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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057758_0001"/>
Shu<lb/>
(fJarnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.60orfcV P<lb/>
luesday, November 19, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
( irculation 12.WM)<lb/>
Reagan, Gorbachev<lb/>
Begin Their Talks<lb/>
By IMH G ROBERSON<lb/>
Sl.ff Wrtlrl<lb/>
With a simple handshake,<lb/>
President Ronald Reagan and<lb/>
Soiet leader Mikhail Gorbachev<lb/>
began their historic summit in<lb/>
Geneva this morning.<lb/>
However, it is unlikely major<lb/>
differences will be resolved dur-<lb/>
ing the two-da) meeting between<lb/>
the superpower leaders, said<lb/>
ECU Political Science Chairman<lb/>
Maurice D. Simon.<lb/>
"1 don't believe wide-ranging<lb/>
strategic differences can be<lb/>
resolved in the course of a highly<lb/>
publicized summit meeting. But.<lb/>
this does not preclude some pro-<lb/>
gress if both sides work diligently<lb/>
to enlarge the area of<lb/>
agreement he said.<lb/>
vears. he added.<lb/>
From the Soviet perspective,<lb/>
Simon said an arms-control<lb/>
agreement would provide "a<lb/>
direct acknowledgement of<lb/>
Soviet military and diplomatic<lb/>
equality and status" with the<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
"An arms agreement would<lb/>
also free some Soviet resources<lb/>
for the kind of modern economic<lb/>
development Corbachev has been<lb/>
developing and the Soviet con-<lb/>
sumer drastically needs he said.<lb/>
But dcspne the need for arms<lb/>
reduction, Simon said he is "only<lb/>
mildly optimistic that a far-<lb/>
reaching accord" can be attained<lb/>
during the summit.<lb/>
"I think there are some<lb/>
positive indications that both the<lb/>
U.S. and v i ?' - are seiious<lb/>
about reducing their strategic<lb/>
nuclear arsenals. Both sides are<lb/>
uneasy oi the nucleat sword that<lb/>
hangs over I he head .f<lb/>
humankind he said<lb/>
The I S<lb/>
recognize 11 <lb/>
LS K<lb/>
i ? ?<lb/>
 be reduced bv up : 50<lb/>
, s mon adekv.<lb/>
?V in previous summits, the<lb/>
. i, ? bachev meeting will<lb/>
i ? Idwide attention.<lb/>
I s su is to a larger<lb/>
Maurice Simon<lb/>
In his televisec<lb/>
Thursday, P<lb/>
said, "If we red<lb/>
of war. there w<lb/>
only winners<lb/>
Simon said h<lb/>
Reagan<lb/>
iU I I V.<lb/>
i puns<lb/>
sers,<lb/>
agrees that<lb/>
.in arnis-cDnlrnl agrcemcnl would<lb/>
benefit the U.S. and U.S.S.R.<lb/>
"For the U.S President<lb/>
Reagan should want to receive<lb/>
historical approval as a leader<lb/>
who not only st rengt h e n e d<lb/>
America, but also bega <lb/>
the way to a less frightening<lb/>
nuclear world Simon said.<lb/>
Reagan also realizes the<lb/>
public's desire 'or some relief<lb/>
from the "massive" military<lb/>
spending programs ol recent<lb/>
degree a mi<lb/>
Reagai ha<lb/>
m<lb/>
Gorbachev<lb/>
" V the<lb/>
very gnific;<lb/>
si akes a<lb/>
cd<lb/>
C ncerning progress in other<lb/>
areas during the summit, Simon<lb/>
ia . ? - because<lb/>
been a media<lb/>
! he world is<lb/>
e about<lb/>
e said<lb/>
te time - a<lb/>
ummii because<lb/>
? aiv<lb/>
expev<lb/>
 . ommitn<lb/>
from both sides on future and<lb/>
more regular meetings.<lb/>
"There are a variety of issues<lb/>
that need to be handled more ef-<lb/>
fectively Some are of nearly<lb/>
equal i m p trtance with the<lb/>
strategic nuclear arms race,<lb/>
dangerous regional conflicts,<lb/>
continuing conventional arms<lb/>
race and the divergent positions<lb/>
of both sides on human rights<lb/>
issues Simon said.<lb/>
In his preview speech, Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan said. "My mission.<lb/>
stated simply, is a mission for<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
"It is to engage the new Soviet<lb/>
leader in what I hope will be a<lb/>
dialogue tor peace that endures<lb/>
beyond my presidency<lb/>
Simon said he believes Reagan<lb/>
and Gorbachev are "pragmatic<lb/>
enough to realize" the limitations<lb/>
on progress during a two-day<lb/>
summit.<lb/>
"1 suspect Reagan will realize<lb/>
some accommodations over the<lb/>
SHI need to be readied. Mv guess<lb/>
is thai we will try to find a way to<lb/>
cap the Star Wars race<lb/>
somewhere before the full<lb/>
deployment stage he said.<lb/>
"Both Reagan and Corbachev<lb/>
can be realists and politicians in<lb/>
effective wavs when they want to.<lb/>
Both wish to make their marks ,? :<lb/>
their respective political<lb/>
systems he added.<lb/>
In general, Simon said summits<lb/>
'end to "promote cooperation"<lb/>
between the superpowers<lb/>
"1 believi thai<lb/>
our younget generation, in the<lb/>
I S. and I s S.R be given<lb/>
: p through<lb/>
understand i g. Otherwise,<lb/>
negativity and passivity may lead<lb/>
us to the brink of nuclear destruc-<lb/>
tion he said.<lb/>
Students  erest ed in<lb/>
L . S Soviet relations should con-<lb/>
taci the Political Science Depart-<lb/>
ment. Simon will teach a course<lb/>
on the dilemmas and prospects of<lb/>
superpower relations in the spr-<lb/>
ing semester.<lb/>
Plastic Money<lb/>
j B mumbebt TM East Carolinian<lb/>
A shopper makes a purchase with a credit card ? plastic money. Since retailers and other<lb/>
businesses have recognized the potential of the college student as a consumer, credit cards have<lb/>
become relatively easy to acquire. See the related story on page 1 for more details.<lb/>
Residents Voice Concerns<lb/>
Over Proposed Dorm Change<lb/>
By FI IZABFIH PAGE<lb/>
staff W nlrr<lb/>
Fleming Dorm residents voiced<lb/>
their grievances concerning the<lb/>
possibility of changing from all<lb/>
female to either coed or all male<lb/>
dorm at last Thursday's open<lb/>
forum ol the Residence 1 ife<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
According to Associate Dean<lb/>
Residence I ife Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum, three or four years<lb/>
ago, plans were made to renovate<lb/>
Cotter Jarvis and Fleming. I"he<lb/>
plans cleared the way for the a;r<lb/>
conditioning of those dorms,<lb/>
which, at that time, were all<lb/>
female.<lb/>
Fulghum said Residence Life<lb/>
staff members knew they would<lb/>
have to either make the dorms<lb/>
coed or offer some oi the air-<lb/>
conditioned space to male<lb/>
students at ECU.<lb/>
Currently, out of the 59" air-<lb/>
conditioned spaces offered at<lb/>
ECl . "2 are<lb/>
students, while 465 are a<lb/>
to female s! i ei<lb/>
plans are undei way to a ndi-<lb/>
i wing f Scott<lb/>
is still d ivho will be<lb/>
ed ' reside in<lb/>
cond : spaces ?? ath<lb/>
non-athletes.<lb/>
cc<lb/>
? enough spa<lb/>
See DORM Page 3.<lb/>
Students Easily Acquire Credit Cards<lb/>
By BETH THICKER<lb/>
siiff Wrllrr<lb/>
"Eighty percent of college<lb/>
students who applv for credit<lb/>
Media Board Discusses Lab<lb/>
By JENNIFER MVFRs<lb/>
Miff Wmrr<lb/>
The Media Board discussed the<lb/>
decline in the quality of services<lb/>
offered by PhotoLab, the prin-<lb/>
ting of Expressions magazine<lb/>
and also the release of a<lb/>
marketing survey concerning the<lb/>
East Carolinian and WZMB<lb/>
radio.<lb/>
Problems have been occurring<lb/>
regarding services provided by<lb/>
the East Carolina Photo Lab. Ac-<lb/>
cording to various organizations<lb/>
needing assistance, the<lb/>
photographers at the lab have<lb/>
been difficult to contact.<lb/>
In addition, campus organiza-<lb/>
tions have spent extra money un-<lb/>
necessarily to get pictures<lb/>
developed. For these organiza-<lb/>
tions, outside developers had to<lb/>
be contacted or additional sup-<lb/>
plies had to be requisitioned to<lb/>
meet the organization's needs.<lb/>
The photo lab receives enough<lb/>
money to have the supplies to<lb/>
assist most campus organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The Rebel used an outside<lb/>
photographer, Joseph Cham-<lb/>
pagne, to photograph the recent<lb/>
edition to improve the quality of<lb/>
the magazine.<lb/>
Expressions will print an edi-<lb/>
tion by the end of fall semester.<lb/>
Color pictures will be numerous<lb/>
in this edition with fewer color<lb/>
shots in the spring edition and<lb/>
even less in the summer edition.<lb/>
This decrease stems from the<lb/>
large cost of color-separation<lb/>
processing needed for the fall edi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Media Board said results<lb/>
o a marketing research study will<lb/>
be released soon. Students in<lb/>
Hawa Altuner's marketing<lb/>
classes prepared and distributed<lb/>
the surveys. Out of six student-<lb/>
written reports, one will be<lb/>
choosen as the final conclusion to<lb/>
the study. The research involved<lb/>
an analysis of the circulation and<lb/>
readership patterns of the East<lb/>
Carolinian and the listening<lb/>
habits of WZMB's targeted au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
e<lb/>
cards are accepted said Michael<lb/>
From me, public relations<lb/>
representative o the College<lb/>
Credit Card Corporation.<lb/>
"It's very easy to get a major<lb/>
credit card with this program. To<lb/>
qualify, a student must fill out an<lb/>
application and provide proof of<lb/>
enrollment in college Fromme<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Companies are very in-<lb/>
terested in college students.<lb/>
Retailers and other companies<lb/>
are realizing the potential of the<lb/>
college market, which consists of<lb/>
12 million students. Special con-<lb/>
sideration is given to college<lb/>
students since they are making an<lb/>
investment in their future by go-<lb/>
ing to college Fromme said.<lb/>
"We'd like to give them (col-<lb/>
lege students) every opportunity<lb/>
to apply tor our cards, as the<lb/>
start of a long-term financial<lb/>
relationship said John R. Post,<lb/>
vice president and director of<lb/>
Bankcard Acquisitions for<lb/>
Citibank.<lb/>
Citibank has announced plans<lb/>
to be a major sponsor of a<lb/>
24-hour toll-free hotline that will<lb/>
enable many juniors, seniors and<lb/>
graduate students to request their<lb/>
Visa and Mastercard applications<lb/>
over the phone<lb/>
"The idea evolved when 300<lb/>
campuses were surveyed in 1983.<lb/>
The studv found that students<lb/>
bearing credit cards are<lb/>
greater risk than ordinary card<lb/>
holders cited Fromme.<lb/>
"Nationally, the v.<lb/>
Credit Card Corporation offers<lb/>
four major credit cards: Citibank<lb/>
(Visa or Mastercard), Sears,<lb/>
Amoco, and Zales. On a regional<lb/>
basis, the College Credit Card<lb/>
Corporation offers credit cards a:<lb/>
department stores or specialty<lb/>
stores said Fromme.<lb/>
"Credit limits vary from stu-<lb/>
dent to student. A student's<lb/>
credit limit is a bit lower than that<lb/>
of a regular card holder's, and<lb/>
the credit limits increase<lb/>
periodically. Moreover, a student<lb/>
who charges to his limit and pays<lb/>
on time is likely to receive a<lb/>
higher credit limit cites<lb/>
Fromme.<lb/>
"Most students pay their bills<lb/>
each month; they are as likely to<lb/>
pay on time as regular card<lb/>
holders. A portion of college<lb/>
students are irresponsible just as<lb/>
a portion of people with jobs are<lb/>
irresponsible Fromme said.<lb/>
"We believe that college students<lb/>
are educated, reliable people. If<lb/>
they do not pay their bills, they<lb/>
are treated like anvone else<lb/>
Citibank Visa or Mastercard<lb/>
charges at; annual percentage rate<lb/>
19.8 percent. Howevei<lb/>
is a charge of 5o cents ea i b<lb/>
period Moreover, cash advai<lb/>
drawn from aut mated teller<lb/>
machine . a Si5<lb/>
each withdrawal. More imp<lb/>
tant, the $1.75 is added on to any<lb/>
other previous I or c?<lb/>
advances other than tl<lb/>
withdrawn from the automated<lb/>
teller, each non-au  teller<lb/>
withdrawal is . 12 percent<lb/>
of the withdrawal amou<lb/>
However, NCNB otters a stu-<lb/>
dent Visa for Si8 annually 1' e<lb/>
maximum line of credit for a stu-<lb/>
dent Visa is S200.<lb/>
NCNB charges 18 percent in-<lb/>
terest on purchases and cast: ad-<lb/>
vances. No other charges are bill-<lb/>
ed to the card holder.<lb/>
"To apply for the student<lb/>
Visa, one needs to fill out an ap-<lb/>
plication stating his her<lb/>
allowance, money from jobs and<lb/>
other financial informal<lb/>
Some students' parents co-sign<lb/>
the application with the<lb/>
student according to Julian<lb/>
Williamson, manager trainee a:<lb/>
NCNB<lb/>
"The cards are not very dif-<lb/>
ficult to receive. We have found a<lb/>
number of students apply for the<lb/>
card said Williamson.<lb/>
 - W. i Legislature Sides With Scott<lb/>
?<lb/>
SGA Legislature Meets<lb/>
J 8 HUMBERT - Th East Carolinian<lb/>
The SGA Legislature met Monday night in Mendenhall. The Legislature voted to give Scott Dorm<lb/>
residents priority in reserving rooms in the new air-conditioned wing. See related story on page 1 for<lb/>
further details.<lb/>
By LANCESEARL<lb/>
suff Wrll?f<lb/>
The SGA legislature approved<lb/>
a resolution Monday that would<lb/>
enable residents of Scott Dorm to<lb/>
have resident living priority next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Due to ECU's attempt to<lb/>
recruit top athletes, Scott Dorm<lb/>
has been chosen to house its<lb/>
athletes in a comfortable, air-<lb/>
conditioned environment. As a<lb/>
result, many of Scott's present<lb/>
residents will be displaced.<lb/>
According to Legislator Gor-<lb/>
don Walker, the resolution is<lb/>
neither for nor against the univer-<lb/>
sity's plans to renovate Scott. It's<lb/>
main purpose is to help the<lb/>
students who would be affected<lb/>
by ECU's plan.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA ap-<lb/>
propriated $840 to the ECU Am-<lb/>
bassodors to attend conferences<lb/>
at Memphis State University and<lb/>
$200 to Pirate Walk for printing<lb/>
and supply costs.<lb/>
According to Speaker Kirk<lb/>
Shelley, future legislative<lb/>
business may include a "future<lb/>
funding program This would<lb/>
require legislative bodies to ap-<lb/>
propiate money to organizations,<lb/>
which would have to receive<lb/>
money from the SGA for at least<lb/>
five years on a two-year basis.<lb/>
(That year and the year after).<lb/>
"This would give new<lb/>
legislatures a better idea of what<lb/>
and how much money they can<lb/>
and can't appropriate to certain<lb/>
organizations without previous<lb/>
legislative bodies actually<lb/>
deciding for them Shellev said.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features7<lb/>
Sports10<lb/>
Friendship mu kes prosperity<lb/>
brighter, while it lightens<lb/>
adversity by sharing its griefs<lb/>
and anxieties.<lb/>
 ? C icero<lb/>
T<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0002"/><lb/>
THfc LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 19, 1985<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
PUBLIC PROGRAM<lb/>
The Dubiu s n?ptf ?o a program on<lb/>
Family Vioierue A ?an i issue' Tue<lb/>
aa? November l? at 8 p m a' 'he First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church af Greenville icna'eo<lb/>
at the comer oi Un ana Eim Streets Mar,<lb/>
? a worker at ECUS<lb/>
Fan ir Practice Center nois? spei.aiist in<lb/>
 rsc ? "rn wii: be the speaker The<lb/>
? ' ??? xus or- tne dynamics of<lb/>
? Olence n Tf family and rtowr our values<lb/>
I id ?'?,?  society often combine with<lb/>
mil pr essures V P'eve-i v In'strom<lb/>
escap My Abos ve 't'a' onsnips The meeting<lb/>
?s sponsored Dy the Greenv ue P'tt County<lb/>
i-eague ot Women yoters For rnore nor<lb/>
mation e-ease coi '?.? . ? c a jms a1<lb/>
134<lb/>
ZETA PHI BETA<lb/>
imbda Mu Cl Ap'e ot Ze'a P" Beta<lb/>
a be Elding .Ts thiro annuai<lb/>
ed tood1 ? and clothes drive social on<lb/>
Hi a'he LeooPia Wr.gnt Cultural<lb/>
'1 with the donation ot cann<lb/>
?is is tree wthout canned gooos ad<lb/>
m ssion is 11 oo a terns collected will be<lb/>
a ted I eedy fan es n Greenv e T he<lb/>
SIGMA GAMMA RHO<lb/>
? ? - . Rhc Sorority ?, "?vt j ?n at Mov 23 at the Cull . S'uaeTs 's ? 2 drittl Non students $1 00 ten v a th Come an ? Gamma - l nake some<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
B? la amboa 1 it netl a?. ? s, .  n Ras. u. al ! 00 speaki be Dr a ? -peak fcmer car fee EntercjeV<lb/>
ECU CHORALE<lb/>
?? . ' ia  nws ers Com-i eehot se on Thurj . .<lb/>
PHYSICAL THERAPY CLUB<lb/>
Treat yourseit to a massage1 The Pt?ysi a<lb/>
Therapy Club s having a massage ctina<lb/>
Tues Nov i? trom 6 X to 10 00 at the Beik<lb/>
Buiidmg Cost is one dollar tor ten minutes<lb/>
Everyone is welcome1<lb/>
THEATRE ARTS<lb/>
Usher and see ECU s production ot The<lb/>
Three Sisters Nov 20 23 F RE E ' A tew spots<lb/>
are stui open tor each n.gh' however, in<lb/>
oroer to usher you mus' sign op betore the<lb/>
night you wish fo usher' Sign up sheets are<lb/>
'cxated on the bulletin boards in rVless'Ck<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center<lb/>
LSS<lb/>
The ceisure Systems Studies Soce'r <lb/>
be having a meeting on Wed Nov 20 m the<lb/>
multipurpose room at rVenoennati at 7 00<lb/>
p m There will be a guest speaker on iob<lb/>
placements at the meeting<lb/>
LSS<lb/>
Leisure Svs'ems Studies Society w'll be<lb/>
navmg a bake sale F day Nov 22 'O front of<lb/>
the Student Store to ra-se fund for upcom<lb/>
?ng events Come oo ouT and buy some r ? ?<lb/>
cooked goodies to kill those Fridav morning<lb/>
my nc hies<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
USE YOUR SRA CARD<lb/>
ECU RUGBY CLUB<lb/>
Pre Proessiona Hea " ft an e a<lb/>
meet Nov 21 a 6 30 pm .n 'x n<lb/>
"lAenoenhan Our gues' speaker , o M<lb/>
Lor "a Lews trom the oepar'men' ot sot a<lb/>
work Ai. members and interested guests sr<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Apt 11 procedures for Gradua'e<lb/>
Schoc ? ? psychology maors D' Pt'ra'<lb/>
Durham and Or Grossn ? e Tes<lb/>
N 1 ,6 a' 7 0C .n Brews'er C '0:<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Lectun Ps choiogs's as an e?per'<lb/>
a rss ex a -? itioi a n c<lb/>
a ? : N . 1 it 7 31 n B ???.? ? B 102<lb/>
TURKEY SHOOT BOWLING<lb/>
There w be a Turkei ' 1 ?-<lb/>
red bi 1 ??? 1 Reci eai -<lb/>
Comm f n No 21 (17 OOP n Pa<lb/>
?a a4 a ?? sf ? H sei ' ? ?<lb/>
'anes knew ? ? vv- ai east eight f 1<lb/>
?er a-es a ' a ? ? ?? rive entry fe<lb/>
s: x ac mt - ? ? ? rnes . mj -??<lb/>
un mited - r ore turkey c- pet<lb/>
COUNCIL OF<lb/>
HONOR SOCIETIES<lb/>
 ? r ??v rtg w oe<lb/>
p Brewstei E - ? S<lb/>
Seafood House aid Oyster Bar;<lb/>
 Washington Highway N.C. 33 Ext.) Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
'J Phone 752-3172<lb/>
 pt (Past RiverbluffApts. j<lb/>
; Flounder $325<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp $325<lb/>
Hours 4:30-9:30 MonSat.<lb/>
- NEWLY REMODELED -<lb/>
This Style Frame<lb/>
With Single Vision RX<lb/>
Lenses for only<lb/>
$24.95<lb/>
All Other Frames<lb/>
30 to 60 OFF<lb/>
with purchase of RX Lenses<lb/>
RAY BAN sunglasses30 OFF<lb/>
Xfe<lb/>
iciaas<lb/>
31 5 PorVview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
Op?n MonFri. 9 a.m. til 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
OREAT AMERICAN SMOKEOUT<lb/>
The Great American Smokeout is<lb/>
November Jlst Come to Room 107 at the Stu<lb/>
dent Health Center on the 2lst (or cookies.<lb/>
candy and information on hoyy to quit smok<lb/>
nfl Lectures will be at 10 00 1 00. and 00<lb/>
tor Specific Tips on Becoming a Non<lb/>
Smoker For more information can Mary<lb/>
Elesha Adams at 757 6841 or E D G!Ov?" a'<lb/>
757 6961<lb/>
ECU SURFING<lb/>
The next club meeting will be "<lb/>
night at 8 00 at John McCann s noost-<lb/>
ner ot First and Meade' Lates' video! <lb/>
be shown and final plans will be made tor the<lb/>
Thanksgiving trip to Florida Free brews<lb/>
will be supplied and all members are urgei.)<lb/>
to attend i it you are gomg to Fia you MUST<lb/>
attendi<lb/>
GENERAL ACCOUNTING<lb/>
OFFICE<lb/>
A represen'a'ive trom the US Get ?<lb/>
counting Office vrgin.a B ? I w<lb/>
on campus Tues, Nov 26 W85 to int? ? .<lb/>
Coop stuoents who would kc to wort g<lb/>
GAO Evaluators Accounting maiors who<lb/>
have completed 60 semester hours anc I .i.?i<lb/>
a 2 9 GPA or nigner snouic; ?? t the Co op<lb/>
113 Raw! to arranoe a- rMerve. m<lb/>
med'a'eiy<lb/>
Dorm Could Switch<lb/>
( ontinued From Pa ??<lb/>
students at kC'L. "Wc need lo<lb/>
provide more space tor male<lb/>
students she said. "We (at<lb/>
Residence Life) had to turn down<lb/>
about 50 men this year<lb/>
The number of male students<lb/>
on the campus is also rising,<lb/>
which calls for more housing<lb/>
whether or not it's air condition<lb/>
ed said Fulghum<lb/>
( aroln Fulghum<lb/>
The needs in Residence 1 ife are<lb/>
brought before the Residence<lb/>
Life Committee in the form of a<lb/>
suggestion, according to<lb/>
Fulghum. "We Jon tell them<lb/>
what the alternatives ate said<lb/>
Fulghum. "It's up to the Com-<lb/>
mittee to make that decision<lb/>
After the Residence I ifeom-<lb/>
mittee members 'hear the sugges-<lb/>
tions, the make their decision.<lb/>
which is then handed ova<lb/>
Vice-Chancellor tor Academic<lb/>
Affairs Elmer Meyer, who makes<lb/>
the final decision<lb/>
The committee consist oi the<lb/>
three Area Residence Council<lb/>
presidents, Mary Fowler, Direc-<lb/>
tor of Housing Dan Wooten and<lb/>
Fulghum.<lb/>
I ast Thursday, the committee<lb/>
held an open hearing to hear<lb/>
grievances against the proposed<lb/>
changes of Fleming,<lb/>
Residences of the dorm armed<lb/>
themselves with homemade but-<lb/>
tons proclaiming "We love Flem-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
1 leming Dorm President lod<lb/>
Jameson spoke before the -<lb/>
mittee trying to persuade them<lb/>
against such a change. She<lb/>
pointed to the damage caused to<lb/>
the dorm during the summer<lb/>
when male students were allowed<lb/>
to live in Fleming.<lb/>
"Most of the residents who li -<lb/>
ed on the first floor had to re-<lb/>
paint their rooms said<lb/>
Jameson, "just to cover up the<lb/>
damage done during<lb/>
summer<lb/>
According to Jan esoi . moving<lb/>
would also cause the resident;<lb/>
a place they have cal<lb/>
home for man) yea<lb/>
Jameson argued that moving<lb/>
the women who live in Flen<lb/>
could be putting them in dang<lb/>
"lor safety reasons. I -<lb/>
ideally Icoated said J,<lb/>
"The farther av- a<lb/>
them trom C. entral C am; .<lb/>
more risk you'll be<lb/>
"It Fleming must change<lb/>
the: me coed 11<lb/>
there will still be<lb/>
dorm, and they will still ha<lb/>
say in Residence Hall .<lb/>
men? added James<lb/>
"We have no) bei<lb/>
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students w hi ivai<lb/>
ditioned facilities<lb/>
manj beds it's j<lb/>
Maybe the c<lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton. G,wMflnafr<lb/>
Jay Stone, Manning Editor<lb/>
Mike Ludwick, ?. ?? Tom Luvender, ???, 0Adwnmt<lb/>
Scott Cooper, ?a Anthony Martin, ???,<lb/>
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LORIN P-XSQl IAL. .?n SHANNON SHORT, ???, ?,<lb/>
DfChamle Johnson. ?? ?, Debbie Stevens, ?<lb/>
November 19, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
uorrvptzBrtxurztjA?? nft?-aktppvPtur<lb/>
Scott Hall<lb/>
4 thletes In; Academics Out<lb/>
The current controversy brewing<lb/>
over plans to air condition the<lb/>
South wing of Scott Hall is il-<lb/>
lustrative of a larger truth. The<lb/>
reason for air conditioning Scott is<lb/>
not to provide a more congenial<lb/>
and livable environment for the<lb/>
average geology or art major here<lb/>
at ECU. It is instead to offer 120<lb/>
members of the Pirate football<lb/>
team more comfortable accomoda-<lb/>
tions. It is hoped by athletic direc-<lb/>
tor Ken Karr that, in the long run,<lb/>
providing such niceties to football<lb/>
players will enable the school to<lb/>
recruit better talent. Yet, many-<lb/>
students who currently live in Scott<lb/>
feel that the administration is<lb/>
pandering to football players at the<lb/>
expense of the average student. The<lb/>
reason for le grassroots antipathy<lb/>
toward the administration's plan is<lb/>
that some students who currently<lb/>
live in Scott must be moved out in<lb/>
order to make room for the<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Of particular importance in<lb/>
evaluating the merits of this case is<lb/>
the fact that many students seem to<lb/>
feel that Scott is one of the better<lb/>
dorms on campus. In fact, statistics<lb/>
show that Scott has the highest<lb/>
retention rate of any other<lb/>
residence hall on ECU's campus,<lb/>
with an approximate 71 percent of<lb/>
its residents choosing to continue<lb/>
living there.<lb/>
Of course, it must be conceded<lb/>
that the administration is being<lb/>
confronted with a sticky situation.<lb/>
On the one hand, a strong football<lb/>
program can undeniably have the<lb/>
effect of buffering a school's<lb/>
reputation as well as its coffers.<lb/>
Our administration is clearly striv-<lb/>
ing to build up our football pro-<lb/>
gram because it sees that as the best<lb/>
strategy for building a strong<lb/>
university. One needs only to look<lb/>
around the country at the generous<lb/>
contributions which alumni are in-<lb/>
clined to make to universities with<lb/>
strong athletic programs to unders-<lb/>
tand the logic that is at work here.<lb/>
Yet, at the same time the decision to<lb/>
move students out of Scott and<lb/>
replace them with football players<lb/>
was an autocratic one. The students<lb/>
affected were not consulted or of-<lb/>
fered compensation. (Though new<lb/>
rooms will be found for them<lb/>
elsewhere.)<lb/>
Yesterday the SGA passed a bill<lb/>
which was designed to ameliorate<lb/>
the problems in Scott. The bill<lb/>
states the opposition of students to<lb/>
the administration's move. After<lb/>
doing so, however, it adds what the<lb/>
bill's author calls "a reality<lb/>
clause The clause simply asks:<lb/>
OResidents of Scott Hall who<lb/>
would be displaced be granted<lb/>
highest priority of available rooms<lb/>
in the residence hall during the spr-<lb/>
ing room sign up. 2) The coaches<lb/>
and staff of the ECU Pirate foot-<lb/>
ball team encourage their players to<lb/>
pay the optional Student Residence<lb/>
Association fees. 3) The staff and<lb/>
coaches of the football team active-<lb/>
ly participate with the staff of Scott<lb/>
Residence Hall to maintain social<lb/>
order on and off season. Of course,<lb/>
the "reality clause" is included in<lb/>
the bill as a tacit acknowledgement<lb/>
of the fact that nothing that student<lb/>
government does is going to change<lb/>
the administration's plans. Thus<lb/>
the three provisos above are<lb/>
representative of a compromise<lb/>
which the SGA considers fair. It is<lb/>
an attempt to salvage the best<lb/>
bargain possible for the current<lb/>
residents of Scott in the face of a no<lb/>
win situation.<lb/>
PLANNED<lb/>
PARENTHOOP<lb/>
HQRS.<lb/>
UNPLANNED<lb/>
PARENTHOOD<lb/>
HQRS.<lb/>
?Campus Forum<lb/>
A n ti-A bortion A rticle Criticized<lb/>
I can not sit quietly in the face of<lb/>
the self-righteous pontification<lb/>
presented by Michael Garnder's anti-<lb/>
choice, bibiically-based tract. It<lb/>
seems very odd that this impassioned<lb/>
piece comes from a fellow who is<lb/>
most probably a young white middle-<lb/>
class male; he is entitled to his opi-<lb/>
nion but I d take his position more<lb/>
seriously if he were female and or<lb/>
minority and or below the poverty<lb/>
level and or urban. I'd especially give<lb/>
his opinion more credence if he didn't<lb/>
claim that he has a direct line to<lb/>
God's thinking.<lb/>
I really think men are just great to<lb/>
have around, but I get tired of men<lb/>
who think so little of women's minds<lb/>
that they feel they should tell women<lb/>
what to do with their lives and bodies;<lb/>
1 get more tired still oi those who do<lb/>
it in the guise of religion. Religion<lb/>
was used to justify the inquisition<lb/>
(Christians against the non-believer<lb/>
infidels. I believe it was), to justify<lb/>
slavery (land-owning white males<lb/>
claiming God's authority over the<lb/>
savages, you could sav), and it is still<lb/>
being used to justify all the in-<lb/>
ternecine wars in the middle east (i.e.<lb/>
Iran and Iraq).<lb/>
People who say that their way is the<lb/>
right way. that they have the truth.<lb/>
and that anybody who disagrees with<lb/>
them is wrong and probablv bound<lb/>
for hell, could be called arrogant.<lb/>
Verv often they do it in the name of<lb/>
their faith, forgetting that not all peo-<lb/>
ple are Christians, and that not all<lb/>
Christians are fundamentalist, or<lb/>
Baptist, or whatever faith the truth-<lb/>
proclaimer professes. In tact, accor-<lb/>
ding to a recent almanac, not all<lb/>
Americans protess a faith and while<lb/>
added together all the various Chris-<lb/>
tian denominations (Protestant<lb/>
faiths, Catholics, etc.) make a large<lb/>
majority of North Americans of<lb/>
faith, not all North Americans of<lb/>
faith are Christian, and fewer than<lb/>
half of all North Americans of Chris-<lb/>
tian faith are Protestant, although the<lb/>
Protestant faiths are growing. A<lb/>
ding to the Information Please<lb/>
Almanac 1983, Muslims and Hindus<lb/>
together total more than all branches<lb/>
of Christians world-wide, and that's<lb/>
not counting any of the<lb/>
religions which claim a sul<lb/>
number of believers world-w<lb/>
My point. Mr. Gardner is this: You<lb/>
are entitled to your own opinions,<lb/>
your own faith, your own beliefs.<lb/>
However, our countrj is founded<lb/>
upon a pluralistic philosophy, with<lb/>
nobody's faith having prioi vet<lb/>
anyone else's faith and we a ;n-<lb/>
titled to our own beliefs. Don try<lb/>
trivialize what is an acutely difficult<lb/>
personal, social and economic deci-<lb/>
sion for other people bv quoting a<lb/>
higher authority based upon vour<lb/>
own beliefs. And since the issue of<lb/>
abortion is not one that you are likelv<lb/>
to ever have to face personally (as a<lb/>
male), don't pass harsh judgments on<lb/>
a woman who chooses that as a solu-<lb/>
tion. Rather, wait to judge until you<lb/>
have walked a mile in that woman's<lb/>
shoes, until you are personal 1<lb/>
prepared to take responsibility for<lb/>
that unwanted child's needs tor the<lb/>
next 18 years<lb/>
Iti our country. n<lb/>
get an abortion, and womei 1<lb/>
choose to have abortions ligl  <lb/>
many women, it is tl<lb/>
to a difficult problem that n<lb/>
erwise mean a lifetime I<lb/>
people, il<lb/>
brief period<lb/>
woman who must n ?<lb/>
lice. Deciding w<lb/>
"human" life beg<lb/>
and ie of the qua<lb/>
an alread)<lb/>
are tor each <lb/>
are matters<lb/>
and<lb/>
whi<lb/>
f1 ave<lb/>
a spern ?<lb/>
?So <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Mind) Macha<lb/>
 ss t Prof<lb/>
Desig<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East I .<lb/>
expressing all pou Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our ofj<lb/>
dons Building, at ?<lb/>
'ranee of Joyner Libra<lb/>
Fr purpt es '<lb/>
ters must include the nann<lb/>
classification, address, phone nun<lb/>
and signature of the author(s).<lb/>
Economic Downturn Predicted<lb/>
Eerie Echoes Of The 1920's In The 1980's<lb/>
By MICHAEL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Does the spector of the 1920s haunt<lb/>
the Reagan '80s? Not in any literal<lb/>
sense. But the echoes of that decade are<lb/>
at the very least disturbing, even eerie.<lb/>
The '20s, in hindsight, represented<lb/>
the triumph of supplv-side economics.<lb/>
The latest scientific discoveries radically<lb/>
transformed the production process<lb/>
itself. Business investment and output<lb/>
per worker soared. There was a bull<lb/>
market on Wall Street, and middle-class<lb/>
investments abounded as the dividend<lb/>
and interest portion of the nation's in-<lb/>
come rose dramatically. Corporate<lb/>
mergers proliferated, and there were<lb/>
even some people who worried about<lb/>
the way in which real assets were shuffl-<lb/>
ed and reshuffled in an intricate finan-<lb/>
cial game.<lb/>
Labor was on the defensive, and<lb/>
sophisticated capital alternated between<lb/>
union busting and trying to sell workers<lb/>
on cooperation rather than conflict.<lb/>
Prices were stable, and there was a<lb/>
modest increase in wages.<lb/>
The '20s, of course, ended with a<lb/>
crash. One critical reason was that pro-<lb/>
ductivity had outstripped buying power.<lb/>
The New Deal improvised a response to<lb/>
that crisis of underconsumption and<lb/>
overproduction. President Franklin D.<lb/>
Roosevelt, a superb politician and no<lb/>
kind of an economist, spurred the na-<lb/>
tion into a recovery, and then in 1936,<lb/>
blundered into a recession because he<lb/>
cut back on public works  to balance<lb/>
the budget.<lb/>
And yet, after World War II, those<lb/>
improvisations somehow cohered in a<lb/>
systematic whole that solved the pro-<lb/>
blem of the '20s. Fiscal and monetary<lb/>
policy insured sufficient effective de-<lb/>
mand; union wages in key industries ad-<lb/>
vanced in tandem with productivity and<lb/>
set an unofficial national norm; the<lb/>
"social wage" of Social Security and fr-<lb/>
inge benefits increased enormously.<lb/>
Americans thus created the mass con-<lb/>
sumption that was ? and is ? the con-<lb/>
dition of mass production.<lb/>
Has Ronald Reagan forgotten 'hat<lb/>
truth, so dearly learned under the<lb/>
tutelage of his hero, F.D.R.? Yes, but<lb/>
that is not to say that a second crash is<lb/>
at hand, not least because of some of<lb/>
the changes that Mr. Roosevelt made.<lb/>
But the echoes are there.<lb/>
This year, the top 25 percent of our<lb/>
society is doing quite well, but there is a<lb/>
new poverty of former smokestack in-<lb/>
dustry workers, sweatshops exploiting<lb/>
the undocumented and a dispropor-<lb/>
tionate number of poor women and<lb/>
children.<lb/>
More to the point, income statistics<lb/>
look somewhat like those of the 1920s.<lb/>
In 1968, arguably the last year of New<lb/>
Deal economics, wages and salaries ac-<lb/>
counted for 67.9 percent of personal in-<lb/>
come, and rents, dividends and interest<lb/>
13.7 percent. But in the preliminary<lb/>
figures for 1984, the wage and salary<lb/>
portion had declined to 59.8 percent;<lb/>
the rent, dividends and interest fraction<lb/>
had climbed to 19 percent.<lb/>
Those numbers clearly show two<lb/>
trends: most jobs are now being<lb/>
generated in the service sector, where<lb/>
the pay is low (manufacturing employ-<lb/>
ment actually went down in February);<lb/>
the price of the monetarist assault on in-<lb/>
flation has been extremely high interest<lb/>
rates, which now transfers 15 percent of<lb/>
the federal budget from average tax-<lb/>
payers to rich investors, both domestic<lb/>
and foreign.<lb/>
So the '20s suggest an unpleasant<lb/>
truth about the '80s. For a time, indeed<lb/>
there can be a boom based upon<lb/>
robotizing production, gentrification<lb/>
and the emerging croissant sector. But<lb/>
sooner or later, the exceedingly modest<lb/>
consumption capacity of the service sec-<lb/>
tor, where 80 percent of the new jobs<lb/>
have been generated, won't be able to<lb/>
buy the output of laborless, computer-<lb/>
controlled machines.<lb/>
No one knows when, or how, this<lb/>
contradiction will assert itself. But one<lb/>
might hope that the neo-liberals of the<lb/>
Democratic Party will not liquidate the<lb/>
heritage of FDR. on the eve of its<lb/>
renewed relevance. That heritage does<lb/>
not offer an answer to our crisis. But it<lb/>
is the point of departure for solutions<lb/>
that must go as far beyond the New<lb/>
Deal as the New Deal went beyond<lb/>
Herbert Hoover.<lb/>
Michael Harrington, whose most recent<lb/>
book is The e American Poverty,<lb/>
teaches sociology at the City University<lb/>
oj ew York and inspired mans of the<lb/>
anti-poverty programs of the '60s with<lb/>
his book The Other America.<lb/>
Teach<lb/>
?<lb/>
,<lb/>
Zf<lb/>
CJ?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
NO<lb/>
No Risk<lb/>
NC<lb/>
?"<lb/>
0?lt<lb/>
?s<lb/>
SATOFA'<lb/>
GUARANTEI<lb/>
ROUG!<lb/>
NOVEMBER. "??<lb/>
MosterCord<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0005"/><lb/>
IHI I AS I ' KOI IMA.<lb/>
MAI MBI k 19, I98J<lb/>
ijfcp .r?'4f<lb/>
S&amp;I<lb/>
1AMNEP<lb/>
ENTHOOD<lb/>
ORS.<lb/>
iticized<lb/>
. ed to<lb/>
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jtion<lb/>
' fering<lb/>
? ng a<lb/>
the<lb/>
not<lb/>
hey<lb/>
The<lb/>
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ople<lb/>
thev<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
tiers<lb/>
m Vfai or<lb/>
let-<lb/>
ind<lb/>
?;umber<lb/>
1980's<lb/>
the<lb/>
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ITS rim<lb/>
S0M?<lb/>
KAUSUPPOFsT<lb/>
5 5MAIL<lb/>
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9M6A<lb/>
?N6l50N)<lb/>
<lb/>
Teacher Speaking Skill Tested<lb/>
(CPS)More schools m recent<lb/>
weeks hae moved to keep hard<lb/>
to-under stand, foreign-born<lb/>
teaching assistants out of college<lb/>
classrooms.<lb/>
The wave of complaints from<lb/>
students who said thev had trou-<lb/>
ble deciphering the accents and<lb/>
speech of their teachers seems to<lb/>
crest last year as colleges, which<lb/>
regular 1 assign graduate<lb/>
students to teach lower-level<lb/>
courses, literal!) began to run out<lb/>
ol native Americans to teach in<lb/>
some disciplines like engineering<lb/>
and computer science<lb/>
Georgia, Arizona State and<lb/>
si ol the public colleges in<lb/>
Honda and Oklahoma tor the<lb/>
tirst time hae just given foreign<lb/>
born I-s tests on their English<lb/>
speaking abilities. Those who<lb/>
don't pass will be shuffled out ol<lb/>
their teaching assignments.<lb/>
University of I"exas and<lb/>
Southern California ad-<lb/>
ministrators two weeks ago an-<lb/>
nounced they might soon give<lb/>
oral English exams reign<lb/>
grad students.<lb/>
In all.<lb/>
more than ?<lb/>
ools<lb/>
hav<lb/>
Service ills<lb/>
give foreig<lb/>
ucational res<lb/>
Eng ? tests to<lb/>
11 n teach<lb/>
assistants ovei the last year, the<lb/>
ETS says.<lb/>
So far, colleges arou I<lb/>
country report they have<lb/>
to push many foreign-born g<lb/>
students out of their teaching<lb/>
duties<lb/>
But all the effort ultii<lb/>
could rob grad scl ols ol<lb/>
students needed to keep<lb/>
enrollments up. make campuses<lb/>
much less vital and interesting<lb/>
places to be, and even lead to a<lb/>
teacher shortage in lower-level<lb/>
undergraduate courses, some<lb/>
educators worry.<lb/>
The foreign-born teaching<lb/>
assistants themselves, moreover,<lb/>
fear the testing will cost them<lb/>
their stipends, on which they de-<lb/>
pend to stay in the country<lb/>
The teaching stipend is "the<lb/>
main income lor us explains<lb/>
Chung Kuang Chao, president of<lb/>
Arizona State's Chinese<lb/>
(Taiwanese) Students Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
He says foreign students have a<lb/>
very difficult time getting othei<lb/>
jobs off campus.<lb/>
"We can't bring someone from<lb/>
hall waj around the world and<lb/>
say your stipend is cut off adds<lb/>
Marilyn Baker, associate deai<lb/>
Southern CaFs graduate school<lb/>
Southern C'al. among others, is<lb/>
trying to judge foreign students'<lb/>
English skills before they're ac-<lb/>
cepted or given teaching<lb/>
assignments.<lb/>
Iowa State 1 sic - -<lb/>
Chairman Stanley Williams, .<lb/>
says students had been coi<lb/>
ing bitterly about not being able<lb/>
und rstand cei tain g<lb/>
as- stants, w sounds pros<lb/>
tive teachers oui by phone "1<lb/>
made the phone calls to test<lb/>
1 nglish<lb/>
Testing foreign studc-<lb/>
glish skills before thev<lb/>
mitted to grad school, ; <lb/>
could depress enrolln t<lb/>
"It will be I<lb/>
futu : for<lb/>
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competency tests are adopted,<lb/>
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Discouraging foreign students<lb/>
from coming to the U.S. con-<lb/>
ceivably could have a devastating<lb/>
impact on main American grad<lb/>
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?nd because starting salaries<lb/>
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( onsequeni lv. science and<lb/>
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1 50 percent ol the<lb/>
students enrolled in graduate<lb/>
science and technical school pro-<lb/>
lis yeai are foreign born.<lb/>
ng to a recent article in<lb/>
Thi M all Street Journal.<lb/>
Keepr .rents from<lb/>
 moreover, could cause<lb/>
some lower<lb/>
leve irses.<lb/>
"We really had to scratch (i<lb/>
nough instructors)<lb/>
reports Ben<lb/>
airman ol<lb/>
V zona Si ? uter science<lb/>
?<lb/>
B li id students<lb/>
a-I ike oral E nglish<lb/>
id well enough<lb/>
gei ai I certifica<lb/>
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. i<lb/>
hi ipes thev '11<lb/>
? seme<lb/>
ASl also is trying to get them<lb/>
research projects so they won't<lb/>
lost their stipends.<lb/>
"There are many other jobs<lb/>
they can do adds Madelyn<lb/>
I ockhart, dean of Florida's grad<lb/>
school, which recently adopted<lb/>
new English skills standards for<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
"We have strains on our pro<lb/>
gram, but that (not enough grad<lb/>
students to teach) is not the<lb/>
reason 1 ockhart says<lb/>
"Without sufficient funds, we<lb/>
can't hire enough TAs. We are<lb/>
not unusual in that respect<lb/>
" I lie supply of TAs is there<lb/>
concurs Philip Holden, president<lb/>
ol Graduate Assistants United, a<lb/>
union for teaching assistants<lb/>
But students and campuses in<lb/>
general lose something bv<lb/>
limiting the number of foreign<lb/>
grad students who can teach,<lb/>
Southern Cal's Baker observes.<lb/>
A dded A ctivities<lb/>
Predict Promise<lb/>
Continued From Pane 3.<lb/>
study's findings have prompted<lb/>
him to "pay a lot more attention<lb/>
to the stick-to-it-iveness kid<lb/>
rather than the spread-vourselt<lb/>
thin kid "<lb/>
In announcing the study's fin-<lb/>
dings earlier this month, College<lb/>
Board President Hanford said<lb/>
the results "put I some<lb/>
long-standing myths about the<lb/>
admissions process<lb/>
lor example, work experience,<lb/>
attendance at a private secon I<lb/>
school and the subject ol an ap-<lb/>
plicant's essay actually indicate<lb/>
little about a student's potential,<lb/>
Willingham found.<lb/>
In particular, the study<lb/>
minimized the importance ol<lb/>
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says anything about future suc-<lb/>
 Perham adds.<lb/>
"It's our experience that the<lb/>
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iiMal Perham says. Other<lb/>
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In addition to Colgate,<lb/>
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I HI EAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOV! MBfcR 19, 1985<lb/>
South's Infant Mortality Must Be Solved<lb/>
VSHINGTON (UP1) - A "col-<lb/>
aborative commitment" by state<lb/>
and federal policy makers, health<lb/>
ssionals, business and com-<lb/>
t leaders is needed to solve<lb/>
he chronic dilemma" of infant<lb/>
rtalit) in the South, a report<lb/>
? Mondaj<lb/>
A task force, created in July<lb/>
I by the Southern Governors'<lb/>
Vssociation, made 46 recommen-<lb/>
in the areas oi services,<lb/>
financing, education and<lb/>
irch, all aimed at improving<lb/>
s poor record on infant<lb/>
ink this report is a<lb/>
oi action said South<lb/>
Carolina Gov. Dick Riley, who<lb/>
chaired the Southern Regional<lb/>
Task Force on Infant Mortality.<lb/>
"It's comprehensive. We think<lb/>
that is the only fair way to deal<lb/>
with this issue said Riley, who<lb/>
spoke to reporters in a telephone<lb/>
news conference.<lb/>
The recommendations range<lb/>
from a call for state and federal<lb/>
changes in certain poverty laws to<lb/>
the establishment of specialized<lb/>
health care clinics and statewide<lb/>
oversight councils on maternal<lb/>
and infant health.<lb/>
Model state legislation based<lb/>
on the recommendations is due to<lb/>
be completed in Januarv<lb/>
Although many of the recom-<lb/>
mendations have high price tags,<lb/>
Riley said that in the long run,<lb/>
preventive action would save<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"The primary recommenda-<lb/>
tions in this report are designed<lb/>
to save state and federal dollars<lb/>
in the long term. That's what<lb/>
really counts said the governor,<lb/>
calling the problem in the South a<lb/>
"persistent and chronic<lb/>
dilemma<lb/>
Indeed, the problem of infant<lb/>
mortality, the number of babies<lb/>
who die before their first birth-<lb/>
day, is particularly acute in the<lb/>
South. Nine of 11 states in the na-<lb/>
Insurance Increases For Bars<lb/>
tion with the highest infant death<lb/>
rates in 1983 were in this region.<lb/>
Mississippi had an infant mor-<lb/>
tality rate of 15.1 per 1,000 live<lb/>
births in 1983, and South<lb/>
Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia,<lb/>
North Carolina, Alabama, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, Florida, Virginia,<lb/>
Maryland and Kentucky were<lb/>
above the national rate of 11.2,<lb/>
"The preventable death of an<lb/>
infant is a sad and perplexing<lb/>
event. It is particularly sad in the<lb/>
South, the region where babies<lb/>
die at higher rates than any other<lb/>
region in the country the report<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The answer to the problem.<lb/>
as complex as it may be, is a<lb/>
laborative commitment b polic)<lb/>
makers, health care pro<lb/>
sionals from a variety ol<lb/>
disciplines, and corporate<lb/>
community leaders to make<lb/>
taut mortality a priority deserv-<lb/>
ing special attention and im-<lb/>
mediate action the report said.<lb/>
1 ow birth weight is i iften<lb/>
associated with infant dea<lb/>
The task force said no one fa<lb/>
can he pinpointed as the sole<lb/>
cause oi low birth weighi and in-<lb/>
fant deaths but said that pov<lb/>
is a "significant (actor affet I<lb/>
the health and well beii s<lb/>
women and children<lb/>
Since povertj likely<lb/>
eliminated, the rep<lb/>
trateg<lb/>
?? situations leading<lb/>
i and intervene at<lb/>
str .<lb/>
II<lb/>
idard<lb/>
'r c id to i<lb/>
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be set at<lb/>
less<lb/>
'v le ? ? a yeai<lb/>
-H, NC (UPI)<lb/>
g liability insurance<lb/>
liui tor taverns.<lb/>
a  o ? ei sellers of<lb/>
beverages are forcing<lb/>
ers t( stop coverage<lb/>
stop sales, at-<lb/>
ys and businessmen say.<lb/>
Payne, co-owner of<lb/>
' "s Rathskeller restaurant<lb/>
unge, said her liability in-<lb/>
e premium almost doubled<lb/>
he vear, up to Si,200 a<lb/>
Another Raleigh bar<lb/>
said he has been shopping<lb/>
tor liability insurance,<lb/>
is bracing himself with the<lb/>
paving perhaps<lb/>
I a yeai for coverage,<lb/>
u're on thin ice said<lb/>
Ray, a partner in Crow ley's<lb/>
tes Restaurant and<lb/>
"It's a shame, really,<lb/>
he law is holding us<lb/>
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. can lose everything<lb/>
ked tor all youi life, what<lb/>
work for the rest of<lb/>
; somebody leaves<lb/>
' as ai accident and<lb/>
jranee pro-<lb/>
r re I owner<lb/>
by people<lb/>
drunken driver u<lb/>
- at the person's<lb/>
establishment.<lb/>
This month, four people hurt<lb/>
in a March collision with an adult<lb/>
drunken driver, who subsequent-<lb/>
ly committed suicide, filed suit in<lb/>
Wake County Superior Court<lb/>
against the driver's family and<lb/>
the tavern where, the suit says,<lb/>
the driver got "skunk drunk"<lb/>
before the accident. The plain-<lb/>
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million in damages.<lb/>
North Carolina's 1983 drunken<lb/>
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responsible for up to $500,000 in<lb/>
damages if a minor is served<lb/>
alcoholic beverages and is later<lb/>
involved in a wreck. A separate<lb/>
state law prohibits bars from ser-<lb/>
ving alcohol to intoxicated peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
Large awards from suits across<lb/>
the nation are causing the in-<lb/>
creased premiums, said Max<lb/>
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state insurance commissioner,<lb/>
William Potter Jr a Raleigh at<lb/>
torney and lobbyist wh<lb/>
represents tavern owners, said<lb/>
some of his clients are passing<lb/>
along their premium increases<lb/>
through price increases, while<lb/>
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"It may end up that the only<lb/>
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chains, and 1 don't think that's<lb/>
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community Potter said.<lb/>
The size of premium increases<lb/>
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cent, said Dennis Jav, a<lb/>
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surance Agents in Alexandria.<lb/>
Va. Jay traced the increases to<lb/>
the national focus on drunken<lb/>
driving and a movement to find<lb/>
out "who was responsible and<lb/>
put the blame wherever you can<lb/>
for the problem<lb/>
Potter said the nation is involv -<lb/>
ed in a kind of "hysteria of trying<lb/>
to punish people who sell<lb/>
alcohol Other lawyers question<lb/>
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iha increased lawsuits<lb/>
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"In 1985, we've ail become<lb/>
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automobiles, restaurants, cities,<lb/>
counties, transit systems, fishing<lb/>
fleets, day-care centers, said<lb/>
Alan Briggs.<lb/>
The Night Away<lb/>
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Entertainment<lb/>
N() MM K 19. 1985<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Folger Consort<lb/>
To Play Hendrix<lb/>
e Folger Consort<lb/>
This much-accJaimed Renaissance and Medieval quartet will be appearing Wednesday night at Hendrix Theatre. Iheir music covers a wide<lb/>
peetrum of Jacobean and Elizabethan stles, including songs from some of s,hakespeare s plas.<lb/>
Mozart, Salieri Tangle In Amadeus<lb/>
B( APP IVE<lb/>
SUff Wr1l?r<lb/>
Coming to Hendrix Theatre on<lb/>
the Fast Carolina University<lb/>
campus in Greenville on Nov. 20<lb/>
is the Folger Consort, a quartet<lb/>
of professional musicians<lb/>
specializing in Medieval and<lb/>
Renaissance music. They have<lb/>
emerged from a broad spectrum<lb/>
of experience, including or-<lb/>
chestra, solo and chamber per-<lb/>
formances.<lb/>
The quartet is currently per!<lb/>
ming in residence at Folger<lb/>
Shakespeare Library's<lb/>
Elizabethan Theatre, rhe g a<lb/>
these regular performances is<lb/>
provide the growing early music<lb/>
audience with a realistically vital<lb/>
? scholarly representation<lb/>
Medieval, Renaissance and Ba<lb/>
que styles o music.<lb/>
The ensemble is comprised of<lb/>
K bert Fi sen stein, viola;<lb/>
Christopher Kendall, lute; Scott<lb/>
Reiss. recorder, and Ann<lb/>
Monoyios, soprano The music<lb/>
presented will be a . ross section<lb/>
ol the weal" vanetv<lb/>
1 zabethan and Jac bean music.<lb/>
Musical numbers by Roberi<lb/>
! n and perario<lb/>
be played, rhese Jacol<lb/>
masque dances, elaborately<lb/>
ed and c ?stumed, were run<lb/>
series, with the participa<lb/>
both, nobility and the ll au-<lb/>
diences.<lb/>
uilv en<lb/>
1984'<lb/>
n e<lb/>
al<lb/>
film p til the<lb/>
events in the<lb/>
decade ol Wolfgang Amadeus<lb/>
Moart<lb/>
H<lb/>
is music<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
Amadeus, wi<lb/>
Peter Shaffer,<lb/>
?vard play (<lb/>
81 M<lb/>
i I976's Academy '<lb/>
sweeping One f ? ' ? <lb/>
dominates the film, and son<lb/>
prominent pieces are from<lb/>
Mo; peras<lb/>
Most imp ). the movie is<lb/>
based on the encounter betwei<lb/>
common person and a genius<lb/>
The common person is Antonio<lb/>
Salieri, the 18th-century ltahan<lb/>
court composer to Emp<lb/>
;eph 11 - tria and broi<lb/>
 ? Dui ing<lb/>
I id ?<lb/>
? u<lb/>
. Best<lb/>
lies- !<lb/>
M<lb/>
ii I disgust ?'?<lb/>
spark<lb/>
u also the<lb/>
?<lb/>
tesque (to Salieri's<lb/>
child. Salieri is also<lb/>
that Cod is obviously<lb/>
ring him but rather the<lb/>
Mozart.<lb/>
Mozart, an uneducated and<lb/>
single child reared by his father,<lb/>
was ility Where<lb/>
most children rebel during their<lb/>
adolescent years. Moart's<lb/>
lescent rebellion was postpon-<lb/>
until his later years when he<lb/>
opposed the rchbishop of<lb/>
Salzbui<lb/>
Cast as "v: Hulce<lb/>
Best V<lb/>
imal House 1<lb/>
Murray v plays Salieri,<lb/>
essed interior Boi<lb/>
ties convincingly. i<lb/>
; f Best Actoi<lb/>
been a difficult one tor the<lb/>
V.ademv ol Motion Picture<lb/>
rnces.<lb/>
Mucl ' movie is filmed in<lb/>
Prague, Czechoslovak the<lb/>
netown of Milos 1<lb/>
Mozart s " The Marri ige<lb/>
"Don Giovanni<lb/>
"The Magic Flute" have all been<lb/>
recreated in breath-taking scenes<lb/>
within the film, giving the au-<lb/>
dience a sense of enthrallment.<lb/>
Admission to Amadeus is free<lb/>
. :nts and guests with<lb/>
IDs and also for ECl<lb/>
Staff and guests IDs and ;<lb/>
ester 1 ilm Passes.<lb/>
The consort will ah<lb/>
some works ol 11 mas Morley,<lb/>
whose works were used<lb/>
William Shakespeare in -cu<lb/>
his plays Mosi notably,<lb/>
Desdemona sang "The Willow<lb/>
( Khello and "It was<lb/>
a lover and His Lass" was incor-<lb/>
porated into the first production<lb/>
of "As You Like It<lb/>
The Folger Shakespeare<lb/>
Library, in Washington, D.C,<lb/>
has been praised as the most<lb/>
significant collection of English<lb/>
and continental Renaissance<lb/>
materials in the Western<lb/>
Hemisphere. It boasts some 79 of<lb/>
Shakespeare's first Folio (the<lb/>
first full collection of<lb/>
Shakespeare's work) compared<lb/>
to the British Library's five. The<lb/>
Folios, printed in 1623, are,<lb/>
??ever, the "tip of the<lb/>
iceberg The Folger Library-<lb/>
houses the largest collection of<lb/>
Shakespeare's work anywhere in<lb/>
the world. It is no small wonder,<lb/>
then, that the Folger Consort has<lb/>
gained an international reputa-<lb/>
tion for giving precise, pleasing<lb/>
renderings of the music of early<lb/>
yesteryear.<lb/>
The Folger C onsort will per-<lb/>
m the November 20 concert at<lb/>
s p.m. in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale now at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
pen Monday-Friday from 11<lb/>
to b p.m. Tickets are S2 for<lb/>
 (I students and guest, S2 for<lb/>
iths (high school aged and<lb/>
under), $4 for ECU faculty and<lb/>
? f, and S4 for the public and at<lb/>
I<lb/>
 oi tickets and more informa-<lb/>
tion, call 757-6611.<lb/>
Fhe Folger Consort is touted as<lb/>
one oi the best performances in<lb/>
field and said to bring<lb/>
freshness and vitality to a musical<lb/>
style which could seem "dusty-<lb/>
material Don't miss this oppor-<lb/>
s season!<lb/>
Ceramic Sale<lb/>
School Of Music Faculty Will Perform At Georgetown<lb/>
A selection of "giveable, affor-<lb/>
dab pottery" will be<lb/>
Fered for sale Dec. 5-6 at 1<lb/>
c at olina University's Jenl<lb/>
Fine Arts, Center<lb/>
1 he sale items, worl I stu-<lb/>
dent members ? the PC I<lb/>
Ceramic Guild, will be displayed<lb/>
from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursdav<lb/>
and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday<lb/>
in the Jenkins Center's foyer.<lb/>
Previous December sales by the<lb/>
Guild have included such func-<lb/>
tional pieces as mugs, platters,<lb/>
bowls and pitchers, along with<lb/>
plaques, vases, ornaments, tiny-<lb/>
animals and other decorative<lb/>
items.<lb/>
<lb/>
D.C .<lb/>
H<lb/>
ting. Tl will<lb/>
will be<lb/>
wed bv a ;<lb/>
in the Hall o Nation;<lb/>
? ei holders.<lb/>
s sponsored by 1 ast<lb/>
University Alumni<lb/>
in the Washington,<lb/>
i) i ?<lb/>
$10 per adult and S foi studei<lb/>
I Xvlult tickets purchased in<lb/>
blocks ol four or more are $8)<lb/>
rickets may be ordered bv mail<lb/>
a check or money order<lb/>
tde payable to Washington<lb/>
Metro E I Alumni<lb/>
 ation") to Col. Bryan Ben-<lb/>
. 2913B South Woodlev<lb/>
Street, Arlington. VA, 22206.<lb/>
1 hey will be held at the door until<lb/>
concert time.<lb/>
The evening's program will<lb/>
aith Selma Gokcen, cellist,<lb/>
: Pan; 1 ardif, piano, perform-<lb/>
ing Haydn's "Divertimento in D<lb/>
majorChants d' Espagne" by<lb/>
Joaquin Nin, and "Rondo" by<lb/>
C M. von Weber, hollowing will<lb/>
be "Divertissement" by Pierre<lb/>
Max Dubois (performed bv<lb/>
David Hawkins, oboe; Deborah<lb/>
Chodacki, clarinet; Kim Peoria,<lb/>
bassoon, and Brad holey, sax<lb/>
ophone) and Moart's "Diver-<lb/>
timento in B-tlat" performed bv<lb/>
Hawkins. Chodacki, and Peoria.<lb/>
The concert will end with favorite<lb/>
duets from shows bv Irving<lb/>
Berlin ("Call Me Madam"),<lb/>
George Gershwin ("Of Thee 1<lb/>
Sing") and Jerome Kern ("Girl<lb/>
form Utah") among others, sung<lb/>
by Antonia Dalapas. soprano,<lb/>
and Edward Gleen. bass-<lb/>
barritone, and accompanied on<lb/>
piano by Everett Pittman,<lb/>
lor more information, cal<lb/>
Page Stout Aman at 757-60"2.<lb/>
Don 9t Forget To Dress For Success<lb/>
Bv CAPP INKY<lb/>
stjff ?nin<lb/>
e tall semester is aim<lb/>
Soon December graduates<lb/>
? the "real" world?the<lb/>
Resumes and letters of<lb/>
ication will be mailed in<lb/>
es ot landing the all -<lb/>
?rtant job interview. The in-<lb/>
?? is a nerve-wracking ex-<lb/>
nce, yet must be endured to<lb/>
ire a job.<lb/>
As with any other aspect of<lb/>
business, there are special rules<lb/>
about the interview and the code<lb/>
;tess for men and women. As<lb/>
cording to John Molloy, author<lb/>
? Dress for Success, there are<lb/>
dard ways to dress for an in-<lb/>
terview. Unfortunately, these<lb/>
ays do not leave room for<lb/>
creativity, but are necessary it<lb/>
one is to present himself or<lb/>
herself in a business-like manner.<lb/>
For men, a suit is the most im-<lb/>
portant item. It is the garment<lb/>
with which most people judge the<lb/>
wearer's status, character, and<lb/>
abilities; it is also associated with<lb/>
authority, position and power.<lb/>
Basic conservative colors are<lb/>
the best choices for a suit, and<lb/>
blue and gray are the best of<lb/>
these. These colors, in darker<lb/>
shades, indicate the most<lb/>
credibility to a potential<lb/>
employer. Brown is a definite<lb/>
ative for an interview and<lb/>
should be avoided. Molloy states<lb/>
that a brown suit is negative,<lb/>
if you are trying to be more<lb/>
authoritative and if you are too<lb/>
authoritative<lb/>
In choosing a shirt to match a<lb/>
suit, pinks and pale lavenders<lb/>
should be avoided due to less-<lb/>
than-masculine associations. A<lb/>
pastel-colored shirt (pale yellow<lb/>
or blue) is acceptable, providing<lb/>
it has a white collar and the job<lb/>
interview is for a high-fashion in-<lb/>
dustry. Otherwise, choose a basic-<lb/>
shirt in a lighter shade than the<lb/>
suit, either light gray, eggshell, or<lb/>
white.<lb/>
The next item to consider in a<lb/>
suit is the tie. Molloy claims the<lb/>
tie is the single most important<lb/>
denominator of social status for a<lb/>
man in the United States today. It<lb/>
symbolizes respectability and<lb/>
responsibility. The tie should be<lb/>
darker than the shirt and made of<lb/>
100 percent silk. There are three<lb/>
main types of silk ties: the<lb/>
foulard, regular weave, and<lb/>
woven. The best of these is the<lb/>
regular weave; the foulard is too<lb/>
light for a sturdy Windsor knot<lb/>
and the woven is too heavy. Solid<lb/>
ties are the best choice; they will<lb/>
match everything. A patterned<lb/>
tie. providing it is tastefully<lb/>
designed, is also acceptable.<lb/>
Small polka-dot designs are the<lb/>
most appropriate choice.<lb/>
The uniform for women is<lb/>
much the same as the one for<lb/>
men. To begin with, to wear<lb/>
slacks would be a definite faux<lb/>
pas. Slacks are far too casual for<lb/>
an interview and would be as bad<lb/>
a mistake as overdressing. A<lb/>
female should strive to appear as<lb/>
a serious and capable person, not<lb/>
to sell herself as an object of<lb/>
decoration.<lb/>
Once again, blues and grays<lb/>
are safe colors. A blazer and skirt<lb/>
look business-like and are ap-<lb/>
propriate. Be wary of skirts with<lb/>
high splits or ones that are too<lb/>
body-conforming. A straight-<lb/>
lined skirt is best; one that allows<lb/>
the interviewee to move freely.<lb/>
A matching shirt in a conser-<lb/>
vative color is necessary to com-<lb/>
plete the business look. A shirt<lb/>
with a collar is preferable so a tie<lb/>
can be worn. A silk sash in a solid<lb/>
color should be worn around the<lb/>
neck; this is the equivalent of ?.<lb/>
man's tie.<lb/>
Experts consider suntan-<lb/>
colored hose to be the most ap-<lb/>
propriate leg covering. It is best<lb/>
to avoid patterned hose and those<lb/>
of various colors. Be sure to wear<lb/>
pumps with a low heel. If the<lb/>
heels are too high, the interviewee<lb/>
may tower over the interviewer<lb/>
and cause him or her to be on the<lb/>
defensive. Also, heels that are too<lb/>
high are more difficult to walk in<lb/>
and may cause wobbling.<lb/>
Accessories are fine for an out-<lb/>
fit, but don't overdo it. Large,<lb/>
clunky jewelry should not be<lb/>
worn; however, simple rings,<lb/>
watches and bracelets are accep-<lb/>
table. Another accessory to avoid<lb/>
is perfume, especially if its scent<lb/>
is heavy. If perfume must be<lb/>
worn, choose one with a light<lb/>
scent and use it sparingly.<lb/>
Although dressing ap-<lb/>
propriately will not guarantee a<lb/>
job, it will be helpful to those in<lb/>
the interviewing process. Good<lb/>
luck to all of you hunting for jobs<lb/>
now ? appropriate dress will<lb/>
give you one less thing to worry<lb/>
about during the interview.<lb/>
"Well, Do I Get The Job?"<lb/>
When choosing your wardrobe for that all-imj. rtant job interview,<lb/>
take a tip from the photo above ? save this outfit for Halloween.<lb/>
.? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
IHl i AMAROl INIAN<lb/>
s I MBI K is? is)h?.<lb/>
Madrigal Dinners To Usher In Season<lb/>
It's difficult to think about the<lb/>
holida) season when it is still so<lb/>
fai olt. but it you wam sure<lb/>
to begin vour holidays witl<lb/>
time-honored tradition, now is<lb/>
the tune to purchase tickets to the<lb/>
Madrigal Dinners sponsored eat I<lb/>
yeai bv the Department<lb/>
Universit I nions, I his <lb/>
these Elizabethan leasts will be<lb/>
held Decembei ?i 7 at 7 p.m<lb/>
the Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
ECU's M Stud<lb/>
v entei<lb/>
IV l<lb/>
I<lb/>
Din<lb/>
Universit<lb/>
Madi igal<lb/>
open the<lb/>
ciav<lb/>
1 nglish fashion. I he dinners are<lb/>
modeled aftei an Elizabethan<lb/>
festival in a country manor<lb/>
house. I he lord and lads of the<lb/>
manoi preside ovei the entire<lb/>
least; they are dressed in lux<lb/>
urious period costumes ol velvet<lb/>
and lace and stand ready to greet<lb/>
? guests gain this year, Jim<lb/>
I rancine Rees will host the<lb/>
e em<lb/>
I i tient is provided b<lb/>
magicians, poets, and musicians.<lb/>
1 lie Madrigal Singers, under the<lb/>
: reel ?n of Di Charles Moore<lb/>
the School ol Music, will<lb/>
highlight the evening. Dressed in<lb/>
period attire, they will sing a<lb/>
tiumber ol age old Madrigals and<lb/>
Christmas selections and will per<lb/>
form traditional Elizabethan<lb/>
dances.<lb/>
Dinner will be served b<lb/>
costumed waiters and waitresses<lb/>
I ong banquet tables, covered<lb/>
with snowy white cloths, add to<lb/>
the feeling of a royal feast Sei<lb/>
vomation Corporation, under the<lb/>
direction of Ira Simon, will pro<lb/>
v ide the meal.<lb/>
I ickets, which are $14 per pei<lb/>
son. go quickly and can be pur<lb/>
chased in advance. The can be<lb/>
obtained at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, ot hv calling 757 6611.<lb/>
exi 266 Mondays through<lb/>
Fridays from 11 a.m to 6 p.m<lb/>
One dollar ol the ticket price i<lb/>
lav deductible contribution to the<lb/>
School of Musk Scholarship<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
Anyone interested ma) direct<lb/>
mail orders to: Central I icket Ol<lb/>
fice, Mendenhall Studententer.<lb/>
Please make the check payabli<lb/>
" entral Hcket Office and<lb/>
dicate the full names ol all ticket<lb/>
holders win are ordering<lb/>
can be placed on the ho ol<lb/>
"honored guests "<lb/>
 It's Something Special You e Been Looking For<lb/>
B MUCH EATON<lb/>
SUfl ?m,i<lb/>
i d a <lb/>
irk<lb/>
on t he<lb/>
?a<lb/>
V<lb/>
S :<lb/>
is a<lb/>
. atei ing a<lb/>
w edding<lb/>
erii a bab<lb/>
tid70<lb/>
md 140<lb/>
W ?' using any<lb/>
ad e ? mouth<lb/>
and<lb/>
w th<lb/>
yeai<lb/>
Ka<lb/>
v el<lb/>
1 he-<lb/>
 discus<lb/>
K.O<lb/>
'<lb/>
i<lb/>
? .<lb/>
e da<lb/>
e<lb/>
arger kii<lb/>
:<lb/>
' Bui<lb/>
w c a e ? e<lb/>
da work w ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
worked<lb/>
Cynthia and Ka wanted to<lb/>
create a pleasant, warm at-<lb/>
mosphere with good food foi<lb/>
students and downtown business<lb/>
people. They replaced the navy<lb/>
walls and dark Kood of the Blue<lb/>
Moon with white walls, floral<lb/>
:ahle cloths, plants and ceiling<lb/>
tans.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The next step was to tl il<lb/>
name After thinking ovei a<lb/>
man) possibilities, c ynl<lb/>
turned to Ka and said. "<lb/>
we need is something spec :<lb/>
Ka answered, " I hai<lb/>
name<lb/>
I he peoph ? I<lb/>
ege students <lb/>
Ka believe "it is impoi u<lb/>
idents, since i c l<lb/>
int in ,nthia<lb/>
son lohn, and ka' -<lb/>
Ka<lb/>
and Allison, a<lb/>
business. i said "i<lb/>
could probabh I<lb/>
I h e res<lb/>
weekdays from 11<lb/>
foi lunc h only. I he me<lb/>
eludes soup, salads,<lb/>
sandwn<lb/>
deserts 1<lb/>
1 1 25 to $4 50<lb/>
I .<lb/>
lude op Ka<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
even i ngj I - ?<lb/>
<lb/>
meel<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
MEXICAN MADNESS<lb/>
V<lb/>
MARGAR  f ?<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT 5 - 9 PM<lb/>
Al L l ADIFS Wll<lb/>
Al<lb/>
K MUNCH<lb/>
F-Rt f P .<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT BEEF RIBS<lb/>
7 95<lb/>
?<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
SCHNAPPS NIGHT<lb/>
?<lb/>
FREE FIESTA FOOD BAR: 11-1 PM<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
SOURS &amp; COLLINS FOR 1 99<lb/>
FREE FIESTA FOOD BAR 11-1 PM<lb/>
SUNDAY:<lb/>
99 DRINK SPECIALS<lb/>
-<lb/>
Darryl s Delivers  Call 757-1973<lb/>
New Fiesta Food Bar<lb/>
On Friday &amp; Saturday Nights 11:00 to 1:00<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Brass Plays It Duo<lb/>
R<lb/>
<lb/>
i I<lb/>
Hal<lb/>
Deuv 1 anses<lb/>
the<lb/>
?v is .1<lb/>
the Bat I M isu :<lb/>
( reorge Brou Rid<lb/>
A 111<lb/>
He . - a candidate foi 11 e<lb/>
Bachelor ol Music Educai<lb/>
degree<lb/>
<lb/>
3P Tc 3?<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
$105.00<lb/>
$ 145.00<lb/>
OPTOMeTWC<lb/>
?WCAR?C?KT?R<lb/>
<lb/>
kV'<lb/>
Honors Program3.4 gpa<lb/>
Anth 1000 Europ. Studies 3001 Econ 2113 Eng 1200 For<lb/>
2221 Geog 2001 'Hist 1551 Hist 1553 Phil 1100 Soa 2110<lb/>
Sem What's All This Fuss About Humanism?"<lb/>
Seminar: Church &amp; State In The U.S.<lb/>
Seminar: Masculinity Femininity: New Perspectives tsoc<lb/>
V: .red)<lb/>
Seminar Astronomy: In Celebration of Halley's Comet<lb/>
Seminar: Astronomy Lab -<lb/>
Seminar: The 50's (H ? OR !<lb/>
Any student with o 3 4 gpa qualifies to take Honors courses any<lb/>
time<lb/>
For more into, see Dr David Sanders, 212 Ragsdale (757 6373)<lb/>
Hlth 1000 Libs HUM) Libs 3102 Math 1085 Math 2171 <lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
758 0327<lb/>
A VA. I A MJ 4<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
$5"<lb/>
Includes french fries, cole slaw &amp; hush puppies<lb/>
Tues Wed Thur. Only<lb/>
THE<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
4 p.m10 p.m.<lb/>
 Monday &amp; Tuesday Night<lb/>
Fried Shrimp? All You Can Eat $4.50<lb/>
 Wednesday Nigh t<lb/>
Scallops &amp; Soft Shell Crab Combo $4.50<lb/>
 Thursday Night<lb/>
Cubbies Cheese Steak $2.50<lb/>
 Friday Night<lb/>
Cubbies Shrimp Burger $1.50<lb/>
Daily Special<lb/>
2 Hot Dogs for $1.00<lb/>
Hambu rger &amp; French Fries $1.00<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
10:30a.m. to 2:30a.m.<lb/>
7 Da vs A Week<lb/>
Corner of 5th and Evans Street<lb/>
Phone: 752-6497<lb/>
Dotllll s)<lb/>
y J<lb/>
Man-O<lb/>
Walkin Th<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.?.? .<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
"<lb/>
<lb/>
EC I Artist<lb/>
M<lb/>
at the C<lb/>
a<lb/>
Carolina Des ?<lb/>
Fa;<lb/>
weekei .<lb/>
in Raleigh, c<lb/>
Gregg ann<lb/>
near! 9<lb/>
give out three Aw<lb/>
cellence tor<lb/>
smanship<lb/>
V ?ors, a gra;<lb/>
received the<lb/>
and award<lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0009"/><lb/>
00 to 1:00<lb/>
FR<lb/>
JljJLV<lb/>
iw Evans Si reel<lb/>
Phone: 752-6497<lb/>
looiu stmr<lb/>
fHE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVFMBf R 19, 198! 9<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
: ! 41<lb/>
 J<lb/>
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Man-O-Stick<lb/>
r<lb/>
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3<lb/>
Bv JARRELL &amp; JOHNSON<lb/>
Walkin' The Plank<lb/>
Bv A. GUY<lb/>
vy: ?'?'<lb/>
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? . . ? 1MB Jl? <lb/>
3 1 I ? 3 t  t c <lb/>
itpfte<lb/>
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By PAUL FRIEDRICH<lb/>
???<lb/>
WHffTRl iTS COOL<lb/>
'  ? '<lb/>
r<lb/>
&amp; 4<lb/>
xk<lb/>
ECU Artist To Judge Craftsmen's Fair<lb/>
Brain Food<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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TOPPING!<lb/>
?? ? ?.<lb/>
delicious 1 - item<lb/>
?id get your<lb/>
nd toppmq<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY FREE1<lb/>
Offer good through 12 1 85<lb/>
throwing a ; ny<lb/>
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Call us.<lb/>
758-6660 752-6996<lb/>
r<lb/>
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30 minute<lb/>
guarantee<lb/>
or<lb/>
Don  i brings<lb/>
you fa ' -? ?.<lb/>
30mmut<lb/>
GUARANTEED<lb/>
rnhb<lb/>
FREE:<lb/>
'? ? AM S ii Fhui<lb/>
1 At ? &amp;Sat<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
FREE.<lb/>
m<lb/>
4MI<lb/>
Upcoming Events<lb/>
Films Committee:<lb/>
Amadeus<lb/>
Thurs Fri &amp; Sat Nov. 21, 22 &amp; 23<lb/>
6:30&amp;9:15p.m.<lb/>
Travel Committee:<lb/>
PARIS AND THE SEINE ?<lb/>
Presented b kathv Dusek in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 19<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Recreation Committee:<lb/>
Men's Billiards<lb/>
ruesday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Student Center Billiards Room<lb/>
Turkey Shoot In Bowling<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 21 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Student (enter Bowling Alley<lb/>
? Sign Up Nou ! <lb/>
Special Events Committee:<lb/>
JAY LENO<lb/>
Monday, Nov. 25 at 8 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Tickets Available at Mendenhall Central Ticket Office<lb/>
$1.50 for students, S3.00 for faculty and $4.00 for the general public and at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee:<lb/>
International Week<lb/>
No. 17 through Nov. 21<lb/>
Michael H Voors, instructor<lb/>
the I Schoo ?1 rt, w<lb/>
uror fur the 16th annual<lb/>
?lina Designer (raftsmen's<lb/>
fair, scheduled for rhanksgiving<lb/>
weekend at the s;ate fairgrounds<lb/>
in Raleigh, CDC President Jan<lb/>
f iregg announced Thursd.i-<lb/>
Voors will judge the work<lb/>
nearly 90 fair exhibitors and will<lb/>
give out three Awards in I n<lb/>
cellence for outstanding craft-<lb/>
smanship.<lb/>
Voors. a graphic artist, has<lb/>
received the following honors<lb/>
and awards: Honorable Mention<lb/>
Award and Purchase Award, 6th<lb/>
Annual Juried Exhibition,<lb/>
(ioldsboro Community Arts<lb/>
( ouncil, 1985; Purchase Award,<lb/>
Kansas Ninth National Small<lb/>
Painting, Drawing, and Print Ex-<lb/>
hibition, Fort Hays State Univer-<lb/>
sity, Hays, Kansas, 1984, and<lb/>
First Place Award for Graphics,<lb/>
5th Annual Juried Exhibition,<lb/>
Tarboro Arts Commission, Tar-<lb/>
boro, N.C 1984. His profes-<lb/>
sional affiliations include Board<lb/>
of Trustees. Greenville Museum<lb/>
of Art; College Art Association,<lb/>
and Philadelphia Print Club.<lb/>
Carolina Designer Craftsmen,<lb/>
a guild dedicated to contem-<lb/>
porary applications of traditional<lb/>
crafts, sponsors the Research<lb/>
Triangle area's largest craft show<lb/>
sponsored by a professional<lb/>
guild.<lb/>
Fair hours will be 6 to 10p.m<lb/>
Nov. 29, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. No<lb/>
30 and noon to 6 p.m Dec. 1.<lb/>
Admission will cost $3 for<lb/>
adults and $2 for students and<lb/>
senior citizens. Children aged 12<lb/>
and younger will be admitted at<lb/>
no charge.<lb/>
The Underground:<lb/>
For Lunch<lb/>
160f3sm3500 at 1:30 p.m<lb/>
Rock world Kieos<lb/>
Thursdays at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Movie Shorts<lb/>
With The Keystone Kops in<lb/>
"The Desperate Scoundrel"<lb/>
WINNER OF<lb/>
ACADEMY<lb/>
AWARDS<lb/>
BEST PICTURE<lb/>
W <lb/>
L<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
riiim iwimhii imiinini<lb/>
ALSO INCLUDING<lb/>
Best Actor<lb/>
F. Murray Abraham<lb/>
Best Director<lb/>
MUos Forman<lb/>
Best Screenplay<lb/>
Peter Shaffer<lb/>
AmadeuS<lb/>
 n?i Vbrkei f Urns Reteas ,POi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0010"/><lb/>
I HI I ASI . ARO INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
VIM ' M k 19, lvx<lb/>
PiratesCome Up Short<lb/>
Rallies Tulsa<lb/>
JmS??"<lb/>
Senior tailback Ton, Baker rambles for some of his 130 yards Satorda,<lb/>
LSI (on Dec. 7, to surpassblesterrumpler as EC!<lb/>
s al<lb/>
Haker needs just 76 vards ajjainsf<lb/>
-time leading rusher.<lb/>
Seniors3 Last Home Action<lb/>
By SCOT! COOPER<lb/>
DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
? amon8the Performers in cost the Pirates greatlv. s<lb/>
the<lb/>
S O<lb/>
f main oi the<lb/>
LIr,rat.J5ackfe,d were sen" game wound down. Holtzclaw<lb/>
Bob,b 'Dirx 30 C,a" and managed to find his touch and<lb/>
 'Rock' Pirate receivers lonv Sirith a d<lb/>
vert<lb/>
wai<lb/>
Ficklt<lb/>
e Da :i d<lb/>
fine I<lb/>
eai ?<lb/>
Desp .<lb/>
ECl coacl V<lb/>
I<lb/>
ich M ?  Bal<lb/>
h e did v er v 11<lb/>
?<lb/>
n<lb/>
V<lb/>
important role in the P<lb/>
game ? kej<lb/>
ns to n<lb/>
es.<lb/>
Defensively, -<lb/>
unt racked<lb/>
Robert Wa?<lb/>
"A<lb/>
N1- ? alsi ad <lb/>
? -s (six - <lb/>
.<lb/>
back K<lb/>
v all<lb/>
Wiln and Rim McCaliun<lb/>
our fill in.<lb/>
u on felt the Pirates<lb/>
3d P'ayed ell in the fin ? hut<lb/>
"I w<lb/>
heca vhoie<lb/>
My backup was hurt<lb/>
u lid. "We cou<lb/>
ived Amos 'Slice' Adam;<lb/>
Wr<lb/>
id B ?<lb/>
ma<lb/>
Berke Holtclaw<lb/>
"Berke Holtzclaw was a plea-<lb/>
ts coacl Bakei said.<lb/>
"He gave us a glimpse ol w<lb/>
he's going to do fot us. He had<lb/>
confidence in himself and 1<lb/>
thought he made a great pass in<lb/>
the end to gel us in a position to<lb/>
B DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
SfMM fdllnrs<lb/>
Junior quarterback Steve Gage<lb/>
led the Tulsa Golden Hurricane<lb/>
to a narrow 21-20 comeback vic-<lb/>
tory over a struggling 2-8 Pirate<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
The Tulsa victory came before<lb/>
a Shrine Day crowd of 23,126 on<lb/>
an overcast Saturday.<lb/>
Gage, who passed tor 157<lb/>
vards and one touchdown while<lb/>
rushing tor 52 vards and another<lb/>
score, was the driving force in<lb/>
Tulsa's offensive attack, rhe<lb/>
Golden Hurricane rallied in the<lb/>
third quarter, scoring two<lb/>
touchdowns while effective!<lb/>
shutting down the Pirate offense.<lb/>
Tulsa first-year head coach<lb/>
Don Morton did not give up on<lb/>
his squad, despite their first half<lb/>
17-6 deficit.<lb/>
I told the players to keep a<lb/>
positive attitude and to maintain<lb/>
their poise out there (during<lb/>
halftime) said Morton.<lb/>
Tulsa took first possession and<lb/>
mounted a drive of 68 yards<lb/>
before a strong defensive play.<lb/>
resulted in a Hurricane turnovet<lb/>
On a third-and-goal from the<lb/>
is l 12, Cage tumbled and<lb/>
lulsa receiver Eric Brown<lb/>
recovered but tumbled to ECl s<lb/>
Robert Washington on the P<lb/>
25<lb/>
ECl was unable to capitalize<lb/>
?-? I I miscue, and Tim<lb/>
Wolter punted Hurricane<lb/>
39. However, the Buc defense<lb/>
responded again as Essray,<lb/>
I aliaferro put i c iage, I<lb/>
ring a fumble, which raliaferro<lb/>
himsell recovered on the II J3<lb/>
rhe Pirates, behind a sti n e<lb/>
offensive line, use: <lb/>
middle running plays to put tl e<lb/>
hail on the Iuisa six yard line.<lb/>
I ' C big play was a 15??<lb/>
scamper by seuicM fullback Bob<lb/>
bv'air The scoring play, came<lb/>
a pitch to senior tailback lony<lb/>
Hake. who dove between <lb/>
Iuisa defenders. I he 33-vard<lb/>
on a 2 yard (?age ; a Ron<lb/>
Kellev I he Buc defense stiffen<lb/>
ed, forcing a lason Stauro ?<lb/>
tield goal of 12 vards. "his cut<lb/>
the Pirate lead to 7-3 witl<lb/>
maining in the opening period<lb/>
I he strong Pirate ground<lb/>
tack led by (lair. Maker dwd An-<lb/>
thony Simpson moved the ball 79<lb/>
vards in 13 plays, giving the<lb/>
Pirates held position I I<lb/>
seven yard line On third down.<lb/>
HoltJaw rolled right and<lb/>
Simpson in the endone. With<lb/>
10:21 left in the halt. EC I<lb/>
command 14 1<lb/>
rhe Hurricane retaliated<lb/>
moving rhe ball 69 .<lb/>
Phi e Pirate 1 1 yard<lb/>
Seinoi Keith i I topped<lb/>
11 third-down plav<lb/>
rovsky, fiel I<lb/>
I he 28-yard held e q .<lb/>
led to 14-6 witl 5-17 eft i<lb/>
halt.<lb/>
However.<lb/>
was not ovei<lb/>
pleting a 14 ya v .<lb/>
 iainey, 1<lb/>
39. H Kevin !<lb/>
? ' '? '<lb/>
plays<lb/>
ebackei Bubba kVai<lb/>
recovered a<lb/>
giving the P ra<lb/>
own 13 with 2:02 i<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
I n t he<lb/>
drive. 1(1<lb/>
range I - a Heatl ?" .<lb/>
fieldj<lb/>
17-6 lea<lb/>
sue- ful a<lb/>
17 12<lb/>
54 yard<lb/>
the good fi<lb/>
52- i<lb/>
wid<lb/>
I .<lb/>
plav. 64<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
? i '<lb/>
u , ?v "u lv KC1 us m a p.<lb/>
, beause e were trying to v that last field goal<lb/>
P the i which :<lb/>
hall up the middle "<lb/>
Holtzclaw, who completed<lb/>
lony Bal 13 arc1<lb/>
1 c l  &amp;eco" d ??? ?? a lown in his first stari<lb/>
fading rushei combined touches of precison-<lb/>
s ?" :  30 car? med passing witl a b<lb/>
' 76 vards 'freshman-itis' The Valdosta<lb/>
" ,the P '?' Ganative experienced some dif-<lb/>
as lie fumbled in two<lb/>
: ' ' ' s) as <lb/>
'? ?? time leading rusher. I<lb/>
Holtzclaw, though, was<lb/>
somewh i less self complimen-<lb/>
tary. When asked what he<lb/>
lEer  ards he would r?r oi<lb/>
??l start, the freshman<lb/>
replied. "I'll remember all the<lb/>
tumbles 1 made<lb/>
1 I will have some time to<lb/>
rest and prepare before traveling<lb/>
to Baton Rouge. 1 a on Dec. 7<lb/>
to face the Bayou Bengals of<lb/>
I SI<lb/>
scoring drive consumed 2:17<lb/>
five plays and the Jet: Heath kick<lb/>
gave the Bucs a 7-0lead with 7:12<lb/>
left in the first quarter.<lb/>
fter both teams were unable<lb/>
to gam a first down, Iuisa<lb/>
managed to move o the Pirate 1 5<lb/>
? was ?<lb/>
 c Stai<lb/>
1<lb/>
two Pirate .cores. And a<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
tie,<lb/>
wed 15-s?<lb/>
Neither ream could gain ? firsi<lb/>
Kevin Walk? and Keii<lb/>
collided and w ? ?<lb/>
:<lb/>
Hake; I ? ECU<lb/>
! I ree plav<lb/>
pleted a 17<lb/>
to Kev <lb/>
in tl<lb/>
in six<lb/>
outing and<lb/>
ending<lb/>
their<lb/>
M<lb/>
Lady Bucs Look To Tourney<lb/>
magmg situations.<lb/>
turnovers did not<lb/>
Ih<lb/>
e Pirate fullback position played a vital role in Saturday's<lb/>
mmizzs;?zi 2??"s,adium-Here Berke<lb/>
my.<lb/>
Lagnaf Football I<lb/>
Tourney Scheduled<lb/>
Do you like to play flag foot-<lb/>
ball If so, enter the first annual<lb/>
LAC VAFInvitational Flag Foot-<lb/>
ball Tournament the weekend of<lb/>
Nov. 22-24.<lb/>
All teams are invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate. There is a small entry fee<lb/>
of $20 per team. There will be<lb/>
prizes awarded to both the firs:<lb/>
and second-place finishers. The<lb/>
first place team will receive a<lb/>
trophy and a keg of beer. The<lb/>
second-place finishers will also<lb/>
receive a trophy.<lb/>
The team's captain meeting is<lb/>
tomorrow at 7 p.n n the Jar-<lb/>
vis Dorm lobby. All team cap-<lb/>
tains must attend and are urged<lb/>
to bring their entry fee as well.<lb/>
For more information concerning<lb/>
the tournament, contact Richard<lb/>
Frazier at 752-8208, John<lb/>
Faulkner at 758-9255 or Billy<lb/>
McShea at 758-5077.<lb/>
Managers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
The ECU men's basketball<lb/>
team has a need for several<lb/>
managers. The managers have<lb/>
several duties and are entrusted<lb/>
with a large amount of respon-<lb/>
sibility.<lb/>
Scholarships can be earned<lb/>
through loyalty and hard work.<lb/>
In addition, there are many<lb/>
benefits offered to basketball<lb/>
managers. To apply and to find<lb/>
out more about the position,<lb/>
come by Minges Coliseum at 5:30<lb/>
p.m. and speak with the head<lb/>
manager, Burt Jenkins.<lb/>
By riM CHANDLER<lb/>
M?ff Wncr<lb/>
The Lady Pirate Basketball<lb/>
team held their final Purple-Cold<lb/>
intrasquad scrimmage of the yeai<lb/>
this Saturday.<lb/>
The game was held in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum immediately after the<lb/>
completion of the ECU-Tulsa<lb/>
game. Head Coach Emily Man-<lb/>
waring said that she felt that<lb/>
there was improvement from the<lb/>
last scrimmage. 'The girls knew<lb/>
where to go offensively stated<lb/>
Manwaring. "but they need to<lb/>
show trust in their teammates<lb/>
and show some patience<lb/>
"The girls knew where<lb/>
to go offensivelybut<lb/>
they need to show trust<lb/>
in their teammates, and<lb/>
show some patience. "<lb/>
Emily Manwaring<lb/>
Coach Manwaring stated that<lb/>
she felt that defense would be the<lb/>
key to the team. "We're not go-<lb/>
ing to be able to let our op-<lb/>
ponents have wide-open shots<lb/>
stated Manwaring, "their hands<lb/>
have to stay up on defense<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have only<lb/>
three more practice days before<lb/>
they open their season. And<lb/>
Coach Manwaring said that the<lb/>
three days of practice are needed.<lb/>
According to Manwaring, there<lb/>
was too much that has to be<lb/>
changed. She also stated that the<lb/>
girls know what to do, they just<lb/>
need to start doing it. Coach<lb/>
Manwaring stated that the star-<lb/>
ting lineup for the opening game<lb/>
had not been selected yet. "I am<lb/>
still considering eight players for<lb/>
starting positions said Man-<lb/>
waring.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will certainly<lb/>
have their hands full during their<lb/>
first three games this weekend.<lb/>
They open up on Friday, 'o 22<lb/>
'he "ennessee rech<lb/>
merit Their opponent will he<lb/>
rennessee Tech the del<lb/>
Ohio Vallev (<lb/>
rech finished las: -A<lb/>
2d-9 record and also made a<lb/>
the N( -V tournamei<lb/>
Saturday, the 1 adv Pirates<lb/>
take on the winner<lb/>
Georgia-Central Michigan game<lb/>
that will be played Friday. I<lb/>
Bulldogs are ranked second in<lb/>
preseason polls. ftcv were 2<lb/>
last vear and finished as nati<lb/>
-<lb/>
p<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
a 22<lb/>
? are<lb/>
preseason poll<lb/>
bv Pal cd,i Sumi<lb/>
Sr<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Bv IfUSt !? km<lb/>
n<lb/>
aloriK<lb/>
Dwa<lb/>
CjU.j D ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
3) H o m '<lb/>
4)<lb/>
5) P <lb/>
) Po<lb/>
:<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' Monlque Pomoilli Hriv?T JO"Dn cu "ho,? L"<lb/>
William Mary ,as. ye.r.VheiSZZX u? 22. ??<lb/>
Tennessee Tech Tournament this weekend c?Paign in the<lb/>
r<lb/>
Men's Ba.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
"He<lb/>
some p<lb/>
s hke he<lb/>
and<lb/>
the -<lb/>
spo?<lb/>
duct H<lb/>
National B<lb/>
P<lb/>
still ?<lb/>
'<lb/>
fwi<lb/>
(jrivelhl<lb/>
Ibr<lb/>
Res'<lb/>
ABffR? ;toi?i<lb/>
-<lb/>
PH:<lb/>
stat<lb/>
reltg<lb/>
as this i<lb/>
BB&amp;I<lb/>
ks <lb/>
I "h <lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 19, 1W<lb/>
11<lb/>
es Tulsa<lb/>
sas<lb/>
B ' ! 11' 11<lb/>
o Tourney<lb/>
 I<lb/>
JON JOBDAN<lb/>
mique Pompilli drives for two points against<lb/>
tar. The Bues open their '85-86 campaign in the<lb/>
lament this weekend.<lb/>
IRS Team<lb/>
H JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
Staff ?ni?<lb/>
I he Department ol<lb/>
imural Recreational Services'<lb/>
?cam bowling is rolling right<lb/>
g into the playoffs. The top<lb/>
bowlers in the men's divi-<lb/>
are 1 rank 1 ee with 586,<lb/>
Dwayne rayloi 579, and Mike<lb/>
$73. Fhe women's lead top<lb/>
arc Kri Martin 2"M and<lb/>
i Dixon 295. Sneakei Sam's<lb/>
picks have changed their<lb/>
es ' men's diision<lb/>
Kappa Alpha ' V<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon V<lb/>
I Home Crown<lb/>
4) fau Kappa Epsilon Sitty<lb/>
?es<lb/>
?a erhouse<lb/>
ip ladies teams going into<lb/>
ayoffs arc<lb/>
11 Powerhouse Women<lb/>
sie Rollers<lb/>
 pi a Delta Pi<lb/>
i u i racquetball competi<lb/>
a:i vith last<lb/>
s open-dh :l ampion<lb/>
waj ? Raym nd Song<lb/>
. captured lasi earV cham-<lb/>
pionship but may run into a little<lb/>
more trouble this year. Three<lb/>
'racqueteers' have a shot at<lb/>
dethroning Song, Andy Altman,<lb/>
David Patton and P.J. Hughes.<lb/>
In the intermediate division,<lb/>
Troy Miller, Robert Buckley and<lb/>
Patrick Ricci are this year's top<lb/>
wall bangers. With the playott<lb/>
picture closing inthese three will<lb/>
highlight the action in Minges<lb/>
Coleseum.<lb/>
Intramural volleyball is in it's<lb/>
last week of action. Sneaker<lb/>
Sam's original league leaders are<lb/>
holding their own. In the ladies'<lb/>
divisions. Good, Bad, and Ugly<lb/>
are topping the charts with an<lb/>
undefeated 4-0 record. Other<lb/>
teams with perfect records in-<lb/>
clude the Hawaiian Noises and the<lb/>
Sig Hp Goldenhensjwho could<lb/>
be the teams to beat Good, Had<lb/>
and Ugly.<lb/>
The sorority leaders. Alpha<lb/>
Phijare spiking their way into the<lb/>
all-campus tournament with little<lb/>
competition from fellow op-<lb/>
ponents. The Gumbys are stret-<lb/>
ching out their lead in the<lb/>
women's residence hall division.<lb/>
Three unbeaten teams lead the<lb/>
Coach Pleads Guilty<lb/>
men's independent division.<lb/>
Lucky Seven, Phi Kappa Tau 'C<lb/>
and Alpha Phi Big Brothers have<lb/>
each netted 3-0 records. Sig Eps<lb/>
and Phi Kappa Tau are still<lb/>
fighting it out for the number one<lb/>
spot in the fraternity division A<lb/>
and B leagues. The number two<lb/>
ranked CHUD leads the<lb/>
residence-hall division along with<lb/>
the 3(H Spikes.<lb/>
The Chicago hears and this<lb/>
year's number one co-rec football<lb/>
team. The Spoilers, have<lb/>
something in common, and it is<lb/>
not 'Refrigerator Perry Both<lb/>
are wiping out their opponents.<lb/>
Recently, the Spoilers scored 54<lb/>
points in one contest and are<lb/>
averaging 40 points a game. Se-<lb/>
cond ranked. Royal Invaders are<lb/>
not far behind with an average of<lb/>
35 points a game.<lb/>
The final intramural event of<lb/>
the semester is close at hand, so<lb/>
be sure to find the nearest free-<lb/>
throw line and practice your toul<lb/>
shots. Registration tor this year's<lb/>
t r e e -1 h r o w contest ends<lb/>
December 2<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
in<lb/>
'oo m<lb/>
104<lb/>
Men's Basketball At Tulane?<lb/>
Sew i ans (UPI) - The<lb/>
having scandal<lb/>
at -?.Max. old Tulane<lb/>
pe col-<lb/>
? . la be<lb/>
?<lb/>
rCU.<lb/>
"Never" n'<lb/>
ee " s' <lb/>
. . ? ' ? be i<lb/>
. - ave  ?<lb/>
deni Earn on Kelly<lb/>
c men's -arsit pro-<lb/>
p- the wake of a<lb/>
. ; ai dal and allega-<lb/>
? NCAA violations, in-<lb/>
. stat centei<lb/>
'Hot K d" Williams .<lb/>
?? ? iign wit I<lb/>
Y<lb/>
led-<lb/>
Aould<lb/>
.el<lb/>
ed. i-<lb/>
cour age<lb/>
1 ater, K<lb/>
stance a bit.<lb/>
"He has indicated to me that at<lb/>
some point in the future, if he<lb/>
Is like he could bring back the<lb/>
program, and do il right, he<lb/>
would be for u -aid Mack<lb/>
Brown, first-year athletic dire.<lb/>
 c ach.<lb/>
"It he could not do it I<lb/>
ass, .i ng it rig!<lb/>
: Aould not re for it<lb/>
w illiam case is still in court,<lb/>
or are ti<lb/>
. him on<lb/>
erj ?'? am<lb/>
? trial resulte i i mistrial on<lb/>
ba-is ol pn :ial miscon-<lb/>
His uncertain status promp-<lb/>
ted the Cleveland Cavaliers o the<lb/>
Nati ? al Basketball Association<lb/>
Iraw their contract otter.<lb/>
Point guarcTDavid Dominique<lb/>
face charges, but no date<lb/>
has been sei for his trial.<lb/>
wo former players testified<lb/>
against Williams under grants o<lb/>
immunity, and a third testified<lb/>
for the prosecution in a plea<lb/>
bargain.<lb/>
 gag order is in effect,<lb/>
preventing discussion of the case<lb/>
bv anyone involved.<lb/>
I ntil the matter is settled.<lb/>
Browi said ii was premature to<lb/>
-peculate on the future of Tulane<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
"I think that after this thing<lb/>
gets out of court. Dr. Kelly and I<lb/>
will talk, and he will bring me up<lb/>
date on it Brown -aid.<lb/>
I wo ol 1 ulane's most ardent<lb/>
financial backers want to see<lb/>
basketball revived, but only on<lb/>
Kelly's term<lb/>
"Jl w aid seem that someday a<lb/>
university like this ought to have<lb/>
a basketball program back. One<lb/>
itake sh aldi '1 -pell the end ol<lb/>
a progra i I ?rever -aid Ben<lb/>
Werner, one ol Tulane leading<lb/>
fund-raisers.<lb/>
"He (Kelly) knows my opi-<lb/>
nion. I backed him on what he<lb/>
did at the time he did it, but it<lb/>
iuld be open for reconsidera-<lb/>
:i Weiner said.<lb/>
Kent McWilliams was Tulane's<lb/>
first scholarship basketball<lb/>
player, a poor kid who used his<lb/>
degree a- a springboard to wealth<lb/>
a- nead of McMoRan petroleum<lb/>
exploration company.<lb/>
In addition to I is financial sup-<lb/>
port of athletics, McWilliams is a<lb/>
major contributor to "ulane's<lb/>
medic1 center and has endowed<lb/>
a chair in geology.<lb/>
Academics come first, he said:<lb/>
"As much as I love athletics, you<lb/>
have to have priorities<lb/>
However, he said he believes<lb/>
the matter could have been<lb/>
handled without abolishing the<lb/>
basketball program. "You don't<lb/>
blame basketball for the frailties<lb/>
of a few people<lb/>
"Down the line, we hope we<lb/>
can establish enough credibility<lb/>
for them to consider reinstating<lb/>
basketball he said.<lb/>
Some five doen members of<lb/>
the athletic department staff -<lb/>
coaches, administrators and sup-<lb/>
port personnel, have either quit,<lb/>
been fired or reassigned to other<lb/>
duties since the scandal broke.<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn.<lb/>
(UPI)Former Vanderbilt<lb/>
strength coach E. J. "Doc" Kreis<lb/>
pleaded guilty Monday to illegal-<lb/>
ly distributing steroids to a Clem-<lb/>
son coach in a case that focused<lb/>
national attention on the use of<lb/>
chemical bodybuilders by<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
The misdemeanor counts could<lb/>
bring a maximum sentence of 11<lb/>
months and 29 days to Kreis<lb/>
"This case has alerted college<lb/>
football programs all over the<lb/>
country that the use of steroid<lb/>
drugs without a prescription is<lb/>
not only illegal, but, in our opi-<lb/>
nion, is harmful to them said<lb/>
Davidson County District At-<lb/>
torney General Thomas Shriver.<lb/>
"We feel that college athletes<lb/>
should not have to be drugged to<lb/>
be competitive he added.<lb/>
Kreis' co-defendant, one time<lb/>
pharmacist Melvin "Woody"<lb/>
Wilson, pleaded guilty to one<lb/>
count of distributing and another<lb/>
of conspiracy in the same case.<lb/>
Both men were tentatively<lb/>
scheduled to be sentenced next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The investigation began over a<lb/>
year ago with the death of Clem-<lb/>
son University track star<lb/>
Augustinius Jaspers. An autopsy<lb/>
on the athlete showed traces of a<lb/>
prescription drug in his system.<lb/>
The drug was traced to<lb/>
Nashville, where a Tennessee<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation probe<lb/>
disclosed that more than 30 pre-<lb/>
sent or former Vanderbilt foot-<lb/>
ball players had been using<lb/>
steroids.<lb/>
The scandal rocked the private<lb/>
university and prompted drug<lb/>
testing on athletes at many<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Kreis had been indicted on<lb/>
sever m.soemeanor counts of<lb/>
distributing and one count of<lb/>
conspiracy. All but the con-<lb/>
spiracy count were dismissed in<lb/>
September by special Judge Bob-<lb/>
by Capers, who said the statute<lb/>
of limitations had expired.<lb/>
Kreis pleaded guilty to<lb/>
distributing steroids to a Clemson<lb/>
coach, which was one of the<lb/>
counts dismissed by Capers<lb/>
In exchange, the burly former<lb/>
all-sports strength coach will not<lb/>
be prosecuted on the conspiracy<lb/>
count.<lb/>
Kreis' attorney, Roger May, a<lb/>
former Vanderbilt quarterback,<lb/>
said "it's no secret" that both<lb/>
Kreis and Wilson will attempt to<lb/>
get a probationary sentence.<lb/>
The third defendant in the<lb/>
case, former pharmacy employee<lb/>
Thomas Patterson, has already<lb/>
received pre-trial diversion in the<lb/>
ase.<lb/>
During Monday's verv brief<lb/>
hearing, Kreis admitted he sold a<lb/>
steroid drug to his friend, Sam<lb/>
Colson, then the strength coach<lb/>
at Clemson. That transaction oc-<lb/>
curred in February, 1984.<lb/>
"You're pleading guilty<lb/>
because in fact you are guilty0<lb/>
Capers asked Kreis<lb/>
"Yes, sir Kreis replied.<lb/>
A separate investigation<lb/>
South Carolina led to a guilty<lb/>
plea from Colson on similar<lb/>
charges. Colson received a<lb/>
suspended 18-month sentence<lb/>
and was placed on three years<lb/>
probation. He was also required<lb/>
to perform 16 hours of public ser-<lb/>
vice work a week for a year.<lb/>
"Mr. Kreis was approached by<lb/>
Sam Colson about obtaining<lb/>
steroid drugs Shriver said. "As<lb/>
a result of those conversations,<lb/>
Kreis obtained dianabol from<lb/>
Woody Wilson.<lb/>
"Then in turn Sam Col-<lb/>
wrote a check paying for the<lb/>
drugs to Doc Kreis. Mr Kreis<lb/>
took the check and endorsed it<lb/>
over to Mr. Wilson in payment<lb/>
Shriver said.<lb/>
The steroid scandal broke on<lb/>
the Vanderbilt campus after the<lb/>
death of Jaspers. Jaspers died ol<lb/>
a heart defect, but an autopsy<lb/>
disclosed traces of a drug in his<lb/>
system. Jaspers had no prescrip-<lb/>
tion for the medication, which<lb/>
was not steroids. South Carolina<lb/>
investigators traced the source to<lb/>
Nashville.<lb/>
? l ,renill? stores )nl<lb/>
Kentucky Nuggets Combo<lb/>
9 Piece Kentucky Nuggets<lb/>
Kentucky Fries<lb/>
Lg drmk S2.89<lb/>
vocations<lb/>
600 A Greenville B'vC 7 56 6434<lb/>
2905 E 5tM St 752 5184<lb/>
Put your time<lb/>
and energy<lb/>
together.<lb/>
SPEEDY REEDY'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
FREE EXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
on every pizza1<lb/>
PRICES:<lb/>
jsaaz<lb/>
CHINATOtDN EXPRESS<lb/>
Western Siz<lb/>
PLAIN CHEESE<lb/>
1 ITEM<lb/>
2 ITEMS<lb/>
3 ITEMS<lb/>
4 ITEMS<lb/>
5 ITEMS<lb/>
6 ITEMS<lb/>
7 ITEMS<lb/>
8 ITEMS<lb/>
9 ITEMS<lb/>
DELUXE<lb/>
VEGETARIAN<lb/>
RUNNER<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
14"<lb/>
660<lb/>
7.85<lb/>
8.80<lb/>
9.75<lb/>
1O70 i J2J0<lb/>
11 65<lb/>
12.60<lb/>
:<lb/>
960<lb/>
10.60<lb/>
11 60<lb/>
1360<lb/>
14 60<lb/>
15.60<lb/>
14 20<lb/>
15 60<lb/>
10 60<lb/>
11 60<lb/>
11 60<lb/>
13 55 15 60 19 80<lb/>
ta? already 'ncluded<lb/>
17 00<lb/>
18.40<lb/>
i9 60<lb/>
12 80<lb/>
14 20<lb/>
14.20<lb/>
FREE PEPSI'S<lb/>
WEVERY PIZZA<lb/>
Unless Using Coupon<lb/>
SUBS EVERYDAY<lb/>
11:00-6:00<lb/>
758-9999<lb/>
2711 I. 10 Si<lb/>
Hour: Mort-Thurt 11 a.m. - 12 mid.<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. 11-2 a.m.<lb/>
Sunday 11-1<lb/>
1-16" 2-item pizza for only<lb/>
j plus 4 free Pepsis $8.00<lb/>
M?? .nnM.e. ne Co"P??, ? P,ZZ?<lb/>
coupon wh?n ordering Expires I 2, 3 1 85<lb/>
JBLHL<lb/>
&amp; Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Present<lb/>
QvelheRisC<lb/>
for Christmas<lb/>
Resent<lb/>
A Literary and<lb/>
Visual Celebration<lb/>
of North Carolina's<lb/>
Quadricentennial<lb/>
from BB&amp;T.<lb/>
Capture the Tar<lb/>
Heel spirit and Old<lb/>
North State- heritage of<lb/>
the past 400 years in the<lb/>
perfect Christmas gift<lb/>
tor friend, famil or<lb/>
business asscx iate<lb/>
Contemporary<lb/>
North Carolina writers and photogra-<lb/>
phers have contributed to this enchanting collection d<lb/>
p lignani essays and over 250 color and black-and-white<lb/>
itographs This unique journal includes reflections ot out<lb/>
state's heritage in the arts, business, atWetics. education, cuisine,<lb/>
religion, agriculture and politics with an extensive time line<lb/>
lacing it all together<lb/>
However this isone bit of history that will not repeat ltseit<lb/>
as this the List printingo our ba k Copies are available U <lb/>
$ 37 SO plus tax in any BBT lobby ltsa( hristmas present<lb/>
tn ,m the past th.it v. ui il enj vy U r years t. o ?ne C let y? urs t da<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
IfeMoreThanABank<lb/>
It's An An it udt<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Tuesday November 19, 1985<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
9:00-1:00A.M.<lb/>
$1.00 Ladies<lb/>
&amp; Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Wednesday, November 20, 1985<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys<lb/>
Draft All Nit<lb/>
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12<lb/>
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Classifieds<lb/>
SALK<lb/>
NEEDTYPING<lb/>
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PROFESSIONAL TYPiNw SER<lb/>
V IC I ? ?<lb/>
2 6, 3 Bt DROOM AP T <lb/>
from f<lb/>
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FOR SAi t<lb/>
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ROOWAt A AN TED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMM1<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
PKRsON 1 s<lb/>
S IG V A S<lb/>
LING<lb/>
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SUN NO<lb/>
Sat nO<lb/>
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' l??S NOT<lb/>
AVAILAiLI<lb/>
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OK WHOltSAUKS<lb/>
?i RESIRvi ???!<lb/>
?l(iH ' ID LLMjT<lb/>
?-(T!l5<lb/>
I'til:<lb/>
SIII'IKVIOKI<lb/>
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A" r<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Stock Clerks<lb/>
Available For Work From<lb/>
6 00pm unti!700om<lb/>
NOW IN PROGRESS<lb/>
? II<lb/>
UBLE<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
LOWEST PRICES<lb/>
IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
MATCH ANY ADVERTISED FEATURE<lb/>
GROCERY Pt<lb/>
-<lb/>
U.S.D.A. GRADE "A<lb/>
BUTTER BASTED<lb/>
Ybung Turlceys<lb/>
2 LITER<lb/>
(NON-RETURNABLE BOTTLE)<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
I a: 1 c-i<lb/>
Green Cabbage<lb/>
20 lbs<lb/>
and<lb/>
PICA<lb/>
DAYS<lb/>
AZD<lb/>
RAFT NiGH'<lb/>
t .<lb/>
A0C<lb/>
40c<lb/>
Bach<lb/>
stf<lb/>
DEAR DUMPLIN ?<lb/>
FOUND?<lb/>
WET BUNS CONTEST . nembet 1 ;<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
S 1 G M A S R d m k<lb/>
??<lb/>
 Socrates: 4 To do is toIt be. h <lb/>
t Plato:<lb/>
4<lb/>
y To be is to f Sinatra:do -ft<lb/>
Do be, dobe. 4<lb/>
?3HEF"fr ?"?"???"<lb/>
$<lb/>
Ann Page<lb/>
Waffles<lb/>
FRENCH S SAUCES &amp;<lb/>
(1 OZ. - 1 . OZ.)<lb/>
TURKEY<lb/>
? e?<lb/>
Gravy<lb/>
Mixes<lb/>
Flav-O-Rich<lb/>
Sherbet<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
12 CT -9 . OZ <lb/>
Butter-Me-Not<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
(6 PK.)<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
? gZte<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
S (8 0Z.)<lb/>
Scooter iSour<lb/>
Crunch<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
DIXIE CRYSTALS<lb/>
PLAIN ? SELF-RISING<lb/>
Pure Cane Sugar I Red Band Flour<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIMIT OMC WtTM AOOmOHAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERyIStLOW PRICE<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE.<lb/>
CAMPBELL'S<lb/>
Tomato Soup<lb/>
uT<lb/>
10.75 oz.<lb/>
can<lb/>
b<lb/>
UMIT SIX WTTH AOOmOHAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd Greenville, NC<lb/>
SKINNER<lb/>
(16 OZ )<lb/>
Elbow<lb/>
Macaroni<lb/>
BUTTER ? REGULAR<lb/>
disco Shortening<lb/>
L?T ONE WTTM AOOmONAl<lb/>
ENCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
DUKE'S<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057758_0013"/><lb/>
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