<?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="00057582_0001"/>
?he iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
IL<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.r<lb/>
Thursday, October 13,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
?<lb/>
Education School<lb/>
ECU Ahead Of Other N.C. Universities<lb/>
???,<lb/>
When mo fibsofcrfdy.<lb/>
PosiliveJy Have IV)<lb/>
Score (to<lb/>
Saiurday tuyU<lb/>
Emory Receives T-Shirt<lb/>
OB POOL! ? MMo L?b<lb/>
Scott Hall Head Resident Don Payne (far left) presents ECU Head Football Coach Ed Emory with a Scott<lb/>
Hall T-shirt as house council members look on.<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Staff Wrttar<lb/>
Despite the scrutiny that ECU's<lb/>
School of Education has received<lb/>
over the past few months, the<lb/>
teacher education program has<lb/>
upheld higher admission stan-<lb/>
dards than those at many of the<lb/>
other schools in the UNC system.<lb/>
Over the next few years, North<lb/>
Carolina hopes to upgrade its<lb/>
teacher education programs with<lb/>
a Quality Assurance Plan. The<lb/>
plan will require, effective in July,<lb/>
that students practice-teach for a<lb/>
minimum of ten weeks. Previous-<lb/>
ly there was no minimum require-<lb/>
ment. ECU, however, has re-<lb/>
quired ten weeks of student<lb/>
teaching since 1977.<lb/>
Many schools are not waiting<lb/>
for the Quality Assurance Plan to<lb/>
go into effect and are already<lb/>
upgrading admission standards by<lb/>
raising the required grade point<lb/>
average from a 2.0 to a 2.2. ECU<lb/>
has required a 2.2 average for five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"At ECU we have recognized<lb/>
academic excellence that others are<lb/>
just now going to Charles Co-<lb/>
ble, dean of the School of Educa-<lb/>
tion, said. "However, we also<lb/>
realize that there are other fac-<lb/>
tors. It's not just grades that mat-<lb/>
ter, as important as they are.<lb/>
Teaching is a human enterprise<lb/>
The teacher education program<lb/>
at ECU has several unique<lb/>
features. First, effective im-<lb/>
mediately, all applicants are re-<lb/>
quired to go through a screening<lb/>
process. Three faculty members<lb/>
will interview each applicant<lb/>
throughout the semester to deter-<lb/>
mine their suitability for the pro-<lb/>
gram. "This will help us deter-<lb/>
mine early enough if we have<lb/>
identified any adverse<lb/>
characteristics Coble said.<lb/>
Applicants will also be required<lb/>
to take a speech and hearing<lb/>
screening test "to diagnose<lb/>
physical disabilities so that we can<lb/>
prescribe treatment or couseling<lb/>
before entry into teacher educa-<lb/>
tion Coble said. "We recognize<lb/>
that teacher education is a human<lb/>
enterprise that involves personal<lb/>
transactions, and the nature and<lb/>
quality of those transactions<lb/>
should be an important part in<lb/>
deciding whether or not that per-<lb/>
son should teach<lb/>
Coble said that the number of<lb/>
persons entering teacher educa-<lb/>
tion at ECU and at other univer-<lb/>
sities has declined dramatically.<lb/>
"We're on the verge of a teacher<lb/>
shortage he said. He con-<lb/>
tributed this to several factors, the<lb/>
main point being that the number<lb/>
of people entering the field has<lb/>
declined at a faster rate than the<lb/>
positions available.<lb/>
Tax Refunds Kept If Loans Not Repaid<lb/>
By STEPHEN C. HARDING<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The N.C. Department of<lb/>
Revenue is allowed to keep an in-<lb/>
dividual's state income tax refund<lb/>
and apply it to any outstanding<lb/>
debt to a state agency, and this<lb/>
method is currently being used to<lb/>
collect deliquent student loan<lb/>
payments from former ECU<lb/>
students, according to a university<lb/>
business official.<lb/>
The Set-Off Debt Collection<lb/>
Act Of i 979 empowers the revenue<lb/>
department to garner tax refunds<lb/>
for debts to such state institutions<lb/>
as public universities, courts or<lb/>
hospitals.<lb/>
According to Business Manager<lb/>
Julian Vainright, the university<lb/>
assists the state in finding those<lb/>
who are deliquent on loan<lb/>
payments. "We submit a list of<lb/>
people to the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Revenue about Nov. 20. When<lb/>
the information here is merged<lb/>
with the information of the<lb/>
Department of Revenue, they<lb/>
notify us. We notify the person<lb/>
that we will take the refund unless<lb/>
he gives a good reason he said.<lb/>
George Davis of the individual<lb/>
income tax division of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Revenue said an in-<lb/>
dividual "then has 30 days to file<lb/>
for a healing. Most times he<lb/>
doesn't. In that case we apply it to<lb/>
his debt<lb/>
Grace Cannon, who handles<lb/>
student loans at ECU, said her of-<lb/>
fice contacts the attorney general<lb/>
and files a legal suit. The interest<lb/>
rate on the loan can then increase<lb/>
from 3 to 8 percent on in-state<lb/>
loans. Cannon said a collection<lb/>
agency handles persons living out<lb/>
of North Carolina, and the<lb/>
federal government is called in for<lb/>
tough cases.<lb/>
if a student becomes a state<lb/>
employee and is found to have a<lb/>
deliquent bill, his job can be ter-<lb/>
minated through the State<lb/>
Employee Debt Collection Act.<lb/>
Also, universities can refuse to<lb/>
release transcripts on graduates<lb/>
with outstanding debts.<lb/>
The U.S. Department of<lb/>
Education has developed a poster<lb/>
that tells of the possibility of a<lb/>
student not being able to receive<lb/>
credit in the future if he does not<lb/>
pay back his loan. A letter by Ed-<lb/>
ward M. Elmendorf and James<lb/>
W. Moore of the Education<lb/>
Department said, "We believe<lb/>
that the poster sends a strong<lb/>
message: that there are serious<lb/>
consequences in failing to honor<lb/>
the obligations and respon-<lb/>
sibilities a borrower accepts when<lb/>
receiving an education loan<lb/>
ECU has a low rate of delin-<lb/>
quent loan payments, according<lb/>
to Cannon. She said the default<lb/>
rate through the Student Loans<lb/>
Office is less than 6 percent. "The<lb/>
low deliquency rates reflect the<lb/>
quality of East Carolina's<lb/>
students. Most of our borrowers<lb/>
are willing to repay their loans<lb/>
because without them many could<lb/>
not have made it financially<lb/>
Drunk Driving Arrests<lb/>
Down Due To New Law<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joe Calder, head of the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Safety, says it will take a<lb/>
long time before his department will be<lb/>
able to tell what, if any, impact the Safe<lb/>
Roads Act will have on the number of<lb/>
drunk drivers on North Carolina<lb/>
highways. But N.C. Highway Patrol Capt.<lb/>
Carl Gilchrist claims there has been a 25<lb/>
percent reduction in drunken driving ar-<lb/>
rests since the law's enactment Oct. 1.<lb/>
Gilchrist didn't have exact figures, but<lb/>
he said the area under his command has<lb/>
had a 25 percent reduction in drunk driv-<lb/>
ing arrests compared with the same period<lb/>
in 1982.<lb/>
Gilchrist attributes the reduction to the<lb/>
psychological effects the new law is having<lb/>
on people who drink and drive. "I think<lb/>
we're gaining here from psychological ef-<lb/>
fects Gilchrist said. "The reduction can<lb/>
be attributed to some degree to the<lb/>
psychological effect the new law is having<lb/>
on persons who normally drink and<lb/>
drive<lb/>
Newly appointed Greenville Police<lb/>
Chief Ted Holmes reported a decrease of<lb/>
one arrest for drunk driving during the<lb/>
first 10 days of October compared to the<lb/>
same period in 1982. Greenville police<lb/>
made 13 drunk driving-related arrests for<lb/>
ECU College Bowl<lb/>
the first 10 days of October, compared to<lb/>
14 last year. Holmes said there were no<lb/>
18-year-olds arrested among the 13.<lb/>
"If the new law has any impact at all it<lb/>
should reduce the number of 18-year-olds<lb/>
we would arrest Holmes said. "It should<lb/>
reduce our problem<lb/>
Because Holmes assumed his new post<lb/>
on Oct. 3 he said it would take him time<lb/>
to familiarize himself with the new laws<lb/>
created by the act. "The unfortunate thing<lb/>
is you have a lot of 18-year-olds who are<lb/>
perfectly capable of handling alcohol<lb/>
Holmes said, adding there were also many<lb/>
other 18-year-olds who could not. "It's<lb/>
the same with 19-year-olds<lb/>
"We have not in any way changed our<lb/>
rules one way or another Calder said.<lb/>
"There's no change in enforcement<lb/>
Calder reported ECU police have made<lb/>
only one drunk driving arrest on campus<lb/>
since Oct. I. On Saturday night they ap-<lb/>
prehended a 16-year-old non-student.<lb/>
"In general, I favor the change in the<lb/>
law Holmes added. Calder has been on<lb/>
record in the past as not supporting the<lb/>
change in the minimum drinking age<lb/>
because it would be difficult to enforce.<lb/>
The Safe Roads Act took effect Oct 1.<lb/>
It received strong support from N.C. Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jrwho called it the<lb/>
toughest drunk driving law in the country.<lb/>
LIILII TOOO ? SCU M?w<lb/>
Just when it looked like Wendy McManus would<lb/>
have to hobble unprotected in the rain, along came<lb/>
James CUnkdale to the rescue.<lb/>
'Sport Of The Mind' Begins Oct. 22<lb/>
By N. K. HOGGARD<lb/>
Staff Writ<lb/>
academia, sports, trivia and cur-<lb/>
rent events. "It has been called<lb/>
the intercollegiate sport of the<lb/>
mind said L. E. Hough, a<lb/>
political science professor and<lb/>
coach of the college bowl all-star<lb/>
team for the past four years.<lb/>
In the competition, two teams<lb/>
Bowl and assistant program direc- of four players each use buzzers to<lb/>
tor at Mendenhall, said he "hopes signal their readiness to answer<lb/>
The annual ECU College Bowl<lb/>
competition will be held the<lb/>
weekend of Oct. 22-24 at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Jon<lb/>
Curtis, coordinator of College<lb/>
to get more involvement this year.<lb/>
Last year we didn't have very<lb/>
many teams competing<lb/>
College Bowl, a collegiate ver-<lb/>
sion of TV game shows, requires<lb/>
participants to answer questions<lb/>
from a variety of sources:<lb/>
the "toss-up" question. If the<lb/>
correct answer is given, the team<lb/>
will be given a harder bonus ques-<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Jeffrey Jones, an ECU<lb/>
undergraduate student and college<lb/>
bowl all-star last year, said "My<lb/>
team for this year did thumb exer-<lb/>
cises all summer. We're hoping<lb/>
for some good competition this<lb/>
year Jones traveled to Knox-<lb/>
ville, Tenn to compete in the<lb/>
Region V division last year, but<lb/>
declined comment on the out-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
"In<lb/>
last year's competition<lb/>
tion. The team accumulating the there were not enough teams for a<lb/>
most correct answers wins and very good tournament said Cur-<lb/>
then plays another team in a tis. "People participating have a<lb/>
playoff style, double elimination real good time and there is a $25<lb/>
prize for first place per team<lb/>
member. I've been sending letters<lb/>
to the departments on campus to<lb/>
get more people involved<lb/>
Jones' team is considered the<lb/>
favorite going into the competi-<lb/>
tion this year, but upsets in Col-<lb/>
lege Bowl frequently occur. In<lb/>
1979, for example, Davidson Col-<lb/>
lege pulled a stunning upset over<lb/>
the heavily favored Harvard<lb/>
University team in the National<lb/>
Competition.<lb/>
Anyone with a team, or who<lb/>
wants to join a team should con-<lb/>
tact Jon Curtis at Mendenhall<lb/>
before October 19.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Election Results<lb/>
Freshman president<lb/>
Staci Falkowitz<lb/>
Sophomore president<lb/>
Rob Poole<lb/>
Junior president<lb/>
David Brown<lb/>
Senior president<lb/>
Lisa Roberts<lb/>
Freshman vice president<lb/>
Don Come<lb/>
Soph, vice president<lb/>
Lisa (VDonnell<lb/>
Junior vice president<lb/>
Suzanne Starling<lb/>
Senior vice president<lb/>
Laura White<lb/>
Senior sec.tres.<lb/>
Wendy Taylor<lb/>
Graduate president<lb/>
Daniel Prevatte<lb/>
Graduate vice president<lb/>
Rick Morgan<lb/>
Dorm Legislators<lb/>
Garret<lb/>
John P. Carver<lb/>
Slay<lb/>
Lou Ann Owens<lb/>
Aycock<lb/>
Tracy Buchanan<lb/>
Fletcher<lb/>
Lee Hardy, Sandra Sanders<lb/>
Clement<lb/>
Lori Svendsen,<lb/>
Claretta Foye<lb/>
Greene<lb/>
Karen McGill,<lb/>
Shannon Carraway<lb/>
Jarvis<lb/>
Jonathon Grief<lb/>
Umstead<lb/>
Coralie Patterson<lb/>
Belk<lb/>
Brad Hicks<lb/>
White<lb/>
Katherine Cannon<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Angela Centanni,<lb/>
Don Corne<lb/>
Tyler<lb/>
Sandi Thurman,<lb/>
Melinda Davis<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
Tory Russo, Brian Wessler<lb/>
Day Representatives<lb/>
Joey Francis<lb/>
Fran Dickens<lb/>
Michael Dixon<lb/>
Johnny Rainey<lb/>
Terry Leamy<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne<lb/>
David Whiteside<lb/>
Al Smith<lb/>
Michael McPartland<lb/>
Wesley Johnson<lb/>
Kirk Shelley<lb/>
Glenn Maughan<lb/>
John Shannon<lb/>
Anne Clayton<lb/>
Jim Ensor<lb/>
Rick Hamilton<lb/>
Amy Merrell<lb/>
Jim Boone<lb/>
Al Maginnes<lb/>
Kevin Winstead<lb/>
Greg Shelnut<lb/>
Melanie Bunch<lb/>
David Futrelle<lb/>
Chris Townsend<lb/>
David Brannan<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Vote Early And Often<lb/>
Students Maed ap to<lb/>
vote fari<lb/>
of their<lb/>
?? v<lb/>
 t ? ? ?. ?- ?, ?<lb/>
? tHi f!?'f?i ???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1983<lb/>
Many Scholarships A vailable For Seniors<lb/>
By ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
Graduating seniors<lb/>
who wish to continue<lb/>
their education have<lb/>
the opportunity to do<lb/>
so through the various<lb/>
scholarships pro-<lb/>
grams available<lb/>
through ECU. Since<lb/>
1965, John Ebbs, pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, has<lb/>
been in charge of the<lb/>
NationalInterna-<lb/>
tional Scholarships<lb/>
and Fellowships p. v,<lb/>
gram at ECU.<lb/>
During 18 years of<lb/>
service, Ebbs has<lb/>
awarded six<lb/>
prestigious scholar-<lb/>
ships allowing en-<lb/>
trance to universities<lb/>
both in Europe and in<lb/>
the United States. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Ebbs,<lb/>
two of the major<lb/>
scholarships, the<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson and<lb/>
Danforth awards,<lb/>
have been discon-<lb/>
tinued, but a variety<lb/>
of others are<lb/>
available.<lb/>
The Marshall<lb/>
Scholarship is<lb/>
England's way of<lb/>
showing appreciation<lb/>
for the Marshall Plan<lb/>
proposed following<lb/>
World War II. It<lb/>
allows two years of<lb/>
study in any field at a<lb/>
college or university<lb/>
in Great Britain. The<lb/>
Fulbright Scholarship<lb/>
allows one or more<lb/>
years of study in a<lb/>
foreign country where<lb/>
the student carries out<lb/>
an academic project<lb/>
of some kind.<lb/>
As of 1980, women<lb/>
have been included as<lb/>
part of the Rhodes<lb/>
Scholarship. Ebbs<lb/>
considers this the best<lb/>
in the world as it pays<lb/>
all expenses for three<lb/>
years of study at Ox-<lb/>
ford University in<lb/>
England.<lb/>
The Harry S.<lb/>
Truman scholarship is<lb/>
solely for<lb/>
sophomores. The<lb/>
award pays for the<lb/>
student's junior and<lb/>
senior years at a col-<lb/>
lege anywhere in the<lb/>
country, provided the<lb/>
student is willing to<lb/>
make a commitment<lb/>
to a career in public<lb/>
service. Also included<lb/>
is graduate school<lb/>
payment for one year.<lb/>
"Though there hasn't<lb/>
been a winner yet<lb/>
from ECU, there are<lb/>
always applicants.<lb/>
There is none other<lb/>
like it in the world<lb/>
Ebbs said.<lb/>
Requirements for<lb/>
the scholarships vary.<lb/>
With some there is an<lb/>
age limitation and the<lb/>
necessity for a high<lb/>
gpa due to national<lb/>
competition levels.<lb/>
Seniors graudating in<lb/>
May must apply in the<lb/>
prior August or<lb/>
September to allow<lb/>
ample time to com-<lb/>
plete scholarship re-<lb/>
quirements.<lb/>
"There has been a<lb/>
problem in com-<lb/>
municating with<lb/>
students about the op-<lb/>
portunities available.<lb/>
Letters to deans with<lb/>
information passed students to apply with individual scholarships. The stu-<lb/>
on to students has Ebbs said there is departments for op- dent is the beginning<lb/>
worked somewhat, something for portunities relating to factor and needs to<lb/>
but there is still dif- everyone. Students fellowships, graduate make some initiating<lb/>
ficulty in getting should also check assistantships and effort-<lb/>
Honor Board Seeks Applicants<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
Because this year's<lb/>
Honor Board was<lb/>
established on an in-<lb/>
terim basis, applica-<lb/>
tions are now being<lb/>
sought for positions<lb/>
on the board. Ap-<lb/>
plicants for the<lb/>
Review Board are also<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
The Honor Board<lb/>
consists of seven<lb/>
students and three or<lb/>
four alternates. The<lb/>
Review Board also<lb/>
has seven members.<lb/>
Applicants are screen-<lb/>
ed by the Student<lb/>
Government Associa-<lb/>
tion Executive Board<lb/>
and appointed by the<lb/>
legislature. According<lb/>
to James Mai lory,<lb/>
associate dean of<lb/>
judiciary, applicants<lb/>
need to be full-time<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Applications can be<lb/>
obtained in the SGA<lb/>
offices on the second<lb/>
floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Members will be<lb/>
chosen at the first ses<lb/>
sion of this year's ex-<lb/>
ecutive council.<lb/>
"We're always<lb/>
looking for good peo-<lb/>
ple Mallory said.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
Watt?<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed in the announcement<lb/>
column, piease type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and send II to<lb/>
TV East Carolincan in care of<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at me East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications<lb/>
Building Flyers and handwnt<lb/>
fen copy or odd sued paper can<lb/>
"of be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
1 mi ted Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
nent will run as long as you<lb/>
wflnf and suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column for<lb/>
publicity.<lb/>
The deadline for an<lb/>
nouncements is 3 p m Monciay<lb/>
for the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m. WKJnesoay for the Thurs<lb/>
dav paper No announcements<lb/>
received after these deadlines<lb/>
w i be printed<lb/>
This space .s available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
ECU MARAUDERS<lb/>
Tha Department of Military<lb/>
Scianca invitas you to par<lb/>
ticlpate in tha ECU<lb/>
MARAUDERS, an organization<lb/>
or-entad towards leadership<lb/>
development mrovgh adventure<lb/>
training, military tactics and<lb/>
other outdoor activities<lb/>
All students are welcome The<lb/>
third meeting will be held on<lb/>
Monday IS October 1983 at 7<lb/>
p m In Room 212. Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center For more Infor<lb/>
matlon contact CPT Lilvak at<lb/>
757 ???67<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
The Delta Zeta's are in search<lb/>
of the most Eligible Bachelor)<lb/>
Help them find him by voting tor<lb/>
your favorite candidate. Can-<lb/>
didate's pictures are on display<lb/>
in the lobby of the Student Store<lb/>
Proceeds go to the Gallaudet<lb/>
School for the deaf.<lb/>
SAB MEETING<lb/>
There will be a Student<lb/>
Athletic Board Meeting at 5<lb/>
p.m October 19, 1983 at<lb/>
Mendenhall Room Rm. 24S. The<lb/>
meeting has been changed as a<lb/>
result of Fall Break<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
the East Carolina Karate Club<lb/>
will have a registration night at<lb/>
? p m. on Oct 13th This Is for<lb/>
any East Carolina University<lb/>
student who wants to learn the<lb/>
martial artv There will be a<lb/>
demo and explanation of the<lb/>
course In Memorial Gym<lb/>
downstairs on registration<lb/>
night.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
Interested in officiating in<lb/>
tramural volleyball? The<lb/>
Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services will begin<lb/>
training clinics for Inframual<lb/>
volleyball officials Monday Oc<lb/>
tober 24, 1963 at 6 p m in Room<lb/>
102 of Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
Rules, Infepretatlons and<lb/>
mechanics will be discussed Of<lb/>
ficials will be hired based on<lb/>
practical and written<lb/>
tests Volleyball Officials<lb/>
Clinic, Mon. Oct 24, 1983, 6 p.m<lb/>
Rm 102, Mem Gym.<lb/>
FREEDOM TO<lb/>
LIVE LIFE<lb/>
God wants us to live In<lb/>
freedom, not the bondage of<lb/>
legallsm (Read Galatlans<lb/>
chapters 5 and 6) Then we can<lb/>
be flexible to do what Is right to<lb/>
help ourselves and others live<lb/>
the best life. Then we will have<lb/>
peace In our hearts and freedom<lb/>
from fear In our minds so we can<lb/>
really love people. (I John 4:17,<lb/>
18) Stop by me booth at the Shi<lb/>
dent Supply Store for more in-<lb/>
formation about God's heart to<lb/>
man, the Bible (Psalm 33:11,<lb/>
John 831,32)<lb/>
LIBERAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Their will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students today at 7 p.m. In room<lb/>
248 Mendenhall Std Center At<lb/>
tendence is open to all minority<lb/>
students<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
CAMPUS RACE<lb/>
Two Cross Campus races will<lb/>
be held Homecoming Day Satur<lb/>
day Oct 29 A 2.5 mile race will<lb/>
start at 9 am. and a 5 0 mile<lb/>
race will start at 9 30 am Both<lb/>
races start near the bleachers at<lb/>
the ECU varsity track. Bunting<lb/>
Field The race course is 95 per<lb/>
cent on grass and traverses in<lb/>
and about the area surrounding<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, Flcklen<lb/>
Stadium, Bunting Field, Harr<lb/>
mgton and the women's Softball<lb/>
field. The races, which are spon<lb/>
sored by the Department of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices, are open to participation<lb/>
by all ECU students, staff and<lb/>
ECU alumni.<lb/>
SPORT<lb/>
CLUB COUNCIL<lb/>
The second meeting for the<lb/>
1983 84 Sport Club Council will<lb/>
be held Wednesday October 19,<lb/>
1983 at 400 p.m. In Room 105B of<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium Atten-<lb/>
dance is required of represen<lb/>
tatives of active sport clubs.<lb/>
Persons or groups Interested In<lb/>
forming a sport club are Invited<lb/>
to attend. Representatives are<lb/>
asked to prepare. If needed. Trip<lb/>
Applications and Vehicle Re-<lb/>
quests for the fall<lb/>
semester Sport Club Council<lb/>
Meeting, Weds. Oct. 19, 19t3, 4<lb/>
p.m Rm. 103B, Mem. Gym.<lb/>
CANOEING<lb/>
Your can't keep 'em out of the<lb/>
water The Pamllco-Ter River<lb/>
Foundation is going to slip back<lb/>
into the River October 15. This,<lb/>
the second canoe trip for the<lb/>
PTRF, will begin Saturday at 10<lb/>
o'clock am at the Port Ter<lb/>
mlnal near Cliff's Seafood House<lb/>
(approx. 1 5 miles east of Green<lb/>
villa) The canoeists will make<lb/>
several exciting and infor-<lb/>
mative stops along the Tar befor<lb/>
ending at Yankee Hall where<lb/>
transportation will be provided<lb/>
back to the Port Terminal.<lb/>
Members and persons in<lb/>
terested in a fall trip on the Tar<lb/>
are asked to bring a canoe,<lb/>
lunch, life preservers, paddles<lb/>
and other necessary equipment<lb/>
if you would like to join the<lb/>
PTRF Fall canoe excursion<lb/>
please sign up with Mary Jo<lb/>
Larkln in Greenville at 750103<lb/>
or Keith Hackney In Washington<lb/>
at 946-4197. it may be your last<lb/>
chance on the River before<lb/>
winter hits<lb/>
KALTH<lb/>
CAWEVOOCAN AMomtOHadmcnciBci-<lb/>
MPflND ON. sion rhoff nvxto easier by<lb/>
th womejn of m rlemtng Center Counselors are<lb/>
ovoiaWe doy and night to support and under-<lb/>
stand you Vour safety corntort and pnvocy are<lb/>
assured by the caring ttarr of the Reming Center<lb/>
?MCel: ? Tuesday ? Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
poswtrneritSBl 1st 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Ftee Pregnancy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Ptegnancy Tests ? Ail tnctusJve Fees P Insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALi 7S44S50 DAY Of NKtfT ?<lb/>
MeSaalcam.ccunesSny rue a CMlkl<lb/>
and education for wo- int fliMlflVr<lb/>
c?sfrti<lb/>
ABORTIONS UF<lb/>
T012THWEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
SI95.MI<lb/>
Ceetref. <lb/>
Pregnancy<lb/>
CVT?<lb/>
832-SS1S (TeM Free Massfear<lb/>
sea mi in) Between 9 A as<lb/>
an S P.M. Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION 1<lb/>
?17 Wee Merge. St.<lb/>
Monday Night FOOTBALL<lb/>
on our BIG-SCREEN TV $3.09<lb/>
Tackle<lb/>
A Pizza<lb/>
AlGatti's<lb/>
sTaSSCaVaaMe?<lb/>
A great wiy to have ?<lb/>
great ttae. With all that<lb/>
hottest to Gain's goods<lb/>
art Ofjr Happy Hoar Sparta<lb/>
yoa already kaow who<lb/>
thearlaaeris.<lb/>
Comer off Cotaache aad 10th<lb/>
The beat ptaa In town. yf1<lb/>
Yon, with<lb/>
your favorite Gatti's<lb/>
Pitts Diaaer buffet<lb/>
?5 p.m. to 8 p.sa All the<lb/>
pizza, spaghetti aad salad<lb/>
you caa eat.<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
The ECU Wrestling Sport club<lb/>
is practicing Teusday and<lb/>
Thursday evenings tor 9 p.m. to<lb/>
11 p.m. in the Exercise Room<lb/>
(Room lot) ot Memorial Gym.<lb/>
All students Interested In work-<lb/>
ing out with the wrestling Club<lb/>
should attend these work-out<lb/>
sessions.<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
What an exciting night we<lb/>
have in store for you next week<lb/>
on Wednesday at ? Inter<lb/>
Varsity Is having a faculty<lb/>
testimony night. Yea. faculty<lb/>
from ECU will be sharing with<lb/>
us how the Lord Is working In<lb/>
their life. This will be a night you<lb/>
will not want to miss. Come loin<lb/>
us in Jenkins Audltorum and br<lb/>
I no a friend.<lb/>
ECU LAW<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will be<lb/>
meeting for the first time on<lb/>
Thursday. October X at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Room 31?.<lb/>
The guest speaker, a local<lb/>
lawyer, will be Mr. Stamey of<lb/>
the law flrm-Dixon, Horne,<lb/>
Ousses. and Ooub. For more in-<lb/>
formation, contact: Mike Gard-<lb/>
ner (7574141), or David Fgrrrel<lb/>
(758 187)<lb/>
ZBT LITTLE<lb/>
SISTERS<lb/>
Don't forget the "Get Ac-<lb/>
quainted" cookout at Todd Ea<lb/>
at 5 p.m. today. Please call<lb/>
for directions.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Applications are now being ec<lb/>
cepted tor students wishing to<lb/>
servo en University Committees<lb/>
(or ftst 1??3 84 school year. Stu<lb/>
dent pesltlowa art open on<lb/>
University Administrative Com<lb/>
mittees and Faculty<lb/>
SenateAcademic Committees<lb/>
Applies I ton blanks have the<lb/>
names of committees with<lb/>
vacancies on them. Applications<lb/>
may be picked up at the follow-<lb/>
ing locations:<lb/>
Office of the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life, 304 Whicherd;<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cater infor-<lb/>
mation Desk, SGA Office.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Canter; Of<lb/>
flee of intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services, Memorial Gym and<lb/>
Residence Hail Directors Of<lb/>
ficea.<lb/>
The University greatly ap-<lb/>
preciates the efforts of those<lb/>
students who have served in the<lb/>
past and hopes that students wilt<lb/>
continue their interest and par-<lb/>
ticipation. Questions about<lb/>
University committees and<lb/>
memberships may be directed<lb/>
to the Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
(757-4441)<lb/>
PREPROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
The Preprofesslonal Health<lb/>
Alliance will meet Thursday.<lb/>
Oct. 13 at 5:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Culture Center. Dr. Linda Spino<lb/>
from the Center for Student Op-<lb/>
portunities will speak on Test<lb/>
Taking Techniques. All<lb/>
members end interested per-<lb/>
sons are urged to attend.<lb/>
REBEL CONTESTS<lb/>
Tha annual REBEL contests<lb/>
are coming up soon. Deadline<lb/>
for prose and poetry submis-<lb/>
sions is Monday, November 7.<lb/>
Bring your entries by the<lb/>
REBEL or Media Board offices<lb/>
from 9 - 5. All entries must be<lb/>
typed and include your name,<lb/>
address, phone number, and<lb/>
classification. Prize money is<lb/>
provided by the Attic and<lb/>
Budwelser.<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESS<lb/>
TRAINING<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
A three part workshop offered<lb/>
to students at NO COST by the<lb/>
University Counseling Center<lb/>
Thursday, Oct 30. 37 and Nov 3<lb/>
All three sen lorn will be con<lb/>
ducted from 3-4 p.m. in 308<lb/>
Wright Annex (757ssM.<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
EFFICIENCY<lb/>
CLASSES<lb/>
A program tor increasing<lb/>
Learning Efficiency win be of<lb/>
fared by the Counseling Center<lb/>
The first section will be on Mon<lb/>
day and Wednesday at 3 p.m<lb/>
beginning Oct 34 and the second<lb/>
section will be on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday at 1 p.m. beginning<lb/>
Oct 35. Both groups will meet In<lb/>
305 Wright Annex The classes<lb/>
are available to all students. At<lb/>
tendance is voluntary No for<lb/>
mel registration Is required<lb/>
INTEREST<lb/>
The Strong Campbell Interest<lb/>
Inventory Is offered every Tues-<lb/>
day in 305 Wright Annex at 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
A representative from the<lb/>
U.S. General Accounting Office,<lb/>
Virginia Beach, VA, will be on<lb/>
campus October 25 to Interview<lb/>
co-op students who would like to<lb/>
work are a GAO Evaluator<lb/>
Buslness students who have<lb/>
completed 7S semester hours<lb/>
and have a 2.9 GPA or higher<lb/>
should contact the Co-op Office.<lb/>
313 Rawi, to arrange an Inter<lb/>
view Immediately.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA IOTA<lb/>
The foreign language honor<lb/>
society will sponsor a lecture in<lb/>
the Mendenhall coffee house on<lb/>
Nov 4 at 7 30 p.m The event<lb/>
will commemorate the 500th an<lb/>
nlversary of the birth of Martin<lb/>
Luther The public is invited<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omlcom Chapter of Pni<lb/>
Beta Lambda is selling Tom Wat<lb/>
products from now until October<lb/>
19 irs toys, chimes, calendars<lb/>
tools, school supplies, and knick<lb/>
knacks it's everything from<lb/>
first aid kits to candles From<lb/>
whimsical to practical, Tom<lb/>
Wat makes great gifts, or stock<lb/>
Ing stutters for people of all<lb/>
ages<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is the<lb/>
Naitonal organization for<lb/>
students maiorlng In business<lb/>
educetion. marketing, manage<lb/>
ment, finance, or accounting<lb/>
Sponsorship of Phi Beta Lamb<lb/>
da is In the Business Education<lb/>
and Office Administration<lb/>
Department Persons interested<lb/>
in purchasing Tom Wat products<lb/>
should contact Mrs Betty Cor<lb/>
bin (7J7 ?9S3' or any member of<lb/>
PM Beta Lambda<lb/>
NATIONAL HONOR<lb/>
SOCIETY IN<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
if you have 8 semester hours<lb/>
in psychology, or will have at the<lb/>
conclusion of the semester and it<lb/>
you are in tha top 35 percent o?<lb/>
your class, then you are eligible<lb/>
for membership in the National<lb/>
Honor Society In Psychotogv<lb/>
PSl CHI Pick up your applica<lb/>
tions In the PSl CHI librae<lb/>
(Speight 203) during office<lb/>
hours. Apply now Hurry, the<lb/>
deadline for application is<lb/>
November 11, ISO if you are a<lb/>
member, new or old, end you<lb/>
haven't filled out a locator card.<lb/>
please come by PSl CHI office<lb/>
and fill one our<lb/>
We ail want PSl CHI to be m?<lb/>
best ever this semester, so afl<lb/>
you guys get involved in YOUR<lb/>
organization We're here for you<lb/>
and WE ARE WHAT YOU<lb/>
MAKE US HELP MAKE US<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
Second Session Aerobics<lb/>
Registration will begin iwst after<lb/>
Fell Break on October 19-21<lb/>
Classes will be held at the same<lb/>
times es first session with one<lb/>
exception there will be more<lb/>
classes Cost is Wstudenrs.<lb/>
SSfacuity staff, and spouse tor<lb/>
classes meeting l time per week<lb/>
and U students. 810faculty.<lb/>
staff and spouse for classes<lb/>
meeting twice a week Classes<lb/>
run from Oct 24 Dec. 5th For<lb/>
more information just come by<lb/>
the IWRic Offices In 204<lb/>
Memoriei Gym<lb/>
Hamb<lb/>
Sherman<lb/>
For<lb/>
tenor<lb/>
on to<lb/>
for M<lb/>
congr<lb/>
porterl<lb/>
desert<lb/>
origin<lb/>
ment<lb/>
speed<lb/>
me- <lb/>
coal I<lb/>
bla<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
-<lb/>
be. .1<lb/>
Daj<lb/>
gradi<lb/>
to mu<lb/>
as n(<lb/>
Hr<lb/>
Dull<lb/>
tow;<lb/>
judic<lb/>
jum j<lb/>
sec<lb/>
he<lb/>
P1- "<lb/>
sh I<lb/>
woul<lb/>
J<lb/>
?u.<lb/>
They<lb/>
grou<lb/>
sa<lb/>
rij<lb/>
fresbl<lb/>
necei<lb/>
va l<lb/>
the<lb/>
lidn;<lb/>
mux<lb/>
ca <lb/>
WITHTHI<lb/>
raf V<lb/>
I<lb/>
STUDENT UNION MAJOR ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
presents<lb/>
A HOMECOMING SPECTACULAR<lb/>
CHARLIE DANIELS BAND<lb/>
AND<lb/>
MARSHALL TUCKER<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28,1983<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
MINGES COLLISEUM<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS: $9.00 NON-STUDENTS: $10.00<lb/>
ALL TICKETS AT THE DOOR: $10.00<lb/>
Tickets available Central Ticket Office, October 14, 1983<lb/>
until sell out!<lb/>
Tickets also available at Both<lb/>
Record Bars In Greenville and Apple Records.<lb/>
I<lb/>
FILM.<lb/>
24HOur<lb/>
FILM SE<lb/>
Sl.OOOFF<lb/>
Exposur<lb/>
50c OFF Dev<lb/>
50C OFF An<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Any 8xlC<lb/>
or t i coeaerc<lb/>
M 518 SOUTH CCTA?.<lb/>
GREENVILLE H<lb/>
75206M<lb/>
Limit one coupon per<lb/>
INTO<lb/>
it .i nW- IU<lb/>
Luoo<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL WEEK<lb/>
NOVEMBER 6-12,1983<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
f THE EXOTIC DRUM BEAT OF AFRICA<lb/>
II Sunday the 6th, 8:00p.m Mendenhall 244, Free<lb/>
n LOX AND BAGELS<lb/>
y) Monday the 7th, Multi-Purpose Room, Speaker: Georgi<lb/>
 Riabikoff, Admission: $2.00<lb/>
GEORGI RIABIKOFF. Pianist<lb/>
ncQ Tuesday the 8th, 8:00p.m Hendrix Theatre, ECU<lb/>
&amp; Students. $1.50. Faculty &amp; Staff: $3.00. Public &amp; at the<lb/>
door: $5.00<lb/>
AMBASSADOR ROBERT WHITE The Sources of the Crises<lb/>
n in Central America<lb/>
?jl Wednesday the 9th. Hendrix Theatre. $1.50 - ECU<lb/>
Students. $2.50 - ECU Faculty and Staff, and $3.50<lb/>
-Public and at the Door. 8:00p.m.<lb/>
g GANDHI<lb/>
5J Thursday the 10th. Hendrix Theatre. 5:00 &amp; 8:30p.m.<lb/>
I<lb/>
GANDHI<lb/>
Friday the llth. Hendrix Theatre. 5.00 A 8:30p.m.<lb/>
GANDHI<lb/>
Saturday the 12th. Hendrix Theatre. 5.00 &amp; 8:30p.m.<lb/>
It's Big Apple Time!<lb/>
NEW YORK CITY<lb/>
at Thanksgiving<lb/>
Broadway Macy's Parade .Shopping. . Touring<lb/>
NOVEMBER 23 thru NOVEMBER 27. 1983<lb/>
Space for 135 persona<lb/>
Single Occupancy - $170 00 per person<lb/>
Double Occupancy - $115.00 per person<lb/>
Triple Occupancy - $110.00 fm person<lb/>
Quad Occupancy -99.00 per person<lb/>
Price includes Roundtrip Bus transportation<lb/>
and accomodations at the Hotel Edison<lb/>
in the heart of Broadway!<lb/>
SIGN UP BY NOVEMBER 1<lb/>
AT THE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
Call 757-6611, ext. 266 for information<lb/>
tS<lb/>
;<lb/>
?sjssj aM<lb/>
T$?<lb/>
'<lb/>
-?AawiAr ?wM?aSj<lb/>
?SM<lb/>
??<lb/>
4 ?? m -? ?- ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1983<lb/>
ors<lb/>
 idual<lb/>
for op-<lb/>
aung to<lb/>
raduate<lb/>
rs and<lb/>
scholarships. The stu-<lb/>
dent is the beginning<lb/>
factor and needs to<lb/>
make some initiating<lb/>
effort<lb/>
pplicants<lb/>
issocia-<lb/>
Board<lb/>
the<lb/>
v ding<lb/>
r) ?<lb/>
in of<lb/>
nts<lb/>
U-time<lb/>
offices on the second<lb/>
floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Members will be<lb/>
chosen at the first ses-<lb/>
sion of this year's ex-<lb/>
ecutive council.<lb/>
We're always<lb/>
looking for good peo-<lb/>
ple Mallory said.<lb/>
( <lb/>
<lb/>
nouse on<lb/>
 tv??tl<lb/>
II A<lb/>
?<lb/>
e"W3 ?<lb/>
Bir? r;xr<lb/>
a<lb/>
or itock<lb/>
M :? all<lb/>
? r<lb/>
: n For<lb/>
IcOurf g<lb/>
IT " r.<lb/>
?? Zor<lb/>
NATIONAL HONOR<lb/>
SOCIETY IN<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
 too htvt tamaatar hours<lb/>
o?vcology or will h?v? at trta<lb/>
conciuaioo o m? Mmtar and M<lb/>
you ara in ta top U parcant of<lb/>
our ciaa man you ara eligible<lb/>
tor memoar?Mp in ttia National<lb/>
Honor Sociaty in Psychology,<lb/>
Chi Ptck up your applies<lb/>
??ons ,n ma PSt CHI library<lb/>
Spe.ght 701) during off lea<lb/>
nours Apply now 11 Hurry, tha<lb/>
3taa!n tor application is<lb/>
November u, laaj if yoo are a<lb/>
mambav n?w or old and you<lb/>
aveo t ? n?o out a locator card,<lb/>
piaasa coma by PSI CHI office<lb/>
arwj tin one our<lb/>
 an want PSI Chi to be me<lb/>
bev ever mis lemeatar. so all<lb/>
you guys get involved in YOUR<lb/>
organiiaton We're hare for you<lb/>
?M E ARE WHAT YOU<lb/>
MAKE US HELP MAKE US<lb/>
G8E4<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
Second Session Aerobics<lb/>
Registration win begin lust after<lb/>
Pan Break on October 19 21<lb/>
C asses win be held at ma same<lb/>
mes as first session with one<lb/>
exception there will be more<lb/>
??? Cost is Wstudents.<lb/>
15facuitv staff and spouse for<lb/>
asses meeting l time per week<lb/>
?nc 16 students. SlOfaculty.<lb/>
'atf and spouse for classes<lb/>
mee'ing twice a week Classes<lb/>
run from Oct 24 Dec 5m For<lb/>
-o?-e information fust come by<lb/>
'?e M Rec Offices In 204<lb/>
frnor a Gym<lb/>
D<lb/>
NTS: $10.00<lb/>
00<lb/>
y 1983<lb/>
pple Time!<lb/>
RK CITY<lb/>
iksglvlny<lb/>
Jade Shopping Touring<lb/>
NOVEMBER 27, 1983<lb/>
135 persons<lb/>
$170 00 per person<lb/>
$115 00 per person<lb/>
$110 00 per person<lb/>
y -99 00 per person<lb/>
imp Bus transportation<lb/>
)s at the Hotel Edison<lb/>
of Broadway<lb/>
NOVEMBER 1<lb/>
at TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
TUDENT CENTER<lb/>
266 for information<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
lilllllilllllilllllliiiimiiMii<lb/>
Watt? He Resigned?<lb/>
By THERESA DULSK1<lb/>
Staff Wrilar<lb/>
Ham by<lb/>
Sherman<lb/>
For 18 days Secretary of the In-<lb/>
terior James Watt attempted to hold<lb/>
on to his job, but one by one cries<lb/>
for his resignation surfaced among<lb/>
congressman, and many of his sup-<lb/>
porters in the Republican party<lb/>
deserted him. Watt's problems<lb/>
originated as the result of a com-<lb/>
ment he made during a Sept. 21<lb/>
speech to a U.S. Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce. Watt referred to people on a<lb/>
coal advisory commission as "A<lb/>
blacka women, two Jews and a<lb/>
cripple Students were asked if<lb/>
they felt Watt's remarks were offen-<lb/>
sive and if he should have resigned<lb/>
because of them.<lb/>
David Hamby, chemistry,<lb/>
graduate student ? "He is referring<lb/>
to minority groups and depicts them<lb/>
as not as up to par with his race.<lb/>
He's been doing a good job, but he<lb/>
shouldn't show some prejudice<lb/>
towards minorities. He let his pre-<lb/>
judiceness show too much<lb/>
Lori Flowers, physical therapy,<lb/>
junior ? "It was offensive. He<lb/>
seems like he's prejudice. Why can't<lb/>
he just talk to people instead of<lb/>
picking out certain groups. He<lb/>
should of resigned because they<lb/>
would have asked for his resigna-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Joel Sherman, history, senior ?<lb/>
"What he said is pretty much true.<lb/>
They try to gather up these types of<lb/>
groups to form the commissions,<lb/>
but he shouldn't have come out and<lb/>
said it so blunt<lb/>
Sherry Phillips, accounting,<lb/>
freshman ? "His remark was not<lb/>
necessary although he did get a<lb/>
variety of people. But referring to<lb/>
the cripple would be humiliating. 1<lb/>
didn't care for that comment too<lb/>
much. I don't think he should have<lb/>
resigned, but he should be more<lb/>
careful. That's not the first time<lb/>
he's made a remark that wasn't call-<lb/>
ed for<lb/>
?OBPooia<lb/>
Flowers<lb/>
I.D. Required To<lb/>
Purchase Tickets,<lb/>
See Football Game<lb/>
Phillips<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Staff Witter<lb/>
Increased atten-<lb/>
dance at home foot-<lb/>
ball games coupled<lb/>
with stricter admis-<lb/>
sion policies have<lb/>
caused problems for<lb/>
many ECU students.<lb/>
The key ingredient<lb/>
for attending an ECU<lb/>
football game using<lb/>
student tickets is a<lb/>
student identification<lb/>
card.<lb/>
Students wishing to<lb/>
obtain tickets are re-<lb/>
quired to present both<lb/>
their ID and activity<lb/>
cards. They will also<lb/>
have to bring ID cards<lb/>
with them to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium in order to<lb/>
get into the game.<lb/>
The reason for the<lb/>
double-check pro-<lb/>
cedure is to help pre-<lb/>
vent misuse of student<lb/>
tickets by non-<lb/>
students, according to<lb/>
SGA President Paul<lb/>
Naso.<lb/>
At this year's home<lb/>
games, crowded lines<lb/>
have been created by<lb/>
students waiting until<lb/>
just before the game<lb/>
to enter the stadium.<lb/>
"Twenty minutes<lb/>
before the game<lb/>
everybody wanted to<lb/>
get in Naso said.<lb/>
Because of the ID<lb/>
check this resulted in<lb/>
long lines.<lb/>
There are two solu-<lb/>
tions to this problem.<lb/>
The first is to get to<lb/>
the game early. "This<lb/>
will alleviate problems<lb/>
for all of us Naso<lb/>
said. The other solu-<lb/>
tion is to use the gates<lb/>
on the far side of the<lb/>
stadium. According<lb/>
to Assistant Athletic<lb/>
Director John<lb/>
Welborn, most<lb/>
students use the gate<lb/>
on the north side of<lb/>
the stadium, near<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
They can also use stu-<lb/>
dent gates on the<lb/>
south side of the<lb/>
stadium, therefore<lb/>
cutting down on the<lb/>
length of the lines.<lb/>
Students needing<lb/>
IDs may obtain them<lb/>
at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. The<lb/>
cards are made every<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
from 2:30 to 3:30<lb/>
p.m. On Oct. 26, the<lb/>
Wednesday before<lb/>
Homecoming, cards<lb/>
will be made from<lb/>
2:30 to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
There is a charge of $2<lb/>
for new cards and $5<lb/>
for replacements.<lb/>
 i?<lb/>
 I<lb/>
FRIOCT14<lb/>
SCHIZO<lb/>
pi. 50 ADMISSION<lb/>
I BEFOR 9:30<lb/>
SAT OCT 15<lb/>
WSTINGRAYS<lb/>
featuring.JIM HAKIM<lb/>
ifffii<lb/>
?iiiiiifiiiiiiififfiifiitfiiiiiMnaaiiifTTfiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiittiiitiiiiiifiiitrifiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiitttiitt?iiiitttiiii<lb/>
MUMUM??MJJUJlJJMMMMM?.ljjJJ13aMa3??p<lb/>
??????????<lb/>
KKr ,K( H I'AI'h K:<lb/>
, '? rB9 to coo? o? - ai fcj?fc'?<lb/>
, ?b?I?i???cj??i TOS Met?<lb/>
"Ofl Cu?oo 'Illirt t ?Wi ui,i<lb/>
? B 11 322 loane ?.? ?2DeWA<lb/>
! li"g.M.C-?900?? 213 477 asie<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs, Air Conditioners,<lb/>
Stereos, gum. gold 4 silver.<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm tut on-<lb/>
ly), video games A car<lb/>
fridges, power tools,<lb/>
musical instruments,<lb/>
microwave ovens, video<lb/>
recorders, bicycles, and<lb/>
anything else ot value.<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop,<lb/>
located ?s Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown. 7SM4e4.<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Tomorrow is the last<lb/>
day to pre-register<lb/>
f<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON <lb/>
WELL<lb/>
GIVE YOU<lb/>
A DEAL!<lb/>
Kodak film<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 roll slide film<lb/>
50c OFF Any Co'ar 5x7 Enlargement<lb/>
S1.00OFF Any 8x10, 8x12, 11x14 Color Enlargement<lb/>
Qft coieco hop<lb/>
Sam's Lock<lb/>
And Key Shoppe<lb/>
757-0075<lb/>
1804DickinsenAve.<lb/>
(across from Pepsi<lb/>
Plant)<lb/>
(24 Hours)<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Friendly Service<lb/>
(she was formerly<lb/>
with Forrest Lock<lb/>
and key for 9 years)<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective thru sat.<lb/>
October 15,1983.<lb/>
aga ? - -<lb/>
? or ? i Job n ?<lb/>
" ? " - ' -<lb/>
 - ??" " . " e - - ; , -  - .<lb/>
????. 51<lb/>
aoal ?   <lb/>
-r- -? - J r?ar?<lb/>
v r 6<lb/>
'oiltlon tr. ?1   , <lb/>
 s .ag.H.i - - cm<lb/>
a4J iot.eki c a . ? -?? <lb/>
? ear, "?.?    <lb/>
. a B. M . - - t <lb/>
.1 s  .<lb/>
t you 'r? .tarastaa - ?<lb/>
-or Ma  St  c. <lb/>
T ?e  ' ' t. en eei?r . : ? - r ?<lb/>
?t t-? : ? - ?<lb/>
 r <lb/>
? <lb/>
'Ok ce -<lb/>
" ? s - -<lb/>
?a.scr pTs<lb/>
?OT sar?is<lb/>
U.S. NA?T OfFICER ffJOCHAMS<lb/>
li.lgh, M . - .<lb/>
e I-800-662-72J<lb/>
9aa-3paa MOM - "?<lb/>
ttryrVWrY<lb/>
?v ' t<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C 27834<lb/>
752-0688<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Eacn of tftese aover<lb/>
tised items is re-<lb/>
quired to oe readily<lb/>
available for sate in<lb/>
eacn Kroger sav-on<lb/>
except as spectficai<lb/>
iv noted in tnis ad if<lb/>
we do run out o an<lb/>
?T?TT? W? WtM 0??r<lb/>
you your crwMcc of a<lb/>
comparaoie item<lb/>
avfien available,<lb/>
reflecting me same<lb/>
savings or a rain<lb/>
enec wnicn will en-<lb/>
tttle you to purchase<lb/>
the advertrsed item<lb/>
at tne advertised<lb/>
price within 50 days<lb/>
limit one manufac<lb/>
turers coupon per<lb/>
item<lb/>
Limit one coupon per order- coupon expires 6-1-84<lb/>
INrRODUCING!<lb/>
KEEBLER<lb/>
Saltines<lb/>
1-Lb.<lb/>
BOX<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
TOTIMOS<lb/>
Party<lb/>
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI FREE,<lb/>
SUGAR FREE PEPSI FREE OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Hamburger Magic<lb/>
1O0z.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Yubi<lb/>
Yogurt<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$25<lb/>
KROGER Vi<lb/>
Lowfat<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
$159<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS FRESH<lb/>
CUT UP MIXED FRYER PARTS<lb/>
OR GRADE A<lb/>
whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Limit 3 Pkgs.<lb/>
IN STORE BAKED<lb/>
French Bread<lb/>
SLICED OR SHAVED<lb/>
Boiled Ham<lb/>
119 I329<lb/>
? -<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Uttfe liaat (EaroHnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ?? &amp;?,<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. Wror MsWomf<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, mm -<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH, Cm l<lb/>
Geoff Hudson, onMM m?mk?-<lb/>
MlCHAEL MAYO, r?rfcun s?rviw<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants, ?, ?'?<lb/>
Greg Rideout, ott?w ahw ?<lb/>
Gordon Ipock. 00 Edu?<lb/>
Lizanne Jennings, &amp;???<lb/>
Todd Evans, product? uanagr,<lb/>
October 13, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Commencement<lb/>
Thanks For Changing The Day<lb/>
Chancellor Howell earlier this<lb/>
week officially changed this school<lb/>
year's commencement from Fri-<lb/>
day, May 4, to Saturday, May 5.<lb/>
Thanks for your wisdom and<lb/>
foresight. In light of last year's<lb/>
tangle with the student body over<lb/>
graduation, we believe you have<lb/>
done a wise and beneficial thing.<lb/>
Having commencement on a<lb/>
Saturday, as you know, Dr.<lb/>
Howell, is a convenience to friends<lb/>
and family. It allows them to avoid<lb/>
taking off from work for more<lb/>
days than is necessary. The change<lb/>
will allow students to have one day<lb/>
of rest before taking the final<lb/>
plunge into the real world; we all<lb/>
thank you for that.<lb/>
The most significant aspect of<lb/>
the new plan is how it came into,<lb/>
being. Obviously, we can never<lb/>
know if this is true, but we believe<lb/>
the campus outcry last year and the<lb/>
beginnings of one this year were<lb/>
the main factors contributing to<lb/>
the administration's change of<lb/>
heart. Once again, it shows that<lb/>
with a little perserverance one can<lb/>
'Tight city hall<lb/>
We are proud of the students<lb/>
last year who put enough time and<lb/>
effort into changing a school event<lb/>
that truly belonged to them. We<lb/>
are proud of those students this<lb/>
year who were about to begin the<lb/>
same fight for students' rights, for<lb/>
just the inkling of some<lb/>
pugnacious spirit sparked the<lb/>
forces-that-be into changing their<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
We are not saying that the whole<lb/>
administration, or for that matter<lb/>
individual members of it, is against<lb/>
students' wishes. We are just<lb/>
lamenting the simple fact of<lb/>
bureaucratic life that procedures<lb/>
are inherently inbred and slow to<lb/>
accept changes from without. We<lb/>
are proud to say our academic<lb/>
leaders are willing to listen to the<lb/>
leaders of the student body and<lb/>
respond in the correct manner.<lb/>
So, seniors, remember when you<lb/>
stand in Ficklen Stadium on that<lb/>
fateful Saturday in May that there<lb/>
will appear to be many immovable<lb/>
obstacles as you travel down the<lb/>
proverbial road of life. But, if you<lb/>
exert enough energy, they can be<lb/>
moved ? just like the day you got<lb/>
your degree was changed. You will<lb/>
be one mover and shaker in the<lb/>
world who has already moved and<lb/>
shook.<lb/>
With the World Series tied at<lb/>
one game a piece, it seems the ap-<lb/>
propriate time to show our support<lb/>
for one of the two battling nine. A<lb/>
staff vote has been tallied, and we<lb/>
have decided, unanymously, to<lb/>
support the Baltimore Orioles.<lb/>
Why the Orioles? Why not?<lb/>
Baltimore is closer than Phily, and<lb/>
Phily is in the National League; we<lb/>
decided it's time for the American<lb/>
League to bring home the cham-<lb/>
pionship trophy. Plus,<lb/>
Philadelphia is the residence of<lb/>
Temple University, the opponent<lb/>
of ECU in this Saturday's football<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
So, for all it's worth, we offer<lb/>
our moral support, and thus,<lb/>
through interpolation, the school's<lb/>
support, to the Birds of Baltimore.<lb/>
How To Win The Big One:<lb/>
Taking The Nobel In Style<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
The Nobel Prize isn't made for just<lb/>
anybody. It takes a special breed, a cut<lb/>
above the rest of humanity, to win, or<lb/>
even accept the big one. Take what's been<lb/>
going on lately with the announcements<lb/>
of winners in various categories. Just by<lb/>
keeping an eye on them you can learn<lb/>
what it takes to get the big N.<lb/>
Humility: You got to act like a regular<lb/>
guy (or girl) who had no idea he was even<lb/>
up for the prize. "Who, me?" you got to<lb/>
say. "Just for that little ole experiment<lb/>
with corn that practically pointed the way<lb/>
to a cure for cancer?" That was about the<lb/>
answer of Barbara McClintock, who won<lb/>
the prize this year for medicine, and is the<lb/>
first woman to win it alone.<lb/>
Ignorance: This is the real catcher.<lb/>
They expect us to believe the greatest<lb/>
minds in the world today, the most<lb/>
brilliant PhDs, the most insightful and ar-<lb/>
ticulate writers, have no earthly idea the<lb/>
Nobel Prize is big bucks. McClintock<lb/>
claims she learned her prize was worth<lb/>
$190,000 from reporters. "Oh, it is? I<lb/>
didn't know Right. And literature win-<lb/>
ner William Golding (Lord of the Flies)<lb/>
thinks little kids are sugar and spice and<lb/>
everything nice.<lb/>
Nonchalance: For this one, you got to<lb/>
act like the big N is just a bother, an in-<lb/>
teresting side note that interrupted your<lb/>
dinner. Nobelers are great at this. Where<lb/>
was Lech Walesa when he was told he<lb/>
won the peace prize? Picking mushrooms<lb/>
in the woods. And what did he do when<lb/>
he heard? Keep on picking.<lb/>
And McClintock. When reporters<lb/>
swamped her for an interview after the<lb/>
announcement of her prize, and she<lb/>
knows her picture is going around the<lb/>
world, she picks up an ear of corn, throws<lb/>
an old sweater over her shoulder and<lb/>
looks into the camera. Now that's non-<lb/>
chalance. Here she is, the first woman to<lb/>
win the medicine prize alone, and she's<lb/>
holding a corn cob. And to top it all off,<lb/>
after enduring the reporters, she goes out<lb/>
for her daily stroll to pick walnuts. It's<lb/>
Walesa all over again.<lb/>
WVWLTHWS THE MST TIME W Wl CONTINENTAL UNTIL<lb/>
1HEV SETTLE THIS PILOTS STRIKE<lb/>
Is Campus A War Zone?<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
A front page news story in The East<lb/>
Carolinian Tuesday gave an overview of<lb/>
ECU's new Army ROTC program. The<lb/>
head of the program, Maj. Michael<lb/>
Bishop, said he believes an established<lb/>
campus ROTC is "part of the coming of<lb/>
age of a university The story also<lb/>
pointed out that the post-Vietnam era<lb/>
had ended and ROTC programs were<lb/>
once again on the rise. "We've put the<lb/>
war behind us Bishop said.<lb/>
I can tell. ECU's campus is beginning<lb/>
to look like a war zone. Everywhere I<lb/>
look lately I see military uniforms. The<lb/>
Air Force ROTC with about 175 cadets<lb/>
and the Army with another 91 manage<lb/>
to create quite a visual presence with<lb/>
their forces. Army Cadets often walk<lb/>
around in almost full combat gear. It's<lb/>
an eirrie sight.<lb/>
"ROTC brings out the best in<lb/>
everyone, and it develops a competitive<lb/>
edge said one cadet in the story.<lb/>
Another said the ROTC experience pro-<lb/>
vided him with "leadership oppor-<lb/>
tunities<lb/>
Fortunately, the story also brought<lb/>
out another important fact: If you join<lb/>
ROTC, you may have to fight in a war<lb/>
someday ? you might have to kill so-<lb/>
meone or be killed yourself. "No one is<lb/>
so naive as to think we'll train them as<lb/>
officers and not ask them to someday<lb/>
maybe risk their lives Bishop said.<lb/>
If you're among the majority of<lb/>
Americans who believe war is a<lb/>
necessary evil, then the life and death<lb/>
factor probably doesn't shock you. For<lb/>
me, as a Christian, the act of war runs<lb/>
contrary to my faith.<lb/>
"We are defending American prin-<lb/>
ciples echoed one Army ROTC cadet,<lb/>
"and we may have to take life-<lb/>
threatening risks<lb/>
Whenever I hear words like "defen-<lb/>
ding American principles I get very<lb/>
nervous. What principles does he mean?<lb/>
Take for example the situation in<lb/>
Nicaragua.<lb/>
At present, the United States is covert-<lb/>
ly training insurgents in Honduras who<lb/>
are attempting to destablize and over-<lb/>
throw the legitimate government in<lb/>
Nicaragua. Whether or not the United<lb/>
States happens to like the new govern-<lb/>
ment in Nicaragua is not the issue. The<lb/>
country has a right to its own self-<lb/>
determination free from outside in-<lb/>
terference. Is that an "American princi-<lb/>
ple?"<lb/>
The most unfortunate thing about<lb/>
military thinking is that it's based on<lb/>
blind obedience to authority. This is my<lb/>
primary objection to the presence of<lb/>
ROTC on our campus.<lb/>
ROTC is on our campus recruiting<lb/>
students into an organization dedicated<lb/>
to the erradication of free will. Most<lb/>
ROTC students I talk to see the military<lb/>
as "just another job They claim they<lb/>
will kill without question if ordered to<lb/>
by a superior, regardless of their own<lb/>
moral interpretation of the conflict. In<lb/>
other words, most ROTC cadets clearly<lb/>
recognize the magnitude of their com-<lb/>
mitment when they sign their name on<lb/>
the dotted line, yet they are willing to<lb/>
put aside moral principle ? if necessary<lb/>
? if instructed to do so.<lb/>
Wars don't bring out the best in<lb/>
anyone. Real security cannot be had<lb/>
from continued preparation for war.<lb/>
War preparation has no place on our<lb/>
campus and should never be considered<lb/>
part of "our coming of age<lb/>
Millions of dollars are devoted to the<lb/>
war option. Why doesn't the federal<lb/>
government put its mon y in ventures<lb/>
that will train our youth to achieve peace<lb/>
through non-violent means? Every<lb/>
branch of the armed services has an<lb/>
academy. Since Reagan took office, lots<lb/>
of funds have been cut from programs<lb/>
such as the Peace Corps ? programs<lb/>
which do more to protect our national<lb/>
security then anything the military can<lb/>
offer.<lb/>
The ROTC says it provides "leader-<lb/>
ship" for its members. But their type of<lb/>
leadership is void of moral guidance.<lb/>
Cadets are brainwashed to see the world<lb/>
through the extremely narrow eyes of<lb/>
the the military-industrial complex. My<lb/>
advice to ECU ROTC students is to get<lb/>
out while you can. For the rest of you, I<lb/>
advise a little studying be done before<lb/>
you sell your soul for eiconomic security.<lb/>
Invest instead in "real security There<lb/>
is no way to peace. Peace is the way.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Commencement Changed<lb/>
I have approved the Faculty Senate<lb/>
resolution requesting that commence-<lb/>
ment be changed from May 4 to May 5,<lb/>
1984. I would, therefore, appreciate it<lb/>
if you would publicize as widely as<lb/>
possible the fact that commencement<lb/>
will be on Saturday, May S, 1984, at 10<lb/>
a.m. Thank you for your help.<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
GT-350: Nifty<lb/>
I enjoyed Gordon Ipock's "GT-350:<lb/>
The Legend Of An Ail-American<lb/>
Sports Car" in the Oct. 11 issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian. I suspect many of the<lb/>
readers had difficulty relating to the ar-<lb/>
ticle, as most of them grew up in a time<lb/>
when the first question considered dur-<lb/>
ing the purchase of a car was "how<lb/>
good is the gas mileage not "how<lb/>
much fun is it to drive<lb/>
The Shelby Mustang GT-350 was<lb/>
truly a fun car, produced with a<lb/>
singleness of purpose and few com-<lb/>
promises, it represented tit in<lb/>
automative engineering in the same<lb/>
sense that Frank Lloyd Wright<lb/>
buildings represent art in architecture.<lb/>
Several cars from the era are or will<lb/>
become classics. The GT-350,<lb/>
however, would blow the doors off a<lb/>
Porsche, and you could get this perfor-<lb/>
mance for about the price of a Buick.<lb/>
The price was perhaps the most<lb/>
significant accomplishment, as produc-<lb/>
ing an expensive performance machine<lb/>
is no real feat. The GT-350 was in that<lb/>
sense true Americana, as it was affor-<lb/>
dable by the average American.<lb/>
I agree with Ipock that it is a legend,<lb/>
and I wanted to let him know that at<lb/>
least one reader understood something<lb/>
of what he felt as he watched it disap-<lb/>
pear over the hill for the last time.<lb/>
Paul Alston, Professor<lb/>
Rehabilitation Studies<lb/>
We're Sorry<lb/>
I am writing to request a retraction<lb/>
of part of a statement made in the Oct.<lb/>
4 edition. In the front pate article titled<lb/>
"ECU Student Found Guilty Of<lb/>
Plagiarism an art student named<lb/>
Keith Carter is referred to as a "com-<lb/>
mercial art major Mr. Carter is not a<lb/>
commercial art major. He is taking a<lb/>
survey course called "Introduction to<lb/>
Communication Arts" and is not an<lb/>
accepted major at this point.<lb/>
I would like to point out that there is<lb/>
no program catted "commercial art"<lb/>
here in the School of Art but there is a<lb/>
program called Communication Arts<lb/>
which encompasses graphic design and<lb/>
illustration. Mr. Carter is simply an art<lb/>
student. Thank you.<lb/>
Joan L. Mansfield<lb/>
Curricular Coordinator<lb/>
Communication Arts Program.<lb/>
(Editor's Note: We regret the error<lb/>
and stand corrected.)<lb/>
Hal Sensational<lb/>
Freedom of expression is a basic<lb/>
right fundamental to the vibrancy of<lb/>
The East Carolinian or, for that mat-<lb/>
ter, any university newspaper.<lb/>
It seems to me quite sad when the<lb/>
result of free expression is a statement<lb/>
reflecting obvious sensationalism,<lb/>
rather classic pseudointellectualism,<lb/>
vulgarity and what my daddy used to<lb/>
call "a smart man's sheer stupidity<lb/>
For example, witness the letter writ-<lb/>
ten by one Hal J. Daniel HI, which ap-<lb/>
peared in the campus forum, Sept. 29.<lb/>
Additionally, why identify professors<lb/>
by their departmental affiliation? Isn't<lb/>
just professor enough? The potential<lb/>
for misinterpretation appears obvious.<lb/>
R. DuaneLogue<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
THfc hA<lb/>
Women's Fl:<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
By ELIZABETH JENNINGS<lb/>
Style r<lb/>
As the '83 season of intramurai a<lb/>
flag football comes to an end, so th<lb/>
does the joy of victory and the g'<lb/>
agony of defeat. Some experience m'<lb/>
the agony a little more than Ud<lb/>
others.<lb/>
The women's division of in-<lb/>
tramural flag football has had<lb/>
quite an eventful season. In-<lb/>
tramurals are a great factor<lb/>
among dormitory and sorority in-<lb/>
volvement, and each team has put<lb/>
forth a tremendous effort to beat<lb/>
the opposition. These efforts have <lb/>
left many girls standing on the ha<lb/>
sidelines due to injuries in game an<lb/>
participation. &amp;<lb/>
New De<lb/>
Unique<lb/>
Bv ROBIN AVERS<lb/>
StafT?rita<lb/>
A little bird told me some gooc<lb/>
music was to be coming out of the<lb/>
New Deli Restaurant last<lb/>
weekend. I checked out his hmt<lb/>
and discovered he was right.<lb/>
PBS, a local R&amp;B group,<lb/>
played Friday and Saturday<lb/>
nights. The band, together for<lb/>
about two months, has its own<lb/>
stylized versions of traditional<lb/>
R&amp;B, jazz and blues songs. In ad-<lb/>
dition, there were original com-<lb/>
positions performed.<lb/>
The band with letters standing<lb/>
in for an "unprintable" name<lb/>
gave a zesty performance both<lb/>
nights. Saturday night PBS<lb/>
sounded tighter and more relaxed.<lb/>
Tbc band consists of six<lb/>
talented members. Landy Spain,<lb/>
lead guitar, is the band's<lb/>
songwriter. He shares vocal duties<lb/>
with bassist James Shoe. Chic<lb/>
Chamblee, apparently a man of<lb/>
some mystery, was visible on elec-<lb/>
tric piano and synthesizer. It is<lb/>
known Chic has been with PBS<lb/>
about a month. Keith Strand is<lb/>
drummer, but a new job in New<lb/>
Jersey will soon be taking him<lb/>
away. Bell Powell plays alto and<lb/>
soprano saxophone. Larry<lb/>
Boyette, a guitarist, plays by<lb/>
"absentee ballot Larry is in<lb/>
graduate school in Rochester.<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Ingredi<lb/>
f<lb/>
 0<lb/>
if<lb/>
ar<lb/>
-<lb/>
a. I<lb/>
s<lb/>
II<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
"? ?? -17A W<lb/>
'm&amp;' ?<lb/>
A '<lb/>
Keepin<lb/>
ffnrtahli, yet!<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
?MSM<lb/>
? ? no<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0005"/><lb/>
'AL UNTIL<lb/>
one?<lb/>
 xn has no place on our<lb/>
should never be considered<lb/>
Ir coming of age<lb/>
dollars are devoted to the<lb/>
Why doesn't the federaJ<lb/>
ut its money in ventures<lb/>
r u vouth to achieve peace<lb/>
violent means? Every<lb/>
armed services has an<lb/>
ice Reagan took office, lots<lb/>
been cut from programs<lb/>
Peace Corps ? programs<lb/>
re to protect our national<lb/>
anything the military can<lb/>
says it provides " leader -<lb/>
-nembers. But their type of<lb/>
void of moral guidance.<lb/>
painwashed to see the world<lb/>
extremely narrow eyes of<lb/>
ix-industrial complex. My<lb/>
nj ROTC students is to get<lb/>
u can. For the rest of you, I<lb/>
M studying be done before<lb/>
Hr oi fox economic scirtty<lb/>
id in real security " There<lb/>
peace. Pea is the way.<lb/>
ARC0S?,<lb/>
SHALL NQI<lb/>
?TURN.<lb/>
A<lb/>
Vu<lb/>
ed<lb/>
:hool of Art but there is a<lb/>
led Communication Arts<lb/>
ipasses graphic design and<lb/>
Ir. Carter is simply an art<lb/>
tk you.<lb/>
Joan L. Mansfield<lb/>
Curricular Coordinator<lb/>
lurucation Arts Program.<lb/>
'ote: We regret the error<lb/>
rrected.)<lb/>
nsational<lb/>
of expression is a basic<lb/>
lenial to the vibrancy of<lb/>
rolinian or, for that mat-<lb/>
Jersity newspaper.<lb/>
me quite sad when the<lb/>
expression is a statement<lb/>
bvious sensationalism,<lb/>
pseudointellectualism,<lb/>
what my daddy used to<lb/>
man's sheer stupidity<lb/>
le, witness the letter writ-<lb/>
J. Daniel III, which ap-<lb/>
campus forum, Sept. 29.<lb/>
why identify professors<lb/>
lental affiliation? Isn't<lb/>
r enough? The potential<lb/>
retation appears obvious.<lb/>
R. Duane Logue<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Women's Flag Football<lb/>
styje<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 19t3 Page 3<lb/>
Tough Competition<lb/>
By ELIZABETH JENNINGS<lb/>
As the '83 season of intramural<lb/>
flag football comes to an end, so<lb/>
does the joy of victory and the<lb/>
agony of defeat. Some experience<lb/>
the agony a little more than<lb/>
others.<lb/>
The women's division of in-<lb/>
tramural flag football has had<lb/>
quite an eventful season. In-<lb/>
tramurals are a great factor<lb/>
among dormitory and sorority in-<lb/>
volvement, and each team has put<lb/>
forth a tremendous effort to beat<lb/>
the opposition. These efforts have<lb/>
left many girls standing on the<lb/>
sidelines due to injuries in game<lb/>
participation.<lb/>
These women take their foot-<lb/>
ball seriously. A few broken nails,<lb/>
a kick in the shin or an elbow in<lb/>
the chest doesn't stop these ag-<lb/>
gressive players. Who knows,<lb/>
maybe next year these women will<lb/>
take on the men's football divi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Many sororities demand prac-<lb/>
tices a few times a week. Secret<lb/>
plays have been drawn up with a<lb/>
little help from a few coaches,<lb/>
usually the players' boyfriends.<lb/>
But, according to the Student<lb/>
Health Center and Sports<lb/>
Medicine, a number of women<lb/>
have been complaining of aches<lb/>
and pains after a grueling football<lb/>
game. Many of these women end<lb/>
up with bandaged wrists, ankles<lb/>
and fingers. Several women have<lb/>
even had to use the burdening<lb/>
crutches. "We don't have hardly<lb/>
any crutches left said a recep-<lb/>
tionist at the Student Health<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Participants of the Delta Zeta<lb/>
sorority football team have suf-<lb/>
fered a broken wrist, three sprain-<lb/>
ed ankles and one dislocated<lb/>
shoulder. The majority of these<lb/>
accidents occurred during just one<lb/>
football game.<lb/>
The Chi Omega sorority lost<lb/>
several football players at the<lb/>
beginning of the season. Torn<lb/>
ligaments in the thigh left two top<lb/>
players out of commission for a<lb/>
few games. A broken finger and a<lb/>
sprained back left two more par-<lb/>
ticipants on the sidelines.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma sorori-<lb/>
ty had one team member jam her<lb/>
finger while participating. The<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta and Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi sororities have reported no<lb/>
serious injuries. Although many<lb/>
participants recieved bruises, the<lb/>
women played till the finish.<lb/>
The majority of women foot-<lb/>
ball players agreed that this flag<lb/>
football season has been the<lb/>
toughest ever. Every game has<lb/>
been played with a lot more drive<lb/>
and desire to win. The word com-<lb/>
petition keeps these women out on<lb/>
the field and fighting for their<lb/>
team.<lb/>
New Deli Rocks Again With<lb/>
Unique Local Band 'PBS'<lb/>
By ROBIN AYERS<lb/>
?MMMhf<lb/>
A little bird told me some good<lb/>
music was to be coming out of the<lb/>
New Deli Restaurant last<lb/>
weekend. I checked out his hint<lb/>
and discovered he was right.<lb/>
PBS, a local R&amp;B group,<lb/>
played Friday and Saturday<lb/>
nights. The band, together for<lb/>
about two months, has its own<lb/>
stylized versions of traditional<lb/>
R&amp;B, jazz and blues songs. In ad-<lb/>
dition, there were original com-<lb/>
positions performed.<lb/>
The band with letters standing<lb/>
in for an "unprintable" name<lb/>
gave a zesty performance both<lb/>
nights. Saturday night PBS<lb/>
sounded tighter and more relaxed.<lb/>
TUc band consists of six<lb/>
talented members. Landy Spain,<lb/>
lead guitar, is the band's<lb/>
songwriter. He shares vocal duties<lb/>
with bassist James Shoe. Chic<lb/>
Chamblee, apparently a man of<lb/>
some mystery, was visible on elec-<lb/>
tric piano and synthesizer. It is<lb/>
known Chic has been with PBS<lb/>
about a month. Keith Strand is<lb/>
drummer, but a new job in New<lb/>
Jersey will soon be taking him<lb/>
away. Bell Powell plays alto and<lb/>
soprano saxophone. Larry<lb/>
Boyette, a guitarist, plays by<lb/>
"absentee ballot Larry is in<lb/>
graduate school in Rochester,<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
All the players have experience<lb/>
with instruments and bands. Most<lb/>
are self-taught. Bell has a master's<lb/>
in music and he is music director<lb/>
at North Pitt High School. He has<lb/>
had the opportunity to play with<lb/>
Wilson Pickett. Landy has been<lb/>
playing guitar 17 years. He and<lb/>
Bell have played together over the<lb/>
last couple of years.<lb/>
James started out playing<lb/>
guitar. "I grew up listening to<lb/>
rock music like any other white<lb/>
kid he said. He has been playing<lb/>
bass three years and played with<lb/>
the drummer for the Stingrays<lb/>
while in high school. When the<lb/>
group is not making music, they<lb/>
are listening to a wide variety of<lb/>
music. "Speaking of the<lb/>
Stingrays James said, "They're<lb/>
hot He said the two bands swap<lb/>
tunes back and forth, but each has<lb/>
its own interpretation so they<lb/>
sound different. "We're both uni-<lb/>
que, he added<lb/>
Landy said of Billy Price,<lb/>
"That's the only real singer that<lb/>
works in that place (the Attic). I<lb/>
also love Tower of Power, they're<lb/>
vastly underrated<lb/>
Friday night I sat at a table near<lb/>
the front (with the amplifiers).<lb/>
Saturday night I sat further back<lb/>
in a booth. I could not sec, but I<lb/>
heard more. There is a difference<lb/>
in splitting the senses and focusing<lb/>
one on one. There is not a better<lb/>
example than the experience of<lb/>
live music; good R&amp;B, jazz, blues,<lb/>
and fusion. PBS has a clean<lb/>
sound. Led by Landy and Bell,<lb/>
guitar and sax takes the melody,<lb/>
sometimes in combinations with<lb/>
electric piano andor synthesizer.<lb/>
Landy and Bell can be distinct or<lb/>
mesh their sounds until there are<lb/>
two saxophones in the room. Bass<lb/>
and drums can come into their<lb/>
own as well as providing strong<lb/>
rhythmic support for harmony<lb/>
and melody.<lb/>
"Black Cadillac on Catfish<lb/>
Hodges Eyewitness Blues lp was<lb/>
done well by PBS. It is a blues<lb/>
number with a sax that carries a<lb/>
subtle harmony throughout. A<lb/>
solo on synthesizer highlighted the<lb/>
song.<lb/>
PBS performed the B.B. King<lb/>
version ("Close to it; same ar-<lb/>
rangement") of "Caledonia by<lb/>
Lewis Jordan. Written in the<lb/>
1940's, this is a good dance tune<lb/>
featuring guitar.<lb/>
One of Spain's original songs,<lb/>
an unnamed instrumental, had a<lb/>
quick pace taken on by guitar and<lb/>
saxophone. The two go hand in<lb/>
hand with the latter gradually tak-<lb/>
ing over.<lb/>
There were rowdy renditions of<lb/>
"Who Do You Love?" and<lb/>
"Mustang Sally with a sensual<lb/>
slowdown to take her home.<lb/>
"Truckin a song by William F.<lb/>
Cody is done by PBS. "Its shock<lb/>
value. It's filther said Landy.<lb/>
"Brown Shoes by Oman and<lb/>
the Howlers made my feet dance<lb/>
under the table. The electric piano<lb/>
played a prominent part. It<lb/>
sounded nicely clear.<lb/>
PBS can go from laid-back<lb/>
blues to hot jazz without a pause.<lb/>
This is an energetic band who<lb/>
pretty much play for fun. There is<lb/>
a structure but it is not adhered<lb/>
to. The band improvises well,<lb/>
which is helping them to get more<lb/>
of a feel for their own style.<lb/>
"PAS would like to play more<lb/>
weekends. Being on the road in<lb/>
the past the band got very disillu-<lb/>
sioned. But still anyone with a<lb/>
dream is goint to keep after it,<lb/>
James said<lb/>
Landy said, "Making music is<lb/>
like creating illusions You've<lb/>
still gotta want to do it<lb/>
James and Landy said it is<lb/>
hardest to get financial backing at<lb/>
home. PBS occiaionally gets<lb/>
opening gigs at the Attic. The<lb/>
band has played in front of Rob-<lb/>
bin Thompson, Sea Level, and<lb/>
Fire Fall.<lb/>
James said there used to be a lot<lb/>
of local bands, about eight or<lb/>
nine. "I think everybody should<lb/>
support their local bands. Thanks<lb/>
to the Deli and the Rat, some of<lb/>
these bands get to play said<lb/>
James.<lb/>
Attack!<lb/>
?A?Y PATTMSOM - PIMM U<lb/>
.SS ?? W defeMe pnte ?? bUtz on Sim? Sigma Sigma's<lb/>
qoaterback in women's intramural fla footh.il g a s<lb/>
Seymour Reigns As<lb/>
Queen OfPrimetime<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ?<lb/>
English-born Jane Seymour is the<lb/>
new queen of primetime TV<lb/>
movies, first in line when quality<lb/>
scripts with top female roles turn<lb/>
up at the networks.<lb/>
Jane- succeeds Elizabeth Mon-<lb/>
tgomery who held sway for more<lb/>
than a decade.<lb/>
For years the scripts that<lb/>
filtered down to other actresses<lb/>
bore Elizabeth's fingerprints.<lb/>
Elizabeth commanded the leads<lb/>
in A Case of Rape, The Legend of<lb/>
Lizzie Borden, Mrs. Sundance,<lb/>
Dark Victory, The Victim, Act of<lb/>
Violence, Belle Star, The Rules of<lb/>
Marriage and others, winning<lb/>
three Emmy nominations in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Now the No. 1 choice of TV<lb/>
movie producers apparently is the<lb/>
strikingly beautiful Miss Seymour<lb/>
whose latest is NBC TV's The<lb/>
Haunting Passion, airing Oct. 24.<lb/>
She plays a wife who cheats on her<lb/>
husband with a ghost.<lb/>
"It's a hot, sexy movie with a<lb/>
daring love-making scene in a<lb/>
shower Jane said with a smile.<lb/>
"No one can object because the<lb/>
ghost I'm making love to can't be<lb/>
seen<lb/>
There is much, however, to be<lb/>
seen of Jane who was bright<lb/>
enough to foresee that if she<lb/>
hoped to establish herself in<lb/>
Hollywood she would have to<lb/>
speak American English rather<lb/>
than the cultured tones of Blighty.<lb/>
Jane masks her English accent<lb/>
so well that many of her roles are<lb/>
American or ethnically uniden-<lb/>
tifiable.<lb/>
See JANE, p. 6<lb/>
Ingredients For A Long Lasting Relationship<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) ? Ac-<lb/>
cording to a recent public opinion<lb/>
survey, couples with "similar in-<lb/>
terests" have the best shot at for-<lb/>
ming lasting relationships.<lb/>
In this poll, the majority ranked<lb/>
similar interests ahead of "in-<lb/>
telligence "sense of humor<lb/>
"physical attractiveness" and<lb/>
"good income<lb/>
I don't necessarily quarrel with<lb/>
that ordering of priorities. But<lb/>
suppose you are primarily in-<lb/>
Keepin'Dry<lb/>
Tab coaple finds a comfortable, yet<lb/>
, way to skate mi<lb/>
Orb this<lb/>
tneyeny.<lb/>
Just Relaxing<lb/>
dttgeatiy looking for a<lb/>
terested in brainpower, comic<lb/>
books, good looks and money,<lb/>
whereas the main interests of your<lb/>
lover are needlepoint, Bavarian<lb/>
art, open heart surgery and<lb/>
pretzels.<lb/>
Does that mean your relation-<lb/>
ship is inevitably transitory? Not<lb/>
necessarily, I would say. It<lb/>
depends on whether the two of<lb/>
you are intellectually stimulated<lb/>
by such things as open heart<lb/>
surgery and pretzels.<lb/>
Similiar interests<lb/>
instead of phsical<lb/>
atractiveness<lb/>
If so, you can look forward to<lb/>
many enchanted evenings before<lb/>
an open fire, heads together<lb/>
pondering such conundrums as<lb/>
whatever happened to closed<lb/>
heart surgery and how the origin<lb/>
of hard pretzels got lost in the<lb/>
mists of antiquity.<lb/>
Nobody, we are told, knows<lb/>
where or when hard pretzels, as<lb/>
opposed to soft pretzels, first ap-<lb/>
peared.<lb/>
A true intellectual realizes that<lb/>
many golden moments are missing<lb/>
from history, probably because<lb/>
someone neglected to write them<lb/>
down. The test of durability is<lb/>
whether both parties in a relation-<lb/>
ship are romantic enough to<lb/>
brood about it anyway.<lb/>
I personally an intellectually<lb/>
romantic enough to envision in<lb/>
the smoke rings the image of Miss<lb/>
Mable Upperfloss of Amen Cor-<lb/>
ner, Vt who is in the kitchen<lb/>
whipping up a batch of pretzels to<lb/>
take to a church social.<lb/>
Upon removing the twists from<lb/>
the oven, she finds to her surprise<lb/>
and dismay that they have ac-<lb/>
quired a rigid, brittle texture. Her<lb/>
assumpion is that she has messed<lb/>
up the old family recipe for soft<lb/>
pretzels.<lb/>
The appointed hour for the<lb/>
social having already arrived,<lb/>
Miss Upperfloss does not have<lb/>
time to whip up another batch.<lb/>
Neither will her sense of honor<lb/>
permit her to show up with a<lb/>
culinary mistake.<lb/>
So she takes the hard pretzels to<lb/>
the church and leaves them like a<lb/>
foundling on the rear stoop,<lb/>
knocking upon the door and then<lb/>
beating a hasty retreat ere her<lb/>
presence is discovered.<lb/>
It hardly need be said that hard<lb/>
pretzels provide a new taste thrill,<lb/>
especially for male parishioners,<lb/>
in whom they create a strong<lb/>
thirst for beer.<lb/>
A church being an inap-<lb/>
propriate place to develop a crav-<lb/>
ing for beer, male guests begin<lb/>
betaking themselves to a nearby<lb/>
tavern, long before the social<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
The barkeep, sensing this could<lb/>
be the start of something big, has<lb/>
the hard pretzels analyzed and<lb/>
duplicated. Thereafter, he keeps a<lb/>
bowl of them on the bar. Beer<lb/>
sales triple overnight.<lb/>
Miss Upperfloss, a teetotaler,<lb/>
never shares in the fruits of her in-<lb/>
vention, alas. Mortified by the<lb/>
belief that she is a failure as a<lb/>
pretzel baker, she goes to an early<lb/>
grave.<lb/>
If hard pretzels lack the ingre-<lb/>
dients of a lasting relationship,<lb/>
better take up with someone<lb/>
whose chief interest is operating<lb/>
on salt water taffy.<lb/>
 - - -<lb/>
v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0006"/><lb/>
HE t ASi CAROl INIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1983<lb/>
Jane Seymour No. 1 Choice M4JS?fHON<lb/>
cont'd from p.5<lb/>
In truth, her startling beauty<lb/>
has been more a handicap than<lb/>
her Mayfair accent, which is<lb/>
naturally more high-toned even<lb/>
than Julie Andrews whose<lb/>
faultless diction severely limits her<lb/>
choice of roles.<lb/>
"I used to feel my looks had to<lb/>
be overcome Jane said. "But<lb/>
I'm woman enough and vain<lb/>
enough to have been terribly nat-<lb/>
tered when Harpers magazine<lb/>
named me one of the 10 most<lb/>
beautiful women.<lb/>
"But when I see a photograph<lb/>
self posed as a classic beau-<lb/>
i see the woman as someone<lb/>
not me<lb/>
Beauty has not prevented Jane<lb/>
ing an astonishing list<lb/>
hour TV movies and<lb/>
sries in the past few years:<lb/>
Captain and the Kings, Seventh<lb/>
Avenue, The Awakening land.<lb/>
The Scarlet Pimpernel, Fast of<lb/>
Eden, Phantom of the Opera,<lb/>
Four Feathers, Dallas Cowboys<lb/>
Cheerleaders, Frankenstein, The<lb/>
True Story and Jamaica Inn.<lb/>
In the near future she will be<lb/>
seen in Dark Mirror and then in<lb/>
the title role of Mata Hari.<lb/>
It doesn't take a Rhodes<lb/>
Scholar to perceive that much of<lb/>
Jane's work consists of classic and<lb/>
gothic stories.<lb/>
Of her unique type-casting, she<lb/>
says, "I believe I have a timeless<lb/>
look. I can play historic roles or<lb/>
women of the future as I did in<lb/>
the pilot film of Battlestar Galac-<lb/>
tica ? with equal conviction.<lb/>
"It isn't just a matter of<lb/>
makeup and wardrobe. I think it<lb/>
is an attitude. In several TV<lb/>
movies I've aged to 50 years old<lb/>
and in several others I've played<lb/>
insanity.<lb/>
"One reason I agreed to do The<lb/>
Haunting Passion and The Dallas<lb/>
Cowboy Cheerleaders was the op-<lb/>
portunity to play contemporary<lb/>
women<lb/>
On the big screen, as in TV,<lb/>
Jane is caught in a time warp. Her<lb/>
most memorable film role was<lb/>
Somewhere In Time, in which she<lb/>
played a turn-of-the-century ac-<lb/>
tress.<lb/>
She returns to her own personal<lb/>
time machine next spring co-<lb/>
starring with Tom Selleck in<lb/>
l.assiter, playing a 1939 dancer.<lb/>
"Perhaps some actresses feel<lb/>
constrained about playing period<lb/>
roles she said. "They've<lb/>
become second nature to me.<lb/>
"When I step into a period<lb/>
costume with corsets, wig, fan<lb/>
and ribbons I feel as comfortable<lb/>
as I do putting on modern war-<lb/>
drobe. I'm never aware of my<lb/>
costume once the scene begins<lb/>
Jane is content to continue<lb/>
working in period pieces now that<lb/>
she and her husband, Hollywood<lb/>
business manager David Flynn,<lb/>
have purchased a genuine 10th<lb/>
century monastary in Avon, con-<lb/>
verted in the 15th century to an<lb/>
Elizabethan house, on 14 ancient<lb/>
acres.<lb/>
"It is a listed property with<lb/>
England's National Trust Jane<lb/>
said. "We've put a fortune into<lb/>
the place but I think of it as an in-<lb/>
vestment in history<lb/>
An appropriate sentiment from<lb/>
a lady whose acting fortune was<lb/>
accumulated playing period roles.<lb/>
p. a RESTAURANTS<lb/>
uZ 1 ' GREEK to me<lb/>
!re FAST FREE DELI VERY<lb/>
Serve 5:00-U:00p.m.<lb/>
Daily Subs, Sandwhichs<lb/>
Specials Homemade Greek Pastries<lb/>
752-0326 56? JrM u<lb/>
'? wamm Greenville. W.C.27834<lb/>
 Breaker Morant' Portrays Drama Of War<lb/>
THURSDAY-OCT 13<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA<lb/>
Perhap- the best of the new<lb/>
ighly acclaimed Australian<lb/>
nema, Breaker Morant is a<lb/>
tnt drama of war, politics<lb/>
Based on a true<lb/>
. the film is set at the turn of<lb/>
entury, when England was<lb/>
- 5 the Boer War in Africa ?<lb/>
-rrilla war.<lb/>
 eep Germany from enter-<lb/>
the war, England court-<lb/>
ed three Australian<lb/>
idiers for murdering<lb/>
' war, and denied<lb/>
. soldiers were acting<lb/>
ler British orders.<lb/>
a travesty of<lb/>
 the Pussies were eiven<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
7S?VJ13 ? 24 MftS.<lb/>
a stunning defence by a brash<lb/>
Australian lawyer who exposed<lb/>
the mockery and hypocrisy behind<lb/>
the trial. Director Bruce Beresford<lb/>
(The Getting of Wisdom) alter<lb/>
nates emotionally charged cour-<lb/>
troom confrontations with scenes<lb/>
of the events as they happened in<lb/>
a marvelously cohesive style.<lb/>
As the inexperienced lawyer.<lb/>
Jack Thompson deservedly won<lb/>
the Cannes Film Festival Award<lb/>
as Best Suporting Actor, but the<lb/>
quality of the rest of the cast mat-<lb/>
ches his excellence. Breaker<lb/>
Morant is a powerful, intelligent<lb/>
film which, like all great drama, is<lb/>
also rousing entertainment <lb/>
Breaker Morant' comi<lb/>
siiWRm!5i5?i5siH?sigasiBim?s<lb/>
ng Wed Oct. 19, 8 p.m.<lb/>
present<lb/>
Happy Hour starting at<lb/>
9:00 with super specials<lb/>
GET AN EARLY START<lb/>
ON<lb/>
FALL BREAK<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
752-1493 200 W. 10th St,<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB<lb/>
LIVE IN CONCERT<lb/>
VERN GOSDIN and MEL McDANIEL<lb/>
Oct. 19, 1983 7:00pm and 9:30pm<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
HEL<lb/>
At the Moose Lodge<lb/>
Tickers A vailable: Tnendh Hairdesigners<lb/>
W. 4th Si. Sear Cox Florist<lb/>
Hours 9-5 Daily 9-1 Sat.<lb/>
WARWICK PROD. INC.<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
THEATER A<lb/>
?i'iil <lb/>
NIOHT<lb/>
CLUBS<lb/>
WE'RE OPEN LATE!<lb/>
Stop in at Subway after your late night fun. Try one of our<lb/>
great tasting fpot-long sandwiches. We have 17 mouth water-<lb/>
ing varieties to top off your night! We're open till 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
seven davs a week.<lb/>
3UBIMBRP )<lb/>
America's Famous<lb/>
Foot-Long Sandwich<lb/>
208 E. 5th Street<lb/>
???????<lb/>
own<lb/>
Every Sunday<lb/>
through Thursday<lb/>
5 P.M. until 11 P.M.<lb/>
Get A Burrito Supreme<lb/>
Regular Taco<lb/>
Medium Pep. si<lb/>
All For Only $2.49<lb/>
Good at 319 E. Greenrille Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
TflCO fr BELL<lb/>
TACO BEL! 1983<lb/>
AlQKt6tfl<lb/>
m<lb/>
If you re a musician who's serious<lb/>
about performing, you should take a<lb/>
senous look at the Army.<lb/>
Army bands offer you an average<lb/>
of 40 performances a month. In every-<lb/>
thing from concerts to parades.<lb/>
Army bands also offer you a<lb/>
chance to travel.<lb/>
m  NO CIVILIAN BAND<lb/>
CAN MAKE YOU THIS OFFER.<lb/>
The Army has bands perfoi iing<lb/>
in Japan, Hawaii, Europe and all<lb/>
across America.<lb/>
And Army bands offer you the<lb/>
chance to play with good musicians. Just<lb/>
to qualify, you have to be able to sight-<lb/>
read music you've never seen before and<lb/>
demonstrate several other musical skills<lb/>
?4r<lb/>
?J, ? V'<lb/>
I BREAKFAST BAR Of Ft.R'NQ<lb/>
s<lb/>
? Fraahty Scrambled EWa ? Homafflada Buttarmltk Biscuits ? I<lb/>
? Country MM OraVy ? Najajaj Fried Potatoa ? Southern Sty Oatta ?<lb/>
Mowamada Muffins ? Link and Patty Sautaga ? A Cnolce of<lb/>
"Snoopy" Own Special FruN Toppinga ? Orated Amartcan I<lb/>
PLUS Th? FruK Bar featuring a variety of fresh fro and<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
MOMOAV-PMfMY<lb/>
inkHnatiut<lb/>
MTvnoAv-euaioev<lb/>
AHOUOAVS<lb/>
? ee am -tea am<lb/>
Its a genuine, right-now, imme-<lb/>
diate opportunity.<lb/>
Compare it to your civilian offers<lb/>
Then wnte: Army Opportunities, P.O<lb/>
Box 300, North Hollywood, CA 91603<lb/>
mARMYBANDl<lb/>
BEALLVOUCANBL<lb/>
Owl<lb/>
ByCINin PI EA!<lb/>
?-x,<lb/>
ECU head I<lb/>
Emor said the f<lb/>
to have to p ,<lb/>
Saturda if tl<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
"If we dor<lb/>
play defense<lb/>
"we're in for a<lb/>
"They (T<lb/>
everything in<lb/>
the option, the<lb/>
'I (forrrid<lb/>
everything - .<lb/>
After la<lb/>
Temple in<lb/>
Emory is exp<lb/>
little vengeful<lb/>
in the ba I<lb/>
they're gonna come<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"You km ?<lb/>
down thert<lb/>
'Look, we<lb/>
ty back We<lb/>
they're riding<lb/>
Emory doesn<lb/>
will let that happen<lb/>
team is r e a<lb/>
the wa the<lb/>
he said "We<lb/>
could do a<lb/>
got to PL'<lb/>
"This is a bij<lb/>
if we war<lb/>
the line "<lb/>
If the B<lb/>
hopes of a be -<lb/>
Qaarter-mile runner Keith Oa<lb/>
to the relay team, said Track<lb/>
Orioles<lb/>
BALTIMORE (I PI) Roo<lb/>
Mike Boddicker. a lifesaver<lb/>
watery field, came<lb/>
Baltimore Onoles' rescue I<lb/>
second time in a week ecr :<lb/>
night by tossing a three-hitter a<lb/>
knocking in a run to spark a<lb/>
truimph over the Philadelpr<lb/>
ffiillies that evened the Wo-j<lb/>
Si?ries at one victory apiece<lb/>
cAfter a travel dav Thurs<lb/>
the best-of-seven Series resumes!<lb/>
Philadelphia Fnday night wi<lb/>
Mike Flanagan pitching for tj<lb/>
Orioles and Steve Carlton goa<lb/>
for the Phillies.<lb/>
Boddicker, who blanked<lb/>
4<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
HON<lb/>
GRANTS<lb/>
7,K to me<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
00-11:00P.M.<lb/>
lbs, Sandwhichs<lb/>
ade Greek Pastries<lb/>
560 Evans Street<lb/>
rtenville. N.C.27834<lb/>
0CT13<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
enr<lb/>
r starting at<lb/>
Der specials<lb/>
ILY START<lb/>
IEAK<lb/>
RMI1S<lb/>
:oo w. ioth st.<lb/>
(CLUB<lb/>
r<lb/>
'<lb/>
V<lb/>
ay<lb/>
Vd<lb/>
ll<lb/>
right-now, imme-<lb/>
your avilian offers<lb/>
y Opportunities, P.O<lb/>
loUywood, CA 91603.<lb/>
BAND.<lb/>
CAN BE.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Owls Won't Be Asleep<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1983<lb/>
Pa?e7<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
ECU head football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory said the Pirates are going<lb/>
to have to play better defense this<lb/>
Saturday if they're going to beat<lb/>
Temple.<lb/>
"If we don't go to Temple and<lb/>
play defense Emory said,<lb/>
"we're in for a long night.<lb/>
"They (Temple) throw<lb/>
everything in the world at you ?<lb/>
the option, the split-draw, and the<lb/>
'I (formation); they use<lb/>
everything but the kitchen sink<lb/>
After last year's 23-10 win over<lb/>
Temple in Veterans' Stadium,<lb/>
Emory is expecting Temple to be a<lb/>
little vengeful. "They'll have that<lb/>
in the back of their minds, and<lb/>
they're gonna come after us he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"You know what they're saying<lb/>
down there. They're telling them,<lb/>
'Look, we can gain some credibili-<lb/>
ty back We can beat ECU, and<lb/>
they're riding high right now<lb/>
Emory doesn't think the Pirates<lb/>
will let that happen. "I think the<lb/>
team is really embarrassed with<lb/>
the way they played Saturday<lb/>
he said. "We showed what we<lb/>
could do at Missouri. We've just<lb/>
got to put it all together.<lb/>
"This is a big, big game for us<lb/>
if we want to do something down<lb/>
the line<lb/>
If the Bucs are going to keep the<lb/>
hopes of a bowl bid alive, Emory<lb/>
said they are going to have to play<lb/>
every game with a high intensity<lb/>
level.<lb/>
"We have to play very inspired<lb/>
football Emory said. "If you<lb/>
can't be ready for 11 games a<lb/>
year, you're not enough of a man<lb/>
? enough of a player.<lb/>
"You have 11 games a year and<lb/>
44 in a career. I could understand<lb/>
if we had 25 to 30 games a year.<lb/>
You ought to be ready to play. If<lb/>
you're not, that's a copout<lb/>
Emory praised the Pirates for<lb/>
having an excellent offensive<lb/>
game, except for four fumbles in<lb/>
the second half. Running backs<lb/>
Tony Baker and Ernest Byner<lb/>
each had two in the second half.<lb/>
Emory said he hasn't been able<lb/>
to break Byner of holding the ball<lb/>
out when he runs. "He carries the<lb/>
football away from his body he<lb/>
said, "and four years later he's<lb/>
still doing it, but he gives such a<lb/>
great effort<lb/>
The Pirates may be missing one<lb/>
of their backs when they travel to<lb/>
Temple on Saturday. Tailback<lb/>
Jimmy Walden suffered a frac-<lb/>
tured hand against SW Louisiana<lb/>
and is questionable for the trip to<lb/>
Philadelphia. Walden is the only<lb/>
player on the serious injury list.<lb/>
Although Emory may not have<lb/>
been too thrilled about four<lb/>
fumbles, he was happy over<lb/>
ECU's offensive line. "We're just<lb/>
real happy about the offensive<lb/>
line at this point he said. "If<lb/>
Terry Long isn't the finest offen-<lb/>
sive lineman in the country, I'd<lb/>
hate to see who is<lb/>
However, upon mentioning the<lb/>
Pirates' defense, Emory looked<lb/>
worried. "We're really concerned<lb/>
about the defensive secondary "<lb/>
he said. "We played well in the<lb/>
fourth quarter, but we're just not<lb/>
playing with the aggressiveness we<lb/>
need.<lb/>
"When teams finesse you and<lb/>
spread you out on the field, that<lb/>
should be our cup of tea, but we<lb/>
seem to do better against someone<lb/>
like Missouri. It has to be a<lb/>
physical dogfight for us.<lb/>
"We need to have something<lb/>
happen to our defensive secon-<lb/>
dary. We were 94th in the nation<lb/>
in pass defense last week, and our<lb/>
athletes are much finer than<lb/>
94th<lb/>
The defense will have a chance<lb/>
to make something happen<lb/>
against Temple. And while the<lb/>
Pirates are concerned about their<lb/>
secondarv, Temple is confident.<lb/>
"They have an outstanding defen-<lb/>
sive secondary?possibly the best<lb/>
we'll face all season Emory<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Owls also have an outstan-<lb/>
ding quarterback. "Tim Riordan<lb/>
is simply one of the most outstan-<lb/>
ding quarterbacks in the East and<lb/>
in the nation Emory said. "He<lb/>
can beat you with the dropback<lb/>
pass or with the option. He can<lb/>
beat any team on a given day and<lb/>
our secondary had better be up to<lb/>
the task on Saturday<lb/>
For ECU quarterback Kevin In-<lb/>
gram, the trip to Philadelphia will<lb/>
be his homecoming. Ingram had<lb/>
his finest game of the 1982 season<lb/>
in his hometown last year. Ingram<lb/>
threw for 101 yards and rushed<lb/>
for 105 yards in front of the<lb/>
homefolks.<lb/>
But Ingram isn't the only Penn-<lb/>
sylvanian making the trip. Strong<lb/>
safety Keith Brown, center Tim<lb/>
Mitchell and noseguard Gerry<lb/>
Rogers will also get a chance to<lb/>
visit their home state.<lb/>
In fact, both Ingram and<lb/>
Rogers came to ECU after<lb/>
Villanova dropped its football<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The Pirates were originally<lb/>
scheduled to play in Veterans<lb/>
Stadium this year, but the game<lb/>
was changed when the<lb/>
Philadelphia Phillies made the<lb/>
World Series in baseball.<lb/>
The game, which will be played<lb/>
now at Franklin Field, was also<lb/>
changed from 1:30 p.m. to 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Emory wasn't too happy<lb/>
about that. "It's just gonna make<lb/>
me wait that much longer " he<lb/>
said. "It'll make me put on<lb/>
another 10 pounds during that<lb/>
period<lb/>
fTAMLW LSA Y - I<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Now in his 17th year as head<lb/>
coach of the men's track team,<lb/>
Bill Carson is looking forward to<lb/>
what might be his most successful<lb/>
season ever at ECU.<lb/>
The Pirates didn't lose anyone<lb/>
to graduation, and Carson has<lb/>
managed to land one of the best<lb/>
freshmen classes in the state.<lb/>
a ECU's strongest event will be<lb/>
? the mile-relay team of Eddie<lb/>
Bradley, Rueben Pierce, Willie<lb/>
Fuller and Chris Brooks. All four<lb/>
are returning veterans, and Car-<lb/>
son believes they can be one of the<lb/>
top-twenty relay teams in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Tommy Adams and Herman<lb/>
Morton are two freshmen that are<lb/>
looking good to Carson, and he<lb/>
expects them to add depth to the<lb/>
mile relay.<lb/>
"Tommy beat the lead-off man<lb/>
on the relay team in trials, and<lb/>
looked very good in doing it<lb/>
Carson said. "There's a good<lb/>
possibility that he will take over a<lb/>
leg on the mile-relay team before<lb/>
the season starts.<lb/>
"We're also hoping that Her-<lb/>
man comes around as a quarter-<lb/>
 miler Carson added. "In some<lb/>
meets we might want to hold<lb/>
Brooks out because he's our best<lb/>
, long jumper<lb/>
Keith Clarke is another quarter-<lb/>
rawer Keith Clarke should also add tremendous depth E?? t$ sh?V!J ft ou' lrhc<lb/>
relay team, said Track Coach BUI Carson. mmna?m mm ?"? ? year. "Keith was M for<lb/>
quite some time with a blood<lb/>
Orioles Fly By Philadelphia<lb/>
disorder Carson explained.<lb/>
"But if he can return to his old<lb/>
form he will add tremendous<lb/>
depth to the relay team<lb/>
Vincent Epps is yet another<lb/>
freshman that should help out the<lb/>
relay team. "Vincent looked<lb/>
awfully good in the time trials, so<lb/>
I fed we have a total of eight ex-<lb/>
cellent quarter-milers Carson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"With Brooks and Bradley run-<lb/>
ning healthy, our chances of runn-<lb/>
ing a 3:05 in the mile relay are<lb/>
very good Carson said. "The<lb/>
school record is 3:06.15, and I<lb/>
think we have a good chance of<lb/>
breaking that this year<lb/>
Six people are presently battling<lb/>
to make the 4x100 relay team.<lb/>
"As of right now, we're using<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle leading off,<lb/>
Phillip Epps, Joe Dingle and Er-<lb/>
skine Evans anchoring, but things<lb/>
could change before the start of<lb/>
the season Carson explained.<lb/>
Last year the team ran a 39.8,<lb/>
with Terry Brown in place of<lb/>
Epps. Brown isn't presently<lb/>
enrolled in school, but is expected<lb/>
back in January to battle Epps for<lb/>
his old position.<lb/>
Football star Henry Williams<lb/>
will also join the team in the spr-<lb/>
ing and is expected to be one of<lb/>
the top Pirate sprinters.<lb/>
Long-jumpers Maurice Monk<lb/>
and Chris McGlawhorn have<lb/>
good speed, according to Carson,<lb/>
and are the two present team<lb/>
members that are expected to<lb/>
Pirate Head Coach Ed Emory talks with his former ECU coach, Jack<lb/>
Boone. Boone, now Emory's specialty teams coach, has been with<lb/>
East Carolina for 35 years.<lb/>
In State;<lb/>
History<lb/>
Brown and Williams in the spring.<lb/>
"My real hope is we can go to<lb/>
the IC4A's this year and run three<lb/>
people in the 100 and three people<lb/>
in the 200 who can all make the<lb/>
finals, while still having the best<lb/>
4x100 relay team Carson said.<lb/>
"Last year we bad to use<lb/>
Evans, Dingle and McGorkic in<lb/>
the 100, 200 and 4x100 relays. We<lb/>
made it to the finals, but by the<lb/>
time we got there everybody was<lb/>
too tired to perform up to their<lb/>
potential<lb/>
The IC4A is the oldest track<lb/>
conference in the country and is<lb/>
made up of 115 teams from<lb/>
throughout the East.<lb/>
Last season, the Pirates finish-<lb/>
ed 11th in their first year in the<lb/>
conference, but Carson is<lb/>
definitely looking for a top ten<lb/>
finish this year.<lb/>
The Pirates also had nine peo-<lb/>
ple place in the top three, which<lb/>
earned each individual All-East<lb/>
honors. "To have nine All-East<lb/>
athletes on one team is a great<lb/>
tribute to the ECU program, but I<lb/>
feel we'll have even more this<lb/>
year Carson exclaimed.<lb/>
ECU will compete in 10 indoor<lb/>
and outdoor meets beginning in<lb/>
January. Included on their<lb/>
schedule are such prestigious<lb/>
meets as the Wanamaker-Milrose<lb/>
games, the indoor nationals and<lb/>
the Domino Pizza Relays. Each<lb/>
meet will attract athletes from<lb/>
across the country and are<lb/>
scheduled to be televised.<lb/>
challenge for spots on the 4x100<lb/>
relay team.<lb/>
Individually, the best two<lb/>
events should be Brooks in the<lb/>
long jump, and Craig White in the<lb/>
110-meter hurdles. Both were par-<lb/>
ticipants in the NCAA Champion-<lb/>
ships as freshmen and are ex-<lb/>
pected to repeat this year.<lb/>
"Chris has been working as<lb/>
hard as anyone in practice and is<lb/>
showing great leadership Car-<lb/>
son said. "He's one of the best<lb/>
long-jumpers in the country<lb/>
With McGlawhon and Monk<lb/>
also long-jumping, Carson feels<lb/>
this will be the strongest field<lb/>
event for the Pirates.<lb/>
White, who was the number<lb/>
two-ranked freshman hurdler in<lb/>
the nation last year, will be joined<lb/>
by Walter Southerland and Steve<lb/>
Rash in the high hurdle events.<lb/>
The intermediate hurdles will be<lb/>
handled by Rueben Pierce,<lb/>
another runner Carson feels con-<lb/>
fident will qualify for the na-<lb/>
tionals. "Rueben's been working<lb/>
really hard in practice and on the<lb/>
weights, and I'm expecting him to<lb/>
have an outstanding year.<lb/>
"Rueben is also a great asset in<lb/>
that he's expanding the team<lb/>
Carson added. "He's giving us a<lb/>
national Contender in an event<lb/>
that we didn't even have last<lb/>
year<lb/>
The 100 and 200-meter dashes<lb/>
will be handled primarily by Mc-<lb/>
Corkle, Evans and Phillip Estes,<lb/>
with added help coming from<lb/>
BALTIMORE (UPI) ? Rookie<lb/>
Mike Boddicker, a lifesaver on a<lb/>
watery field, came to the<lb/>
Baltimore Orioles' rescue for the<lb/>
second time in a week Wednesday<lb/>
night by tossing a three-hitter and<lb/>
knocking in a run to spark a 4-1<lb/>
truimph over the Philadelphia<lb/>
fihiiiiftt that evened the World<lb/>
Series at one victory apiece.<lb/>
After a travel day Thursday,<lb/>
the best-of-seven Series resumes in<lb/>
Philadelphia Friday night with<lb/>
Mike Flanagan pitching for the<lb/>
Orioles and Steve Carlton going<lb/>
for the Phillies.<lb/>
Boddicker, who blanked the<lb/>
Chicago White Sox with a five-<lb/>
hit, 14-strikeout effort in the se-<lb/>
cond game of the American<lb/>
League Playoffs last Thursday<lb/>
after Baltimore lost the opener,<lb/>
wasn't quite as overpowering this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
But his assortment of off-speed<lb/>
pitches kept the Phillies off stride<lb/>
and had them beating the ball into<lb/>
the ground. Only four of the 27<lb/>
outs Boddicker recorded were<lb/>
flies to the outfield, a good thing<lb/>
since the outfield turf was soggy<lb/>
from 20 hours of continual rain.<lb/>
The 26-year-old right-hander,<lb/>
who posted a 16-8 record with a<lb/>
2.77 ERA during the season,<lb/>
struck out six and did not walk a<lb/>
batter in beating rookie Charles<lb/>
Hudson. The only hits off Bod-<lb/>
dicker were an infield single by<lb/>
Joe Morgan in the fourth, a line<lb/>
single to right by Gary Matthews<lb/>
in the seventh and a bloop single<lb/>
to right by Bo Diaz in the eighth.<lb/>
Boddicker also drove in a run<lb/>
with a sacrifice fly ? only hit<lb/>
third at-bat in professional<lb/>
baseball ? when the Orioles<lb/>
scored three runs in the fifth and<lb/>
knocked out Hudson.<lb/>
It appeared for a while Wednes-<lb/>
day morning that the game might<lb/>
not be played because of over-<lb/>
night rain that left Memorial<lb/>
Stadium field a soggy mess.<lb/>
However, the Orioles' grounds<lb/>
crew, one of baseball's best,<lb/>
worked diligently to get the field<lb/>
in playing shape. And, except for<lb/>
some unsure footing in the out-<lb/>
field, there were no mishaps<lb/>
because of the condition of the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
John Lowenstein also wore a<lb/>
hero's mantle for the Orioles by<lb/>
collecting three of Baltimore's<lb/>
nine hits, including a long home<lb/>
run in the fifth inning that tied the<lb/>
score 1-1 and triggered a three-run<lb/>
outburst.<lb/>
???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0008"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCOTBER 13, 1983<lb/>
?Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
ECU at Temple<lb/>
UNC at N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland at Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson at Duke<lb/>
V MI at Virginia<lb/>
Tennessee at Alabama<lb/>
Nebraska at Missouri<lb/>
Kentucky at I SI<lb/>
Georgia at Vanderbilt<lb/>
Cindy Pleaiantt<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Rudy Mewi<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Mart Barter<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Dve Gordon<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va.<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
MlkeHagbei<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Greg Hideout<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
State<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
U.Va.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Vandy<lb/>
M<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each o these advertised items is required to be readily availal<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price m each A&amp;P Store excep<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad. <lb/>
e tor <lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PRirFS EFFECTIVE THRU WED Bat Oct. 15 A4P IN Greenvttk, NC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
NfY SIO EPS: So you think it<lb/>
was your pladoas well think<lb/>
?gain.<lb/>
MAPPY BIRTHDAY GARY I I<lb/>
lav yow. Cutla.<lb/>
MO AND BERN What do u say<lb/>
j sticking igathar this fall braak<lb/>
1 c it stop-n-snop will braak<lb/>
down and sail us l ago causa ilka<lb/>
its said " u navar knowl" Bah<lb/>
awoy. Luv Empty.<lb/>
CAROL HAPPY BIRTHDAY.<lb/>
My daar daar friend Lova you.<lb/>
Susan.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST. UK foM rossa chain<lb/>
braciat, In downtown araa. It<lb/>
found call TM-tOOO, REWARD<lb/>
OP F E RED. <lb/>
LOST: Mala Sibartan husky<lb/>
n?r tha Kappa Sigma howM on<lb/>
Tanth Straat. Has ono brewn and<lb/>
ona blua aya and antwe t to tha<lb/>
nama of CZAR. If h? nd. call<lb/>
Kalth Wilkins. 7a-77tJ<lb/>
PHARO RESTAURANT<lb/>
employing daytlma halp from 10<lb/>
a.m. 'till 1 p.m. Coma altar 1<lb/>
p.m. MenFrl. Sll Cotonche. No<lb/>
call accaptad.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE<lb/>
WANTED: Georgetown Apt.<lb/>
S73.7Smonth. Call WtjHMW.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDEO:<lb/>
Various aftamoons, nights and<lb/>
waakands. Experience with In-<lb/>
fant and yaar old naadad. Own<lb/>
transportation. Call WMjjf.<lb/>
LEOAL HASSLEST Call<lb/>
Howard J. Cummlnga. attorney<lb/>
at Law. Ne charga far inlttal<lb/>
consultation far ECU Stwdanta.<lb/>
caii m aa<lb/>
LOWEST TYPING RATES an<lb/>
campus Include experienced<lb/>
professional work. Pro<lb/>
ofraading, spoiling and gram-<lb/>
matical corractlons 3SS-A74I<lb/>
aftar S:M.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
)55-t74<lb/>
TYPING.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
ACADEMIC AND PROFES<lb/>
SIONAL typing. Call Julia<lb/>
Bloodworth at 7Se-7e74.<lb/>
TERM, THESI<lb/>
IF GETTING HYPER OVER<lb/>
YOUR typawrltar Relax. Lat<lb/>
tha protasslonals at Word tor<lb/>
Word do your typing. Typing<lb/>
and word procosslng.<lb/>
Oaorgatown shop; Wd Floor,<lb/>
Call 7Se-4?M.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE-experlence, quality<lb/>
work, IBM aelecfrlc typewriter.<lb/>
Call Lanta Shiva 7S-SM1.<lb/>
QUALITY TYPING. IBM<lb/>
typewriter. IS years of ex-<lb/>
perience. Full time typing for<lb/>
faculty and students. Call<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEHO, WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
5 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS, EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS.<lb/>
$20 PURCHASE 10 COUPONS, $100 PURCHASE 50 COUPONS.<lb/>
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE!<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
25 RESUMES<lb/>
(Linen Paper)<lb/>
Typed $8.65<lb/>
Typeset $22.15<lb/>
Open 12 Hours<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
Friday 9-7 Saturday 9-2<lb/>
The Georgetown Shops<lb/>
Between now and Oct 15. we will redeem national<lb/>
manufacturers centa-ott coupon up to SO for<lb/>
double their value Otlef good on national manu-<lb/>
facturers centa-ott coupon only (Food retailer<lb/>
coupons not acceptedCuatomer muat purchaee<lb/>
coupon product In tpecifled sue Expired coupon<lb/>
will not be honored. One coupon per customer per<lb/>
Hem No coupons accepted for inm merchandiae<lb/>
Otter does not apply to AP or other atore coupon<lb/>
whether manufacturer i mentioned or not when<lb/>
the value of the coupon exceeds SO or the retail<lb/>
of the rtem. thie otter I limited to the retail price<lb/>
Strings are Gnat with AiP $<lb/>
DOuLi SMfWGS COUPOMS'<lb/>
mc s<lb/>
COUFOM<lb/>
COUPON A<lb/>
COUPON B<lb/>
COUPON C<lb/>
COUPON D<lb/>
?re<lb/>
Cf?TSO?<lb/>
25'<lb/>
18<lb/>
50"<lb/>
75'<lb/>
U. iOOtC<lb/>
C?rrs o?<lb/>
25'<lb/>
18<lb/>
TO'?- cou?o?<lb/>
50"<lb/>
YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN<lb/>
OFFICER'S COMMISSION<lb/>
IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
Your BSN means you're a profession In the Army, It also<lb/>
mesas you're sn officer. Y ju start as a f ulfledged member of our<lb/>
medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities,<lb/>
P.O. Box 7713, Burbank. CA 91510.<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS.<lb/>
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.<lb/>
Ttcute of TtoU<lb/>
403 5. IVANS ST.<lb/>
tHtEFNVILU, N.C<lb/>
Latest Styles in<lb/>
Ladies Hats and accessories<lb/>
10:00AM-S:30PM<lb/>
fhr<lb/>
HfiKPACU&amp; . SO Z.OO<lb/>
h<lb/>
Plaza i<lb/>
cinema<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Only two things con screw<lb/>
up their relotionship.<lb/>
He's one. She's the other.<lb/>
i H<lb/>
White Bread Double Q Tuna<lb/>
i<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
IN OIL ? IN WATER<lb/>
y loaf Limit one with additional 7.50 order a? (1l can m Limit one with j additional 7 50 order1!<lb/>
SAVE 61?<lb/>
? Corn Flakes<lb/>
?5Ppr POST TOASTIES<lb/>
5<lb/>
18 oz.<lb/>
Pg.<lb/>
Limit one with<lb/>
additional 7.50 order<lb/>
48<lb/>
c<lb/>
SAVE 30<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
A&amp;P FROZEN<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
can<lb/>
Limit one with<lb/>
additional 7.50 order<lb/>
SAVE 41<lb/>
SAVE 30<lb/>
Tomato Ketchup! Hi Dri Towels<lb/>
. '<lb/>
rtUlHS<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
Limit one with<lb/>
additional 7.50 order<lb/>
HI-DWJ<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
rolls<lb/>
Limit two with<lb/>
additional 7 50 order<lb/>
NowSave A&amp;P Gold Register Tapes for<lb/>
great savings on quality<lb/>
Stainless Steel Cookware<lb/>
<lb/>
DUDLEY MOORE<lb/>
MARY STEENDURGEN<lb/>
ROMANTIC<lb/>
COMEDY<lb/>
SHOW TIMES<lb/>
MON-FRI. 3:00-7:05-9:00 I"<lb/>
SAT-SUN. 3:00-5:10-7:05-9:fl0<lb/>
CS1RSI<lb/>
4th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION<lb/>
PRIZES ? AUTOGRAPHS ? PICTURES<lb/>
LOOK-ALIKE ? 2 P-m- ? i 5th "?"? n<lb/>
-r'w " ?-???? participating store before Oct 15<lb/>
TONTEST Winner receivr dinner with the Uars<lb/>
Qt.<lb/>
warmerserver<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 tor better cooking<lb/>
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS<lb/>
and a 150 Oft Certificate<lb/>
?STAR APPEARANCES BY FRANK RUNYEON &amp;. KRISTA TESREAU<lb/>
Oct 22. Center Court ? 11 a.m. &amp; 4 p m ? Carolina East Centre ? Noon<lb/>
loyce Betker s Soap Oper fe?tlvl?<lb/>
Must be 18 or older to enter ? Must have at least 5 entrants per category to validate contest<lb/>
MfLOYttS ARE NOT UIGI6U<lb/>
Save your valuable A&amp;P gold register tapes<lb/>
When you have the amount of A&amp;P gold register tapes needed, redeem them at the<lb/>
A&amp;P Check Stand.<lb/>
Naturally, you can start saving more A&amp;P gold register tapes for the next cookware<lb/>
item you plan to select.<lb/>
And remember, all items are on sale for the duration of this program. This offer is<lb/>
scheduled to end Saturday, December 17,1983.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
waaaaajaa.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057582_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>