safely in 18<lb/>
of his last 20 games and had raised<lb/>
his batting average to over .300.<lb/>
With only a little over a month<lb/>
to go before his 44th birthday,<lb/>
Yastremski ranks in the top 17 in<lb/>
11 offensive categories. When he<lb/>
plays in his 110th game of the<lb/>
1983 season, he will pass Hank<lb/>
Aaron as the all-time leader in<lb/>
games played with 3299.<lb/>
Yastremski, who was playing<lb/>
for the Red Sox before there ever<lb/>
was an American in space, is first<lb/>
among active players in games<lb/>
played, runs batted in (1788),<lb/>
total bas;s (5384), walks (1791)<lb/>
and extra-base hits (1123).<lb/>
He is second among those still<lb/>
playing in at-bats (11,608), runs<lb/>
(1778), hits (3318), doubles (622).<lb/>
home runs (442) and singles<lb/>
(2195).<lb/>
Since he replaced Williams in<lb/>
1961, Yastremski has won three<lb/>
batting championships, seven<lb/>
Gold Gloves, and was the last ma-<lb/>
jor leaguer to win the Tr<lb/>
Crown (1967). In addition.<lb/>
Yastremski is only the fourth<lb/>
player in major league historv<lb/>
with over 400 home runs and 3000<lb/>
hits.<lb/>
But it appears that after 2?<lb/>
record-breaking years in a Red<lb/>
Sox uniform, a Boston landmark<lb/>
will soon be gone. In anticipation<lb/>
of this historic happening.<lb/>
Boston's last game of the year<lb/>
Oct. 2nd against Cleveland ? has<lb/>
already been sold out.<lb/>
Gaylord Perry returned to the<lb/>
major leagues after a bi<lb/>
absence Monday night, but<lb/>
return was spoiled by fhe Toronro<lb/>
Blue Jays, who defeated Perry<lb/>
and the Kansas City Royals 7-4.<lb/>
Perry, who was released by the<lb/>
Seattle Mariners shortly before<lb/>
the All-Star break, pitched six in-<lb/>
nings, giving up eight hits and two<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
Kansas City manager Dick<lb/>
Howser said he hoped Perry pit-<lb/>
ches as well as he pitched Mondav<lb/>
night the rest of the season.<lb/>
Howser said Perry pitched better<lb/>
than expected.<lb/>
Major league umpire Joe West<lb/>
wore the shoe on the other foot<lb/>
last week after shoving Atlanta<lb/>
manager Joe Torre on June 28.<lb/>
West was suspended for three<lb/>
days and fined $500 by NL Presi-<lb/>
dent Chub Feeney.<lb/>
Many managers have been fin-<lb/>
ed for pushing umpires, but this is<lb/>
the first time in major league<lb/>
history that an umpire has been<lb/>
fined for shoving a manager.<lb/>
This week's trivia question:<lb/>
Which major league player has<lb/>
been playing the same position for<lb/>
the same team longer than anyone<lb/>
else (excluding pitchers)?<lb/>
Answer to last week's question:<lb/>
California catcher Bob Boone led<lb/>
the majors in 1982 in percentage<lb/>
of opponents caught stealing.<lb/>
Tourney Begins Thursday<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Golf Registration Continues<lb/>
Registration for the Intramural<lb/>
Golf Classic continues through<lb/>
the day of the event, which is<lb/>
Thursday, July 14. The Classic<lb/>
will be held at the Ayden Golf<lb/>
Course. All participants should be<lb/>
sure to return their scorecards to<lb/>
the Intramurals-recreation office<lb/>
by Friday, July 15, at 2 p.m.<lb/>
For<lb/>
Tennis Players 'Matched<lb/>
Tournament Action<lb/>
Five participants will enter into<lb/>
Pthe single elimination tennis tour-<lb/>
 , M nament after completing the<lb/>
? ?-???? .jl ? .fliijSij I season Monday. Finals actions is<lb/>
Z0n&amp;?' , jJmttM?A W! I se! to finish Monda Juy 25<lb/>
oary patteesoh ecu PMi uk Favorites in this single elimination<lb/>
These ECU students pass the summer hours by engaging In a friendly game of four-on-four on the asphalt event look to be Raymond Song<lb/>
courts beside Belli Dorm. and Ray McKeithan, who both<lb/>
sport winning records.<lb/>
'Swinging' Single Tourney Starts<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
The single elimination softball<lb/>
tournament get underway today<lb/>
as seven teams will be vying for<lb/>
the title. This hard-hitting action<lb/>
is set to begin at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
tongiht, with semi-final action<lb/>
Monday, July 18 and finals<lb/>
Wednesday, July 20 at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Favorites at bat look to be Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Phi and the Field Generals.<lb/>
Co-Rec Volleyball Season Win-<lb/>
ding Down<lb/>
Six strong volleyball teams will<lb/>
Finish up season play next week.<lb/>
Play-offs are set to begin Thurs-<lb/>
day, July 21. Tournament play<lb/>
should prove to be exciting, as all<lb/>
teams sports skill and enthusiasm.<lb/>
Aerobic Fitness Classes<lb/>
Two aerobic fitness classes will<lb/>
be held in Memorial Gym dance<lb/>
room beginning, Monday, August<lb/>
1, and ending Thursday, Sept. 1.<lb/>
The classes are scheduled to meet<lb/>
Monday through Friday from<lb/>
5:15 to 6:15 p.m and Tuesday<lb/>
through Thursday at the same<lb/>
time. The cost will be $8.00 for<lb/>
the session. Registration will be<lb/>
Monday, Aug. 1 and Tuesday,<lb/>
Aug. 2, in Memorial Gym, room<lb/>
204, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
The instructor will be Lucy<lb/>
Mauger.<lb/>
-?.???.? ??? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0009"/><lb/>
?.<lb/>
8 THE fast CAROLINIAN JULY 13. 1903<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
TYPING TERM PAPERS.<lb/>
ESSAYS and RESUMES. IBM<lb/>
SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER<lb/>
,?? CAMERA READY<lb/>
RESUME SERVICE Call<lb/>
MIKE at 7$2 n4.<lb/>
ACADEMIC AND PROPES<lb/>
SIONAL TYPING. IBM Selec<lb/>
trie III ?? Bloodworth<lb/>
7S?-7?'?<lb/>
I NEED A TUTOR Hr Ad<lb/>
m.m?tr?liv? Law Coure Call<lb/>
7S2-4SA ?nv?il"? .<lb/>
YOU'RE NOT REALLY<lb/>
STUPID! Youe tu?t having a<lb/>
little trouble learning Spanish!<lb/>
Call me; I can help. Tutarina;<lb/>
available for all levels. A?h for<lb/>
Karri. 757-MSS.<lb/>
LABRADOR RETRIEVCR<lb/>
PUPPIES. AKC. Black. Sire<lb/>
chocolate with large broadfcead<lb/>
Oamt yellow. Vat. eKam and<lb/>
wormed, sm male, $IM<lb/>
female. Chris Smith. Beech<lb/>
Bay Kennel. TtS-fias<lb/>
HELPWANTED: The AeroO<lb/>
Workshop is accepting applica-<lb/>
tions tor instructors. No ex-<lb/>
perience necessary. We ??'<lb/>
train. Apply l:M p.m. 7.M P m.<lb/>
Mon Fri. 417 Evans Street mall.<lb/>
Downtown. 7S7-140B. <lb/>
LAITARES EWELIRS<lb/>
BT H.CHIO 1911<lb/>
HIE N C<lb/>
j&amp;anfjricel fmmkm<lb/>
n<lb/>
Dm Pi 1JIJ1<lb/>
Remnants<lb/>
Custom Design<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
All H ork Done On Premises I<lb/>
ANNOUNCING ? . ?<lb/>
SATURDAY OFFICE<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
For your convenience wc will be open<lb/>
tor examination and optical services<lb/>
every Saturdav from 9:00 a.m. to 100<lb/>
p.m' Affordable fees, quick, accurate<lb/>
sen, ice. Convenient Hoar. Seeing is<lb/>
BrtteHng dr. pETCR W. HOLUS<lb/>
?1? CAME QEHfEK<lb/>
O.O 9.A.<lb/>
TlPI MMPKX :?8 3B??NV'lLi BLVO<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
$<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Complete Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglass Or Contact Lens<lb/>
Fitting<lb/>
Must Be Presented At<lb/>
TtnteOtOrda<lb/>
Other Discounts Or Coupons<lb/>
Do Nol Apply<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
St9s.pt prianary Test.<lb/>
Centre, and PraMaes<lb/>
,?re?e?cy CevneeHne, Per<lb/>
turtr -Mermatn call<lb/>
I3i4i? (Tan f-roe Mweaoor<lb/>
M?-Hi-MM) Between ? A.M.<lb/>
and P.M. Wee.<lb/>
? ALEIOMS WOMEN $<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
01T Wast A rg??? $t.<lb/>
iaMaj<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN A?oeriON:acjtfricuttdeo<lb/>
DEPEND ON. Bum?saftmuJumatmtH<lb/>
I he women of the r leming Center. Com ttetors are<lb/>
available aav and night to support and under-<lb/>
stand you Your safety, exxrtfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured by the caring star? of the Roming Center<lb/>
SEWICES. ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1 st ft. 2nd Trimester Abortion, up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Ptegnancy Tests ? All Inclusive Fees ? Insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CAU 711-5550 DAY Ot MIGHT ?<lb/>
Healthcare.coureelmg W FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
and education for wo-<lb/>
rrncjalioaes<lb/>
Motol RimMrss<lb/>
Frames<lb/>
with Simjtt Vision<lb/>
Lenses<lb/>
$44S<lb/>
?7S.M<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
GLASS OR<lb/>
PLASTIC<lb/>
LENSES IN<lb/>
ANY USABLE<lb/>
PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
USDA Choiea Baa Rotw  hoU<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
 (choice) V<lb/>
(Tints E?tr?) (No Other Coupons Applicable.<lb/>
THIS AD MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER<lb/>
(OFFER 0OO0 THRU Mr1.1?3<lb/>
ORECMVH.LE STORE ONLY<lb/>
3?<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
H$ PajtiloN Commons<lb/>
Across From Ooetors fort<lb/>
I OBonlAM-VJIPNIIon-Frl<lb/>
Iae?hBrr;p?o,0?p?vH0o?iee?. J<lb/>
r<lb/>
CALLUS<lb/>
r<lb/>
drTTNTHR<lb/>
Of YOU<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, July 16,1983<lb/>
10-12 Lb. Average<lb/>
Slieed FREE<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round - Bottom<lb/>
Round<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
?<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE.<lb/>
USDA Choiet Family Pick<lb/>
Cube<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
<lb/>
Seedless<lb/>
Thompson<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
$2?9<lb/>
1Liter - Mm I CbbbIW Bareaaa. Vis Reel I Pkf. ef 12 - 1 Oi. NR BoHlet<lb/>
' RsiM Plak Ckabiit U. Chiesiti. Saaaria<lb/>
Carlo<lb/>
Rossi<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
fk. of 12 12 0z. Can<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
Pkf. of 11 12 Oz. Caat<lb/>
Stroh's Beer<lb/>
2 War<lb/>
n<lb/>
22 Ounea<lb/>
laihy Pay ?1.39<lb/>
T"<lb/>
i.soi.it.eiiMiitMt.uoii<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Of The<lb/>
Sea<lb/>
?ky Pay 1.09<lb/>
Oairt<lb/>
Way Pay M.19<lb/>
119 Sweats laro,a Roll<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
Why Pay 87'<lb/>
Le<lb/>
twaooovouxi<lb/>
 1b?W<lb/>
389<lb/>
<lb/>
HalKa.<lb/>
14 Oz. - Cfcs?M? BaafLWar I Basf - Pag Foot<lb/>
Kal Kan<lb/>
4 Lb. - letltat Lita<lb/>
Embers Charcoal<lb/>
399<lb/>
489.<lb/>
4.S Oz. - LivorKieaoy Noerty Stae - Cat Fooi<lb/>
Vienna Sausage EH Purina 100<lb/>
39.<lb/>
S Oi. - UUf'<lb/>
IUf.1T MHSS? TZSP iSEBBBr. t t IT!<lb/>
Pork &amp; BeansA N? Toilet Tissue<lb/>
Margarine Quarters<lb/>
Hall Sail - Malta Haai.<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
k4i<lb/>
 V<lb/>
? !?<lb/>
3V1<lb/>
10 Ounce<lb/>
Jeno's<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Wny Pay ;1 29<lb/>
i'3&amp;i<lb/>
Del Monte Irif<lb/>
jr-UeL?<lb/>
u ?' g? so on r<lb/>
Liauid <lb/>
ran<lb/>
k<lb/>
rt. .?<lb/>
rVS Ps, i n<lb/>
f<lb/>
-w ? i?ewajiieejBi?aiO)a?iew<lb/>
?eijw HUBSI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057564_0010"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>