<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057792_0001"/>
<lb/>
?h? iaHt (Earnitman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No.Sfr aq<lb/>
Tuesday, January 14, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
24 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Carillon Back On<lb/>
ECU West Campus<lb/>
As The Check Bounces<lb/>
J B HUMBERT The East Carol.m?n<lb/>
es, its thai time again when all ECU students make their pilgrimage to Mecca in order to offer<lb/>
green paper as a sacrifice to the gods. Students make the pilgrimage hoping to influence the gods into<lb/>
smiling upon themselves so that Ws mav some how appear in their professors' Krade hooks at the end<lb/>
of the semester.<lb/>
Halley's Comet Has Arrived<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) - I here<lb/>
are almost as many wavs of pro-<lb/>
nouncing Halley as there are oi<lb/>
spelling Khadafy.<lb/>
According to the Sational<lb/>
Geographic Society, if you are<lb/>
referring to Edmund Halley, the<lb/>
English astronomer, you should<lb/>
make the name rhyme with<lb/>
"valley<lb/>
(The Geographic must be<lb/>
assuming that there is only one<lb/>
way to pronounce "valley How<lb/>
little it knows!)<lb/>
s for Libya's leader. I PI<lb/>
spells his name Moammar<lb/>
Khadafy. But beyond those<lb/>
guidelines, apparently, everyone<lb/>
is on his own. No improvising,<lb/>
please. And that goes for the<lb/>
country as well.<lb/>
Anyway, we are talking here<lb/>
about comets, in particular the<lb/>
one Halley discovered in P05.<lb/>
which still bears his name. (The<lb/>
comet, not the year.)<lb/>
Halley's comet, now visible in<lb/>
the United States away from cit)<lb/>
lights, passes this way every 75 to<lb/>
"6 years or so. It was last seen by<lb/>
Americans in 1910.<lb/>
I wasn't born et. but I have<lb/>
heard my parents talk about it<lb/>
and they agreed their oldest child,<lb/>
then about 5, had the best chance<lb/>
o seeing it twice.<lb/>
My brother missed the current<lb/>
visitation, but the Geographic<lb/>
says much has been learned about<lb/>
comets since 1910, and 1 believe<lb/>
it.<lb/>
See THE FACTS Page 3.<lb/>
Bv BKTH WHICKER<lb/>
Miff Wrllrf<lb/>
Students may be wondering<lb/>
from where the mysterious music<lb/>
is coming on West Campus. The<lb/>
ECU Carillon is back and is in<lb/>
operation after more than a<lb/>
decade of storage.<lb/>
The Carillon is a music box<lb/>
with bells that can be played from<lb/>
a keyboard or some other<lb/>
mechanism<lb/>
Recently, the Carillon was<lb/>
taken out o storage, repaired<lb/>
and installed on the roof of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
thanks to the Faculty Facilities<lb/>
Committee, which recommended<lb/>
the Carillon be put back into use<lb/>
after its dormant past.<lb/>
I he SGA purchased the<lb/>
Carillon in 19fS9 for $4,000 and<lb/>
dedicated to 1 eo Jenkins, who<lb/>
was Chancellor at that time.<lb/>
The Canilon was then installed<lb/>
on the top of Austin Building,<lb/>
where it chimed the hour and<lb/>
played the ECl Alma Mater.<lb/>
However, it created :h a noise<lb/>
disturbance that it was put to<lb/>
rest<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander and stu-<lb/>
dent leaders met in November to<lb/>
decide when to play the newly in-<lb/>
stalled Carillon and what should<lb/>
be plaved. The group was in-<lb/>
formed that the music box would<lb/>
be installed on the side of the<lb/>
penthouse of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dententer before the end of the<lb/>
Fall semester. "With the<lb/>
Economic Outlook Bright<lb/>
By MIKF II DWICK<lb/>
The employment outlook and<lb/>
the economic prospects for the<lb/>
Southeast, particularly North<lb/>
Carolina and South Carolina, are<lb/>
quite bright, according to two<lb/>
economic reports published bv<lb/>
the BellSouth Corp. and Man-<lb/>
power Inc. and also James<lb/>
Furney, director of the ECU<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office<lb/>
The prospects for spring<lb/>
graduates are "as good as or bet-<lb/>
ter than last year said Furney.<lb/>
However, Furney qualified his<lb/>
statement, saying that the<lb/>
economic climate could change,<lb/>
but barring any economic varia-<lb/>
tion, the outlook is good.<lb/>
'The job maiket is com-<lb/>
petitive; therefore, students<lb/>
should start looking now for<lb/>
those May and June jobs said<lb/>
Furney.<lb/>
Nevertheless, Furney said that<lb/>
the job market is a fuction of an<lb/>
individuals efforts. If an in-<lb/>
dividual sits and waits for a job<lb/>
to come to him or her, maintain-<lb/>
ed Furney, then the job market<lb/>
will be quite tough. On the other<lb/>
hand, Furney said that those<lb/>
students who have initative and<lb/>
an aggressive outlook, then they<lb/>
can make the job market more<lb/>
hospitable.<lb/>
Furney, in a phone interview,<lb/>
cited math teachers as those who<lb/>
are presently in the greatest de-<lb/>
mand. Overall, education majors<lb/>
are in high demand and have a<lb/>
bright outlook for this May. He<lb/>
also added that business ad-<lb/>
ministration, computer science<lb/>
and health professionals are cur-<lb/>
rently in demand.<lb/>
Liberal arts graduates will have<lb/>
the toughest time again said<lb/>
Furney. "They have a difficult<lb/>
time finding a job mainly because<lb/>
they are not trained for a specific<lb/>
position such as accounting he<lb/>
maintained.<lb/>
However, the news is not all<lb/>
bad. According to Fruney, the<lb/>
retail industry is wide open and<lb/>
an excellent opportunity for<lb/>
those graduates with a beral arts<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
Furney's predictions are not<lb/>
the only ones that paint a rosy<lb/>
picture for the Southeast. Both<lb/>
BellSouth Corp. and Manpower<lb/>
Inc. predict that the Southeast,<lb/>
particularly North Carolina and<lb/>
South Carolina, will lead the na-<lb/>
tion in economic growth.<lb/>
BeliSouth's economic report<lb/>
stated, "We expect the<lb/>
Southeast's advantage to con-<lb/>
tinue during the forecast period.<lb/>
(Jan. 1, 1986 through Jan. 1,<lb/>
1987) The expanding national<lb/>
economy will continue to<lb/>
stimulate the Southeast and that,<lb/>
coupled with the region's long-<lb/>
standing abiliiv ;o attract<lb/>
newcomers, will produce solid<lb/>
growth<lb/>
The report stated that North<lb/>
Carolina and South Carolina<lb/>
have managed to grow faster<lb/>
than the nation as a whole since<lb/>
1982 despite substantial job<lb/>
losses in textile and apparel<lb/>
manufacturing. Those workers<lb/>
are finding other jobs and "we<lb/>
expect the Carohnas to grow<lb/>
solidly in the forecast period by<lb/>
continuing to rely on the service-<lb/>
producing sectors for jobs rather<lb/>
than manufacturing<lb/>
Also. BellSouth predicted that<lb/>
more than one million new jobs<lb/>
will be created in the Southeast<lb/>
by 1987 and real income will rise<lb/>
by eight percent.<lb/>
Manpower Inc. focused its<lb/>
study on hir'ng trends across the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Nationally, Manpower said,<lb/>
"The new year will begin amidst<lb/>
a declining job outlook. Amongst<lb/>
almost 12,500 employers<lb/>
surveyed in nearly 400 cities, 19<lb/>
percent expressed intentions to<lb/>
add to their employment rolls<lb/>
during the first quarter of 1986,<lb/>
while 13 percent plan reductions<lb/>
and 66 percent plan no change<lb/>
The report pointed out that the<lb/>
first quarter is seasonally a slow<lb/>
period. However, finance, in-<lb/>
surance and real estate firms will<lb/>
provide the brightest spots for the<lb/>
first quarter, while opportunities<lb/>
will exist in education and public<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
Southern companies, accor-<lb/>
ding to Manpower, will provide<lb/>
the most favorable hiring<lb/>
outlook. "While the wholesale<lb/>
and retail outlook surpasses those<lb/>
of other regions, it is still<lb/>
seasonably weak.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Economic Outlook<lb/>
According to various economic surveys, the Southeast is again supposed to lead the nation in<lb/>
economic growth. More important, of the Southern states, North Carolina and South Carolina are<lb/>
supposed to be the leaders. See related story on page 1.<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifiedsg<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features11<lb/>
Sports17<lb/>
Courage is resistance to fear,<lb/>
mastery of fear ? not absence<lb/>
of fear.<lb/>
 Mark Twain<lb/>
Carillon's new location, it is less<lb/>
likely to disturb students in class,<lb/>
vet everyone will enjoy the<lb/>
benefits of the music box ac-<lb/>
:ording to David Brown, SGA<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
The Carillon will strike the<lb/>
lour from 8 a.m. until 10 p.m.<lb/>
.even days a week. The Alma<lb/>
Vlater will be played at noon<lb/>
Monday through Saturday.<lb/>
On Memorial Day, July 4th,<lb/>
md Veteran's Day, a patriotic<lb/>
-ong will be played at noon after<lb/>
he Alma Mater, a patriotic song<lb/>
clayed at 3 p.m and a mini-<lb/>
oncert of three to four songs at 6<lb/>
).m. The ECU Veteran's Club<lb/>
uggested that the songs be<lb/>
Mayed on patriotic holidays.<lb/>
On Commencement days,<lb/>
nusic appropriate for com-<lb/>
mencement will be played on the<lb/>
same schedule as for patriotic<lb/>
Holidays.<lb/>
The Student Committee sub-<lb/>
mitted the requests for the non-<lb/>
religious Christmas music, which<lb/>
will be played after the<lb/>
Thanksgiving holidays. One song<lb/>
will be played after the Alma<lb/>
Mater, and a mini-concert con-<lb/>
sisting of three to four songs will<lb/>
be played at 6 p.m.<lb/>
"I feel the Carillon will add<lb/>
tradition and heritage to ECU<lb/>
said Brown.<lb/>
"Few students know the Alma<lb/>
Mater; by hearing it played every<lb/>
day, many more students will<lb/>
recognize the song and heritage<lb/>
of ECU added Brown.<lb/>
Anyone wishing to offer<lb/>
recommendations on the selec-<lb/>
tion of songs played by the<lb/>
Carillon should contact the<lb/>
Department of University<lb/>
Unions.<lb/>
Economics Courses<lb/>
Part Of The Basics<lb/>
By BETH WHICKER<lb/>
M?ff Wrtlrr<lb/>
North Carolina educators<lb/>
claim economics courses should<lb/>
be taught as one of the basics.<lb/>
According to a study done I)<lb/>
the Hearst Corporation, only<lb/>
half of 1,000 adults surveyed<lb/>
knew what the prime rate is.<lb/>
The H'inston-Salem Journal<lb/>
claims that less than 25 percent of<lb/>
high school students can<lb/>
recognize a simple description of<lb/>
capitalism.<lb/>
However, North Carolina is<lb/>
one of 27 states that requires a<lb/>
course in economics for high<lb/>
school graduation, according to<lb/>
the Journal.<lb/>
In 1980, the state provided<lb/>
S200.000 to train North Carolina<lb/>
educators in economics. This<lb/>
year, the amount was $60,000,<lb/>
said Larry Huzerford, director o;<lb/>
the Center for Economic Educa-<lb/>
tion at Winston-Salem State<lb/>
University, where he teaches<lb/>
teachers economics.<lb/>
?ccording to Huer ?'ord, few<lb/>
teachers had an economics course<lb/>
in college, and only a few con-<lb/>
sidered it as important as the<lb/>
three R's ? reading, writing and<lb/>
arithmetic.<lb/>
"Teachers who feel that way<lb/>
about economics really can't be<lb/>
expected to communicate a lot of<lb/>
enthusiasm to their students<lb/>
said Huzerford.<lb/>
"Too many professors teach<lb/>
economics like everyone is going<lb/>
to major in it. That's the curse of<lb/>
college, too much<lb/>
specialization he added.<lb/>
See ECONOMICS Page 3.<lb/>
J.S. HUMIERT - Tha East Carol.nian<lb/>
New Year For The SGA<lb/>
The SGA began the new year with a slow start Monday night. At-<lb/>
tendence was low and the amount of business discussed was sparse<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, vice-chancellor for Student Life, said that two floors<lb/>
of Scott Dorm would be air-conditioned, which is spaces.<lb/>
 . -<lb/>
???. f t r ' - -<lb/>
? ????.<lb/>
 ? ' <lb/>
' . ?? ?. -r. <lb/>
1 '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0002"/><lb/>
I'Hfc hAST I'ARi H INI w<lb/>
l k 14. lJSf<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
JAZZ BAND<lb/>
SPECIAL POP<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Sublimifi<lb/>
FUN IN THE SUN<lb/>
Di<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
r Daytami s<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
? ? ?  itions<lb/>
a ula Burt a'<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
?<lb/>
TEST WORKSHOP<lb/>
VI Dl<lb/>
taking 1<lb/>
format! o<lb/>
' '?- strafeO) a I<lb/>
SRCLASSCOUNlIL<lb/>
ECU B'OL OGY CLUB<lb/>
?<lb/>
STUDY SKILLS<lb/>
. ? ,<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
? <lb/>
A ? a<lb/>
?.<lb/>
THE NAVIGATORS<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
circle k<lb/>
vou have a friend who has not yet<lb/>
'eyistered a' the Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service' Encovirage them to go by and<lb/>
pick up a REGISTRATION PACKET ana to<lb/>
attend eher ot two GENE RAl INFORMA<lb/>
TiON MEETINGS On Wednesday Januar,<lb/>
a, In Mendenhall 244 ana on Thursday<lb/>
January ?3 in Rawl UO, brief iessors to e?<lb/>
plain registration intervening on ampus<lb/>
and how to bes; utilize the Career Planning<lb/>
ana Placement Service will he ottered<lb/>
GRADUATE STUDENTS<lb/>
a ?,iu graduate B . ? Summer?<lb/>
II so you are encouraged to register at me<lb/>
Career Planning and Placemen' Se' t t<lb/>
There will be GENERAL INFORMATION<lb/>
MEETINGS on Wednesday January 72 at 5<lb/>
pm in Mendenhall 244 ?? 'Sday<lb/>
-anuar, 23 at 3 p m .n Rawl 1 30 (or fOu to<lb/>
learn more about how to best ue the Career<lb/>
Plannmj and Placement Set .<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
ireer Piai . . . ? ,<lb/>
" ? B (ton h se i ??? ione hour<lb/>
sessions t0 help you prepare four own<lb/>
' -w graduates ge' oos without<lb/>
parafion Many ernpl , ?? s -eouest<lb/>
? Showing your edui a'<lb/>
oeence Sessions to help will be helo i the<lb/>
Career Planning Room on January 24 at J<lb/>
p m and lanuary 30 at 3 ano ' .<lb/>
INTERVIEWING WORKSHOP<lb/>
? ? ? Planning and Placer?<lb/>
?? H se s ??? .????.<lb/>
to aid ? eloping<lb/>
?? ? . pa rig sii.ms tot Si .<lb/>
a discussioi f how i<lb/>
iew through this service w - - I ? efl<lb/>
? -i ' ses! a be held " ? ireer l ?<lb/>
. Ra . ?  ? <lb/>
 , ?<lb/>
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
la s ? ?<lb/>
? i ' ? -<lb/>
6 30 6<lb/>
Beg . ?? ? <lb/>
-<lb/>
- .<lb/>
? .? Fei<lb/>
?' -<lb/>
Sc uba Tues ' T hurs<lb/>
' 10<lb/>
Bas.c Sailing. Thurs<lb/>
7 30 9 30 p m and Sat<lb/>
1 30 4 30 p m<lb/>
Sailing ? Ousmg instru' tion Sat ? Sun Mar<lb/>
22 ? 23, Sat 10 00 am Sun 4 00 pm<lb/>
Continuing Education Erwm Man or call<lb/>
7S7 4143<lb/>
Vrti ' 18 Apr i 10<lb/>
pm<lb/>
April 17 Va,<lb/>
Apr 19 26 May 2<lb/>
p m<lb/>
METHODISTPRESBYTER IAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Our firsl Wednesday ntghl Supc s ? ,? ? ,<lb/>
held this Wednesrtar January IS, at me<lb/>
First Presbyter a ?<lb/>
I4tr, and Elm), at 5 30 p m tea'<lb/>
L ASAGNA' Call !? 2030 for more miur ?? a<lb/>
tion Sponsored by Methodist and<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus mm ?<lb/>
STOP SMOKIr,<lb/>
? ,?.  ? reai<lb/>
? . se1 y<lb/>
? ??? a ? .<lb/>
? . .<lb/>
Wary E lesha <lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Greeting Fellow Student Leaders rhe<lb/>
brotherhood of Alpha Ph. Alpha Frate<lb/>
!nc Eta Nu Chapter would like to first and<lb/>
for most wish you and your organization<lb/>
seasons greetings, and cordially invite rou h<lb/>
participate In our second annual Martm<lb/>
Luther King jr Leade'Sh.p Award!<lb/>
i. ffr.iony and Reception to be held on Mon<lb/>
day January 20 1986 at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center ' he purpose of this eve? s 'wofoirj<lb/>
we would like to recognize both student and<lb/>
community leaders and publicly gatttei<lb/>
together t0 celebrate 'he f,rst official na<lb/>
tonal observance of the birthday of Dr Va-<lb/>
fin Luther King jr w arp asking fa'<lb/>
organization to submit to . .<lb/>
theif p'es.dent ana also mP name of any<lb/>
person from your organization who you feel<lb/>
"as displayed outstanding leaders- p<lb/>
haacterist.es both in the organization and<lb/>
'? ?? ampus ommunity as a whole<lb/>
person will compete for the Marl n uther<lb/>
K ng jr eadersr p Awarr; ivfj I .<lb/>
deadline for this informatioc s faai<lb/>
ianuar, 17 1986 a' 5 OO p m in roon I<lb/>
Jarv.s Dorm or give th,s informa' a I - .<lb/>
member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraterr ?.<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
'art . ? semester ?? jreat ??<lb/>
asagna ? - eac<lb/>
preparea by "errbp-c ?<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
rst Presbytei at<lb/>
? 4" jrvd I - Br ng 0ur friends<lb/>
inly ? 'SI 7240 few . ? ? ? al ,<lb/>
? A O<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Carolina East Centre<lb/>
Off Highway II<lb/>
Near PHtt Theatre<lb/>
Phone 756 A401<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
THE LADIES ZOO<lb/>
All Lady Members In FREE Until 10 pm<lb/>
Guys In At 10<lb/>
25? Draft 75c 16 pz Draft<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
All Members In FREE Until 9 pm<lb/>
50 Draft 50c Wine Coolers<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
Bob "Daddy Cool" Hayworth is back playing the best<lb/>
in Contemporary Dance Music both fun-filled nights.<lb/>
Beau's, a private club<lb/>
Located in the Carolina Cast Centre, Greenville.<lb/>
 c Phone 756 40i for more info.<lb/>
The Fac<lb/>
A TIN G This<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
SPRING BREAK IS COMING!<lb/>
Now is the time to start getting your body<lb/>
ready for bathing suit weather.<lb/>
Bring this coupon in for S5.0Q off a<lb/>
month's membership.<lb/>
The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
417 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Coupon Expires 1-31-86<lb/>
757-1608<lb/>
((UPON<lb/>
2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
(Original Recipe" or<lb/>
Extra Cnspy-v)<lb/>
1 small mashed potato<lb/>
and gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
I Medium Drink<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
FOR ONE COMPLETE<lb/>
2-PIFXK PACK<lb/>
i i<lb/>
We do Chicken Right"<lb/>
Coupon Redeemable at<lb/>
Greenville locations<lb/>
Expiration Date 3 3-86<lb/>
Gain<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
Save 40<lb/>
All Varieties<lb/>
1 1 oz bag<lb/>
?C'Ol PONM5<lb/>
Charmin<lb/>
79<lb/>
TOILET TISSUE<lb/>
4 roll pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
42 oz box<lb/>
$<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
Regular or Diet<lb/>
7-Up or RC Cola<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle each<lb/>
79<lb/>
Franklin Natural Grain<lb/>
1 lb loaf<lb/>
Regular 79c Value<lb/>
Buy One at Regular Price,<lb/>
Get One<lb/>
JOOOCOOOOCCOCOOl<lb/>
BREAD<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PLAY &amp; WIN<lb/>
in Overtoil's Wheel of Fortune Game!<lb/>
Three Names Are Drawn Each Week.<lb/>
You Can Qualify to Spin The Wheel and<lb/>
Win Cash or Grocery Prizes!<lb/>
o Complete Details in Store!<lb/>
Xsoooooo<lb/>
Jif Creamy or Crunchy<lb/>
PEANUT BUTTER<lb/>
18 oz jar<lb/>
1.39<lb/>
Econom<lb/>
Vital Part<lb/>
Of School<lb/>
CCOGO0O23OCCOO00GCO!<lb/>
Lean Cuisine Frozen<lb/>
Chicken Chow Mein<lb/>
or Spaghetti<lb/>
Ore-Ida Frazen Crinkle Cut Grade "A? Rresh White<lb/>
French Fries Jumbo EGGS<lb/>
Dozen 4 Jl c<lb/>
<lb/>
1 1 oz pkg.<lb/>
$<lb/>
1.39<lb/>
2 lb bag<lb/>
19<lb/>
99<lb/>
Richfood<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
or Donald Duck<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
1 2 gallon carton each<lb/>
99<lb/>
Miller Lite<lb/>
6 pack<lb/>
2 oz cans<lb/>
2.39<lb/>
Sea I test $<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
12 gallon carton<lb/>
All Varieties Except Cubic Scoops<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
1OVERTON'S COUPON<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS &amp; FACULTY ONLY<lb/>
5 Discount<lb/>
On $10.00 or more food order at<lb/>
Overtoil's Supermarket. Present<lb/>
this coupon to cashier with ECU I.D.<lb/>
Open 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Monday through Saturday<lb/>
Sundays 1 pm - 6 pm<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Amount of Purchase<lb/>
Discount Amount<lb/>
Coupon Expires MM6<lb/>
limit on discount oor ID. nwmoor<lb/>
Thus Discount S'm val,d In Conjunction With ny OtherDbcxmni<lb/>
<lb/>
'i1 <lb/>
H ?<lb/>
?w? ? ??<lb/>
i z<lb/>
k z?NvS<lb/>
m ? T<lb/>
f ? ? ? ? Su<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Dl<lb/>
F<lb/>
Melod<lb/>
W,ll B.<lb/>
SHE<lb/>
Locafed on<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
STOP SMOKING!<lb/>
a as ?o stop<lb/>
? ?' or Group<lb/>
M MM flSt$ for<lb/>
Mondays ?1 ? 00<lb/>
- room 10'<lb/>
57 641 for<lb/>
Club<lb/>
Near Plitt Theatre<lb/>
Phone 756 6401<lb/>
day Night<lb/>
IESZOO<lb/>
In FREE Until 10 pm<lb/>
In At 10<lb/>
75? 16 oz Draft<lb/>
y Night<lb/>
ENIGHTH!<lb/>
FREE Until 9pm<lb/>
50t Wine Coolers<lb/>
etchers<lb/>
xrth is back playing the best<lb/>
Ausic both fun-filled nights.<lb/>
i private club<lb/>
?a East Centre, Greenville.<lb/>
01 far more info.<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
E. aUL&amp;Ht<lb/>
ILET TISSUE<lb/>
kg<lb/>
Chy<lb/>
BUTTER<lb/>
Richfood<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
or Donald Duck<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
1 2 gallon carton each<lb/>
99<lb/>
is coupon<lb/>
&amp; FACULTY ONLY<lb/>
scount<lb/>
lore food order of<lb/>
rmorket. Present<lb/>
ishter with ECU I.D.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
ear I.D. ?!?<lb/>
punction With Any Other Discount<lb/>
Subliminal Messages Can Not Harm<lb/>
By BETH WHICKER<lb/>
Miff Wrtltr<lb/>
Legislatures, parents, clergv<lb/>
and musicians Frank Zappa and<lb/>
John Denver have raised public<lb/>
awareness by campaigning and<lb/>
voicing their views on the effects<lb/>
of subliminal messages in rock<lb/>
music and advertising on the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
The Arkansas State Legislature<lb/>
felt strongly that rock music af-<lb/>
fected children in adverse ways.<lb/>
The legislature felt so strong that<lb/>
in 1983, the legislature passed a<lb/>
bill that requires the following<lb/>
message be attached to all records<lb/>
and tapes sold in the state: Warn-<lb/>
ing: This record contains<lb/>
backward masking which may be<lb/>
perceptible at a subliminal level<lb/>
when the record is played for-<lb/>
ward. Moreover, other states are<lb/>
considering the same legislation.<lb/>
Backward masking is hidden<lb/>
messages that can be heard if the<lb/>
record is played in a reverse mo-<lb/>
tion on an ordinary turntable.<lb/>
Proponents for the warning label<lb/>
have suggested since the mid-70s<lb/>
that backward masking is evident<lb/>
in Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to<lb/>
Heaven<lb/>
Is it possible to understand<lb/>
messages played backwards?<lb/>
Psychologists John K. Vokey and<lb/>
J. Don Read at the Univeisity of<lb/>
Lethbridge conducted a study in-<lb/>
volving 65 students to examine<lb/>
the comprehension of subliminal<lb/>
messages. Vokey and Read state,<lb/>
"To our ears, messages heard<lb/>
backward retain many of the pro-<lb/>
perties of their forwardly<lb/>
presented counterparts<lb/>
According to Vekey and Read,<lb/>
as taken from American<lb/>
Psychologist, 99 percent of<lb/>
students in the survey could<lb/>
discriminate the sex of a speaker<lb/>
as the tape was played in the<lb/>
reverse motion.<lb/>
Students were able to<lb/>
discriminate paired backward<lb/>
passages spoken by the same in-<lb/>
dividual with a 78.5 percent ac-<lb/>
curacy rate.<lb/>
In a related task, students were<lb/>
asked if backward sentences<lb/>
would make sense if heard in the<lb/>
forward direction. Less than 50<lb/>
percent accurately chose the cor-<lb/>
rect sentences.<lb/>
Another task consisted of hear-<lb/>
ing Psalm 23 (religious messages<lb/>
are said to have no subliminal<lb/>
messages) and Lewis Carroll's<lb/>
"Jabberwocky" backwards. The<lb/>
The Facts Behind Halley's<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
For one thing, my parents<lb/>
thought they were seeing a fiery<lb/>
object streaking across the night<lb/>
sky. How wrong they were!<lb/>
As astronomers now know,<lb/>
Halley's comet is more like a big<lb/>
snowball that moves slowly in<lb/>
relation to the stars.<lb/>
Scientists theorize that comets<lb/>
are composed of such frozen<lb/>
substances as water, ammonia<lb/>
methane, carbon dioxide and<lb/>
hydrogen cyanide.<lb/>
I don't know what they figure<lb/>
a snowball is composed of, and<lb/>
the Geographic doesn't say. I<lb/>
don't even know whether they<lb/>
pronounce it properly.<lb/>
It is known, however, that<lb/>
some of the ice evaporates w hen a<lb/>
comet gets close to the sun.<lb/>
Halley's comet, incidentally,<lb/>
has a tail that is about 4 miles in<lb/>
diameter and 50 million miles<lb/>
long. Yet, we are told all of its<lb/>
cosmic dust, which may be the<lb/>
same stuff from which the<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
Vital Part<lb/>
Of School<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
"Economics is actually com-<lb/>
mon sense and making good<lb/>
choices in your personal, profes-<lb/>
sional and civil life he said.<lb/>
"A knowledge of economics<lb/>
also helps a person vote better<lb/>
Huzerford said.<lb/>
According to the Journal, the<lb/>
economically literate person<lb/>
realized there are no easy<lb/>
answers.<lb/>
The Journal's report concludes<lb/>
that economics courses can pro-<lb/>
duce economically rational<lb/>
citizens who are immune to<lb/>
economic snow jobs by politi-<lb/>
cians.<lb/>
universe was formed, would fit<lb/>
into a single suitcase.<lb/>
I'm just guessing now, but I<lb/>
would suppose that if all of its<lb/>
gases were fitted into your<lb/>
stomach, you would have a case<lb/>
of heartburn that even a suitcase<lb/>
full of Rolaids wouldn't relieve.<lb/>
At any rate, the comet's 1986<lb/>
visit is said to be among the dim-<lb/>
mest on record. It must have been<lb/>
brighter in 1910. Otherwise, my<lb/>
family probably wouldn't have<lb/>
noticed it.<lb/>
Thev sav you need binoculars<lb/>
to spot it now, and I can tell you<lb/>
that nobody in my family<lb/>
habitually went outside at night<lb/>
with field glasses.<lb/>
The so-called "Oort Cloud<lb/>
where Halley's is believed to have<lb/>
originated, is suspected of con-<lb/>
taining at least 100 billion or-<lb/>
biting comets. About half a<lb/>
dozen are discovered each year.<lb/>
There is talk of putting a per-<lb/>
son on a comet, possibly before<lb/>
Halley's next scheduled return in<lb/>
2061.<lb/>
experimenters detected hidden<lb/>
messages in the material before it<lb/>
was given to the students.<lb/>
According to Read and Vokey,<lb/>
"Several creative listening pat-<lb/>
terns of the backward passages<lb/>
could be interpreted as sounding<lb/>
like something meaningful<lb/>
Only 15 percent of the students<lb/>
involved in the experiment<lb/>
detected the phrases that had<lb/>
been heard previously by those<lb/>
directing the experiment.<lb/>
According to Read and Vokey,<lb/>
"We could Find no evidence that<lb/>
subjects are influenced either<lb/>
consciously or subconsciously by<lb/>
the semantic control of backward<lb/>
messages<lb/>
Key is mostly concerned with<lb/>
advertisers' intent to sell by<lb/>
associating products with sex.<lb/>
According to Key's studys, taken<lb/>
from American Psychologist, 95<lb/>
percent of college and males<lb/>
recognized a Playboy magazine<lb/>
advertisement one month after<lb/>
seeing the ad.<lb/>
Other findings by Sheppard,<lb/>
Standing, Conzzio and Haer<lb/>
show that most college-age males<lb/>
recognize almost all material<lb/>
shown to them.<lb/>
Professional Image<lb/>
Development<lb/>
Hairstyling for women and men<lb/>
JOANNE BRANKIN<lb/>
A New You for the New Year<lb/>
at a complimentary price<lb/>
2 makeovers<lb/>
for the price<lb/>
of one<lb/>
or<lb/>
2 Haircuts<lb/>
for the price<lb/>
of one<lb/>
756-1945<lb/>
Wed-Sat 8-6:30<lb/>
By appointment only<lb/>
Let us entertain you<lb/>
vente jfcin jn (?? I<lb/>
Professionally-<lb/>
Prepared<lb/>
Resumes<lb/>
CALL 355-6810<lb/>
5TH STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICt<lb/>
WE REPAIR TOYOTA, HONDA, VW,<lb/>
FIAT, PORSCHE, VOLVO, DATSUN,<lb/>
LOTUS, MERCEDES, BMW, AUDI<lb/>
AND OTHERS<lb/>
DIAJL<lb/>
758-1534<lb/>
167 E. 5TH<lb/>
GRXENV HA<lb/>
AEROBIC EXERCISE CLASSES<lb/>
The New Year ? The New You<lb/>
- LT?T the b"dy 5h?ppe 3?t J?<lb/>
$21.95 Tota Fitness for Today's Woman yD<lb/>
H<lb/>
Z<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
a.<lb/>
(reg. $?8)<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIALS<lb/>
(reg. $72)<lb/>
70<lb/>
O<lb/>
-n<lb/>
rn<lb/>
en<lb/>
ii<lb/>
O<lb/>
Z<lb/>
<lb/>
z<lb/>
on<lb/>
H<lb/>
c<lb/>
n<lb/>
1000's Of Movies<lb/>
For Sale Or Rent<lb/>
VHS &amp; BETA FORMATS<lb/>
Sunshine<lb/>
Video, inc.<lb/>
756-4392<lb/>
214 Arlington Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
i-t<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Campus ?East Carolina University<lb/>
? SALE AMV KVTAl WITS<lb/>
? L0CATEV MEJCT TO CAMPUS<lb/>
? ALK TO CLASSES AMV RWW<lb/>
? EmCUHClES. I i t-BEWCti WITS<lb/>
? fULLV HXM1SMEV AMV ACCESSOtUEP<lb/>
? CAKPETIV AMV AIR CCHVJT10MEV<lb/>
? K1TCHEH APPLIANCES fUttMSHEV<lb/>
? LALINVHV fACUITIES<lb/>
? 0H-S1TE HAHAGEiCHT<lb/>
? UJOtJ SECURITY PEKSOHHEl<lb/>
? KESJVEHT PAJLK1HG STICttRS<lb/>
Estate Realty Co.<lb/>
830-1040<lb/>
Due to the Fire at<lb/>
FOR HEADS ONLY<lb/>
Melody Furci and Beth Long<lb/>
Will Be Working with the Fine Staff of<lb/>
SHEAR HAIR DESIGN<lb/>
Located on 14th St. next to Sammy's Country Cooking.<lb/>
752-9706<lb/>
(Tina Furci's clients may contact Melody or Beth for more Information)<lb/>
mjp r ? . ? M ???. ? - - -<lb/>
??'<lb/>
? - - .?<lb/>
- -?????-<lb/>
- ? - <lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0004"/><lb/>
$te iEaat Kar0lttttatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
rOMLUVl NDER. Ge?enlHtumt,<lb/>
J -W S I)1 . tanagmgEdito,<lb/>
Mike 11 dwick, .?<lb/>
SCOT LX)i K, s,<lb/>
John Shannon, ???<lb/>
LORIN PASQl l . .<lb/>
DeChaNUEJohnson<lb/>
1<lb/>
Greg Winchester, n dlui?t<lb/>
Anthony Martin, am<lb/>
John Peterson, om<lb/>
Shannon Short. ???? v?<lb/>
Dfbbii- Stevens, v.?<lb/>
December 5, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Financial Aid<lb/>
Student Welfare Cheats?<lb/>
Virtually every semester 1 o to<lb/>
myself that 1 will write something<lb/>
about the ways in which the finan-<lb/>
cial aid system for higher education<lb/>
is flawed and virtually every<lb/>
semester 1 fail to do so for reasons<lb/>
that remain mysterious even to me.<lb/>
But this semester there is one aspect<lb/>
of the aid system in particular that<lb/>
has piqued my ire and so I have<lb/>
decided to keep my appointment<lb/>
with destiny.<lb/>
It is not on an infrequent basis<lb/>
that students who want to write for<lb/>
this newspaper have discovered that<lb/>
it they do so the meager wage ;<lb/>
they will earn from us will bite into<lb/>
their financial aid. 1 his is so<lb/>
because the government considers<lb/>
any wage that a student earns as<lb/>
"self -help" and thus a sum that<lb/>
disqualifies him or her from being<lb/>
considered for the full amount of<lb/>
federal or state funds. That is<lb/>
because financial aid for higher<lb/>
education is "need based mean-<lb/>
ing that only the poor and destitute<lb/>
should receive it.<lb/>
Ot course, students who confront<lb/>
the possibility of loosing financial<lb/>
aid money general!v choose not to<lb/>
become involved in working with<lb/>
the campus media or u other-<lb/>
salaried campus occupation. Never-<lb/>
theless, it is common knowledge<lb/>
that many who receive financial aid<lb/>
do, in fact, hold jobs off campus<lb/>
from which they receive a sup-<lb/>
plemental income. This is true at<lb/>
schools all over the country.<lb/>
Many people will in all likelihood<lb/>
conclude that students who conduct<lb/>
themselves in such a manner are<lb/>
welfare cheats. Strictly speaking,<lb/>
they are correct. And vet. this<lb/>
generation of "welfare cheats" has,<lb/>
by and large, come from s ;<lb/>
working class families and ;i<lb/>
were raised on traditional values.<lb/>
They have shown a measure of in-<lb/>
itiative simply by choosing to come<lb/>
to college and some ol them will<lb/>
make the Dean's List and go on to<lb/>
become MAs and PHDs. They do<lb/>
not fit the "welfare cheat"<lb/>
stereotype of the lav and shiftless<lb/>
deadbeat.<lb/>
Students who are working a job<lb/>
in addition to receiving financial<lb/>
aid are actually being ambitious. I<lb/>
have a friend who goes to Yale who<lb/>
told me of a clever scheme whereby<lb/>
he invested all of his student loans<lb/>
in money market funds which pay<lb/>
substantially higher interest rates<lb/>
than the government requires<lb/>
students to pay on their loans.<lb/>
Thus, in the end, my friend ex-<lb/>
pected to actually pay off his loans<lb/>
and make a tidy profit with the<lb/>
assistance of the government.<lb/>
O.K 1 know what you must be<lb/>
thinking. By now you're probably<lb/>
wondering if I'm trying to be ironic<lb/>
or it I even have a point to make<lb/>
here. Well, my point is simply this;<lb/>
the current financial aid regulations<lb/>
seldom prevent anyone who wants<lb/>
to from earning a second income.<lb/>
1 hev only, foster a contempt for of-<lb/>
ficialdom because they appear to<lb/>
discourage initiative and the desire<lb/>
to work. Since somehow or other<lb/>
college is supposed to teach people<lb/>
io become productive contributing<lb/>
members of society this doesnT<lb/>
make sense. The financial aid<lb/>
system should provide more<lb/>
generous rewards for people who<lb/>
do work. In the long run, however,<lb/>
what would make the most sense is<lb/>
H higher education was paid for in<lb/>
return for some kind of national<lb/>
service such as a stint in the Peace<lb/>
Corps or Vista.<lb/>
Those who have served in the<lb/>
military have enjoyed the benefits<lb/>
of the Gl Bill (rightfully so). Now it<lb/>
is time that our country recognized<lb/>
the contributions of those who have<lb/>
combated poverty, hunger and<lb/>
disease overseas and at home. More<lb/>
the point, education is the vital<lb/>
life blood of a democracy and of an<lb/>
advanced economy. Many Euro-<lb/>
an nations pay for the education<lb/>
of their citizens. The L'nited States<lb/>
should do likewise. Without a<lb/>
highly educated citizenry we will be<lb/>
bound to fall behind other advanc-<lb/>
ed nations in both economic perfor-<lb/>
mance and the rate of cultural pro-<lb/>
gress. We should stop making<lb/>
welfare cheats out of our students.<lb/>
At the very least we should not<lb/>
penalize them for working.<lb/>
Marcos Vs. Aquino<lb/>
Democracy<lb/>
Mrs. Corazon Aquino, the c;<lb/>
of anti-Marjos Filipinos, has declared<lb/>
that if elected president, she will allow<lb/>
Communists into her cabinet. <lb/>
mind, she told reporters in whai wa<lb/>
obvious appeal tor the Communi<lb/>
a coalition government. You<lb/>
gather from this that she is hersel<lb/>
Communist. "1 would he the I<lb/>
in the world to be a Communist,<lb/>
said. But Mrs. Aquino, wl<lb/>
as a law-and-order candidate in<lb/>
tion to the excesses o Presideni Marcos,<lb/>
which may or may not have ii<lb/>
assassination of her husband,<lb/>
Filipinos and the world to know<lb/>
has in mind a verv special kind i<lb/>
munist, namely "Communists (w<lb/>
nounce all forms ot violence " It Mi<lb/>
Aquino can produce Commu<lb/>
fit that description, si<lb/>
Nobel Prize for alchemy<lb/>
es in a countr so situated a :<lb/>
geop i as to be critic .<lb/>
American interests m the area. "Of 159<lb/>
' ites of the tinted Nations<lb/>
leasi 100 ai ably governed m<lb/>
 Philippines l ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 while ii<lb/>
IN n s.<lb/>
ON THE RIGHT<lb/>
B WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
The big debate about the Filipino<lb/>
engagement has begun not only<lb/>
but also here. Mrs. Jean Kirkpatrick has<lb/>
written in her column that American<lb/>
purism is causing difficulty in viewing<lb/>
the Filipino election realisticall) . V (<lb/>
asking of Marcos the kind ot behavior<lb/>
we don't ask ot other world leaders with<lb/>
whom we have normal relations, and<lb/>
this notwithstanding that Marcos heads<lb/>
a government friendly to the United<lb/>
tve rthui Schles . i<lb/>
'?? reel Journal. He<lb/>
ikes the argume<lb/>
fa . back tl<lb/>
by failing to ba ?<lb/>
. acknowledges that M: Reaj<lb/>
? Marc is as he has .<lb/>
nous r<lb/>
I : lously 5<lb/>
1 dX'? is faci exercising ex<lb/>
ized ii<lb/>
More . Mi n<lb/>
inger, there isn't any other course<lb/>
ike, because<lb/>
rnal di<lb/>
t<lb/>
' zes . ne in. So' "S<lb/>
Marcos Packing his col ruled.<lb/>
something :r;e<lb/>
iv( b wen insufficient attention<lb/>
- - ocratic procedures<lb/>
ins guarantee pleasa<lb/>
d law abiding governments<lb/>
w j- are we going to do - b we, 1<lb/>
mea Schlesingers and the Solarzes<lb/>
and the Americans for Democratic v<lb/>
pens in the Philippines<lb/>
is thai Marc s is returned'1 Returned,<lb/>
-over, in air election judged bv<lb/>
observers to have been fairly conducl<lb/>
V e should begin bv rem<lb/>
?elves that in our tune, people voting<lb/>
free!) have made disastrous political<lb/>
mistakes In German in 1932, if you<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
 r u <lb/>
Pei<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Weai<lb/>
a v -1<lb/>
Mrs<lb/>
pleb<lb/>
I<lb/>
brea<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
I'm<lb/>
trie: :<lb/>
?<lb/>
? <lb/>
 AH1HE HOUWSARfcT<lb/>
nWvj 0V6R FOOTSAUS MOST.<lb/>
i&amp; 7 ' ApveRoMOwrCANFAIAaV'<lb/>
sve<lb/>
f?<lb/>
-O<lb/>
HUM GARY flART<lb/>
"?AR?0NW (000<lb/>
M0R?VOT7AJG5<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Deficits, Debts And Eurodollars<lb/>
TW6W0RIPS0NW (NAMMATc PSMOCRAr<lb/>
BUTAtA<lb/>
ACCePT<lb/>
A PRAFf<lb/>
(WNTWJN)<lb/>
?gflra ij?rnc?vn?yx?;<lb/>
By 3A STONE<lb/>
Over the course of the past sear, both<lb/>
the federal deficit and the national debt<lb/>
have been hot topics of public debate.<lb/>
Most people, however, have remained<lb/>
largely in the dark about the most fun-<lb/>
damental issues underlying this debate.<lb/>
What, for example,is the difference bet-<lb/>
ween the federal deficit and the national<lb/>
debt and what is the impact of each on<lb/>
the national economy? Simply put, the<lb/>
federal deficit represents the difference<lb/>
between the money spent by the federal<lb/>
government in any given year and the<lb/>
revenue it receives that year. The na-<lb/>
tional debt is the cumulative total<lb/>
deficits from past years. The debt is held<lb/>
in the form of U.S. bonds and bills.<lb/>
most of which are owned by individuals<lb/>
rather than collective entities such as<lb/>
corporations.<lb/>
The graph above shows the relation-<lb/>
ship between the federal deficit, the na-<lb/>
tional debt, and the level of production<lb/>
in the U.S. economy. Over the past<lb/>
decade, the federal deficit has sometimes<lb/>
represented an increasing share of the<lb/>
gross national product; at other times, it<lb/>
has represented a diminishing propor-<lb/>
tion of GNP. The national debt, on the<lb/>
other hand, has followed a more consis-<lb/>
tent pattern. Only during the last four<lb/>
years has the national debt begun to rise<lb/>
(dramatically in relation to GNP. This<lb/>
eflects the impact of the record deficits<lb/>
ncurred by the Reagan administration.<lb/>
When the federal deficit or the na-<lb/>
tional debt rises as a percentage of GNP,<lb/>
t is growing faster than the economy;<lb/>
when it shrinks, it is growing more slow-<lb/>
than the economy, rhroughout most<lb/>
ot the 1960's and I970's, the debt grew<lb/>
more slowly than the economy, did.<lb/>
Although the government ran modes;<lb/>
deficits, the growth of the economy<lb/>
meant that the ratio of debt to GNP<lb/>
tended to decline over time. In the las;<lb/>
foui years, on the other hand, annual<lb/>
deficits have been enormous and the rate<lb/>
o increase of the debt has far outpaced<lb/>
the rate ol economic growth.<lb/>
The most obvious effect of the na-<lb/>
tional debt on the economy is servicing it<lb/>
? paying interest to the people who<lb/>
hold U.S. government bonds I verv<lb/>
year, part of the federal budget is alloted<lb/>
to paving the interest on the national<lb/>
debt As the size of the national debt has<lb/>
grown as compared to the level of GNP,<lb/>
the cost of the debt has taken ever-larger<lb/>
shares of government spending. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Dollars &amp; Sense, since the begin-<lb/>
ning of the Reagan era, interest<lb/>
payments on the debt have increased bv<lb/>
seventy billion dollars ? more than the<lb/>
sum total of al of his cuts on social<lb/>
spending. The primary recipients of<lb/>
U.S. interest payments have always been<lb/>
the nation's wealthy, among whom<lb/>
bond ownership is concentrated. But in<lb/>
the 1980's, they also include bond<lb/>
holders in other countries. Past deficits<lb/>
were largely owed to U.S. citizens. Now,<lb/>
for the first time, a large portion of the<lb/>
money is owed to foreigners.<lb/>
If the economy continues to grow<lb/>
more slowly than the national debt,<lb/>
these interest costs will continue to ac-<lb/>
count for an ever-larger proportion of<lb/>
federal spending. Given the current ad-<lb/>
ministration's unwillingness to rescind<lb/>
its tax cuts for the wealthy, and its attat-<lb/>
chmei<lb/>
ding,<lb/>
paying inten<lb/>
 it  ?<lb/>
Decembi r 191 ? Dollars A v<lb/>
i<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The tost Carolinian welconu<lb/>
expressing all points 0J vie .<lb/>
drop them by our office in tin Pui<lb/>
ttons Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance ot Jovner I ibrar,<lb/>
for purposes of verificath -n all let-<lb/>
ten must mclude the name, ma,or and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s) I,<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten <lb/>
double-spaced or neatly primed ill<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no persona,<lb/>
attacks will be permuted. Students<lb/>
facultv and staff wntmg letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
fH? l ASI AMJ<lb/>
Manu<lb/>
Hv MKX sr HPlk<lb/>
man<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
f<lb/>
1 ? Q<lb/>
.<lb/>
Pe<lb/>
U S.<lb/>
A<lb/>
Mn<lb/>
waj<lb/>
Reagai<lb/>
H -se<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
represc<lb/>
?<lb/>
Late.<lb/>
r.ea: a' I i<lb/>
from the military, ser<lb/>
the Itaiiar. errare <lb/>
have inged<lb/>
star general N -<lb/>
dOv<lb/>
<lb/>
Per? n<lb/>
Is Soci<lb/>
Bv ROBFRT Kl TIMR<lb/>
!r. 92 i presidt<lb/>
chairec: by a<lb/>
one<lb/>
?<lb/>
prograrr.<lb/>
Folio .<lb/>
me<lb/>
increased :<lb/>
Sex<lb/>
fluent retin .<lb/>
men: age<lb/>
living esca<lb/>
benefits <lb/>
. ? ?<lb/>
source " s .  x<lb/>
The resui: was<lb/>
surplus in the S<lb/>
for the r,e: 2! yeai<lb/>
ne babv r . ??<lb/>
will offset rev reree-<lb/>
"babv-bust" c<lb/>
boomers retir aftei <lb/>
ment age m ave bee-<lb/>
higher payroll taxes r . n p<lb/>
presumabiv Socia v<lb/>
good phvsica! shape ,<lb/>
centurv<lb/>
Still, if Socia. Secui ty is<lb/>
ciallv, it remains unstable ideoK ,<lb/>
and politically. The prograrr j<lb/>
dally redistribute m its impact.<lb/>
universal in its coverage, it ex <lb/>
degrading means tests. s such<lb/>
always been resented by conservati<lb/>
especially now when privatization lj<lb/>
in vogue, and politically, a lotf<lb/>
younger voters are growing skep:<lb/>
about its worth.<lb/>
The conservative critique of Sc<lb/>
Security is fourfold. First, it is argi<lb/>
people would be better off if the- j<lb/>
invest their payroll deductions, rat<lb/>
than having them compulsonly<lb/>
lected by the state. Citizens would<lb/>
more "free to choose and they mil<lb/>
well be financially better off. Secol<lb/>
,i<lb/>
M i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAAOLIMIAN<lb/>
i I VY<lb/>
nes<lb/>
dollars<lb/>
-<lb/>
n A Sense<lb/>
ipus Forum<lb/>
hrum Rules<lb/>
nes letters<lb/>
ievk va or<lb/>
?. Publica-<lb/>
?he en-<lb/>
all let-<lb/>
major and<lb/>
ss, phone number<lb/>
I etters<lb/>
" panes,<lb/>
d All<lb/>
editing for brevi-<lb/>
i libel, and no personal<lb/>
(' be permitted Students,<lb/>
an anting letters for this<lb/>
unded that they are limited<lb/>
tes.<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY !4. 1V8S<lb/>
Manufacturing Consent With McCar thy ism<lb/>
ByMARKSCHAPIRO<lb/>
Mother Jonct<lb/>
Dario Fo, the Italian author of more<lb/>
than 40 satirical plays, seems an unlikely<lb/>
threat to the security of the United<lb/>
States. One of Fo's plays. Accidental<lb/>
Death of an Anarchist, debuted on<lb/>
Broadway in 1984, but the author was<lb/>
not allowed to supervise rehearsals.<lb/>
After Fo was invited by the producers,<lb/>
the U.S. State Department denied him a<lb/>
visa, deciding that his membership in a<lb/>
prisoners' rights organization known as<lb/>
Soccorso Rosso branded him a "ter-<lb/>
rorist sympathizer After the American<lb/>
Civil Liberties Union and a dozen other<lb/>
civil liberties and theatrical groups laun-<lb/>
ched a public campaign in Fo's behalf,<lb/>
the State Department reversed itself and<lb/>
gave the playwright a visa just before his<lb/>
play's premiere. The novel approach<lb/>
taken by the play's producers may have<lb/>
been the key to the State Department's<lb/>
about-face; they claimed that denying<lb/>
Fo a visa infnnged on their ability to<lb/>
earn a living as investors in the play.<lb/>
In 1983. Hortensia Allende, the<lb/>
widow of Salvador Allende and a resi-<lb/>
dent of Mexico, was invited by several<lb/>
universities in the United States to speak<lb/>
about the role of women in the opposi-<lb/>
tion to the Chilean dictatorship. But the<lb/>
U.S. embassy in Mexico denied her a<lb/>
visa; it cited Mrs. Allende's ties to the<lb/>
World Peace Council, which State<lb/>
claims is a Soviet front. The rejection of<lb/>
Mrs. Allende's request for a visa came at<lb/>
a time when the Reagan administration<lb/>
was considering the resumption of arms<lb/>
sales to Chile. The denial had a par-<lb/>
ticularly ironic outcome: soon after-<lb/>
ward. Hortensia Allende's "successor<lb/>
Mrs. Augusto Pinochet, was Nancy<lb/>
Reagan's guest for tea at the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
In the 1960s. Nino Pasti was Italy's<lb/>
representative to the NATO Military<lb/>
Committee, stationed at the Pentagon.<lb/>
Later, he served at NATO's vice-<lb/>
supreme allied commander in Europe<lb/>
tor nuclear affairs and, after retiring<lb/>
from the military, served two terms in<lb/>
the Italian senate. But Pasti's sentiments<lb/>
have changed since his days as a four-<lb/>
star general. Now over "0 years old, he<lb/>
claims to have American military<lb/>
documents that dispute NATO's asser-<lb/>
tion of Soviet military superiority in<lb/>
Europe. After Pasti was invited by peace<lb/>
groups to speak against the cruise and<lb/>
Pershing II missile deployments, his re-<lb/>
quest for a visa was denied in the fall of<lb/>
1983. His entry into the United States,<lb/>
said the State Department, would be<lb/>
"prejudicial to the public interest<lb/>
Fo, Allende. and Pasti are three<lb/>
among thousands of foreign intellec-<lb/>
tuals, authors, and political figures who<lb/>
have been denied U.S. visas because of<lb/>
their political beliefs. The case of Farley<lb/>
Mowat, the renowned Canadian writer,<lb/>
provides another recent example.<lb/>
Last April, Mowat was snared by the<lb/>
U.S Immigration and Naturalization<lb/>
Service at Toronto's Pearson Interna-<lb/>
tional Airport before his flight to Los<lb/>
Angeles to kick off a publicity tour fo-<lb/>
his book Sea of Slaughter. The INS per<lb/>
formed a routine check of airline<lb/>
passengers against its visa lookout book<lb/>
of "excludable" aliens and discovered<lb/>
that Mowat was included. The<lb/>
Canadian-U.S. border is supposedly<lb/>
open, and Mowat did not legally require<lb/>
a visa.<lb/>
The INS refused to explain whv it ex-<lb/>
cluded Mowat, as it does with all foreign<lb/>
citizens denied entry. An anonymous<lb/>
source later issued a partial explanation:<lb/>
Mowat, the author of over a dozen<lb/>
naturalist books, was put on the INS<lb/>
"hot" list after being quoted in a 1968<lb/>
newspaper article saying that he was<lb/>
ready to defy American B-52 bombers<lb/>
with a .22 rifle during their low-level<lb/>
training runs over Newfoundland. "My<lb/>
threat still holds Mowat explained<lb/>
during an interview after the airport in-<lb/>
cident. Soon after, the immigration ser-<lb/>
vice made what it considered a con-<lb/>
ciliatory gesture, offering Mowat a one-<lb/>
shot waiver to complete his publicity<lb/>
tour. In a now-celebrated declaration of<lb/>
Canadian nationalism. Mowat retorted<lb/>
to the immigration service. "Stuff it<lb/>
(He subsequently indicated that he<lb/>
would accept the offer only if it were ac-<lb/>
companied by an apology from Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan and if he were flown into<lb/>
the country on Air Force One.) "It was a<lb/>
scurnious, scatological offer explain-<lb/>
ed Mowat, who has since written a book<lb/>
on the border controversy. My<lb/>
Discovery of America.<lb/>
As Mowat's case illustrates, some of<lb/>
the State Department's "excludables"<lb/>
are issued visas with highly restricted<lb/>
travel rights, limited to particular cities<lb/>
or special public appearances. Some are<lb/>
denied once, then admitted after another<lb/>
try. The practice makes the United<lb/>
States the only Western democracy to<lb/>
exclude foreign citizens on ideological<lb/>
grounds.<lb/>
The law keeping America pure is the<lb/>
1952 McCarran-Walter Act, which<lb/>
forms the basis for current U.S. im-<lb/>
migration law; it is described by<lb/>
playwright Arthur Miller as "one of the<lb/>
pieces of garbage left behind by the sink-<lb/>
ing of the great scow of McCarthyism<lb/>
Miller suffered his own travel problems<lb/>
in reverse when Joe McCarthy's Senate<lb/>
committee succeeded in getting his<lb/>
passport revoked in the 1950s, thereby<lb/>
preventing Miller from legally leaving<lb/>
the United States. President Truman ex-<lb/>
coriated Congress after it passed the law<lb/>
over his veto: "Seldom has a bill ex-<lb/>
hibited the distrust evidenced here for<lb/>
citizens and aliens alike<lb/>
The McCarran-Walter Act sets out 33<lb/>
reasons for excluding individuals from<lb/>
the United States, combining pro-<lb/>
stitutes, paupers, and the insane with<lb/>
ideological undesirables and homosex-<lb/>
uals. Of the two political sections in the<lb/>
Act, one permits the exclusion of in-<lb/>
dividuals associated with Communist<lb/>
party or affiliated organizations. The<lb/>
other section can be used to exclude in-<lb/>
dividuals considered a danger to the<lb/>
"welfare, safely, or security of the<lb/>
United States or whose entry is deem-<lb/>
ed "prejudicial to the public interest<lb/>
The State Department maintains what<lb/>
is probably the world's largest blacklist,<lb/>
a global computer network known as the<lb/>
Automated Visa Lookout System<lb/>
(AVLOS.)<lb/>
There are about a million names in<lb/>
AVLOS. according to the Legislative<lb/>
and intergovernmental Affairs Office of<lb/>
the State Department. The list includes<lb/>
all people considered offenders under<lb/>
the provisions of the McCarran-Walter<lb/>
Act. An estimated 40.000 to 50,000 in-<lb/>
dividuals have been judged excludable<lb/>
for ideological reasons. A classified list<lb/>
of "proscribed organizations" is in the<lb/>
Foreign Service Manual issued to<lb/>
diplomatic staff in American embassies<lb/>
and missions overseas.<lb/>
According to Charles Gordon, the list<lb/>
of individuals and organizations is com-<lb/>
piled from a number of confidential in-<lb/>
telligence sources, including the Central<lb/>
Intgelligence Agency, local informants<lb/>
and a host country's police services. The<lb/>
Royal Canadian Mounted Police, for ex-<lb/>
ample, provided the information on<lb/>
Farley Mowat that formed the basis for<lb/>
his exclusion.<lb/>
The Bureau of Consular Affairs' ex-<lb/>
cludable list includes some of the<lb/>
world's most distinguished authors and<lb/>
artists, all of whom have experienced<lb/>
visa difficulties at one time or another:<lb/>
Nobel laureates Gabriel Garcia Mar-<lb/>
quez. Pablo Neruda, and Czeslaw<lb/>
Milosz; Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes,<lb/>
English novelist Graham Greene. South<lb/>
African dissident poet Dennis Brutus,<lb/>
and Spanish filmmaker Luis Bunuel.<lb/>
Every administration since<lb/>
Eisenhower's has abused the ideological<lb/>
exclusion provision of U.S. immigration<lb/>
law. The Reagan administration,<lb/>
however, has gone a step further to limit<lb/>
public debate - most notably concerning<lb/>
its Central American policies.<lb/>
Eloquent spokespersons opposing the<lb/>
adminstratiors policies have been<lb/>
repeatedly denied visas, preventing them<lb/>
from keeping speaking engagements, ap-<lb/>
pearing at congressional hearings, or at-<lb/>
tending meetings with activists, business<lb/>
organizations, or university officials.<lb/>
Representative Barney Frank<lb/>
(D-Mass.) has challenged the ad-<lb/>
ministration with a bill that would<lb/>
revamp American visa policies and pre-<lb/>
vent the State Department from con-<lb/>
sidering its own foreign policy interest in<lb/>
deciding who is allowed to enter the<lb/>
United States. "Getting into the United<lb/>
States should not be seen as some make<lb/>
of approval says Frank.<lb/>
The American Civil Liberties Union is<lb/>
challenging several of the visa denials in<lb/>
court. Representing some of the people<lb/>
who invited Hortensia Allende, the<lb/>
ACLU is suing the State Department for<lb/>
violating their right to hear her speak.<lb/>
The ACLU also claims that the latest<lb/>
rash of exclusions are contrary to con-<lb/>
gressional intent, which was aimed at<lb/>
barring the entry of espionage agents,<lb/>
saboteurs, and active revolutionaries,<lb/>
not those with controversial political<lb/>
views.<lb/>
When people apply for visas at their<lb/>
local U.S. consulate or at border check-<lb/>
points (as is the case for Canadians),<lb/>
their names are automatically checked<lb/>
against the AVLOS memory<lb/>
bank.Membership in any proscribed<lb/>
organization is reason enough for get-<lb/>
ting on the list.<lb/>
Most excludable aliens are ultimately<lb/>
"waived in and issued visas. But once a<lb/>
name is added to AVLOS, it is nearly<lb/>
impossible to have it erased, as Mowat<lb/>
and others have discovered. The only<lb/>
guaranteed method is to prove that one's<lb/>
association with a proscribed organiza-<lb/>
tion was involuntary, or to engage in a<lb/>
ritual or repentance by demonstrating<lb/>
five years of active opposition to the<lb/>
priciples of communism. Afficionados<lb/>
of this escape clause refer to it as the<lb/>
"Koestler Amendment named after<lb/>
Hungarian author Arthur Koestler, who<lb/>
defected, renounced his ties to the Com-<lb/>
munist party, and wrote about his<lb/>
negative experiences in the Soviet bloc<lb/>
for the next 40 yars.<lb/>
The most haunting aspect of the<lb/>
Automated Visa Lookout System is that<lb/>
an individual may never know what ac-<lb/>
tivity qualifies him or her for exclusion.<lb/>
Like poor Josef K. in Franz Kafka's The<lb/>
Trial, an alien is never informed of the<lb/>
specific cause of a denial.<lb/>
Critics charge that U.S. visa policies<lb/>
violate the human rights provisions of<lb/>
the 1975 Helsinki accords, which<lb/>
guarantee the free flow of ideas between<lb/>
nations. Helsinki Watch, the Fund for<lb/>
Free Expression, the Association of<lb/>
American Publishers' International<lb/>
Freedom to Publish Committee, and<lb/>
more than 30 civil liberties, political,<lb/>
and cultural groups have organized the<lb/>
Coalition for Free Trade in Ideas to<lb/>
repeal the ideological exclusion sections<lb/>
of the McCarran-Walter Act. PEN, the<lb/>
international writers' group, will hold its<lb/>
48th congress in New York this Januarv,<lb/>
and a score of excludable writers will be<lb/>
invited as a test of the law<lb/>
Satirist Dario Fo offers comfort to the<lb/>
excluded. Unable to cross the American<lb/>
frontier last year to address a Free Trade<lb/>
in Ideas conference, he spoke via<lb/>
satellite from a Toronto television<lb/>
studio. Appearing on a screen in a<lb/>
Washington meeting hall, Fo told the<lb/>
conference: "The fact that the State<lb/>
Department deniedthe visa is<lb/>
something which makes me very proud.<lb/>
I took a look at the list of people denied<lb/>
visas to the United States, and :her. I<lb/>
realized that I am in beautiful<lb/>
company<lb/>
Carlos Fuentes, who has faced the I<lb/>
ful experience of applying and reapply-<lb/>
mg for waivers to enter tl : i<lb/>
since he was first denied a visa in 1961,<lb/>
also spoke out at the conference.In I<lb/>
talk, Fuentes captured the absur- I<lb/>
U.S. policy. "It is hard to imagine<lb/>
Fuentes declared, "that the insi I<lb/>
of this great republic, its den<lb/>
edifice, its vast economy and<lb/>
power, can in any wa be endangered<lb/>
the physical presence of Gra<lb/>
Greene, Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Da'<lb/>
Fo, or Mrs. Salvador Alende. Or. ' .<lb/>
contrary: experience has :augh: <lb/>
that it is the application of the exc<lb/>
sionary clause that endangers the<lb/>
republic, mocks democracy, demora.<lb/>
the true friends of the United States, and<lb/>
offers undeserved aces to the S<lb/>
UnionThis is a clause that be I .<lb/>
the realm of sadomasochism, noi I<lb/>
legal ledgers of a self-respecting, power-<lb/>
ful d e  ?<lb/>
Is Social Security System Really Over The Hill?<lb/>
.<lb/>
By ROBERT KLTTNER<lb/>
In 1982, a presidential commission<lb/>
chaired by Alan Greenspan undertook<lb/>
one of history's great rescue operations,<lb/>
the stabilization of the Social Security-<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Following the commission's recom-<lb/>
mendations, Congress pared benefits,<lb/>
increased payroll taxes, made half of<lb/>
Social Security benefits taxable for af-<lb/>
fluent retirees, phased in a higher retire-<lb/>
ment age and modified the cost-of-<lb/>
living escalator so that Social Security<lb/>
benefits can increase only as fast as the<lb/>
growth of real wages (which are the<lb/>
source of Social Security revenue).<lb/>
The result was to create a large<lb/>
surplus in the Social Security accounts<lb/>
for the next 20 years, during which time<lb/>
new baby boomers in the work force<lb/>
will offset new retirees of the previous<lb/>
"baby-bust" cohort. By the time baby<lb/>
boomers retire, after 2010, the retire-<lb/>
ment age will have been raised and<lb/>
higher payroll taxes put in place;<lb/>
presumably Social Security will be in<lb/>
good physical shape well into the 21st<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Still, if Social Security is stable finan-<lb/>
cially, it remains unstable ideologically<lb/>
and politically. The program is substan-<lb/>
tially redistributive in its impact, but<lb/>
universal in its coverage; it exacts no<lb/>
degrading means tests. As such, it has<lb/>
always been resented by conservatives,<lb/>
especially now when privatization is so<lb/>
in vogue, and politically, a lot of<lb/>
younger voters are growing skeptical<lb/>
about its worth.<lb/>
The conservative critique of Social<lb/>
Security is fourfold. First, it is argued,<lb/>
people would be better off if they could<lb/>
invest their payroll deductions, rather<lb/>
than having them compulsorily col-<lb/>
lected by the state. Citizens would be<lb/>
more "free to choose and they might<lb/>
well be financially better off. Second,<lb/>
conservatives contend that Social<lb/>
Security was too good a deal for the<lb/>
first generation of pensioners, and a<lb/>
bad deal for young people just entering<lb/>
the workforce.<lb/>
The founding generation got to pay<lb/>
very low taxes, but reaped rising<lb/>
benefits in inflation-sheltered dollars.<lb/>
The younger generation, in contrast,<lb/>
must pay very high payroll taxes, and<lb/>
will collect benefits that cannot possibly<lb/>
keep pace, because the ratio of workers<lb/>
to retirees keeps falling.<lb/>
Third, despite the 1983 congressional<lb/>
restructuring, Social Security is held to<lb/>
be economically destructive. It sup-<lb/>
posedly depletes the savings rate, drags<lb/>
down economic growth and cannot<lb/>
possibly fulfill its promises without a<lb/>
confiscatory rate of taxation.<lb/>
Finally, it is argued that Social<lb/>
Security is redistributive the wrong way;<lb/>
it taxes the working people, many of<lb/>
whom are poor, to pay the elderly,<lb/>
many of whom are rich.<lb/>
The remedy, for conservatives, is to<lb/>
privatize retirement income, as much<lb/>
and as fast as possible, and to let Social<lb/>
Security gradually metamorphose into a<lb/>
means-tested program for the cer-<lb/>
tifiably needy.<lb/>
Peter Ferrara of the Cato Institute,<lb/>
formerly at the Reagan White House, is<lb/>
a prime exponent of this view. He wants<lb/>
to create a "super-IRA even more<lb/>
tax-sheltered than the present IRA, and<lb/>
allow people to opt out of Social Securi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Politically, the danger to Social<lb/>
Security is not that such proposals will<lb/>
be taken seriously in the short run, but<lb/>
that as the upper-middle-class public<lb/>
gradually comes to rely on IRA's,<lb/>
Keogh plans, so-called "401-Ks<lb/>
private pension plans and similar tax-<lb/>
subsidized private retirement schemes,<lb/>
the broad constituency for Social<lb/>
Security will gradually erode. The tax<lb/>
subsidy to privatized retirement<lb/>
schemes will exceed $100 billion in 1986.<lb/>
Over ha'f of all newly retired couples<lb/>
have retirement incomes from private<lb/>
pensions.<lb/>
Those critics wringing their hands<lb/>
about the distributive inequalities of<lb/>
Social Security would do well to con-<lb/>
sider the topsy-turvy distributive effects<lb/>
of tax-subsidized private retirement.<lb/>
Social Security is regressive in the way it<lb/>
collects taxes, but highly progressive in<lb/>
the distribution of its benefits. But the<lb/>
tax subsidy to private retirement<lb/>
schemes is 100 percent regressive.<lb/>
The average recipient of a private<lb/>
pension is far more affluent than the<lb/>
average retiree. IRAs are ubiquitous<lb/>
among upper-income professionals, but<lb/>
are used by less than 20 percent of peo-<lb/>
ple with incomes below $18,000. .And<lb/>
Keogh plans and 401-Ks are used<lb/>
primarily by doctors, lawyers and in-<lb/>
dependent business people with enough<lb/>
discretionary income to shelter.<lb/>
A $100,000-a-year lawyer who socks<lb/>
away $15,000 in a Keogh plan needs to<lb/>
pay income tax on only $85,000. The<lb/>
tax that he didn't pay is paid by all those<lb/>
low-income workers straining under the<lb/>
burden of Social Security payroll taxes.<lb/>
Indeed, the $20,000-a-year worker pays<lb/>
both Social Security and income tax on<lb/>
all his earnings; the $100,000 profes-<lb/>
sional who shunts pan of his income in-<lb/>
to tax-sheltered savings pays neither tax<lb/>
on those earnings.<lb/>
We have slipped into a multi-tiered<lb/>
retirement system in which the haves are<lb/>
being subsidized by other taxpayers to<lb/>
provide for their own retirement, while<lb/>
the have-less class is still very heavily<lb/>
dependent on Social Security. There is a<lb/>
real emerging danger to the public pro-<lb/>
gram. As the upper-middle class comes<lb/>
to rely more heavily on tax-sheltered<lb/>
private income schemes, Social Security<lb/>
will loom smaller.<lb/>
Most of the conservative criticisms of<lb/>
Social Security are primarily<lb/>
ideological, not factual. Economically,<lb/>
there is no proven effect of Social<lb/>
Security on savings rates. Europe has a<lb/>
much more generous Social Security-<lb/>
system and much higher private savings,<lb/>
too. Fiscally, Social Security should be<lb/>
quite stable well into the next century,<lb/>
thanks to the 1983 amendments, and if<lb/>
wages moderate, so will Social Security<lb/>
pay-outs.<lb/>
My generation will indeed get a lower<lb/>
return from Social Security investment<lb/>
than my parents' did, but that was by-<lb/>
design. The program's designers<lb/>
recognized that pay-outs would have to<lb/>
be adequate to coax older workers out<lb/>
of the work force, even if the first<lb/>
generation paid its dues in the Great<lb/>
Depression.<lb/>
The one element of the conservative<lb/>
critique that has real power, though, is<lb/>
the last one. Payroll taxes, especially on<lb/>
the working poor, are too high, and in-<lb/>
defensibly regressive. Rich retirees do<lb/>
get Social Security benefits (though only<lb/>
about 10 percent of Social Security reci-<lb/>
pients earn even $25,000, and rich<lb/>
retirees get even more subsidy via tax-<lb/>
sheltered retirement income). The<lb/>
young are indeed increasingly overtax-<lb/>
ed, and skeptical.<lb/>
But the remedy is to change the way<lb/>
we finance and tax Social Security, not<lb/>
to privatize the whole program. A big<lb/>
exemption on income subject to payroll<lb/>
tax, or a partial shift of Social Security<lb/>
finance to general revenue sources, or<lb/>
even to a value-added tax. would solve<lb/>
the regressivity problem. Making Social<lb/>
Security checks fully subject to the in-<lb/>
come tax above a moderate income<lb/>
threshold ? say $15,000 a year ?<lb/>
would deal with much of the millionaire<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
As the upper-middle class relies more<lb/>
heavily on retirement income, defenders<lb/>
of Social Security need to shore up the<lb/>
program's political vulnerability.<lb/>
Defenders need as allies today's young<lb/>
workers, and those workers deserve a<lb/>
financial break.Why not remove some<lb/>
of the tax subsidy now going to<lb/>
economically inefficient private retire-<lb/>
ment schemes such as the IRA and use<lb/>
the money to reduce payroll taxes on<lb/>
moderate-income workers? and why not<lb/>
fully tax Social Security benefits, the<lb/>
same way we tax private retirement<lb/>
benefits?<lb/>
Even with its flaws, Social Security<lb/>
remains a successful and efficient form<lb/>
of social income. It has allowed tens of<lb/>
millions of working Americans to enjoy<lb/>
a dignified retirement. It has reduced<lb/>
the poverty ratio of elderlv people to<lb/>
that of the general population. In<lb/>
evaluating the criticism of Social Securi-<lb/>
ty and its remaining flaws, one always<lb/>
needs to ask: Is the critic out to perfect<lb/>
the program or to dismantle it?<lb/>
6W0,? fM 6tAP WU'Rg PMALW H TOUCH WITH TWfiST<lb/>
1<lb/>
? <lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
Congress Makes Students Pay Taxes<lb/>
News Bureau Photo<lb/>
Street Artist<lb/>
ECU senior Donald Rees of Philadelphia, Pa letters a new sin<lb/>
on "Greek Street" on the ECU campus. Greek Street is a<lb/>
pedestrian walk-way and catering place for students between<lb/>
classes. Rees is painting the logo of the honor and service society.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi.<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) -<lb/>
Students are returning to campus<lb/>
this month to find themselves in a<lb/>
new role: as taxpayers.<lb/>
Thanks to congressional inac-<lb/>
tion in December, for example,<lb/>
grad students who get tuition or<lb/>
fees paid in return for teaching or<lb/>
research work are going to have<lb/>
taxes withheld for the first time<lb/>
and will have less take-home pay<lb/>
starting this month.<lb/>
In addition, all students who<lb/>
get scholarship, grant, stipend or<lb/>
fellowship money that they don't<lb/>
use for tuition soon will be sub-<lb/>
ject to higher taxes if the Senate<lb/>
approves the new tax reform bill<lb/>
the House passed in December.<lb/>
But educators, who are<lb/>
scrambling to undo the tax<lb/>
damage done to students over the<lb/>
holidays, hope the damage will be<lb/>
temporary.<lb/>
For the time being, however,<lb/>
the Internal Revenue Service will<lb/>
consider grad students' tuition<lb/>
and fee remissions as taxable in-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Some colleges will begin<lb/>
withholding taxes from fee remis-<lb/>
sions this week.<lb/>
The reason is that Congress<lb/>
could not agree to extend the tax<lb/>
exemption on remissions before it<lb/>
recessed in December.<lb/>
"You're going to be taxed on<lb/>
money you don't even receive<lb/>
United States Student Associa-<lb/>
tion (L'SSA) lobbyist Kathy Ozer<lb/>
laments.<lb/>
Tom Butts, i -crsity of<lb/>
Michigan lohb. imates the<lb/>
average student will have S100<lb/>
per month les- take-home pay<lb/>
under currr .ite because of<lb/>
the new re- - ilicies.<lb/>
Help keep<lb/>
America<lb/>
looking<lb/>
good.<lb/>
SB&amp;<lb/>
!<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
'?<lb/>
i<lb/>
?$<lb/>
No one was willing to guess<lb/>
how many students nationwide<lb/>
will now find their take-home pay<lb/>
reduced, but Butts thinks some<lb/>
1,300 grad assistants will be af-<lb/>
fected at Michigan.<lb/>
Withholding, moreover, is<lb/>
"going to be a terribly expensive<lb/>
thing to administer maintains<lb/>
Indiana University adminstrator<lb/>
Sheila Cooper.<lb/>
The burden will be even<lb/>
heavier on out-of-state students,<lb/>
who have to pay more taxes<lb/>
because they are subject to higher<lb/>
tuition rates. "It's terribly un-<lb/>
fair Cooper contends.<lb/>
Although Indiana intends to<lb/>
start withholding taxes in<lb/>
January, it's not certain how<lb/>
many schools will do so initially.<lb/>
"I don't think they (colleges)<lb/>
will withhold until it is definite<lb/>
there will be no extension of the<lb/>
exemption Ozer speculates.<lb/>
The same problem came up last<lb/>
year when Congress delayed ex-<lb/>
tending the tax exemptions, and<lb/>
many schools waited until a law<lb/>
was passed.<lb/>
Lobbyists expect Congress will<lb/>
extend the exemption when it<lb/>
reconvenes this month and make<lb/>
the exemption retroactive. "The<lb/>
question is when Cooper says.<lb/>
While the lobbyists say there's<lb/>
little organized opposition to the<lb/>
remission exemptions, they fret<lb/>
"it could get lost in the shuffle"<lb/>
observes Sheldon Steinbach,<lb/>
lawyer for the American Council<lb/>
on Education (ACE).<lb/>
He adds remissions could<lb/>
become a casualty of congres-<lb/>
sional deficit-cutting fervor.<lb/>
But lobbyists are attaching bills<lb/>
to extend the tax exemptions to<lb/>
Hooker Memorial Christian Churrii<lb/>
Dirple. of Chiiat)<lb/>
1111 Greenville Blvd 756-22 7 5<lb/>
"as many bills as possible" to<lb/>
assure its passage, Steinbach ex-<lb/>
plains.<lb/>
Steinbach is less certain than<lb/>
other lobbyists that Congress will<lb/>
restore the exemption. He feels<lb/>
the odds are about 5050.<lb/>
But one of the bills that would<lb/>
restore the exemption - the new<lb/>
tax reform act passed by the<lb/>
House and approved by the presi-<lb/>
dent in December - would tax all<lb/>
kinds of student aid, except<lb/>
Guaranteed Student Loans.<lb/>
If the bill passes in its present<lb/>
form, students would have to<lb/>
declare aid money they don't use<lb/>
to pay for tuition or fees as tax-<lb/>
able income.<lb/>
In other words, if a student got<lb/>
a $2,500 Pell Grant, and used<lb/>
$2,000 of it to pay college costs,<lb/>
he or she would have to declare<lb/>
$500 worth of income that could<lb/>
be taxed.<lb/>
Student aid has already beer<lb/>
diminished by inflation, so taxing<lb/>
it will mean even more hardship<lb/>
for students in making ends mee;<lb/>
Steinbach believes.<lb/>
But observers note soi<lb/>
students' outside earnings<lb/>
aid together often keep then<lb/>
under the poverty line, thus spar<lb/>
lng them from paying taxes.<lb/>
Malpass Muffler<lb/>
$ 2616 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
Oil Change Special<lb/>
$11.99<lb/>
Includes 'liter and up to 5 quas <lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Y<lb/>
"In essentials<lb/>
In non-essentials<lb/>
In all things, ion<lb/>
- Special Classes For C allege Students<lb/>
4tk M I 9:45 a.m. Christian Education (all ages)<lb/>
R?v h Vann Katghi 11.00 a.m. Worship- Open Communion<lb/>
Needs You<lb/>
Work Your Own Hours<lb/>
NO Weekends<lb/>
Easy to Learn<lb/>
Apply 1104 Clark Si.<lb/>
8:00-5:00 Mon-Fri<lb/>
No Phone Calls, Please<lb/>
sp<lb/>
&amp;&amp;<lb/>
NEW EXPANDED AREA<lb/>
?fc<lb/>
is<lb/>
Co <lb/>
US Htyy<lb/>
"?mHiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiw<lb/>
?Vs<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
0<lb/>
2711 East 10th St<lb/>
758-9999<lb/>
N tO<lb/>
I CD<lb/>
SUBS SOLD FROM<lb/>
11 AM 'til 4 PM<lb/>
I RT33<lb/>
ittii???m,Mi<lb/>
a.<lb/>
Q<lb/>
Q<lb/>
O<lb/>
8 DIFFERENT<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
FREE PEPSIS WITH<lb/>
EVERY PIZZA<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
Just Ask For<lb/>
"DOUBLE DEAL"<lb/>
TWO 14" PIZZAS<lb/>
ALOT MORE . . .<lb/>
FOR A LITTLE MORE!<lb/>
Cheese 9 00<lb/>
1 Item 10.OO<lb/>
2 Item 11 00<lb/>
3 Item 12.35<lb/>
4 Item 13.70<lb/>
$1.35 per extra item<lb/>
Z ?<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
co I<lb/>
<lb/>
 x<lb/>
? o<lb/>
Nte<lb/>
KS<lb/>
o?<lb/>
iiiim<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
YORK RD<lb/>
 Q<lb/>
I cC<lb/>
 cc<lb/>
I C<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
I o<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
NEW HOURS!<lb/>
HOURS: SUN-THURS 11 AM to 1 AM<lb/>
FRI&amp; SAT 11 AM to 2 AM<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
t.<lb/>
<lb/>
fflimmimmimmiimias<lb/>
'LIMITED DFMVrRY RFAi<lb/>
<lb/>
III<lb/>
um?<lb/>
t?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Buy a 16" 3-item Pizza<lb/>
for the price of a 14"<lb/>
3 item Pizza plus 4 FREE<lb/>
16 oz. PEPSIS<lb/>
Get a 12" 1-item<lb/>
Pizza plus 2 FREE 16 oz.<lb/>
PEPSIS for only $5.00!<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
K I New, Hurr?u<lb/>
spr ig whi<lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
resea<lb/>
toi ? .<lb/>
 '<lb/>
Bra" ;<lb/>
The<lb/>
-<lb/>
j<lb/>
Tcacl <lb/>
wem<lb/>
made<lb/>
<lb/>
Bre er. In<lb/>
Brev.tr<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
did<lb/>
Belie<lb/>
size : J<lb/>
have a ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
man<lb/>
was<lb/>
?<lb/>
sajd<lb/>
If Bra<lb/>
project va .<lb/>
might not hav<lb/>
ECL had<lb/>
had '<lb/>
and<lb/>
could bcgii<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Vve<lb/>
various pla.<lb/>
sity Bratton said. "M I<lb/>
stored in the basemer.<lb/>
ing Dormitory and<lb/>
closets<lb/>
Fortunately.<lb/>
the catalog<lb/>
newspapers ai d<lb/>
publisr s<lb/>
1909 were a-<lb/>
Librarv. aj<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"Fr e very<lb/>
we've had som?<lb/>
put" Bra<lb/>
"We had, aftei 3 -<lb/>
called The Tra.<lb/>
Quarterly. It ha(<lb/>
teachers and r<lb/>
had a section on wha I<lb/>
were doing, a:<lb/>
annual; the spr <lb/>
ed all the lists a<lb/>
students<lb/>
She also spenl a<lb/>
the stale a<lb/>
"From the time we wer<lb/>
until 1954,<lb/>
dent of pub; c <lb/>
law, the<lb/>
of trustees B i<lb/>
ev ery one<lb/>
 J<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0007"/><lb/>
rHEEASlAkOI IMAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
ay Taxes I ECU Publishes Its First Official History<lb/>
In other words, if a student got<lb/>
0 Fell Grant, and used<lb/>
pa college costs,<lb/>
would hae to declare<lb/>
v ? income that could<lb/>
HI News Bureau<lb/>
.in alread been flat ion, so taxing vcn more hardship naking ends meet,<lb/>
sves<lb/>
note some -  earnings and keep them<lb/>
us par-g taxes<lb/>
PASSMUFFLER f<lb/>
i East 10th Street<lb/>
IM.C 27834<lb/>
Chonge Special<lb/>
$11.99<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
11 f J<lb/>
knocks<lb/>
You<lb/>
Own Hours<lb/>
ekends<lb/>
i Learn<lb/>
?tY<lb/>
S<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
ZA<lb/>
cessary<lb/>
or<lb/>
EAL"<lb/>
ZZAS<lb/>
'ORE<lb/>
9.00<lb/>
10.00<lb/>
1.00<lb/>
2.35<lb/>
13.70<lb/>
'a item<lb/>
AM to 1 AM<lb/>
to 2 AM<lb/>
ELIVERY<lb/>
ARFA<lb/>
East Carolina University will<lb/>
reach yet another milestone this<lb/>
spring when its first official<lb/>
history is published.<lb/>
The book, titled "East<lb/>
Carolina University: The For-<lb/>
mative Years, 1907-1982 was<lb/>
researched and written by Mary<lb/>
Jo Bratton, professor and direc-<lb/>
tor of graduate studies for the<lb/>
ECU Department of History.<lb/>
Bratton is not sure how she<lb/>
ended up with the project. "1 had<lb/>
not written an institutional<lb/>
history before she said. "My<lb/>
field is in southern cultural and<lb/>
intellectual history, so 1 have a<lb/>
general background in many of<lb/>
the factors involved in this<lb/>
The book covers ECU's first 75<lb/>
years - from 1907, when the bill<lb/>
establishing East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers Training School was<lb/>
passed in the legislature, until<lb/>
1982.<lb/>
"You've got to stop<lb/>
somewhere Bratton said. "1<lb/>
went through 1982 because that<lb/>
made it a convenient 75-year<lb/>
history<lb/>
The book was the brainchild of<lb/>
former Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer. In the summer of 1980,<lb/>
Brewer was preparing for ECU's<lb/>
75th anniversary celebration,<lb/>
which was scheduled for 1982.<lb/>
Needing information, he reached<lb/>
for the university's official<lb/>
history only to discover that one<lb/>
didn't exist.<lb/>
Believing that an institution the<lb/>
size and stature of ECU should<lb/>
have a written history, Brewer in-<lb/>
structed the office of academic<lb/>
affairs to prepare one. The chair-<lb/>
man of the history department<lb/>
was contacted and "eventually it<lb/>
trickled down to me Bratton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
If Bratton had known what the<lb/>
project was going to involve, she<lb/>
might not have accepted it. Since<lb/>
ECU had no archives, Bratton<lb/>
had to first find the documents<lb/>
and organize them before she<lb/>
could begin writing. That task<lb/>
took a year.<lb/>
"We had documents filed in<lb/>
various places all over the univer-<lb/>
sity Bratton said. "Most were<lb/>
stored in the basement of Flem-<lb/>
ing Dormitory and in various<lb/>
closets<lb/>
Fortunately, complete files of<lb/>
the catalogs, bulletins, student<lb/>
newspapers and yearbooks<lb/>
published by the university since<lb/>
1909 were available at Joyner<lb/>
Library, and Bratton read all of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"From the very beginning,<lb/>
we've had some very good<lb/>
publications Bratton said.<lb/>
"We had, after 1914, a quarterly<lb/>
called The Training School<lb/>
Quarterly. It had articles for<lb/>
teachers and future teachers; it<lb/>
had a section on what the alumni<lb/>
were doing, and it served as an<lb/>
annual; the spring issue contain-<lb/>
ed all the lists and pictures of the<lb/>
students<lb/>
She also spent a lot of time at<lb/>
the state archives in Raleigh.<lb/>
"From the time we were founded<lb/>
until 1954, the state superinten-<lb/>
dent of public instruction was, by<lb/>
law, the chairman of our board<lb/>
of trustees Bratton said. "In<lb/>
every one of those superinten-<lb/>
dent's files, there are a number of<lb/>
files on East Carolina<lb/>
Another valuable resource was<lb/>
people: former students, faculty,<lb/>
staff and administrators. "I was<lb/>
fortunate enough to be able to<lb/>
talk with the last five presidents<lb/>
or chancellors Bratton said.<lb/>
"Those who I haven't talked<lb/>
with, I've talked with a member<lb/>
of their family<lb/>
Aware that memories can fade<lb/>
with time, Bratton relied on the<lb/>
written word whenever possible.<lb/>
"What the oral history does is<lb/>
add another dimension that you<lb/>
don't get out of the press account<lb/>
or out of the records Bratton<lb/>
said. "A lot of times, you get the<lb/>
underlying reasons for what hap-<lb/>
pened.<lb/>
"I've talked with a number of<lb/>
people who since I began this<lb/>
project have died Bratton add-<lb/>
ed. "I'm very glad I was able to<lb/>
preserve a lot of their memories,<lb/>
many of which I could not incor-<lb/>
porate directly into the<lb/>
manuscript, but they're there in<lb/>
the University Archives for other<lb/>
people who might want to do<lb/>
research<lb/>
The book included many battle<lb/>
scars from ECU's first 75 years,<lb/>
as well as the institution's suc-<lb/>
cesses. "That's been one of the<lb/>
challenges of writing this<lb/>
history Bratton said. "We have<lb/>
a very excellent historical record<lb/>
of achievement. Like any institu-<lb/>
tion or individual that is 75 years<lb/>
old, we have chapters where we<lb/>
have not been as successful. I<lb/>
have included those in the<lb/>
book<lb/>
Bratton organized the book<lb/>
around the four names ECU has<lb/>
had. "First we were a two-year<lb/>
teachers training school with two<lb/>
years of college, two years of<lb/>
high school. That was called East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training<lb/>
School. Next we were East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College, then<lb/>
we were East Carolina College<lb/>
and then East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty. So that presented me with a<lb/>
very obvious division of the book<lb/>
because it's not just a change in<lb/>
name, it's a change in function,<lb/>
responsibility, degrees, programs<lb/>
and everything<lb/>
The book is unique in that each<lb/>
division includes a chapter on<lb/>
campus life. Most institutional<lb/>
histories, Bratton said, relegate<lb/>
only one chapter to its students.<lb/>
"I think that's one of the most<lb/>
important parts of the book<lb/>
Bratton said. "It's more of a<lb/>
social history - not just the recor-<lb/>
ding of names ? but their major<lb/>
assumptions, their values, what<lb/>
they were trying to do, what their<lb/>
concerns were<lb/>
The history is written in such a<lb/>
way that it can be enjoyed by<lb/>
both alumni and scholars, Brat-<lb/>
ton said. Footnotes have been in-<lb/>
cluded for those who are in-<lb/>
terested in sources. "I hope it will<lb/>
please the alumni, because I have<lb/>
written it with them in mind<lb/>
she said. "I am eager for the<lb/>
alumni to embrace the pride in<lb/>
their alma mater that they have a<lb/>
right to<lb/>
Bratton completed the<lb/>
manuscript in 1984. "It's taken<lb/>
up this long to go through the<lb/>
publication process she said.<lb/>
"It's a long book, and it takes a<lb/>
long time to get every stage<lb/>
done<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell,<lb/>
who has read the manuscript,<lb/>
says Bratton has captured "the<lb/>
essence of ECU" in her work.<lb/>
"It's a document that anybody<lb/>
who's had any association with<lb/>
ECU will enjoy Howell said.<lb/>
"It's an extraordinarily well-<lb/>
documented and well-written<lb/>
book<lb/>
Included in the book's 550<lb/>
pages is an extensive index and<lb/>
appendix. "It's going to be a full<lb/>
index Bratton said. "It's im-<lb/>
portant that people should be<lb/>
able to find themselves or their<lb/>
great-aunts, or their grand-<lb/>
fathers, or whoever<lb/>
The appendix will include lists<lb/>
of all members of the board of<lb/>
trustees, student government<lb/>
presidents, yearbook and<lb/>
newspaper editors, and alumni<lb/>
officers and their dates of service.<lb/>
The book will be bound in deep<lb/>
royal purple cloth, with gold let-<lb/>
tering. "That's our official color,<lb/>
not lavender Bratton said. "I<lb/>
spent a whole afternoon over in<lb/>
the art department going through<lb/>
their color charts to get the right<lb/>
color<lb/>
The title of the book will ap-<lb/>
pear on the spine; the seal will be<lb/>
stamped on the front.<lb/>
The book is being printed by<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Press in Chapel Hill and publish-<lb/>
ed and marketed by the ECU's<lb/>
Alumni Association.<lb/>
"When the leadership of the<lb/>
Alumni Association saw the<lb/>
depth of the research and the<lb/>
readability of Dr. Bratton's<lb/>
manuscript, we asked to be<lb/>
publishers because we were proud<lb/>
of the story this volume tells<lb/>
said James L. Lanier, Jr vice<lb/>
chancellor for Institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement.<lb/>
Lanier says the book will play<lb/>
an important role in the future of<lb/>
ECU. "I think anyone who reads<lb/>
Bratton's accounts of our pro-<lb/>
gress in 75 years will more clearly<lb/>
understand our future potential<lb/>
for service and achievement. We<lb/>
often hear the phrase that East<lb/>
Carolina is destined to become<lb/>
one of the great young univer-<lb/>
sities of the south. Bratton's<lb/>
work certainly defines the foun-<lb/>
dation upon which that recogni-<lb/>
tion will be based<lb/>
Don Leggett, assistant to the<lb/>
vice chancellor for Institutional<lb/>
Advancement for University<lb/>
Relations and Alumni Affairs, is<lb/>
also excited about the book. "As<lb/>
our alumni know. East Carolina<lb/>
University is a unique place, and<lb/>
an ECU education is a unique ex-<lb/>
perience. Much of the specialnes<lb/>
of ECU derives from its unique<lb/>
history. We're happy to have the<lb/>
story recorded now and to be able<lb/>
to make it available to our alum-<lb/>
ni<lb/>
Fran'  '?<lb/>
outdo<lb/>
hbttXlAH&amp;t RESTAURANT<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
In Greenville<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
EXTRAVAGANZA<lb/>
$387 pt person<lb/>
Serving:<lb/>
Lunch 11:30 - 2:00<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
Sunday Buffet 11:30-2<lb/>
Dinner 5:30-10:00<lb/>
7 Days A Week<lb/>
Concun, Mexico March 8, 1986<lb/>
Air Travel From Miami<lb/>
7 Nights Hotel Including Taxes<lb/>
Transfers From Airport<lb/>
Bahamas Cruise March 9, 1986<lb/>
4 Days of Cruising in the Bahamas<lb/>
All Meals and Entertainment on Ship<lb/>
Port Taxes and Gratuities<lb/>
'Our game and fresh seafood menu<lb/>
ivailable for lunch "<lb/>
$3S6 per person<lb/>
)W<lb/>
Space Limited<lb/>
Make Your Deposits N<lb/>
Come ir tor brochure<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC<lb/>
3i9 Co'anche Sfree Gre??nv;lie N C<lb/>
Phone 757 0234<lb/>
2516<lb/>
752-9913<lb/>
E. huh St<lb/>
Mixed Beerases<lb/>
s5SKkzyszzxzzssJ?<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
W?<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
Upcoming Events<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
(0<lb/>
o<lb/>
i,(lM'<lb/>
t0&amp;<lb/>
00<lb/>
,?<lb/>
?M<lb/>
fcjf<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
VOT'<lb/>
Films Committee:<lb/>
Ain't MisbehaviiT<lb/>
Paris, Texas<lb/>
A View To A Kill<lb/>
Student ID's<lb/>
Making of Student ID's<lb/>
Wed Jan. 15<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Wed Jan. 15<lb/>
8:00p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Fri. &amp;Sat.<lb/>
7 p.m. &amp;9p.m.<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 13<lb/>
2:30p.m.<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 15<lb/>
3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
ART PRINT<lb/>
EXHIBIT AND SALE<lb/>
Art Prints, Laser Prints,<lb/>
and Contemporary Photo Art<lb/>
DATE: January 13-17, 1986<lb/>
PLACE: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
TIME: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Mattini<lb/>
Features: Rock Star Photos<lb/>
Movie Star Photos<lb/>
Wildlife Prints<lb/>
Buttons<lb/>
Available, Silver and Wood Frames<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
The Underground:<lb/>
For Lunch<lb/>
Tuesdays at 1:30 p.m<lb/>
Rock world Videos<lb/>
Thursdays at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Assorted Movie Shorts<lb/>
gathering place<lb/>
- - ?-?<lb/>
? <lb/>
? ? ?? ' - - ? - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
I'll 1 sAkoi inian<lb/>
ANl ARY 14, 1986<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING: We ofter ex<lb/>
perience in typing resumes, theses<lb/>
technical documents, and term<lb/>
papers We manage and merge your<lb/>
names and addresses into merged<lb/>
letters, labels, envelopes or rolodex<lb/>
cards. Our prices are extremely<lb/>
reasonable and we always offer a 15<lb/>
percent discount to ECU stuaents S<lb/>
&amp; F Professional Computer Co<lb/>
(back of Franklin's 115 E 5th St<lb/>
757 0472<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 pair of Men's Lange<lb/>
Ski Boots s.ze ?; . Like new $95<lb/>
Call 757 0273 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE : Twin size mattress, box<lb/>
springs and frame S50 pr.ce neg<lb/>
Call 757 3325<lb/>
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE:<lb/>
Emerald Isle NC View of both ocean<lb/>
and sound Across the street from<lb/>
the Emerald isle Fishing Pier<lb/>
Water a c par' al furnishing $750<lb/>
or best offer anc assume land lease<lb/>
FOR SALE: Cohn fromb<lb/>
case $200 Call<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT Near universi<lb/>
ty. 305 E 14th St 5 oedrooms. large<lb/>
living room q<lb/>
758 5299<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Honda Civic. Runs<lb/>
gooa, needs some wo? k $500 or best<lb/>
offer. Call 78 7791<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3eige sofa Cai<lb/>
p.m. 758 5422 Reasonable<lb/>
after 5<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT : bedroon<lb/>
bath with appliances Nea universi<lb/>
ty. $350 month Fan . ? ?-<lb/>
students S7 '79g<lb/>
MEDICAL DICTATION SERVICES<lb/>
AVAILABLE 7<lb/>
746 3513 aftei 6 p.n P01<lb/>
SENIORS! SENIORS: SENIORS!<lb/>
Enjoy the last phase of our college<lb/>
career employ mei I S8.F C<lb/>
puters s offering a package price to<lb/>
help you sena out your res<lb/>
eluding all of the f<lb/>
quality typec res rged<lb/>
cover ierters . name ?<lb/>
each company as in;<lb/>
dress on lettei<lb/>
envelopes with con : -? ?<lb/>
ana your re'<lb/>
envelope Ev<lb/>
ana eve- stamp<lb/>
panies senl ro (for <lb/>
Jus' brin<lb/>
resume anc covt ?<lb/>
businesses , with to a<lb/>
we'll ao the rest. Per res e ? -<lb/>
your names'add 'wp s'ff1 S2 30<lb/>
(m.p. 10 resun 1<lb/>
stamp $1.90 (2 page n ? ces<lb/>
? .<lb/>
ly expires V ?<lb/>
puter Compr , ; ? ? ? ?- 5?<lb/>
Greenv 1 '834 757 0-<lb/>
NEED TYPING? L e 11<lb/>
Resume's Terr papei I Cai<lb/>
Karen at 752 0498<lb/>
WANTED: Looking for one or two<lb/>
persons, M or F, to share a house 2<lb/>
blocks from campus Rent $130 a<lb/>
month ? ' 3 or ' 4 utility. Remainder<lb/>
of January's rent free. Call David or<lb/>
Jeff anytime at 752 9788<lb/>
NEED FINANCIAL AID?: Scholar<lb/>
ship Research Foundation can help!<lb/>
We have over 4 billion dollars worth<lb/>
of financial aid in our computer<lb/>
banks $135 million dollars worth<lb/>
went unused last year. We have<lb/>
financial aid sources for freshmen,<lb/>
sophomores, athletes and also for<lb/>
the student wishing to attend<lb/>
graduate school. Our applicants<lb/>
receive an average of from 15 to 20<lb/>
sources for which they qualify. We<lb/>
guarentee results! For free informa<lb/>
tion write to us and please include<lb/>
year in school Scholarship<lb/>
Research Foundation. 829 Lyn<lb/>
nhaven Parkway. Suite 114118,<lb/>
Virginia Beach, V'a 23452.<lb/>
WANTED: 6 conscientious black<lb/>
female students to simulate tf"?<lb/>
mother of a young black patient No<lb/>
acting experience necessary Paid<lb/>
$7,50 per hour for about 4 hours.<lb/>
Training Jan 29, 1986 at 9:30<lb/>
Simulation Jan.31, 1986 at 9 30. Con<lb/>
fact Dr. Lmda Nieman ai 757 2608.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED IM<lb/>
MEDIATELY: Pvt room Close to<lb/>
campus, 147.50 a month<lb/>
uM:ties. Call Kim at 758 7643<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED To snare 2<lb/>
bedroom 2 ' : oatr apt in<lb/>
Eastbrook. 142 50 - a utilities Call<lb/>
Danny after 4pm at 752 0792<lb/>
MODELS NEEDED: If interestec<lb/>
see Tran Gorrjiey at 1307 Jenkins Art<lb/>
. Phone '5? 6259<lb/>
AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS NEED-<lb/>
ED Gooa ca, plus commission.<lb/>
flSk for the<lb/>
hard<lb/>
roommate WANTED: Lexington<lb/>
ext tc Greene -? thletic<lb/>
'56 9583 or 355 6974 after 5 30,<lb/>
tow ? . bedrooms ?<lb/>
? ite bearoo upstairs will<lb/>
Dedroc" ? . baths,<lb/>
p a t i c c a d I e TV<lb/>
h washer n ? wave, ana<lb/>
Pr.?er jDQer classman,<lb/>
(enl ? ?? -ssionai. non<lb/>
now<lb/>
wanted. Co ege students<lb/>
teresti ? ? ng a free spring<lb/>
break in the Bahamas call Campus<lb/>
" . ? ? ? 5) 4 ?<lb/>
roommate needed 4 bedroom<lb/>
icross ? "? Overton s 3<lb/>
 :ampus ut ? es 2<lb/>
'? s arge k l ? en Ca '58 5953<lb/>
FOR SALE 510"p n<lb/>
Surf boar ? ?v .<lb/>
756 2620<lb/>
MOVING OUT SALE F ?<lb/>
Apts (furniture<lb/>
sell by D - . ery<lb/>
negotiable For mon<lb/>
758 6971<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATE NfccDED 3 BR<lb/>
house, V 2 m.ies from campus $120<lb/>
per month, 3 j1 I t es P- vate<lb/>
bedroom. Gooa for people with pets<lb/>
Call 355 5318<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
Own room, 3 utilities ana j ex<lb/>
penses $135 per month ? depos ? 1<lb/>
mile from camp- "58 2477<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED $70 a<lb/>
month, own room, 1 block from can<lb/>
pus Cai 752 1471 Prefer male<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS: Trinity Center,<lb/>
new Episcopal Camp and Con<lb/>
ference Center at Salter Path, N.C,<lb/>
accepting applications for summer<lb/>
jobs, lifeguards (WSi's), sailing In-<lb/>
structor (WSI also), counselors, RN,<lb/>
and Arts &amp; Crafts Director. Apply<lb/>
to: Edward M. Hodges, Jr Trinity<lb/>
Summer Camp Director, 101 E. 10th<lb/>
St Washington, N.C. 27889<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: SiOO a<lb/>
month, ?? utilities. Across from<lb/>
Overton's, 3 blocks from campus<lb/>
758 5953.<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM: Female, non<lb/>
smoker preferred. Rent $114. A<lb/>
deposit of $92 is required, ' 3 utilities<lb/>
Available immediately. Call<lb/>
anytime. 758 4127.<lb/>
PART TIME EMPLOYMENT: Per<lb/>
sonal attendant for disabled student,<lb/>
Tuesdays and Thursdays, Spring<lb/>
Semester Wilson Acres Females<lb/>
preferred. Contact Rick Creech<lb/>
758 3214<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
HELP While in the midst of a<lb/>
drunken stupor last Saturday night I<lb/>
lost the ring that my boyfriend gave<lb/>
me tor X mas. The diamond and<lb/>
sapphire ring was lost downtown in<lb/>
Grog's There is a reward offered!<lb/>
Please can Debbie Edwards at<lb/>
355 2871 because my boyfriend is<lb/>
chafed majorly!<lb/>
PHI TAU LIL' SISTERS: Welcome<lb/>
back1 if you wish to be active this<lb/>
semester you MUST attend a<lb/>
meeting Wed Jan 15 at 5 p m<lb/>
Please bring dues if possible See<lb/>
you there!<lb/>
PH. TAU BROTHERS: Let us<lb/>
Aeicome you back the right way<lb/>
Come to our Happy Hour at Beau's<lb/>
Wed Jan 15 Let's Rock the Place<lb/>
Down! Your iiI' Sisters<lb/>
WELCOME BACK Stop mto Uni<lb/>
quely Yours for a 10 percent dis<lb/>
count th s week on unique clothing,<lb/>
furniture ana jewelry 903 Dickinson<lb/>
?ve Open Tues Thur 11 5 ana<lb/>
Saturaay 11 5<lb/>
SPRING BREAK CRUISE Decide<lb/>
NOW to cruise to the Mex.can isles<lb/>
$445 ps ana gratuities included 5<lb/>
n g's 6 aas Can now for a<lb/>
GREAT SPRING BREAK: 758 0074<lb/>
or 752 3178<lb/>
FOUND: H.gh School class ring<lb/>
Founa in parking lot of Ringgoic<lb/>
Towers, identify ana ciaim at 622<lb/>
R ?ggoia Towers befwee" 7 9pm<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Student Union Vice President<lb/>
Deadline: January 24, 1986<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Committee Chairpersons<lb/>
Deadline: February 5. 1986<lb/>
for the 1986-87 Term<lb/>
Any full time student can apply<lb/>
Applications available at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Information Desk<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
With<lb/>
Mary Elesha Adams<lb/>
My New Year's resolution was<lb/>
to quit smoking and lose weight.<lb/>
HELP! Congratulations for wan-<lb/>
ting to have a healthier 1986!<lb/>
There are many strategies for ac-<lb/>
complishing your goals; let's take<lb/>
smoking cessation first:<lb/>
?List all the reasons why you<lb/>
want to quit. Every nght before<lb/>
going to bed, repeat one of the<lb/>
reasons 10 times.<lb/>
?Involve someone else. Ask a<lb/>
friend to quit with you or be! a<lb/>
friend you can quit on your target<lb/>
date for stopping.<lb/>
?Switch brands. Switch to a<lb/>
brand you f;nd distasteful and<lb/>
lower in tar and nicotine than<lb/>
your current brand.<lb/>
?Cut down on the number of<lb/>
cigarettes you smoke. Smoke on<lb/>
ly half of each cigarette and each<lb/>
day postpone lighting your first<lb/>
cigarette one hour.<lb/>
?Stop buying cartons of cigaret-<lb/>
tes and stop carrying cigarettes<lb/>
with you; leave them at home<lb/>
when you're in class.<lb/>
?Do not empty your ashtrays.<lb/>
This will not only remind you of<lb/>
how many cigarettes you hae<lb/>
smoked each day, the sigh: and<lb/>
smell of stale butts will be very<lb/>
unpleasant.<lb/>
?Change your eating habits to aid<lb/>
in cutting down. If you associate<lb/>
smoking with drinking coffee or<lb/>
alcohol, drink something<lb/>
ferent such as ju<lb/>
drink.<lb/>
These are just a few ideas 1 .<lb/>
you started on stopping smoking.<lb/>
Some people try the "cold<lb/>
turkey" approach -md are quite<lb/>
successful. Others benefit more<lb/>
from taking a smoking cessai<lb/>
class. Still others try both ap-<lb/>
proaches together. C heck The<lb/>
East Carolinian for ads about the<lb/>
smoking cessation cla<lb/>
would like to attend.<lb/>
lor many, smoking ces<lb/>
and weigh; maintenance <lb/>
in hand. Pe ften rep<lb/>
they gain weight when they<lb/>
smoking. That often is the case<lb/>
because they substitute I<lb/>
cigarettes. One of the best ways<lb/>
to maintain or lose  g<lb/>
increase the amount<lb/>
activity you get. Here are some<lb/>
specific suggest<lb/>
weight loss and vr maintenance:<lb/>
?Learn about y<lb/>
habits by keeping a ret rd<lb/>
your daily food c<lb/>
?At home, limit all food intake to<lb/>
one specific room, preferably the<lb/>
room with the kitchen table in it.<lb/>
Sitting in front ot the TV is<lb/>
distracting because it's easy to<lb/>
watch TV and eat compulsively.<lb/>
?Keep lower calorie foods more<lb/>
available and more visible than<lb/>
higher calorie foods.<lb/>
-Go to the grocery store when<lb/>
you're not hungry.<lb/>
-Ask family and friends not to<lb/>
use food for gifts or rewards.<lb/>
When eating meals, eat the<lb/>
foods vou like best at the first of<lb/>
the meal so that you can avoid<lb/>
the "eat everything on your<lb/>
plate" syndrome.<lb/>
-Use stairs instead of elevators<lb/>
whenever possible.<lb/>
-Set realistic goals for yourself<lb/>
Don't make your weight-loss<lb/>
goals too difficult; that's or<lb/>
the mam reasons for diet failure<lb/>
If you would like additional<lb/>
formation about smoking cessa<lb/>
tion or weight lossmainter.a<lb/>
check the brochure racks ai<lb/>
Student Health Center<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
355-5222<lb/>
For ' ? . Mai ,Vho<lb/>
Wants To Dress To Impress<lb/>
Ready to start the new year off<lb/>
right? Come by the Style<lb/>
Shop ? Plaza Mall where we are<lb/>
featuring a 30 off sale on most<lb/>
of our merchandise.<lb/>
Such As:<lb/>
Union Bay -<lb/>
Rigolletto -<lb/>
Heet ? shirts<lb/>
pants, jeans &amp; shirts<lb/>
leans<lb/>
Also a variety of sweaters<lb/>
(Pullover &amp; Button Dourn<lb/>
Hurry &amp; come see the Style Shop<lb/>
Gang, they 7 help you to dress to<lb/>
impress!<lb/>
Style Shop<lb/>
Welcome Back Special<lb/>
Mon. thru Wed.<lb/>
7 AM to 11:30 AM<lb/>
All U can Eat<lb/>
Pancakes and French<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
See For Yourself<lb/>
on All Frames, Sunglasses,<lb/>
and Contact Lenses<lb/>
Everyday.<lb/>
Sou ttvrv arc rwo locations thai offer BQ0 jjiiermi fmns u choose<lb/>
from at everyday savings t M)1 6051 rt regular retail pneev Th:<lb/>
Eye Srtt- .it rhe PLij. jjxi The Eye Care Center at the Tipur .Annex<lb/>
In advlttjiifi. eye enmnaoons or- available at The Eye Care Center<lb/>
No appointment necessary Cafl tor exam hours<lb/>
MARATHON RESTAURANTS<lb/>
rh lu<lb/>
Phone So-gyi<lb/>
OPTOMCTNC<lb/>
Oft CAB? CENTER<lb/>
For Frame Selection and Fe Examinations:<lb/>
21H (.rrenvillr Blvd tTipiiin Annul<lb/>
Phone 756-V404<lb/>
Dr. Peter Hollis<lb/>
O.O.<lb/>
?.A.<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
Steak and CheeseS3 45<lb/>
Steak and MushroomsS3.45<lb/>
MeatballS3.45<lb/>
Reuben with French FriesS3.95<lb/>
Ham and Cheese$3.45<lb/>
Roast Beef and French Fries$3.95<lb/>
Cold Sub$3.45<lb/>
Chicken Salad SubS3.45<lb/>
Pastrami SubS3 45<lb/>
Turkey and Cheese$3.45<lb/>
Super Sub$3.95<lb/>
B.L.T$3.45<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
GYRO Sandwich$3.35<lb/>
Souvlaki Sandwich$3.35<lb/>
GYRO Platter$3 95<lb/>
Marathon Special$3.95<lb/>
Athenian-Style Chicken$3.95<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
Aegean Grilled Cheese$2.40<lb/>
Hamburger$1.30<lb/>
Cheeseburger$1.50<lb/>
Hot Dog$ 95<lb/>
Chicken Salad Sandwich$2.40<lb/>
Chicken Breast$1.95<lb/>
Shrimp Eggroll$ .95<lb/>
"Greek Owned and Operated Since 1<lb/>
Delivery Menu<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
Greek SaladS3.50<lb/>
Chef's SaladS3 50<lb/>
Chicken Salad PlateS3 50<lb/>
Tossed Salad$1 35<lb/>
Potato Salad$1 2C<lb/>
979"<lb/>
CALL US <lb/>
FAST DELIVERY<lb/>
752-0326 or 752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
GREEK PASTRIES<lb/>
Baklava<lb/>
PIZZA MENU<lb/>
SMALL 12<lb/>
CHEESE PIZZA<lb/>
ANY 1 ITEM<lb/>
ANY 2 ITEMS<lb/>
ANY 3 ITEMS<lb/>
ANY 4 ITEMS<lb/>
ADD L ITEMS<lb/>
Z MUSHROOMS<lb/>
Z GROUND BEEF<lb/>
Z GREEN PEPPERS<lb/>
Z HOT PEPPERS<lb/>
; ANCHOVIES<lb/>
MARATHON DELUXE:<lb/>
$4 30<lb/>
$4 65<lb/>
55.30<lb/>
55 95<lb/>
56 60<lb/>
S 85<lb/>
S 95<lb/>
LARGE 16<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
S6 85<lb/>
$7 7<lb/>
58 55<lb/>
59 40<lb/>
S1 00<lb/>
PEPPERCNi<lb/>
ONIONS<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
OLIVES<lb/>
12' 16<lb/>
$8 00 $11 00<lb/>
Pepceroni. Onions. Grouna Beef<lb/>
Mushrooms. Green PecDers<lb/>
SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
Small S 60 Large70<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
Small $.55 Large $.65<lb/>
Gram<lb/>
WASHINGTON D I<lb/>
Congress' new budge <lb/>
bill, passed in December<lb/>
mean student aid uld<lb/>
cut by as much as 60 ;<lb/>
some college lobbyists here war<lb/>
The first round<lb/>
March . Vari<lb/>
estimate the I<lb/>
mean decreases<lb/>
from two to 4<lb/>
student aid prograt<lb/>
The nev.<lb/>
Gramm-Rudman law<lb/>
senators Philij<lb/>
and Warren -<lb/>
who co-sponsored I I<lb/>
federal governmei<lb/>
budget by<lb/>
But in do i .<lb/>
not allowed<lb/>
Social Secut<lb/>
programs, ma<lb/>
grams<lb/>
debt.<lb/>
So, u;<lb/>
to help ha<lb/>
SG<lb/>
j<lb/>
$<lb/>
(i<lb/>
Rubber<lb/>
A<lb/>
s<lb/>
Tone<lb/>
Take A<lb/>
JOIN NO'<lb/>
<lb/>
No<lb/>
calI<lb/>
FRE<lb/>
THE<lb/>
South P.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
H ith<lb/>
1 dams<lb/>
can avoid<lb/>
 on your<lb/>
I elevators<lb/>
yourself.<lb/>
eight-loss<lb/>
- one of<lb/>
diet failure.<lb/>
ditional in-<lb/>
 ng cessa-<lb/>
aintenance<lb/>
acks at the<lb/>
center or<lb/>
I oilier<lb/>
P.<lb/>
Mon-Sot<lb/>
10-9<lb/>
cy<lb/>
ear off<lb/>
Style<lb/>
we are<lb/>
on most<lb/>
:ters<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
dress to<lb/>
lecial<lb/>
iru Wed.<lb/>
11:30 AM<lb/>
can Eat<lb/>
Les and French<lb/>
roast<lb/>
o<lb/>
Kvpires Jan. 31<lb/>
ANTS<lb/>
l<lb/>
i?S<lb/>
?zza m<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
LARGE 16"<lb/>
S6 00<lb/>
i 56 35<lb/>
58 55<lb/>
59 40<lb/>
51 00<lb/>
 E?PERONI<lb/>
ONIONS<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
OLIVES<lb/>
ON DELUXE: 12' 16"<lb/>
$8 00 511.00<lb/>
c Beef<lb/>
is jl<lb/>
jcoers<lb/>
SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
Large $70<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
?mall S 55 Large.65<lb/>
Gramm-Rudman May<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) ?<lb/>
( ongress' new budget-balancing<lb/>
bill, passed in December, could<lb/>
mean student aid soon could be<lb/>
cul by as much as 60 percent,<lb/>
some college lobbyists here warn.<lb/>
The first round of cuts is due<lb/>
March 1. Various sources<lb/>
estimate the first round could<lb/>
Mean decreases of anywhere<lb/>
om two to 40 to 60 percent in all<lb/>
tudenl aid programs.<lb/>
The new law, usually called the<lb/>
i-iramm-Rudman law after<lb/>
senators Philip Gramm (R-Tex)<lb/>
and Warren Rudman (R-NH),<lb/>
who co-sponsored it, forces the<lb/>
federal government to balance its<lb/>
dget by 1991.<lb/>
But in doing so, Congress is<lb/>
allowed to cut spending for<lb/>
Social Security, some welfare<lb/>
grams, many defense pro-<lb/>
ims or to pay off the federal<lb/>
debt.<lb/>
So, unless the government tries<lb/>
help balance the budget by<lb/>
raising some taxes, education<lb/>
programs will be tempting fiscal<lb/>
targets, lobbyists say.<lb/>
Just how deep the first round<lb/>
of cuts will be is open to debate.<lb/>
By calculating current Gramm-<lb/>
Rudman targets and the<lb/>
escalating deficit, Susan Frost of<lb/>
the Committee for Education<lb/>
Funding figures the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education will have to shave all<lb/>
its college program funding by<lb/>
4.6 percent in March and another<lb/>
30 percent in October.<lb/>
Educators are reluctant to<lb/>
specify just how many students<lb/>
would be forced out of school by<lb/>
the cuts, or to estimate how much<lb/>
schools would have to raise tui-<lb/>
tion to compensate for them.<lb/>
They do, however, think the<lb/>
cuts will hurt badly.<lb/>
"Consequences of Gramm-<lb/>
Rudman's possible 40 to 60 per-<lb/>
cent cuts in higher education (by<lb/>
next fall) will be absolutely-<lb/>
disastrous to millions of current<lb/>
and future students observes<lb/>
Kathy Ozer, legislative director<lb/>
of the U.S. Student Association<lb/>
(USSA).<lb/>
The same pressure to reduce<lb/>
spending could also force Con-<lb/>
gress to reduce college program<lb/>
funding in the upcoming Higher<lb/>
Education Act of 1985, which<lb/>
sets spending levels through 1990,<lb/>
adds pat Smith, legislative<lb/>
analyst for the American Council<lb/>
on Education (ACE).<lb/>
Under the new law, Ozer<lb/>
estimates Congress will have to<lb/>
trim about $11.7 billion from the<lb/>
1986 fiscal year budget by March.<lb/>
If it doesn't, President Reagan<lb/>
would "sequester" funds,<lb/>
deciding by himself which pro-<lb/>
grams not to fund in order to<lb/>
save money.<lb/>
Based on what he's done<lb/>
before, the president would seem<lb/>
likely to cut education programs<lb/>
to do it.<lb/>
In each year since 1980, Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan has proposed cut-<lb/>
ting federal student aid programs<lb/>
by as much as 50 percent. Con-<lb/>
gress historically has rejected<lb/>
those cuts, choosing instead to<lb/>
freeze most programs at or near<lb/>
their 1981-82 levels for the last<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
The federal government will<lb/>
spend about $8 billion on student<lb/>
aid programs this year - about<lb/>
the same as in fiscal 1985 before a<lb/>
supplemental appropriation bill<lb/>
funding Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loans passed.<lb/>
After March, the Gramm-<lb/>
Rudman law then mandates the<lb/>
government to find ways to keep<lb/>
reducing the federal deficit by<lb/>
$36 billion a year through the rest<lb/>
of this decade.<lb/>
One way t: reduce the deficit,<lb/>
of course, is to raise taxes.<lb/>
"More and more people are<lb/>
talking about a tax increase. It<lb/>
will be the only way reports<lb/>
Tom Gleason, a spokesman for<lb/>
Sen. Gary Hart (D-Co).<lb/>
"I don't think there is a pro-<lb/>
clivity toward cuts agrees Bob<lb/>
Sneed, an aide to Sen. Ernest<lb/>
Hollings (D-SC). "Most people<lb/>
think drastic reductions" without<lb/>
accompanying tax hikes "will be<lb/>
dead on arrival" in Congress.<lb/>
Gleason thinks some conser-<lb/>
vative senators will endorse tax<lb/>
hikes if they help spare the<lb/>
defense budget from cuts, though<lb/>
he doesn't expect them to public-<lb/>
ly support the hikes until after<lb/>
next fall's elections.<lb/>
Ozer worries fall may be too<lb/>
late for many student aid pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
"Clearly cuts will be triggered<lb/>
before possible tax legislation<lb/>
she says.<lb/>
A similar nationwide letter-<lb/>
writing campaign helped defeat a<lb/>
presidential proposal to cut<lb/>
federal student aid programs in<lb/>
1982.<lb/>
ARTHUR MERRILL McGLAUFLIN<lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW<lb/>
DWITraffic Offenses<lb/>
Personal Injury<lb/>
Property Damage<lb/>
Child Support and Custody-<lb/>
Residential Loan Closings<lb/>
Separation Agreements<lb/>
757-1055<lb/>
No Fee for Initial Consultation<lb/>
Fees Upon Request<lb/>
Flexible Office Hours<lb/>
SGA Carpet Sale<lb/>
January 14-16<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
$10.00 - $18.00<lb/>
on most rolls<lb/>
Rubber Insulated Backing<lb/>
And Fireproof<lb/>
Pre sen ts<lb/>
1K Draft All Nite<lb/>
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday<lb/>
Jan.14,15<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
9:00-1:00 A.M.<lb/>
$1.00 Ladies<lb/>
STILL NOT OVER<lb/>
THE HOLIDAYS<lb/>
Tone Your Body Back In Shape At<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Take Advantage of Our Special Student Rates<lb/>
JOIN NOW<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
per month<lb/>
No Contracts<lb/>
No Initiation Fee<lb/>
CALL NOW FOR<lb/>
FREE VISIT<lb/>
SouthPark Shopping Center<lb/>
756-7991<lb/>
COED WET AREA<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
Steam<lb/>
Sauna<lb/>
Whirlpool<lb/>
Dynacam Equipment<lb/>
Free Weights<lb/>
Aerobics 52 times a week<lb/>
New Wolff System<lb/>
Tanning Bed<lb/>
$4.00 per visit<lb/>
10 visits $30.00<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY U 1986<lb/>
I,<lb/>
<lb/>
Out-Of-State Student Quota Tenative<lb/>
(UPI) University of No.th<lb/>
Carolina campuses would have<lb/>
new limits on the number of out-<lb/>
of-state students they can admit<lb/>
beginning in 1988 under a policy<lb/>
approved Thursday by a UNC<lb/>
Board of Governors committee.<lb/>
The policy is designed to force<lb/>
some campuses to reduce out-of-<lb/>
state enrollment and to slow the<lb/>
growth in out-of-state enrollment<lb/>
at other campuses, said Raymond<lb/>
H. Dawson, UNC System's vice<lb/>
president for academic affairs.<lb/>
The policy would set an 18 per-<lb/>
cent ceiling on out-of-state<lb/>
enrollment at all 16 UNC cam-<lb/>
puses except the N.C. School of<lb/>
the Arts.<lb/>
"Somewhere a line has to be<lb/>
drawn between diversity and hav-<lb/>
ing a large amount of university<lb/>
resources committed" to out-of-<lb/>
state students, Dawson said.<lb/>
The policy will go before the<lb/>
full Board of Governors for ap-<lb/>
proval in February. The UNC<lb/>
System has been under pressure<lb/>
from members of the General<lb/>
Assembly and from Gov. James<lb/>
G. Martin's Efficiency Study<lb/>
Commission to set a limit on out-<lb/>
of-state students.<lb/>
Dawson said out-of-state<lb/>
enrollment had declined after the<lb/>
legislature approved huge in-<lb/>
creases in out-of-state tuition in<lb/>
1969 and 1971, but had risen<lb/>
steadily since 1980.<lb/>
The problem has become par-<lb/>
ticularly acute at five UNC cam-<lb/>
puses, he said. Out-of-state<lb/>
students made up 34 percent of<lb/>
N.C. A'T State University's<lb/>
entering class this fall, 32.5 per-<lb/>
cent at Elizabeth City State<lb/>
University, 25 percent at N.C.<lb/>
Central University, 26 percent at<lb/>
East Carolina University and 20<lb/>
percent at UNC-Greensboro.<lb/>
For N.C. State University, the<lb/>
figure was 17.6 percent, and for<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, 19 percent,<lb/>
Dawson said.<lb/>
Except for the School of the<lb/>
Arts, 19 percent of the system's<lb/>
freshman class this past fall was<lb/>
from out of state, up from 15<lb/>
percent in 1980. The total out-of-<lb/>
state enrollment, except for the<lb/>
School of the Arts, was 14 5 per<lb/>
cent, up from 11.8 percent in fall<lb/>
1980, Dawson said.<lb/>
If the policy is approved, the<lb/>
universities would have 1986 and<lb/>
1987 to reduce out-of-state<lb/>
enrollments. The new limit would<lb/>
take effect in fall 1988.<lb/>
Lawyers Challange Gramm-Rudman<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) ?<lb/>
lawyers for challengers of a<lb/>
federal budget-balancing law told<lb/>
a federal court Friday that the<lb/>
month-old act puts Congress'<lb/>
power over the government's<lb/>
purse strings on "automatic<lb/>
pilot" and should be stricken as<lb/>
unconstitutional.<lb/>
But defenders of the Gramm<lb/>
Rudman-Hollings Act, designed<lb/>
to reduce the annual deficit from<lb/>
the current $212 billion to zero in<lb/>
five years, argued thai the<lb/>
measure was a lawful delegation<lb/>
by Congress of its budget-making<lb/>
powers and should be upheld.<lb/>
The three-judge U.S. district<lb/>
court panel hearing the case -<lb/>
shaping up as possibly the most<lb/>
far-reaching constitutional<lb/>
separation of powers issue before<lb/>
the federal judiciary since the<lb/>
Watergate era - took the matter<lb/>
under advisement after a three-<lb/>
hour hearing.<lb/>
The court's ruling is certain to<lb/>
be appealed directly to the<lb/>
Supreme Court regardless of the<lb/>
outcome.<lb/>
Twelve members of Congress,<lb/>
led by Rep. Mike Synar,<lb/>
D-Okla and the National<lb/>
Treasury Employees Union are<lb/>
challenging the constitutionality<lb/>
of the law, which would trigger<lb/>
across-the-board budget cuts if<lb/>
Congress failed to institute<lb/>
specified annual deficit reduc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Attorney Alan Morrison,<lb/>
representing the dozen members<lb/>
of Congress, told the court the<lb/>
bill was enacted because "Con-<lb/>
gress has refused to pass the very<lb/>
laws to do what it contends must<lb/>
be done - that is. balance the<lb/>
federal budget<lb/>
Morrison said the act, in giving<lb/>
the power to proscribe budget<lb/>
cuts to the non-elected heads of<lb/>
three agencies - the Congressional<lb/>
Budget Office, the White House<lb/>
Office of Management and<lb/>
Budget and the congressional<lb/>
General Accounting Office - had<lb/>
given away powers the Constitu-<lb/>
tion vests in Congress.<lb/>
"Certain functions are so<lb/>
legislative in nature that they may<lb/>
not be delegated. This is one of<lb/>
the things the revolution was<lb/>
fought over said Morrison,<lb/>
who is a senior lawyer for Public<lb/>
Citizen, a group founded by con-<lb/>
sumer advocate Ralph Nader.<lb/>
And although President<lb/>
Reagan signed the measure into<lb/>
law Dec. 12, a Justice Depart-<lb/>
ment lawyer argued that one of<lb/>
its key features - the part trigger-<lb/>
ing spending cuts - should be<lb/>
overturned but the remainder of<lb/>
the law should stand.<lb/>
"We think the unique status of<lb/>
the president in our constitu-<lb/>
tional scheme has been tran-<lb/>
sgressed said Assistant At-<lb/>
torney General Richard Willard.<lb/>
Under the law, automatic cuts<lb/>
would have to be ordered by the<lb/>
president if the General Accoun-<lb/>
ting Office determined that Con-<lb/>
gress had not reached deficit<lb/>
targets under Gramm-Rudman.<lb/>
The Congressional Budget Of-<lb/>
fice and the Office of Manage-<lb/>
ment and Budget would make<lb/>
separate projections of the<lb/>
deficit, but the GAO would be<lb/>
the final arbiter, deciding how<lb/>
large the mandatorv cuts should<lb/>
be.<lb/>
If Congress failed to come up<lb/>
with its own package of cuts<lb/>
within 90 davs, the reductions<lb/>
spelled out would take effect.<lb/>
A HO RTI OSS L'P<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
1195 Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks a'<lb/>
additional cost Pregnant Test, Birth (<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling Foi<lb/>
Further information, call 832-0535 (toll tree<lb/>
number: 1-800-532-5384) between V a m and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdavs General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
escort service<lb/>
unbav, $nt. 19<lb/>
noto accepting<lb/>
applications tor<lb/>
erators &amp; escorts<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4?<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4?<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4?<lb/>
JAN CLEARANCE SALE<lb/>
Hurry in. Limited quantities<lb/>
We have the guaranteed lowest<lb/>
? '?'WHH<lb/>
<lb/>
?j<lb/>
COMPLETt<lb/>
hbi M59 <lb/>
OPP Rnq 249 I Nj  <lb/>
TTT'Sr<lb/>
prices. So Shop Now and Save<lb/>
Nowhere Efse In<lb/>
Eastern N.C. Will<lb/>
You Find Prices This Low.<lb/>
?<lb/>
PADDED RAILS $29 ? WATERBED SHEETS $29<lb/>
$<lb/>
MEDIUM FIRM<lb/>
'IN FliilEi'c<lb/>
49<lb/>
95<lb/>
it<lb/>
Queen i, h<lb/>
PC King ei pt<lb/>
FIRM 312 COIL<lb/>
m FullEiP:<lb/>
$C Q95 u QdCNEaPc<lb/>
WW PC King El ft<lb/>
EXTRA FIRM<lb/>
m Full t, ft<lb/>
$C 05 tl Queen e, ft<lb/>
Uv PC King ei ft<lb/>
LUXURY FIRM<lb/>
IWIN FuliE.ft<lb/>
$<lb/>
79<lb/>
95<lb/>
A<lb/>
PC<lb/>
Queenei ft<lb/>
King (i ft<lb/>
M ma ? uM ? mi<lb/>
'59.95<lb/>
'69.95<lb/>
'79.95<lb/>
'69.95<lb/>
99.95<lb/>
M24.95<lb/>
79.95<lb/>
M09.95<lb/>
M49.95<lb/>
'99.95<lb/>
'129.95<lb/>
'174.95<lb/>
$89<lb/>
SUPER FIRM 510 COIL<lb/>
?" . ?ullE.ft M09.95<lb/>
95 Ei "QueenE.ft '139.95<lb/>
PC KingEift M89.95<lb/>
PREMIUM EXTRA FIRM<lb/>
?" FuilELft '119.95<lb/>
i!<lb/>
!<lb/>
i!<lb/>
i!<lb/>
i!<lb/>
i!<lb/>
i<lb/>
i!<lb/>
89<lb/>
95<lb/>
:t<lb/>
Queens ft<lb/>
PC King (i ft<lb/>
'149.95<lb/>
'199.95<lb/>
tiiMnKmiauasm<lb/>
javy Bed Frames ?. v- START NOW $15.<lb/>
FACTORY MATTRESS &amp; WATERBED OUTLET<lb/>
730 Greenville Blvd. (Next To The Plaza)<lb/>
355-2626<lb/>
Open MonFri. 10 to 8 Sat. 10 to 6<lb/>
90 Days<lb/>
Same As Cash<lb/>
Delivery<lb/>
Layaway<lb/>
Low Monthly<lb/>
Payments<lb/>
M<lb/>
-mmMMi<lb/>
i!<lb/>
i!<lb/>
8<lb/>
?WM&amp;4WjVS,VVSSSS.<lb/>
' vSSss ? "s ? ?-wyy-yyyvy<lb/>
U?JJMJJMJ!V?J?J?,JJSWM?JJJMMM???m<lb/>
OPTICAL<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
 $1 5.00 OFF<lb/>
I Any Complete<lb/>
? Pair of<lb/>
I Eyeglasses<lb/>
(excluding sale items)<lb/>
i r<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i i<lb/>
Ray-Ban<lb/>
and all other<lb/>
non -prescription<lb/>
SUNGLASSES<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
ASK ABOUT OUR 20<lb/>
SENIOR CITIZENS<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
OPEN SATURDAYS BY<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS ONLY<lb/>
 Cm Amtf<lb/>
FwYmOb<lb/>
TieSaaeDay<lb/>
Soft Contacts<lb/>
$59.00 pair<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-4204<lb/>
Offer Expires Jan. 31<lb/>
713 Grwavttt Ihrt. (Acroa Froa Pin Ptaa, Next To ERA Realty)<lb/>
Gary M. ?mmVUmmmI Optidaa Opes 9:30 a.a. loap.a. MmFri.<lb/>
SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
NAME BRAND SHOES<lb/>
At Discount Prices<lb/>
Quality Casual Shoes $15<lb/>
Ladies Dress and Casual Shoes<lb/>
at discount prices<lb/>
Large Selection of Name Brand<lb/>
Tennis Shoes $12.88 to $29.88<lb/>
752-2332<lb/>
ySMySAfSArSSSSrSSSSSSAVSSS<lb/>
203 West Ninth greet<lb/>
one block off Evans<lb/>
mmteui,<lb/>
wedtegekff 7km(Li faibt,<lb/>
The VERANDA<lb/>
Featuring HAPPY PAYS!<lb/>
DOG GONE IT<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
No Cover<lb/>
Build the "perfect"<lb/>
Hot Dog<lb/>
House High Balls<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
WING IT<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
Chicken Wings<lb/>
With All The<lb/>
Condiments<lb/>
Draft $.50<lb/>
Pitcher $2.00<lb/>
The Arbor<lb/>
Chef<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Chef<lb/>
Special<lb/>
SOUTH OF THE<lb/>
BORDER FIESTA<lb/>
Build Your Own<lb/>
Taco with all<lb/>
the ingredients!<lb/>
Margaritas $1.75<lb/>
Tequila Sunrise<lb/>
$1 75<lb/>
Dos Equis XX $1.50<lb/>
Shrimp &amp;<lb/>
Chablis<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
Join us for HAPPY DAYS, Mor -Fn serving Hot and Heavy Hors<lb/>
d'ouervres, 5-7p.m.<lb/>
Band hours are 9p.m. -1 a.m Daily drink specials are available all day<lb/>
long. Dress Code Enforced. Open 6 p.m a.m.<lb/>
Ramada Inn ? 301 Greenville Blvd. ? 756-2792<lb/>
PIRATE PARTY<lb/>
Featuring our<lb/>
Fabulous Pizza<lb/>
Spread<lb/>
Draft50<lb/>
P'tcher $2.00<lb/>
Schnapps $2.00<lb/>
Crab legs<lb/>
&amp; Shrimp<lb/>
with Chablis<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
FESTIVE<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Chef's Choice<lb/>
of Hot &amp; Heavy<lb/>
Hors d'ouevres<lb/>
Irish Coffee $2 00<lb/>
Hot Cider $2 00<lb/>
Choice of our<lb/>
3 all you can<lb/>
eat specials<lb/>
$10.95<lb/>
THF FASTABC,I<lb/>
A Vie To 1 Kill, the Jam<lb/>
at Mendenhal! Mudent t t-ntl<lb/>
Admission to bo'h film<lb/>
A Hi<lb/>
B BETH DAMEI<lb/>
Welcome back I<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Something hot anu <lb/>
I help -<lb/>
awa When<lb/>
rru<lb/>
N.C. A:<lb/>
"Heavenh<lb/>
Minnie Evans" m<lb/>
the North Carolina Mus<lb/>
Art January 18 thr<lb/>
1986. The ev .<lb/>
works produced a<lb/>
by the 93-yeaj<lb/>
artist from Wilming<lb/>
Deeply influent<lb/>
lifel v<lb/>
the natural beau r<lb/>
Garden near Wilmi - I<lb/>
she was gatekeepei year<lb/>
Evans has produced a<lb/>
work rich in religious . J<lb/>
imagerv Colorful flowers<lb/>
and animals are often arra<lb/>
symmetrical formats remi I<lb/>
of Near Eastern art. w j<lb/>
Realism<lb/>
The V . Museui<lb/>
of An will present "An<lb/>
Figurative Painting Since I<lb/>
an exhibition of 15 worl <lb/>
the Sara Rob Foundation C c<lb/>
lection. Feb. 1-April 2<lb/>
The Foundation was<lb/>
ed in 1955 b Mrs Rob)<lb/>
time resident of Ne? V <lb/>
who currentU resides in Nai<lb/>
tucket. Mass Ho <lb/>
pose was to form a<lb/>
works in various<lb/>
American artists<lb/>
them to institution<lb/>
the United States and i<lb/>
Mrs. Roby. hersel! I<lb/>
sought to combat ;he <lb/>
tyranny of abstract movemen <lb/>
art by demonstrating that<lb/>
realist tradition continued<lb/>
thrive. Her collection. ?<lb/>
wide diversity, represents<lb/>
in its many forms<lb/>
Included in the exhib I<lb/>
paintings by Edward Hoppo aa<lb/>
Reginald Marsh, wrfeoac ? v<lb/>
characterized tn aa<lb/>
promising reai x<lb/>
"Cape Cod Mc<lb/>
subject it a woman ? <lb/>
window. The ? -v <lb/>
however, is p .s.<lb/>
straighiforwatd i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0011"/><lb/>
native<lb/>
1980 The total out-of-<lb/>
1except for the<lb/>
Si ts, was 14.5 per-<lb/>
8 percent in fall<lb/>
? d<lb/>
O is approved, the<lb/>
ive 1986 and<lb/>
oui of-state<lb/>
.(vv limit would<lb/>
 1988<lb/>
( 12th w EEK<lb/>
OY rHl G i.VCf<lb/>
tree<lb/>
ind <lb/>
i ble.<lb/>
LEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
West Morgan St Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
stities<lb/>
hop Now and Save<lb/>
adiu<lb/>
lere Else In<lb/>
(rn Will<lb/>
Prices This Low.<lb/>
EDIUM FIRM<lb/>
OIL<lb/>
; FIRM<lb/>
(XURY FIRM<lb/>
l59.95<lb/>
'69.95<lb/>
'79.95<lb/>
'69.95<lb/>
s99.95<lb/>
M24.95<lb/>
479.95<lb/>
M09.95<lb/>
M49.95<lb/>
'99.95<lb/>
'129.95<lb/>
M74.95<lb/>
FIRM 510 COIL<lb/>
M09.95<lb/>
Lh M39.95<lb/>
M89.95<lb/>
iuM EXTRA FIRM<lb/>
M19.95<lb/>
M49.95<lb/>
M99.95<lb/>
START NOW $15<lb/>
a'IIM<lb/>
Plaza)<lb/>
Low Monthly<lb/>
Payments<lb/>
I.<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
s<lb/>
i!<lb/>
a<lb/>
J<lb/>
swmftsMfwssssSMMwwssswstrwstfa!<lb/>
ount Prices<lb/>
est Ninth Slreet<lb/>
ck off Evans Street<lb/>
??"Mm&amp;www?fwswswssw.<lb/>
Tzmzmmam<lb/>
vimi Sairtdig,<lb/>
rrving Hotand Heavy Hors<lb/>
 jrpavailable all da<lb/>
ville Blvd. ? '?56-2792<lb/>
ESTIVE fclDAY<lb/>
f s Choice i Heavy i d ouevres Coffee $2.00 t der $2.00BANDS Jan. 13-18 Atlantic Ave Jan. 20-25<lb/>
<lb/>
ce of ourStraight A's<lb/>
you canJan. 27-31<lb/>
specialsProwler<lb/>
10.95<lb/>
THF EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
Page 1 1<lb/>
Shad Festival Is<lb/>
Finally Underway<lb/>
Grace Jones Hefts A KGB Agent<lb/>
A View To A Kill, the James Bond thriller starring Roger Moore and Grace Jones, will screen Friday and Saturday at 7 and 9 p.m<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center. Paris, Texas, an award winning fjm starring Harry Dean Stanton, will show tomorrow night at 8.<lb/>
Admission to both films is by ECU l.D. and activity card.<lb/>
The annual Grifton Shad<lb/>
Festival Hickory Shad Fishing<lb/>
Contest is officially open, accor-<lb/>
ding to contest chairman George<lb/>
Sugg of the Sport Shop in Grif-<lb/>
ton. AJthough the first fish of the<lb/>
season is not usually caught until<lb/>
early February, the contest tradi-<lb/>
tionally opens on January 1 and<lb/>
closes the first day of the Shad<lb/>
Festival in April.<lb/>
Dates for the 1986 Shad<lb/>
Festival are April 9-13, with a<lb/>
Bass Fishing Tournament<lb/>
preceeding the major events by<lb/>
one week. The Bass Tournament<lb/>
is scheduled for Saturday, April<lb/>
5, and Danny Joe Humphrey of<lb/>
Kinston and the W.E.T.S.U.<lb/>
Bassmasters will head this event<lb/>
up again this year.<lb/>
Other athletic competitions<lb/>
will include tournaments in ten-<lb/>
nis, archery, horseshoes and golf,<lb/>
a 27-mile bicycle race, a Canoe<lb/>
Race with three divisions (adding<lb/>
a Racing Canoe Division for the<lb/>
first time), and running events in<lb/>
One-Mile, Two-Mile and 10 KM.<lb/>
The latter are appropriately call-<lb/>
ed the "Spring Shad Run nam-<lb/>
ed for the term used to describe<lb/>
the annual springtime migration<lb/>
of hickory shad up coastal creeks<lb/>
to spawn.<lb/>
The Hickory Shad Fishing<lb/>
Contest is limited to fish caught<lb/>
on hook and line and American<lb/>
shad are not eligible. This is<lb/>
because in the Grifton area,<lb/>
hickory shad outnumber the<lb/>
American variety. Fish must be<lb/>
weighed and recorded at the<lb/>
Sport Shop in Grifton.<lb/>
Shad, a migratory fish living in<lb/>
the ocean, swim up coastal rivers<lb/>
to spawn in fresh-water creeks<lb/>
further upstream. The date when<lb/>
the fish "run" up the creek varies<lb/>
according to the temperature of<lb/>
the coastal waters. Tagging<lb/>
studies have shown the same fish<lb/>
off Florida in the winter and off<lb/>
Nova Scotia in the summer, over<lb/>
2000 miles away.<lb/>
In eastern North Carolina, the<lb/>
peak of the "shad run" is March.<lb/>
Trophies will be awarded to the<lb/>
fisherman who enters the first<lb/>
shad, and the the adult and youth<lb/>
catching the largest shad.<lb/>
For those who would rather lie<lb/>
about it than actually catch a<lb/>
fish, there is the "Fishy Tales"<lb/>
storytelling (or liar's) contest.<lb/>
"Shad-O" (bingo on special<lb/>
cards) is another of the fun word-<lb/>
plays around fish and shad<lb/>
dreamed up by the festival plan-<lb/>
ners.<lb/>
Crafts, a parade, food, a clog-<lb/>
ging and street dance, a flea<lb/>
market and historical exhibits<lb/>
and demonstrations are among<lb/>
the other 25 Grifton Shad<lb/>
Festival events to appeal to all<lb/>
ages and interests. For a schedule<lb/>
of activities, write to Grifton<lb/>
Shad Festival, Box 928, Grifton,<lb/>
NC 28530.<lb/>
A Hot Idea To Alleviate The Chill<lb/>
Bv BETH DANIELS<lb/>
Staff Wrll?r<lb/>
Welcome back to East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Something hot and flavorful<lb/>
will help warm the winter chill<lb/>
away. When I was young, my<lb/>
mother fixed a beverage very<lb/>
similar to this on Halloweenwe<lb/>
called it "Witches Brew Here<lb/>
in Greenville and other parts of<lb/>
the South, versions of this<lb/>
delightful beverage are called<lb/>
Russian Tea.<lb/>
Old Fashioned Russian Tea<lb/>
2 quarts of water<lb/>
4 family size tea bags<lb/>
1 large can unsweetened pineap-<lb/>
ple juice<lb/>
juice of 6 squeezed oranges<lb/>
juice of 2 squeezed lemons<lb/>
1 tablespoon whole cloves<lb/>
1 stick cinnamon<lb/>
sugar to taste<lb/>
Bring water to a boil in a large<lb/>
sauce pan. Add the tea bags and<lb/>
simmer 5 minutes. Add pineap-<lb/>
ple, orange and lemon juices as<lb/>
well as the spices. Return to a<lb/>
boil, lower heat another 5<lb/>
minutes. Remove tea bags, and<lb/>
simmer the tea mixture for an<lb/>
hour or so. Remove the spices<lb/>
before storing in the refrigerator.<lb/>
Serve reheated.<lb/>
Not only is this a great warmer-<lb/>
upper, but it makes the house<lb/>
smell terrific, too.<lb/>
Another method for making l teaspoon ground cloves<lb/>
Russian Tea, quicker and one-half cup sugar, or to taste<lb/>
perhaps more convenient: (optional)<lb/>
1 18-ounce jar Tang<lb/>
1 6-ounce package lemonade<lb/>
flavor Kool-aid<lb/>
one-half to three-quarter cup ins-<lb/>
tant tea<lb/>
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon<lb/>
Mix all of these ingredients in a<lb/>
large bowl with sealing lid. To a<lb/>
cup of boiling water add 2 or<lb/>
more tablespoons of tea mixture.<lb/>
Stir and enjoy.<lb/>
N.C. Artist Minnie Evans Properly Praised At Age 93<lb/>
"Heavenly Visions: The Art of<lb/>
Minnie Evans" will be on view at<lb/>
the North Carolina Museum of<lb/>
Art January i8 through April 13,<lb/>
1986. The exhibition presents<lb/>
works produced across 40 years<lb/>
by the 93-year-old, self-trained<lb/>
artist from Wilmington, NC.<lb/>
Deeply influenced by her<lb/>
lifelong stuay of the Bible and by<lb/>
the natural beauty of Airlie<lb/>
Gardens near Wilmington, where<lb/>
she was gatekeeper for 26 years,<lb/>
Evans has produced a body of<lb/>
work rich in religious and exotic<lb/>
imagery. Colorful flowers, trees<lb/>
and animals are often arranged in<lb/>
symmetrical formats reminiscent<lb/>
of Near Eastern art, with a cen-<lb/>
tral figure that may be inter-<lb/>
preted as a divine or royal image.<lb/>
The symmetry of these works<lb/>
reinforces Evans' joyous vision<lb/>
of the world as orderly and<lb/>
stable, with a central focus on<lb/>
belief.<lb/>
Born in 1892 in Pender Coun-<lb/>
ty, near Wilmington, Evans was<lb/>
reared in Wilmington and<lb/>
Wrightsville Beach by her mother<lb/>
and grandmother. She worked as<lb/>
a domestic during the period bet-<lb/>
ween the world wars and was the<lb/>
gatekeeper of Airlie Gardens, a<lb/>
private tourist attraction, from<lb/>
1948 to 1974.<lb/>
Evar created her first images<lb/>
in 1935 as the result of a religious<lb/>
vision. Her two earliest works, on<lb/>
view in the exhibition, are<lb/>
abstract pencil drawings almost<lb/>
like hieroglyphics. Within a few<lb/>
years Evans began producing still<lb/>
lifes, figures and abstract<lb/>
designs, using crayons and col-<lb/>
ored pencils.<lb/>
In the 1940s and 1950s Evans<lb/>
experimented with a variety of<lb/>
formats and media, including oil<lb/>
painting, and developed a use of<lb/>
traditional perspective. Her work<lb/>
from this period includes exotic<lb/>
images, such as a temple by the<lb/>
sea, and religious themes like the<lb/>
Crucifixion and the Resurrection.<lb/>
By the 1960s, however, Evans<lb/>
had settled upon a flat, vertical<lb/>
arrangement of images as her<lb/>
favored mode, working both with<lb/>
figures and with abstract designs.<lb/>
She is best known for the richly<lb/>
detailed, symmetrical paintings<lb/>
of this period.<lb/>
The exhibition comprises 30<lb/>
paintings, drawings, and col-<lb/>
lages, tracing Evans' work from<lb/>
her earliest efforts through the<lb/>
late 1970s. In addition to the ar-<lb/>
tist and other private individuals,<lb/>
lenders include the National<lb/>
Museum of American Art,<lb/>
Washington, DC; the Weathers-<lb/>
poon Art Gallery, UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro; the Ackland Art<lb/>
Museum, UNC-Chapel Hill; and<lb/>
the North Carolina Museum of<lb/>
History, Raleigh. Evans has had<lb/>
numerous solo exhibitions over<lb/>
the past 25 years, including a<lb/>
1975 show at the Whitney<lb/>
Museum of American Art in New<lb/>
York.<lb/>
The exhibition is supported by-<lb/>
funding from the North Carolina<lb/>
Art Society. The accompanying<lb/>
48-page catalogue includes an<lb/>
essay by Dr. Mitchell Kahan,<lb/>
curator of American and contem-<lb/>
porary art, who has organized the<lb/>
exhibition. It is the first publica-<lb/>
tion devoted entirely to Evans'<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Related programs include<lb/>
"The Angel That Stands By<lb/>
Me a free 30-minute film about<lb/>
Evans, to be shown Sunday at 3<lb/>
and 4 p.m. Three lectures on folk<lb/>
art and alternative art traditions<lb/>
will be presented on Thursdays,<lb/>
March 20, 27 and April 3 at 8<lb/>
p.m. Speakers will be Henry<lb/>
Glassie of the University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, author and collector<lb/>
Herbert Hemphill and Charles<lb/>
Zug of UNC-Chapel Hill. Tickets<lb/>
are $9 for the lecture series or<lb/>
$3.50 for individual lectures.<lb/>
Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. Wednesday, Thursday,<lb/>
Saturday; 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fri-<lb/>
day; 12 noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
There is no admission fee. For in-<lb/>
formation, call (919) 833-1935.<lb/>
Realism Is Thriving<lb/>
The North Carolina Museum<lb/>
of Art will present "American<lb/>
Figurative Painting Since 1950<lb/>
an exhibition of 15 works from<lb/>
the Sara Roby Foundation Col-<lb/>
lection, Feb. 1-April 27.<lb/>
The Foundation was establish-<lb/>
ed in 1955 by Mrs. Roby, a long-<lb/>
time resident of New York City<lb/>
who currently resides in Nan-<lb/>
tucket, Mass. Her primary pur-<lb/>
pose was to form a collection of<lb/>
works in various media by<lb/>
American artists and to lend<lb/>
them to institutions throughout<lb/>
the United States and abroad.<lb/>
Mrs. Roby, herself an artist,<lb/>
sought to combat the apparent<lb/>
tyranny of abstract movements in<lb/>
art by demonstrating that the<lb/>
realist tradition continued to<lb/>
thrive. Her collection, with its<lb/>
wide diversity, represents realism<lb/>
in its many forms.<lb/>
Included in the exhibition are<lb/>
paintings by Edward Hopper and<lb/>
Reginald Marsh, whose work is<lb/>
characterized by an uncom-<lb/>
promising realism. In Hopper's<lb/>
"Cape Cod Morning" (1950), the<lb/>
subject is a woman gazing from a<lb/>
window. The isolated figure,<lb/>
however, is presented in a<lb/>
straightforward rather than a<lb/>
sentimental manner.<lb/>
Works by a slightly younger<lb/>
generation of artists, including<lb/>
Paul Cadmus, Honore Sharrer<lb/>
and George Tooker, demonstrate<lb/>
their interest in "magic realism<lb/>
which emphasizes the inex-<lb/>
plicable and surreal. Realism as<lb/>
social commentary is seen in<lb/>
works by Philip Evergood and<lb/>
Jacob Lawrence, while satire and<lb/>
fantasy are employed by Roy de<lb/>
Forest.<lb/>
Other artists represented in the<lb/>
exhibition are Charles Bur-<lb/>
chfield, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Bruce<lb/>
Kurland, Gregory Gillespie,<lb/>
Raphael Soyer and Saul<lb/>
Steinberg.<lb/>
The exhibition is accompained<lb/>
by a free gallery guide written by<lb/>
Huston Paschal, assistant curator<lb/>
at the North Carolina Museum of<lb/>
Art.<lb/>
In conjunction with the exhibi-<lb/>
tion, films on the work of Ed-<lb/>
ward Hopper and Jacob<lb/>
Lawrence will be screened Sun-<lb/>
day, Feb. 2 at 3 p.m. A film on<lb/>
Pal Cadmus will be shown Sun-<lb/>
day, March 2 at 3 p.m. The free<lb/>
programs are part of a series of<lb/>
films on American artists.<lb/>
f" fh<lb/>
feM: jfr- ?<lb/>
' 4B<lb/>
Michelangelo Would Not Be Pleased<lb/>
The Rev. Jerry Falwell is typical of fundamentalist television evangelists in his pursuit of money for the selling of God, according to<lb/>
the latest cartoon from political satirist Ori Hof mekler in the January issue of Penthouse magazine. Using Michelangelo's famous ceiling<lb/>
of the Sistine Chapel as a backdrop. Hofmekler shows God with a naked Falwell, forefingers outstretched and only a dollar bill between<lb/>
them. Hofmekler, an internationally acclaimed Israeli artist, has won worldwide recognition for his incisive portraits<lb/>
m m "<lb/>
?<lb/>
, , - . ?<lb/>
?0 0 -m ? m  A<lb/>
? ???, <lb/>
H"<lb/>
h<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
1 HI l AM CAROl IM <lb/>
<lb/>
Original Rock Music Migrates North<lb/>
U PI) - Miami may be the cit)<lb/>
of beach bunnies, scaring sun<lb/>
shine, Latin tango maniacs and<lb/>
disco dudes, but it is no haven ol<lb/>
lock.<lb/>
For the four guvs in Sunlen-<lb/>
ding, it's time to pack theii<lb/>
guitars and synthesizers and hit<lb/>
the trail. Next stop Boston<lb/>
"We're living in an adverse en<lb/>
vironment said Ron I lear, 26.<lb/>
lead guitarist and singei fot the<lb/>
band.<lb/>
"Our influences have nothing<lb/>
to do with Caribbean music,<lb/>
Latin music, sun and fun, beach<lb/>
music or southern rock said<lb/>
Rossi Kane, the group's<lb/>
manager. "We're a total em.<lb/>
here<lb/>
Perhaps it is best put b Corin-<lb/>
na Sampson, a model and 1 l<lb/>
longtime honey. "I'm a real<lb/>
Miami person, a real beach bun<lb/>
nv she squeaked "A: first I<lb/>
was against the move. But i'c<lb/>
never seen snow before<lb/>
Sunlending has all the<lb/>
stuff to make a dent in the n<lb/>
biz. Hear, Tom Beier. 23, on<lb/>
keyboards, David Freedman, 23<lb/>
on bass guitar and Doug s-j<lb/>
Cray, 24. on drums make<lb/>
point to do it their wav !<lb/>
have their own sound and<lb/>
own songs; thev have a ma<lb/>
they have a press packet<lb/>
have an 8-by-10 black ?. I<lb/>
publicity photo, the have tl<lb/>
biographies. There .<lb/>
tie problem: thev ar .<lb/>
up with nowhere<lb/>
have no audience, no<lb/>
no place to hang tl<lb/>
cords<lb/>
The problem is thai Miai<lb/>
music scene is<lb/>
like South Afri<lb/>
' bands have i<lb/>
stay awa -<lb/>
The are staving aw<lb/>
there is no su I - .<lb/>
rock and ro<lb/>
The loc<lb/>
dead K.<lb/>
ha' 1<lb/>
M i<lb/>
ing in me;<lb/>
s,i<lb/>
gae<lb/>
"En ery<lb/>
that has<lb/>
wl<lb/>
taved open three week-<lb/>
months ? has gone un : ??<lb/>
problem in Miami genei<lb/>
to do with how transient tl<lb/>
is. It ha- a serious lack of ?<lb/>
and tradition- People <lb/>
down here to swim. The:<lb/>
communitv except I at in. I<lb/>
no 'hometown' feeling<lb/>
"Original music is tl<lb/>
Boston has a great oca<lb/>
scene. It has never bow . .<lb/>
to the Top 40 droe and it w<lb/>
"In Boston, thev pul<lb/>
music on a pedestal<lb/>
Miami radio statio<lb/>
local bands, so the dee <lb/>
no power in pushing<lb/>
favorites. They don't seen in-<lb/>
terested in developing<lb/>
and the Orange Peels, or i<lb/>
Bop's Bikini Bumpers, i : Sammy,<lb/>
Blue Sky and the Suns.<lb/>
Nor is there mingling<lb/>
cultures in Miami. The Latin-<lb/>
have Little Havana, the sen<lb/>
have Miami Beach, the kid<lb/>
the strip in Fort Lauderdale.<lb/>
Everthing is diced up and dmcj<lb/>
out in categories. Individual<lb/>
styles stay on their own side ol<lb/>
?he fence.<lb/>
So when a hot local band like<lb/>
unlending looks around for an<lb/>
audience, things get tough.<lb/>
There's no club scene, no radio<lb/>
promotion, no record company<lb/>
action, no demand, no deal.<lb/>
After three years of sun and fun,<lb/>
it's time to pack and split.<lb/>
On the other end of the musu<lb/>
appreciation dial, Boston makes<lb/>
gods and goddesses out of its<lb/>
golden-tongued brethren. Out<lb/>
side the rat holes of New York<lb/>
and Los Angeles, Boston has one<lb/>
of the best track records for pro-<lb/>
ducing music the nation wants to<lb/>
hear.<lb/>
Innovative groups like 'til<lb/>
Tuesday, the Cars and Aerosmith<lb/>
all got their breaks in Boston<lb/>
before hitting the national<lb/>
radiowaves.<lb/>
The strong local music scene is<lb/>
partly responsible. So is the<lb/>
abundance of young folks. The<lb/>
fact that Boston is a hotbed of<lb/>
talent pricks the ears of record<lb/>
companies. The music biz types<lb/>
have strong regional setups in<lb/>
Boston, which means lots of<lb/>
showcases, lots of music industry<lb/>
events, and more than the city's<lb/>
fair share of signed records con-<lb/>
at ns reallv push Miami said Llear. drivel. You don't have to eat<lb/>
Ihev even have local That environment is what helps shards of glass or dye your hair<lb/>
Kinds. bands flourish and it makes for chartreuse to get attention, but<lb/>
!v the opposite of good new music ? not the same you do have to do something dit<lb/>
i said about old record company formula ferent. Call it a musical halt twist<lb/>
it you will.<lb/>
The envii<lb/>
And Boston i?<lb/>
to the musical de<lb/>
So Sunlending<lb/>
B<lb/>
-<lb/>
'?<lb/>
Fresh Daily<lb/>
Ground Chuck<lb/>
Lb 1.58<lb/>
bs in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday January 19. 1986<lb/>
Fresh Daily<lb/>
5 Lb. Pack<lb/>
Or More<lb/>
Take<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
We Reserve<lb/>
The Right To<lb/>
Limit Qtiantites<lb/>
rK<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round - Full Cut<lb/>
Boneless Round Steaks<lb/>
Crisp<lb/>
Iceberg Lettuce<lb/>
5-7 Lbs. Average<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Picnics<lb/>
0<lb/>
Bunch<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Snow White<lb/>
Cauliflower<lb/>
ROAST OR STEAK<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round<lb/>
Top Round<lb/>
EMPEROR GRAPES<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
$115<lb/>
Liter Diet Pepsi, Pepsi-Free.<lb/>
Diet Pepsi-Free<lb/>
Tavlor Lake<lb/>
Country<lb/>
$34$<lb/>
1.5 Liter - Red. Pink. White, bold. Chablis<lb/>
$529<lb/>
Pkg. ot 12 12 Oz. Cans<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$519<lb/>
12 12 07 Cans Reg. &amp; It<lb/>
s<lb/>
CORN MUFFIN MIX CHERRY PIE FILLING FABRIC SOFTENER<lb/>
Jiffy - 8.5 Oz.<lb/>
64 Oz. - Snuggle<lb/>
45C0ff<lb/>
EXTRA LOW PRICES<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Process &amp; Prim r<lb/>
19 jC per print<lb/>
NOW $4.73<lb/>
( arulma t at N<lb/>
?"V, ?1<lb/>
OPI N M<lb/>
I AM<lb/>
ires I  M<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0013"/><lb/>
rth<lb/>
IHl I AM -K01 INIAN<lb/>
JAM AKt M <lb/>
13<lb/>
Gregory Peck Remembers A Long Career<lb/>
toy ? ami ELLIOT1<lb/>
kKWl 1<lb/>
Sr?,<lb/>
 ngel oj<lb/>
M - the<lb/>
? B .<lb/>
Revision<lb/>
.is been enjoying<lb/>
. screen.<lb/>
- specifu com<lb/>
Prince<lb/>
M . the<lb/>
. lub in Wellington, Fla. " 1 here<lb/>
are always things on the back<lb/>
burner, but right now nothing<lb/>
specific I nist plan to go right on<lb/>
living and having a good time. I<lb/>
hope that is in the future. I'm just<lb/>
having a marvelous time wat<lb/>
stung the Prince play polo<lb/>
Peck went to Hollywood in<lb/>
W41 aftei a brief stage career on<lb/>
the road, in summer stock, and<lb/>
on Broadwa)<lb/>
"Clarence Brown, mv director<lb/>
in The Yearling once described<lb/>
me as 'an inspiration, an actor of<lb/>
quiet strength Peck said in<lb/>
describing himself<lb/>
Born Eldred Gregory Peck on<lb/>
April 5, 1 v 1 s. the future actoi<lb/>
was raised in his native I a Jolla,<lb/>
a southern California seaside<lb/>
town, where his father owned a<lb/>
drugstore.<lb/>
lor a year, he was enrolled at<lb/>
San Diego State College, but left<lb/>
to work tor an oil company as<lb/>
night watchman and utility<lb/>
delivery man.<lb/>
"When I was told by my assis<lb/>
tant manager that 1 had a future<lb/>
with the company, that 10 or 15<lb/>
years would brmt me as mucl<lb/>
$300 a month, 1 decided to go<lb/>
back to school, this time at the<lb/>
University of California, at<lb/>
Berkeley Peck recalled "I had<lb/>
hoped to become a doctor, an<lb/>
ambition which my father en-<lb/>
couraged, but found that 1 had to<lb/>
wade through too many books to<lb/>
make people well<lb/>
"It there's anything the world<lb/>
doesn't need, it's a bad doctor<lb/>
he continued. "1 changed my ma<lb/>
jor to English and drama<lb/>
At the University of C alifor<lb/>
ma's Little Theatre, he plaved in<lb/>
Moby Dick and Anna'hristu '<lb/>
"i got rid of Gregory Peck, the<lb/>
guv who was so unsure of himself<lb/>
and became to myself, a veritable<lb/>
wonder man Mv first New York<lb/>
job, however, was as a<lb/>
$25-a week talker in the amuse-<lb/>
ment area of 'lie World's 1-air m<lb/>
1SH9 "<lb/>
Peck won a scholarship in a<lb/>
contest sponsored by the<lb/>
Neighborhood Playhouse School<lb/>
of the Threatre in New York He<lb/>
later toured in The Doctor'<lb/>
Dilemma. After the completion<lb/>
of the tour, he was assigned '<lb/>
understudy Philip Merivale and<lb/>
Jean-Pierre Aumont in Hose<lb/>
Burke, a McClintic production,<lb/>
which did not reach Broadw<lb/>
"In the summer of 1942, 1 ai<lb/>
at the Cape Playhouse in De<lb/>
see PI pane )4<lb/>
Take Care With Batteries<lb/>
cries<lb/>
eel way<lb/>
?nous<lb/>
ndness,<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
(NSPB)<lb/>
'<lb/>
s<lb/>
were<lb/>
ergency<lb/>
? attei v<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
? ? &amp;<lb/>
ery<lb/>
:nd<lb/>
trie good<lb/>
?<lb/>
tn non-<lb/>
. -<lb/>
-<lb/>
. ies.<lb/>
ibles,<lb/>
?v be<lb/>
i i<lb/>
9<lb/>
n0Md<lb/>
o<lb/>
OFTENER<lb/>
64 Oz. 'Snuggle<lb/>
v 450 Off<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Process &amp; Print ?t<lb/>
191 C per print<lb/>
rig. (reg. $2.98<lb/>
eg $9 W<lb/>
NOW $4.73<lb/>
( arolina haM Mall<lb/>
Neai H?<lb/>
756-6078<lb/>
OPI s MONSAT.<lb/>
I M to 9 PM<lb/>
?upon<lb/>
ffen<lb/>
t pire?. I 27 Ht<lb/>
M <lb/>
gauge wire; well insulated; have<lb/>
sharp and clean alligator clips;<lb/>
olor-coded to avoid<lb/>
wrong connections.<lb/>
Society has these jump-<lb/>
imendations graphical-<lb/>
ly listed on a bright yellow v<lb/>
kei 1 or a copy, send 25 cents<lb/>
and a self-addressed, stamped,<lb/>
business m ? ? ope to: Na-<lb/>
tion - Prevei Blind-<lb/>
ness, Nortl Cai ina i filiate,<lb/>
1033 Wade . suite 126,<lb/>
g M 27<lb/>
i ' ? . iet is<lb/>
at i ?. ij d in prevei<lb/>
blindness through a comprehen-<lb/>
sive progiam ol community set<lb/>
vices, public and professional ed<lb/>
cucation and research.<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn.<lb/>
10th ft Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
AM Transactions Confidential ?i<lb/>
BUY?SALE?TRADE<lb/>
752-0322<lb/>
noin: 9tW<lb/>
paMotStl.<lb/>
University Optometric Eye Clinic<lb/>
DR. DENNIS O'NEAL<lb/>
Comprehensive Eye Examinations<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
Soft, Hard, (,a Permeable Tinted<lb/>
I (tended Hear, Contacts for Astigmatism<lb/>
Glasses (One Da) s. - n Mostuses<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty Discounts on Contacts &amp;<lb/>
(j lasses<lb/>
Convenient to Campus<lb/>
Evening &amp; Sat Appointments Available<lb/>
niu<lb/>
in'<lb/>
612 E. 10th Street<lb/>
(Across from campus security)<lb/>
758-6600<lb/>
2 PIECE DIAMOND<lb/>
WEDDING SET<lb/>
- .<lb/>
$<lb/>
629<lb/>
 v<lb/>
Be.i<lb/>
Gift'<lb/>
7 DIAMOND<lb/>
CLUSTER RING<lb/>
$5995<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
FASHION RING<lb/>
$290<lb/>
25 Cl<lb/>
Total<lb/>
Weight<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
CLUSTER RING<lb/>
S449<lb/>
Total<lb/>
Weight<lb/>
?"?? ? ?.?<lb/>
r<lb/>
14 DIAMOND<lb/>
CLUSTER RING<lb/>
$695<lb/>
50 Ct T W<lb/>
Reg<lb/>
$1075.00<lb/>
? '1 U' 'k"<lb/>
50 Ct T W<lb/>
Res<lb/>
1550 00<lb/>
GENTS<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
RING<lb/>
$895<lb/>
m<lb/>
EARRINGS<lb/>
s40<lb/>
ROSE<lb/>
PENDANT<lb/>
$275? m<lb/>
DIAMOND BUTTERCUP<lb/>
EARRINGS AND<lb/>
PENDANTS<lb/>
N<lb/>
' ? ?<lb/>
24 c 1 r .<lb/>
White Gold<lb/>
295 $295<lb/>
GENTS GOLD<lb/>
NUGGET<lb/>
RING <lb/>
$<lb/>
<lb/>
749<lb/>
-m<lb/>
25 Ct TW<lb/>
Reg S1250 00<lb/>
GENTS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
BLACK ONYX<lb/>
RING<lb/>
s595<lb/>
MATCHING GOLD NUGGET<lb/>
DIAMOND WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
GENTS<lb/>
$495<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
$475<lb/>
14 KT GOLD<lb/>
HEART<lb/>
PENDANT<lb/>
Reg $230.00<lb/>
S<lb/>
97<lb/>
SO.<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
? EARRINGS<lb/>
S1C95<lb/>
16<lb/>
GENTS<lb/>
GEMSTONE<lb/>
RINGS<lb/>
&amp; iy<lb/>
30?(<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
Ooff<lb/>
Our<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Selection1<lb/>
; WAYS TO BUY Cash Charge Layaway Visa MasterCard?Amencan Express'Barnes Charge Car-j<lb/>
Free ear piercing <lb/>
with purchase of Earrings<lb/>
Barnes<lb/>
<lb/>
lcucu.<lb/>
Only $2.99<lb/>
And Diamond Gallery<lb/>
Hours Monday Thursday 9 30 8 00 Friday 9 30 9 00 Saturday 9 30 6 00 Closed Sunday<lb/>
14K Gold Chains &amp;<lb/>
Bracelets<lb/>
50 o 60<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
JACKSONVILLE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I HI EASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
FANUARY 14. 1986<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
Peck Looks Back On Satisfactory Career<lb/>
Some Maestros Were Oddballs<lb/>
continued i. page 13<lb/>
Mass he recalled. "1 received a<lb/>
call from McClintic to play the<lb/>
lead in Emlyn Williams' Morning<lb/>
Star. When it opened in<lb/>
Philadelphia, I received about as<lb/>
bad a set of notices from the<lb/>
critics as it is possible for an actor<lb/>
to get<lb/>
His five nominations as Best<lb/>
Actor were for To Kill a Mock-<lb/>
ingbird, for which he won the<lb/>
Academy Award. The Keys to the<lb/>
Kindgorn, The Yearling,<lb/>
Gentlemen's Agreement and<lb/>
Twelve O'Clock High.<lb/>
"Of my early films it was the<lb/>
role of Father Chisholm in Keys<lb/>
of the Kingdom that I liked the<lb/>
best<lb/>
"When I worked on a film, 1<lb/>
was never pleased with a scene<lb/>
and always wanted to do it over. I<lb/>
am an actor who play by play in<lb/>
every way gets better and better. I<lb/>
enjoyed stage because it was there<lb/>
I received real body blows<lb/>
"1 enjoy politics, but I'm not a<lb/>
chronic crusader Peck said.<lb/>
"People have said 1 have a<lb/>
resemblance to Lincoln, with a<lb/>
suggestion of nobility in my<lb/>
bony, rugged face and rather gen-<lb/>
tle, shy manner. Any pictured<lb/>
resemblance lies in the frame. My<lb/>
honest face, if any, never im-<lb/>
presses anybody, except once<lb/>
when I bluffed in poker and ran a<lb/>
pair of nines over a straight<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
B Y FRIEDRICH<lb/>
KiMO f<lb/>
JkSAfi<lb/>
BT THE fVKt M ??<lb/>
w<lb/>
'<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
(UP1) ? Classical music lovers<lb/>
? and others too ? will enjoy<lb/>
The Book of Musical Anecdotes<lb/>
by Norman Lebrechi, a well-<lb/>
researched volume about little-<lb/>
known eccentricities and pro-<lb/>
clivities among a group that as a<lb/>
whole tends to be a little weird.<lb/>
Composer George Frederic<lb/>
Handel (1685-1759) once dined at<lb/>
a tavern and ordered dinner for<lb/>
three. There was such a long<lb/>
delay in serving him that he asked<lb/>
the waiter why it was taking so<lb/>
long. The waiter replied that he<lb/>
was waiting for his guests to ar-<lb/>
rive ? to which Handel retorted<lb/>
that he was the "company<lb/>
Handel, who produced more<lb/>
than 50 operas, loved to eat and<lb/>
drink and once received a gift of<lb/>
a doen bottles of excellent cham-<lb/>
pagne.<lb/>
Handel wanted to keep H tor<lb/>
his own persona! u-e and not<lb/>
serve it to his guests. During a<lb/>
partv one time, Handel had a<lb/>
sudden thirst tor some of his<lb/>
superior champagne.<lb/>
He told his guests that he had a<lb/>
thought and they assumed he<lb/>
wanted to write down something<lb/>
before he forgot it. Actually he<lb/>
was going to his closet to swill<lb/>
some of the wine.<lb/>
German symphonist Johannes<lb/>
Brahms once fell asleep listening<lb/>
 ran I is: play, Anton<lb/>
. kner's Jg was trained to<lb/>
a when listening to Richard<lb/>
Wagneer's compositions and<lb/>
Russian Igor Stravinsky hated<lb/>
(wing van Beethoven's com-<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
Beethoven loved to eat bread<lb/>
soup made with 10 raw eggs and<lb/>
Giuseppe Verdi, the great Italian<lb/>
composer, disturbed by the<lb/>
sound of street organs playing<lb/>
anas from his operas, hired them<lb/>
all for a season and kept them<lb/>
locked in a room.<lb/>
t, arts writer for the<lb/>
London Times, collected hun-<lb/>
dreds of anecdotes from<lb/>
thousands of books, articles and<lb/>
unpublished manuscripts.<lb/>
ELLIE'S<lb/>
Ladies Fashions &amp; Mens Sportswear <lb/>
Clearance on Fall Merchandise y<lb/>
I 25 to 50 Off <lb/>
y Brand Name Jeans from Si4.99 <lb/>
J Sweaters $7.99 ?)<lb/>
Skirts S12.74 (f<lb/>
And More I ow Prices<lb/>
2806 K. 10th St.<lb/>
Located in Shopping<lb/>
( enter Across from Highwav Patrol<lb/>
Open Mon thru Sat 10-6<lb/>
?N<lb/>
UU fAl<lb/>
-<lb/>
N<lb/>
ys<lb/>
Great,<lb/>
Combe<lb/>
?<lb/>
Jr. Sirloin<lb/>
&amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Mon-Fri.<lb/>
No Take Outs<lb/>
Please<lb/>
STTLAK HOUSE<lb/>
? ???<lb/>
UNCLE SAM'S<lb/>
CARPET CLEANING<lb/>
One Dorm Room<lb/>
Steamed Cleaned<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
Call 758-6942<lb/>
AHOY ECU STUDENTS?<lb/>
fKJ 1<lb/>
Set "sale" for Kroger!<lb/>
we've got everything<lb/>
you need to get<lb/>
you through a busy<lb/>
week, plus weekend<lb/>
party supplies!<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
S3E3E3E3S3S3E3S3E3E&amp;<lb/>
Yo<lb/>
OmEdy ZpNE<lb/>
ANOTHER DIMENSION IN SIGHT &amp; SOUND<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE COKE DIET COKE<lb/>
CLASSIC COKE OR NEW <lb/>
Coca<lb/>
Cola.<lb/>
Ltr<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
SINGLE TOPPING<lb/>
12" Deli<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
For<lb/>
We makt . m FRESH<lb/>
vim take'em ami bake'em!<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
POLAR PAK<lb/>
Ice<lb/>
Cream <lb/>
6J H ? N ?" j.i<lb/>
? Reserved seating for two shows every Wednesday.<lb/>
? Call 758-5570 by 6:00 on Wednesday for<lb/>
Reservations.<lb/>
? Doors Open 7:30 First Show<lb/>
10:15 Second Show<lb/>
? All these young comedians have appeared at<lb/>
Charlie Goodnight's in Raleigh. Many have<lb/>
appeared on the Johnny Carson Show and Late<lb/>
Night with David Letterman.<lb/>
? Amateur Hour immediately following comedians.<lb/>
??? 2 please<lb/>
MINUTE MA.D REGULAR OR<lb/>
COUNTRY STYcE CHILLED<lb/>
'OOO'o PURE<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice . .<lb/>
KROGER BUTTERMILK.SWEET ACIDOPHILUS<lb/>
CHOCOLATE MILK. OR HOMOGENIZEO<lb/>
2 Lowfat,<lb/>
Skim, or<lb/>
Whole Milked<lb/>
FLORIDA ? CITRUS?<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
Oranges<lb/>
8 99<lb/>
Video Movie Rentals<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
C i 756 5570 for i FREE RIDE to<lb/>
on the jj<lb/>
Wed Jan<lb/>
15th<lb/>
JtSerCp 9bdt<lb/>
with<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
Prime flub Ml ABC Permits<lb/>
OVER<lb/>
650<lb/>
TITLES<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
A VMS<lb/>
iVP.E Hv<lb/>
No Club Fees<lb/>
VHS Player<lb/>
Rental<lb/>
$399<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
PREVIOUSLY FROZEN<lb/>
50-70 CT MEDIUM<lb/>
Headless<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
$399<lb/>
FANCY ROME. GOlD<lb/>
OR REO<lb/>
Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
SPRrnAVp ?oicEEN 4 ?2 CONTAINER OF<lb/>
4rHnruLALcMS SALSA SALSA w CHEESE<lb/>
NACHO CHEESE SAUCE OR PICANTE SAUCE<lb/>
($2 99. AND GET A FOURTEEN ,14, OZ BAG<lb/>
NachOs SAve<lb/>
Chips.S17?<lb/>
OPEN 2a HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
WeO<lb/>
Came<lb/>
PhotofinisI<lb/>
48 Hour<lb/>
24 Hour<lb/>
by Colorcrl<lb/>
Nikon and<lb/>
Lenses, an<lb/>
A Complei<lb/>
Film, Equi<lb/>
Kodak, Ag<lb/>
Photo Pap<lb/>
OftC<lb/>
518<lb/>
GREI<lb/>
nnii3ui2M:<lb/>
'<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
??. 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0015"/><lb/>
Oddballs<lb/>
es and<lb/>
 ?4 ? ?tf NS i<lb/>
IE'S<lb/>
iil Merchandise<lb/>
50 Of f s<lb/>
!h M.<lb/>
iv? dv Patrol<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
TS!<lb/>
mple<lb/>
ranges<lb/>
m <lb/>
I FOURTEEN (14) OZ CONTAINER OF<lb/>
IPINGDALE FARMS SALSA SALSA W CHEESE<lb/>
JCHO CHEESE SAUCE OR PICANTE SAUCE<lb/>
991 AND GET A FOURTEEN (14) 02 BAG<lb/>
lacho - save<lb/>
hips. $179<lb/>
2a HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
lenviile Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
D<lb/>
x<lb/>
HI EASTAROLINIANJANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
15<lb/>
K<lb/>
i inc-K. has Vh-t<lb/>
p sv-ep'NG ipie- <lb/>
nk-tMV HP SjftfHSJT? in<lb/>
iVAMtP OF U2VL-F H.t,<lb/>
bvOETKs Mp AU, His ?<lb/>
lt vAR7?<lb/>
Firs Lady v4c In KiYfeo<lb/>
The world premiere of "Stop<lb/>
the Madness a music video<lb/>
dedicated to drug abuse preven-<lb/>
tion and featuring First Lady<lb/>
Nancy Reagan, will be stereocast<lb/>
on NBC's Friday Night Videos<lb/>
(12:30-2 a.m. NYT).<lb/>
Reagan taped her appearance<lb/>
in the video with a chorus of<lb/>
children in the Blue Room of the<lb/>
White House. New Edition,<lb/>
Whitney Houston, Latoya<lb/>
Jackson, Arnold Schwarzeneg-<lb/>
ger, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,<lb/>
David Hasselfhoff, Michele Lee,<lb/>
Stacey Keach, Herb Alpert, Toni<lb/>
Basil and radio host Casey Kasem<lb/>
are among those who appear and<lb/>
peform in "Stop the Madness<lb/>
The video was created by Tim<lb/>
Reid for the Entertainment In-<lb/>
dustries Council, a non-profit<lb/>
organization comprising enter-<lb/>
tainment industry leaders. Coun-<lb/>
cil founder Brian Dyak served as<lb/>
executive producer of the video;<lb/>
Michael Stokes produced and<lb/>
directed the music.<lb/>
Dyak said: "Tim Reid and I sat<lb/>
around for a year trying to think<lb/>
of an anti-drug music video that<lb/>
would be commercially com-<lb/>
petitive and not preachy. We felt<lb/>
that if we had a strong dance tune<lb/>
with a driving beat, eventually<lb/>
the lyrics would sink in. I was<lb/>
very impressed with Mrs.<lb/>
Reagan's commitment to this<lb/>
issue. Although heavy dance<lb/>
music is not her kind of music,<lb/>
she liked the message and saw<lb/>
right away that using contem-<lb/>
porary sounds was a technique<lb/>
that could r lly work<lb/>
"During the taping, Mrs.<lb/>
Reagan was exceptional. We had<lb/>
eight-foot speakers set up in the<lb/>
White House and she kept wan-<lb/>
ting to turn the music up louder.<lb/>
She liked the beat and agreed that<lb/>
the theme, 'Stop the Madness<lb/>
really worked for her. Thanks in<lb/>
part to her help, that theme has<lb/>
sort of become the theme of the<lb/>
entertainment industry's efforts<lb/>
for drug prevention<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
IMP C$TP(D<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
SAX<lb/>
<lb/>
I Ice Water Mansion<lb/>
ECU Students $1.00<lb/>
Dorm Students free<lb/>
thur<lb/>
LUIIII J1UUCIII3 IIW ?<lb/>
So -THAT'S WH?C?.<lb/>
t Gen that ervf<lb/>
You Sffcfir<lb/>
hA0N?f 0M<lb/>
Wtt tirif HAWt A. Co ?<lb/>
A ' WOVLDI' t UtSC TO<lb/>
? ????<lb/>
 NEEDED<lb/>
Editors<lb/>
Apply: The East Carolinian<lb/>
NEED HELP GETTING A JOB?<lb/>
Call Life Planning Institute and we will reserve a spot for you at our Job Interviewing<lb/>
workshopseminar<lb/>
You will learn proper interviewing techniques that will bring you success in your job<lb/>
search!<lb/>
This is a first come, first serve basis<lb/>
So, ACT NOW! We have only 20 spots left.<lb/>
CALL 355-6810<lb/>
$9.00 pre-registration<lb/>
Jaycee Auditorium<lb/>
$12.00 at door<lb/>
2000 Cedar Lane<lb/>
Your One Stop Store For<lb/>
Everything Creative<lb/>
We Offer a Complete Line of<lb/>
Camera Supplies and Equipment.<lb/>
Photofinishing by Eastman Kodak<lb/>
48 Hour Kodak slide Service<lb/>
24 Hour Kodacolor Service<lb/>
by Colorcraft<lb/>
Nikon and Canon Cameras<lb/>
Lenses, and Accessories<lb/>
A Complete Line of Kodak<lb/>
Film, Equipment and Supplies<lb/>
Kodak, Agfa, and llford,<lb/>
Photo Papers<lb/>
art 4 coacro hop<lb/>
ri 518 SOUTH CQTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NX. 27834<lb/>
752-0888<lb/>
We Offer the Best Selection of<lb/>
Art Supplies in the East<lb/>
Supplies for the Student<lb/>
Amateur, and Professional<lb/>
Graphic Supplies by Letraset,<lb/>
Zipatone, Tactype, Alvin,<lb/>
Decadry, E-Z Letter, and many more.<lb/>
Custom Framing<lb/>
Drafting Supplies<lb/>
Largest Selection of Mat Board<lb/>
Artist Boards and Artist Papers In the East<lb/>
Ready Made Frames and Framing Supplies<lb/>
Framed and Unframed Posters and Prints<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0016"/><lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14,1986<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
VtAk<lb/>
-?' GA<lb/>
cm<lb/>
: Mkl A GUY WHO WANTS<lb/>
IN A CLUB HE'S OPENING<lb/>
0N9r?<lb/>
STREET<lb/>
3<lb/>
htLANlPAYME.BUTHELL<lb/>
THROW ME AN OPENING WHEN<lb/>
DM PONE' INCREDIBLE<lb/>
opportunity1 in ma 1 CAN<lb/>
ONLY THINK OF x<lb/>
ONE DOWN SIPE<lb/>
ADOmSOE? 1EAHITC0UU?<lb/>
TO PAINTING CONE OFF AS<lb/>
A TOTAL S7RANG A &amp;ATAKT CA<lb/>
Ek TOILETS REERMOVB<lb/>
FOR FREE 3 <lb/>
' i ? ? Hit HAEt<lb/>
 XX SURl LAVATORY At i<lb/>
SOHEONL SVERY&amp;6<lb/>
v wcing mm HCk<lb/>
??v <lb/>
s .it,<lb/>
X<lb/>
Jm<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
s<lb/>
A UP  -V! STARTS ARE<lb/>
DECORATING ROCK CUBS H?OM THL<lb/>
BAR JO THE TELEPHONE BOOTHS 1I<lb/>
?- ?: A LOTMORE EXPO<lb/>
SURE HAS TRAP-<lb/>
?VUER ?<lb/>
HIKE MNEAVORK<lb/>
AH PEOPLE SPEND MUCH<lb/>
8L THE HIRE TIME IN THE BA TH<lb/>
BATH ROOM THAN THEY DO ON<lb/>
ROOMS THE DANCE "<lb/>
? OR <lb/>
REALLY? OH. MY SHIEST<lb/>
WHAT COUNTRY MOUSE<lb/>
fOR <lb/>
WEU J! ' ?<lb/>
REUMlNARi<lb/>
???? KETCHES IU<lb/>
?. St AlOT<lb/>
.??<lb/>
QEA WHS a<lb/>
. -   <lb/>
THANKS nemiDGCCR-<lb/>
a.  ? W$ 7?5 R?S HAR<lb/>
-???- PRXE&amp;t ? a LI 36<lb/>
r ? spfw&amp;BAwioenm<lb/>
I PONT KNOW ABOUT -HE<lb/>
?? ?? ? ? ?<lb/>
JF<lb/>
dmk C<lb/>
MAYBE YOU<lb/>
SHOULD LEAVE<lb/>
IPfMUk n<lb/>
iX-KMOO<lb/>
SC-PEOPLE<lb/>
CM FINP<lb/>
THEM <lb/>
WhAT ANP PLACE.<lb/>
cUNCTION OVER<lb/>
f0mt5UBJU6ATl<lb/>
IRONY AND ENERGY<lb/>
"LTlLnARjANiSfl'7<lb/>
M IKE.THIS !SN<lb/>
OKLAHOMA<lb/>
GOP THE<lb/>
QUITE CRITICS MXlD<lb/>
R GHT HAVE A FI6LP<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
?  ? ???.  u<lb/>
 ??? . - wst ?-?<lb/>
? ????: PEA "<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
'? -v ?? S ?: Ml<lb/>
Sh?. .<lb/>
,i : '<lb/>
m i A-<lb/>
-j? <lb/>
 ?Jr<lb/>
<lb/>
4JKH<lb/>
C-1- <lb/>
?  M ? ?.?? ? VL<lb/>
U K- Sh t t ?' <lb/>
;????.? - <lb/>
? TM V  ? ?-? <lb/>
 v: 5 ?? '???'?'  ?<lb/>
v. ?: it ?? ?  T-f cV"<lb/>
?? cEeune6Asar?m.<lb/>
. V? - A,  <lb/>
I<lb/>
info<lb/>
s<lb/>
L<lb/>
LI <lb/>
?;? " vta the<lb/>
jj asa expe ;? wxe<lb/>
 7ML TiEAmCAL I'M<lb/>
v  ????? . m<lb/>
PRY ICE.<lb/>
? <lb/>
<lb/>
 r<lb/>
??<lb/>
1 r i n<lb/>
ti<lb/>
nm<lb/>
<lb/>
MO<lb/>
k v? 7y<lb/>
NIO<lb/>
:H<lb/>
<lb/>
?  A  ??? . M . ?? ??? ?<lb/>
7Mil<lb/>
 i -<lb/>
<lb/>
ANi ?? ?? ? ???? van r<lb/>
WE Of VPU5T7HAL SPRJN -<lb/>
'OR PECPLE T05TT0N vr THE<lb/>
QOFQAM<lb/>
a hA' 5 v 5 A SLEEPi 6<lb/>
aHNOTHAT W THATSRAOm<lb/>
OOKS U KE A E 5 ?' ??90W<lb/>
2&amp;MS W. v ARTIST<lb/>
BEAVER CLEAVER<lb/>
a ASLEEP ON A BED<lb/>
' U VM 3005<lb/>
OF THE 00 IjSTAWnKM-<lb/>
nx ?? ?? - WHAT CO<lb/>
YOU Th ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
REAWi S<lb/>
: a 'SSUIN6<lb/>
 fORMS?<lb/>
ANYWAY THE ROTC COMMANPER<lb/>
C?EMEP TO TAKE A REAL SHINE<lb/>
TOME I'M HOPING HE'LL BE<lb/>
 ABLE TO PUT ME<lb/>
ON THE PROCURE<lb/>
' MEYTEAST WACk<lb/>
??.<lb/>
A'YRL7TC<lb/>
 <lb/>
HAIRCUTS,<lb/>
I M6VESS<lb/>
iOUlAuGH procurement<lb/>
IS THE FUTURE ITS THE<lb/>
EVERY ONLIWAYTD<lb/>
BOY'S WITH DEFENSE<lb/>
DREAM CDNTRAC<lb/>
TORS'<lb/>
NO COR A PUll<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
NOT EVERYONE<lb/>
UA. TES THEIR<lb/>
TRlPPY a 0U<lb/>
MREORPEREP<lb/>
TO BOMBARD<lb/>
A HAMLET OF<lb/>
toOCENT CIVIL-<lb/>
IANS WOULDYOU<lb/>
Dor<lb/>
YUP' HOW PO YOU<lb/>
LIKE THEM APPLES,<lb/>
PEFENSE SUNSHINE' V<lb/>
CDNTRAC<lb/>
TORS?<lb/>
NOCEN"<lb/>
MY FOOT<lb/>
60-dbao<lb/>
ANPLETY0U6ET<lb/>
YOU'RE NOT A CRACK AT THEM"<lb/>
BRINGING NOWAY,<lb/>
ANY OF THEM<lb/>
BACKTOTHE<lb/>
ROOM, ARE YOU7<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Fitness Center<lb/>
Formerly<lb/>
NAUTILUS<lb/>
1002 Evans Street<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
Home of ECU Pirates Baseball Team<lb/>
and Cheerleaders<lb/>
OUR GYM HAS:<lb/>
? Over 8000 lbs. of Olympic Weights<lb/>
? A 16 Station Nautilus Circuit<lb/>
?Tanning Center<lb/>
? Aerobic Classes Daily<lb/>
? Sauna<lb/>
? Showers<lb/>
? Nutrition Counseling<lb/>
? Air Conditioning<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
Schedule of Classes<lb/>
Monday 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday 4:00p.m. 5.30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday 4:00 p.m. 5.30p.m. 7:00p.m.<lb/>
Thursday 4:00p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7:00 pm.<lb/>
Friday 4:00p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday 4:00p.m.<lb/>
 Other times will be added if there<lb/>
is sufficient interest.<lb/>
GYM HOURS<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
10:00a.m.<lb/>
1:00p.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
9:00p.m.<lb/>
9:00p.m.<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 pm.<lb/>
5:00p.m.<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
$10 Off First Month<lb/>
or Semester Rate<lb/>
$75 Semester<lb/>
$25 Month<lb/>
Expires 1-19-86<lb/>
Where Winners Train<lb/>
Jim Gaskill<lb/>
Clint Jordan<lb/>
Mike Massey<lb/>
Pete Clark<lb/>
Markem<lb/>
Wheatly<lb/>
Vern Ferrell<lb/>
1985 Gold's Classic Jr. OverAII<lb/>
Champion<lb/>
1985 tsNr. NC 4th Heavyweight Division<lb/>
1983 Eastern NC Body Building Jr.<lb/>
Overall Champion<lb/>
1984 Appalacian 3rd Place Open<lb/>
Heavyweight<lb/>
1985 Gold's Classic 3rd Place Open<lb/>
Heavyweight<lb/>
1982 Mr. Teenage Burlington<lb/>
1982 Mr. Teenage Triad<lb/>
1983 Eastern NC Body Building Teenage<lb/>
1985 Nkt. Jr. Piedmont 2nd Place Tall<lb/>
1984 Eastern Teenage 2nd Place<lb/>
1984 Teenage hNr. NC 4th Place<lb/>
Short Class <lb/>
1981 Mr. NC 2nd Place Medium Height<lb/>
1982 Mr. NC Winner Medium Height<lb/>
Class 2nd Overall<lb/>
1983 10th AAU bAr. America<lb/>
1985 Iron Den Classic 3rd Place<lb/>
Sharon Bartha 1985 M$s Traid Overall Winner<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ?v<lb/>
HNflMM  ? m " "w<lb/>
i<lb/>
mmtmmmmmimfmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0017"/><lb/>
i V<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirate Sports Take No Break Over Holidays<lb/>
I to'i s<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
 I<lb/>
<lb/>
n -<lb/>
<lb/>
I t<lb/>
<lb/>
((. lockwiv ne I osier handles hall; Ml 's No. 2 all-time rusher lun<lb/>
Baker rambles for irlier competition; Scott Hard) fires away; Jefi Heath con-<lb/>
cludes outsl irln Harrison directs his squad vocally.<lb/>
????????????1<lb/>
Bucs Pick Up Sixth Victory<lb/>
i k;<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
KX . ,<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ba.ss.ECl<lb/>
 :m with a tu f((<lb/>
1 : ? 1 (4X-30)<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
 7 points v hil?<lb/>
ted in double<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
.i - ed Mid<lb/>
agot a ire 1<lb/>
( 1 squeaking out<lb/>
? 1: ' Minges<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
-<lb/>
- I '<lb/>
Ik :<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
? .<lb/>
-<lb/>
See HOOPS! I Rs. Page IK<lb/>
Lady Pirates-Finish<lb/>
Second In Classic<lb/>
B IliHNI)I hK<lb/>
sp  n<lb/>
?<lb/>
u, ee i<lb/>
it<lb/>
. game by a ?0 65<lb/>
i. assiv the University<lb/>
Rhode Islai<lb/>
Depth Is Key To Women<lb/>
Swimmers Conference Win<lb/>
Bv DWII) l,(,lMss<lb/>
?A I!<lb/>
Mini<lb/>
rhe III <lb/>
i an the second le<lb/>
'85 '86 season wil<lb/>
over <lb/>
William &amp; Mai ?<lb/>
Natatorium last Saturday i<lb/>
record now stands ai 8-1 ii<lb/>
record seven<lb/>
v ictories to thi<lb/>
'Depth' wa the k ?<lb/>
ladies victory i<lb/>
place in only se r 14 swm<lb/>
mg events 1 he womei<lb/>
to place .tt leas; (hud m every<lb/>
?<lb/>
'?<lb/>
? yard<lb/>
while<lb/>
p honors in<lb/>
' II i<lb/>
am ol<lb/>
? ? grabbed<lb/>
oints foi the<lb/>
i -<lb/>
ites,<lb/>
sweepii i<lb/>
one ai ?tei events<lb/>
Bucs Sheri y . ampbell took fii si<lb/>
Pofl second in both<lb/>
the one and three meter events,<lb/>
a n over illiam Jv. Mar y<lb/>
is an important one tor the ladies.<lb/>
ause that school, along with<lb/>
lames Madison University, will<lb/>
biggest k hallenge tor<lb/>
them in the c Ac conference<lb/>
tournament in February<lb/>
Sec SWIM, Pane 22<lb/>
. ? M ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
U-29 v, <lb/>
-<lb/>
I)elpvie Ma<lb/>
to Gretta ONea<lb/>
' A<lb/>
n ti t se. ond 1<lb/>
by n<lb/>
Bra<lb/>
with U 19 to <lb/>
?<lb/>
ther<lb/>
with 9:54 t g <lb/>
Pirates were<lb/>
come within tout po<lb/>
sent from the flooi <lb/>
1 igei s s<lb/>
? '<lb/>
Sy a Bra<lb/>
the Pirates with 24<lb/>
followed b I isa Squirewi<lb/>
See 1 l) pak; 2.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
?lyjLEAST C A ROLINI AN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
Hoopsters Stumble At Siena Tournament<lb/>
Continued From Page 17<lb/>
American University and snap-<lb/>
ped a tour-game losing streak for<lb/>
the Bucs.<lb/>
Vanderhorst was second for<lb/>
ECU with 13 and center Bass ad-<lb/>
ded a dozen.<lb/>
The Pirates started slowly as<lb/>
they trailed early 7-2 just minutes<lb/>
into the contest. However, ECU<lb/>
came back and opened a seven-<lb/>
point lead with 2:15 left in the<lb/>
first period. The Eagles fought<lb/>
back and the teams were<lb/>
deadlocked (30-30) at the inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
The Pirates grabbed the second<lb/>
half lead and never looked back.<lb/>
ECU opened as much as an<lb/>
11-point lead on a pair of Sledge<lb/>
free throws late in the game and<lb/>
went on to win 70-62.<lb/>
American was led by guard<lb/>
Frank Ross with 20 points while<lb/>
Eagle center Henrv Hopkins add-<lb/>
ed 10.<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 28, 1986<lb/>
A balanced scoring attack in<lb/>
which five players hit double<lb/>
figures was enough to pace<lb/>
Bucknell University to a 68-61<lb/>
victory over ECU in the consola-<lb/>
tion game of the Siena Invita-<lb/>
tional Tournament in Loudon-<lb/>
ville, N.Y.<lb/>
The Pirates led early in the<lb/>
contest on the hot shooting of<lb/>
senior guard William Grady.<lb/>
Grady's 10 first-half points kept<lb/>
the Bucs close as thev trailed<lb/>
31-28 at the half.<lb/>
The second half was just as<lb/>
close as the teams battled back<lb/>
and forth. Two Jack Turnbill<lb/>
free throws knotted the game at<lb/>
61-61 with 3:10 remaining.<lb/>
However, ECU went cold and<lb/>
Bucknell went on to victory<lb/>
68-61.<lb/>
For ECU, Grady led all scorers<lb/>
with 18 points. Bass had 15 while<lb/>
Hardy chipped in 10.<lb/>
Fri. Dec. 27, 1985<lb/>
The Ivy League's Cornell<lb/>
University defeated ECU in over-<lb/>
time in the opening round of the<lb/>
Siena Invitational Tournament,<lb/>
54-53.<lb/>
A low scoring first half saw<lb/>
both teams shooting poorly from<lb/>
the field. Cornell connected on 34<lb/>
percent of their attempts while<lb/>
ECU hit just 30.<lb/>
The second half saw the lead<lb/>
change hands 10 times. Henry's<lb/>
basket underneath gave the Bucs<lb/>
a 49-47 advantage with just over<lb/>
a minute left in regulation. But<lb/>
two Josh Wexler free throws put<lb/>
the game into overtime.<lb/>
Cornell got an inside basket<lb/>
and made three of four foul shots<lb/>
to squeak past ECU 54-53.<lb/>
Henry led ECU with 16 as<lb/>
Vanderhorst added 13 and Bass<lb/>
chipped in 10.<lb/>
Sal. Dec. 21, 1985<lb/>
The SMU Mustangs defeated<lb/>
ECU 71-62 in second-round ac-<lb/>
tion of the Kentucky Invitational<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates kept the action<lb/>
close and trailed 33-30 at the<lb/>
halftime intermission. The<lb/>
Pirates cut the Mustang lead to<lb/>
just one (33-32) early in the se-<lb/>
cond half on a Bass turnaround.<lb/>
However, the Southwest Con-<lb/>
ference members showed their<lb/>
strength and cruised to a 71-62<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Walker En-Shrined<lb/>
ECU's senior cornerback<lb/>
Kevin Walker participated in the<lb/>
61st annual East-West Shrine<lb/>
Game, played on Jan. 11 in Palo<lb/>
Alto, Calif.<lb/>
Kevin Walker<lb/>
The Shrine Game took place in<lb/>
Stanford Stadium as the East was<lb/>
coached by Earle Bruce (Ohio<lb/>
State) and the West by Lavelle<lb/>
Edwards (BYU). Walker was<lb/>
teamed with LSU's Garry James,<lb/>
Bowling Green's Brian McClure,<lb/>
Miami's Kevin Fagan and<lb/>
Maryland's Rick Bdanjek to<lb/>
mention a few.<lb/>
The game, mostly controlled<lb/>
by the defensive units, saw the<lb/>
East team overpower the West<lb/>
squad as they rolled to an 18-7<lb/>
victory. Walker, who was around<lb/>
the ball all afternoon, recovered a<lb/>
fumble and picked off a pass.<lb/>
Walker, a Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
native played for the East Squad<lb/>
after concluding the 1985 season<lb/>
tied with Tennessee's Chris White<lb/>
as the nation's interception<lb/>
leader. Both Walker and White<lb/>
managed nine intercepts in 11<lb/>
games. Walker led the nation in<lb/>
interceptions for six consecutive<lb/>
weeks during one stretch in the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The 5-11, 185-pound Walker<lb/>
earned first-team all-Southern In-<lb/>
dependent and first team all-<lb/>
ECAC honors during his brilliant<lb/>
senior year. With his nine interc-<lb/>
pts. Walker fell just one shy of<lb/>
the school's single-season record<lb/>
of 10. His 18 career pick-offs<lb/>
leave him just four short of the<lb/>
school career mark of 22 set Jim<lb/>
Bolding (1975).<lb/>
Walker earned ECAC Defen-<lb/>
sive Player of the Week honors<lb/>
twice this past season as he had<lb/>
two games where he intercepted<lb/>
two or more passes. In the<lb/>
Pirates' 27-15 loss on Oct. 5 to<lb/>
the (then 2nd ranked) Miami<lb/>
Hurricanes, Walker intercepted<lb/>
three Vinny Testaverde passes<lb/>
and tied ECU's single-game<lb/>
record.<lb/>
i<lb/>
)COeCOOGCOOSCOOCOGOOOOCCOOCOCOC000000<lb/>
, 1<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
R?tr?ad ??<lb/>
"?00 "P<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?5555 4CyUnder<lb/>
IJSSSSl 529.95<lb/>
"$14.88 UandScyhnder<lb/>
For 1 lightly higher<lb/>
Aiiipwffir i<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available.<lb/>
JfF'Clii. NCPlMCiKOllWSUftlfcSPlCHOJtSIAln'h<lb/>
Wf UftVtCE NATION At ACCOUNTS<lb/>
SKaoodrich<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
? a?A.M 1 OOP M<lb/>
OPEN MON FRI<lb/>
(MAM. J: JO P.M.<lb/>
' 'Consider us your cars'<lb/>
? Home A wa y From Home A<lb/>
Cog gins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 W6st Greenville Blvd<lb/>
MOOOROOOooaaanfinnnnnfiaanaeaannw ? ? i. ?ngpooooooooou<lb/>
"The game was lost in the first<lb/>
five minutes of the first half and<lb/>
the first five of the second. They<lb/>
had command of the game at<lb/>
those times coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison said.<lb/>
Bass led the Bucs with 17 as<lb/>
Sledge added 14 and Vanderhorst<lb/>
chipped in a dozen.<lb/>
Fri. Dec. 20, 1985<lb/>
Kentucky University's All-<lb/>
America candidate Kenny<lb/>
Walker scored 19 points to lead a<lb/>
powerful Wildcat squad past<lb/>
ECU in opening-round action of<lb/>
the the Kentucky Invitational<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Kentucky came out hot, scor-<lb/>
ing the first seven points of the<lb/>
contest. The Wildcats led 36-24 at<lb/>
the half and went on to win han-<lb/>
dily 86-52 in Rupp Arena in Lex-<lb/>
ington, N.C.<lb/>
Henry and Herb Dixon paced<lb/>
the Pirate scorers with 10 points<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
T<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 14, 1985<lb/>
Henry's 25 points and<lb/>
Vanderhorst's 14 led the Bucs<lb/>
past Winthrop College 77-69 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The victory gave ECU a 4-1<lb/>
mark which was the best start<lb/>
since the 1962-63 squad.<lb/>
The Bucs enjoyed a 34-29<lb/>
halftime lead, but extended the<lb/>
lead to 10 (43-33) on a Hardy<lb/>
steal and layup. The Buc lead was<lb/>
largest 61-45 when freshman<lb/>
Jones had a slam dunk.<lb/>
Winthrop could manage to cut<lb/>
the Pirate lead to just six (61-55)<lb/>
with 5:50 remaining to play.<lb/>
However, ECU was able to hold<lb/>
off any threats of a comeback as<lb/>
they went on to win easily 77-69.<lb/>
Wed. Dec. 11, 1985<lb/>
ECU used an 18-10 run late in<lb/>
the game paced by William<lb/>
Grady's two clutch baskets to<lb/>
give the Pirates a 68-60 win over<lb/>
the Longwood College Lancers in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The Bucs were led by Henry's<lb/>
25 points and Vanderhorst's 14<lb/>
and Bass' 11.<lb/>
The Pirates opened a 10-point<lb/>
lead early on a Jones slam with<lb/>
14:23 left in the first half.<lb/>
Longwood came back and<lb/>
managed to knot the game 34-34<lb/>
at the intermission.<lb/>
With the game tied 50-50 mid-<lb/>
way through the second half,<lb/>
coach Harrison inserted Grady,<lb/>
who responded with two quick<lb/>
buckets. With the Bucs up 54-50,<lb/>
they never looked back. Good<lb/>
free-throw shooting down the<lb/>
stretch sealed the victory for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The Bucs outrebounded the<lb/>
Lancers 26-19. The Pirates also<lb/>
shot well, connecting on 62.5 per-<lb/>
cent of their field-goal attempts<lb/>
The Lancers were not far behind<lb/>
as they hit 55.3 percent.<lb/>
Kenneth Fields led Longwood<lb/>
with 20 while Lonnie Lewis add-<lb/>
ed 18 and Kevin Ricks had 10.<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
DONNA EDWARDS<lb/>
Pilot makes<lb/>
writing so exciting.<lb/>
Good Selection of Reptiles<lb/>
and Saltwater and Freshwater Fish<lb/>
We Carry A Complete Line<lb/>
of Dog, Cat, and Fish Supplies<lb/>
511 EVANS ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
PHONE 754 9222<lb/>
The<lb/>
Pilot Precise<lb/>
rolling ball pen -<lb/>
the smooth,<lb/>
sleek way<lb/>
to get it on paper.<lb/>
It's the pen that writes as fine as it looks <lb/>
tinv ball held by a needle like collar is the<lb/>
secret to the comfort and smoothness you'll<lb/>
experience And hei ause , if <lb/>
Us ball, the Precise will w rite PtlOTj<lb/>
(risplv through carbons , rVv  -<lb/>
Tr either the fine or extra Ol QCJSvS<lb/>
tine point )nl S! I9each<lb/>
?<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
CRUISES<lb/>
March 13-16<lb/>
3 nights<lb/>
$ 313.75<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? i<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
March 9-13<lb/>
4 nights<lb/>
$ 422.00<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
EC<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
'?<lb/>
 <lb/>
5?<lb/>
?:<lb/>
 V<lb/>
,r?.<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
Special<lb/>
to the<lb/>
7,500 s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0019"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14,J986<lb/>
19<lb/>
nament<lb/>
4<lb/>
i he<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
tpts<lb/>
ig ?v ood<lb/>
Kid<lb/>
,sJK C9<lb/>
iring.<lb/>
I ?me<lb/>
M<lb/>
0<lb/>
-1663<lb/>
The UBE COUPON BOOK<lb/>
is back and <lb/>
It's Free<lb/>
Only at the UBE ? Downtown<lb/>
iv,<lb/>
St<lb/>
fh&amp;ii<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
Prie<lb/>
WS Regular<lb/>
&amp;AShiaflsK?<lb/>
'tank<lb/>
;v<lb/>
"the<lb/>
Pera5 oo<lb/>
EP<lb/>
33fe<lb/>
e'k<lb/>
<lb/>
nef <lb/>
?j 6<lb/>
Tco b;???<lb/>
Bo"<lb/>
m CVV 3on c<lb/>
otGreenv <lb/>
x<lb/>
.i0rne  -<lb/>
?<lb/>
. " r o? o c0 ??<lb/>
???;?<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
218 ARLINGTON 756-6001<lb/>
A ECU Students with ID s receive a I 00<lb/>
count Present this coupon for a<lb/>
10 OlSt INT<lb/>
jffc?RSON<lb/>
?Sfe<lb/>
oVD<lb/>
SSSSS?<lb/>
pe'<lb/>
?<lb/>
r is<lb/>
V-oV<lb/>
????.?! ???<lb/>
G<lb/>
v<lb/>
AS<lb/>
amkJ&amp;<lb/>
4<lb/>
 $<lb/>
Up STflTIQ<lb/>
215 E4f<lb/>
GPi<lb/>
'o?<lb/>
Aa1<lb/>
S enviilc Athletic<lb/>
four Fitness Headquarters<lb/>
arters m"<lb/>
gptfrf Greenville's most comprehensive ?m? ?-  - Mfc ? I<lb/>
V . rtea and Illness facU4 ? am. r U 1 "<lb/>
7 &amp;;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 A<lb/>
'r- A VP '<lb/>
caf<lb/>
18 vrtWA' !T? ?cU lu?n (Mef<lb/>
20??<lb/>
off<lb/>
CM<lb/>
 fife ?'<lb/>
75a<lb/>
-o8<lb/>
?r?P<lb/>
xm Off<lb/>
?ir?<lb/>
f00(T (-p-??"<lb/>
60&amp;J<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
'?<lb/>
'<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
Special Bonus<lb/>
to the first<lb/>
7,500 students!<lb/>
fB<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NX.<lb/>
jr ? -<lb/>
 ,?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0020"/><lb/>
20<lb/>
-IMJLEASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14. 1986<lb/>
ECU Army ROTC Book Exchange<lb/>
The Army ROTC Book Exchange is provided through the<lb/>
I courtesy of The East Carolinian. Information provided to us is<lb/>
listed in this order: Subject, Course Title; Book Name; Seller's<lb/>
Name; Seller's Phone Number; and price. The East Carolinian ac-<lb/>
Icepts no responsibility for incorrect information, nor exchanges<lb/>
between students.<lb/>
FINA<lb/>
Security and Port. Management<lb/>
Martha Moallar<lb/>
758-1895<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
ACCOUNTING<lb/>
ACCT 2401<lb/>
Financial Accounting<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
BIOL 1050<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Tanya Rhudy<lb/>
758-8284<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
BIOL 1050<lb/>
Humanistic Aspects of Biology<lb/>
Connie D. Bell<lb/>
758-8306<lb/>
$6.50<lb/>
BIOL 1051<lb/>
Humanistic Aspects of Biology<lb/>
John Conway<lb/>
752-9872<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
BIOL 1060<lb/>
Living In the Environment<lb/>
Gayle Pugh<lb/>
758-7222<lb/>
$16.50<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
Managerial Econ<lb/>
Managerial Economics<lb/>
Martha Miller<lb/>
758-1895<lb/>
$15.50<lb/>
BUED 3200<lb/>
Retail Business Management<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$13.00<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
CHEM 1020<lb/>
General Organic &amp; BioChemistry<lb/>
Shelley Perry<lb/>
752-9927<lb/>
$17.00<lb/>
COMPUTER SCIENCE<lb/>
Switching Theory<lb/>
Digital Logic &amp; Computer<lb/>
Design<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$18.00<lb/>
CSCI 2600<lb/>
Fortran w Problem Solving<lb/>
Gayle Pugh<lb/>
758-7222<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
Assembler<lb/>
Assembler Language w Assit.<lb/>
(2nd ed.)<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$16.00<lb/>
CRIMINAL JUSTICE<lb/>
CORS<lb/>
Police and Community<lb/>
Kathy S. Williams<lb/>
756-7494<lb/>
$18.00<lb/>
DECISION SCEINCE<lb/>
DSCI 2223<lb/>
Computers and Data Processing<lb/>
Connie D. Bell<lb/>
7584306<lb/>
$13.00<lb/>
DSCI 2223<lb/>
Computers and Data Processing<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$16.50<lb/>
DSCI 2244<lb/>
Computers and Data Processing<lb/>
(2nd ed.)<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
Management Science<lb/>
Management Science<lb/>
Ginger W. Chenoweth<lb/>
758-1627758-4111, X251<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
ECONOMICS<lb/>
ECON<lb/>
Economics (Micro)<lb/>
Study Guide to occompany<lb/>
Thompson's Economics<lb/>
(unmarked)<lb/>
Tracy Simmons<lb/>
758-9978<lb/>
$8-6<lb/>
ECON<lb/>
Economics (micro) ThompsonFRENCH<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
Tracy SimmonsFREN 1001, 1002, 1003<lb/>
758-9978Theme et Variation<lb/>
$18-15Brando Bass<lb/>
752-8609<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
FREN 1004<lb/>
SPED 2000Premiers Textes Litteraires<lb/>
Educating Exceptional ChildrenGerald Joyce<lb/>
KirkGallagher758-5075<lb/>
Suzanne R. Harrell$8.00<lb/>
1-751-1043<lb/>
$12.00FREN 1001, 1002, 1003<lb/>
Theme et Variation<lb/>
ENGLISHLauren Bollinger<lb/>
ENGL 1100752-8783<lb/>
The Women of Brewster Place$15.00<lb/>
Gerald Joyce<lb/>
758-5075<lb/>
$4.00GEOGRAPHY<lb/>
ENGL 1100GEOG 1000<lb/>
Concise English HandbookGeog: An Intro Perspective<lb/>
Lee WalstonSusan Perry<lb/>
752-3239758-9689<lb/>
$10.00$16.50<lb/>
ENGL 1100GEOG 1000<lb/>
McGraw Hill ReaderRhoads &amp; Murphy: The Scope of<lb/>
Tanya RhudyGeography<lb/>
758-8284Melody<lb/>
$11.00758-2402<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
ENGL 1100<lb/>
Writing: A College Handbook<lb/>
Tanya RhudyHEALTH<lb/>
758-8284<lb/>
$5.00HLTH 1000<lb/>
Health<lb/>
ENGL 1100Lee Walston<lb/>
The McGraw Hill Reader752-3239<lb/>
Shelley Perry$10.00<lb/>
752-9927<lb/>
$9.00HLTH 1000<lb/>
Health<lb/>
ENGL 1100, 1200Tammy Visconti<lb/>
Reading and Writing Across752-1088<lb/>
the Curriculum (New)$10.00<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402HLTH 1100<lb/>
$8.50Hearth<lb/>
Tanya Rhudy<lb/>
ENGL 1100758-8284<lb/>
The Writing Project$14.00<lb/>
Robert Jordan<lb/>
757-1768HLTH 1100<lb/>
$3.00Health: Science of Human<lb/>
Adaptation<lb/>
ENGL 1100Shelley Perry<lb/>
The McGraw Hill Reader752-9927<lb/>
Gerald Joyce$9.50<lb/>
758-5075<lb/>
$9.00<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
ENGL 1200-<lb/>
Language Awareness (3rd ed.)HIST 1050<lb/>
MelodyAmerica: A Narrative History<lb/>
758-2402Susan Perry<lb/>
$8.00758-9689<lb/>
$5.50<lb/>
ENGL 1200<lb/>
Literature: The Human Ex-HIST 1051<lb/>
perienceAmerica: A Narrative History<lb/>
ElaineElaine<lb/>
752-4731752-4731<lb/>
$11.00$7.00<lb/>
ENGL 1200Political Science<lb/>
Writing Research PapersThe American Polity<lb/>
(4th ed.)Donald Roberson<lb/>
Lauren Bollinger1-792-1902<lb/>
752-8783$18.00<lb/>
$2.75<lb/>
History<lb/>
ENGL 2730A History of Modern World<lb/>
Understanding and UsingChuck<lb/>
English758-7860<lb/>
Kirk Shelley$19.00<lb/>
756-6029 $9.00HOME ECONOMICS<lb/>
<lb/>
Consumer Affairs<lb/>
Victorian LiteratureEconomic Decisions for Con-<lb/>
Victorian Prose and Poetry<lb/>
Lou Ann OwensHarvey Clark<lb/>
757-0548<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
ENGL 3850<lb/>
Story First: The Writer as Insider<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$4.00<lb/>
f.hAhtt<lb/>
REAL ESTATE<lb/>
Appraisal of Real Estate<lb/>
Randy Meetre<lb/>
752-1617<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
Financial Analysis<lb/>
and Planning<lb/>
Martha Moallar<lb/>
758-1895<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
FINA 2244<lb/>
Legal Environ. Of Business<lb/>
Business Law<lb/>
Alise Rowan<lb/>
756-5750<lb/>
$21.00<lb/>
sumers<lb/>
Mike Sherrer<lb/>
758-9686<lb/>
$20.50<lb/>
Home 1103<lb/>
Marriage and Family Experience<lb/>
Debbie Preston<lb/>
758-5499<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY<lb/>
Quality Assurance INDT. 4300<lb/>
Quality Control<lb/>
Kurt Yanchenko<lb/>
7584587<lb/>
$17.00<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Principles of Management<lb/>
Ginger Chenoweth<lb/>
758-1627 or 758-4111, ext. 251<lb/>
$21.00<lb/>
MKTG. 3832<lb/>
Basic Marketing<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
Marketing Management 3832<lb/>
Basic Marketing<lb/>
Marilee Bienes<lb/>
355-6477<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
MATH<lb/>
College Algebra<lb/>
College Algebra 3rd ed.<lb/>
Gerald Joyce<lb/>
758-5075<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
with Analytic<lb/>
Math 2171<lb/>
Calculus<lb/>
Geometry<lb/>
Gayle Pugh<lb/>
758-7222<lb/>
$23.50<lb/>
Calculus 2119<lb/>
Technical Calculus<lb/>
Dreston Storks<lb/>
752-1794<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
Linear Algebra<lb/>
Introductory Linear Algebra with<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$18.00<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
Music 5426<lb/>
19th-Cenrury Romatnticism in<lb/>
Music (by Longyear)<lb/>
Casey<lb/>
752-6985<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
Music 6887<lb/>
A Guide to Research in Music<lb/>
Education (Phelps)<lb/>
Casey<lb/>
752-6985<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY<lb/>
PHIL. 1100<lb/>
Man Asks Why<lb/>
Molly Harrell<lb/>
758-8364<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
PHIL 1100<lb/>
Man Asks Why<lb/>
Lee Walston<lb/>
752-3239<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
Ethics<lb/>
Beyond Good and Evil<lb/>
Dee Sounders<lb/>
752-8793<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
Ethics<lb/>
John Stuart Mill- On Liberty<lb/>
Dee Sounders<lb/>
752-8793<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
Logic (PHIL. 1500)<lb/>
Understanding Natural Deduc-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$9.00<lb/>
PHYSICS<lb/>
Conceptual Physics 4th ed.<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
Physics 1080 Astronomy<lb/>
Exploring the Cosmos<lb/>
Frances Ridley<lb/>
758197<lb/>
$13.00<lb/>
Physics 1500<lb/>
Physics (Paul Hewitt 4th Ed.)<lb/>
Casey<lb/>
752-6985<lb/>
$8.50<lb/>
Physics 2250,60,70<lb/>
General Physics<lb/>
Ben Wilbanks<lb/>
758-5673<lb/>
$30.00<lb/>
POLITICAL SCIENCE<lb/>
Southern Politics<lb/>
Southern Politics in State eV Na-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Kirk Shelley<lb/>
756-6029<lb/>
$15.00<lb/>
Psychology 1050<lb/>
Shelley Perry<lb/>
752-9927<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
Psychology 1050<lb/>
Ann Mizefle<lb/>
752-0254<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
Psychology 1050 &amp; 1051<lb/>
Psychology Today<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
Statistics<lb/>
Fundamentals of Statistics for<lb/>
the Behavior Science<lb/>
Kirk Shelley<lb/>
756-6029<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY<lb/>
Social Life<lb/>
How to Impress Girls (By Bill<lb/>
McVicker)<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
756-2544<lb/>
I will pay you $5 a copy<lb/>
Courtship and Marriage<lb/>
The Marricge Exercise Book<lb/>
Dee Sounders<lb/>
752-8793<lb/>
$9.00<lb/>
Sociology 1000<lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
Tammy Visconti<lb/>
752-1088<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
Sociology 2110<lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
Russell Ebelherr<lb/>
757-0599<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
SOC. 2110<lb/>
The Social World<lb/>
Russell Ebelherr<lb/>
757-0599<lb/>
$12.00<lb/>
ed. -Jon M.<lb/>
SOC. 2110<lb/>
Sociology 2nd<lb/>
Shepard<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
SOC. 3220 -Deviance<lb/>
Interpreting Deviance<lb/>
Robin Wilson<lb/>
758-4245<lb/>
$13.00<lb/>
Modern Social Problems<lb/>
Social Problems -Henslin &amp; Light<lb/>
Karhy S. Williams<lb/>
756-7494<lb/>
$15.50<lb/>
Modern Social Problems<lb/>
Social Problems &amp; The Quality<lb/>
of Life<lb/>
Lisa Stoebier<lb/>
758-9754<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
SPECIAL EDUCATION.<lb/>
Special Education 2000<lb/>
Education Exceptional Children<lb/>
Donald Roberson<lb/>
792-1902<lb/>
$15.00<lb/>
SPEECH<lb/>
SPCH 2001<lb/>
Your Speech, A Manual<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$8.50<lb/>
SPCH 2001<lb/>
Your Speech (Includes Progress<lb/>
Sheets)<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$8.50<lb/>
SPCH. 2001<lb/>
Your Speech<lb/>
Ricky Gilis<lb/>
757-0623<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
Theatre 1000<lb/>
The Essential Theatre 3rd ed.<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$8.50<lb/>
Chrysler<lb/>
if Pirate basketball game<lb/>
aren't fun enough. h<lb/>
sound to I nance <lb/>
new car ai<lb/>
gar;<lb/>
That's rig<lb/>
will ha1.?<lb/>
new<lb/>
hah<lb/>
bal! . i<lb/>
random i<lb/>
have 2'<lb/>
Pii<lb/>
fan<lb/>
l<lb/>
H<lb/>
?<lb/>
be<lb/>
NC; Rac<lb/>
Hanna M<lb/>
Du;<lb/>
sophon<lb/>
Nl- K bin Jones, a<lb/>
m Colonial Heights<lb/>
imai<lb/>
 . an<lb/>
Bonetu<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? TOPPING!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
?? <lb/>
 ?? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0021"/><lb/>
I HI 1 AS! i AROl 1N1AN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
21<lb/>
e<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
Psychology 1050<lb/>
Shelley Pe<lb/>
7529927<lb/>
$20 00<lb/>
P$. 10 SO<lb/>
Ann Mu?'<lb/>
752-0254<lb/>
$20 00<lb/>
oqy 1050 &amp; 1051<lb/>
Psychology Today<lb/>
n Per?<lb/>
7 59689<lb/>
$1400<lb/>
Statist<lb/>
Fundamental ot Statistics for<lb/>
the Behavior Science<lb/>
Shelley<lb/>
$-6029<lb/>
$1000<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY<lb/>
mpress Girls By Bill<lb/>
5 2544<lb/>
I pay ou $5 a copy<lb/>
Courtship and Marriage<lb/>
The Mamcge Exercise Book<lb/>
Dee Sounders<lb/>
752-8793<lb/>
$9 00<lb/>
000<lb/>
Socfdog<lb/>
Tammy Viscontt<lb/>
752-1088<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
Sociology 2110<lb/>
Sociolc<lb/>
Russell Ebelherr<lb/>
757-0599<lb/>
$20 00<lb/>
SOC 2110<lb/>
Social World<lb/>
Russell Ebelherr<lb/>
757-0599<lb/>
$12,00<lb/>
2nd ion M<lb/>
SOC 2110<lb/>
Shepard<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$1400<lb/>
SOC 3220 -Deviance<lb/>
Interpreting Devia<lb/>
Robin Wilson<lb/>
758-4265<lb/>
$1300<lb/>
frierr Social Problems<lb/>
Social Problems -Hensi?n &amp; Light<lb/>
Kathy S Williams<lb/>
7 56-7494<lb/>
$15 50<lb/>
Modern Social Problems<lb/>
Social Problems &amp; The Quality<lb/>
of Life<lb/>
Lisa Staebler<lb/>
758-9754<lb/>
$8 00<lb/>
SPECIAL EDUCATION<lb/>
Special Education 2000<lb/>
Education Exceptional Children<lb/>
Donald Roberson<lb/>
792-1902<lb/>
$15 00<lb/>
SPEECH<lb/>
SPCH 2001<lb/>
Your Speech, A Manual<lb/>
Kym Perry<lb/>
758-9689<lb/>
$8 50<lb/>
SPCH 2001<lb/>
Your Speech Includes Progress<lb/>
Sheets;<lb/>
Melody<lb/>
758-2402<lb/>
$8 50<lb/>
SPCH 2001<lb/>
Your Speech<lb/>
Ricky Gilis<lb/>
757-0623<lb/>
$7 00<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
Theatre 1000<lb/>
The Essential Theatre 3rd ed.<lb/>
Tammy Lee<lb/>
758-2219<lb/>
$8 50<lb/>
Chrysler Giveaway Scheduled<lb/>
It Pirate basketball games<lb/>
arenM fun enough, how would it<lb/>
sound to have a chance to vin a<lb/>
t each ECl home<lb/>
game?<lb/>
rhat's right! ECU students,<lb/>
lt and Greenville citizens<lb/>
have a chance to win a brand<lb/>
I slei 1 ifth venue ai tin<lb/>
? every Pirate baskei<lb/>
came<lb/>
25<lb/>
ple v?, 111 be drawn ai<lb/>
ach participant wil<lb/>
:onds to make ton<lb/>
a tree throw .<lb/>
shot from the top-of-the-key an.<lb/>
a successful half-court shot coul<lb/>
make some lucky fan a ne<lb/>
owner of the beautiful Chrysl<lb/>
Fifth Avenue.<lb/>
If this wasn't enough, hi<lb/>
about the talented performa<lb/>
of the Pure Gold Dancers, i<lb/>
Dancers return to Minges (.<lb/>
lseum for the Pirates next hoi<lb/>
game on Sat. Jan. 25. Followi<lb/>
this performance, the Dana<lb/>
will make four more appear am<lb/>
throughout the year.<lb/>
This basketball vear Pira<lb/>
fans will see a new look from the<lb/>
Pure Gold Dancers. Some of the<lb/>
reasons why this group will be<lb/>
changed from last year include: a<lb/>
new coach, an almost entirely dif-<lb/>
ferent cast of performers, and an<lb/>
emphasis on precision routines.<lb/>
Ms. Bobbi Collins, a dance in-<lb/>
structor with over 25 years of ex-<lb/>
perience, is the coach-advisor.<lb/>
This season's Pure Gold Dancers'<lb/>
edition is comprised of 12 Easi<lb/>
Carolina University coeds from<lb/>
three different states; North<lb/>
Carolina, Virginia, and Florida.<lb/>
MINGES COLISEUM<lb/>
?t?ii;W?ilu?Mm?itt.?'?.???? ? ?"? lilW)W?K'i'i<lb/>
nd anoM are the beautiful Pure Cold Dancers with the new car that will be given away to some lucky<lb/>
Deitona, FL. These young ladies one of several halftime promo-<lb/>
will entertain Pirate fans with tions scheduled at men's basket -<lb/>
their precision dance routines, ball games to entertain all Pirate<lb/>
The Pure Gold Dancers are just fans.<lb/>
? ei I) Mcli<lb/>
W i In<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
8<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
! FOR<lb/>
J TWO<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
I<lb/>
? FREE<lb/>
; TOPPING!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L,<lb/>
Enjoy a delicious 12'<lb/>
small pizza with any<lb/>
two of your favorite<lb/>
toppings PLUS two<lb/>
servings of Coke<lb/>
You pay only $5.99!<lb/>
(Including tax!)<lb/>
One Coupon per pizza<lb/>
Offer good through<lb/>
13186<lb/>
Our 12"small pizza<lb/>
has 8 slices serving<lb/>
2-4 persons.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Order any<lb/>
delicious 1 - item<lb/>
pizza and get your<lb/>
second topping<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY FREE<lb/>
One Coupon per<lb/>
pizza<lb/>
Offer good through<lb/>
13186<lb/>
I hrow a party - any party1 Then<lb/>
get on the Domino's Pizza Party<lb/>
Line and start ordering!<lb/>
When you hang up. we swing<lb/>
into action with delicious cheese,<lb/>
tempting meats and the choicest<lb/>
veggies that ever met a great<lb/>
pizza. And we deliver to your<lb/>
door in less than 30 minutes!<lb/>
Call us.<lb/>
758-6660 752-6996<lb/>
harle Btvti Rivergate Shopping Ctr<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
II AM-1 AMSunThurs.<lb/>
11 AM-2AMFn.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
 520 l985Domin P  i ?<lb/>
ob<lb/>
-??<lb/>
GTYM<lb/>
Located on the Evans Street Mall<lb/>
(across the street from the Elbo)<lb/>
THE LARGEST FREE WEIGHT<lb/>
Nautilus Gym in Greenville<lb/>
(Over 7,000 sq. ft.)<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
STUDENT RATES<lb/>
Semester4 Months<lb/>
$70.00<lb/>
New Year Special 1 yr. Only<lb/>
$99.00<lb/>
Expires Jan. 25, 1986<lb/>
Monthly $25.00<lb/>
YOUR MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES<lb/>
Nautilus Equipment<lb/>
Over 50 Exercise Stations<lb/>
10000 lbs. Free Weight<lb/>
Aerobic Classes Karate Classes<lb/>
Men &amp; Ladies Shower &amp; Locker<lb/>
Rooms<lb/>
Members Get Discounted Rates on Suntana<lb/>
Tanning Bed<lb/>
GOLD'S AEROBICS<lb/>
Semester<lb/>
Special<lb/>
4 Months $25.00<lb/>
Good until Jan. 25, 1985<lb/>
NO INITIATION FEE<lb/>
NO CONTRACTS<lb/>
Hours: M-F 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
Sat. 12:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.<lb/>
Sun. 2:00 P.M. ? 6:00 P.M.<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
CALL TODAY 758-4359<lb/>
A Licensee of GOLD'S GYM ENT. INC.<lb/>
? ? ? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0022"/><lb/>
22<lb/>
I HI- I AS CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
Swim Team Training Trip<lb/>
( nnfinn?1 I'rnm Paop 17 1 IM liiv.n ?m?Kl ur KM) PI. r .  . .<lb/>
Continued From Page 17<lb/>
Over the Christmas break the<lb/>
Pirate tankers traveled to North<lb/>
Palm Beach, Fla. for their winter<lb/>
training session. But for the<lb/>
Pirates, this was not a vacation,<lb/>
but a rigorous week of almost<lb/>
nonstop practice. Both men's and<lb/>
women's teams had two daily<lb/>
training sessions designed to put<lb/>
the athletes in top condition prior<lb/>
to the conference championships.<lb/>
Pirate swim coach Rick Kobe<lb/>
was pleased by the dedication of<lb/>
his athletes. "This was the best<lb/>
training trip we've ever had, we<lb/>
worked extremely hard, and that<lb/>
kind of work pays off<lb/>
Kobe had reason to be pleased<lb/>
with the Bucs' performance. Bet-<lb/>
ween Dec. 27 and Jan. 5, the<lb/>
Pirates cranked out an amazing<lb/>
102,(XX) yards in 14 workouts. In<lb/>
addition, they competed against<lb/>
and defeated two collegiate teams<lb/>
with whom they were sharing<lb/>
training facilities; Notre Dame<lb/>
and Johns Hopkins.<lb/>
According to Kobe, about 90<lb/>
percent of college im teams<lb/>
travel to Florida for their winter<lb/>
training. "We come here for one<lb/>
reason, to work hard Kobe<lb/>
said. 'The kids know they are<lb/>
here to work, and the atmosphere<lb/>
really motivates them<lb/>
doing to Florida is not all fun<lb/>
and games for the Pirates<lb/>
though. Not only are they work-<lb/>
ing out harder there than at any<lb/>
other time during the season,<lb/>
they have pay for the trip<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Following the week in Florida,<lb/>
the Pirates traveled back for<lb/>
another week of intensive<lb/>
workouts in Greenville, as they<lb/>
begin to taper down to their tour-<lb/>
nament conditioning level. Dur-<lb/>
ing that week the Bucs swam<lb/>
another 60.000 yards as they<lb/>
began to gradually decrease their<lb/>
intensity.<lb/>
Around the last week in<lb/>
January the swimmers will start<lb/>
making their workouts shorter<lb/>
and lesN strenuous. The idea<lb/>
behind this<lb/>
let their bodies<lb/>
rest without losing conditioning.<lb/>
This easing up brings the athletes'<lb/>
energy levels up to their peak in<lb/>
preparation for their final and<lb/>
most important meets of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Bucs next dual meet will be<lb/>
this Saturday at 2:00 p.m. when<lb/>
they lace the Seahawks o UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The following are the results<lb/>
from the men's and women's<lb/>
meet against American Universi-<lb/>
ty, followed by the women's<lb/>
results against William &amp; Mary.<lb/>
Men's Meet<lb/>
400 Medley Relay: ECL<lb/>
3:39.21; American 3:45.2.<lb/>
1000 Free: Smith (EC) 9:59.80;<lb/>
Wells (EC) 10:40.41.<lb/>
200 Free: Killeen (EC) 1:47.55;<lb/>
Cook (EC) 1:49.82; Quinones<lb/>
(Am Univ) 1:51.23.<lb/>
50 Free: Kaut (EC) 22.24;<lb/>
Potocki (.Am Univ) 22.54; Hector<lb/>
(Am Univ) 22.84.<lb/>
200 IM: Hidalgo (EC) 2:02.25;<lb/>
Mac Donald (Am Univ) 2:02.59;<lb/>
Brennan (EC) 2:04.81.<lb/>
IM Diving: Stevens (EC) 131.9;<lb/>
O'Connor (Am Univ) 122.0;<lb/>
Laney (EC) 121.7<lb/>
200 Fly: Blockschmidt (EC)<lb/>
1:57.45; Quinones (Am Univ)<lb/>
2:04.42: Hawkins (EC) 2:11.56<lb/>
100 Free: Kaut (EC) 49.02;<lb/>
Potocki (Am Univ) 49.05; Hector<lb/>
(Am Univ) 49.16<lb/>
200 Back: Hidalgo (EC)<lb/>
2:06.05; Porch (Am Univ)<lb/>
2:06.42<lb/>
00 Free: Smith (EC) 4:54.33;<lb/>
Berry (Am Univ) 5:00.86; Kay<lb/>
(Am Univ) 5:11.21.<lb/>
3M Diving: O'Connor (Am<lb/>
Univ) 146.70; Stevens (EC)<lb/>
134.35; Laney (EC) 118.90<lb/>
200 Breast: MacDonald (Am<lb/>
Univ) 2:13.24; Giametta (Am<lb/>
Univ) 2:30.16; Smith (EC)<lb/>
2:17.65<lb/>
400 Free: Am Univ 3:17.88;<lb/>
ECU 3:18.27<lb/>
Women's Meet<lb/>
200 Medley Relay: ECU<lb/>
1:56.30<lb/>
1000 Free: Poust (EC)<lb/>
11:26.53; Augustus (EC)<lb/>
11:44.37<lb/>
200 Free: Pierson (EC)<lb/>
2:01.33; Wawczak (Am Lniv)<lb/>
2:03.31; Miller (EC) 2:03.36<lb/>
50 Free: Wir.stead (FX) 26.39;<lb/>
Wentink (EC) 27.31; Wilson<lb/>
(EC) 27.46<lb/>
200 IM: Gorenflo (EC)<lb/>
2:20.67; Grand (EC) 2:21.91;<lb/>
Halstead (EC) 2:23.89<lb/>
1 IM Diving: Campbell (EC)<lb/>
290.80; Poff (EC) 266.05; Kerber<lb/>
(EC) 244.45<lb/>
100 Free: Pierson (EC) 56.91;<lb/>
Wawczak (Am Univ) 57.53;<lb/>
Miller (EC) 58.36<lb/>
100 Back: Livingston (EC)<lb/>
1:03.66; Horton (EC) 1:04.40;<lb/>
Palmeiri (Am lniv) 1:08.66.<lb/>
500 Free: Gorenflo (EC)<lb/>
5:36.61; Vituli (Am Univ)<lb/>
5:52.37; Grand (EC) 5:33.34<lb/>
3M Diving: No Entry<lb/>
100 Breast: Conroy (Am Univ)<lb/>
1:19.79; Wentink (EC) 1:14.63;<lb/>
Halstead (EC) 1:15.02<lb/>
200 Free: Am Univ 1:51.49<lb/>
Women's Meet<lb/>
200 Medley Relay: ECU (Hor-<lb/>
ton, Wentink, Poust, Winstead)<lb/>
1:55.36<lb/>
1000 Free: Vallere (WM)<lb/>
10:41.25; Miller (EC) 10:59.81;<lb/>
Olivo (WM) 11:10.27<lb/>
200 Free: Allee (WM) 2:00.32;<lb/>
Pierson (EC) 2:01.41; Miller (EC)<lb/>
2:01.44<lb/>
100 Back: Poust (EC) 1:03.10;<lb/>
Horton (EC) 1:04.05; Alleva<lb/>
(WM) 1:04.90<lb/>
100 Breast: Wentink (EC)<lb/>
1:12.47; Alleva (WM) 1:13.20;<lb/>
Ennis (EC) 1:13.98<lb/>
200 Fly: Johnson (WM)<lb/>
2:13.72; Augustus (EC) 2:15.18;<lb/>
Grand (EC) 2:18.16<lb/>
50 Free: Welch (WM) 25.00;<lb/>
Winstead (EC) 25.82; White<lb/>
(WM) 27.25<lb/>
'00 Fly: Conroy (Am Univ)<lb/>
1:06.50; Ferrero (Am lniv)<lb/>
1:06.88; Poust (EC) 1:13.13<lb/>
IM Diving: Campbell (E )<lb/>
212.4; Poff (EC) 208.35; Martin<lb/>
(WM) 206<lb/>
100 Free: Welch (WM) 54.29;<lb/>
Johnson (WM) 56. S8; Pierson<lb/>
(EC) 57.51<lb/>
200 Back: Poust (EC) 2:15.43;<lb/>
Horton (EC) 2:17.35; White<lb/>
(WM) 2:18.68<lb/>
200 Breast: Wentink (EC)<lb/>
2:32.14; Alleva (WM) 2:34.14;<lb/>
Ennis (EC) 2:39.42<lb/>
500 Free: Vallere (WM)<lb/>
i:22 4"<lb/>
5:16.08; Allee V1,<lb/>
Miller (EC) 5:23.63<lb/>
100 Fly; Welch (WM) v 88<lb/>
Augustus (EC) 1:02.62; Pie.<lb/>
(E1:03.33<lb/>
3M Divmg ampbell (E )<lb/>
260.15; Poff (EC) 190.6; Ma<lb/>
(WM) 189<lb/>
Subscribe<lb/>
(Sift iEaat (Earolfman<lb/>
Serving ihe East Carolina campus community since 192'<lb/>
( Vn M <lb/>
4:49.7:<lb/>
400 IM Johnson<lb/>
4 46-09; Poust (1 ,<lb/>
Alleva (WM) 4:57.66<lb/>
400 Free Relay: William ' Man<lb/>
(White. Del uca, llee, Welch)<lb/>
3:44.79<lb/>
This Style Frome<lb/>
With Single Vision Rx<lb/>
Lenses for only<lb/>
$27<lb/>
.95<lb/>
All Other Frames<lb/>
30 to 60 OFF<lb/>
with purchase of RX Lenses<lb/>
RAY BAN sunglasses30 OFF<lb/>
Offer good Through 13186<lb/>
315 Part . '??. ins<lb/>
PinCtftC Across From Doctors Part<lb/>
Open MonFri. 9 a.m. til 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
(le-Aux$Aii04i<lb/>
v Busch v<lb/>
q Garjens V<lb/>
? TRY<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
1<lb/>
: i1<lb/>
Greensboro N.C Columbus. OH<lb/>
Pittsburgh. PA Bloomington. IN<lb/>
GREENSBORO.NC<lb/>
1-800-253-3302<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
 oniinu?-d From Pae 1<lb/>
12 <lb/>
evc;<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
R<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Pij<lb/>
?<lb/>
Choosing a long distance<lb/>
company is a lot like choosing<lb/>
a roommate.<lb/>
7J <lb/>
. m y '<lb/>
It's better to know what they're<lb/>
like before you move in.<lb/>
Living together with someone for the first<lb/>
time can be an "educational" experience.<lb/>
And living with a long distance company<lb/>
isn't any different. Because some companies<lb/>
may not give you all the services you're used to<lb/>
getting from AT&amp;T<lb/>
For instance, with some companies you have<lb/>
to spend a certain amount before you qualify for<lb/>
their special volume discounts. With some<lb/>
others, voice quality may vary.<lb/>
But when you choose AT&amp;T, there won't be<lb/>
any surprises when you move in. You'll get t he<lb/>
same high-quality, trouble-free service youre<lb/>
used to.<lb/>
With calls that sound as close as next door.<lb/>
Guaranteed 6W and 40 discounts off our Day<lb/>
Kate?so you can talk during the times you can<lb/>
relax. Immediate credit for wrong numbers.<lb/>
Operator assistance and collect calling.<lb/>
So when you're asked to choose a longdis-<lb/>
tance company, choose AT&amp;T. Because whether<lb/>
you're into Mozart or metal,quality is the one<lb/>
thing everyone can agree on.<lb/>
Reach out and touch someone.<lb/>
I<lb/>
c 1985 AT&amp;T Communications<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
K1<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ci.<lb/>
&amp;S<lb/>
t<lb/>
'Several Energiung Aero<lb/>
 Machine and Weight kt<lb/>
 Relating Yoga Classes<lb/>
HOT Tub and SAUNA<lb/>
AerobkClasA<lb/>
Monday10:15 3:154<lb/>
Tuesday10:15 3:154<lb/>
Wednesday10:15 3:1543d<lb/>
Thursday10:15 3:154<lb/>
Friday10:15 3:154<lb/>
Saturday11:00<lb/>
Sunday3:00<lb/>
57S<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0023"/><lb/>
larulfnian<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1986<lb/>
23<lb/>
Lady Bucs Rout Richmond, Indiana State<lb/>
?CH v<lb/>
ENS v<lb/>
w V<lb/>
Continued From Page 17<lb/>
: points and a team high of<lb/>
ven rebounds. Other scorers for<lb/>
'irates included Alma Bethea<lb/>
eight. 1 oraine Foster with<lb/>
and Gretta O'Neal, who<lb/>
four points.<lb/>
In the consolation game,<lb/>
de Kiand defeated Miami<lb/>
S6 65.<lb/>
1 ad Pirate v lassie<lb/>
In Friday's opening round of<lb/>
1 ad) Pirate Classic, the<lb/>
rates almost led the entire way<lb/>
?sting a 63-52 win over the<lb/>
?ersit ol Rhode Island.<lb/>
 Hragg's two free throws at<lb/>
e 12:51 mark gave the Pirates a<lb/>
I the) never relinquished. The<lb/>
I ad Bucs built their lead to as<lb/>
 as eight (32-24) in the first<lb/>
.ilt before taking a 35-30 lead at<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
In the second half, it was much<lb/>
e same 'or the Pirates, who<lb/>
red the First six points of the<lb/>
and half to grab a 41-30 lead<lb/>
18 26 to go. After that, they<lb/>
er sav-v their lead get any nar-<lb/>
wer than six points.<lb/>
1 he Pirates shot 44.7 percent<lb/>
n the tloor for the game while<lb/>
de Island shot only 33.8 per-<lb/>
1 eading the way in scoring for<lb/>
Pirates was Loraine Foster<lb/>
18 Also scoring double<lb/>
figures tor ECU were Sylvia<lb/>
igg with 15 and Lisa<lb/>
jquirewell with 14 points. The<lb/>
n had a high of 13 rebounds.<lb/>
inding out the Pirates scoring<lb/>
e Delphine Mabry with six.<lb/>
<lb/>
Chris O'Connor with four and<lb/>
Alma Bethea with three. Moni-<lb/>
que Pompil and Gretta O'Neal<lb/>
chipped in two points apiece.<lb/>
In the other first-round game,<lb/>
LSU handily defeated Miami<lb/>
94-54.<lb/>
Jan. 4, 1986<lb/>
The Pirates routed the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Richmond 67-33 to win<lb/>
their conference opener. The<lb/>
Pirates were never threatened as<lb/>
they built a 30-11 halftime lead.<lb/>
The ladies shot 50.8 percent<lb/>
from the floor for the game,<lb/>
while Richmond only shot 32.8<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
The Pirates were led by Lisa<lb/>
Squirewell and Sylvia Bragg, with<lb/>
14 points a piece. Loraine Foster,<lb/>
Alma Bethea, and Monique<lb/>
Pompile all chipped in eight<lb/>
points each. Also scoring for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates was Chris O'Conner<lb/>
with four and Rose Miller with<lb/>
three. Delphine Mabry, Cathy<lb/>
Ellis, Therese Dartin and Gratta<lb/>
O'Neal all chipped in two points<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Dec. 31, 1985<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won their<lb/>
New Year's Eve showdown with<lb/>
Indiana State University by a<lb/>
66-56 margin.<lb/>
The Pirates only shot 43.1 per-<lb/>
cent from the floor, while In-<lb/>
diana State shot an even 50 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Gretta O'Neal led a trio of<lb/>
double-figured scorers for the<lb/>
Pirates with 14 points. Delphine<lb/>
Mabry chipped in 12, and Sylvia<lb/>
Bragg added 11. Also scoring for<lb/>
the Pirates were Squirewell and<lb/>
Foster, with eight points each.<lb/>
Dec. 30, 1985<lb/>
The Lady Pirates lost on the<lb/>
road to their First game after<lb/>
Christmas, dropping a 82-65<lb/>
decision to Old Dominion on the<lb/>
road. ECU shot 39.7 percent<lb/>
from the floor, while Old Domi-<lb/>
nion shot 47.9 percent.<lb/>
ECU placed two scorers in<lb/>
double figures for the game; they<lb/>
were Squirewell with 17 and<lb/>
Bragg with 12. Bethea had a team<lb/>
high of seven rebounds.<lb/>
Dec . 19, 1985<lb/>
East Carolina completed its<lb/>
stay in Florida with its third win<lb/>
of the road trip with a 58-43 win<lb/>
over Miami.<lb/>
The Pirates shot 38 percent for<lb/>
the game, while the Hurricanes<lb/>
shot 32.7 percent.<lb/>
The Pirates had three players<lb/>
who had double-figure scores.<lb/>
Bragg and Squirewell led the way<lb/>
with 11 points each, while Gretta<lb/>
O'Neal chipped in 10.<lb/>
Dec. 17, 1985<lb/>
ECU, playing in their second<lb/>
of a three-game Florida road trip,<lb/>
steadfastly defeated South<lb/>
Florida, with a score of 65-43.<lb/>
The Pirates shot 49.2 percent<lb/>
from the floor for the game.<lb/>
ECU had a trio of players to<lb/>
score in double figures. Bethea<lb/>
and Bragg led the way with 14<lb/>
points each, and Foster chipped<lb/>
in 12.<lb/>
Dec. 16, 1985<lb/>
ECU began its Florida road<lb/>
trip barely escaping with a win<lb/>
over Florida 56-55. The-Pirates<lb/>
shot 44.7 percent for the game.<lb/>
Alma Bethea led the way with<lb/>
an impressive 25-point perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
Dec. 14, 1985<lb/>
After being tied with North<lb/>
Carolina Centra! at halftime, the<lb/>
Lady Bucs blew past them in the<lb/>
second half to bring on a 70-50<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The Pirates shot 48.4 percent<lb/>
for the game and were led in scor-<lb/>
ing by Lisa Squirewell, with 16<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Dec. 13, 1985<lb/>
The Lady Pirates blew a five-<lb/>
point halftime lead and lost a<lb/>
65-60 decision to Radford.<lb/>
For the game, ECU athletes<lb/>
shot 51.9 percent from the floor.<lb/>
They were led in scoring by<lb/>
Squirewell and Foster, with 14<lb/>
points each.<lb/>
1<lb/>
yre<lb/>
y-<lb/>
7<lb/>
The taste of<lb/>
things to<lb/>
COME.<lb/>
 A delicious new world of dining<lb/>
excitement is headed your way as Anna-<lb/>
 belle's Restaurant &amp; Pub introduces the<lb/>
American taste, enjoyed without haste<lb/>
Annabelle's extensive menu is full<lb/>
moi the cuisine you love most. From crisp<lb/>
salads and hearty soups, to juicy<lb/>
burgers and piled-high sand-<lb/>
wiches From tender aged<lb/>
steaks, to succulent chicken,<lb/>
seafood and pasta From<lb/>
appetizers to dessert,<lb/>
unch to Idtenight,<lb/>
Annabelle's is "the Taste<lb/>
of America ?<lb/>
Visit us soon in The Plaza.<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER<lb/>
SPECTACULAR!<lb/>
at Bond's<lb/>
Russel Athletic Sweatshirts<lb/>
XS, S, M<lb/>
reg. $10.95 NOW $8.88<lb/>
Hooded Sweatshirts<lb/>
XS, S, M<lb/>
Reg. $12.95 Now $8.88<lb/>
Sweat Pants<lb/>
M,L,XL reg. 10.95 now $8.88<lb/>
Russell Athletic Sportswear 30 off<lb/>
Far West Ski Clothing Special<lb/>
 Buy a Jacket at regular price<lb/>
Receive a pair of bibs FREE!<lb/>
AH Shorts 20 <lb/>
Adidas and Nike Warm-L ps 25 off<lb/>
All shoes in stock 20 off. Children's shoes 30 off<lb/>
Air Jordan's Red White &amp; Black reg. $64.95 NOW $50.95<lb/>
All White reg. $64.95 ? Now 50.95<lb/>
Carolina Blue reg. $64.95 ? Now $50.95<lb/>
Group of Shoes Only $15.00 a pair<lb/>
ASAH Tennis Shoes Men's Leather reg. $42.95<lb/>
Canvas $24.95<lb/>
Women's Leather $40.95<lb/>
Canvas $24.95<lb/>
Come By And See Why Bond's<lb/>
Is Your 1 Sporting Goods Store<lb/>
218 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Greenville 756-6001<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
Hours Mon Sat<lb/>
from 11:30 am<lb/>
Sun from 12 noon<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Greenville Blvd<lb/>
756-0315<lb/>
Tr.eHUB-<lb/>
618 South Pitt St.<lb/>
752-1946 or 752-5048<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
1 A k<lb/>
'Several Energizing Aerobic Classes Daily<lb/>
 Machine and Weight Rooms<lb/>
 Relaxing Yoga Classes<lb/>
'HOT Tub and SAUNA Villiage<lb/>
2 Food Bars<lb/>
For the price of 1 Only $2<lb/>
with meal $1.69<lb/>
Feast on 8 farm fresh hot vegetables at no extra<lb/>
charge when you visit the famous Western Steer salad bar. By any<lb/>
stretch of the imagination?Western Steer's salad bar and hot vegetable<lb/>
bar is the best deal in town.<lb/>
Build your favorite mile-high salad. Pick delicious farm fresh<lb/>
vegetables. Make a meal or make a start while your USDA Choice steak<lb/>
is cooked-to-order. Choice<lb/>
after choice. Western Steer<lb/>
salad bar and hot vegetable<lb/>
bar?yours to enjoy at the<lb/>
same low price as our salad<lb/>
bar alone.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Sunton Booth<lb/>
"Juice, Beer, and Snack Bar<lb/>
Live ond DJ Musk Room<lb/>
TV and Movie Lounge<lb/>
'Lockers and Dressing Rooms<lb/>
Aerobic Class Schedule<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
10:15<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
4:30 5:45<lb/>
4:30 5:45<lb/>
4:30 5:45<lb/>
4:30 5:45<lb/>
4:30 5:45<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
Club Hours<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
9:00 ? 9:00<lb/>
10:00 - 7:00<lb/>
1:00.6:00<lb/>
S'udent Special<lb/>
Get a whole semester a? UNLIMITED<lb/>
use of trie ENTIRE cluB tor only<lb/>
?0 $75 oa<lb/>
e-mg In ths coupon tor one FREE VISIT<lb/>
to the club lc you ond a friend<lb/>
?NO Sales Pressure'<lb/>
?<lb/>
 N tAH?r ?<lb/>
H, A <lb/>
?c c? ?????? I I<lb/>
CO<lb/>
BQV<lb/>
!<lb/>
s<lb/>
D<lb/>
untvtbsai m? MtAim am<lb/>
6I? SOUTH PITT ST<lb/>
? . f T ?<lb/>
?? .<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
ES EFFI<lb/>
I N<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
I HI<lb/>
TO WALL PRICE REDUCTIONS<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH ANY ADVERTISED GROCERY FEATURE PRICE IN GREENVILLE.<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current<lb/>
I Week Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items or Equal Quality:<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
MARKET<lb/>
MARKET BREAK CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Fryer Leg Qtrs. I Sliced Bacon I Head Lettuce<lb/>
10 LBS. OR<lb/>
LIMIT ONE<lb/>
stf<lb/>
large<lb/>
head<lb/>
DIET COKE AB -DIET SPRITE<lb/>
? MELLO YELL<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
DIXIE C WSTAL<lb/>
Pure<lb/>
Cane<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
88<lb/>
G<lb/>
j<lb/>
cJt<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
bag<lb/>
'?' ' Nl ? H E A H ADDITIONAL<lb/>
RCHASE AT EVERYDAY I H PRICI<lb/>
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
Florida Oranges<lb/>
j-<lb/>
MC -<lb/>
AO<lb/>
C f<lb/>
t<lb/>
for<lb/>
Purex Bleach<lb/>
rr1<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
LIMIT TWQJ<lb/>
PURCHASE WITH<lb/>
WITH AOOmONAL<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT<lb/>
Armour Treet<lb/>
SIN<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
can<lb/>
88c<lb/>
PLAIN- SELF-RISING<lb/>
Red Band Flour<lb/>
5 lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
3V :<lb/>
48?<lb/>
??<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE VT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
BUTTER-REGULAR<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
3<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
- save' i<lb/>
' 81c<lb/>
68<lb/>
ANN ? At<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
?J28<lb/>
MIT ONI ????. sa,<lb/>
PURCHAbt A<lb/>
NABISCO<lb/>
Round Top Bread I Premium Saltines<lb/>
DUKES<lb/>
11b.<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
r SAVE r<lb/>
u 4 V<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C. 0PEN24H0URS EStSilvm OPEN SUNDAYS 7 "V11PM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057792_0025"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>