<?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="00057572_0001"/>
?he SaHt Carolinian<lb/>
A<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No<lb/>
Friday, September 9, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
PIRG Funding Plan Axed<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
Politicalormpo?nl<lb/>
A recent letter to Vice<lb/>
Chancellor of Student Life Elmer<lb/>
Meyer from UNC system Presi-<lb/>
ent William Friday's office has<lb/>
abeled the funding mechanism<lb/>
ought by the organizers of a<lb/>
ublic Interest Research Group<lb/>
ii campus inconsi.ttnt with state<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
The fee method in question<lb/>
uould have all students pay $2 or<lb/>
S4 to the organization. Students<lb/>
not wanting to contribute to<lb/>
PIRG would then have the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to get a refund. PIRG<lb/>
organizer Jay Stone sr'd he still<lb/>
plans to work toward this<lb/>
"negative check-off" system<lb/>
while trying to install the PIRG at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Efforts to start a PIRG on cam-<lb/>
pus began after Ralph Nader, a<lb/>
consumer activist and one of the<lb/>
group's founders, visited ECU<lb/>
last spring. PIRGs work in<lb/>
various ways to influence public College Republicans, feels the let-<lb/>
policy, such as printing pamphlets ter will definitely sway undecided<lb/>
on bike trails in town or testing<lb/>
chemical company wastes for il-<lb/>
legal toxins.<lb/>
For the group to be established<lb/>
on campus under the negative<lb/>
check-off system, the SGA<lb/>
Legislature must first approve<lb/>
holding a campus-wide referen-<lb/>
dum. The referendum must then<lb/>
be passed by the students in the<lb/>
manner proscribed by the SGA. If<lb/>
this is accomplished, the<lb/>
chancellor will consider the matter<lb/>
and decide if the measure should<lb/>
be brought to the attention of the<lb/>
Board of Governors. The Board<lb/>
then has the right to approve or<lb/>
legislators when the measure is<lb/>
voted on sometime in October.<lb/>
Stone, however, feels the group<lb/>
will get over the SGA hurdle by<lb/>
having PIRG supporters run for<lb/>
Freedom's Defense, a paper put<lb/>
out on campus by members of the<lb/>
N.C. College Republicans, ran a<lb/>
story calling for the defeat of<lb/>
PIRG at ECU. One of the<lb/>
author's, Juliet Sadd from Duke,<lb/>
main arguments against the<lb/>
? o ? -??-? ?"?yy?-? ?? - -?? v? ilium uig,umviivj ?? ??<lb/>
seats in the Legislature. He plans research group was the funding<lb/>
on countering Kilcoyne and com<lb/>
pany's argument by pointing out<lb/>
the benefits of PIRG to students.<lb/>
The funding mechanism, he<lb/>
points out, would be the same<lb/>
type as that of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian or The Buccaneer, except a<lb/>
refund would be available.<lb/>
Stone's main argument is that<lb/>
the Board of Governors have no<lb/>
legal right to deny ECU a PIRG if<lb/>
disapprove the group and its fun- the students have democratically<lb/>
ding method<lb/>
With the Board of Governors'<lb/>
indication that they would not ap-<lb/>
prove a PIRG in this form, op-<lb/>
position to the PIRG is sure the<lb/>
fight will be over in the SGA.<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne. chairman of the<lb/>
chosen to have one, regardless of<lb/>
the type of funding mechanism.<lb/>
Stone said he doesn't plan on<lb/>
compromising the wordingof the<lb/>
referendum unless it is absolutely<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
Thursday's edition of<lb/>
No Exceptions Made<lb/>
Student Claims Fees<lb/>
Unfair<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
f?( tutor<lb/>
An ECU graduate student<lb/>
enrolled in an independent study<lb/>
course this fall claims she was<lb/>
discriminated against because she<lb/>
was required to pay a $28.50 stu-<lb/>
dent activity fee.<lb/>
Donna Guarino. a home<lb/>
economics education graduate<lb/>
student living in Wilmington.<lb/>
N.C, is enrolled in a course that<lb/>
does not require her to be on cam-<lb/>
pus on a regular basis.<lb/>
When she paid her fee, Guarino<lb/>
wab charged $103 tuition for the<lb/>
3-hour course, an Sfc.SO health<lb/>
services fee and S28.50 in "other<lb/>
university fees After inquiring,<lb/>
Guarino said she was told by ECU<lb/>
Business Manager Julian<lb/>
Vainnght, that the $28.50 charge<lb/>
is used to provide students with<lb/>
free tickets to football games, free<lb/>
movies in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, "upkeep of the campus"<lb/>
and a transportation system.<lb/>
Vainright told her the fee is man-<lb/>
datory for all ECU students.<lb/>
"I don't think I should have to<lb/>
pay Guarino told The East<lb/>
Carolinian. "I'm not even going<lb/>
to be on campus this semester.<lb/>
There's no way I would drive 125<lb/>
miles to see a free movie<lb/>
Vainwright told Guarino that<lb/>
similar fees are charged to<lb/>
students at other universities and<lb/>
he thought the policy was fair.<lb/>
Guarino disagreed. "I'm not go-<lb/>
ing to be able to use the stuff I'm<lb/>
paying for Guarino said.<lb/>
Guarino, who works full-time<lb/>
as a school teacher, said she also<lb/>
objects to the student health ser-<lb/>
vices fee because her job offers<lb/>
her complete medical insurance<lb/>
coverage. "If 1 got sick 1 would go<lb/>
to the hospital Guarino said. "I<lb/>
wouldn't go to the infirmary<lb/>
ECU Vice-Chancellor for<lb/>
Business Affairs C. G. Moore said<lb/>
that "all students, part-time or<lb/>
full-time" are required to pay stu-<lb/>
dent fees. He said it didn't matter<lb/>
it the student lives on or off cam-<lb/>
pus or out of town, they are still<lb/>
required to pay the fees.<lb/>
Moore said allowing students to<lb/>
selectively pay their fees would<lb/>
result in an administrative burden<lb/>
for the university. "It's just not<lb/>
practical, it would take too long<lb/>
to collect student fees if each one<lb/>
could pick and choose Moore<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Moore noted that the student<lb/>
fees are used in part for "debt ser-<lb/>
vices" on campus buildings. He<lb/>
mentioned Minges Coliseum and<lb/>
Ficklen football stadium as two<lb/>
buildings still in debt. Moore said<lb/>
the fees are also used to fund the<lb/>
Student Government Association,<lb/>
the transit system, the campus<lb/>
media and athletics.<lb/>
Moore said 30 percent of the<lb/>
student activity fee goes into the a<lb/>
general fund to support ECU<lb/>
athletic programs.<lb/>
According to Moore the student<lb/>
acivity fee is based on a sliding<lb/>
scale. Guarino's charge was the<lb/>
lowest fee on that scale. A student<lb/>
attending classes full-time is re-<lb/>
quired to pay a fee of $113.50.<lb/>
Nine hours is considered full-time<lb/>
for graduate students.<lb/>
Moore said student fees were<lb/>
necessary and that serious con-<lb/>
sideration has never been given to<lb/>
the possibility of waving the fee<lb/>
and not issuing the student an ac-<lb/>
tivity card. "Operationally its just<lb/>
not very practical Moore said<lb/>
adding that it would be impossible<lb/>
to accurately determine If students<lb/>
were or were not using free cam-<lb/>
pus services.<lb/>
method. He quoted Thomas Jef<lb/>
ferson; "to compel a man to fur-<lb/>
nish funds for the propagation of<lb/>
ideas he disbelieves and abhors is<lb/>
sinful and tyrannical<lb/>
A former PIRG organizer<lb/>
working for Ralph Nader's<lb/>
organization in Washington,<lb/>
D.C doesn't share Stone's<lb/>
rigidityt on the funding issue.<lb/>
John Richard said getting an ef-<lb/>
fective PIRG organization started<lb/>
is more important than<lb/>
establishing specific funding.<lb/>
Richard feels funding through<lb/>
the SGA would be acceptable.<lb/>
The letter from the UNC system<lb/>
office mentioned the SGA fun-<lb/>
ding method as acceptable. SGA<lb/>
regulations forbid funding a<lb/>
politically oriented group. Kil-<lb/>
coyne defines PIRG as a political<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Stone is considering legal action<lb/>
if the Board does deny PIRG fun-<lb/>
ding.<lb/>
Pictured is the anchor of the USS Monitor which was recovered by<lb/>
ECU divers and scientists. One of the directors of the recovery<lb/>
operations, Dr. Gordon Watts, is standing to the right of the an-<lb/>
chor.<lb/>
?I<lb/>
ECU Underwater Researchers<lb/>
) Studv Vessels With Grant<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Suff W rtter<lb/>
The Maritime Preservation<lb/>
Grants Program of the National<lb/>
Trust for Historic Preservation<lb/>
has awarded a $1,500 grant to<lb/>
ECU's Maritime History and<lb/>
Underwatei Research program.<lb/>
The grant is to be used by the<lb/>
graduate program to conduct an<lb/>
underwater archaeological survey<lb/>
of two eighteenth century vessels<lb/>
located in the vicinity of<lb/>
Blossom's Ferry on the Northeast<lb/>
Cape Fear River near Wilm-<lb/>
ington, N.C. Four students will<lb/>
ferry service on the Northeast<lb/>
Cape Fear existed with virtually<lb/>
no interruption from around 1733<lb/>
to the establishment of a perma-<lb/>
nent bridge there in 1925.<lb/>
In October, 1981, Watts and<lb/>
graduate students from the ECU<lb/>
program conducted a two-day<lb/>
preliminary reconnaissance of the<lb/>
area to confirm the existence of a<lb/>
wreck at the site. After relocating<lb/>
the first vcwt confirmed in July.<lb/>
1981. the ECU te?n located m mm-<lb/>
cond previously unknown vessel.<lb/>
The fragile but well-preserved<lb/>
hulls of both ferries were found<lb/>
resting upright on the Castle<lb/>
piticipate. in the four-week pro- Hayne marTriver bouorn<lb/>
it scheduled from September<lb/>
12 to October 12, under the direc-<lb/>
tion of Gordon P. Watts, director<lb/>
of underwater research for the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The Blossom's Ferry vessels are<lb/>
the first such craft to be located<lb/>
and scientifically investigated, ac-<lb/>
cording to Watts<lb/>
Differences in the design and<lb/>
construction of the two rec-<lb/>
tangular vessels, each about<lb/>
35-feet long and 11-feet wide, in-<lb/>
dicate that the two vessels were<lb/>
probably constructed during dif-<lb/>
ferent periods. While one may<lb/>
have been built as early as 1750,<lb/>
the other may have been built<lb/>
linK lO vau  ,r j io-?c<lb/>
The staff and students of the later, between 1775 and 1825.<lb/>
FCU Program in Maritime For over 200 years, ferry service<lb/>
History and Underwater Research provided instrumental links in the<lb/>
ECGC Begins Seventh Year<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Sen Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Com-<lb/>
munity (ECGC) will kick off its<lb/>
seventh year of service to hCU s<lb/>
gay students with a September<lb/>
19th planning meeting to be<lb/>
followed by a social.<lb/>
According to ECGC president<lb/>
Gary Faircloth, the groups of-<lb/>
ficers have already met for an ex-<lb/>
ecutive planning meeting to<lb/>
discuss some of the plans for this<lb/>
years agenda.<lb/>
"Our primary function, accor-<lb/>
ding to our constitution, is as a<lb/>
support group for students with<lb/>
lifestvles Faircloth community and an atmosphere of<lb/>
alternative<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Faircloth, an ECU drama stu-<lb/>
dent, said the ECGC was also<lb/>
committed to "clearing up some<lb/>
of the myths regarding homosex-<lb/>
uality" and more accurately in-<lb/>
forming people about the<lb/>
have been pursuing research<lb/>
associated with the Blossom's<lb/>
Ferry wrecks for the past two<lb/>
years Watts said. "The two<lb/>
vessels located at the Northeast<lb/>
Cape Fear River site are of con-<lb/>
siderable historical significance,<lb/>
understanding between people of as they preserve concrete infonna-<lb/>
different affectational orienta<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Faircloth said that many new<lb/>
gay students come to ECU from<lb/>
small towns and have never been<lb/>
exposed to gay lifestyles. The<lb/>
tion about the design and con<lb/>
struction of early ferries<lb/>
Historical records indicate that<lb/>
network of American transporta-<lb/>
tion, particularly in North<lb/>
Carolina with its extensive inland<lb/>
waterways.<lb/>
Until the late 1800s, such<lb/>
vessels (simple scows, flats, and<lb/>
flat-bottomed boats) facilitated<lb/>
communication, travel and trade<lb/>
over the waterways and along the<lb/>
poorly developed roadways in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Considerable documentary<lb/>
evidence concerning the licensing<lb/>
and regulating of ferries survives;<lb/>
however, references concerning<lb/>
the architectural and construction<lb/>
details of the various types of fer-<lb/>
ries used during the colonial and<lb/>
federal periods of American<lb/>
history arc vague.<lb/>
"Continued investigation of the<lb/>
Blossom's Ferry wrecks v. ill pro<lb/>
vide historian with insight into<lb/>
transportation that is not preserv-<lb/>
ed in archival sources Watts<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The ECU group will utilize<lb/>
"black water" surveying techni-<lb/>
ques and closed-circuit television<lb/>
to document the two vessels. Ad-<lb/>
jacent land areas will be examined<lb/>
for evidence of docking structures<lb/>
or landings.<lb/>
A modified mechanized landing<lb/>
craft called Murphy Base will<lb/>
serve as a research platform, and<lb/>
a 25-foot Privateer will operate as<lb/>
a survey vessel during the project.<lb/>
Data will be collected, and ar-<lb/>
tifacts and other material in and<lb/>
around both ferries will be analyz-<lb/>
ed, catalogued and preserved for<lb/>
public display.<lb/>
The Blossom's Ferry project is<lb/>
the first of two projects scheduled<lb/>
for the fall semester by the ECU<lb/>
program. In October, students in<lb/>
the program will be working in<lb/>
conjunction with the Bermuda<lb/>
Maritime Museum.<lb/>
iESr J-S??<lb/>
women.<lb/>
"The East Carolina Gay Com-<lb/>
munity is working to break the cy-<lb/>
cle to eradicate the misconcep-<lb/>
tions and to eliminate the need for<lb/>
hiding states an ECGC infor<lb/>
go more smoothly for these in-<lb/>
dividuals, Faircloth added.<lb/>
The ECGC brochure quotes a<lb/>
Kinsey Institute for Sex Research<lb/>
estimate that there 20 million gay<lb/>
adults living in the U.S yet only<lb/>
Historic? icwiw? ?? <lb/>
North Carolina Student Legislature<lb/>
Contributes Ideas To Lawmcikm<lb/>
mational brochure. "The ECGC one-percent of these people are<lb/>
promotes a sense of self-<lb/>
awareness from within the gay<lb/>
See GAY, Page 6<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
AuistMt New Editor<lb/>
Founded in 1937, ECU's North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legislature is<lb/>
the oldest active student<lb/>
legislature in the country.<lb/>
The NCSL gives students the<lb/>
opportunity to learn about the<lb/>
legislative process and practical<lb/>
problems affecting state govern<lb/>
nor, compiled into a compendium<lb/>
and presented to the General<lb/>
Assembly and state leaders for<lb/>
their consideration.<lb/>
"Forty-seven percent ot legisla-<lb/>
tion we've passed in annual ses-<lb/>
sion has become law in North<lb/>
Carolina, Shelly said.<lb/>
Past issues addressed by the<lb/>
NCSL include child custody, ERA<lb/>
problems a?7h . and public education. This year<lb/>
ment. Currently, there are J i coi nu f , , ? m pr0pose a<lb/>
ieges and universes parucpaung .he ECU dg? '??<lb/>
in the NCbL.<lb/>
ECU student Kirk Shelley, the<lb/>
NCSL district chairperson, said<lb/>
each campus' delegation may<lb/>
write bills and resolutions for<lb/>
presentation and debate<lb/>
throughout the academic year.<lb/>
Once a month, the 31 delegations<lb/>
meet for an "interium council<lb/>
pass on a sexually transmitted<lb/>
diesease.<lb/>
Shelley said the organization is<lb/>
non-partisan; members range<lb/>
from conservative to Marxist.<lb/>
Joining the NCSL "is a good<lb/>
way to learn about issues that are<lb/>
affecting the state of North<lb/>
Carolina Shelley said. "We do<lb/>
make a difference<lb/>
Members of the organization<lb/>
must be full-time undergraduate<lb/>
students and maintain a 2.0<lb/>
overall grade point average.<lb/>
ECU Freshman Raped<lb/>
By GLENN MAUGHAN<lb/>
S?IWit?<lb/>
was used in the attack, but the vic-<lb/>
tim was told to cooperate or she<lb/>
No More Beer<lb/>
w -i? . fllft A new Uw iocs Into effect Oct 1,raising the legal<lb/>
A 17 year-old ECU freshman would be killed. After the attack,<lb/>
'Sntenum council was sexually assualted early Satur- she walked to Darryrs Restaurant<lb/>
m!Ct ? H,ha?e resoTut'ons and day morning in the vicinity of where she was aided in contacting<lb/>
where they debate resolutions ana -?? w fm<lb/>
hear speeches. Capt ,onn Brjieyt acting minor injuries and released from<lb/>
m March the NCSL holds its Greenville chief of police said the Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
In March ?? ?. . walking alone at ap- The victim told police she could<lb/>
annuaj session wMAfawtupgw SSmS 12:45 a.m. when the not see her attacker but believes<lb/>
2?Sto-?ffi SSolk place. The victim was hetassaUant left.on foot Briley<lb/>
SWi ow ranitolbuildina tabbed from behind and the said no one is believed to have<lb/>
at SnelSy 2fWl3i"li? ESS covered the victim's face witnessed the,crime ?d police<lb/>
rJses bothhouses at the session, during the assault. have no description of the at-<lb/>
uTsed b? the student gover- According to police, no weapon tacker.<lb/>
<lb/>
'? lmii)nilwlili)?.r T ??-<lb/>
?. <lb/>
MHNMMMMMi<lb/>
" ' ' ???' ? ? ? o ? <lb/>
;ft<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0002"/><lb/>
IHB EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SPETEMBER9. 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Marine<lb/>
FREEWILL<lb/>
BAPTIST<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
All students are Invited to the<lb/>
organizational meeting of the<lb/>
Free Will Baptist Fellowship on<lb/>
Montis September 12. 7p m at<lb/>
First PWB Church. 2600 S<lb/>
Charles St If anyone needs a<lb/>
ride, call Harry Grubbs at<lb/>
756 6600 or 756 8585<lb/>
ELECTRIC<lb/>
UNBOW<lb/>
RADIO SHOW<lb/>
The Electric Rainbow Radio<lb/>
Show is back Keith Mitchell<lb/>
hosts the notorious radio-active<lb/>
heavy metal show each weekend<lb/>
on WZMB Friday night it kicks<lb/>
oft at 12 midnight and continues<lb/>
until 4am Saturday night the<lb/>
rockets begin firing at 2 a m<lb/>
and the bombardment continues<lb/>
until 6 in the morning This week<lb/>
album specials are to be an<lb/>
nounced<lb/>
RUSH PHI<lb/>
KAPPATAU<lb/>
The Brothers and Little<lb/>
Sisters of Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Fraternity Invite all ECU<lb/>
students to rush this week at 409<lb/>
Eiiiabeth Street For a ride or<lb/>
more information call 752 4379<lb/>
SIGMA TAU<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
We would like to thank<lb/>
everyone for making our first<lb/>
two nights of rush a success<lb/>
Hooe to see you agam tonight at<lb/>
9pm 7570127<lb/>
SACK THE<lb/>
PACK<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma would like<lb/>
?c invite everyone at ECU to at<lb/>
tend an open house party on Fri<lb/>
day Sept 9 at 4 p m Bus<lb/>
transportation win be provided<lb/>
from the dorms For iptorma<lb/>
tion call 757 0127<lb/>
2ETA PHI<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
Th? Lambda Mu Chapter of<lb/>
7a Ph. Beta Soror.ty inc an<lb/>
"vounces 'ts Fall Formal Rush to<lb/>
fee held on Septemner 12 1983 at<lb/>
' 30 pm in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
located or the lower level of<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
PREPROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ALLIANCE<lb/>
"he PreproteSsionai Health<lb/>
a I ance, an organization con<lb/>
s sting ot minority students in<lb/>
health related careers wishes tc<lb/>
? nvite all interested students to<lb/>
its first meeting of the fall<lb/>
semester on Thursday, Sept 8<lb/>
?t 5 30 p m in the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Cultural Center<lb/>
"he guest speaker will be Vs<lb/>
Etsel Mason D.rector of<lb/>
Volunteer Services at Pitt<lb/>
Vemoriai Hospital<lb/>
AMERICAN<lb/>
MARKETING<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a Get<lb/>
Together" at the Gazebo<lb/>
(behind Rawli on Friday, Sept<lb/>
9 19C3 It will begin at 3p m and<lb/>
last until 6 p m There will be<lb/>
tree hot dogs, beverages (ID.<lb/>
required music and friendly<lb/>
people All marketing students<lb/>
ano facultv are welcome<lb/>
FAST FOR<lb/>
LIFE<lb/>
As the FAST FOR LIFE<lb/>
enters into its 6th week, a group<lb/>
of ECU students and Greenville<lb/>
residents continues their Sat.<lb/>
morning vigils in support of the<lb/>
tasters<lb/>
We are trying to draw atten<lb/>
tion to the fast in the hopes of<lb/>
saving their lives They have<lb/>
vowed to drink only water until<lb/>
there is a "BREAK IN THE<lb/>
MOMENTUM OF THE<lb/>
NUCLEAR ARMS RACE "<lb/>
Please join us at the 10th St<lb/>
Post Office at 11 00 am for a<lb/>
one hour vigil For more info<lb/>
call 758 4906 PEACE<lb/>
I.V.C.F.<lb/>
inter varsity would like to in<lb/>
vite you to learn more about us.<lb/>
For info on our prayer groups<lb/>
and bible studies, contact Steve<lb/>
at 752 8776 or 752 1341<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug Pro-<lb/>
gram on Tuesday, Sept 13, at 4<lb/>
p m m room 210 Erwin Hall.<lb/>
CADP is a student operated ser<lb/>
vice if you wish to become in<lb/>
volved as a member of CADP<lb/>
and help us promote responsible<lb/>
decisions regarding chemical<lb/>
use, please attend this meeting<lb/>
All interested persons are in<lb/>
vited<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
There will be a covered dish<lb/>
dinner on Monday, September 12<lb/>
at 6 p.m. in Speight 202 We'll<lb/>
have dinner, a short meeting,<lb/>
and we'll clean up the library<lb/>
Members please attend We<lb/>
need your input! Call Trina Har<lb/>
rison at 758 8552 and let us know<lb/>
what you're bringing tor dinner<lb/>
if you plan to be active m Psi<lb/>
Chi this year, please come by<lb/>
the Psi Chi library and fill out a<lb/>
locator card If you would like to<lb/>
volunteer to work in the Psi Chi<lb/>
library this semester, call Sandy<lb/>
Register at 355 6794 or Trina<lb/>
Harrison at 758 8552, or come by<lb/>
the library in Speight 202 If you<lb/>
have not picked up your<lb/>
membership certificates yet,<lb/>
you may do so by coming by the<lb/>
Psi Chi library<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Come out to see why you<lb/>
should be a member of the best<lb/>
fraternity on campus The Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi fraternity has a lot to<lb/>
offer you intramurals<lb/>
Brotherhood, social lite, party<lb/>
ing and women are lust a few<lb/>
things offered Come out and<lb/>
party with the Pi Kapps by the<lb/>
lake and find out why we are the<lb/>
Best fraternity on campus For<lb/>
rides and more information call<lb/>
'56 3540 The Miller Pi Kapp<lb/>
Beach Music Festival iscommg<lb/>
Sept 18 Get your tickets while<lb/>
you can!<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
ALPHA PSI<lb/>
An informal smoker will be<lb/>
held for all interested men on<lb/>
September 13, 1983 at 8 30 p m<lb/>
in the Coffee House located on<lb/>
the lower level of Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be an organiza<lb/>
tional meeting on Thursday,<lb/>
Sept 5 at 5 p.m. in room 212<lb/>
Mendenhali All members are<lb/>
urged to attend to discuss future<lb/>
plans for the club<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
When a ball dreams it dreams<lb/>
it's a frisbee Come play<lb/>
ultimate, bottom of College Hill<lb/>
every Tues , Thurs and Sun. at<lb/>
5 30<lb/>
ALBERT LONG<lb/>
IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
That's right ? Albert Long ?<lb/>
the second and last athlete in the<lb/>
University of North Carolina's<lb/>
history to letter in tour sports<lb/>
ifootball basketball, baseball<lb/>
and track) will be speaking at<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial United<lb/>
Methodist Church, September<lb/>
11 14? Sunday through Wednes<lb/>
day ? every night at 730 p.m.<lb/>
in definitely a modern day ap<lb/>
proach, Albert talks, not<lb/>
preaches, about Jesus and the<lb/>
Bible in relation to apathy, self<lb/>
centeredness, sex, peer<lb/>
pressure, hypocrisy, alcohol and<lb/>
drugs Albert Long is a dynamic<lb/>
and motivating person you can<lb/>
not afford to miss Albert Long,<lb/>
nightly at 7 30. September 1114<lb/>
at Jarvis Church near campus<lb/>
UGLY MAN<lb/>
ON CAMPUS<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
cepted tor the 3rd annual Ugly<lb/>
Man on Campus contest Hurry<lb/>
and get your entry in now. For<lb/>
more information can the AOII<lb/>
house 757 0769<lb/>
POLITICS<lb/>
interested in learning how the<lb/>
political system works while ac<lb/>
ting as a voice for North<lb/>
Carolina's students? Join the<lb/>
North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature, a non partisan<lb/>
educational opportunity NCSL,<lb/>
we make a difference<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
The Sign Language Club will<lb/>
have an organizational meeting<lb/>
Monday, Sept. 12, at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
room 221 in Mendenhali There<lb/>
will be a covered dish dinner<lb/>
preceding the meeting starting<lb/>
at 5 p m Please come if you are<lb/>
interested in sign language Ot<lb/>
ficers will be elected at this<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
Current Honors students and<lb/>
all faculty are reminded of the<lb/>
opportunity to propose Honors<lb/>
Seminars for spring 1984 See<lb/>
pp 87 88 of the catalogue for<lb/>
categories Seminars are ideally<lb/>
generahst. inter disciplinary,<lb/>
and team taught<lb/>
To be considered proposals<lb/>
must be submitted m writing to<lb/>
Dr David Sauders. Coordinator<lb/>
of the Honors Program, c, o<lb/>
English Department For fur<lb/>
ther details, call 6373<lb/>
COOP JOBS<lb/>
USDA APHIS In Goldsboro<lb/>
NC and Miami. FL has a co op<lb/>
opening for a Plant Protection<lb/>
Quarantine Aide Trainee Will<lb/>
direct survey crews looking tor<lb/>
gypsy moths, wtch weed, and<lb/>
imported fire ants, applying<lb/>
control and regulatory<lb/>
measures Students who are<lb/>
sophomores or iumors maiormg<lb/>
m Biology. Entomology, or<lb/>
Botany are urged to apply The<lb/>
position will be available begin<lb/>
ning Spring 19S4. Salary will be<lb/>
at the GS 4 level (SU.949) and<lb/>
requires two work periods In<lb/>
terested students should contact<lb/>
the Co op Office. 313 Rawl<lb/>
NIH<lb/>
A representative from the Na<lb/>
tional Institutes of Health,<lb/>
Bethesda, MD, will be on cam<lb/>
pus October 5-7 to interview<lb/>
students who would like to be<lb/>
health research assistants in<lb/>
their Normal Volunteer prey<lb/>
gram beginning Spring 1984.<lb/>
Students will participate in ex<lb/>
perlments and research regar<lb/>
ding disease control and the<lb/>
human body Will receive $12.50<lb/>
per day stipend plus free room<lb/>
and board, and transportation<lb/>
paid to and from NIH. Students<lb/>
in the health, natural sciences,<lb/>
computer science, and business<lb/>
fields who may be interested<lb/>
should contact the Co op Office,<lb/>
313 Rawl, immediately to sign<lb/>
up for an Interview<lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
If you play lacrosse, or just<lb/>
want to learn, come down to the<lb/>
bottom ot College Hill at 200 on<lb/>
Tuesday September 13 We need<lb/>
every one interested to attend<lb/>
WEIGHTTRAINING<lb/>
Do you want to 'get into'<lb/>
weight training but are in<lb/>
timidated by the Weight Room?<lb/>
Don't be! Women and men<lb/>
who have had little or no ex-<lb/>
perience with lifting weights as<lb/>
part of an overall fitness pro<lb/>
gram are invited to loin us at<lb/>
intramural Rec Services for a<lb/>
course in Beginning Weight<lb/>
Training. You will learn to use<lb/>
the Universal machines, sta<lb/>
tions, and light free weights cor<lb/>
rectly and efficiently so that you<lb/>
will feel confident when training<lb/>
on your own. Methods taught<lb/>
will Include Introductions to cir<lb/>
cult training, progressive<lb/>
resistance exercise (PRE) and<lb/>
proper warm up cool down pro<lb/>
cedures. come add weight<lb/>
training to your fitness pro<lb/>
gram Firm up, inc ?oase lean<lb/>
body mass, get stronger, and<lb/>
have fun! Bring (or check out) a<lb/>
towel, wear light weight, com<lb/>
tortable clothing (shorts and<lb/>
T shirts) and a supportive<lb/>
athletic shoe with flexible mid<lb/>
sole (running shoes with flaring<lb/>
heels andor varus wedge are<lb/>
not recommended )<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Orga i n iza t iona I meeting<lb/>
Thursday evening, September<lb/>
15, 7 p.m Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center, room 212 information,<lb/>
Diane Jones, 756 6556.<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS<lb/>
The Student Government an<lb/>
nounces their Fall elections The<lb/>
filing dates are from Monday<lb/>
Sept 12 to Friday, Sept 16 The<lb/>
mandantory meeting date for all<lb/>
candidates is Monday, Sept 19<lb/>
at 7 p m Application for can<lb/>
d'dates may be picked up m 228<lb/>
Menoenhall from 8 5 Positions<lb/>
available 25 day student<lb/>
representatives, 25 dorm reps.<lb/>
president and vice president of<lb/>
all undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
classes, and<lb/>
SecretaryTreasurer for Senior<lb/>
Class<lb/>
BIBLE CLASS<lb/>
Do you want to really know<lb/>
God and his will for your life if<lb/>
so, you need to know how to read<lb/>
the Bible, and understand what<lb/>
you have read (Acts 8 30 31)<lb/>
This is the key to a dynamic<lb/>
Christian life filled with power,<lb/>
love and sound thoughts. (II<lb/>
Timothy 1:7) We will Restarting<lb/>
a class soon to teach interested<lb/>
people how to understand the Bi<lb/>
ble. Stop by Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center, Room 212, on Monday,<lb/>
Sept. 12 between 5 and 5:30 pm<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
BIBLE<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
night we will have a Bible<lb/>
fellowship at our house. We<lb/>
strive to teach the Bible so peo<lb/>
pie can understand how to apply<lb/>
Godly principles in their lives.<lb/>
Why Because God wants us to<lb/>
have a full and enioyable life<lb/>
(John 10 10, I Timothy 6:17)<lb/>
Come by and check us out.<lb/>
(Tuesday and Thursday, 7:30<lb/>
p.m at 112 Rotary Ave )<lb/>
OLD TESTAMENT<lb/>
Beginning on Sept. 8, a course<lb/>
on the Old Testament will meet<lb/>
once a week during the 83 84<lb/>
school year from 6:30-8 p.m.<lb/>
each Thursday in Brewster<lb/>
building, room 303-B. The class<lb/>
is open to all students. The in<lb/>
structor will be Bill Evenhuls of<lb/>
the Church Education System of<lb/>
the Church of Jesus Christ of<lb/>
Latter Day Saints. Please come<lb/>
and enjoy an excellent review of<lb/>
the Old Testament<lb/>
uzzzzaxaBznzzzzznzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz2222zzzzzszzzzszzzzzzzzszizzBZzazziaa<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Fall Elections<lb/>
Filing Dates<lb/>
Monday Sept. 12 ? Friday Sept. 16<lb/>
Applications can be picked in 228<lb/>
Mendenhali From 8-5<lb/>
Monday Sept. 19 at 7:00 in 221 Mendenhali<lb/>
Election Day. Wednesday Sept. 28<lb/>
Positions A vailable:<lb/>
25 Day Student Reps<lb/>
25 Dorm Reps<lb/>
President and Vice President<lb/>
of Undergraduate and Graduate Classes<lb/>
Sec. - Treas. for Senior Class<lb/>
7T7T7.<lb/>
2UMtrrrn??MI?ffJJ??ljIrn7TT?<lb/>
ROXY MUSIC<lb/>
ARTS CENTER<lb/>
The Roxy Music Arts Center<lb/>
to Regroup Wednesday<lb/>
September 14 at 7X pm in the<lb/>
Community Building on Greene<lb/>
Street, Greenville For intorma<lb/>
tion contact Bill Shepherd<lb/>
752 5713.<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday evening.<lb/>
Sept. 13, in the chapel of St<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church, 406 4th<lb/>
St (one block from Garrett<lb/>
dorm) The service will be at<lb/>
5 30 pm with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, the Rev Bill Hadden.<lb/>
celebrating<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
"the place to be"<lb/>
Dote: 12 and 13 SEPT83<lb/>
Time: 7:00 ?<lb/>
Coffehouse<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOfNT UNION<lb/>
I Ml 'iM'M UMllt'T'<lb/>
Coll 757-6611 Ext. 210<lb/>
for more info.<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service will offer a<lb/>
general program about their<lb/>
services on Wednesday,<lb/>
September 14. at 4 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhali 244 You can get an<lb/>
early start by finding out more<lb/>
about registering and<lb/>
establishing a place for recom<lb/>
mendations from three factulty<lb/>
references Some discussion of<lb/>
employers who will come to<lb/>
campus and employers who you<lb/>
should contact directly will be<lb/>
offered<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Tune in to WZMB's Contem<lb/>
porary gospel show, every Sun<lb/>
day morning from 6 10 p.m<lb/>
featuring artists like Keith<lb/>
Green, Phil Keaggy, Amy Grant<lb/>
and Leon Patillo, Comedians<lb/>
like Mike Warnke and Isaac Air<lb/>
Freight; and our regularly<lb/>
scheduled program, "Light 'n<lb/>
Up On WZMB, 91 3 FM.<lb/>
SOULS MEETING<lb/>
The first SOULS meeting is<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday Sept 8,<lb/>
1983 at 7 p.m. in the coffee house<lb/>
in Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Everyone interested in becom<lb/>
ing an active member of the<lb/>
organization is urged to attend<lb/>
Old members and new members<lb/>
should be present for this<lb/>
meeting YOUR SUPPORT IS<lb/>
NEEDED!<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade tor Christ is<lb/>
sponsoring Prime Time this<lb/>
Thursday at 7 pm in the Nurs<lb/>
ing Building Rm 101 Please join<lb/>
us for fun, fellowship, and Bible<lb/>
study We are looking forward to<lb/>
meeting you.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA<lb/>
THETA<lb/>
The ladies of Delta Sigma<lb/>
Theta will be having an "Above<lb/>
the Knee Dance" on Saturday.<lb/>
Sept. 10, from 10-2 pm Gals<lb/>
with mini skirts 50 cents, guys<lb/>
with shorts: 50 cents, other at<lb/>
tire: 75 cents. Come on out and<lb/>
show your legs.<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
ADVISORS<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices is requesting assistance in<lb/>
the Sport Club Program Facul<lb/>
ty or staff members are needed<lb/>
to serve as advisors for the<lb/>
following sports clubs Archery<lb/>
Frisbee Disc, Lacrosse, Rac<lb/>
quetball, Rugby Men, Rugby<lb/>
Women, Soccer, Team Handball<lb/>
Men, Team Handball Women<lb/>
Water Polo, Field Hockey<lb/>
Women and Surfing Interested<lb/>
facultry or staff members<lb/>
should contact the Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services Sport<lb/>
Club Office in Room 105 A of<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Robert Fox,<lb/>
757 6064<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Brothers. Little S.sters.<lb/>
and Pledges of Kappa Sigma<lb/>
would like to thank everyone<lb/>
who came to RUSH<lb/>
BIBLE READING<lb/>
INFORMATION<lb/>
Reading the Bible is basic to<lb/>
living a dynamic Christian life<lb/>
(Romans 8 37 and 12 2) Where<lb/>
is the best place to start reading<lb/>
the Bible What book m the Bible<lb/>
is written directly to young<lb/>
people Come by the booth on the<lb/>
first floor of Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center Friday, Sept 9. between<lb/>
6 U pm for answers to these<lb/>
and other questions<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
PREPARATION<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service in the Blox<lb/>
ton House is offering the follow<lb/>
ing one hour sessions to help you<lb/>
prepare your own resume<lb/>
September 12, Monday, 2 p m ,<lb/>
September 20, Tuesday. 3pm,<lb/>
September 28, Wednesday. 4<lb/>
p m , October 6, Thursday, 3 30<lb/>
p m Those seniors or graduate<lb/>
students finishing this year and<lb/>
planning to register with us are<lb/>
urged to attend You may come<lb/>
to the Bioxton House at any of<lb/>
the above times<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service in the Blox<lb/>
ton House is offering these one<lb/>
hour sessions to aid you in<lb/>
developing better interviewing<lb/>
skills for use m your job search<lb/>
September 13, Tuesday. 2 p.m<lb/>
September 19, Monday, 3 p m ,<lb/>
September 29 Thursday, 4 p m ,<lb/>
and October 5 Wednesday, 3 30<lb/>
p m A film and discussion of in<lb/>
terviewing through the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement Ser<lb/>
vice will be shared<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
In order to receive your nurs<lb/>
mg pm by December 2. 1983,<lb/>
orders must be placed m the Stu<lb/>
dent Supply Store, Wright<lb/>
Building, no later than<lb/>
September 23. 1983 Orders<lb/>
should be placed at the Jewelry<lb/>
Counter orders must be paid in<lb/>
full when the order s placed<lb/>
WOMEN'S<lb/>
SOCCER CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Women's SOCCER<lb/>
sport ciub is holding their 1983 84<lb/>
organizational meeting Wednes<lb/>
oa, September 14. 1983 at 6 p m<lb/>
m Room 102 of Memorial Gym<lb/>
Women interested in playing<lb/>
soccer during 1983 84 year<lb/>
should attend this meeting<lb/>
Practices are scheduled to be<lb/>
held on Tue50S(S and Thursdays<lb/>
at the Dottom of the hill at<lb/>
Mmges ColeS'um and on Sun<lb/>
days in Memorial Gym For tur<lb/>
ther information contact Robert<lb/>
Fox. Sport Club Coordinator<lb/>
Room 105A 757 4064<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
Archery, Frisbee Disc<lb/>
karate, lacrosse, Racquetban.<lb/>
Rugb Men aro Women, Soccer<lb/>
Women Surfing, Team Hand<lb/>
ball men and Women, Badmm<lb/>
ton Chess, Cycling. Fencing<lb/>
Field Hockey. Gymnastics,<lb/>
Outing. Snow Ski, Water Polo,<lb/>
Water Ski. Wind Surfing, Wrestl<lb/>
mg!i! If you are interested m<lb/>
one of these sports or you want<lb/>
to orgamze a group for a sport<lb/>
contact the ECU Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreatonal Ser<lb/>
vices SPORT CUB PROGRAM<lb/>
in Room '05A of Memorial Gym<lb/>
nasium, 757 6064<lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Lacrosse Sport Club<lb/>
is inviting anyone interested in<lb/>
playing the exciting game of<lb/>
lacrosse to attend the organiza<lb/>
tional meeting to be held<lb/>
Wednesday September 14, 1983<lb/>
at 5 pm in Room 102 of<lb/>
Memorial Gym Playing ex<lb/>
perience is not necessary<lb/>
Rules, techniques and playing<lb/>
strategy will be taught during<lb/>
practice sessions to be held each<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday at the<lb/>
College Hill fields at 3 30 p m<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Robert Fox, Sport Club Coor<lb/>
dinator. Room 105A, Memorial<lb/>
Gym. 757 6064<lb/>
CANOEING<lb/>
LESSIONS<lb/>
The American Red Cross and<lb/>
ECU'S Department of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices will be offering a course in<lb/>
beginning canoeing beginning<lb/>
Sept 16 Cost will be 12 dollars<lb/>
and there will be approximately<lb/>
12 hours of standardized instruc<lb/>
tion Equipment and transporta<lb/>
tion will be provided Groups,<lb/>
halls clubs, etc are welcome<lb/>
Classes will be held Sept 16.3 6<lb/>
p m . Sept 17, 9 12 p m , Sept<lb/>
23, 3 6 p m Sept 24 9 12 p m<lb/>
Registration Deadline ;s<lb/>
September 13 in the Outdoor Rec<lb/>
Center 115 Memorial Gym at 4<lb/>
p m All registrants must be<lb/>
able to swim<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Intramural Softball Registra<lb/>
tion will be held September 12<lb/>
and 13 in the iM Rec Offices<lb/>
There will be a captains meeting<lb/>
for all interested parties on<lb/>
September 15 at 4 p m m<lb/>
Brewser C 103 For more intor<lb/>
mation iust call the intramural<lb/>
Offices at 757 6387<lb/>
PUTT PUTT<lb/>
Team Putt Putt Registration<lb/>
will be held September 12 ano 13<lb/>
at the intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services office in room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym A Captains<lb/>
meeting for Putt Putt is schedul<lb/>
ed for September 15 m Bioidogy<lb/>
room 103<lb/>
JOBOPENING<lb/>
If you are interested m sports<lb/>
photography then intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services may<lb/>
haves a part t.me job tor you<lb/>
The hours are varied and the<lb/>
work is fun If you're interested<lb/>
iust go by the IM Rec offices m<lb/>
room 204 Memor.ai Gym and ap<lb/>
ply But hurry<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Don't let those s its waste<lb/>
away1 if your gymnastically m<lb/>
clineo. or iust need a little prac<lb/>
tice for that methods class then<lb/>
taxe advantage of the free use<lb/>
periods of the ;?mnasfics room<lb/>
n Memorial Gym The iRS<lb/>
department is sponsoring a<lb/>
supervsed period for recrea<lb/>
tional use of the gymnastics<lb/>
room on Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
nights from 740pm 900pm<lb/>
BINGOICE<lb/>
CREAM PARTY<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a<lb/>
Binoolce Cream Party on Tues<lb/>
day. September 13, 1983 at 7pm<lb/>
in the Multi Purpose Room The<lb/>
admission is 50 cents and you get<lb/>
to eat all the delicious ice cream<lb/>
you like All ECU students<lb/>
faculty, staff, their dependents<lb/>
and guest are welcome The<lb/>
flavors of ice cream are Roo y<lb/>
Road. Pralines and Cream<lb/>
Chocolate Chip and Butter<lb/>
pecan Come out and eg'<lb/>
delicious ice cream, win terntir<lb/>
prizes, and enioy the fun Bring<lb/>
a friend'<lb/>
ECU MARAUDERS<lb/>
The Department of Militar,<lb/>
Science invites you to par<lb/>
ticipate n the ECU Marauders<lb/>
an organization oriented toward<lb/>
leadership Development thru<lb/>
adventure framing, military<lb/>
tactics and other outdoor ac<lb/>
tivities<lb/>
All students art welcome<lb/>
First meeting will be neio on<lb/>
Monday 12 September 1983 at 7<lb/>
p m in Room 221, Menoenna<lb/>
Shjdent Center For more .ntor<lb/>
mation contact CPT LUvak, at<lb/>
757 6967<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
CLASS<lb/>
The ECU Program for Hear<lb/>
ng impaired Students ec S-gn<lb/>
Language Club announce a non<lb/>
credit Introductory S 01<lb/>
Language class, beginning 6<lb/>
p m Wednesday Sept U m<lb/>
Brewster B ng 203 For those<lb/>
that have already taken th? -<lb/>
troductory course, an A<lb/>
termediate course wi. be o?<lb/>
fered on Tuesday nights starting<lb/>
Sept 13 at 6 p m m Brews-er<lb/>
B Wing 205 There is no regisfa<lb/>
tion required and no age Hand<lb/>
instructor for the course wilt be<lb/>
Michael Cotter<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
CLUBS<lb/>
The following Recreation<lb/>
Clubs sponsored by tha Depa"<lb/>
ment of university Unions MM<lb/>
meet on the ground floor ot Man<lb/>
danhali Student Center at the<lb/>
following times Table Tennis<lb/>
Club. Monday. Sop tern dot ISM<lb/>
at 5 00 p m , ChassBack gam<lb/>
mon Clubs. Tuesday, September<lb/>
13th at 5 00 p m Meaor<lb/>
ts. Spades Clubs. Wadnesdsr<lb/>
September 14th at 5:00 p rr<lb/>
Bridge Club, Thursaay<lb/>
September 15th at 5 00 p m<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty<lb/>
staff and their guests a'e<lb/>
welcome to 10m t?v? ?;? <lb/>
meetings are organ zaf or,<lb/>
meetings only Time of play arv:<lb/>
location of meetings wilt be<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
By GLENN<lb/>
MALGHAN<lb/>
Staff writer<lb/>
An ECU professor<lb/>
will be co-chainng a<lb/>
marine resources con-<lb/>
ference <lb/>
San L -I<lb/>
month.<lb/>
ference<lb/>
represent<lb/>
the L i j<lb/>
Me?<lb/>
League<lb/>
B ANDREAdis.<lb/>
MARKELLO(Clt<lb/>
Staff witterwide<lb/>
j ?<lb/>
Members of thereg<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty LeagueA .<lb/>
Women's VotersEamon<lb/>
Tuesdav afternoon toegoi<lb/>
begin a study on local-1 c a i<lb/>
government. Spc<lb/>
guest peaker was Dr<lb/>
Tom Eamon of the<lb/>
ECL political sciencehomoge<lb/>
department. Eamon1<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
Ship's<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
ECU Circle K Cluo invites you<lb/>
to come out end loin ?? tw com<lb/>
ing and every Tuesday niejM at 7<lb/>
pm m Mandannali room m for<lb/>
tun ana socializing nope to saa<lb/>
you there<lb/>
CRAZY ZACK'S<lb/>
We'd like to welcome ECU<lb/>
to Raleigh Happy Hour<lb/>
for East Carolina<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ri<lb/>
Sat. 3:00 til gametime<lb/>
25C draft $1.25 buckets<lb/>
special post-game party<lb/>
 <lb/>
v<lb/>
GOODL UCK<lb/>
PIRA TES!<lb/>
Hillsboro Street<lb/>
across from Meredith College<lb/>
DAT<lb/>
PLA<lb/>
T<lb/>
?! im mf$m?mmmvtf ?-?<lb/>
?- . ,<lb/>
,4"<lb/>
??sffS'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9, 1983<lb/>
Marine Resource Conference To Be Held<lb/>
IE<lb/>
!TY<lb/>
vervtv<lb/>
Ift'ing a<lb/>
on Tues<lb/>
lil'pm<lb/>
KxwTi The<lb/>
"M vou aet<lb/>
u rearr<lb/>
trvdenrv<lb/>
jme Tf<lb/>
e Rock)<lb/>
I Bu'ter<lb/>
d eat<lb/>
n ?er- ?<lb/>
!? n Bring<lb/>
?ERS<lb/>
?rauoef <lb/>
?ow.ara<lb/>
lnt thro<lb/>
??<lb/>
ltooor ?<lb/>
tlcomj<lb/>
"?(a or<lb/>
?3 ? '<lb/>
 se"t-a<lb/>
"? intor<lb/>
i ?? a'<lb/>
By GLENN<lb/>
MAUGHAN<lb/>
Staff Vtfttcc<lb/>
An ECU professor<lb/>
will be co-chairing a<lb/>
marine resources con-<lb/>
ference to be held in<lb/>
San Diego later this<lb/>
month. The con-<lb/>
ference will include<lb/>
representatives from<lb/>
the United States and<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
Dr. Michael K. Or-<lb/>
bach, an ECU<lb/>
associate professor of<lb/>
Sociology, An-<lb/>
thropology and<lb/>
Economics, said the<lb/>
conference would be a<lb/>
landmark for<lb/>
U.SMexican rela-<lb/>
tions. Orbach will be<lb/>
chairing the con-<lb/>
ference during a<lb/>
discussion on U.<lb/>
SMexican relations<lb/>
regarding marine<lb/>
resources and<lb/>
domestic policies.<lb/>
"This will be the<lb/>
first time scientists,<lb/>
government policy-<lb/>
makers and marine<lb/>
League Of Women Voters Meet<lb/>
GE<lb/>
? S,0n<lb/>
' ' v ;<lb/>
' ItlOM<lb/>
S Of<lb/>
i s'art.ng<lb/>
?'ev?ver<lb/>
? eg<lb/>
cje ? rr ?<lb/>
? Cvt<lb/>
By ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
Staff WrIUf<lb/>
Members of the<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty League of<lb/>
Women's Voters met<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon to<lb/>
egin a study on local<lb/>
government. Special<lb/>
kiuest speaker was Dr.<lb/>
Tom Eamon of the<lb/>
ECU political science<lb/>
department. Eamon<lb/>
discussed district<lb/>
(city-wide or county-<lb/>
wide) vs. at-large (in-<lb/>
dividual geographic<lb/>
region) electoral<lb/>
systems.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Eamon Greenville is<lb/>
categorized as a<lb/>
typical at-large<lb/>
system. "The at-large<lb/>
system does well, pro-<lb/>
ducing a<lb/>
homogeneous coun-<lb/>
cil Eamon said.<lb/>
"The nature of the<lb/>
system, however,<lb/>
varies from place to<lb/>
place<lb/>
"The at-large<lb/>
system lacks true<lb/>
democratic<lb/>
sameness Eamon<lb/>
said. "Minorities are<lb/>
-uled out or fewer<lb/>
minorities are<lb/>
represented.<lb/>
Minorities have a bet-<lb/>
ter chance with a<lb/>
district system<lb/>
Authority to set<lb/>
election policy is<lb/>
granted to Greenville<lb/>
through the state con-<lb/>
stitution with a<lb/>
government that in-<lb/>
cludes a City Council<lb/>
composed of six coun-<lb/>
cil members, a mayor,<lb/>
and an appointed City<lb/>
Manager.<lb/>
Williams' ECU Rep<lb/>
businesspeople have<lb/>
all sat down together<lb/>
to hear all the issues<lb/>
Orbach said. The con-<lb/>
ference will focus on<lb/>
three topics;<lb/>
U.SMexican in-<lb/>
volvement with the re-<lb/>
cent Law of the Sea<lb/>
Convention, domestic<lb/>
realtions concerning<lb/>
marine resources and<lb/>
specific problems<lb/>
regarding the manage-<lb/>
ment of tuna.<lb/>
Attending the con-<lb/>
ference will be U.S.<lb/>
State Department of-<lb/>
ficials, and Mexican<lb/>
government officials,<lb/>
involved in shaping<lb/>
marine policies.<lb/>
Former Mexican<lb/>
president Luis<lb/>
Echeverria Alverez is<lb/>
also scheduled to<lb/>
speak.<lb/>
Orbach said no for-<lb/>
mal changes in policy<lb/>
will be made at the<lb/>
conference, but he<lb/>
does expect the<lb/>
meeting to have an<lb/>
impact on future deci-<lb/>
sions. "Everyone will<lb/>
hear all the viewpoints<lb/>
from all sides he ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
Because current<lb/>
Mexican law prohibits<lb/>
the harvesting of<lb/>
selected marine<lb/>
species, North<lb/>
Carolina's fishing in-<lb/>
dustry will be indirect-<lb/>
ly discussed, Orback<lb/>
said. "Those boats<lb/>
which might fish in<lb/>
Mexican waters have<lb/>
come to North<lb/>
Carolina's coast, con-<lb/>
tributing to the over-<lb/>
harvesting<lb/>
problems he added.<lb/>
U.S. law also<lb/>
prevents Mexico from<lb/>
harvesting tuna in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Orback said he<lb/>
hopes the informal<lb/>
tone of the conference<lb/>
will ease tensions bet-<lb/>
ween the two nations.<lb/>
"This won't be people<lb/>
stating their country's<lb/>
position at one end of<lb/>
a big mahogany<lb/>
table Orback add-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
with<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsey Williams,<lb/>
is ECU'S student<lb/>
representative<lb/>
on the Greenville City<lb/>
Council. "The coun-<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
r op? ?<lb/>
Of 0 M.r<lb/>
? ? m?<lb/>
POt?f&amp;r<lb/>
x?lflr<lb/>
feiev??<lb/>
-C 0 rr<lb/>
ll I5?.<lb/>
?Cult<lb/>
e abov<lb/>
?i :?? mi<lb/>
Dlay anc<lb/>
? D<lb/>
Ship's Anchor Discussed<lb/>
kepple<lb/>
By THERESA DULSKI<lb/>
SUM Wrtief<lb/>
Students were asked if they<lb/>
view the recovery of the Monitor's<lb/>
anchor as a significant event or as<lb/>
one that is receiving too much<lb/>
publicity.<lb/>
Jim Kepple, Computer Science,<lb/>
Sophmore ?<lb/>
"1 think it is worth it. It has<lb/>
historic value as being one of the<lb/>
first ironclads<lb/>
David Driver, Marketing, Junior<lb/>
"I don't think that it was that<lb/>
significant of an event to receive<lb/>
so much publicity. It's not like its<lb/>
from medieval times or earlier<lb/>
Donna Lynch, Computer Science,<lb/>
Senior ?<lb/>
"1 thought the article in The<lb/>
East Carolinian about the local<lb/>
TV evangelist was more in-<lb/>
teresting than the article on the<lb/>
Monitor's anchor<lb/>
Desiree Bryan. Nursing,<lb/>
Freshman ?<lb/>
"No, I feel it hasn't had a lot of<lb/>
publicity because up until today I<lb/>
didn't know anything about an<lb/>
anchor<lb/>
Driver<lb/>
cil members are easy<lb/>
to work with and have<lb/>
recently allowed the<lb/>
opportunity for a se-<lb/>
cond (ECU) represen-<lb/>
tative said Williams<lb/>
who is also vice-<lb/>
president of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
"Though the students<lb/>
have no formal vote<lb/>
on the council, they<lb/>
have opportunity to<lb/>
speak for the universi-<lb/>
ty Williams added.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Williams issues<lb/>
discussed at a recent<lb/>
council meeting in-<lb/>
cluded the newly ap-<lb/>
proved noise or-<lb/>
dinance, car stickers<lb/>
for parking on side<lb/>
streets near campus,<lb/>
and construction of<lb/>
highway signs giving<lb/>
directions to campus.<lb/>
Williams said stu-<lb/>
dent representation<lb/>
on the City Council is<lb/>
important. Presenting<lb/>
campus problems to<lb/>
city officials will help<lb/>
students, Williams ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
f<lb/>
Lynch<lb/>
Bryan<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Work For<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
Special Low Prices<lb/>
 HAS A RING TO IT.<lb/>
r.<lb/>
?K<lb/>
Ji<lb/>
.<lb/>
 StJ<lb/>
7<lb/>
<lb/>
1r<lb/>
SEE THE ENTIRE COLLECTION OF<lb/>
HERFF JONES COLLEGE RINGS AT:<lb/>
September<lb/>
DATE: 712'13 TIME:<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
9:00am-<lb/>
4:00pm<lb/>
PLACE:<lb/>
HEKFF SOMES<lb/>
Division of Carnation Company<lb/>
SEX<lb/>
Now that we hove your<lb/>
attention, lef s you and I talk<lb/>
about working at the Buccaneer,<lb/>
the student yearbook.<lb/>
Come to an introductory staff meeting on<lb/>
WHEN: Monday Sept. 12<lb/>
or<lb/>
Tuesday Sept 13<lb/>
at 6:30<lb/>
WHERE: The Buccaneer, Old<lb/>
South Building across from<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
i<lb/>
jc - ? - m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0004"/><lb/>
QUre Eaat (Earoliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Mil ler. centralManager<lb/>
Darryl Brown, Haw! ?,?<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. tortctor of Advtrtmng ClNDY PLEASANTS, Sports Editor<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, bus, Manager Patrick O'neill. mm Editor<lb/>
ALl AFRASHTEH. CrrdH Manager CARLYN EBERT, Enttrtamment Editor<lb/>
Geoff Hudson, emulation Manager Lizanne Jennings, siykwto.<lb/>
Clay Thornton, m supervisor Todd Evans, products Manager<lb/>
September 9, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Fund Raising<lb/>
Ambassadors Fill Vital Need<lb/>
The alumni relations department,<lb/>
in conjunction with the Office of In-<lb/>
stitutional Advancement and Plann-<lb/>
ing and the ECU Ambassadors, this<lb/>
month is conducting their annual<lb/>
telephone drive to raise money from<lb/>
university alumni. The ambassadors<lb/>
and student volunteers spend three<lb/>
hours a night, Monday through<lb/>
Thursday, for the next few weeks<lb/>
calling alumni across the country in<lb/>
a effort to supplement university<lb/>
coffers with former students' dona-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The effort is important and in-<lb/>
creasingly irreplaceable. Colleges<lb/>
across the state and country are us-<lb/>
ing the almuni solicitation techni-<lb/>
que, with varying results, more and<lb/>
more out of necessity to supplement<lb/>
dwindling state appropriations and<lb/>
federal student aid, as well as to<lb/>
develop university programs and at-<lb/>
tract better students through more<lb/>
lucrative scholarships. N.C. State,<lb/>
UNC at Chapel Hill, Charlotte and<lb/>
Greensboro, and Duke University<lb/>
are among nearby schools that use<lb/>
the method.<lb/>
The money raised by the<lb/>
telephone effort, which ad-<lb/>
ministrators hope will reach<lb/>
$55,000, is set to go not only for 100<lb/>
merit-based scholarships, but also<lb/>
also for assistance to faculty in the<lb/>
form of research grants or travel ex-<lb/>
penses. Money will also be donated<lb/>
to deans' discretionary funds, for<lb/>
the university's various schools to<lb/>
do with as they please.<lb/>
This makes the funds vitally im-<lb/>
portant for the growth of ECU,<lb/>
both in size and respect. As ECU<lb/>
tries to change its focus from a<lb/>
primarily service-oriented school<lb/>
(an idea springing from its origins as<lb/>
a teacher's college) to a more<lb/>
research-oriented university with<lb/>
publishing scholars, more funding is<lb/>
needed to allow professors the time<lb/>
and facilities to do research and<lb/>
publish articles. Likewise, attractive<lb/>
scholarship packages, tied to am-<lb/>
bitious recruitment efforts, go a<lb/>
long way toward bringing more pro-<lb/>
mising students to ECU. Both of<lb/>
these projects enhance the reputa-<lb/>
tion of ECU and the quaility of<lb/>
education is gives; it is also precisely<lb/>
in these areas of institutional ad-<lb/>
vancement, that state and federal<lb/>
funds are lacking the most.<lb/>
Students need to support the ef-<lb/>
forts of the fund raising drive, and<lb/>
it is not without rewards. Those<lb/>
who volunteer to give three hours<lb/>
on one or more nights this month<lb/>
will get a free dinner, a complimen-<lb/>
tary long distance phone call and<lb/>
the chance to draw for other prizes.<lb/>
There is also the added dimension<lb/>
of helping the university that will<lb/>
stay with one, on job applications<lb/>
and on the diploma, throughout<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Students should support the<lb/>
university in the current effort, and<lb/>
the similar drive in the Spring and,<lb/>
perhaps most importantly, not<lb/>
forget to support ECU after gadua-<lb/>
tion. Every student, present and<lb/>
former, benefits by a better ECU,<lb/>
and the telephone drive is one step<lb/>
toward achieving that.<lb/>
In The Land Of Oz, Women<lb/>
Hope Reagan Will Get A Heart<lb/>
Sorry<lb/>
The East Carolinian deeply regrets<lb/>
the publication delay of Thursday's<lb/>
edition. Production was halted until<lb/>
Friday because of irrepairable<lb/>
equipment failure. We regret any in-<lb/>
convenience to The East Carolinian<lb/>
readers and advertisers. Normal<lb/>
production should resume next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
By GREG HIDEOUT<lb/>
In the land of Oz, Dorothy was the<lb/>
heroine. She doused the Wicked Witch<lb/>
from the West with water as her three<lb/>
male counterparts, one without a brain,<lb/>
one without courage and one without a<lb/>
heart, stood idly by. Now, in a world not<lb/>
so different from Frank Baum's, the<lb/>
place we call Washington, another<lb/>
female is trying to melt a man she says<lb/>
"doesn't give a damn" about women's<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
Sound too whimsical? Well, if you<lb/>
read all the hoopla surrounding the<lb/>
resignation of Barbara Honegger, a<lb/>
minor Justice Department political ap-<lb/>
pointee, you would be thinking about<lb/>
how to get back to Kansas, too. She ac-<lb/>
cused President Reagan, her<lb/>
Washington Wizard, of not working<lb/>
hard enough on eradicating sex bias in<lb/>
state and federal laws. White House of-<lb/>
ficials are reeling from the blow.<lb/>
The publicity given Honegger's<lb/>
charges, which many high-level ad-<lb/>
ministration officials privately say are<lb/>
true, has prompted fresh debate on how<lb/>
candidate Reagan should deal with the<lb/>
so-called gender gap. Officials at first<lb/>
dealt out more gaffes in an effort to play<lb/>
down the affair. Justice Department<lb/>
spokesman Thomas DeCair called her a<lb/>
"low-level munchkin and Deputy<lb/>
White House Press Secretary Larry<lb/>
Speakes reminded reporters, offhanded-<lb/>
ly and falsely, that she played the easter<lb/>
bunny at the White House Easter Egg<lb/>
Roll.<lb/>
President Reagan, if all this isn't<lb/>
enough, is priveleged to be the first<lb/>
modern president markedly less popular<lb/>
among women than men. The image<lb/>
makers at the White House just can't<lb/>
seem to find a solution to this very sore<lb/>
spot on the Reagan body politic. Yet,<lb/>
with all their statements claiming a com-<lb/>
mittment to helping women, the record<lb/>
shows very little action and hardly any<lb/>
female support of the administration.<lb/>
Thirdly, Reagan's views on women's<lb/>
issues like abortion and availability of<lb/>
contraceptives hit to close to home for<lb/>
most politically active women They see<lb/>
his effort to amend the Constitution to<lb/>
forbid a choice on abortion as an affront<lb/>
to their hardfought freedom.<lb/>
Reagan has consistently opposed the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment, resulting in an aliena-<lb/>
tion of most women. Those who stuck<lb/>
around saw his alternative, the promise to<lb/>
purge biased laws, receive only minor atten-<lb/>
tion. In fact, none have been changed since<lb/>
January, 1981.<lb/>
Firstly, Reagan (and the Republican<lb/>
Party) have consistently opposed the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendment, resulting in<lb/>
an alienation of most women. Those<lb/>
who stuck around saw his alternative,<lb/>
the promise to purge biased laws, receive<lb/>
only minor attention. In fact, none have<lb/>
been changed since January, 1981.<lb/>
Secondly, support has been lacking<lb/>
because many cuts in welfare programs<lb/>
effect women more than men. These in-<lb/>
clude such slashed programs as Aid to<lb/>
Families with Dependent Children, food<lb/>
stamps and federally subsidized legal aid<lb/>
programs. The president counters these<lb/>
charges by claiming lowered inflation<lb/>
will help everyone, including women.<lb/>
But most feminist groups aren't buying<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Something Missing In Super Powers' Dialog<lb/>
A<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
The Soviet Union's recent shooting<lb/>
down of a Korean passenger jet with 269<lb/>
civilians aboard has caused the United<lb/>
States, and the world, to re-evaluate its<lb/>
attitude toward and relationship with<lb/>
that nation. The tragic incident shocked<lb/>
the world, but what is certainly just as<lb/>
incredible is the Soviet's handling of the<lb/>
incident in the week following the event.<lb/>
Only Tuesday, five days after the at-<lb/>
tack on the airliner, did the Soviet's ad-<lb/>
mit they actually shot down the plane (in<lb/>
their words, "stopped the flight").<lb/>
Their actions and attitudes throughout<lb/>
the last week have been callous and com-<lb/>
pletely without compassion or apology.<lb/>
Never have they regretted or mourned<lb/>
the loss of 269 innocent civilians. They<lb/>
only insist they would do the same thing<lb/>
again if another plane enters their air<lb/>
space, and they assert (somehow) the<lb/>
U.S. bears "entire responsibility" for<lb/>
the tragedy.<lb/>
The last week has caused citizens and<lb/>
government officials throughout the<lb/>
Western world to re-examine its basic<lb/>
beliefs about Soviet policy, thought and<lb/>
behavior. How can a nation be so cold?<lb/>
Are they really so ruthless?<lb/>
One reaction, that taken by the<lb/>
Reagan adminstration, is to reconfirm<lb/>
the conception of the Soviet Union as an<lb/>
"evil empire one that must be oppos-<lb/>
ed with all the military might one can<lb/>
muster, and one that we can make no ac-<lb/>
comodation to. This shows, they say,<lb/>
the Soviets are less than civilized, and we<lb/>
must dig in our heels, accept the bless-<lb/>
ings of God, and fight them until one<lb/>
side or the other is defeated.<lb/>
The opposite reaction, one assumed<lb/>
by many staunch anti-nuclear activists,<lb/>
is that, though the incident is tragic and<lb/>
the Soviets clearly at fault, we must con-<lb/>
tinue to seek disarmament, to create a<lb/>
world where there are no weapons at all,<lb/>
so people cannot destroy each other.<lb/>
After all, they say, Russian and<lb/>
American bodies both die from bombs<lb/>
and nuclear radiation, and both coun-<lb/>
tries want peace, so don't let this stop us<lb/>
from disarming and living in peaceful<lb/>
brotherhood.<lb/>
The trouble is, neither idea is really<lb/>
practical or feasible. So what happens if<lb/>
we build up a super-arsenal capable of<lb/>
forcing the Soviets to reduce weapons or<lb/>
be destroyed: can we really beat the<lb/>
Soviets in war, no matter what weapons<lb/>
we have, and not be so injured by the<lb/>
struggle that we live in a world free of<lb/>
communism happily ever after? Does<lb/>
the airliner incident really call for us to<lb/>
redouble our defense efforts because<lb/>
these Communists are inhuman, and the<lb/>
only way to survive is to get them before<lb/>
they get us?<lb/>
Likewise, the throw-out-all-the-<lb/>
weapons point of view is not realistic. It<lb/>
assumes what Time magazine called<lb/>
plural solipsism, the idea that deep<lb/>
down, everyone is really just like us;<lb/>
since Soviets and Americans both want<lb/>
to live in peace, and since both die from<lb/>
guns, let's just stop fighting and start<lb/>
talking and living peacefully. Surely we<lb/>
can get along if we just get the<lb/>
belligerent politicians out of the way.<lb/>
The trouble is, life isn't usually logical<lb/>
and people are not "all just alike Our<lb/>
biological hearts may pump the same<lb/>
beats per minute, but our consciences,<lb/>
filled with mostly learned conceptions<lb/>
and attitudes, make our behavior and<lb/>
even some beliefs of justice or right and<lb/>
wrong completely different. Behavioral<lb/>
psychologists Watkins and Skinner long<lb/>
ago showed that many "instinctual"<lb/>
behaviors are learned; much less are<lb/>
ideas of what is a peaceful, just society<lb/>
universal. Thus, while Americans and<lb/>
Soviets both want peace, they won't ac-<lb/>
cept it on the same terms. What seems<lb/>
clear and logical to one is grossly injust<lb/>
or incorrect to the other. It is a basic<lb/>
conflict of perspectives or points-of-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
We cannot deal peacefully with the<lb/>
Soviets while operating on a completely<lb/>
different set of attitudes and values and<lb/>
not acknowledge theirs. But neither is<lb/>
does it seem the best alternative to build<lb/>
bigger guns and hide behind them, living<lb/>
in ignorance of those we is opposed to,<lb/>
waiting until we can get rid of them or<lb/>
they come around to our way of tinking.<lb/>
There is a fundamental difference in<lb/>
the Soviet consciousness, its values and<lb/>
ideas, and that of Americans. The two<lb/>
countries must understand each other to<lb/>
peacefully coexist. Conservatives don't<lb/>
try to understand them; Liberals think<lb/>
they already do. Most Americans know<lb/>
little more about the Soviet Union than<lb/>
the ideas of communism they were rais-<lb/>
ed on; certainly Russians, with less than<lb/>
a free exchange of ideas, know little<lb/>
more about Americans than Tass and<lb/>
Pravda news reports.<lb/>
The United States must, while dealing<lb/>
with current issues, attempt to gain, over<lb/>
a long term, a better understanding of<lb/>
the Soviet mind-set. Their reasoning,<lb/>
their rationale, must not seem foreign<lb/>
and inconceivable to us, even though we<lb/>
must disagree with it. One can't bring<lb/>
changes with the other side until one<lb/>
understands not only what they do, but<lb/>
how and why.<lb/>
It is also hard for Americans to<lb/>
understand the belief that if one pulls<lb/>
out a knife in anger, it is more honorable<lb/>
to draw blood than to re-sheath the<lb/>
blade peacefully; yet that is a traditional<lb/>
conviction in areas of Asia minor.<lb/>
The Russians are not just like us. They<lb/>
are an asian country with only limited<lb/>
historical connection with the West and<lb/>
its values. The history that has formed<lb/>
their national consciousness is vastly dif-<lb/>
ferent from our own. There is a reason<lb/>
within the Soviet psyche that they fed<lb/>
justified in shooting down a civilian<lb/>
plane over their airspace; though we<lb/>
cannot and should not accept it, it is<lb/>
urgent that we figure out how they could<lb/>
hold such a ruthless attitude. Only by a<lb/>
thorough understanding of Soviet<lb/>
culture, through more than just politics,<lb/>
will we be able to deal with the Soviet<lb/>
Union effectively. This is more than<lb/>
diplomacy-by-cxchange-student; it is the<lb/>
r-Campus Forum<lb/>
only way either side will understand wny<lb/>
the other acts and reacts, not just how.<lb/>
It is probably the only way to realistical-<lb/>
ly and practically coexist. We must hold<lb/>
fast to our condemnation of the airplane<lb/>
attack, but it should be a signal that we<lb/>
are leagues apart with the Soviet Union,<lb/>
and something must be done to bridge<lb/>
that gap, before reclacitrant conflict<lb/>
does us all in.<lb/>
Tougher Line Called For<lb/>
I write in reply to Patrick O'Neill's<lb/>
column in the latest issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian. I want to say that the basic<lb/>
thrust of his article is erroneous, in my<lb/>
view.<lb/>
Mr. O'Neill's claim that, "until we<lb/>
begin to make an effort toward peace<lb/>
by changing our own policies, it is<lb/>
unlikely that the Soviets will make<lb/>
changes (in their own policies)" simply<lb/>
ignores more than sixty years of our<lb/>
modern history. Again and again, the<lb/>
United States and its allies have chang-<lb/>
ed their policies in order to increase the<lb/>
possibility of peace with the U.S.S.R,<lb/>
but the Kremlin has never wavered in<lb/>
practice from its aim of bringing the<lb/>
world under its imperialist dominion.<lb/>
Making weak excuses such as "An-<lb/>
dropov is not Adolf Hitler" ignores the<lb/>
bloody record of that gentleman, who<lb/>
headed the infamous KGB for many<lb/>
years before ascending to his present<lb/>
post and played a leading part in the<lb/>
crushing of the Hungarian revolution<lb/>
in 1956, and his associates.<lb/>
As to Mr. O'Neill's protestation that<lb/>
there are still many areas that need<lb/>
clarification, he may be right. But it<lb/>
has already been proved to my satisfac-<lb/>
tion, and that of millions of others,<lb/>
that the Soviet Air Force did, knowing<lb/>
that the plane in question was an<lb/>
unarmed Korean Air Lines 747, shoot<lb/>
it down with the resultant loss of all<lb/>
269 passengers, including a member of<lb/>
the U.S. Congress (who, perhaps not<lb/>
coincidentally, was one of the formeost<lb/>
anti-Communists in that body)<lb/>
Nothing that the supporters of ap-<lb/>
peasemnt and unilateral disarmament<lb/>
say can disguise that simple fact, or the<lb/>
fact that the Soviet Union is, ultimate-<lb/>
ly, indeed an "evil empire Like<lb/>
Johnathan Houston, I am not laughina<lb/>
any more. e<lb/>
Joseph A. Admire<lb/>
Junior, Political Science<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop Jhem by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from Joyner<lb/>
Library. w<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printedAU<lb/>
letters are subject to editing.<lb/>
But, the most important reason most<lb/>
women tend to shy away from Mr. i<lb/>
Reagan is because he is out of touch with' I<lb/>
the changed role of women in modem<lb/>
soceity. As someone who has always <lb/>
longed for the days-gone-by of simple<lb/>
America, and as a person who sees<lb/>
himself as a nice guy, President Reagan<lb/>
and his staff should heed Munchkin<lb/>
Honegger's charges and begin bridging<lb/>
the gender gap with measurable planks,<lb/>
not conservative rhetoric.<lb/>
So, with Republican polls in present-<lb/>
day Oz showing Reagan minus a heart<lb/>
with women, and with the public think-<lb/>
ing his spokesmen don't have a brain<lb/>
amongst them, most women are hoping<lb/>
he will finally be awarded some courage<lb/>
to help solve the issues of women.<lb/>
Coun<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Interpersonal reia-<lb/>
tionships, although a<lb/>
part of everyday hfc<lb/>
can also be a source of<lb/>
conflict. If you are<lb/>
having problems<lb/>
relationship witr<lb/>
spouse, boyfriend or<lb/>
girlfriend, ECl<lb/>
Marriage Counseling<lb/>
Program may be -<lb/>
to help.<lb/>
Intenratio<lb/>
Doctor Sav<lb/>
By GLENN<lb/>
MALGHAN<lb/>
As the Inter<lb/>
tional Fast For I -<lb/>
participants enter the<lb/>
6th week of the<lb/>
water-only fast.c<lb/>
tors with the g:<lb/>
are saying the i<lb/>
one to two weeks wU<lb/>
be "a critical to a<lb/>
stage" for the faster<lb/>
Dorothy Granada,52<lb/>
was hospitalized<lb/>
San Francisco. Ac.<lb/>
ding to Kath Dar. ?<lb/>
spokesperson for<lb/>
r<lb/>
CO<lb/>
75 5982<lb/>
TO ALL MY COUJ<lb/>
THERE: THANKS<lb/>
GREAT RESPONSI<lb/>
PREVIOUS ADS. I'l<lb/>
PROVIDE YOU W<lb/>
MORE COUPOI<lb/>
CONCENTRATE<lb/>
DYING. WE'LL<lb/>
COOKING. ANI<lb/>
DELIVER IT T<lb/>
ROOM.<lb/>
i 3c : ;etf ?<lb/>
gt ft OF lAft&amp;t - - b<lb/>
? - ? - "X MK1W<lb/>
ISN'T IT Nl<lb/>
Beat State!<lb/>
(Fri. Sept G<lb/>
wil<lb/>
h Yd<lb/>
'Home<lb/>
FOi<lb/>
Th? Greed<lb/>
(Across fr<lb/>
Gre?nvilU<lb/>
ri<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0005"/><lb/>
lW8r-<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
n<lb/>
eart<lb/>
iev.v on women s<lb/>
iailability of<lb/>
e to home for<lb/>
 lien They see<lb/>
tion to<lb/>
is a: affront<lb/>
ed the Equal<lb/>
i an aliena-<lb/>
who stuck<lb/>
e promise to<lb/>
minor atten-<lb/>
hanged since<lb/>
Is; important reason most<lb/>
lto shy away from Mr.<lb/>
use he is out of touch with<lb/>
ie of women in modern<lb/>
ne who ha.s always<lb/>
gone-by of simple<lb/>
- a person who sees<lb/>
:e gu. President Reagan<lb/>
lid heed Munchkin<lb/>
ges and begin bridging<lb/>
ith measurable planks,<lb/>
'hetonc.<lb/>
)ubhcan polls in present-<lb/>
g Reagan minus a heart<lb/>
d with the public think-<lb/>
nen don't have a brain<lb/>
Jmost women are hoping<lb/>
fe awarded some courage<lb/>
es of women.<lb/>
alog<lb/>
?side will understand wny<lb/>
Ind reacts, not just how.<lb/>
le only way to realistical-<lb/>
ly coexist. We must hold<lb/>
jemnation of the airplane<lb/>
lould be a signal that we<lb/>
h with the Soviet Union,<lb/>
must be done to bridge<lb/>
' reclacitrant conflict<lb/>
d For<lb/>
Air Lines 747, shoot<lb/>
: resultant loss of all<lb/>
Including a member of<lb/>
ps (who, perhaps not<lb/>
las one of the formeost<lb/>
ts in that body).<lb/>
ie supporters of ap-<lb/>
nilateral disarmament<lb/>
(that simple fact, or the<lb/>
liet Union is, ultimate-<lb/>
r'evil empire Like<lb/>
Iton, 1 am not laughing<lb/>
Joseph A. Admire<lb/>
mior, Political Science<lb/>
m Rules<lb/>
linian welcomes letters<lb/>
?tnts of view. Afay or<lb/>
 office in the Old<lb/>
across from Joyner<lb/>
f verification, all let-<lb/>
' the name, major and<lb/>
fdress, phone number<lb/>
the author(s). Letters<lb/>
o typewritten pages,<lb/>
F ne?tly printed. All<lb/>
yt to editing.<lb/>
?!?Ilse,ing Available For Married<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 9. jgg 5<lb/>
B JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Interpersonal rela-<lb/>
tionships, although a<lb/>
part of everyday life,<lb/>
can also be a source of<lb/>
conflict If you are<lb/>
having problems in a<lb/>
relationship with a<lb/>
boyfriend or<lb/>
Socio.Partmcnt of<lb/>
sociology, A<lb/>
EconS?-08y and<lb/>
jcononucs, is not<lb/>
signed exclusively<lb/>
2 mInitd co"P?es.<lb/>
fording to David<lb/>
Kr?ox, professor of<lb/>
spouse, .ovfriend or oflSPmdHrect?<lb/>
girlfriend. ECU's spec LaiLP0gram' il<lb/>
Marriage Counseling SSS , <lb/>
Program may be able rSIi ? love' mar<lb/>
tohelp. "iff ?r sex ?" jt<lb/>
Elates to two people<lb/>
"&amp;s gjrsst EStrars siesm; ?a?<lb/>
assisled in evaluating then taken to change te chan.ed "if tfS ause they are at a<lb/>
?oJorit'i0nShiP and W-vta.3 artnerTave the go whe'n V may<lb/>
exploring areas not savs Amt"tmUm u ??  . 6. 1,CI incy may<lb/>
graduate intern m<lb/>
marriage counseling.<lb/>
To provide high-<lb/>
quality care, all<lb/>
counseling is done<lb/>
under intensive super-<lb/>
vision. Services are<lb/>
free to all ECU<lb/>
students. There is a<lb/>
minimal charge for<lb/>
non-students.<lb/>
Premarital counsel-<lb/>
ing is one of the ser-<lb/>
exploring areas not<lb/>
obvious during court-<lb/>
ship. This allows the<lb/>
couple to become bet-<lb/>
ter acquainted with<lb/>
different aspects of<lb/>
the other person's<lb/>
behavior.<lb/>
In a problem rela-<lb/>
tionship, specific<lb/>
behaviors which are<lb/>
says that "feeling bet-<lb/>
ter about each other is<lb/>
the goal of most part-<lb/>
of a continued rela-<lb/>
tionship<lb/>
"Counseling is<lb/>
 be<lb/>
meeting future mates,<lb/>
Knox said. Learning<lb/>
to successfully<lb/>
negotiate conflict is Health Center and the<lb/>
important in all rela- Student Health<lb/>
tionships. Cenler if funher<lb/>
Appropriate counseling is deemed<lb/>
reterals will also be necessary<lb/>
made to the Pitt Interested students<lb/>
 Mental should contact Knox<lb/>
Math, Science Teachers Needed<lb/>
w ?, pcopie. ing is one of the ser- behaviors which<lb/>
International Fasters Enter 6th Week;<lb/>
D???lSays Next Two Weeks Critical<lb/>
By GLENN<lb/>
MAICHAN<lb/>
SUfi ? rtler<lb/>
As the Interna-<lb/>
tiona! Past For Life<lb/>
part pants enter the<lb/>
6th week of their<lb/>
water-only fast .doc-<lb/>
tors with the group<lb/>
are saying the next<lb/>
one to two weeks will<lb/>
be "a critical to crisis<lb/>
stage" for the fasters.<lb/>
Dorothy Granada,52,<lb/>
as hospitalized in<lb/>
San Francisco. Accor<lb/>
Oakland, Calif,<lb/>
group, Granada need-<lb/>
ed her fluids and elec-<lb/>
trolytes balanced.<lb/>
Daniel described<lb/>
the faster's physical<lb/>
condition as serious.<lb/>
'They are suffering<lb/>
from dehydration and<lb/>
their effort until there<lb/>
is a "break in the<lb/>
momentum of the<lb/>
nuclear arms race<lb/>
In Toronto,<lb/>
Canada, two other<lb/>
fasters Brian Burch<lb/>
and Karen Harrison<lb/>
have each lost over 20<lb/>
vnamin deficiency; pounds in a similar<lb/>
SvJT ?r tWO fast they both ban<lb/>
iney could experience on Aug. 6. "I've had<lb/>
kidney failures or a couple of bad<lb/>
saattaCkSDaniel dayssom severe<lb/>
p . . ? cramps, fainting<lb/>
hav? i ,hefasters speIls? and contant<lb/>
ding to Kathv DanTei imat-lv n 3PPr? hcadaches off and<lb/>
spokesperson for the Tht 1t T ?' Burch said-<lb/>
I hey row to continue Canadian peace ac-<lb/>
r<lb/>
tivists including Burch<lb/>
will meet later next<lb/>
week with member's<lb/>
of Canada's Parlia-<lb/>
ment to discuss the<lb/>
fast and their<lb/>
demands to end cruise<lb/>
missile testing.<lb/>
Each of the fasters<lb/>
has refused to end<lb/>
their vigil although<lb/>
the recent downing of<lb/>
a Korean jetliner by<lb/>
Soviet forces has<lb/>
detracted media atten-<lb/>
tion away from the<lb/>
fast, possibly jeopar-<lb/>
dizing the fasters<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
COUSIN'S pizzeria"<lb/>
' v 5982 321 E. 10th ST. Greenville 758-5616<lb/>
TO ALL MY COUSINS OUT<lb/>
THERE: THANKS FOR THE<lb/>
GREAT RESPONSE IN OUR<lb/>
PREVIOUS ADS. I'D LIKE TO<lb/>
PROVIDE YOU WITH SOME<lb/>
MORE COUPONS. YOU<lb/>
CONCENTRATE ON STU-<lb/>
DYING. WE'LL DO THE<lb/>
COOKING. AND WE'LL<lb/>
DELIVER IT TO YOUR<lb/>
ROOM.<lb/>
SUNDAY SPECIALS<lb/>
Eat-in Only<lb/>
Sm. Pixia w one topping<lb/>
of choice &amp; one pitcher<lb/>
of Beer $4.99<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
ONLY FOB DELIVERIES<lb/>
One Dollar Off Small Pizza<lb/>
Specify On The Phone<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
ONirro DELIVERIES<lb/>
Two Dollars Off Large Pizza<lb/>
Specify On The Phone<lb/>
II 00 O" AMI MMTTI<lb/>
j ooo" CHeES??vioi.i<lb/>
CMIHfl. ???0 - I. AC<lb/>
- 00 OFF l??CE HEAT Mil. S.I<lb/>
I' X OFF ON CHIFS SALAD<lb/>
? 1 oo orr A LASAOMA<lb/>
? l 00 Or r A CHEf M HAHICOTTI<lb/>
? 1 00 OFF A0?fEHSALA0<lb/>
M.v?. ?1T? MAI 'ft SHI<lb/>
? 1 00 OFF ON A<lb/>
HOT PASTRAMI SUS<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
ISN'T IT NICE TO HAVE A COUSIN IN TOWN?<lb/>
The Green Leaf<lb/>
Presents'<lb/>
-<lb/>
Beat state! Presents Beat State!<lb/>
(Fri.Sept.9) (Fri. Sept. 9)<lb/>
The Beat State Party'<lb/>
with Billy Scott and The Georgia Prophets<lb/>
the 1982 Beach Music Entertainer<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
Free Draft till 10:00<lb/>
Ladies ? price<lb/>
Admission $3.00<lb/>
Come join the Greenleaf in<lb/>
the 1983 ' Beat State Party '<lb/>
Buffet and Dinner Available<lb/>
And coming in September:<lb/>
John Clayton Thomas and Blood, Sweat, and Tears<lb/>
Pure Prarie League r Coolidge<lb/>
b v<lb/>
The Greenleaf<lb/>
'Home of the Big Name Entertainment'<lb/>
FOR INFORMATION CALL 757-3107<lb/>
The GrcenLcaf, 1104 N. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
(Across from the Airport)<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
(UPI) - The<lb/>
North Carolina Board<lb/>
of Science and<lb/>
Technology said the<lb/>
shortage of Math and<lb/>
Science teachers in the<lb/>
state's public schools<lb/>
is critical.<lb/>
In 1980-81, 167<lb/>
math teachers<lb/>
graduated in the state<lb/>
while the anticipated<lb/>
need was 620, the<lb/>
board said.<lb/>
In the same two<lb/>
years, 218 science<lb/>
teachers graduated<lb/>
while the anticipated<lb/>
need was 310.<lb/>
in 1980-81 were not<lb/>
certified in these<lb/>
fields, the board said.<lb/>
The board said 59<lb/>
percent of the junior<lb/>
 An high math teachers<lb/>
Some 40 percent of and 48 percent of the<lb/>
the teachers who junior high science<lb/>
taught one or more teachers in the state<lb/>
math classes and 29 during the two-year<lb/>
percent of the period were improper-<lb/>
teachers who taught ly certified,<lb/>
one or more science<lb/>
classes in grades 7-12<lb/>
the math<lb/>
teachers in grades<lb/>
7-12, the board said<lb/>
only 23 percent held a<lb/>
master's degree or<lb/>
higher. Only 24 per-<lb/>
cent of the science<lb/>
teachers in the same<lb/>
grades held a master's<lb/>
degree or higher. The<lb/>
national average in<lb/>
each field was 50 per-<lb/>
cent, the board said.<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
Christopher Fordham<lb/>
said there is clearly a<lb/>
need to improve the<lb/>
teaching of math and<lb/>
science in the state's<lb/>
public schools.<lb/>
"I think the data<lb/>
are pretty clear that<lb/>
we have a shortage of<lb/>
quality math and<lb/>
science teachers<lb/>
Fordham said.<lb/>
!<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
September 9th, 10th, 11th<lb/>
Daily Specials 11 A.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Buy one 11-oz. Sirloin at Reg. Price $5.79<lb/>
Get Second 11-oz. Sirloin at 12 Price $2 90<lb/>
Served with King Idiho Potato or F.F. &amp; Teias Toast<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
f Served with King Idaho Potato or F.F. it Texas Toast<lb/>
A Serving Prime Rib every Friday and Saturday Night<lb/>
 Banquet &amp; Party Facilities seating up to 100 people<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
8-oz chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
Beef Ribs<lb/>
8-oz Sirloin<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Try our New Fruit Bar<lb/>
and Improved Veg. Bar<lb/>
2 Locations to Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
1 2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
tf<lb/>
Bikini Contest September 14th<lb/>
Wednesday Night!<lb/>
$75 First Prize<lb/>
$35 Second Prize<lb/>
SUPER SPECIALS<lb/>
Every Friday - SUPER HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
4:00-9:00 25 DroftlOC Increase Each Hour<lb/>
SATURDAY - PENNY DRAFT NIGHT<lb/>
pb.v iT???LAY,NG JO?-? AND 0A?CE MUSIC<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB - MEMBERSHIW ONLY $1.00 WITH ECU ID<lb/>
? ?nH 7 "?HTS A WEEK<lb/>
75J-14V3 All ABC P?n,iH 200 W. T?th Stet<lb/>
You<lb/>
w<lb/>
fc<lb/>
Saturday Sept. 17th<lb/>
ECU vs. Murray St. 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday Sept. 18th The Biggest Beach Concert<lb/>
 Greenville &amp; ECU has ever seen<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
fa<lb/>
AlAtTAr?y<lb/>
rfi<lb/>
fiffawfe,<lb/>
QtJCto<lb/>
J0V NOORf Of VbKQ<lb/>
Co-Sponsors<lb/>
S W SEPTIC TANKS<lb/>
WRQR WSfl<lb/>
Rain or Shine!<lb/>
f?ATURIN<lb/>
CHAIRMEN OF<lb/>
TIiE BOARDS!<lb/>
Coolers Welcome<lb/>
No Bottles, Please<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
H BREEZE ?<lb/>
NORTH TOWER<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
SEPT. 18th<lb/>
1:00-7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Gate Opens<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
NEW PITT COUNTY<lb/>
FAIRGROUNDS<lb/>
GRCfNVIUE n.c.<lb/>
SHOW TIMES<lb/>
1:00 2:00<lb/>
2:15-3:15<lb/>
3:305:00<lb/>
5:15-6:15<lb/>
6:30 7:30<lb/>
Breeze<lb/>
north Tower<lb/>
Cof B<lb/>
North Tower<lb/>
Breeze<lb/>
WELCOMEv<lb/>
toWUer'ilme<lb/>
JJLlJt,<lb/>
m<lb/>
Wuf waJ<lb/>
Look -for ffi(<lb/>
S i.qns <lb/>
? i<lb/>
MAP<lb/>
a<lb/>
C3<lb/>
C.??htf y<lb/>
?m ? hi -w-<lb/>
ilZ<lb/>
ADVANCED<lb/>
TICKET LOCATIONS<lb/>
GREENVILLE: UBE. Bonds fr H.L.<lb/>
Hodges Sporting Goods and<lb/>
any Pi Kapp Brother.<lb/>
ANY RECORD BAR LOCATIONS<lb/>
IN: Greenville, New Bern,<lb/>
Jacksonville, Rocky Mount.<lb/>
House of Records - Morehead<lb/>
City.<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
hi Advance<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
at Gate<lb/>
Welcome to Miller time<lb/>
?<lb/>
B<lb/>
feMaMMMSNntaRMMMrtMnni<lb/>
mm<lb/>
????<lb/>
? ?'???Jin?'ii?i?wH???"?<lb/>
???pvM)<lb/>
?<lb/>
r.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBERS 1983<lb/>
<lb/>
Gay Students Getting Support From ECGC<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1.<lb/>
"out of the closet" or<lb/>
openly gay.<lb/>
Faircloth believes<lb/>
the reason most gays<lb/>
remain anonymous is<lb/>
to avoid the negative<lb/>
social attitudes<lb/>
associated with a gay<lb/>
lifestyle. "There's so<lb/>
much more to us than<lb/>
just our sexuality<lb/>
Faircloth said.<lb/>
In past years many<lb/>
of ECU's gay students<lb/>
have been subjected<lb/>
to ridicule because of<lb/>
their sexuality. One of<lb/>
the groups former<lb/>
presidents once<lb/>
received a telephone<lb/>
death threat after his<lb/>
name was published<lb/>
in an East Carolinian<lb/>
article.<lb/>
"It is difficult ?<lb/>
sometimes even<lb/>
dangerous ? to be<lb/>
openly gay, even with<lb/>
your family and your<lb/>
closest friends<lb/>
ECU Chemistry Professors<lb/>
Conduct Special Research<lb/>
By SUZANNE<lb/>
DARWIN<lb/>
Stan WrMcr<lb/>
Three ECU<lb/>
chemistry professors<lb/>
are doing highly<lb/>
specialized research<lb/>
while visiting exotic<lb/>
places.<lb/>
Dr. Donald<lb/>
Clemens, who recent-<lb/>
ly returned from the<lb/>
Patent Examiners<lb/>
Board in Washington,<lb/>
DC, hopes to get a<lb/>
fuel patent for peat.<lb/>
"If we can market<lb/>
this fuel, it can be us-<lb/>
ed in the boilers on<lb/>
campus, in diesel<lb/>
engines and in home<lb/>
heating Clemens<lb/>
SC?3SS!<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Fuel prices are<lb/>
down and the<lb/>
likelihood for using<lb/>
peat as an alternative<lb/>
source are slim,<lb/>
Clemons added.<lb/>
However,when<lb/>
other natural<lb/>
resources are gone,<lb/>
peat, and Clemens'<lb/>
technique, could<lb/>
become viable alter-<lb/>
natives.<lb/>
Dr. Frank Etzler<lb/>
has been working on<lb/>
the interactions of<lb/>
surface water. The<lb/>
research may be<lb/>
helpful in growing<lb/>
plants in space and<lb/>
could give some clues<lb/>
on how tumors<lb/>
develop.<lb/>
"Water affects our<lb/>
daily lives and by stu-<lb/>
dying its<lb/>
characteristics near<lb/>
the surface, we can<lb/>
learn its effects on<lb/>
biological systems<lb/>
Etzler said.<lb/>
Another ECU<lb/>
chemist will travel to<lb/>
Italy in September to<lb/>
attend a two-week<lb/>
conference on<lb/>
chemometrics. Dr.<lb/>
David Lunney said<lb/>
the meeting offers<lb/>
him the chance to<lb/>
hear the latest<lb/>
developments on ap-<lb/>
plying mathematics to<lb/>
complex chemical<lb/>
data with the aid of<lb/>
computers.<lb/>
Sponsored in part<lb/>
by NATO, Lunney<lb/>
and 100 other scien-<lb/>
tists will be at the<lb/>
University of Callbria<lb/>
in Casenza, Italy.<lb/>
Lunney said the<lb/>
seminar would also<lb/>
enhance the lines of<lb/>
informal communica-<lb/>
tion among scientists.<lb/>
"We usually don't tell<lb/>
our students that a lot<lb/>
of chemistry gets done<lb/>
over a cup of coffee<lb/>
(and) on the<lb/>
telephone; not just in<lb/>
the lab Lunney<lb/>
said, adding that<lb/>
many of the western<lb/>
world's experts will<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
? presents ?<lb/>
?Back By Popular Demand<lb/>
LEON RUSSELL<lb/>
LEON RUSSELL<lb/>
!<lb/>
Advance Tickets: $8.00<lb/>
f Door: $9.00<lb/>
 Ticket Locations: ,<lb/>
: Apple Records, Gotcha Covered<lb/>
Record Bar (Pitt Plaza)<lb/>
y (-or t-urther Information. Caii S 5570<lb/>
 The Carolina Opryhouse is a<lb/>
 Private CLubor members and guests only<lb/>
i All ABC Permits<lb/>
1, A<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 16<lb/>
Coming Soon: Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
Jerry Lee Lewis, Delbert McClinton<lb/>
S?S525S-?a-<lb/>
Monday Night FOOTBALL<lb/>
on our BIG-SCREEN TV $3.09<lb/>
Tackle<lb/>
A Pizza<lb/>
At Gatti's<lb/>
A great way to have a<lb/>
great time. With all that<lb/>
honest to Gatti's goodness<lb/>
and our Happy Hour Specials<lb/>
you already know who<lb/>
You, with<lb/>
your favorite Gatti's<lb/>
Plus Dinner buffet<lb/>
S p.m. to 8 p.m All the<lb/>
pizza, spaghetti and salad<lb/>
you can eel.<lb/>
Corner of Cotanche and 10th<lb/>
The best pizza in town -?"<lb/>
 . ??? ?????<lb/>
states the brochure.<lb/>
"This is why most of<lb/>
these 20 million peo-<lb/>
ple hide their affec-<lb/>
tional orientation<lb/>
Faircloth said the<lb/>
group will also be<lb/>
working to<lb/>
"build-up" its<lb/>
Speakers Bureau this<lb/>
year, hopefully by at-<lb/>
tracting more students<lb/>
who would be willing<lb/>
to speak publically<lb/>
about their homosex-<lb/>
uality.<lb/>
The Speakers<lb/>
Bureau provides<lb/>
speakers to lead<lb/>
discussions about gay<lb/>
lifestyles at meetings<lb/>
or in the classroom.<lb/>
Faircloth said the<lb/>
group has already<lb/>
contacted the ECU<lb/>
departments of<lb/>
sociology,<lb/>
psychology, medicine<lb/>
and health education<lb/>
to let them know that<lb/>
speakers are<lb/>
available.<lb/>
After Sept. 19th,<lb/>
the group will meet<lb/>
regularly on the first<lb/>
and third Mondays of<lb/>
each month at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. The meetings are<lb/>
held at the Catholic<lb/>
Newman Center on<lb/>
10th street.<lb/>
Faircloth praised<lb/>
Catholic campus<lb/>
minister Sister Helen<lb/>
Shondell for allowing<lb/>
the group to meet at<lb/>
the center. "She<lb/>
(Shondell) helped me<lb/>
accept my Christiani-<lb/>
ty and my homosex-<lb/>
uality as intrical<lb/>
things that can work<lb/>
together Faircloth<lb/>
said.<lb/>
For a long time the<lb/>
ECGC was unable to<lb/>
obtain a meeting loca-<lb/>
tion, until Shondell<lb/>
agreed to provide<lb/>
space for the group.<lb/>
During last<lb/>
Sunday's Catholic<lb/>
service, Shondell told<lb/>
students that part of<lb/>
her ministry to<lb/>
students included her<lb/>
work with the ECGC.<lb/>
"They asked for our<lb/>
ministry Shondell<lb/>
said Wednesday.<lb/>
"The Christian<lb/>
message has always<lb/>
been to provide sup-<lb/>
port and love for the<lb/>
outcasts of<lb/>
societythe gays<lb/>
have been outcasts in<lb/>
this community<lb/>
Faircloth said the<lb/>
group plans to invite a<lb/>
speaker to discuss the<lb/>
disease AIDS, which<lb/>
is affecting the gay<lb/>
community, and<lb/>
another to discuss<lb/>
drug and alcohol<lb/>
rehabilitation for<lb/>
gays. The meetings<lb/>
are open to the public<lb/>
Any student s<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Faircloth said.<lb/>
A student does not<lb/>
have to be gay to at<lb/>
tend the ECGC<lb/>
meetings. According<lb/>
to Faircloth, any ECU<lb/>
student or faculty<lb/>
member is welcome<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
esh<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
XXXXXXXXX X.X X X X X X X X X XXXX X X X X X X X X X X X X N X NX x X X X X X X X X X V ? y ?. ? X X x X X X x x X X X X x<lb/>
THE ENDLESS SUMMER<lb/>
With<lb/>
CALENDAR PRINTS<lb/>
(From Your Slides &amp; Negatives)<lb/>
Suitable for Framing<lb/>
Your photography (color or B&amp;W)<lb/>
handsomely<lb/>
displayed on on 8x10 or 11 xl 4 wall<lb/>
calendar,<lb/>
at this remarkable price, you'll love them,<lb/>
calendars from negs have block numbers<lb/>
on white background<lb/>
calendars from slides ? white numbers<lb/>
on black background<lb/>
(10-14 day delivery)<lb/>
Price If Mounted<lb/>
8k10 Calendar w5-l4x8 picture $6.00 -$1.50<lb/>
11x14 Calendar w 7x 11 picture $9.00 -$2.00<lb/>
1983 or 1984 Calendar (Your Choice)<lb/>
Please Read<lb/>
Negatives and Slides will be handled with all reasonable care<lb/>
Liability for loss or damage limited to cost of film before exposure<lb/>
1983<lb/>
Name <lb/>
Address<lb/>
Order Form<lb/>
City, State, Zip.<lb/>
Neg. No Qty.<lb/>
Sub Total<lb/>
DescriptA mount<lb/>
Shipping - 10<lb/>
NCResTax4<lb/>
Total Due<lb/>
L<lb/>
aaaaaaoooo<lb/>
Mail Check To:<lb/>
211 Beiaire Cir Greenville, NC, 27834<lb/>
(919)355-2136<lb/>
xxxxxxxxxxxxx<lb/>
XXXXXXXXXX XXXXX X X X X X<lb/>
xxxxxxxxxxx<lb/>
Hwmw<lb/>
752-1411<lb/>
1011 CHARLES STREET<lb/>
HUCKLEBERRY'S<lb/>
Introducing the New<lb/>
Huckleberry's Afternoon<lb/>
Delights<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
Buy any Biscuit<lb/>
and get the next one of similar value<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Ribs,<lb/>
Buy a Rib Special at regular price<lb/>
and get an extra rib for only a QUARTER!<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Buy any Two-Pc. Chicken Dinner<lb/>
and get the second one FREE<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
TWO FOR ONE SALE<lb/>
Get two of our<lb/>
Great Dogs for the<lb/>
Price of One<lb/>
Olight Specials Good 3 PM. rtieu ? EML torn Tkiny rJ<lb/>
"All educ$<lb/>
last, go to.<lb/>
? Em<lb/>
In the sgare a c.<lb/>
students tenng a ur: .<lb/>
beach or eight have .<lb/>
local Mc pending<lb/>
decide to I You m j<lb/>
and see i 23 con<lb/>
takes a ft. You tnigh<lb/>
burger pafeet up or.<lb/>
before tnever the<lb/>
but the 31s o.hIc.<lb/>
worth it. You<lb/>
The If has a<lb/>
ming s neu - .<lb/>
known i(New r<lb/>
exciting has penned a<lb/>
cient cos of the<lb/>
images ithout a Joubt I'd<lb/>
the Friat school<lb/>
tanes fc. it's the same<lb/>
culminT'<lb/>
Heathipue his tea j<lb/>
I his first booi.<lb/>
a self-help tone for<lb/>
itaJ viewpoint. C<lb/>
V jem$ hat parentv<lb/>
J chose to write 1<lb/>
Con<lb/>
ia<lb/>
weat<lb/>
the<lb/>
sigr<lb/>
"H<lb/>
scic<lb/>
maj<lb/>
wen<lb/>
pat<lb/>
dri<lb/>
i<lb/>
GER<lb/>
Conduch<lb/>
4 STOP<lb/>
(UPI) ? Not-Safe, a Californial<lb/>
organization whose stated goal hi<lb/>
to "protect everyone froml<lb/>
everything at any cost has ex<lb/>
panded its field of anxieties to in<lb/>
elude subliminal messages.<lb/>
According to Dale Lowdermilk.<lb/>
the head paranoid, Not-Safe sup<lb/>
ports legislation to require that<lb/>
the public be warned whenl<lb/>
subliminal messages are used in<lb/>
-j.m.miafinfK media, such as<lb/>
on bumper stickers.<lb/>
Subhmination, as all of u Ner-<lb/>
vous Nellies know, occurs below<lb/>
the level of conscious perception<lb/>
When a message produces a<lb/>
psychological change so slight asj<lb/>
not to effect the consciousness, itj<lb/>
is said to be subliminal.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0007"/><lb/>
?i<lb/>
ll<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
im<lb/>
Fndov and Saturday<lb/>
N<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SI el i Mm v i ?<lb/>
Freshmen Learn To Cope With College Daze<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
? brothei' my attitude was<lb/>
this bul sinc you probably will<lb/>
do it right<lb/>
?i: Brown's conversational writing style is<lb/>
il point ol the book (particularly in the<lb/>
Dorm Pranks" and "A<lb/>
il should be noted that "College<lb/>
. tes much valid information foi the<lb/>
tud lg the subjects broached<lb/>
iggesting couises ol sti<lb/>
lid; surviving the ins-and-out ol<lb/>
g the pros au cons ol fi a<lb/>
; finding indent jobs; and.<lb/>
I related depression<lb/>
? sed in the ti ibulal<lb/>
I ersitv ol<lb/>
-<lb/>
Van H<lb/>
i<lb/>
(, Browns new book How To Survive Your College Daze ives wist advis  Freshmen now<lb/>
nions Art ists Scriess imittec<lb/>
nts<lb/>
? Jewelry, Weaving<lb/>
1 Time To Be Crafty<lb/>
<lb/>
GERHARDT ZIMMERMAN<lb/>
CHARLES TREGER<lb/>
Guest Soloist. Violin<lb/>
Wednesday, September 14, 1983<lb/>
8:00 P.M. Wright Auditorium<lb/>
ECU Campus Greenville<lb/>
i h<lb/>
for ECL Students . . $7.50 foi ECU Faculty<lb/>
Staff, and Public<lb/>
i i. riCKETS ARE $7.50 AT THE DOOR<lb/>
Tickets Available:<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center, ECU<lb/>
Greenville 757-6611<lb/>
Open Monday - Friday, 10:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
B (ARLYN EBER1"<lb/>
h-ittrnammrnt (diio'<lb/>
Got a hankering to<lb/>
calculator-weary finger-<lb/>
darkroom chemicals? Want<lb/>
pretend your major is ba<lb/>
weaving? Did you get closed<lb/>
of the art class you wanted t<lb/>
? just for fun ? that teache<lb/>
throwing pottery on a wheel?<lb/>
You can indulge your art!<lb/>
cravings and hidden talents al the<lb/>
Department of University Unions'<lb/>
Crafts Center. Six different<lb/>
workshops, all beginning the<lb/>
week in October, ofler basic in-<lb/>
struction and hands-on practice<lb/>
basketry, photograph;<lb/>
making, darkroom techni .<lb/>
floor loom weaving and pottery<lb/>
"Our objective is to provide i<lb/>
leisure activity where staff, facul-<lb/>
ty and students can be creative<lb/>
without the pressure o taking an<lb/>
art course said Linda Barkand,<lb/>
(rafts and Recreation Direct<lb/>
Crafts Center members ma<lb/>
take one crafts workshop per<lb/>
semester tree of charge. Center<lb/>
membership is SI 5 for the<lb/>
semester, although a second fee<lb/>
will be charged members wishing<lb/>
to enroll in a second workshop<lb/>
The S15 fee entitles members to<lb/>
use the Crafts Center's resource<lb/>
materials ? books, magazines,<lb/>
etc. ? and its equipment, such a.s<lb/>
hand tools for woodworking.<lb/>
Barkand pointed out that the<lb/>
Crafts Center wants to provide a<lb/>
mines at as low an expense as<lb/>
possible. Many craft supplies are<lb/>
purchased in bulk to keep the -ap-<lb/>
ply cost to members down<lb/>
Workshop space is on a fi<lb/>
pay basis, and sign-up is already<lb/>
in progress at the Crafts (enter,<lb/>
located on the bottom floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall behind the vending<lb/>
machine area. The Center<lb/>
operates from 3 to 10 p.m. Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday and 12 to 5<lb/>
p.m. on Saturday. Members sign-<lb/>
ing up for crafts workshops<lb/>
should bring their membership<lb/>
cards.<lb/>
According to Barkand, interest<lb/>
in some classes usually exceeds the<lb/>
spaces available. "Some classes<lb/>
are always popular, like our<lb/>
photography class and our potter<lb/>
class she said. "On many<lb/>
courses, 1 will run a second course<lb/>
later in the semester if there's<lb/>
enough interest But Barkand<lb/>
adds that since enrollment is on a<lb/>
first-pay basis, interested students<lb/>
should sign up as soon as possible<lb/>
I<lb/>
BASkr1R<lb/>
? !<lb/>
In this beg<lb/>
. -<lb/>
-<lb/>
shap<lb/>
appi<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY:<lb/>
5. 12<lb/>
2<lb/>
: !<lb/>
camera and to ba<lb/>
teel , Metering, depth<lb/>
field, shutter speed, aperafiir-<lb/>
control, filters, ele<lb/>
and types of film w<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Participants w red t<lb/>
shoot film and ha e it process<lb/>
for review during t lass I me S<lb/>
participant- mu have a ?5n<lb/>
single- or twin-lens reflex camt<lb/>
to use during the t<lb/>
JEWELRY MAKING<lb/>
4, 11. 25, Nov. I<lb/>
  JO p.m Instructor Pa<lb/>
Hamilton.<lb/>
Basic fabrication and m<lb/>
techniques will be .nT<lb/>
student will work on<lb/>
metals such as low-pric<lb/>
and brass , as sih<lb/>
ticipants can expect to ma?<lb/>
tional jewelry pieces such as rings<lb/>
pins and bracelets<lb/>
DARKROOM rECHNTQl -<lb/>
Mondays, Oct. 3, 10, 24. 31, Ni<lb/>
7; 6:30-9:30 r m. Instructor<lb/>
Patterson<lb/>
This woi kshop ill p ov ids<lb/>
struction in developing black i<lb/>
white film, contact printing<lb/>
enlarging techniques, use<lb/>
filters, types of paper ask<lb/>
photographic techniques Pat<lb/>
ticipants must have a 35mm<lb/>
120mm camara to use for the<lb/>
duration of the workshop.<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM WEAVING<lb/>
Thursdays, Oci 6, 13, 2 No <lb/>
10; 6:30 30 p m Instruct.<lb/>
Susan Wyre Rho,<lb/>
This course, designed<lb/>
beginner, will cover all the ba<lb/>
See Craft, p H<lb/>
'STOPV'POTS' Creating Subliminal Stirs<lb/>
?<lb/>
there was con-<lb/>
adv ei<lb/>
.<lb/>
the<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
the ievc! ? :M<lb/>
?s ? ?4 I<lb/>
. ?. hange<lb/>
t the coos<lb/>
??ell<lb/>
Acrs<lb/>
' . ? uslv<lb/>
n w hen<lb/>
-d Brand<lb/>
<lb/>
? . ?<lb/>
Jermiik s new rusade are the<lb/>
BS seen at traffic in<lb/>
ind at numerous other<lb/>
i our busv<lb/>
rho- . ires<lb/>
Because ST? spelled<lb/>
I Pi TS der<lb/>
milk argues that these signs<lb/>
subliminal!) promote drug abuce<lb/>
And he ma be right Certainly<lb/>
something is responsible foi in<lb/>
ed marijua nsumption<lb/>
wdern I<lb/>
htghw<lb/>
ment is unwittingly promoaing<lb/>
"erratic behavior' through 'hyp<lb/>
none programming<lb/>
I'm not sure what the<lb/>
replacement for "STOP should<lb/>
be ?'<lb/>
"l il I I)" obvioust) won't Jo<lb/>
ough i II I D spelled<lb/>
? ards is pure gibberish, the<lb/>
h ? is veritably crawling with<lb/>
subliminal messages<lb/>
"A lid u want vour children<lb/>
borrowing our ar tor date it<lb/>
thev knew thev ere going <lb/>
messantb Tied bv signs<lb/>
urging then III I)1' I sure<lb/>
wouldn't<lb/>
I'd rather take a chance on<lb/>
them reading "STOP'<lb/>
-Miminai<lb/>
?ntain many<lb/>
diabolical, ambiguous, subversive<lb/>
x ? Aitd communkatkHM that<lb/>
muM be stricth regulated<lb/>
Perhaps thev should I'm wonder<lb/>
 however, whether subhmina<lb/>
tion couldn't also be a force for<lb/>
lJ(?d<lb/>
Specifically, it occurred to me<lb/>
that subliminal message on street<lb/>
signs might abet the current na<lb/>
tional campaign against drunk<lb/>
driving<lb/>
. pi we, I or example, an intov<lb/>
?? Mgn??. p9<lb/>
H<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0008"/><lb/>
I I HI j AM i RO ISUS NJPIIM<lb/>
HI K 9 !WI<lb/>
'Porky V appears<lb/>
tonight at<lb/>
Mendenhall's<lb/>
ix Theatre.<lb/>
Admission is by<lb/>
Student Activity<lb/>
Card and I.D.<lb/>
Country Takes On Pop Scene<lb/>
Thirtv years ago.<lb/>
The (rand Old Oprv<lb/>
'd a harmless<lb/>
g mailed "My<lb/>
Buckets Got A Hole<lb/>
It Hank<lb/>
- planned to<lb/>
te number, but<lb/>
ofl cials balked<lb/>
uhen the realized<lb/>
the piece included<lb/>
the word "beer<lb/>
Hank could sing the<lb/>
song, they decided,<lb/>
the "beer" had to<lb/>
Hank obliged,<lb/>
tituted "butter-<lb/>
milk" for "beer" and<lb/>
?d away with<lb/>
M Bucket's Got A<lb/>
In It. Can't Buv<lb/>
No Buttermilk And<lb/>
the crowd, familiar<lb/>
with Hank's ways and<lb/>
with the song as well,<lb/>
loved it. That same<lb/>
Opry fired Williams a<lb/>
year or so later.<lb/>
That's how straight<lb/>
country music has<lb/>
been. Songs need to<lb/>
be about coon dogs,<lb/>
sopping biscuits, hard<lb/>
work, old time<lb/>
religion or trains. The<lb/>
audience was clean<lb/>
cut, well scrubbed<lb/>
family. And it could<lb/>
stand in line for a day<lb/>
in front of the ticket<lb/>
windows at Ryman<lb/>
Auditorium without<lb/>
Craft Center Begins<lb/>
In Mendenhall,<lb/>
On October 1<lb/>
l ont'd from page 7<lb/>
jues of weav-<lb/>
ng. Students vm'JJ<lb/>
work on rwo-eolor<lb/>
i i piers, and<lb/>
hi to warp<lb/>
ress a<lb/>
harness, counter-<lb/>
nce floor loom.<lb/>
timentals to be<lb/>
nclude warp<lb/>
:dage calcula-<lb/>
tion, pattern drafting,<lb/>
problem solving and<lb/>
finishing techniques.<lb/>
POTTERY: Mon<lb/>
days, Oct. 3, 10, 24,<lb/>
31, N ? 7; 6:30-9:30<lb/>
p.m. Instructor: Paul<lb/>
Hamilton.<lb/>
Using a potter's<lb/>
wheel, participants<lb/>
will Jearn the fun-<lb/>
damentals of wheel<lb/>
throwing including<lb/>
types of clay, clay<lb/>
preparation, center-<lb/>
ing, opening, forming<lb/>
a cylinder and lifting<lb/>
from the wheel. Glaz-<lb/>
ing and firing pro-<lb/>
cesses will be covered,<lb/>
as well as hand-<lb/>
building techniques.<lb/>
Participants can ex-<lb/>
pect to have com-<lb/>
pleted ceramic pieces<lb/>
by the end of the<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
Shrimp lovers<lb/>
Why travel 100 miles<lb/>
to the beach and pay<lb/>
high prices for<lb/>
fresh shrimp?<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
?<lb/>
 0? AALL YOL CAN EA<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
?c<lb/>
Family Restaurants<lb/>
AWHAlECFAMEAL<lb/>
'y<lb/>
Tarlanding seafood<lb/>
is offering a special<lb/>
popcorn shrimp dinner<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
TUESWEDTHURS.<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
even thinking about<lb/>
breaking into a riot.<lb/>
The female per-<lb/>
formers here gingham<lb/>
wholesome; and if the<lb/>
male singers and<lb/>
pickers drank a bit or<lb/>
caroused with a snuff<lb/>
queen or two, they did<lb/>
so out of sight.<lb/>
Obviously, the<lb/>
scene is changing.<lb/>
Maybe the influence<lb/>
has come from rock<lb/>
'n roll which has<lb/>
always drifted toward<lb/>
the lecherous. Rock<lb/>
bands get famous for<lb/>
their misbehavior,<lb/>
and their songs get at-<lb/>
tention for their in-<lb/>
nuendo, much of it<lb/>
sex andor drug<lb/>
related.<lb/>
Country seems to<lb/>
be taking that cue.<lb/>
Willie Nelson can sing<lb/>
"Wiskey River<lb/>
Waylon Jennings can<lb/>
go on about honky-<lb/>
tonk wine and women<lb/>
out in Texas and<lb/>
Hank Williams Jr.<lb/>
does a tune that<lb/>
goes: 1 Get Stoned,<lb/>
I'm just carrying on<lb/>
an old family tradi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The opry would<lb/>
have given Hank Sr. a<lb/>
free ride out of<lb/>
Nashville for that<lb/>
one.<lb/>
The songs, then,<lb/>
are getting raunchier;<lb/>
the entertainers are<lb/>
looser and take some<lb/>
pride in being called<lb/>
"outlaws" and in<lb/>
referring regularly to<lb/>
grass, booze and loose<lb/>
women' and the au-<lb/>
diences keep the pace<lb/>
? a crowd at a Hank<lb/>
Williams Jr. concert<lb/>
in Niles, 111 last year<lb/>
rioted, and the UPI<lb/>
report called them<lb/>
"drunk and unruly<lb/>
Ryman Auditorium,<lb/>
formerly a church<lb/>
you'll remember,<lb/>
never saw the likes of<lb/>
that.<lb/>
But country, for all<lb/>
its eagerness to cross<lb/>
over into the pop<lb/>
scene and into pop<lb/>
money, is not yet so<lb/>
easy about<lb/>
misbehavior, especial-<lb/>
ly the sexual sort. The<lb/>
subject gets plenty of<lb/>
mention, no doubt.<lb/>
Ruby did take her<lb/>
love to town. Dolly<lb/>
hasbecome something<lb/>
of a sex symbol, a<lb/>
truck driver's dream.<lb/>
Helen and Jim Ed<lb/>
sing of spreading the<lb/>
blanket on the<lb/>
ground. And Waylon<lb/>
and Jessie have reviv-<lb/>
ed a fine old duet, "It<lb/>
Wasn't God Who<lb/>
Made Honky Tonk<lb/>
Angels about what<lb/>
makes good girls do<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
I'd still claim,<lb/>
though, that Nashville<lb/>
is not quite ready for<lb/>
the casual sex of pop's<lb/>
'Afternoon<lb/>
Delight that the<lb/>
Opry probably won't<lb/>
be billing the Sex<lb/>
Pistols or ACDC any<lb/>
time soon.<lb/>
The point is that<lb/>
country still has<lb/>
morality, even if it is<lb/>
fading fast.<lb/>
If we look carefully<lb/>
at Dolly Parton,<lb/>
which is inevitable,<lb/>
we'll find that a<lb/>
woman who looks a<lb/>
bit vampish really<lb/>
seems capable of<lb/>
believing that babies<lb/>
are found under cab-<lb/>
bage leaves ? I guess<lb/>
it's the giggles and the<lb/>
taffeta. Whatever, the<lb/>
point remains that<lb/>
country usually<lb/>
punishes bad<lb/>
behavior, and it<lb/>
usually goes to some<lb/>
trouble to justify what<lb/>
may at first appear to<lb/>
be bad behavior.<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
IVs GREEK to me<lb/>
Subs, Sandwiches Pizza<lb/>
Homemade Greek Pastries<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
560 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.27834<lb/>
mteitattft&amp;tfl<lb/>
V"<lb/>
I BREAKFAST BAR OFFERINQSI<lb/>
? Fr??hly Scrambled Egg. ? Homtmadc Buttermilk Biscuits ? Bacon<lb/>
? Country Milk Qrdvy ? Homo Fried Potato ? Southern Stylo Orris ?<lb/>
Homemade Muffin ? Link and Patty Sauaag o A Choico of<lb/>
"Shonay" Own Spoclal Fruit Topping ? Oratad American Chaoaa ?<lb/>
PLUS Tha Fruit Bar featuring a variety of freh fruN and tomatoe<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
MONDAY FRIDAY<lb/>
?OOAM-netAM<lb/>
SATUftDAV-aUNDAV<lb/>
ft HOLIDAYS<lb/>
? 0 AMI PM.<lb/>
G<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price m each A&amp;P Store except as<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED. SAT 10 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVIILI<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND, WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
5 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS EXAMPLE: S10 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS<lb/>
$20 PURCHASE 10 COUPONS. $100 PURCHASE 50 COUPONS<lb/>
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE!<lb/>
Between now and Sept 10 wa will 'edeem national<lb/>
manufacturer a cents-ofi coupons up to 50 tor<lb/>
double their value Otter good on national manu<lb/>
fadurera centa-oft coupons only (Food tetailei<lb/>
coupons not acceptedCustomer must purchase<lb/>
coupon product in specified size Eiplred coupons<lb/>
will not be honored One coupon per customer per<lb/>
Item No coupons accepted for free merchandise<lb/>
Otter does not apply to A&amp;P or other store coupons<lb/>
whether manufacturer is mentioned or not When<lb/>
the value of the coupon exceeds 50 or the retail<lb/>
of the Item, this otter is limited to the retail price<lb/>
Savings are Great with ASPs DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS'<lb/>
DM<lb/>
COUPON A25-25' SO-<lb/>
COUPON B18'18- 36-<lb/>
COUPON cSO'SO- $1 00<lb/>
COUPON D75'25- $' 00<lb/>
SAVE 2<lb/>
HOT DOG OR<lb/>
Hamburger Rolls<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
n Tea Bags<lb/>
Upton<lb/>
2-11 nun u. size<lb/>
FAMILY SIZE<lb/>
8ct.<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
NT"TTTI<lb/>
SAVE 71<lb/>
Charcoal Briquets<lb/>
A&amp;P BRAND<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
Ann Page Cola<lb/>
 REGULAR &amp; DIET<lb/>
101b.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
2ltr.<lb/>
bti.<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
NowSave A&amp;P GoldRegisteTTapesfoT<lb/>
great savings on quality<lb/>
Stainless Steel Cook ware<lb/>
1Qt.<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Saucepan<lb/>
With $200 Worth<lb/>
A&amp;P Gold<lb/>
register tapes<lb/>
18 8 Stainless Steel<lb/>
with 3 layer tri-ply<lb/>
bottom for better cooking<lb/>
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS<lb/>
?Save your valuable A&amp;P gold reqistertaDes martini c a V<lb/>
? When you have the amount of A&amp;P qoid,stP?S aX 9USt 28th<lb/>
A&amp;P check stand 9 eg,s,er ,apes needed, redeem them at the<lb/>
? Naturally you can start saving more A&amp;P oold rector .? ,<lb/>
item you plan to select. u ? &amp; gold register tapes for the next cookware<lb/>
And remember, all items are on sale for thP rinrat,? j .u<lb/>
scheduled to end Sat. Dec 17. 1983 ? th,S Pro9ra? This offer ,s<lb/>
GrniJii j<lb/>
r? h TODP r<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd. G<lb/>
L enter<lb/>
reenville, N.C<lb/>
Tired<lb/>
B fUr MhKr<lb/>
"All educated Amencuns, ?<lb/>
last, x to Europe.<lb/>
? h.merson<lb/>
In the imn ?<lb/>
students sit hom<lb/>
beach or push hambc .<lb/>
loca. M Donalds,<lb/>
decide to take<lb/>
and ec th ?<lb/>
take<lb/>
burger pushing a-<lb/>
before the audie-<lb/>
but the adjust-<lb/>
worn, it m the<lb/>
The .ear; a<lb/>
ming hole,<lb/>
kno <lb/>
exciting on<lb/>
cier ?<lb/>
ima'<lb/>
the f rei<lb/>
tanes ar<lb/>
culminate<lb/>
Hea<lb/>
Sublimin<lb/>
Con't from pae<lb/>
icated<lb/>
weaving hi - ?<lb/>
the '<lb/>
sign<lb/>
"KM RD<lb/>
sciously.<lb/>
makes no<lb/>
would i<lb/>
pau-<lb/>
drive<lb/>
PILOT'S I. AM<lb/>
A New Mudent Housing I j<lb/>
Will ho asailahle in la<lb/>
Kadeir<lb/>
Reasonable Pnc<lb/>
Other Amenity loo<lb/>
Management Ask for k<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
rj?EvouCAN uovrtoM<lb/>
DEPEND ON<lb/>
?m?  e<lb/>
- - 3ta - -<lb/>
- - . iota<lb/>
StBViCfS ? I esoo?<lb/>
povntmenrsl '52<lb/>
?- ,see?s ? -ee P9Q<lb/>
rvegnono "??'? k<lb/>
AC -ec'eo ? CA. '?' 55!<lb/>
necr- :aw ? s ?<lb/>
o,v GOjc&amp;xy 'or ?o<lb/>
THE<lb/>
A Taco Bell<lb/>
and Bean<lb/>
Jus<lb/>
i.<lb/>
Ofdc ooi Tc<lb/>
 if ri e?tro large<lb/>
cor" i-? pkrt ouf<lb/>
Burr to ana you '?<lb/>
$1.79 ' I one ? f1!<lb/>
baraa.ns you e"t<lb/>
3t9l<lb/>
.It<lb/>
TBCOA<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0009"/><lb/>
ead'iy available fcf<lb/>
aa,p Store except as<lb/>
Alt DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
OUPONS<lb/>
? ftiil DOUBLE<lb/>
0 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS<lb/>
URCHASE 50 C0UPOHS.<lb/>
CE VALUE!<lb/>
t Great wtti ASP s<lb/>
miKGS counts-<lb/>
SAVE $1.50<lb/>
III<lb/>
SAVE 30 LB.<lb/>
iicious Apples<lb/>
ERN GOLDEN<lb/>
bag<lb/>
SAVE UP TO 50<lb/>
pton Tea Bags<lb/>
1 FAMILY SIZE<lb/>
4ct<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
SAVE $1.10<lb/>
Sealtest lce<lb/>
AlL flavors<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
ton Page Cola<lb/>
REGULAR &amp; DIET<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
ister Tapes for<lb/>
juality<lb/>
'ookware<lb/>
With $200 Worth<lb/>
A&amp;PGoid<lb/>
register tapes<lb/>
9 8StamiessSteei<lb/>
ith3layertn-piv<lb/>
bottom for better cook.ng<lb/>
IRKS<lb/>
Sunday August 28th<lb/>
es needed, redeem them at the<lb/>
lertaP?s for the next cookware<lb/>
of this program This offer ,s<lb/>
'?nter<lb/>
He, N.C<lb/>
Tired Of School? Take The<lb/>
Bv HI- Vl m . o- . .<lb/>
THCEASTCAKOUNIAN SEPTEMMl-a 9 1983 9<lb/>
By RENE MEYER<lb/>
Staff Wrtr <lb/>
U educated Americans Hrm nr<lb/>
Vast, go to Europe. " J ?r<lb/>
? Emerson<lb/>
In the summer, while most lazy<lb/>
tudents s,t home, lounge at the<lb/>
.each or push hambergers at the<lb/>
ocal Mc Donalds, some others<lb/>
klec.de to take the "Great Escape"<lb/>
ind see the world. Of coursfit<lb/>
ikes a few previous summers of<lb/>
urger pushing and serious savin<lb/>
tefote the audience is affordable<lb/>
ut the adjusted priorities are well<lb/>
vorth it in the end.<lb/>
The leap across the local swim-<lb/>
?ng hole, more commonly<lb/>
mown as the Atlantic, is truly an<lb/>
txatmg one. Ah. Europe, that an-<lb/>
cient continent of culture All the<lb/>
images collected from photos in<lb/>
the French book, TV documen-<lb/>
tary and romantic movies<lb/>
rulmmate in a smooth landing art<lb/>
Heathrow in London.<lb/>
ubliminal Signs<lb/>
on't from page 7<lb/>
icated motorist<lb/>
reaving his way down<lb/>
Ihe street came to a<lb/>
ign that said<lb/>
KNLRD Con-<lb/>
Iciously, the sign<lb/>
lakes no sense. But<lb/>
ould it not give a<lb/>
ause to a tipsy<lb/>
Irier?<lb/>
Would not the blot-<lb/>
tertongue behind the<lb/>
wheel try to clear<lb/>
away his alcoholic<lb/>
haze long enough to<lb/>
figure would what the<lb/>
sign meant, perhaps<lb/>
even backing up to<lb/>
make sure he had read<lb/>
it right?<lb/>
I think so. I'm con-<lb/>
vinced that encounter-<lb/>
Briskly through the customs likHv i? -?<lb/>
you are overcome bv a feHno nf y end up as P?1 of the<lb/>
relief, as well Ta losLf dTrJefion SETS !?TC yOU reach th<lb/>
and, of course, slee The ?Cx" aSL?" H " ?f L?ndon'to<lb/>
thing to do, after you have found "??. !? bc J0" fun-<lb/>
the way to the nearest wSh . Aftcr a w n the Queen's ci-<lb/>
hostel (or park benchTthe'c &amp; "fr WeStmJnster Aey.<lb/>
may be), is decide where you w hrLfPhamCnt' Big Ben Md<lb/>
to go first To Te ysomeofthemagnificant<lb/>
EVERYTHING; that is u" is time t0 mov "?<lb/>
understood, but where to start. unKL F " ParJS-<lb/>
London is a unique citv Since it ? Llcd blg EuroPean cities<lb/>
is somewhat dirt?, just b sure n iZJ?" " SUnny days in<lb/>
you buy your postcards from in u?l LLT Sf" y?U<lb/>
side the store, otherwise thev tend L? En?land, be prepared to kiss<lb/>
to be rather polLTon speckled SS "fVC Jangua?e ?oodbye<lb/>
black. Traffic Another mhlim USC ff?m hcrc on out il is sir<lb/>
to be confronted Just to ? Hi? P ' SCntCnCCS and Iittle co<lb/>
ferent fmJ, ?tk i " vcrsat?on with the natives<lb/>
tSriSinE,SteS" pWiLh?UL P"c???y P-fect<lb/>
onies still drive orthHeftsL of ZT? !L2? y?U Can ? t0<lb/>
the road. Take you tunecrossin etfS " ' realm ?f t0urists-<lb/>
the street, it's a verVTfck? SS COUrse' is sP?ken in<lb/>
business It is usually necessary to" l'SSsTmT Md<lb/>
stop and think before you even Inf ?" Unfortunately, not<lb/>
take the first step near a crLhT f g?S m ,n English'so without<lb/>
If you are not ZmSSZ 5S2r " " " t0 fed<lb/>
After seeing the typical tourist<lb/>
places, pop into the Centre de<lb/>
Georges Pompidou. The new art<lb/>
and culture centrum is a real treat<lb/>
for all. Everywhere in Paris these<lb/>
days are the junk sellers. Now<lb/>
ing such a sign would there are people from the French<lb/>
a sobering ex- colonies who sell purses, wallets<lb/>
Great<lb/>
and other small articles to easily<lb/>
suckered tourists. The night life in<lb/>
the student quarter is no myth<lb/>
nothing is untrue about Paris.<lb/>
Fashion on the streets, at least<lb/>
this summer, tends to be very fif-<lb/>
ties, complete with crinolins, big<lb/>
skirts and red, red lipstick. When<lb/>
you start feeling fat because you<lb/>
have eaten too many baguettes<lb/>
then you know its time to go south<lb/>
and get away from museums and<lb/>
tourist attractions.<lb/>
Nice, Cannes or Monte Carlo<lb/>
take your pick, they are all a hop<lb/>
skip and a jump from each other<lb/>
Any time in these parts is a time<lb/>
well wasted. If you come early<lb/>
enough to Cannes you could be<lb/>
discovered during the film<lb/>
festival. Watch out for nice old<lb/>
men with big yacts who will want<lb/>
!? take you for more than a ride<lb/>
When you have enough of the<lb/>
beaches and mint avec d'eau, take<lb/>
the next trip eastward.<lb/>
Italy is a great next choice, "ft<lb/>
left a fierce memory of sunlight<lb/>
on the sands and cool marble in-<lb/>
teriors said Charles Ryder ?<lb/>
Bndeshead Refisited. OOO la la'<lb/>
If couldn't be more true. Not a<lb/>
car to be seen, only water and<lb/>
boats. If you decide to walk, you<lb/>
find yourself meandering through<lb/>
the driver's brain,<lb/>
marking his<lb/>
subliminally aware<lb/>
that he had conscious-<lb/>
ly downed a few too<lb/>
many.<lb/>
PILOT'S LANDING<lb/>
A New Student Housing Development<lb/>
 ill be available in late December, off<lb/>
Reade Circle close to Campus<lb/>
Reasonably Priced with Private rooms<lb/>
Other Amenities too. Call Clark, Branch<lb/>
Management. Ask for Kathy, 756-6336<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
?lS 90 r?<lb/>
CV T?t<lb/>
lm?n MlniMtiM call<lb/>
tn-aSU (Toll Ft-M Nunktr<lb/>
?Mill ISM) MN? ? AM<lb/>
an- M WaMOayt.<lb/>
? ALCIOHS WOMINS<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
 ?a?-??. HC<lb/>
Now Nikon makes fine<lb/>
photography easier and<lb/>
more convenient than ever<lb/>
THE<lb/>
AUTOMATIC<lb/>
NIKON FE<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
m-an-MNM.<lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Houl Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
Prices In Town!<lb/>
mall cracks between the buildings<lb/>
and only relieving closterphobia<lb/>
by going into a church. Be wary of<lb/>
Pickpockets. One girl reportedly<lb/>
lost all her money and passport<lb/>
when a really sneaky pickpocket<lb/>
penetrated through zippers on her<lb/>
bag.<lb/>
Gondolas and gondoliers are<lb/>
usually expensive but something<lb/>
not to be missed. The best attrac-<lb/>
tion in Venice are the cats. They<lb/>
live on the little squares around<lb/>
town and all the fat, old Italian<lb/>
ladies waddle out to feed them<lb/>
every day.<lb/>
A short trip through the Alps<lb/>
and you can land in Austria or<lb/>
Switzerland, both filled with old<lb/>
world charm. In fact, in<lb/>
Switzerland, the old country<lb/>
villages are even more charming<lb/>
than the new ones. Each one com-<lb/>
plete with "gasthaus" and plenty<lb/>
of flower boxes to go around. For<lb/>
those who ski, summer skiing in<lb/>
the Alps is also a real treat. A few<lb/>
days in these mountains and it all<lb/>
gets too beautiful. Time to bo<lb/>
north. 8<lb/>
Holland, West Germany and<lb/>
Scandinavia are yet to be seen<lb/>
Amsterdam is the largest drug<lb/>
trafficking center in Europe, so a<lb/>
visit here tends to be more<lb/>
depressing than enjoyable. West<lb/>
Germany in itself is interesting,<lb/>
but a trip to Berlin is the real cross<lb/>
cultural experience. West Ger-<lb/>
many is unofficially divided into<lb/>
the North and the South (called<lb/>
Bavaria), and the rivalry between<lb/>
the two can easily be compared to<lb/>
our country's north and south<lb/>
rivalry. In the south they have a<lb/>
different accent (or vice versa),<lb/>
their own colloquialisms as well as<lb/>
different customs.<lb/>
Last but not least, Scandinavia<lb/>
Scandinavia includes Denmark<lb/>
Norway and Sweden, but not<lb/>
Finland as commonly assumed<lb/>
Sweden, the land of tall skinny<lb/>
blonds, and often topless beaches.<lb/>
You see, Swedes must have<lb/>
perfect tans, visiting a beach in<lb/>
Sweden without having become<lb/>
nicely tan in a solarium first is<lb/>
risking your life.<lb/>
You will never regret the Euro-<lb/>
pean experience, if you decide to<lb/>
indulge. With the strength of the<lb/>
dollar and special plane fares<lb/>
traveling to the other side is<lb/>
becoming more and more affor-<lb/>
dable. A two month trip could<lb/>
cost as much as a term at ECU, if<lb/>
you live on campus. Maybe next<lb/>
summer more students will choose<lb/>
the better education.<lb/>
ECU'S RAFTV CENTEt?<lb/>
TOC 15 V?A??5<lb/>
WR0OMES sack<lb/>
UPCOHtHC fcVtJVTS<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN AaoanoNadiiftcuitdec.<lb/>
DEPEND ON. sion matmxae easier by<lb/>
'ewomenol the (-leaning Center Counselors are<lb/>
available oov ana mght to support and under-<lb/>
stand you Your safety comfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured Py rhe caring staff of the Fleming Center<lb/>
SESVICfS: ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
16 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Earty<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? All Inclusive Fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CAL1 71-5550 DAY OC NIGHT ?<lb/>
Meatrhcare.counseling ???? a raaiai<lb/>
and education tor wo- IHt rttMIW<lb/>
monofaflooos.CENTER<lb/>
WITH MKON<lb/>
SOmm (1 <lb/>
SERIES E ltN.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$299.95<lb/>
SimpK sensational a light, compact auto-exposure<lb/>
35mm sir ith the precision and versatility that only<lb/>
iikon can otter. The Nikon FE gives you automatic<lb/>
exposure dccuracy with any of nearly 60 famous Mikkor<lb/>
lenses plus easy-to-use features for creative<lb/>
photography Theres also a special Nikon automatic<lb/>
elertron.r flash that actually programs the FE shutter,<lb/>
and a compact motor drive for up to 3 5 shov per<lb/>
seconJ Try it yoursen -ome in today!<lb/>
art H. camera hop<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C 27834<lb/>
7 52-0688<lb/>
hump Ncm l all ca?b so '<lb/>
NtGWr - ecu sJoerry<lb/>
ffr<lb/>
F<lb/>
BGKHS<lb/>
MAfVmouj?, lookon 5&amp;J<lb/>
CAWSTtl l:?. T5ic4NS<lb/>
T Cu?tWfi - oamnc ?tts.<lb/>
,WZM8"uv?-<lb/>
? ioo-pl u:oo mmca?osna not ??c<lb/>
TELE RENT TV<lb/>
? J Phone: 758-9102<lb/>
2905 East 10th Street in Green<lb/>
OUR WMOus'LAceS WMT '?<lb/>
MQUBS xoo-V.oo tor 3o-1,6o KT.<lb/>
llHrUllili<lb/>
THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
MreSs srss sMrsa srate9,es that ha- ??<lb/>
m.ng program ,s ISZSSaTS " 86COnd P'3Ce t0daV ??<lb/>
I<lb/>
entertair<lb/>
Date Sept. 9<lb/>
Tme 10 a.m.<lb/>
Location Leo Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Presented by<lb/>
Marry Am Hadact-<lb/>
Millar Brewing Co.<lb/>
CO Tankard Co.<lb/>
Student Chapter off Amerl<lb/>
MaricettncAaeodatlon<lb/>
:<lb/>
.??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
r?M?iWM?weM9<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. 1983 Page 10<lb/>
Pirates Hope To Bounce Right Back<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sporu Mltot<lb/>
The ECU Pirates may have had<lb/>
an offensive war with FSU (47-46)<lb/>
last weekend, but Saturday's<lb/>
came with N.C. State should pro-<lb/>
ve to be even more of a brawl.<lb/>
"The only way to get over the<lb/>
pain of losing to Florida State is<lb/>
to beat N.C. State Emory said<lb/>
Tuesdav at his weekly press con-<lb/>
ference. "We don't have time for<lb/>
depression<lb/>
Emory, in fact, said a win over<lb/>
State Saturday in Raleigh is a<lb/>
must. "If we lose, people might<lb/>
think we're just a fluke team, but<lb/>
I can guarantee you we're not<lb/>
he said. "It's more than just a<lb/>
game. It's state pride and state<lb/>
recruiting. If we beat N.C. State,<lb/>
ve'll be the best team in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
The EClState game will be<lb/>
telewsed nationally on Atlanta<lb/>
cable station VVTBS. The<lb/>
v overage will provide ECU's<lb/>
ugevt exposure in the school's<lb/>
history.<lb/>
"We want to win on national<lb/>
TV Emory said. "That's the<lb/>
mi1 wa we will reach our goals<lb/>
tnd possibly get a bowl bid<lb/>
After the near upset at Florida<lb/>
?ate. the Pirates have received an<lb/>
dndance o( praise from across<lb/>
he countr. particularly from<lb/>
Wolf pack Coach Tom Reed. But<lb/>
ory's apparently a little leery<lb/>
 the sincerity of Reed's<lb/>
i on.<lb/>
"What he said about us was all<lb/>
flowers, but he doen't really<lb/>
. eve that said Emory, who<lb/>
Jed that he's heard a few other<lb/>
larks he aid Reed made<lb/>
cently. "He aid down in Dunn<lb/>
it he gonna beat East<lb/>
t arolina. and (that) he's tired of<lb/>
.iring about us Emory said.<lb/>
On the other hand, Emory said<lb/>
he'd like to know a little more<lb/>
ut Reed, especially the State<lb/>
coach's game plan. The Pirates<lb/>
have looked at film of Reed's<lb/>
teams at Miami of Ohio.<lb/>
"We haven't seem them play<lb/>
like they've seen us Emory said.<lb/>
"They've scouted us so closely<lb/>
that they they probably know our<lb/>
toothpaste brand and shoe size by<lb/>
now.<lb/>
"We just don't know what to<lb/>
expect he continued, "but we'll<lb/>
be as ready as we can for them<lb/>
The Bucs will again carry their<lb/>
strong offense into the game, with<lb/>
quarterback Kevin Ingram leading<lb/>
the way. "We can move the ball<lb/>
better than anybody. We've prov-<lb/>
ed that Emory said. "I thought<lb/>
Ingram played the best game I've<lb/>
had a quarterback plav since I've<lb/>
been at ECU<lb/>
Opposite Ingram Saturday<lb/>
night will be the Wolfpack's Tim<lb/>
Esposito, a junior college transfer<lb/>
who has never played in a college<lb/>
game. Emory, however, said<lb/>
Esposito is no slouch.<lb/>
"They've been crying down<lb/>
there, but Esposito can throw the<lb/>
football Emory said. "He was<lb/>
the leading passer in California. 1<lb/>
know because we recruited some<lb/>
junior college kids out there.<lb/>
When I saw him, I felt like he<lb/>
could throw the ball equal to Kelly<lb/>
Low rev at Florida State<lb/>
Emory said that he's also wary<lb/>
of N.C. State's defense, which he<lb/>
said has more depth than Florida<lb/>
State's. "(N.C.) State's defense is<lb/>
100 percent better than FSU's<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
He added that the outcome of<lb/>
Saturday's game will depend on<lb/>
defense and the punting and kick-<lb/>
ing. Against FSU, the Pirates<lb/>
never punted but did have an ex-<lb/>
tra point and a field goal try<lb/>
blocked.<lb/>
"We should have have four<lb/>
more points Emory said.<lb/>
"There's rno excuse in college<lb/>
football for a blocked kick. We'll<lb/>
get (Jeff) Heath protection. Those<lb/>
mistakes must have been errors by<lb/>
our coaching staff, but we'll get it<lb/>
straightened out.<lb/>
On defense, Emory said the<lb/>
Pirates will have to play more ef-<lb/>
N.C.State coach Tom<lb/>
iuli trying to stop the<lb/>
Reed knows his<lb/>
powerful Pirate<lb/>
Wolf pack will have their hands<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
fectively at State than they did at<lb/>
Florida State.<lb/>
"We're were disappointed with<lb/>
the team's lack of intensity and<lb/>
enthusiasm he said, "but Kelly<lb/>
Lowrey might have had<lb/>
something to do with that. Our<lb/>
long pass defense was good, but<lb/>
we probably gave up too much<lb/>
cushion in respect of their speed<lb/>
on shorter routes<lb/>
Injury-wise, the Pirates suf-<lb/>
fered a major loss this week. Star-<lb/>
ting Center John Floyd, a senior<lb/>
from Fairmont, came down with<lb/>
appendicitis and underwent an ap-<lb/>
pendectomy Tuesday night. He is<lb/>
expected to be back in three<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Floyd will miss<lb/>
the chance to play against State<lb/>
one more time. Another senior,<lb/>
free safety Clint Harris, an All-<lb/>
America honorable mention last<lb/>
season, said getting pumped up<lb/>
for N.C. State won't be too dif-<lb/>
ficult for him and his teammates.<lb/>
"We haven't beaten N.C. State<lb/>
in three years, so this game means<lb/>
a lot to the senior players the<lb/>
Chesapeake, VA native said.<lb/>
"We've only got one more shot,<lb/>
so we're going to make it our best<lb/>
one<lb/>
ECU AT STATL<lb/>
GEORGIA TECH AT<lb/>
CLEMSON AT bOs:<lb/>
MEMPHIS STAT<lb/>
MARY -WD AT VAJ<lb/>
DUKE AI !Mja<lb/>
NAV AT VIRG1 !<lb/>
WAKE fOREST<lb/>
FLORIDA<lb/>
FLORIDA AT S<lb/>
TEMPI I M<lb/>
SOUTHERN M<lb/>
NOTRE DAM 1 <lb/>
OKLAHOMA<lb/>
OREGON ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
?1v<lb/>
ECU head coach<lb/>
would be just the<lb/>
Ed Emory has suggested that a win over N.C. State<lb/>
remedy the Pirates need to get over the shock of the<lb/>
OARY PATTERSON ? ECU ?!? L?6<lb/>
FSU game. The Pirates will get that chance Saturday at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Raleigh's Carter-Finley Stadium.<lb/>
Reed Ready To Open Season<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Antatmal Sport fAiXor<lb/>
Newly-hired N.C. State head<lb/>
coach Tom Reed will be thrown<lb/>
head-first into the fire this<lb/>
weekend when the Wolfpack<lb/>
plays host to ECU.<lb/>
Reed will have to open his<lb/>
Wolfpack coaching career Satur-<lb/>
day night against the Pirates, a<lb/>
team ? and student body ?<lb/>
which always looks at the mat-<lb/>
chup as the biggest rivalry on the<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
And to add to the emotion this<lb/>
year, Reed's debut will be televis-<lb/>
ed nationally by Ted Turner's<lb/>
WTBS-Ch. 17, along with an ex-<lb/>
pected 55,000-plus fans at Carter-<lb/>
Finley Stadium.<lb/>
"I guess you'd describe the<lb/>
game as a back-yard<lb/>
neighborhood brawl Reed said<lb/>
concerning this weekend's mat-<lb/>
chup. "We've got a tough assign-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The contest will be of even<lb/>
greater interest considering the<lb/>
Pirates' awesome offensive show-<lb/>
ing against Florida State.<lb/>
"They moved the ball with ex-<lb/>
treme consistency and were never<lb/>
really stopped Reed com-<lb/>
mented. "I'm not sure anybody<lb/>
can completely contain them, but<lb/>
I hope we'll Find some way to slow<lb/>
them down<lb/>
The series between the two<lb/>
intra-state rivals, which began in<lb/>
1970, has included many exciting<lb/>
games, including the Wolfpack's<lb/>
33-26 victory last season.<lb/>
N.C. State leads the overall<lb/>
series 10-3, with the last Pirate<lb/>
victory being a 28-23 win in 1978.<lb/>
The battle for the starting<lb/>
quarterback position gained most<lb/>
of the attention during State's spr-<lb/>
ing and pre-season practices.<lb/>
Tim Esposito (6-1, 182, Jr.) has<lb/>
been chosen by Reed out of a<lb/>
group of inexperienced hopefuls.<lb/>
None of the Wolfpack QBs, in-<lb/>
cluding Esposito, have played in a<lb/>
game for State.<lb/>
Leading the way for the '83<lb/>
season will be a pair of pre-season<lb/>
all-star selections in starter Joe<lb/>
Mclntosh (5-11, 188, Jr.) at<lb/>
tailback and Andy Hendel (6-1,<lb/>
220, Sr.) at inside linebacker.<lb/>
Mclntosh has totalled 1,970<lb/>
yards in two seasons to rank fifth<lb/>
on State's all-time career rushing<lb/>
list. He needs 573 yards to move<lb/>
into second place this year.<lb/>
Hendel came to State as a<lb/>
lacrosse player before trying out<lb/>
for football and earning a scholar-<lb/>
ship. He finished second on the<lb/>
team in total tackles last year<lb/>
(161), while leading the team in<lb/>
solo tackles (37), tackles for losses<lb/>
(10) and caused fumbles (6).<lb/>
Other standouts for the<lb/>
Wolfpack include linebacker<lb/>
Vaughan Johnson (6-3, 226, Sr.)<lb/>
who teams with Hendel to form<lb/>
one of the best linebacking<lb/>
tandems in the country.<lb/>
Safeties Dwayne Greene (6-1,<lb/>
195, Jr.) and Don Wilson (6-2,<lb/>
187, Sr.), running backs Mike<lb/>
Miller (6-1, 208, So.) and Vince<lb/>
Evans (5-11, 202, So.) and offen-<lb/>
sive tackle Joe Milinichik (6-5,<lb/>
275, So.) will add power to the<lb/>
Wolfpack arsenal.<lb/>
One of State's biggest obstacles<lb/>
this year will be to overcome a<lb/>
lack of experience. Seven seniors<lb/>
will be starting for the Wolfpack<lb/>
against the Pirates.<lb/>
On the other hand, ECU will<lb/>
start eight seniors on defense<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
In the trenches, the Wolfpack<lb/>
will be out-weighed by ECU's<lb/>
contingent. On the offensive line,<lb/>
the Pirates out-average State<lb/>
261-247 pounds.<lb/>
On the defensive front, ECU<lb/>
averages 239 pounds per man,<lb/>
while State stands in at 228<lb/>
pounds apiece.<lb/>
In all, Reed is looking forward<lb/>
to the game, but he knows it will<lb/>
be a tough opening assignment.<lb/>
"They're big and they're fast<lb/>
the former Miami of Ohio coach<lb/>
said. "In a nutshell, East Carolina<lb/>
is an experienced, explosive,<lb/>
physical football team<lb/>
And if the Pirates unleash<lb/>
another explosion like they did<lb/>
against the Seminoles, Reed will<lb/>
be hard-pressed in his quest for<lb/>
opening-game victory.<lb/>
Pirate Fans Flipping Over Williams<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
SyofHEcUtor<lb/>
No one had ever heard too<lb/>
much about ECU flanker Henry<lb/>
Williams until Saturday night.<lb/>
You know, the guy who did a flip<lb/>
in the endzone after running back<lb/>
a 56-yard kickoff return against<lb/>
rsu.<lb/>
The 6-0, 160-pound flash then<lb/>
followed by gliding right through<lb/>
the Seminoles' defense to score on<lb/>
a 99-yard kickoff return.<lb/>
The run was a long one, even<lb/>
for an athlete who runs a 40-yard<lb/>
dash in 4.3 seconds. "I was<lb/>
tired Williams said about his<lb/>
lengthy sprint.<lb/>
That isn't the first time<lb/>
Williams has ran from one end-<lb/>
zone to the other. At Northwest<lb/>
Junior College in Mississippi,<lb/>
Williams ran back a 100-yard<lb/>
kickoff return in his First college<lb/>
football game.<lb/>
The only difference for<lb/>
Williams Saturday night was be-<lb/>
ing surrounded by such a large<lb/>
crowd. "That was one of my big-<lb/>
gest games he said. "I've never<lb/>
played in front of that many peo-<lb/>
ple before. It was very exciting<lb/>
Coming from a school that won<lb/>
the junior college national cham-<lb/>
pionship, Williams has had quite<lb/>
a few big games. During his two-<lb/>
year stint at Northwest, Williams<lb/>
was named junior college all-<lb/>
America and a member of the<lb/>
JUCO national all-star team. His<lb/>
coach, Bobby Ray Franklin said<lb/>
Williams was the most coor-<lb/>
dinated and by far the best special<lb/>
teams player he had ever coached.<lb/>
During his freshman year, he<lb/>
scored nine touchdowns?seven<lb/>
by pass receptions. In 1981, he<lb/>
was named all-Mississippi Con-<lb/>
ference JUCO second-team. Dur-<lb/>
ing his sophomore season,<lb/>
Williams caught 14 passes for 268<lb/>
yards and three touchdowns. He<lb/>
Finished at Northwest with a<lb/>
17-yard average per punt return.<lb/>
Raised in "unica, Miss along<lb/>
with nine children, Williams is the<lb/>
only accomplished athlete in his<lb/>
family. And his family has a lot to<lb/>
be proud of.<lb/>
In track, Williams holds the<lb/>
Mississippi state junior college<lb/>
record in the 220 with a time of<lb/>
21.6 seconds. He placed third in<lb/>
the nationals in the 200 with a<lb/>
time of 20.9.<lb/>
In high school, Williams was a<lb/>
member of the Explorers swimm-<lb/>
ing club and won two Olympic<lb/>
gold medals in the 100-meter<lb/>
freestyle and a breaststroke event.<lb/>
When asked about his sport<lb/>
preference, Williams was quick to<lb/>
respond. "I've played football all<lb/>
of my life he said. "Everything<lb/>
else just Fit in. Track was for<lb/>
speed, and I just developed this<lb/>
acrobatic ability which helped in<lb/>
other things<lb/>
Williams began showing off his<lb/>
gymnastic skill at Northwest after<lb/>
he did a flip at football practice<lb/>
one day. "My wide receiver coach<lb/>
threw a ball to me in the<lb/>
endzone Williams said, "and I<lb/>
did a flip. He couldn't believe it at<lb/>
First. Then he called over the other<lb/>
coaches, and he asked me to do it<lb/>
again<lb/>
Later on, Williams asked his<lb/>
coach if he could do anything in<lb/>
the endzone. His coach said he<lb/>
could do anything but spike the<lb/>
ball. The rest was history.<lb/>
After Williams performed his<lb/>
flip against FSU, Head Football<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory told Williams<lb/>
not to do another one because of a<lb/>
possible penalty call. "Official<lb/>
See WILLIAMS, page 11<lb/>
Junior college transfer Tin Esposito will get the startiat BOd<lb/>
Saturday night's contest in Raleigh.<lb/>
?tQBln<lb/>
There was plenty r high-steppij<lb/>
end of a 1-0 score.<lb/>
S  . . ?<lb/>
 V ? .<lb/>
<lb/>
WELCOME B<lb/>
Come see Our<lb/>
Greeting cart<lb/>
Out-of?n<lb/>
CENTRAL B<lb/>
Greenville Squt<lb/>
Open 7 days a h<lb/>
ANNOUNC<lb/>
SATUR<lb/>
H<lb/>
For<lb/>
for rxan<lb/>
.r S<lb/>
p II! " I<lb/>
v, ; i i t Conve<lb/>
H I <lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Coupon Eil<lb/>
L"<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
irtTj imiaum<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0011"/><lb/>
SICK<lb/>
he too dif-<lb/>
teammates<lb/>
 v state<lb/>
?lame means<lb/>
ayers the<lb/>
. said<lb/>
shot,<lb/>
oui bcsl<lb/>
m<lb/>
ifurda ai p m. in<lb/>
ason<lb/>
EC<lb/>
? c .<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
? man,<lb/>
ruard<lb/>
as it will<lb/>
menc<lb/>
c fast<lb/>
coach<lb/>
r 'hna<lb/>
?plosive,<lb/>
unleash<lb/>
e did<lb/>
ed vmII<lb/>
. lest for<lb/>
7<lb/>
starting nod at QB in<lb/>
?;<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
' Y'S?sss<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. 1983<lb/>
11<lb/>
?WWWSJSSSSSWS SWW?v?W, .<lb/>
Fearless Forecast<lb/>
ECU AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
CLEMsA1 AT AI-ABAMA<lb/>
C LhMSON AT BOSTON COI I Fr.P<lb/>
DUKEATWD"lANAJgDERBILT<lb/>
NAVY AT VIRGINIA<lb/>
VSEES&amp;gEFTECH<lb/>
rtSipl.DcAAT SOUTHER CAL<lb/>
TEMPLE AT PITT<lb/>
N?,TRFEnRANMPIf1!SS1PPI AT AlJBURN<lb/>
NOTRE DAME AT PURDUE<lb/>
OKLAHOMA AT STANFORD<lb/>
OREGON AT OHIO STATE<lb/>
CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
KEN BOLTON<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
JIM K1RCHMAN<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
TODD EVANS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
"??" ??y?<lb/>
 Tigers Aware Of Flutie<lb/>
(UPI) ? Boston<lb/>
College quarterback<lb/>
Doug Flutie is ranked<lb/>
as one of the top<lb/>
passers in the nation<lb/>
and you won't get any<lb/>
argument out of<lb/>
Clemson coaches who<lb/>
learned about him the<lb/>
hard way.<lb/>
"Most of the time,<lb/>
I don't like to admire<lb/>
my oppenent, but I<lb/>
have to in Doug<lb/>
Flutie said Tiger<lb/>
defensive back coach<lb/>
Don Denning, whose<lb/>
team flattened<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
44-10 last Saturday.<lb/>
"This is a horse of a<lb/>
different color. This<lb/>
kid is really<lb/>
something<lb/>
Flutie made ad-<lb/>
mirers out of the<lb/>
Clemson staff last<lb/>
season when the<lb/>
 ? i??<lb/>
i<lb/>
vWstri-wrf- -<lb/>
1tv, v<lb/>
 ?-???<lb/>
.TJ.<lb/>
I ?5l- " ? ?c"?n ?"????? ? ??" tmm. B.t in pJ?vj?i:rP;rihnjo?<lb/>
end of a 1-0 score.<lb/>
BUYING<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs, Air Conditioners,<lb/>
Stereos, guns, gold &amp; silver,<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm size on<lb/>
ly), video games A car-<lb/>
tridges, power tools,<lb/>
musical instruments.<lb/>
microwave ovens video<lb/>
rtc orders bicycle. iM<lb/>
anything else of value.<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop,<lb/>
located 405 Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown. ?52 244<lb/>
? ?;? ??<lb/>
'?-?.?-?-<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
tfbjgPUCi<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
Come see Our Great Selection of:<lb/>
Greeting cards for all occasions<lb/>
Out-of?town newspapers<lb/>
Magazines<lb/>
Books<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
THEATER A<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
NIQHT<lb/>
CLUBS<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK AND NEWS<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 7 days a week 9:30AM-9:30PM<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
ANNOUNCING . . .<lb/>
SATURDAY OFFICE<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Fur vour i n i iiinur ? w ill<lb/>
I ij)CM<lb/>
lor examination and ?tfual services<lb/>
every Saturday Iron. 9:0tJ a m m 1 00<lb/>
p.m Affordable lees quirk .ucurate<lb/>
s( r h e. Convenient Hours. Scfinq is<lb/>
Belwri'ui<lb/>
I)K I'K IKK l Hnl.l.is<lb/>
OTTOMCTMC<lb/>
?E CAftE OEKTCR<lb/>
O.D .A.<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
WE'RE OPEN LATE!<lb/>
?v.h;i aft it nur late niyht fun. Try eric of our<lb/>
?' ii' ?rlviv-ies. We have 7 mouth water<lb/>
' ' r  v 'ur rnth We're open til! 2 00 a m<lb/>
.SUB<lb/>
America s Famous<lb/>
? 208 E. 5th Street<lb/>
tW<lb/>
GREENVILLE, INC.<lb/>
,&amp;Mfii<lb/>
1127 SOUTH EVANS ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE NC 27834<lb/>
$<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Complete Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses Or Contact Lens<lb/>
Fitting<lb/>
Must Be Presented At<lb/>
Ttme 01 Order<lb/>
Other Discounts Or Coupons<lb/>
Do Not Apply<lb/>
Coupon Expires Oct. 31,1983<lb/>
Get High with Balloons Aloft<lb/>
$40.00 for the ride of your life<lb/>
Call 752-2303 for more info<lb/>
 Also: Ground school &amp; flight school I<lb/>
 (see Classifieds) J<lb/>
? I<lb/>
Tigers escaped with a<lb/>
17-17 tie on their<lb/>
home field. He passed<lb/>
for 242 yards, com-<lb/>
pleting 18 of 35<lb/>
passes, including a<lb/>
15-yard fourth<lb/>
quarter scoring toss.<lb/>
Denning said he<lb/>
saw signs last Satur-<lb/>
day the Tiger secon-<lb/>
dary may be the<lb/>
strongest part of the<lb/>
Clemson defense, but<lb/>
getting a good pass<lb/>
rush against Flutie<lb/>
may be the key to<lb/>
shutting down third-<lb/>
year coach Jack<lb/>
Bicknell's team,<lb/>
which returned 24<lb/>
starters from last<lb/>
year's 8-2-1 team.<lb/>
"The best thing,<lb/>
about Doug is his<lb/>
ability to unload the<lb/>
football when there<lb/>
isn't anything there<lb/>
said Denning. "His<lb/>
(completion) percen-<lb/>
tages may not be that<lb/>
high, but you can't<lb/>
catch him behind the<lb/>
line of scrimmage<lb/>
very often<lb/>
The Tar Heels<lb/>
opened the season<lb/>
with a 24-8 win over<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
Williams Ready To Go<lb/>
cont'd from page 10<lb/>
don't like that<lb/>
Emory said. 'They<lb/>
told us a week ago<lb/>
that they wouldn't<lb/>
call anything on that,<lb/>
but I told him not to<lb/>
do it the last time<lb/>
When asked if he<lb/>
will perform another<lb/>
one of his perfect for-<lb/>
ward flips, Williams<lb/>
pondered for a mo-<lb/>
ment and said, "I<lb/>
probably will<lb/>
Although Williams<lb/>
did bruise his knee at<lb/>
FSU, he said he will<lb/>
definetely be ready<lb/>
for the Wolfpack<lb/>
Saturday. "I think<lb/>
this game is going to<lb/>
be bigger than FSU<lb/>
he said. "I don't<lb/>
know too much about<lb/>
State. I'd never heard<lb/>
of them until I came<lb/>
here<lb/>
"But from what<lb/>
everybody has said<lb/>
about it, it's going to<lb/>
be tough<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL 753-6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
$1 off any Large or<lb/>
Giant 3 topping Pizza<lb/>
1<lb/>
ex<lb/>
THETA CHI FRATERNITY<lb/>
BE IN ON THE START OF A<lb/>
GREAT FRATERNITY<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
t John Oaktoy, Praktont: 752-5278<lb/>
-?' Tim H?nry, Scrtory: 758-9214 108 Ay cock<lb/>
t<lb/>
?f i<lb/>
??WM??H?I?<lb/>
' ir0?m0mfiw0 m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9, 1983<lb/>
(UPI) ? Few new<lb/>
football coaches have<lb/>
as much to prove as<lb/>
Alabama's Ray<lb/>
Perkins.<lb/>
When touring<lb/>
sportswriters landed<lb/>
at Tuscaloosa, Ala<lb/>
recently, the<lb/>
stewardess announc-<lb/>
ed: "Welcome to<lb/>
Bryant Country<lb/>
The group then went<lb/>
to Bryant Hall to in-<lb/>
terview Perkins, the<lb/>
successor to Paul<lb/>
Bear" Bryant as<lb/>
head football coach<lb/>
of the Alabama Crim-<lb/>
son Tide.<lb/>
Bryant left an<lb/>
awesome legacy ?<lb/>
323 victories in 38<lb/>
years as a head coach,<lb/>
and, during his 25<lb/>
seasons at Alabama,<lb/>
the best record<lb/>
(232-46-9) in the na-<lb/>
Perkins Facing Pressure<lb/>
tion, including four<lb/>
national champion-<lb/>
ships and 13<lb/>
Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Perkins, who<lb/>
resigned as coach of<lb/>
the New York Giants<lb/>
to return last winter to<lb/>
Alabama where he<lb/>
was a star receiver<lb/>
under Bryant in the<lb/>
mid-60s, knows he's<lb/>
on the spot.<lb/>
"For the most part,<lb/>
coaches that have<lb/>
followed legends have<lb/>
not had success said<lb/>
Perkins. "That's the<lb/>
track record. But<lb/>
there will be only one<lb/>
coach to follow the<lb/>
greatest coach of all<lb/>
time and I consider it<lb/>
a great honor to be<lb/>
that coach. 1 truly<lb/>
look forward to the<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
Alabama's schedule<lb/>
should help Perkins.<lb/>
After opening Satur-<lb/>
day in Birmingham,<lb/>
Ala as an 18-point<lb/>
favorite over Georgia<lb/>
Tech, Alabama plays<lb/>
Ole Miss, Vanderbilt<lb/>
and Memphis State<lb/>
before getting its first<lb/>
real test on Oct. 8 at<lb/>
defending national<lb/>
champion Penn State.<lb/>
"I'm confident<lb/>
we'll have a good<lb/>
football team, but it's<lb/>
going to take a little<lb/>
time said Perkins.<lb/>
"It depends on how<lb/>
our younger players<lb/>
come through. We'll<lb/>
have a far better idea<lb/>
of how good we are<lb/>
after we've gotten a<lb/>
few games under our<lb/>
belt<lb/>
Perkins wasted no<lb/>
time in establishing<lb/>
his own program at<lb/>
Alabama. He replac-<lb/>
ed eight of Bryant's<lb/>
12 assistants and<lb/>
scrapped the<lb/>
wishbone offense for<lb/>
"a multiple pro set<lb/>
"The wishbone was<lb/>
becoming a libility<lb/>
said fullback Ricky<lb/>
Moore, Alabama's<lb/>
leading rusher the<lb/>
past two seasons.<lb/>
"More and more<lb/>
teams were learning<lb/>
how to defense it.<lb/>
Several did such a<lb/>
good job last year,<lb/>
they really threw us<lb/>
off. They kept swit-<lb/>
ching their defenses<lb/>
on us, making them<lb/>
difficult to read. The<lb/>
attack we had used so<lb/>
well for so long was<lb/>
beginning to die<lb/>
down<lb/>
Perkins also<lb/>
brought a new<lb/>
outlook to Alabama<lb/>
The Crimson Tide<lb/>
had been on top so<lb/>
long it developed an<lb/>
attitude of invincibili-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
"We were<lb/>
businesslike said<lb/>
senior defensive<lb/>
tackle Randy Ed-<lb/>
wards. "Our job was<lb/>
to go out there and<lb/>
win, not make a big to<lb/>
do about it There<lb/>
wasn't a lot of emo-<lb/>
tion involved<lb/>
"We'll need more<lb/>
intensity this year<lb/>
because we don't have<lb/>
as much talent said<lb/>
Edwards. "We had<lb/>
great talent last year<lb/>
and it didn't carrv<lb/>
us<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
Prices In Town!<lb/>
TELE RENT TV<lb/>
J Phone: 758-9102<lb/>
2905 East 10th Street in Cree<lb/>
All New Exercise Facility in Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
All Olympic weights and<lb/>
machines, nutritional pro-<lb/>
grams and supervised workout<lb/>
programs available<lb/>
Hours: Monday-Saturday- 9:00a.m9:00p.m.<lb/>
 Sunday 1:00-9:0Op.m.<lb/>
g Monthly Memberships ? $30.00 per month<lb/>
Semester Membership - $100.00<lb/>
Group Rates3 person mm.) $70.00 a semester<lb/>
J?V Located In the Downtown Mall<lb/>
 next to the Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
GYM I" additional Info call 758 2826<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON )?<lb/>
if-mfmmmxmMJimmmwmwwww iiiiiiitm wq<lb/>
LEGAL HASSLES' Call<lb/>
Howtrt J Cumminji, attorney<lb/>
a Law No charge tor initial<lb/>
consultation tor ECU Student!<lb/>
Can ?s? OOO<lb/>
LOWEST TYPING RATES on<lb/>
camput include experienced<lb/>
pro)etiion?l work Proof<lb/>
reading ipeihng and gram<lb/>
matical correct.om J5S ?74i<lb/>
atter 5 M<lb/>
SAVE ON TOYOTA service at<lb/>
Bells Fork Garage Eipenenced<lb/>
Toyota mecnamc. 4 cyl tune<lb/>
speoal ? " O0.?cyivalveadiust<lb/>
ment ?0 TSe J7?<lb/>
STOLEN FROM my art locker<lb/>
IV lenkms an supplies Please<lb/>
Please return at least the<lb/>
teuton Call HMMt<lb/>
NOTICE Please return the<lb/>
ttirow pillow, green velvet with<lb/>
fringe, taken off the bike parked<lb/>
at Joyner Call Til 63S5<lb/>
HOLY ROSARY ? Our Lady of<lb/>
Fatene weekly Can 7M-MH<lb/>
and leave name and phone<lb/>
number tor Barbara<lb/>
NEED A BABYSITTER? Call<lb/>
Sally at 7S21713. Here every<lb/>
weekend till Christmas I have<lb/>
years of eiperience. inctudeing<lb/>
handycapped childern.<lb/>
HOUSEKEEPING AND<lb/>
babysitting Monday thuough<lb/>
WE'LL<lb/>
GIVE YOU<lb/>
A DEAL!<lb/>
FOR SALE Clarinet excellent<lb/>
cond Call Lori 752 431S ?7J 00<lb/>
FOR SALE Water skis Obrien<lb/>
Competitor, with competitor<lb/>
case 11SO. New Connelly wide<lb/>
track trick ski. with, pro wrap<lb/>
front bintfings see C<lb/>
tean I slalon ski S1S0. Scuba<lb/>
gear fins, tank reg wt belt,<lb/>
wet suit top Booties BC knife<lb/>
SSSO Motorcycle Yamaha IT<lb/>
175 l7t 1300 miles 5700 Call<lb/>
7Se 4731<lb/>
FOR SALE 10 speed bike by<lb/>
Soma Only ridden twice New<lb/>
1230 00 will sell tor S'OO 00 call<lb/>
75a 3401 day and 75 5147 night<lb/>
Ask tor Jo Campbell<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CRACKER Surprise. Surprise.<lb/>
Surprise How could I 4get 2<lb/>
wish U a happy birthday? Hope<lb/>
Yesterday was tilled with lots of<lb/>
laughter and good times lust<lb/>
like the times you ve shared<lb/>
with me Enoy Love ya Empty<lb/>
HEY CINDERELLA If you fit<lb/>
those tiny red panties you step-<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE ROOMATE WANTED<lb/>
Georgetown Apt 13 rent and Ut<lb/>
7S??40 <lb/>
REGIONAL AND LOCAL<lb/>
REPS wanted to distribute<lb/>
posters on collage campuses<lb/>
Pan t.me or more work. Re-<lb/>
quires no sales. Commission<lb/>
plus piece work Average earn-<lb/>
ings WOO ? per hour. Contact<lb/>
American Passage, S00 Thiro<lb/>
Avenue West. Seattle. WA nil<lb/>
ATTN: Network 20 M2 1111<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED MS a month rent and<lb/>
one third utilities. Private room.<lb/>
River Bluff 754 2344<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
24Hour Service on Kodacolor<lb/>
FILM SENT TO COLORCRAFT<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Developing Any 24 or 36<lb/>
Exposure roll Kodacolor Film<lb/>
50c OFF Developing Any roltslide film<lb/>
50C OFF Any Color 5x7 Enlargement<lb/>
S1.00OFF Any 8x10, 8x12, 11x14 Color Enlargement<lb/>
art H. comCi a hop<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. M.C 27834<lb/>
752-0888 ? . <lb/>
Limit one coupon per order- coupon expires 6-1-84<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
G<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
GH OUCH 05<lb/>
ians<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
! X-Ravesl<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
a<lb/>
Ladies FREE Till 1.00 55 H.H. Til 11:00<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
W<lb/>
B<lb/>
'The ECU-NC State football game<lb/>
will be shown at ATTICS 7TV<lb/>
nm SUNDAY<lb/>
MGHTHAWH!<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11th<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
i<lb/>
?Am<lb/>
riiiiiniimiinimmnnmii<lb/>
5<lb/>
Invites Students to a<lb/>
Post-game party!<lb/>
E. C. U. Sept. 10th<lb/>
Come see Our Great Selection of:<lb/>
Greeting cards for all occasions<lb/>
Out-of-town newspapers<lb/>
New and Used Books<lb/>
Magazines<lb/>
RALEIGHs NEWEST<lb/>
NIGHT-SPOT<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
vs<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
Western Blvd Next to Amedeo's<lb/>
GO PIRA TES<lb/>
BELTLINE UNION 76<lb/>
CONVENIENCE MART<lb/>
BEER, ICE, MIXERS, GAS<lb/>
On the Way to Carter<lb/>
Stadium, Next to Crabtree<lb/>
Valley Howard Johnsons<lb/>
1.00 off any case of beer<lb/>
wECU Student LD.<lb/>
4320 Glenwood Ave.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27612<lb/>
EVANS NEW AND USED BOOKS<lb/>
321 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Open 7 days a week 9:00AM-6:00PM<lb/>
752-3333<lb/>
99? tW.T ?TTe?W???? e5 ?? i&amp;, ?Wi ?W? iT?5!??S? ??5 ??9 ?T5T? ??5N ,?5 ,?? ,7?, ,Vi 'T?J<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
n<lb/>
0<lb/>
?8<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
8<lb/>
.?K.<lb/>
p3<lb/>
PET VILLAGE<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
E<lb/>
M<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
SB<lb/>
Freshwater<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Fish Sale<lb/>
1 Thurs Fri. and Sat. R<lb/>
fi<lb/>
?<lb/>
b<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
m<lb/>
8<lb/>
&amp;?&amp;,??????????????? ??????4????e?????e?M?4?????4?e???????e??eatoa<lb/>
V<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
"I' <lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9, ls8<lb/>
Perkins Facing Pressure<lb/>
(UPI) ? Few new<lb/>
football coaches have<lb/>
as much to prove as<lb/>
Alabama's Ray<lb/>
Perkins.<lb/>
When touring<lb/>
sportswnters landed<lb/>
at Tuscaloosa, Ala<lb/>
recently, the<lb/>
stewardess announc-<lb/>
ed: "Welcome to<lb/>
Bryant Country<lb/>
The group then went<lb/>
to Bryant Hall to in-<lb/>
terview Perkins, the<lb/>
successor to Paul<lb/>
"Bear" Bryant as<lb/>
head football coach<lb/>
of the Alabama Crim-<lb/>
son Tide.<lb/>
Bryant left an<lb/>
awesome legacy ?<lb/>
323 victories in 38<lb/>
years as a head coach,<lb/>
and, during his 25<lb/>
seasons at Alabama,<lb/>
the best record<lb/>
(2326-9) in the na-<lb/>
tion, including four<lb/>
national champion-<lb/>
ships and 13<lb/>
Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Perkins, who<lb/>
resigned as coach ot<lb/>
the New York Giants<lb/>
to return last winter to<lb/>
Alabama where he<lb/>
was a star receiver<lb/>
under Bryant in the<lb/>
mid-60s, knows he's<lb/>
on the spot.<lb/>
"For the most part,<lb/>
coaches that have<lb/>
followed legends have<lb/>
not had success said<lb/>
Perkins. "That's the<lb/>
track record. But<lb/>
there will be only one<lb/>
coach to follow the<lb/>
greatest coach of all<lb/>
time and I consider it<lb/>
a great honor to be<lb/>
that coach. I truly<lb/>
look forward to the<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
Alabama's schedule<lb/>
should help Perkins<lb/>
After opening Satur<lb/>
day in Birmingham,<lb/>
Ala as an 18-point<lb/>
favorite over Georgia<lb/>
Tech, Alabama plays<lb/>
Ole Miss, Vanderbilt<lb/>
and Memphis State<lb/>
before getting its first<lb/>
real test on Oct. 8 at<lb/>
defending national<lb/>
champion Penn State.<lb/>
"I'm confident<lb/>
we'll have a good<lb/>
football team, but it's<lb/>
going to take a little<lb/>
time said Perkins<lb/>
"It depends on how<lb/>
our younger player-<lb/>
come through. We'll<lb/>
have a far better idea<lb/>
of how good we are<lb/>
after we"ve gotten a<lb/>
few games under our<lb/>
belt<lb/>
Perkins waited no<lb/>
time in establishing<lb/>
his own program at<lb/>
Alabama He replac-<lb/>
ed eight of Bryant's<lb/>
12 assistants and<lb/>
scrapped the<lb/>
wishbone oftense for<lb/>
"a multiple pro set "<lb/>
"The wishbone was<lb/>
becoming a libilnv<lb/>
said fullback Ricky<lb/>
Moore, Alabama's<lb/>
leading rusher the<lb/>
past two seasons.<lb/>
??More and more<lb/>
teams were learning<lb/>
how to defense it<lb/>
Several did such a<lb/>
good job last vear,<lb/>
they really threw us<lb/>
off They kept swit-<lb/>
ching their defenses<lb/>
on us, making them<lb/>
difficult to read. The<lb/>
attack we had used so<lb/>
well for so long was<lb/>
beginning to die<lb/>
down<lb/>
Perkins ai<lb/>
brought a new<lb/>
outlook to Alabama<lb/>
The Crimson Tide-<lb/>
had been on top SO<lb/>
long it developed an<lb/>
altitude of invincibili-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
"Wi were<lb/>
businesslil<lb/>
senior f e n s i v?<lb/>
tackle Rand<lb/>
wards "Our job wa<lb/>
to go out there and<lb/>
win, not mak?<lb/>
do about There<lb/>
wasn't a l I emo<lb/>
tion invoh<lb/>
"We'll<lb/>
intensity<lb/>
because <lb/>
as muc<lb/>
Edwai<lb/>
great talen<lb/>
and it d<lb/>
?<lb/>
y c a i<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
Prices In Town!<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pirate forward Mark Hardy prove that he can play soccer  even with his eyes shut<lb/>
OARY PATTERSON - ECU PKoto Lab<lb/>
TELE.RENTTV<lb/>
e: 75&amp;-9102<lb/>
2905 East 10th Street in Gree<lb/>
All New Exercise Facility in Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
All Olympic weights a<lb/>
machines, nutritional p<lb/>
grams and supervised wo ?<lb/>
programs available<lb/>
Hours: Monday-Saturday- 9:00a.m9:00p.m.<lb/>
 Sunday 1:00-9:00p.m.<lb/>
f? Monthly Memberships - $30.00 per month<lb/>
Semester Memberships - $100.00<lb/>
Group Rates3 person mln.$70.00 a semester<lb/>
Jf Located In the Downtown Mall<lb/>
next to the Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
GYM for additional Info call 758-2826<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
F ? .da. 3 S 3C<lb/>
after 6 p ft1<lb/>
.EGA. HASSLES' Ca<lb/>
Howiro J Cjmmmji attorney<lb/>
?? l? No crarg? (or mil <lb/>
conjugation lor ECU Sturjr"<lb/>
t '? 0OO4<lb/>
.OWEST TYPING RATES or<lb/>
campus include experienced<lb/>
P'O'titionil work Proot<lb/>
'??ding ipHing and gram<lb/>
m??lc?l corr?cf?oni 3S5 474<lb/>
a?ter 5 M<lb/>
SAVE ON TOYOTA ser.ice at<lb/>
Bens Fork Garage E?penenced<lb/>
Tovo'a mechanic cyl tune<lb/>
so, a S' y. ? c. .a.eadiusf<lb/>
rrr JJOC t S 3794<lb/>
STOLEN FROM m. art IOCk?<lb/>
?n? ns a suppnes Pease<lb/>
"ease '?igm at least the<lb/>
s ssors CaM 753 4355<lb/>
NOTICE Please return the<lb/>
throv piuow green vei.et t<lb/>
fringe taken off the bike parked<lb/>
? ' Jovner Call 753 4355<lb/>
HOLY ROSARY ? Our Lady of<lb/>
nvr, weekly Call 7SI 4SU<lb/>
and i?a.t nam? and phone<lb/>
numb?r tor Bartara<lb/>
NEED A BABYSITTER' Call<lb/>
Sally at 752713 Here e.ery<lb/>
weekend till Christmas I ha.e<lb/>
vears o' ??penence includemg<lb/>
nandycapped childern<lb/>
HOUSEKEEPING AND<lb/>
BaOvS t'ng Monday thuough<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Clarinet eiceilen'<lb/>
cond Call Lon 752 ?3!5 ?75 00<lb/>
FOR SALE Water skis Obr.cn<lb/>
Competitor with competitor<lb/>
case 50 New Connelly wide<lb/>
track trick ski with pro wrap<lb/>
bindings S'M? Connetly<lb/>
lean i siaton ski t! 50 Scuba<lb/>
gear fins tank reg wt belt<lb/>
wet suit top Booties BC knife<lb/>
S550 Motorcyce Yamaha IT<lb/>
? ?9 J0C mts S-?C Cali<lb/>
'5 4238<lb/>
FOR SALE IS spefd bike by<lb/>
Soma Only - idden twice New<lb/>
1230 30 will sen tor '00 00 call<lb/>
'54 340 day and 75 5147 night<lb/>
Ask for Jo Campbell<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CRACKER Surprise Surprise<lb/>
Surprise How could I 4get 2<lb/>
wish U a happy birthday' Hope<lb/>
Yesterday was filled with lots ot<lb/>
laughter and good times lust<lb/>
like the times you ye shared<lb/>
with me Enioy Love ya Empty<lb/>
HEY CINDERELLA If you tit<lb/>
those tmy red panties you step<lb/>
ped out of during ttne panty raid<lb/>
Sunday night come show your<lb/>
prince charming how well they<lb/>
tit ano I li be yours for??er<lb/>
?5? ISM<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
FOUND Ai 3rd and Elm Street<lb/>
calico kitten approximately 3<lb/>
months old with flea collar.<lb/>
Please call 752 ?07 for more in<lb/>
 o r m a f i on<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE ROOMATE WANTED<lb/>
Georgetown Apt I 3 rent and Ut<lb/>
7 5a 40<lb/>
REGIONAL AND LOCAL<lb/>
REPS wanted to distribute<lb/>
posters on collage campuses<lb/>
Part time or more work Re<lb/>
quires no sales Commission<lb/>
plus piece work Average tarn<lb/>
mgs la 00 per hour Contact<lb/>
American Passage SOO Thiro<lb/>
Avenue West Seattle. WA I119<lb/>
ATTN Network 204 212 111 I<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED ??5 a monrh rent and<lb/>
one third utilities Private room<lb/>
River Bluff 75a 2344<lb/>
mumWmWm lar-L<lb/>
GIVE YOU<lb/>
A DEAL!<lb/>
3<lb/>
fl<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
a<lb/>
B<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
24Hour Service on Kodacolor<lb/>
FILM SENT TO COLOR C RAFT<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Developing Any 24 or 36<lb/>
Exposure roll Kodacolor Film<lb/>
50C OFF Developing Any roll slide film<lb/>
50C OFF Any Color 5x7 Enlargement<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Any 8x10, 8x12, 11x14 Color Enlargement<lb/>
art cQwCfo hop<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N-C 27834<lb/>
752-0688 . , "<lb/>
Limit one coupon per oraer coupon expires 6-1-84<lb/>
C<lb/>
1<lb/>
E<lb/>
L<lb/>
B<lb/>
B<lb/>
S<lb/>
E<lb/>
E<lb/>
C<lb/>
B<lb/>
B<lb/>
B<lb/>
B<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
I<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
GHOUCHO'S<lb/>
Invites Students to a<lb/>
Post-game party!<lb/>
DsjUE. C. U. Sept. 10th<lb/>
RALEIGH's NEWEST LCU<lb/>
ians<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
i X-Raves i<lb/>
LJ<lb/>
Lodies FREE Til 11:00 55C H.H Til 11:00<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
iiiiiiniiiiimiiiiniiiiiiinnDp;<lb/>
n<lb/>
H<lb/>
Q<lb/>
S<lb/>
N<lb/>
H<lb/>
Thur M<lb/>
H<lb/>
n<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
g<lb/>
n<lb/>
B<lb/>
<lb/>
B<lb/>
M<lb/>
a<lb/>
H<lb/>
H<lb/>
H<lb/>
H<lb/>
?<lb/>
W<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
B<lb/>
The ECU-NC State football game<lb/>
will be shown at ATTIC'S 7TV<lb/>
fnm ? SUNDAY<lb/>
NHMYH4WH1<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11th<lb/>
rfriiimiiniiiimriyifumiiTTr<lb/>
Come see Our Great Selection of:<lb/>
Greeting cards for all occasions<lb/>
Out-of-town newspapers<lb/>
New and Used Books:<lb/>
Magazines<lb/>
NIGHT-SPOT<lb/>
Western Bld Next to Amedeo's<lb/>
vs<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
GO PIRA TES<lb/>
BELTLINE UNION 76<lb/>
CONVENIENCE MART<lb/>
BEER, ICE, MIXERS, GAS<lb/>
On the Way to Carter<lb/>
Stadium, Next to Crabtree<lb/>
Valley Howard Johnsons<lb/>
1.00 off any case of beer<lb/>
w ECU Student LD.<lb/>
4320 Glenwood Ave.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27612<lb/>
EVANS NEW AND USED BOOKS<lb/>
321 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Open 7days a week 9:00AM-6:OOPM<lb/>
752-3333<lb/>
1 R<lb/>
?<lb/>
k<lb/>
I<lb/>
:?:<lb/>
H<lb/>
n<lb/>
y<lb/>
u<lb/>
y<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
m<lb/>
H<lb/>
m<lb/>
PET VILLAGE<lb/>
Freshwater<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Fish Sale<lb/>
Thurs.y FrL and Sat.<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
n<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
n<lb/>
I<lb/>
?:<lb/>
W&amp;&amp; ?tt. i"? ??4 ??? ?T? ?T.?v.? v? .9.?, ,r, ,?r. ,?r, ?v, .?r v v. .t, ?. K<lb/>
r<lb/>
U<lb/>
V .<lb/>
X<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -r?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0014"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBERS 1983 13<lb/>
ressure<lb/>
establishing<lb/>
program at<lb/>
He repkac-<lb/>
?f Bryant's<lb/>
itants and<lb/>
:d the<lb/>
offense tor<lb/>
 pro set<lb/>
jw .shhone a<lb/>
g a libility<lb/>
tck Rick<lb/>
 1 a b a m a' s<lb/>
? u?her the<lb/>
seasons<lb/>
more<lb/>
?re learning<lb/>
de tense it.<lb/>
d -<lb/>
 threv us<lb/>
? kept swit-<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
, <lb/>
?a<lb/>
Perkins ?ls0<lb/>
brought a ne<lb/>
outlook to Alabama<lb/>
The Crimson Tide<lb/>
had been on top so<lb/>
long it developed an<lb/>
attitude of invincibili-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
??We wr<lb/>
businesslike sa '?<lb/>
senior defensive<lb/>
sackle Randy Ed<lb/>
wards. "Our job as<lb/>
10 go out there and<lb/>
vun, not make a big<lb/>
do about it. There<lb/>
wasn't a lot of emo<lb/>
non involved.<lb/>
We'll need moic<lb/>
nsitv this yea<lb/>
because we don't ha t<lb/>
a- much talent said<lb/>
Ed wards. "We had<lb/>
greal talent last year<lb/>
and it didn't cam<lb/>
Facility in Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
All Olympic weights and<lb/>
machines, nutritional pro-<lb/>
rams and supervised workout<lb/>
programs available<lb/>
Saturday- 9:00a.m9:00p.m.<lb/>
pnday l:00-9:00p.m.<lb/>
iberahlpa ? $30.00 par month<lb/>
. Membership - $100.00<lb/>
oeraon mm.) $70.00 a aemeate-<lb/>
lad In the Downtown Mall<lb/>
c tha Aerobic Workahop<lb/>
nal Info call 758-2826<lb/>
nmnmoHanq<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
hur.<lb/>
RavesT<lb/>
iOO 55C H.H.Tin 1:00<lb/>
and Saturday<lb/>
t<lb/>
C State football game<lb/>
n at ATTICS 7'TV<lb/>
-<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
kWKS<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11th<lb/>
iimimiiiiimm<lb/>
BOND'S 'H.L. HODGES CO.<lb/>
a X'<lb/>
 ? mnuS Badweiser beer We knowoTniT- <lb/>
"7c ???? fa K,wer which costs so much to I brQ"D7<lb/>
"? SSKod Aaetru, proves a &amp;?? anfigfa<lb/>
bMJasivKlitw wouw.K find m nojother beeta??? ?"<lb/>
a<lb/>
r<lb/>
'c.<lb/>
H<lb/>
A The World<lb/>
9 Henownep<lb/>
Q<lb/>
SB<lb/>
UDWEISER<lb/>
ImgerBeer ?.<lb/>
iBeeii <lb/>
3RD<lb/>
aU BUDWEISER? ECU<lb/>
PEP<lb/>
RMIY<lb/>
THURSDAY SFPrg,983 7-00-8-30 PM.<lb/>
FICKLIN<lb/>
5TADIUM<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION TO ALL<lb/>
ATTENDING ?<lb/>
? COACH ED EMORy<lb/>
? ECU FOOTBALL TEAM<lb/>
? ECU MARCH IN&amp; BAND<lb/>
? ECU CHEERLEADERS<lb/>
OVER 1000 WORTH OP FREE<lb/>
PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY<lb/>
BY: BUDWEISER<lb/>
?<lb/>
BLOU NT HARVEY WESTERN SI ZZU N'<lb/>
SNoory fox JERRYS sweet shop<lb/>
udweiser<lb/>
?<lb/>
KING OF BEERS<lb/>
9<lb/>
mtmmimtmmfmi ?'?nnr '<lb/>
 m m i<lb/>
"JS!W'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0015"/><lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLON1AN SEPTEMBER 9, 1983<lb/>
<lb/>
Z<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
k<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
?e<lb/>
Get an Extra 10 Off with your Student I.D. Card<lb/>
MasterCard<lb/>
(ONLY E.C.U. STUDENT I.D. S QUALIFY FOR 10 DISCOUNT)<lb/>
Also, check-out Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount prices on all these items<lb/>
Revco<lb/>
Oral<lb/>
Mouthwash<lb/>
Mint or Red<lb/>
24 fi. or<lb/>
Alka-<lb/>
Seltzer<lb/>
Revco's low. everyday<lb/>
discount price of $1.55 ea.<lb/>
.o- usn STOMACH<lb/>
? Mf?0?CMl ??<lb/>
Alka-Seltzer<lb/>
Foil Wrapped. 72s<lb/>
Revco's low. everyday<lb/>
discount price of $4.19<lb/>
Murine<lb/>
Eye<lb/>
Drops<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
or Plus <lb/>
.5 fl. 07.<lb/>
Murine<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $1.29 ea.<lb/>
nnrnr<lb/>
Revco<lb/>
CTM<lb/>
Vitamins<lb/>
Bonus Pack,<lb/>
150's<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
o<lb/>
Allercreme<lb/>
Hypo-<lb/>
Allergenic<lb/>
Hair Spray<lb/>
8 fl. 02.<lb/>
Sutnrrv<lb/>
Clairol<lb/>
Kindness <lb/>
Body Wave Kit<lb/>
Natural or Color Treated<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of 99c<lb/>
Nature's<lb/>
Organics<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
Or Conditioner<lb/>
?ti<lb/>
V"n<lb/>
??? ? ?,<lb/>
M<lb/>
16 fl. oz.<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $5.99 ea.<lb/>
Mead<lb/>
Typing<lb/>
Tablet<lb/>
8.5" x 11"<lb/>
Reg. price 89c<lb/>
Revco's low. everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
Fluoride Toothpaste<lb/>
Regular. Mint. Blue<lb/>
or Green Gel. 6.4 oz.<lb/>
REVCO COUPON ? SAVE $3.00<lb/>
Hamilton<lb/>
Beach<lb/>
Mini Drip<lb/>
Coffeemaker<lb/>
$ooo<lb/>
OOFF<lb/>
Mode<lb/>
784<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $1.05 ea.<lb/>
w<lb/>
Schick ?r<lb/>
Disposable Razors<lb/>
5 Pack<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of 99c ea.<lb/>
Mead<lb/>
Brief<lb/>
Folders<lb/>
With Pockets<lb/>
Reg. price 36c<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
PAPER8MATE<lb/>
t'i7iffn?yffi<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Mate<lb/>
Write<lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
Stick Pens<lb/>
10 Pack<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $1.19<lb/>
ma real r.jtv-d<lb/>
Marcal<lb/>
Facial Tissues<lb/>
100's<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
loxi Shields<lb/>
Revco<lb/>
Maxi Shields 30 s<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $2.35<lb/>
Revco's low. everyday<lb/>
discount price of $15.99<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON &amp; I.D.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER COUPON<lb/>
CoupOfl -?r -es 9.1&amp;83 a:<lb/>
3'ee ? -? ? ? ' ?<lb/>
REVCO COUPON ? SAVE $5.00<lb/>
Gran Prix<lb/>
Cassette<lb/>
Recorder<lb/>
With<lb/>
AMFM Radio<lb/>
$coo<lb/>
ilOFF<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $29.99<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON I.D.<lb/>
LlMIT ONE PER COUPON<lb/>
Coupon eE"es 9 'flrU at the<lb/>
Green;ie Re?co store only<lb/>
Model<lb/>
705<lb/>
REVCO COUPON ? SAVE SOC<lb/>
Eveready<lb/>
Energizer<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
AA. 4 Pack<lb/>
Fuji Film<lb/>
Any Type<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price<lb/>
Revco's low, everyday<lb/>
discount price of $3.29<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON &amp; I.D.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER COUPON<lb/>
Coupon e?pires ?i&amp;3 at the<lb/>
Greenville Revco store only<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
South Park Shopping center<lb/>
115 E. Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
756-9502<lb/>
DISCOUNT DRUG CBOTERS<lb/>
COPYRIGHT 1983 BY REVCO D.S INC.<lb/>
Items available while quantities last.<lb/>
Revcoi<lb/>
thertghttolimrt quantHia<lb/>
k<lb/>
i.?MM<lb/>
?? ?Euan<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057572_0016"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>