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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057845_0001"/>
Qtoe<lb/>
QIaruluitan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.61 No.4<lb/>
Tuesday, September 9,1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Summer Rapes Prompt<lb/>
Advice From Police<lb/>
By LYNN WEAVER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to the official<lb/>
Greenville Police Tally Sheet,<lb/>
there were 14 reported rapes from<lb/>
the beginning of June to the pre-<lb/>
sent time. In eleven of these rapes<lb/>
the suspect was apprehended.<lb/>
The victims' ages range from<lb/>
early teens to 55 years of age.<lb/>
There were six college age women<lb/>
raped and two were known to be<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Due to this information, many<lb/>
feel that students should be advis-<lb/>
ed how to act and what to do in a<lb/>
rape or assault situation.<lb/>
Recent studies by the<lb/>
Behavioral Science Unit of the<lb/>
FBI Academy in Virginia, made<lb/>
it clear that there is no valid in-<lb/>
formation about what women<lb/>
can do to defend themselves dur-<lb/>
ing a sexual attack. Doctors inter-<lb/>
viewed men who had raped ten or<lb/>
more women and the results were<lb/>
not only surprising, but also con-<lb/>
tradictory.<lb/>
The rapists' advice to women<lb/>
was so different that the doctors<lb/>
decided it could be hazardous to<lb/>
offer any advice at all.<lb/>
Although the results of the<lb/>
study seemed negative, Capt.<lb/>
Keith Knox, Crime Prevention<lb/>
officer of ECU Public Safety<lb/>
Department and Officer James<lb/>
Tripp, Juvenile Division of the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department,<lb/>
both feel there are some actions<lb/>
that can be taken.<lb/>
For example, they agree that<lb/>
using general caution and staying<lb/>
alert can help prevent the risk of<lb/>
being attacked.<lb/>
Considering the above<lb/>
statistics of rapes in Greenville,<lb/>
women are advised to keep alert<lb/>
to where the rapes have taken<lb/>
place and use extreme caution in<lb/>
these areas.<lb/>
Knox and Tripp advise women<lb/>
to use regular safety tips such as;<lb/>
don't travel alone at night and<lb/>
keep doors and windows locked.<lb/>
They stress to stay alert when out<lb/>
at night.<lb/>
Another tip they add is to keep<lb/>
keys in hand when walking,<lb/>
because if needed they could be<lb/>
used as a weapon in self-defense.<lb/>
Even when women use extreme<lb/>
caution, there is still the chance<lb/>
that they could be attacked. Na-<lb/>
tional studies show that one out<lb/>
of every three women is sexually<lb/>
assaulted.<lb/>
According to May Hystead,<lb/>
chief of the National Center for<lb/>
the Prevention and Control of<lb/>
Rape, there is little truth to the<lb/>
myth that resistance will increase<lb/>
a woman's risk of being injured.<lb/>
Hystead states, "Two new<lb/>
studies found that women who<lb/>
resisted an attack were more like-<lb/>
ly to escape, with only slight<lb/>
bodily injury<lb/>
She added that women who<lb/>
acted passively and cried made<lb/>
themselves look unapppealing<lb/>
and defenseless, making their at-<lb/>
tackers seem more powerful. In<lb/>
short, submissive victims art<lb/>
more likely to be raped and the<lb/>
resistant victims were more likely<lb/>
to escape.<lb/>
Although the FBI's studies are<lb/>
contradictory, they have to be<lb/>
taken into account. The men who<lb/>
had raped mass amounts of<lb/>
women proved to have many dif-<lb/>
ferent motives and ideas about<lb/>
the rapes and the victims.<lb/>
"Some of the rapists saidTell<lb/>
them to scream, fight and claw<lb/>
like hell but others saidTel!<lb/>
women to give in , because the<lb/>
guy is going to rape her no matter<lb/>
what he has to do " states the<lb/>
FBI report.<lb/>
Knox explained that there are<lb/>
many different factors involved<lb/>
with each situation. Specific ad-<lb/>
vice can not be given to women<lb/>
unless a specific situation can be<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Victims should try to figure out<lb/>
the rapist's motives and then<lb/>
decide which approach to take,<lb/>
whether it be resistance or sub-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
When followed, the above ad-<lb/>
vice and information could help<lb/>
prevent or survive a sexual at-<lb/>
tack.<lb/>
Surviving a sexual attack is the<lb/>
most important thing to<lb/>
remember.<lb/>
Time Out<lb/>
ION JOBOAN � TUB PHOTO LAM<lb/>
When the Intramurals Department held their "Anything Goes"<lb/>
event last week, many students took time out from studying to try<lb/>
new, and some impossible looking, stunts.<lb/>
Results Indicate<lb/>
Little Difference<lb/>
Students Vote On<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
By THERESA ROSINSKI<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association is holding elections<lb/>
for class and dorm represen-<lb/>
tatives and day student represen-<lb/>
tatives on Wednesday, September<lb/>
24 from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m.<lb/>
Anyone wishing to run for an<lb/>
office may file an application at<lb/>
the SGA offices in 228<lb/>
Mendenhall. The last day to file<lb/>
is Friday, Sept. 12.<lb/>
Any student willing to run a<lb/>
campaign must have a 2.0 grade<lb/>
point average to be eligible to run<lb/>
for an office. A $10 refundable<lb/>
fee is also required for the clean-<lb/>
up of their campaign literature.<lb/>
"It's a great opportunity to be<lb/>
involved in SGA. Students get a<lb/>
feel for public speaking and<lb/>
responsibility said Steve<lb/>
Cunanan, SGA president.<lb/>
See SGA page 5<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A study at East Carolina<lb/>
University to provide insights in-<lb/>
to student perceptions of and in-<lb/>
tentions about the state's new 21<lb/>
years drinking age law shows that<lb/>
70 percent of students under 21<lb/>
intend only to change where they<lb/>
drink alcoholic beverages.<lb/>
Of a representative sample of<lb/>
440 students, 61 percent said<lb/>
there would be "more<lb/>
hypocrisy" about alcohol use.<lb/>
Thirty-four percent said they will<lb/>
use more alcohol. Twenty-two<lb/>
percent said they would use more<lb/>
of other drugs.<lb/>
ECU professor Jerry F. Lot-<lb/>
terhos, chairman of the Depart-<lb/>
mant of Community Health and<lb/>
director of the Alcohol-Drug<lb/>
Program at ECU since 1972, said<lb/>
he collected data in a research<lb/>
survey of the ECU student body<lb/>
which, he said, provides "signifi-<lb/>
cant insight" into student percep-<lb/>
tions and intentions regarding the<lb/>
new law which became effective<lb/>
Sept. 1.<lb/>
"These findings raise several<lb/>
concerns about the new age law<lb/>
Lotterhos said. "First, 85 per-<lb/>
cent of the students are already<lb/>
alcohol users by the time they are<lb/>
18 and 60 percent by age 17. This<lb/>
is true in spite of the fact that we<lb/>
have previously had age laws set<lb/>
at ages 18 and 19 for beer and<lb/>
wine.<lb/>
"Why do we assume that our<lb/>
young people will now wait until<lb/>
they are 21?" Lotterhos said.<lb/>
"Students do not, in general,<lb/>
intend to stop dinking Lot-<lb/>
terhos said.<lb/>
"They indicate that they will<lb/>
continue to drink, will change the<lb/>
location of their drinking, and<lb/>
some will increase their use of<lb/>
other drugs he said. "This<lb/>
seems to be in accord with past<lb/>
prohibition efforts in our society<lb/>
which resulted in a vast<lb/>
underground activity relative to<lb/>
alcohol manufacture, sales and<lb/>
use<lb/>
Lotterhos said the data for his<lb/>
study was collected last April as<lb/>
part of a long-term study of three<lb/>
to five years to determine the im-<lb/>
pact of the new 21-year age limit<lb/>
on students' alcohol-drug use.<lb/>
Of the 440 students surveyed,<lb/>
77 percent were age 18-19, 10.5<lb/>
percent age 20 and 12.6 percent<lb/>
21 or older. Eighty-four percent<lb/>
were white and 14.5 percent<lb/>
black. Forty-seven percent were<lb/>
male and 53 percent female.<lb/>
Among findings in the Lot-<lb/>
terhos study:<lb/>
�Ninety percent of the students<lb/>
use alcohol with about 14 percent<lb/>
using alcohol on a daily basis.<lb/>
�Eighty-five percent began<lb/>
regular use of alcohol by age 18,<lb/>
60 percent by age 17 and 32 per-<lb/>
cent by age 16.<lb/>
Asked to identify their primary<lb/>
location for alcohol use, 46 per-<lb/>
cent said they drink at home,<lb/>
which means dormitory, apart-<lb/>
ment or other domicile. Twenty-<lb/>
seven percent said they drink<lb/>
mostly in public bars and 20 per-<lb/>
cent at parties.<lb/>
In response to a question regar-<lb/>
ding the new 21-year drinking age<lb/>
law in North Carolina, 80 percent<lb/>
said they disagree with the law.<lb/>
Twenty percent agreed with it.<lb/>
Students were asked what they<lb/>
felt the beginning legal drinking<lb/>
age should be. Thirty-six percent<lb/>
said 18, 33 percent said 19 and<lb/>
only 14 percent said 21 or older.<lb/>
Other response data showed 1.1<lb/>
percent favored 16 years or less,<lb/>
two percent 17 years, seven per-<lb/>
cent said age 20 and 2.8 percent<lb/>
said there should be no age laws<lb/>
Only 1.8 percent said people<lb/>
should not be allowed to drink at<lb/>
any age.<lb/>
Students were asked how they<lb/>
thought the law would impact the<lb/>
behavior of the average ECU stu-<lb/>
dent. Eighty-six percent said they<lb/>
would change the location of<lb/>
their drinking. Sixty percent said<lb/>
the students would use more of<lb/>
other drugs. Twenty-one per cent<lb/>
said they will use less alcohol.<lb/>
Thirty-four percent said they<lb/>
would use more alcohol.<lb/>
Asked what their personal in-<lb/>
tentions are relative to the new<lb/>
legal drinking age, only six per-<lb/>
cent said they would stop drink-<lb/>
ing. Seventy-three percent said<lb/>
there would be no change in their<lb/>
drinking. Twenty-one percent<lb/>
said they would drink less; 9.5<lb/>
percent said they would drink<lb/>
more. Twenty-two percent said<lb/>
they would use more of other<lb/>
See RESULTS page 3<lb/>
University Supplies Available Terminals<lb/>
By CAROLYN DRISCOLL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
There are currently nine loca-<lb/>
tions on campus housing com-<lb/>
puter resources that are available<lb/>
to students, according to Ernie<lb/>
Marshburn, manager of<lb/>
Academic Computing at ECU.<lb/>
"Many students are not aware<lb/>
of the facilities that are available<lb/>
because they have not been open<lb/>
in the past Marshburn said.<lb/>
These facilities are located in<lb/>
Speight, Ravi, the Physics<lb/>
Building, joyner Library,<lb/>
Austin, Brewster, Clement<lb/>
Dorm, Scott Dorm, and Cotten<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
"ECU is now coming into its<lb/>
own in terms of computer<lb/>
resources, and we are trying to<lb/>
provide the cutting edge for<lb/>
faculty, staff and students at the<lb/>
university Marshburn said.<lb/>
He added that since last<lb/>
August the number of terminals<lb/>
available for general use has gone<lb/>
from 20 to 100.<lb/>
According to Marshburn, last<lb/>
year in the Joyner Library loca-<lb/>
tion alone, the machines were us-<lb/>
ed bv 5000-6000 people, citing<lb/>
this as an example of the needs of<lb/>
faculty and staff that the univer-<lb/>
sity is trying to meet.<lb/>
This expansion now allows<lb/>
students to go to another room if<lb/>
all of the terminals are being used<lb/>
at once, Marshburn said.<lb/>
Looking toward the future,<lb/>
both Marshburn and Janice<lb/>
Evans, assistant manager of<lb/>
Academic Computing, see even<lb/>
greater expansion, depending on<lb/>
the needs of the university.<lb/>
"The faculty won't ask<lb/>
students to do the work if the<lb/>
resources aren't there. We're try-<lb/>
ing to provide those resources so<lb/>
that the teachers can upgrade the<lb/>
quality of their classes. As their<lb/>
needs grow, we will try to provide<lb/>
the equipment said Mar-<lb/>
shburn.<lb/>
Evans said, "We're trying to<lb/>
get departments which would not<lb/>
normally use computers to use<lb/>
them<lb/>
For example, said Mashburn,<lb/>
many of the teachers seem to<lb/>
need a graphics package, so this<lb/>
year, we will be making one<lb/>
available.<lb/>
The expansion also includes<lb/>
more facilities in the dorms,<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials �Summer releases from R.E.M.<lb/>
Features� Bd T" Smiths reviewed � see<lb/>
ComksW FEATURES page S.<lb/>
SportoH Art l1" commeats on Satur-<lb/>
Classifleds12 d'8 ��� � �� SPORTS page<lb/>
Announcements12 11.<lb/>
depending on how well the pre-<lb/>
sent dorm situation goes, accor-<lb/>
ding to Evans. The terminals<lb/>
have been in three dorms since<lb/>
the second session of summer<lb/>
school. Since then the hours have<lb/>
been extended from 8 a.m. to 1<lb/>
a.m she said.<lb/>
"If they (the machines) hold<lb/>
up well, if they don't end up with<lb/>
beer cans smashed through the<lb/>
front of them, we will be expan-<lb/>
ding the project to other dorms<lb/>
said Marshburn.<lb/>
"It is important for students to<lb/>
know what type of machine they<lb/>
need to use before going to one of<lb/>
the locations of campus said<lb/>
Marshburn, "This is because dif-<lb/>
ferent types of computers are<lb/>
available at different places<lb/>
While microcomputers can be<lb/>
used as terminals for a main-<lb/>
frame, they are used by most<lb/>
students for software packages,<lb/>
such as DisplayWrite, Multiplan<lb/>
and dbase.<lb/>
These machines can be found<lb/>
in room 135, Rawl; Joyner<lb/>
Library Micro Lab; room D-214,<lb/>
Brewster; room E-210, Science<lb/>
Complex; room 208, Austin; and<lb/>
room 241 Speight.<lb/>
Terminals, on the other hand,<lb/>
are used mostly to program in<lb/>
computer language as well as to<lb/>
gain access to particular net-<lb/>
works. They are not for software<lb/>
use.<lb/>
These machines are located in<lb/>
room 106 and 10S, Austin; room<lb/>
D-213, Brewster; room 241<lb/>
Speight; and in Cement, Scott<lb/>
and Cotten dormitories.<lb/>
According to Evans, there will<lb/>
be someone supervising each of<lb/>
the locations during operating<lb/>
hours who will be able to offer<lb/>
general information; however,<lb/>
they are not all consultants and<lb/>
will not all be able to teach<lb/>
students to use the machines.<lb/>
"They are not there to do your<lb/>
homework for you. Students<lb/>
need to know how to use the<lb/>
machines before they come in<lb/>
Evans said.<lb/>
She added that several of the<lb/>
software packages have "help<lb/>
disks" that students can use to<lb/>
guide them.<lb/>
Hours for general use are<lb/>
posted outside the door at each<lb/>
location.<lb/>
BIXIM MMMtV - Tte� Bait CirrtMw<lb/>
Pirate Fans<lb/>
Pirate faas got the season's first taste of taUgattng at ECU's opening game in Raleigh Saturday.<lb/>
Carter-FInley Stadium played host to 58,650 faas � the largest attendance ever at a football game in<lb/>
N.C. This year's attendance broke last year's ECU � State record attendance.<lb/>
T M<lb/>
- � -  -4, <lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0002"/><lb/>
Longtime University Activist Dies At 66<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI) �<lb/>
Hargrove "Skipper" Bowles Jr<lb/>
longtime university activist and<lb/>
one-time Democratic nominee<lb/>
for governor, died Sunday after a<lb/>
long battle with Lou Gehrig's<lb/>
disease. He was 66.<lb/>
Bowles, a native of Monroe<lb/>
and a Greensboro investment<lb/>
banker, died about 6:30 p.m<lb/>
said his wife, Deziree. "He was<lb/>
sick a couple of years. It was just<lb/>
a long illness she said Monday.<lb/>
A spokesman for Hanes-<lb/>
Lineberry Funeral Home said ser-<lb/>
vices would be held at 11 a.m.<lb/>
Wednesday at the West Market<lb/>
Street United Methodist Church<lb/>
in Greensboro, with burial at<lb/>
New Garden Friends Cemetery.<lb/>
Teachers<lb/>
Return To<lb/>
Classrooms<lb/>
(UPI)Teachers ended their strikes<lb/>
and returned to class in four<lb/>
school districts in New Jersey, Il-<lb/>
linois, Pennsylvania and Ohio<lb/>
but labor disputes in 25 other<lb/>
districts nationwide and two col-<lb/>
leges locked out nearly 130.000<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Strikes disrupted classes for<lb/>
17,600 students in Illinois, 5,800<lb/>
in Massachusetts, 21,635 in<lb/>
Michigan, 4,100 in Ohio, 45,496<lb/>
in Pennsylvania, 1,900 in Rhode<lb/>
Island and 6,650 in Washington<lb/>
state.<lb/>
At the college level, walkouts<lb/>
by professors in Illinois and New<lb/>
Jersey have left 24,000 students<lb/>
without regular instructors.<lb/>
In Newton Falls, Ohio, 100<lb/>
public school teachers ratified a<lb/>
new contract Sunday night and<lb/>
returned classrooms today, en-<lb/>
ding a four-day strike, said a<lb/>
spokesman for the Newton Falls<lb/>
Classroom Teachers Association.<lb/>
In Mount laurel and in<lb/>
See STRIKING page 6<lb/>
Bowles ran in 1972 as the<lb/>
Democratic Party's choice for<lb/>
governor, but was defeated by<lb/>
Jim Holshouser, who became the<lb/>
first Republican governor this<lb/>
century. A bitter runoff primary<lb/>
between Bowles and then-Lt.<lb/>
Gov. Pat Taylor has been partial-<lb/>
ly blamed for Bowies' defeat in<lb/>
the general election.<lb/>
Bowles also served in the state<lb/>
House from 1967-69 and in the<lb/>
Senate from 1969-71 before step-<lb/>
ping down to run for governor.<lb/>
Former Gov. Terry Sanford<lb/>
described Bowles as an "absolute<lb/>
foe of injustice and personal in-<lb/>
dignities and the suppression of<lb/>
human rights<lb/>
"There just never has been<lb/>
anybody else like Skipper Bowles<lb/>
� full of energy and vision and<lb/>
faith in people, exuberant in<lb/>
everything he ever undertook<lb/>
said Sanford, in whose ad-<lb/>
ministration Bowles worked as<lb/>
chairman of. the Board of Con-<lb/>
servation and Development. "He<lb/>
swept along with him all who<lb/>
might be associated with him in<lb/>
any enterprise<lb/>
"He attracted new business to<lb/>
North Carolina with enthusiasm<lb/>
and self assurance and belief in<lb/>
the wonders of his native state<lb/>
Sanford said. "And he led North<lb/>
Carolina during my administra-<lb/>
tion to new records of new jobs<lb/>
and new investments and new in-<lb/>
dustry<lb/>
Bowles, long active in the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, was chairman of the<lb/>
school's steering committee that<lb/>
raised more than $38 million to<lb/>
build the new Dean E. Smith Ac-<lb/>
tivities Center, the largest drive in<lb/>
the history of collegiate athletics.<lb/>
Among the honors bestowed<lb/>
upon Bowles, who was a member<lb/>
of the university's Board of<lb/>
Trustees from 1973-1981 and<lb/>
chairman from 1980-81, was the<lb/>
1985 William R. Davie Award,<lb/>
the highest award given by the<lb/>
Chapel Hill campus. He also<lb/>
received in 1983 the UNC Board<lb/>
of Governor's University Award,<lb/>
the highest honor given by the<lb/>
university system.<lb/>
"His dedicated work on behalf<lb/>
of the university is well known<lb/>
said William Friday, former<lb/>
UNC system president.<lb/>
"I also would pay tribute to<lb/>
him for his great leadership on<lb/>
behalf of underprivileged people,<lb/>
including those who suffer from<lb/>
alcoholism and those who are in<lb/>
need. Those efforts marked him<lb/>
as a man of great compassion and<lb/>
deep human understanding<lb/>
Sen. Marshall Rauch,<lb/>
D-Gastonia, served with Bowles<lb/>
in the state Senate and described<lb/>
him as a "wonderful, wonderful<lb/>
man<lb/>
"Skipper was one of the finest,<lb/>
kindest gentlemen I've known in<lb/>
my life Rauch said.<lb/>
"He was completely dedicated<lb/>
to North Carolina. He was an<lb/>
outstanding senator. He was a<lb/>
Democratic nominee for gover-<lb/>
nor, and I still feel, had he been<lb/>
elected, he might have been the<lb/>
greatest governor we ever had<lb/>
"By his service and devotion to<lb/>
his state said former Gov. Bob<lb/>
Scott, "he left an imprint that<lb/>
will last through the years. Skip-<lb/>
per Bowles loved his state and<lb/>
devoted a large measure of his<lb/>
time and expertise to building<lb/>
it<lb/>
DIRT<lb/>
CHEAP<lb/>
5<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
Why Rent When You Can Buy!<lb/>
We Can Save You Money!<lb/>
FURNITURE APPLIANCES <lb/>
2 Pc SET Mattress<lb/>
Foundations<lb/>
Single $136"<lb/>
Regular $149"<lb/>
Queen $199"<lb/>
Z<lb/>
3 pc DINING ROOM<lb/>
Set$12900<lb/>
5 pc DINING ROOM<lb/>
Set $18900<lb/>
3 pc LIVING ROOM SET<lb/>
SOFA, CHAIR, &amp; ROCKER<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$299"<lb/>
758-1707<lb/>
BUY-SELL.m2 N Greene S Greenville NEW - USED<lb/>
The Rebel<lb/>
East Carolina's National Award Winning<lb/>
Literary-Art Magazine<lb/>
is now accepting applications for the<lb/>
following positions:<lb/>
Poetry Editor<lb/>
Prose Editor<lb/>
Art Director<lb/>
Applications may be obtained in the<lb/>
Media Board Office and The Rebel<lb/>
Office. Applications should be turned in<lb/>
to the Media Board Secretary<lb/>
Publications Bldg) no later than Friday,<lb/>
Sept. 12,5:00 p.m.<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
Recreation Co nmittee:<lb/>
BingoIce Cream<lb/>
Party<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Tuesday Sept. 9th<lb/>
MSU Multi-purpose Room<lb/>
25 Admission<lb/>
Films Committee:<lb/>
Journey of<lb/>
Natty Gann M<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Wednesday Sept. 10th<lb/>
Jagged Edge M<lb/>
Thur Fri Sat Sun.<lb/>
Sept. 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
We 're still taking Committee<lb/>
Members for all Committees<lb/>
1UHS<lb/>
gathering place<lb/>
��'�<lb/>
! MA1Y-ELESHA ADAMS<lb/>
Can caffeine be harmful to your<lb/>
health?<lb/>
Caffeine, ingest in moderate<lb/>
amounts, is generally considered<lb/>
safe for most people. However,<lb/>
more research about the effects<lb/>
of caffeine on the human bod.<lb/>
needed. The average American<lb/>
drinks or eats about 200 mg of<lb/>
caffeine a day through coffee, ic-<lb/>
ed or hot tea, chocolate, and<lb/>
colas. Some prescription and<lb/>
over-the-counter medicines con-<lb/>
tain caffeine as well. Cold<lb/>
tablets, certain aspirin compound<lb/>
pain killers, menstrual drugs and<lb/>
stimulants may contain 30 to 200<lb/>
mg of caffeine.<lb/>
Drinking two cups of coffee<lb/>
(85-250 mg of caffeine) increases<lb/>
alertness and reduces drowsiness<lb/>
and fatigue, just the effects one<lb/>
wants in that morning "p-ck-me-<lb/>
fe<lb/>
sit<lb/>
otl<lb/>
Svi<lb/>
a'l<lb/>
inc<lb/>
I<lb/>
nei<lb/>
Terroris<lb/>
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (UPI; -<lb/>
Witnesses of the machine-gun at-<lb/>
tack on a synagogue that killed 22<lb/>
worshipers have disputed the<lb/>
governments report that all of the<lb/>
gunmen were killed in a grenade<lb/>
explosion.<lb/>
Members of Istanbul's Jewish<lb/>
community, meanwhile, decided<lb/>
to hold the funeral for the vic-<lb/>
tims in the Neve Shalon<lb/>
Synagogue where they were kill-<lb/>
ed, if the temple is not in danger<lb/>
of collapsing, a spokeswoman<lb/>
said Sunday.<lb/>
The attackers sprayed<lb/>
machine-gun fire and threw<lb/>
grenades Saturday at worshipers<lb/>
as morning prayers were under<lb/>
way in the synagogue, reopened<lb/>
for the Sabath prayers after a<lb/>
restoration.<lb/>
Witnesses and Israeli officials<lb/>
said the gunmen then poured<lb/>
gasoline on their victims and set<lb/>
them ablaze.<lb/>
The authorities have not said<lb/>
which group they suspect carried<lb/>
out the attack.<lb/>
Three Arab groups have claim-<lb/>
ed responsibility for the attack,<lb/>
and Israeli Prime Minister<lb/>
Shimon Peres vowed that Israel<lb/>
would retaliate, saying, "The<lb/>
Jewish People are determined to<lb/>
strike the murderous hand<lb/>
The groups claiming respon-<lb/>
sibility for the attack were the<lb/>
Lebanon-based fundamentalist<lb/>
Is!<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
P<lb/>
M<lb/>
ilia<lb/>
I<lb/>
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&amp;&amp;<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057845_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTMEMBER9. 1986<lb/>
At 66<lb/>
behalf<lb/>
? WTO<lb/>
rmer<lb/>
itc to<lb/>
ip on<lb/>
pie,<lb/>
r from<lb/>
.ire in<lb/>
him<lb/>
my life Rauch said.<lb/>
"He was completely dedicated<lb/>
to North Carolina. He was an<lb/>
outstanding senator. He was a<lb/>
Democratic nominee for gover-<lb/>
nor, and 1 still feel, had he been<lb/>
elected, he might have been the<lb/>
greatest governor we ever had<lb/>
"B his service and devotion to<lb/>
his state said former Gov. Bob<lb/>
Scott, he left an imprint that<lb/>
will last through the years. Skip-<lb/>
per Bowles loved his state and<lb/>
deoted a large measure of his<lb/>
time and expertise to building<lb/>
G ROOM SET<lb/>
IR, &amp; ROCKER<lb/>
LY<lb/>
199"<lb/>
1<lb/>
USED<lb/>
CTIONS<lb/>
earn<lb/>
jay Sept. 9th<lb/>
Room<lb/>
f<lb/>
Sept. 10th<lb/>
I� m<lb/>
un.<lb/>
h, 14th<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
littees<lb/>
Results of Survey<lb/>
Reveal Attitudes<lb/>
ADAMS<lb/>
Can caffeine be harmful to your<lb/>
health?<lb/>
Caffeine, ingested in moderate<lb/>
amounts, is generally considered<lb/>
safe for most people. However,<lb/>
more research about the effects<lb/>
of caffeine on the human body is<lb/>
needed. The average American<lb/>
drinks or eats about 200 mg of<lb/>
caffeine a day through coffee, ic-<lb/>
ed or hot tea, chocolate, and<lb/>
colas. Some prescription and<lb/>
over-the-counter medicines con-<lb/>
tain caffeine as well. Cold<lb/>
tablets, certain aspirin compound<lb/>
pain killers, menstrual drugs and<lb/>
stimulants may contain 30 to 200<lb/>
mg of caffeine.<lb/>
Drinking two cups of coffee<lb/>
(85-250 mg of caffeine) increases<lb/>
alertness and reduces drowsiness<lb/>
and fatigue, just the effects one<lb/>
wants in that morning "pick-me-<lb/>
up However, as the amount of<lb/>
caffeine rises above 250 mg so do<lb/>
the chances of becoming more<lb/>
nervous and developing tremors<lb/>
(the caffeine shakes). Insomnia,<lb/>
restlessness, and increased urina-<lb/>
tion and bowel movements may<lb/>
also occur.<lb/>
The possibility that caffeine in-<lb/>
take is related to heart attacks,<lb/>
fibrocystic breast disease (lumpy<lb/>
or knotty breasts), and cancer of<lb/>
the kidney and urinary tract has<lb/>
been studied. Some researchers<lb/>
feel that caffeine may be respon-<lb/>
sible for these conditions while<lb/>
others do not.<lb/>
It's possible to experience<lb/>
withdrawal effects from caffeine.<lb/>
Symptoms may occur 18 hours<lb/>
after the last caffeine intake and<lb/>
include a feeling of fullness in the<lb/>
head followed by a throbbing<lb/>
headache, yawning, fatigue, ir-<lb/>
ritability, runny nose, and<lb/>
nausea.<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
drugs and 70 percent said they<lb/>
would change where they drink.<lb/>
Students were asked how they<lb/>
would get alcohol if they were<lb/>
underage and intended to con-<lb/>
tinue to drink alcohol. Seventy<lb/>
percent said friends would buy it.<lb/>
Twenty-one percent said they<lb/>
would use borrowed or false in-<lb/>
dentifi cation.<lb/>
Only half of one percent said<lb/>
they would steal to obtain<lb/>
alcohol; 4.3 percent said relatives<lb/>
or parents would buy it<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
In commenting on the study's<lb/>
findings, Lotterhos said he felt<lb/>
that students might actually now<lb/>
be drinking in locations with<lb/>
more implied danger than the<lb/>
dormitory, apartment or public<lb/>
bar, such as in the car, to escape<lb/>
detection.<lb/>
"Of course, student intentions<lb/>
to 'use more other drugs' is an<lb/>
alarming finding he said.<lb/>
"Some students in the study<lb/>
volunteered that it might be<lb/>
easier to hide a little pot (mari-<lb/>
juana) or coke (cocaine) in your<lb/>
room than a six-pack of beer "<lb/>
Of the findings that students<lb/>
will obtain alcohol through older<lb/>
friends, use a borrowed or false<lb/>
ID, or obtain it through their<lb/>
parents or other relatives, Lot-<lb/>
terhos said, "These intentions<lb/>
clearly imply problems for<lb/>
alcohol retailers, public bars,<lb/>
etc<lb/>
"Overall, the basic question<lb/>
seems to be whether we are solv-<lb/>
ing problems or perhaps<lb/>
generating worse ones Lot-<lb/>
terhos said. "Drinking ages<lb/>
have officially changed many<lb/>
times in our society. It is ques-<lb/>
tionable whether these type laws<lb/>
actually result in a change in<lb/>
drinking behavior.<lb/>
"Perhaps we need to realize<lb/>
that we are dealing with very<lb/>
complex patterns of behavior<lb/>
which are woven into the cultural<lb/>
fabric of our country he said.<lb/>
'These are behaviors which do<lb/>
not respond readily to simplistic<lb/>
answers such as law changes<lb/>
jNatoB'hHiina5<lb/>
IV<lb/>
Loves Greeks !<lb/>
0 i0 sonorities and" .<lb/>
fr&amp;f erniTies! A<lb/>
Rush V<lb/>
Terrorists Attack Worshippers<lb/>
yai-&amp;7-<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
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COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
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8:00-11:00<lb/>
$1.00wCollegel.D.<lb/>
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Greenville, NC<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (UPI) -<lb/>
Witnesses of the machine-gun at-<lb/>
tack on a synagogue that killed 22<lb/>
worshipers have disputed the<lb/>
governments report that all of the<lb/>
gunmen were killed in a grenade<lb/>
explosion.<lb/>
Members of Istanbul's Jewish<lb/>
community, meanwhile, decided<lb/>
to hold the funeral for the vic-<lb/>
tims in the Neve Shalon<lb/>
Synagogue where they were kill-<lb/>
ed, if the temple is not in danger<lb/>
of collapsing, a spokeswoman<lb/>
said Sunday.<lb/>
The attackers sprayed<lb/>
machine-gun fire and threw<lb/>
grenades Saturday at worshipers<lb/>
as morning prayers were under<lb/>
way Lnthe synagoguej reopened<lb/>
for the Sabath prayers after a<lb/>
restoration.<lb/>
Witnesses and Israeli officials<lb/>
said the gunmen then poured<lb/>
gasoline on their victims and set<lb/>
them ablaze.<lb/>
The authorities have not said<lb/>
which group they suspect carried<lb/>
out the attack.<lb/>
Three Arab groups have claim-<lb/>
ed responsibility for the attack,<lb/>
and Israeli Prime Minister<lb/>
Shimon Peres vowed that Israel<lb/>
would retaliate, saying, "The<lb/>
Jewish People are determined to<lb/>
strike the murderous hand<lb/>
The groups claiming respon-<lb/>
sibility for the attack were the<lb/>
Lebanon-based fundamentalist<lb/>
Islamic Jihad, the Interna-<lb/>
tionalist Fighters Front and the<lb/>
Palestinian Revenge Organiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Interior Minister Yilderim<lb/>
Akdulut said the attack was most<lb/>
likely carried out by two uniden-<lb/>
tified gunmen who were killed in<lb/>
the synagogue when their<lb/>
grenades exploded.<lb/>
But the witnesses disputed the<lb/>
report.<lb/>
"There were four terrorists<lb/>
said Gabriel Saul, 16, whose<lb/>
father was killed in the attack.<lb/>
"One of them was about 22 to 23<lb/>
years old, of medium height,<lb/>
wore sunglasses and seemed very<lb/>
nervous. I saw him running away<lb/>
from the synagogue after the at-<lb/>
tack<lb/>
Gal Esin, an employee of a<lb/>
shop opposite the syngog in<lb/>
Istanbul's Jewish sector said, "I<lb/>
saw two men running away on<lb/>
foot<lb/>
Turkish journalists said the<lb/>
government version of the<lb/>
massacre might be a ploy to put<lb/>
off guard any gunmen who fled<lb/>
by not confirming they are sear-<lb/>
IIUIIU<lb/>
ching for them.<lb/>
"Police either think this will<lb/>
help them apprehend the culprits,<lb/>
or they are hiding their in-<lb/>
competence said the editor of<lb/>
an Istanbul daily newspaper.<lb/>
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g Hank's uses a custom built ice cream machine to make itt delirious deasem. Modern ice cream machiiio<lb/>
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Qtfte �ast fflarnlmten<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Luvender. w Manatr<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, ���� ��w<lb/>
Patti Kemmis, mm �. steve Folmar. m, <lb/>
Scott Cooper, o.JP�v� a Anthony Martin, busc, ���,<lb/>
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John Shannon, ��, Shannon Short, mm �,�<lb/>
Pat Molloy. �� hi i ���ar DeChanile Johnson, ����<lb/>
September 4, 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Procrastinators<lb/>
They Hurt More Than Themselves<lb/>
dxJdim<lb/>
Question: You're the president,<lb/>
chairperson, or general manager of<lb/>
a student organization or publica-<lb/>
tion. A senior, perhaps even a<lb/>
graduating senior, walks into your<lb/>
modest office and hands you a job<lb/>
application. The queries have been<lb/>
answered with one, maybe two,<lb/>
word sentences (if such an animal<lb/>
does exist). The request for faculty<lb/>
references has been left blank, as<lb/>
blank as the look on the applicant's<lb/>
face.<lb/>
"I'd like a position on your<lb/>
staff the student says. "I'm try-<lb/>
ing to get some experience in my<lb/>
field<lb/>
What do you do?<lb/>
Do you (a) laugh in the student's<lb/>
face for asking the impossible (after<lb/>
all, "experience in my field" can-<lb/>
not be found in fifteen weeks); (b)<lb/>
say nothing and offer whatever<lb/>
menial task you have available, or<lb/>
(c) offer the student a position that<lb/>
you know heshe probably can't<lb/>
handle and one you really can't af-<lb/>
ford to give to an untried staff<lb/>
member?<lb/>
More often than not, lack of stu-<lb/>
dent interest, which leads to insuffi-<lb/>
cient membership in some organiza-<lb/>
tions, forces the hand of manage-<lb/>
ment to choose the third and most<lb/>
unappealing option. The real ques-<lb/>
tion, however, is who are these peo-<lb/>
ple and where have they been<lb/>
hiding?<lb/>
These late comers are what we<lb/>
like to call "resume writers They<lb/>
are nothing more than pro-<lb/>
crastinating seniors (sometimes late<lb/>
juniors) frantically searching for<lb/>
ways to pad their resumes.<lb/>
For years they have carefully<lb/>
balanced their time between the<lb/>
classsroom and the downtown<lb/>
nightclubs. Now, something (God<lb/>
only knows what) has caused them<lb/>
to realize, "Hey, I'm graduating<lb/>
soon. I need something to put on<lb/>
my resume<lb/>
Unfortunately, these people are<lb/>
seldom interested in gaining ex-<lb/>
perience. Instead, what they're<lb/>
looking for is something, anything,<lb/>
to put on that blank page they call a<lb/>
resume.<lb/>
This looks-good-on-the-rez at-<lb/>
titude can, and often does, hurt<lb/>
many organizations. Due to person-<lb/>
nel shortages, the resume writer is<lb/>
assigned a position of responsiblity.<lb/>
Quite often, they blow it. More<lb/>
often, they just don't know how to<lb/>
do it.<lb/>
In many cases they just don't<lb/>
care. They assume a prospective<lb/>
employer won't bother checking<lb/>
their past performance in an activi-<lb/>
ty that doesn't directly relate to the<lb/>
job they're applying for. Therefore,<lb/>
in the final analysis, they do a poor<lb/>
J0b. - tmttmmm � � �<lb/>
C3o$CoWHAS<lb/>
DETUNED FOR POSSSIE EOtfAGfe.<lb/>
Rmracrea?.<lb/>
DOO<lb/>
Americans Have Blurred Vission?<lb/>
If students would just realize the<lb/>
importance of practical experience<lb/>
early on in their college careers,<lb/>
then both they and campus<lb/>
organizations would benefit.<lb/>
50RW5HULTZ IS HAVW6 A MAl�$S�At85f 6 gfflNG A<lb/>
gjgjjgi w n$ WEWK86SB m w WE mmm<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
The art of Reagan hagiography has<lb/>
reached its baroque stage. For In-<lb/>
dependence Day, Time magazine's cover<lb/>
featured the president against a<lb/>
background of fireworks: a national<lb/>
icon to rival Miss Liberty herself. The<lb/>
theme of the current gush is that<lb/>
Reagan's triumph is one of vision, and<lb/>
cannot be dismissed as a matter of per-<lb/>
sonal magic or luck.<lb/>
In a swoony full-page editorial July 14<lb/>
heralding "the onset of an era the<lb/>
Wall Street Journal declared that "what<lb/>
has been going on the past six years" is<lb/>
not a peculiar accident of one man's<lb/>
unique political personality Rather,<lb/>
"Mr. Reagan has been successful<lb/>
precisely because he is a president<lb/>
operating from an agenda<lb/>
The case being made is that Reagan<lb/>
has gone beyond mere political success<lb/>
and legislative victories. In various<lb/>
areas, he (1) began with a clear vision;<lb/>
(2) turned it into action over the opposi-<lb/>
tion of skeptics; (3) saw the action suc-<lb/>
oggjMMJ (permanently changed the<lb/>
�pWlflcWlandSWpe.<lb/>
Time: ,4Just as Franklin Roosevelt's<lb/>
ideas set the style that would dominate<lb/>
the next four decades of American<lb/>
politics so may Reagan's.<lb/>
The Wall Street Journal. "Like FDR,<lb/>
Ronald Reagan is remolding the coun-<lb/>
try's primary institutions and the prin-<lb/>
ciples of its economic life<lb/>
Oh, yeah? Let's take a f'rinstance.<lb/>
How about tax reform? According to a<lb/>
distinguished political columnist, it's "a<lb/>
political triumph for President Reagan,<lb/>
a landmark in the piecemeal destruction<lb/>
of the New Deal philosophy<lb/>
The Journal says the bill now in con-<lb/>
ference is the culmination of Reagan's<lb/>
visionary campaign to curtail "the<lb/>
economic destructiveness of a steeply<lb/>
progressive tax system<lb/>
This is truly revisionist history. Far<lb/>
from the culmination of Reagan's ef-<lb/>
forts, the current tax reform is in impor-<lb/>
tant ways a direct repudiation of his<lb/>
1981 tax bill. That bill expanded<lb/>
loopholes and tax shelters, and shifted<lb/>
the tax burden from corporations to in-<lb/>
dividuals.<lb/>
This bill does the opposite. In fact, it<lb/>
was the revelation that many corpora-<lb/>
tions and rich individuals were paying<lb/>
no taxes at all, thanks to the 1981 boon-<lb/>
doggle, that created the political<lb/>
momentum for genuine reform.<lb/>
Reagan's idea was never tax reform as<lb/>
such. In his mind lower tax rates were<lb/>
supposed to pay for themselves through<lb/>
the Laffer-Curve free lunch, or be paid<lb/>
for through spending cuts he never<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Reagan's first public reference to tax<lb/>
reform was an attempt to get it off the<lb/>
agenda. In his 1984 State of the Union<lb/>
address, fearing that Democrats would<lb/>
make an issue of well-publicized abuses,<lb/>
he announced a Treasury study to be<lb/>
concluded conveniently after the elec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Tax reform only became Reagan's<lb/>
"top domestic priority" when it looked<lb/>
like a winner. He never has invested<lb/>
much of his copious political capital in<lb/>
it.<lb/>
As for the Journal's lofty notion that<lb/>
tax reform reflects a philosophical vic-<lb/>
tory over the discredited concept of<lb/>
"progressivity this reform (unlike the<lb/>
1981 bill) will make the tax code more<lb/>
progressive than the current system.<lb/>
That, in fact, is why it's going to pass.<lb/>
The state of the economy is most<lb/>
responsible for Reagan's standing with<lb/>
the public. Yet on the economy, all four<lb/>
elements of the new Reagan myth are<lb/>
open to challenge. Reagan's economic<lb/>
vision in 1980 was balancing the budget<lb/>
and cutting government spending.<lb/>
Whatever may have happened since<lb/>
then, that is not it.<lb/>
This year's deficit looks to be a new<lb/>
record of $220 billion. Federal spending<lb/>
is 24 percent of the GNP, also a record.<lb/>
Even social welfare spending is down<lb/>
only 9 percent from what it would have<lb/>
been under pre-Reagan policies.<lb/>
Far from reversing the heritage of<lb/>
FDR and "testing the lower limits" of<lb/>
"what government could do for the in-<lb/>
dividual as Time would fancifully<lb/>
have it, Reagan hasn't even attempted to<lb/>
ask citizens to demand less from their<lb/>
government, except for citizens who are<lb/>
poor.<lb/>
The gross national product increased<lb/>
12.6 percent in real terms from 1981<lb/>
through 1985. During the previous five<lb/>
years, under the hapless Ford and the<lb/>
feckless Carter, it increased 23.2 percent<lb/>
� almost double.<lb/>
Seen without rose-colored glasses, the<lb/>
future looks grayish, too. At a moment<lb/>
when everything seems to be going our<lb/>
way � lower energy prices, lower dollar,<lb/>
lower interest rates � we putter along at<lb/>
a wan 2-percent annual growth rate and<lb/>
a record $150 billion annual trade<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
At best, we'll be paying the bills for<lb/>
our Reagan-era consumption orgy for<lb/>
years to come. At worst, Reagan's in-<lb/>
cumbency may be seen as the beginning<lb/>
of a British-style long imperial decline.<lb/>
This is a tendentious analysis. But it ft<lb/>
less tendentious than the analysis that<lb/>
sees Reagan's economy as a grand vision<lb/>
grandly fulfilled.<lb/>
Equally skeptical and equally plausi-<lb/>
ble analyses are available of Reagan's<lb/>
foreign and military record. He's had<lb/>
many successes, some failures, much<lb/>
charm, much luck, some skill, a bit of<lb/>
idealism, a bit of opportunism.<lb/>
Weigh them as you wish, but for<lb/>
heaven's sake get a grip on yourself: The<lb/>
past five years have not been anything as<lb/>
boring and uncomplicated as a trium-<lb/>
phal procession from ideal through ac-<lb/>
complishment and into the kingdom of<lb/>
heaven.<lb/>
Mr. Michael Kinsley is the editor of<lb/>
the New Republic, excerpts from which<lb/>
can occasionally be found on these<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
In Crisis: Losing Sight Of Minority Heritage<lb/>
By CHRYSTAL FRAY<lb/>
dai To Tb East Cmnimm<lb/>
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second<lb/>
installment of a two part article on blacks<lb/>
at white colleges. This article was original-<lb/>
ly published in The Idiom in July of this<lb/>
year. See the Sept. 4 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian for the first installment.)<lb/>
The trend of college students in the<lb/>
1980s toward apathy and non-<lb/>
involvement is not limited to black<lb/>
students, but it does represent a dramatic<lb/>
change from the black students of the 60s<lb/>
and 70s.<lb/>
Most, unlike their counterparts of<lb/>
previous decades, attended predominately<lb/>
white high schools and have participated<lb/>
in integrated sports and extracurricular<lb/>
activities. Therefore, they are less likely to<lb/>
support traditionally "black" organiza-<lb/>
tions I or identify with traditionally<lb/>
"black" issues.<lb/>
In an article written for the Journal of<lb/>
College Student Personnel Charles A.<lb/>
Taylor, dean of students at Loyola<lb/>
University in Chicago says "On political<lb/>
issues the majority of today's black col-<lb/>
lege students on predominately white<lb/>
campuses do not truly understand the<lb/>
issues facing the black community or<lb/>
understand the effects of certain political<lb/>
awareness. Many black students are<lb/>
uninterested, not upset, and not angry<lb/>
Taylor's profile of a black student on a<lb/>
predominately white campus, although<lb/>
not representative of all black students,<lb/>
aids in explaining the current attitude of<lb/>
many students and the reason for their<lb/>
apathy.<lb/>
Today's white colleges have moved<lb/>
beyond integration, the primary focus of<lb/>
the 1960s and 1970s, to assimilation where<lb/>
all students attempt to become culturally<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
Assimilation for the black student<lb/>
means the denial of his culture or<lb/>
heritage. The student can no longer<lb/>
"Think black, act black, talk black or<lb/>
look black according to Taylor.<lb/>
During this process, a white student<lb/>
must deny nothing, and therefore, all that<lb/>
is lost, is lost by the black student.<lb/>
Taylor's profile states:<lb/>
"Being black is to agree with whites<lb/>
who tell me to forget about the dif-<lb/>
ferences between the races and accept<lb/>
people as people. I don't see color, just<lb/>
people. That is why I do not join any of<lb/>
these black organizations on campus.<lb/>
What is 'black pride' anyway?"<lb/>
What determines why many black<lb/>
students leave, yet certain students remain<lb/>
at predominately white colleges?<lb/>
While conducting a survey for the<lb/>
Research Triangle Institute, I asked 15<lb/>
black freshmen (or students with less than<lb/>
32 credit hours) why they chose a<lb/>
predominately white institution.<lb/>
Twelve listed among their reasons the<lb/>
prestige associated with attending a white<lb/>
school along with the idea that white<lb/>
schools offer a better education and better<lb/>
jobs after graduation.<lb/>
This finding correlates to findings of a<lb/>
study conducted in 1984 which found that<lb/>
"Blacks are generally satisfied with the<lb/>
academic quality and prestige of white in-<lb/>
stitutions, although they recognize the<lb/>
high psychic costs (Harold Cheatham:<lb/>
Equal Acess; Progress or Retrogression)<lb/>
These high psychic costs include the<lb/>
development of low self-esteem, interper-<lb/>
sonal conflict, and confused self-identity.<lb/>
Many reseachers, including Taylor<lb/>
himself, have been quick to blame the<lb/>
problems encountered by blacks on the<lb/>
students themselves. Doris Wright, a<lb/>
counselor at the University of Texas at<lb/>
Austin, writes in her article,<lb/>
"Misrepresenting the Black Student Ex-<lb/>
perience Again: A Rejoiner that many<lb/>
people neglect the role student affairs ad-<lb/>
visors and educators play in creating a<lb/>
climate that is unsupportive of black<lb/>
students. However, the blame cannot be<lb/>
totally placed here either.<lb/>
At ECU the University-established<lb/>
black student organizations exist for the<lb/>
benefit of black students, culturally,<lb/>
socially, and academically. The Minority<lb/>
Arts Committee exists to promote minori-<lb/>
ty cultural activities, and each year spon-<lb/>
sors several events during Black History<lb/>
Month in February.<lb/>
Unfortunately, very few blacks serve on<lb/>
the committee or attend the programs.<lb/>
The minority student publication exists as<lb/>
a vehicle for minority student expression,<lb/>
but has not been utilized to its fullest<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
How can university officials be ex-<lb/>
pected to address black problems without<lb/>
direct student input?<lb/>
A major problem for black students is<lb/>
the feeling of alienation; that they have no<lb/>
one to turn to. The feeling of alienation is<lb/>
constantly reinforced when black students<lb/>
refuse to be supportive of each other.<lb/>
They refuse to join campus organizatiosn,<lb/>
black or white, in any measurable<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
They don't support efforts made by<lb/>
other black students, be it voting for<lb/>
black candidates in campus elections or<lb/>
attending programs sponsored by black<lb/>
student organizations.<lb/>
Black students often have the feeling<lb/>
there is nothing on campus they can iden-<lb/>
tify with. Taylor's profile of a black stu-<lb/>
dent in the 1980s illustrated how blacks<lb/>
sometimes have difficulty identifying with<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
"Being black means to walk across<lb/>
campus on my first day of class and see a<lb/>
few other black students, but they look up<lb/>
at the sky, turn their heads, or look me<lb/>
straight in the eye and do not speak<lb/>
Alvin Sumter, a student at N.C. State<lb/>
University in Raleigh, feels that blacks en-<lb/>
counter less problems when they create a<lb/>
support network among themselves.<lb/>
Alvin feels that attending a predominately<lb/>
white school is good for black students<lb/>
because the atmosphere more closely<lb/>
reflects the situation in today's world. He<lb/>
adds that black students should learn to<lb/>
become more self-reliant.<lb/>
He says "instead of looking to others<lb/>
for leadership, black students should<lb/>
learn to rely on themselves and each other<lb/>
for support services and leadership<lb/>
Chrystal Fray is a graduating senior<lb/>
majoring in English and the former<lb/>
features editor of Expressions magazine.<lb/>
Ki<lb/>
EL PASO. TX (UPI) - Prl<lb/>
secuters plan to seek the dea<lb/>
penalty against Henry Lee Luc<lb/>
for the ax slaying of an eldei<lb/>
woman in what some say may L<lb/>
the serial killer's last court a<lb/>
pearance.<lb/>
A final round of pre-trial r<lb/>
tions in Lucas' trial in the Mi<lb/>
27, 1983, slaymg of Librae<lb/>
Apocada, 72 is to begin today<lb/>
Assistant District Attorney Bi<lb/>
Moody said the state's a<lb/>
against Lucas is the strongest<lb/>
date, even though Lucas ru<lb/>
recanted his confessiou<lb/>
Although Lucas already is undt<lb/>
one death sentence, Moody sai<lb/>
officers want another to be cei<lb/>
tain of keeping Lucas off 1<lb/>
streets.<lb/>
"This may be the last Luc<lb/>
trial Moody said, "We're g<lb/>
ing for the death penalty<lb/>
Defense lawyers say thev ai<lb/>
confident they will be able to suj<lb/>
n<lb/>
Ea:<lb/>
Fi<lb/>
8,000<lb/>
Pri<lb/>
Sw<lb/>
1002 Ev aas St<lb/>
�<lb/>
ijy<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. 1986<lb/>
;KlCAN HRSBttM<lb/>
Vission?<lb/>
�n under pre-Reagan policies.<lb/>
Far from reversing the heritage of<lb/>
DR and "testing the lower limits" of<lb/>
h hat government could do for the in-<lb/>
�vidual as Time would fancifully<lb/>
a eit, Reagan hasn't even attempted to<lb/>
. citizens to demand less from their<lb/>
ernment, except for citizens who are<lb/>
i r<lb/>
the gross national product increased<lb/>
6 percent in real terms from 1981<lb/>
irough 1985. During the previous five<lb/>
pars, under the hapless Ford and the<lb/>
:kless Carter, it increased 23.2 percent<lb/>
almost double.<lb/>
Neen without rose-colored glasses, the<lb/>
bure looks grayish, too. At a moment<lb/>
Ihen everything seems to be going our<lb/>
lav � lower energy prices, lower dollar,<lb/>
jwer interest rates � we putter along at<lb/>
jwan 2-percent annual growth rate and<lb/>
record Si50 billion annual trade<lb/>
tficit.<lb/>
A: best, we'll be paying the bills for<lb/>
it Reagan-era consumption orgy for<lb/>
Jars to come. At worst, Reagan's in-<lb/>
lbency may be seen as the beginning<lb/>
a British-style long imperial decline.<lb/>
This s a tendentious analysis. But it &amp;<lb/>
Jss tendentious than the analysis that<lb/>
Reagan's economy as a grand vision<lb/>
�andly fulfilled.<lb/>
Equally skeptical and equally plausi-<lb/>
le analyses are available of Reagan's<lb/>
Veign and military record. He's had<lb/>
lany successes, some failures, much<lb/>
arm, much luck, some skill, a bit of<lb/>
:alism, a bit of opportunism.<lb/>
 Weigh them as you wish, but for<lb/>
aven's sake get a grip on yourself: The<lb/>
st five years have not been anything as<lb/>
king and uncomplicated as a trium-<lb/>
aJ procession from ideal through ac-<lb/>
lplishment and into the kingdom of<lb/>
iven.<lb/>
Vfr Michael Kinsley is the editor of<lb/>
Neu Republic, excerpts from which<lb/>
occasionally be found on these<lb/>
tes.<lb/>
eritage<lb/>
reinforced when black students<lb/>
jbe supporive of each other.<lb/>
je to join campus organizatiosn,<lb/>
white, in any measurable<lb/>
n't support efforts made by<lb/>
fck students, be it voting for<lb/>
lidates in campus elections or<lb/>
programs sponsored by black<lb/>
?anizations.<lb/>
udents often have the feeling<lb/>
thing on campus they can iden-<lb/>
"aylor's profile of a black stu-<lb/>
1980s illustrated how blacks<lb/>
I have difficulty identifying with<lb/>
I black means to walk across<lb/>
my first day of class and see a<lb/>
)lack students, but they look up<lb/>
turn their heads, or look me<lb/>
Ithe eye and do not speak<lb/>
kmter, a student at N.C. State<lb/>
lin Raleigh, feels that blacks en-<lb/>
Is problems when they create a<lb/>
letwork among themselves,<lb/>
that attending a predominately<lb/>
pi is good for black students<lb/>
ie atmosphere more closely<lb/>
situation in today's world. He<lb/>
)lack students should learn to<lb/>
ke self-reliant.<lb/>
"instead of looking to others<lb/>
)hip, black students should<lb/>
! on themselves and each other<lb/>
services and leadership<lb/>
Fray is a graduating senior<lb/>
English and the former<lb/>
tor of Expressions magazine.<lb/>
Ax Murderer On Trfql<lb/>
EL PASO, TX (UPI) - Pro-<lb/>
secuters plan to seek the death<lb/>
penalty against Henry Lee Lucas<lb/>
for the ax slaying of an elderly<lb/>
woman in what some say may be<lb/>
the serial killer's last court ap-<lb/>
pearance.<lb/>
A final round of pre-trial mo-<lb/>
tions in Lucas trial in the May<lb/>
27, 1983, slaying of Librada<lb/>
Apocada, 72 is to begin today.<lb/>
Assistant District Attorney Bill<lb/>
Moody said the state's case<lb/>
against Lucas is the strongest to<lb/>
date, even though Lucas has<lb/>
recanted his confession.<lb/>
Although Lucas already is under<lb/>
one death sentence, Moody said<lb/>
officers want another to be cer-<lb/>
tain of keeping Lucas off the<lb/>
streets.<lb/>
"This may be the last Lucas<lb/>
trial Moody said, "We're go-<lb/>
ing for the death penalty<lb/>
Defense lawyers say they are<lb/>
confident they will be able to sup-<lb/>
Killer May Face Death<lb/>
press Lucas' confession with the<lb/>
motion filed with State District<lb/>
Judge Brunson Moore. The hear-<lb/>
ing on the pre-trial motion is ex-<lb/>
pected to last six to eight weeks<lb/>
and involve 350 defense and pro-<lb/>
secution witnesses.<lb/>
The state's case is based on the<lb/>
confession and other evidence,<lb/>
including the Apodaca home and<lb/>
sold by a suspect who witnesses<lb/>
have said resembled Lucas.<lb/>
The defense says the 49-year<lb/>
old drifter, who once confessed<lb/>
to killing as many as 600 people,<lb/>
was not in El Paso when<lb/>
Apodaca was slain.<lb/>
El Paso prosecuters way they<lb/>
believe Lucas murdered the elder-<lb/>
ly woman, who was beaten, sex-<lb/>
ually abused and killed with an ax<lb/>
in her home in southeast El Paso.<lb/>
The case took a twist last<lb/>
month when an El Paso detective<lb/>
testified in a sworn statement that<lb/>
he was present when two Juarez,<lb/>
Mexico, policemen, identified<lb/>
only as Reyes and Calanche, held<lb/>
an electric cattle prod against the<lb/>
genitals of a Juarez man until he<lb/>
confessed that he killed Apodaca.<lb/>
The suspect, Oeovany Chavez,<lb/>
later repudiated his confession.<lb/>
The detective, Jimmy<lb/>
Apodaca, nephew of the victim,<lb/>
said Chavez was a suspect in the<lb/>
murder.<lb/>
Blood and semen samples were<lb/>
taken from Chavez, but during<lb/>
the deposition, Apodaca was told<lb/>
not to answer when asked if they<lb/>
matched blood and semen found<lb/>
in the body.<lb/>
Apodaca said in the deposition<lb/>
that he thought there was more<lb/>
than one suspect involved in the<lb/>
murder. He said Department of<lb/>
Public Saftey lab reports in-<lb/>
dicated Lucas's blood type- was<lb/>
different from that found on the<lb/>
victim.<lb/>
I WANT YOU<lb/>
DATE SEPT 15-17 TIME Ml PM<lb/>
Pt-ACal40S ELIZABETH WT.<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Fitness Center<lb/>
8,000 lbs. Olympic Weights<lb/>
Private Nautilus Room<lb/>
Sauna<lb/>
Suntana Tanning Bed<lb/>
Fall Student Special<lb/>
Semester $70.00<lb/>
Year $150.00<lb/>
CLIP COUPON<lb/>
1002EvmiSI<lb/>
75S-9SM<lb/>
SGA Holds<lb/>
Elections<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
Five polling places will be set<lb/>
up this year across campus.<lb/>
Students may vote at the Student<lb/>
Store. Croatan, College Hill,<lb/>
Mendenhall, and on West Cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Once elected, representatives<lb/>
are required to attend a meeting<lb/>
every Monday at 5 p.m. and will<lb/>
be responsible for a committee<lb/>
assignment.<lb/>
"Everyone is encouraged to get<lb/>
involved. It's a chance for<lb/>
students to know what's happen<lb/>
ing on campus. By getting involv-<lb/>
ed you learn about the issues, the<lb/>
problems, and the solutions<lb/>
added Cunanan. "Everyone<lb/>
should take an active role in get<lb/>
ytMMSs'titSlll<lb/>
Look What surfaced<lb/>
Every Tuesday Is<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
7 p.mll p.m.<lb/>
99CSUBS<lb/>
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60 Oe. Pitchers $1.99<lb/>
11 a.mll p.m. 752-2183<lb/>
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Ham. Salami ft Cheese<lb/>
Pepperoni. Salami St. Cheese<lb/>
Turkey A Cheese<lb/>
Ham, Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
215 E. 4th St.<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
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Reward yourself with a 14K gold ArtCarved ring,<lb/>
and we'll take $35 off its price<lb/>
or give you a $50 necklace, free.<lb/>
Our Representative is on campus with distinguished<lb/>
traditional and contemporary styles-<lb/>
each backed by a Full Lifetime Warranty.<lb/>
ylKIUIRVED<lb/>
V. CLASS RINGS<lb/>
Representative will be at the Student Store<lb/>
September 4th, 5th, 8th, 9th, and 10th<lb/>
�� from 9:00 a.m4:00 p.m.<lb/>
AnCanwdQaKRngs<lb/>
h<lb/>
�"��' � �?  -���<lb/>
� it T �� �� �<lb/>
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frimmmmmm,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057845_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9, 1986<lb/>
US Reporter Stands Trial In Russia<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) � The<lb/>
case of an American reporter for-<lb/>
mally charged with espionage by<lb/>
the Soviet Union should not im-<lb/>
pede plans for a summit or hinder<lb/>
efforts for his release, to U.S. of-<lb/>
ficials say.<lb/>
Nicholas Daniloff, 52, a U.S.<lb/>
News World Report correspon-<lb/>
dent held in a KGB prison since<lb/>
Aug. 30 on what U.S. officials<lb/>
call "trumped-up charges was<lb/>
formally accused of spying Sun-<lb/>
day, a magazine spokesman in<lb/>
Moscow said.<lb/>
However, U.S. News chairman<lb/>
Mortimer Zuckerman, said he<lb/>
believed some "face-saving" can<lb/>
be found to head off a Soviet trial<lb/>
for Daniloff, who he described as<lb/>
a hostage.<lb/>
Michael Armacost, under-<lb/>
secretary of state for political af-<lb/>
fairs, said that sending Daniloff<lb/>
to trial would "complicate" the<lb/>
"resolution of this case<lb/>
When asked Sunday on NBC's<lb/>
"Meet the Press" if a trial would<lb/>
rule out a superpower summit<lb/>
now in the planning stages, Ar-<lb/>
macost replied, "We haven't said<lb/>
that<lb/>
The revelation of the formal<lb/>
charge came less than 24 hours<lb/>
after White House officials con-<lb/>
firmed that President Reagan ap-<lb/>
pealed to Soviet leader Mikhail<lb/>
Gorbachev for Daniloff's release.<lb/>
In a letter to Gorbachev,<lb/>
Reagan gave his personal<lb/>
assurance the reporter is not a<lb/>
spy, aides said.<lb/>
In Los Angeles Sundaywhere<lb/>
Reagan was campaigning for<lb/>
Republican candidates, White<lb/>
House spokesman Larry Speakes<lb/>
repeated the administration's<lb/>
profession of Daniloff's in-<lb/>
nocence.<lb/>
But Speakes added, "There<lb/>
will be no trade" � a reference<lb/>
to a proposal for an arrangement<lb/>
linking Daniloff's freedom to the<lb/>
case of a Soviet U.N. employee,<lb/>
Gennadi Zakharov, arrested one<lb/>
week before Daniloff and now<lb/>
jailed in New York without bond<lb/>
on spy charges.<lb/>
Speakes also said no change<lb/>
has been made in plans for the<lb/>
Sept. 19 meetings between<lb/>
Secretary of State George Shultz<lb/>
and Soviet Foreign Minister<lb/>
Eduard Shevardnadze.<lb/>
"We will continue to review<lb/>
our options � what we can do to<lb/>
influence events and impress on<lb/>
the Soviets it is indeed a matter of<lb/>
utmost seriousness to the United<lb/>
States he said. The Kremlin has<lb/>
been told that Reagan "is per-<lb/>
sonally involved in the matter<lb/>
and that he regards it as serious<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
U.S. officials have said,<lb/>
however, something other than a<lb/>
trade � for instance, Daniloff's<lb/>
release and a new U.S. considera-<lb/>
tion of a request for Zakharov to<lb/>
be released into the custody of<lb/>
the Soviet ambassador � has<lb/>
been suggested to the Kremlin<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
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Mon-Sat 40:00-9:00<lb/>
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Nomination Debated<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) �<lb/>
Democrats opposed to William<lb/>
Rehnquist being confirmed chief<lb/>
justice have some new ammuni-<lb/>
tion that will likely be presented<lb/>
this week when the Senate begins<lb/>
debate over his nomination.<lb/>
Civil rights leaders charged<lb/>
Saturday that Rehnquist drafted<lb/>
a constitutional amendment in<lb/>
1970 that would have permitted<lb/>
racially segregated schools.<lb/>
William Taylor, an official<lb/>
with the Leadership Conference<lb/>
on Civil Rights, said Rehnquist's<lb/>
1970 proposal "would have<lb/>
sharply curtailed the powers of<lb/>
federal courts to remedy<lb/>
unlawful segregaton of the public<lb/>
schools<lb/>
The proposal, made available<lb/>
to United Press International,<lb/>
calls for a 26th amendment to the<lb/>
Constitution to "validate<lb/>
freedom of choice and<lb/>
neighborhood schools<lb/>
In a statement, Sen. Edward<lb/>
Kennedy, D-Mass said the<lb/>
memos "represent significant ad-<lb/>
ditional evidence of Mr. Rehn-<lb/>
quist's continuing support for<lb/>
racially segregated schools. Mr.<lb/>
Rehnquist is an arch enemy of<lb/>
civil rights and is unfit to be chief<lb/>
justice of the United States<lb/>
Sunday, the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union released reports<lb/>
based on the voting records of<lb/>
both Rehnquist and appeals<lb/>
Judge Antonin Scalia, President<lb/>
Reagan's choice to replace Rehn-<lb/>
quist as associate justice.<lb/>
The Senate is expected to take<lb/>
up the nominations of Rehnquist,<lb/>
61, as the nation's 16th chief<lb/>
justice, and Scalia, 50, this week.<lb/>
Approval of both men is expected<lb/>
despite Democratic objections to<lb/>
Rehnquist's civil rights record.<lb/>
The organization said,<lb/>
"Justice Rehnquist's view is in-<lb/>
consistent with the functional<lb/>
purpose of the Bill of Rights and<lb/>
the generally accepted role of the<lb/>
federal courts in enforcing it<lb/>
Scalia was named by Reagan in<lb/>
Striking Teachers<lb/>
Return to Work<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
Bellmawr, N.J classes for 3,400<lb/>
students resumed today.<lb/>
Negotiators reached an agree-<lb/>
ment on a three-year contract<lb/>
Saturday after an all-night<lb/>
bargaining session, said Miriam<lb/>
Burdette, a school spokeswoman.<lb/>
In Okawville, the West<lb/>
Washington Unit 10 school<lb/>
district board and the Okawville<lb/>
Education AssociationVreached a<lb/>
tentative contract agreement at 6<lb/>
a.m. today after 14 hours of<lb/>
bargaining.<lb/>
A three-day strike by 33<lb/>
teachers in Lewistown, III near<lb/>
Pegria, ended early Saturday and<lb/>
classes resumed today for 590<lb/>
pupils.<lb/>
Pa also agreed Saturday to a<lb/>
new tentative contract, clearing<lb/>
the way for classes to resume to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Athens settlement and a<lb/>
settlement Friday in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania's Spring Grove District<lb/>
leave the state with teachers<lb/>
strikes in 12 other districts, affec-<lb/>
ting more than 45,000 students.<lb/>
At Fairleigh Dickinson Univer-<lb/>
sity in New Jersey, striking facul-<lb/>
ty voted Sunday to continue their<lb/>
walkout for another day.<lb/>
The nation's other college<lb/>
strike, at Thornton Community<lb/>
College in South Holland, 111<lb/>
has canceled classes for about<lb/>
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1982 to the U.S. Court of Ap-<lb/>
peals for the District of Columbia<lb/>
� the most influential federal ap-<lb/>
peals court in the nation. In his<lb/>
opinions, Scalia has frequently<lb/>
sided with the administration.<lb/>
The report said that during his<lb/>
tenure on the appeals court,<lb/>
Scalia "has almost always voted<lb/>
to restrict individual liberties<lb/>
To support its findings on<lb/>
Rehnquist, the ACLU cited ex-<lb/>
amples of his stated philosophy:<lb/>
The primary responsibility of<lb/>
the court is to uphold the right of<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057845_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. I9t6 Pace g<lb/>
Artist Blends Real And Imagined Cultures<lb/>
B JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
Supposed) built around 3000<lb/>
B C. b a civilization called the<lb/>
Apasht, "The EtanicuilahMonu-<lb/>
ment" depicts a female and a<lb/>
male figure on either side of a<lb/>
large mushroom, their mouths<lb/>
poised at its rim. In the<lb/>
mushrooom's stem lies an an-<lb/>
drogynous figure fetally curled,<lb/>
gi ing birth.<lb/>
The monument � or rather,<lb/>
since it has fallen into ruin, its<lb/>
documentation from fragments<lb/>
is itself but a fragment of<lb/>
Beauvais Lvons' "Excavation of<lb/>
the Apasht an exhibit now on<lb/>
displav in Gray Art Gallery. The<lb/>
title of this monument, which<lb/>
depicts the Apasht's creation<lb/>
myth, serve- as a clue to what<lb/>
1 yons is ing to accomplish in<lb/>
his work.<lb/>
"In the process of documen-<lb/>
The Review<lb/>
ting something you transform<lb/>
it said Lyons in a lecture he<lb/>
gave on the genre of "ar-<lb/>
cheologicaJ fiction the genre in<lb/>
which he places his own work.<lb/>
"Etanicullah" � "hallucinate"<lb/>
backwards � is a supposedly fac-<lb/>
tual monument, but Lyons never<lb/>
lets the viewer forget that the<lb/>
monument is being seen through<lb/>
the eyes of a scholar, and that the<lb/>
picture reconstructed from what<lb/>
fragments remained "circa 1922"<lb/>
may be a distorted perception, a<lb/>
"hallucination" of sorts.<lb/>
"On one level, by using a<lb/>
documentary format to create a<lb/>
fiction, I want to call into ques-<lb/>
tion the authenticity of anything<lb/>
else supposedly 'authentic said<lb/>
Lyons. "Who does Ted Koppel<lb/>
interview on 'Nightline' but sup-<lb/>
posed 'experts'? Who's to say if<lb/>
their information is really cor-<lb/>
rect? I hope one result of my<lb/>
work will be to force the viewer<lb/>
to be more skeptical in "real" archaeology, Lyons is<lb/>
Although he believes that there quick to point out that his Dur-<lb/>
is indeed a fictional element even pose is not to downgrade that<lb/>
J. t. HUMIIIT - The last Carolinian<lb/>
Beauvais Lyons' Excavation of the Apasht' is on display in Gray<lb/>
Oallery.<lb/>
Rock Is Alive Both Here And In U.K.<lb/>
B D.A.SWANSON<lb/>
si.ft � nlfr<lb/>
R.E.M. - ife's Rich Pageant<lb/>
tl.K.S. Inc.)<lb/>
The Smiths � The Queen Is<lb/>
Dead<lb/>
(Sire Records Co.)<lb/>
us is w here we walked<lb/>
I : .us is .i here we swam 1 1, Danced, Sane ike c picture here<lb/>
1 tkt a � u enir, R.E.M "Cuyahoga" fe's Rich Pageant<lb/>
i : a summer nearly devoid of<lb/>
the traditional blockbusting<lb/>
album or two, small pictures and<lb/>
souvenirs are about the only<lb/>
things left from the drought of<lb/>
'86 Bui what gems those few ar-<lb/>
ifacts were.<lb/>
So, just in case vou were too<lb/>
busy doing the things college<lb/>
students do during the long sum-<lb/>
mer months I'd like to use this<lb/>
first edition of "The Review" to<lb/>
look back at two of the best<lb/>
albums from the already lost<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Once again those prolific boys<lb/>
from Athens, Ga. (the ones who<lb/>
call themselves R.E.M) have put<lb/>
together an album of impeccable<lb/>
pacing and clarity with just<lb/>
enough regional vision for depth<lb/>
without becoming presumptuous.<lb/>
Maybe I'm being a bit biased, but<lb/>
these guys just keep on producing<lb/>
great albums. The kind of songs<lb/>
you feel just as comfortable with<lb/>
at a rocking party or late on a<lb/>
Tuesday night as an after-study<lb/>
nightcap.<lb/>
Compared with their earlier<lb/>
albums Life's Rich Pageant<lb/>
marks an important advancement<lb/>
in both musical themes and<lb/>
Michael Stipes' (songwriter)<lb/>
poetic renderings. Of course<lb/>
there is still the traditional<lb/>
R.E.M. sound driving the body<lb/>
of this new collection, but there<lb/>
are some new twists here and<lb/>
there that really turned my head.<lb/>
Especially representative of these<lb/>
new shifts is "Under The<lb/>
Bunker a song heavy in<lb/>
mariachi styling that lends a<lb/>
wonderful 'south-of-the-border'<lb/>
air to the rest of the album's cen-<lb/>
tral theme of people trying to live<lb/>
peacably in a world at conflict.<lb/>
Stipe's melancholic mood with<lb/>
the themes of war is right on base<lb/>
as he weaves in and out of the<lb/>
Mexican twinings from the band.<lb/>
Following in this theme is<lb/>
"The Flowers Of -GuJtemair�<lb/>
The title may ne!teatea'politicel<lb/>
message more foreign to R.E.M.<lb/>
than their more standard social<lb/>
statements and regional pic-<lb/>
torials, but Stipes croons entic-<lb/>
ingly of the beauty of nature and<lb/>
the people in it: "The people here<lb/>
are friendly The flowers often<lb/>
bloom at night The flowers<lb/>
cover everything Has Stipes<lb/>
been studying the literary likes of<lb/>
John Ransom, Robert Penn War-<lb/>
ren and the other Nashville<lb/>
Agrarians of the 1920s and 30s?<lb/>
Or is the south-eastern regionalist<lb/>
background of Stipes simply<lb/>
coming of age? One way or<lb/>
another, the pictures drawn both<lb/>
through music and lyric in "The<lb/>
Flowers and other songs such<lb/>
as "Cuyahoga "Swan, Swan,<lb/>
Hummingbird and "Fall On<lb/>
Me indicate a new sensitivity,<lb/>
though rough edged in places,<lb/>
toward the roots of an agrarian<lb/>
concept of man in harmony with<lb/>
his land.<lb/>
Of course, if all of these<lb/>
The Roving Eye<lb/>
Local Pup Likes The Good Things In Life<lb/>
B ROB BELL<lb/>
s��ff Wntfr<lb/>
Her name is Ripple and she can<lb/>
usually be found almost<lb/>
any where in Greenville. Recently,<lb/>
she took a break from her social<lb/>
By HUGH CARROLL<lb/>
Campus shepard Ripple<lb/>
schedule to answer some personal<lb/>
questions. Luckily for The East<lb/>
Carolinian, owners Rob Frayser<lb/>
and Shane Pinks ton were present<lb/>
for translations.<lb/>
Where did you find Ripple?<lb/>
"I bought her from some man<lb/>
for five dollars. I was walking out<lb/>
to my car to get something and<lb/>
this guy walks up holding her by<lb/>
the neck. He said, 'Wanna buy<lb/>
this dog?' and I thought he was<lb/>
joking, but as it turned out I gave<lb/>
him five dollars for her and she's<lb/>
been here ever since then.<lb/>
Everybody in the whole<lb/>
neighborhood knows who she is<lb/>
and loves her. She's kind of like<lb/>
everybody's dog<lb/>
What are Ripple's main interests?<lb/>
"The beach, the mountains,<lb/>
the river. The good things in life.<lb/>
She is very partial to the Grateful<lb/>
Dead. She barks if we put<lb/>
anything else on besides the<lb/>
Dead. I also think that she likes<lb/>
trips. She likes going on road<lb/>
trips with the girls to the moun-<lb/>
tains<lb/>
How did Ripple get her name?<lb/>
"Well, mainly because of a<lb/>
song by the Dead called<lb/>
"Ripple It is a pretty song, and<lb/>
I heard it the night that I got her.<lb/>
So, I had it on tape and I said<lb/>
Ripple and it kind of clicked<lb/>
 notice her hanging around<lb/>
school a great deal. Why?<lb/>
"I think she is just kind of a<lb/>
drop out. She doesn't really like<lb/>
school that much. She likes to<lb/>
just hang around and meet peo-<lb/>
ple and learn a lot about things.<lb/>
She was going a little overboard<lb/>
on the partying scene when she<lb/>
first got here<lb/>
Are you saying that there are<lb/>
times when Ripple consumes<lb/>
alcoholic beverages?<lb/>
"Well, first she was kind of<lb/>
hesitant on the alcohol scene. She<lb/>
was just trying to keep cool and<lb/>
keep a low profile, but just<lb/>
recently she's been exploring, fin-<lb/>
ding out new things. She has had<lb/>
a few bouts with catnip<lb/>
Do you think that there is a<lb/>
chance of Ripple developing an<lb/>
alcohol habit?<lb/>
See A DOG'S, page 10<lb/>
Anthology Series In Trouble<lb/>
B MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Anthology. The word conjures<lb/>
up visions of English textbooks<lb/>
thick as the New York phone<lb/>
directory and just as interesting<lb/>
to read. It's safe to say most<lb/>
students would rather watch TV<lb/>
than curl up with anything with<lb/>
"Norton" on it.<lb/>
TV offered little sanctuary in<lb/>
its Golden Age, for those were<lb/>
the days of anthology programs:<lb/>
"Hallmark Hall of Fame<lb/>
"Suspense and "Kraft Televi-<lb/>
sion Theater" to name a few. But<lb/>
"anthology" should connote<lb/>
"variety" as in spice of life and<lb/>
not "dry" as in dust.<lb/>
In an anthology TV series there<lb/>
are no continuing characters or<lb/>
plots. Story is the thing, not how<lb/>
many cars the Duke boys can pile<lb/>
up per episode.<lb/>
Eventually, the Golden Age of<lb/>
the anthology series came to an<lb/>
end as audiences decided they<lb/>
were more interested in continu-<lb/>
ing characters even without con-<lb/>
tinuity between stories. Situation<lb/>
comedies, westerns, and detective<lb/>
shows began to dominate the lit-<lb/>
tle screen.<lb/>
Anthologies made an occa-<lb/>
sional resurrection attempt. The<lb/>
early seventies saw the anthology<lb/>
king, Rod Serling, open his<lb/>
"Night Gallery It closed down<lb/>
pretty quickly. And in the early<lb/>
eighties you may have seen a<lb/>
show called "Dark Room" if you<lb/>
didn't blink.<lb/>
Never before has there been<lb/>
such a concentrated attempt to<lb/>
return the anthology series to<lb/>
glory than in the fall of 1985.<lb/>
"Alfred Hitchcock Presents"<lb/>
and "The Twilight Zone" return-<lb/>
ed and Spielberg's "Amazing<lb/>
Stories" debuted in the wake of a<lb/>
media blitz promising "It's Com-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
"It's Going seems to be the<lb/>
latest word for not only "Amaz-<lb/>
ing Stories" but the others as<lb/>
well. "Alfred Hitchcock" was<lb/>
cancelled, "Twilight Zone"<lb/>
escaped by the skin of its teeth,<lb/>
and "Amazing Stories" had bad<lb/>
reviews but the saving grace of a<lb/>
two-year contract.<lb/>
Why the failures?<lb/>
"Hitchcock" producers made the<lb/>
mistake of simply remaking the<lb/>
original stories while said stories<lb/>
are still visible in syndication,<lb/>
specifically on cable's widely ac-<lb/>
See UPCOMING, page 9<lb/>
thematic undertones don't mean<lb/>
a crock to you this is still an<lb/>
album worth listening to simply<lb/>
for R.E.Ms now happy, now<lb/>
melancholic musical shifts. That<lb/>
same old sound we've all come to<lb/>
appreciate is still there, though<lb/>
some may say that overproduc-<lb/>
tion in the studio has taken away<lb/>
from the band's original slightly<lb/>
edged quality. Well, that argu-<lb/>
ment may hold some truth, but as<lb/>
far as I'm concerned higher<lb/>
quality production has opened up<lb/>
an awful lot of musical vaults for<lb/>
Stipes and Co. Besides, it's kind<lb/>
of nice to actually understand the<lb/>
words for a change.<lb/>
Possibly the only thing I really<lb/>
miss from R.E.M. is in the con-<lb/>
tinued reduction in importance of<lb/>
Mike Peters' usually well placed<lb/>
bass lines. What was once an<lb/>
even dose of Peter Buck's guitar<lb/>
and Peter's bass has shifted over<lb/>
the past few albums to one of<lb/>
twangy guitar domination. But<lb/>
that's what happens when an<lb/>
Englishmen (Don Gehman) pro-<lb/>
duces for an American band.<lb/>
Watching this local band grow-<lb/>
over the past few years to one of<lb/>
the most influential bands in pro-<lb/>
gressive music has really been ex-<lb/>
citing. And this latest effort<lb/>
marks an increasing maturity in<lb/>
both their song-by-song pacing<lb/>
and lyrical vision. I'll wager that<lb/>
in twenty years music critics will<lb/>
rank Life's Great Passion second<lb/>
only to their first full length<lb/>
album, Murmer. If you're an ig-<lb/>
norant Yankee who still hasn't<lb/>
discovered the clear and<lb/>
sometimes raw music of R.E.M.<lb/>
this is the perfect album to start<lb/>
with. Then go back and pick up<lb/>
their first E.P Chronic Town.<lb/>
These Southern boys are good for<lb/>
your soul.<lb/>
Next in line, following up one<lb/>
of the most critically acclaimed<lb/>
albums of last year, The Smiths<lb/>
returned this summer with their<lb/>
skillfully crafted progressive rock<lb/>
anthems under the title The<lb/>
Queen Is Dead. Despite all of the<lb/>
hype that this band has produced<lb/>
in the world of progressive music<lb/>
I still don't know just how to<lb/>
react to them. The music is driv-<lb/>
ing and the popping bass line can<lb/>
be very effective, but I keep on<lb/>
feeling like I've heard all of this<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Sec SUMMER, page 9<lb/>
profession. Rather, "I'm<lb/>
creating a work in tribute to ar-<lb/>
chaeology he said. "I'm<lb/>
underscoring what is beautiful in<lb/>
that world. The social sciences<lb/>
are really speculative endeavors.<lb/>
"Even the physical sciences<lb/>
he continued, "may be more<lb/>
speculative than they appear. A<lb/>
culture has a paradigm that in<lb/>
some sense is overturned, and<lb/>
then what has reigned as scien-<lb/>
tific truth is no longer valid<lb/>
According to Lyons, the situa-<lb/>
tion with art is a bit different. Art<lb/>
has not changed in major ways,<lb/>
although "Art in previous<lb/>
cultures served roles that art in<lb/>
current cultures doesn't � it was<lb/>
more magical. At the same time,<lb/>
what used to be seen as craft, and<lb/>
is seen by archaeology as artifact.<lb/>
we perceive as art<lb/>
Lyons stresses that casual<lb/>
viewers shouldn't be intimidated<lb/>
by the ideas in his work. He in-<lb/>
tends his mock excavation to be<lb/>
"almost like a novel in a<lb/>
historical setting, or a movie �<lb/>
something everyone can relate to.<lb/>
Hopefully it will speak directly to<lb/>
them<lb/>
In response to objections that<lb/>
his work is too painstakingly<lb/>
meticulous, that it lurches toward<lb/>
simple statement by a circuitous<lb/>
route, Lyons says: "I'm simply<lb/>
trying to create fiction that allows<lb/>
a viewer to suspend his disbelief.<lb/>
One way to do this is to use more<lb/>
believable artifacts  Sometimes<lb/>
people are attracted to things just<lb/>
because they are old<lb/>
Ironically, many of the ar-<lb/>
tifacts o( "Excavation of the<lb/>
Apasht" don't look old at all. No<lb/>
one could believe that the wall<lb/>
mounted fragments of "The<lb/>
Etanicullah Monument" were the<lb/>
genuine article; thev would be<lb/>
much too heav, tot one thing.<lb/>
But the vacuum-molded plastk<lb/>
artifacts are obvious!) intended<lb/>
to be perceived as reproductions<lb/>
The originals arc stored in .1<lb/>
museum overseas<lb/>
"I'm interested 111 creating .1<lb/>
scenario in which a 'real' cull<lb/>
has translated the Apashi crea-<lb/>
tion myth said I � ons m<lb/>
reference to a "Vedic" poem<lb/>
eluded in the show. l he state<lb/>
ment is equally relevant to<lb/>
Etanicullah fragment and indeed<lb/>
to the whole exhibit Hie mix 1<lb/>
of real and imaginary cultun<lb/>
one of the most conspk ,<lb/>
acomplishmen's ol 'Exca' ition<lb/>
of the Apasht<lb/>
Lyons said he has a strong,<lb/>
ongoing commitment to keep<lb/>
working in the area ol "artifac-<lb/>
tual fiction<lb/>
"I'm inventing anothei<lb/>
culture, which will probabh take<lb/>
five years he said "I'm g<lb/>
to invent a temple, and c<lb/>
trate on portraying the culture's<lb/>
daily life � food, clothii<lb/>
garlic, beer, herbal medecines<lb/>
toward the idea that an and life<lb/>
are inseparable<lb/>
"One day said Lyons in his<lb/>
lecture in Jenkins Auditorium, "1<lb/>
in'end, in 'he Bmc �<lb/>
tion, to walk into a libra �<lb/>
insert the portfolio (ol n<lb/>
concerning the Apasht Excava-<lb/>
tion) in the appropriate<lb/>
with an appropriate Library ol<lb/>
Congress number, and on ap<lb/>
propnatelv sized index card<lb/>
sert cross references - rhu gs k<lb/>
Hindoo Kush, Persian<lb/>
Afghanistan. Twins, H t<lb/>
maphrodite<lb/>
Lyons is well on his u<lb/>
joining the two, art mA ' 11<lb/>
Dining Out<lb/>
Chico's Satisfies<lb/>
By BECKY TOY<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Chico's Mexican Resturant.<lb/>
located on Cotanche street in<lb/>
Downtown Greenville, offers<lb/>
some excellent culinary surprises<lb/>
as well as an updated at-<lb/>
mosphere. Over the summer,<lb/>
owner Juan Martinez designed<lb/>
and decorated a whole new addi-<lb/>
tion to his dining room, and redid<lb/>
the original bar and dining room<lb/>
to match.<lb/>
All the decor is authentic Mex-<lb/>
ican arts and crafts, with the<lb/>
notable exception of the tropical<lb/>
mural in the bar, done by former<lb/>
ECU art student Dwight<lb/>
Touchberry. The new addition,<lb/>
decked out in brilliant blues,<lb/>
greens and pinks, offers a bright<lb/>
and airy atmosphere to an addi-<lb/>
tional 80 people, dining on<lb/>
Chico's superb Mexican cuisine.<lb/>
The food, ah the food! Chico's<lb/>
has some of the most beautiful<lb/>
kitchen facilities I've seen in a<lb/>
long time � is it any wonder their<lb/>
food is so good, when they make<lb/>
all their tacos, tortillas and shells<lb/>
fresh every day. Everyhing they<lb/>
serve is prepared daily on the<lb/>
premises � very little is boxed,<lb/>
canned or frozen. Chico's also<lb/>
has a walk-in cooler devoted to<lb/>
beer, to guarantee top flavor and<lb/>
satisfaction.<lb/>
Starting with the appetizers,<lb/>
which run the gamut from the<lb/>
standard Nachos and Queso Fun-<lb/>
dido (cheese dip to you novices)<lb/>
to the more exotic Mexican Pizza<lb/>
and Potatoe Skins, the prices<lb/>
average $2.95 to $4.25, and the<lb/>
servings are ample, nicely<lb/>
displayed. The potato skins arc<lb/>
not the standard bacon ind<lb/>
cheese variety; rather, a south ol<lb/>
the border concoction, replete<lb/>
with lettuce, tomato, sour cream<lb/>
and guacamole.<lb/>
Chico's also otters severa<lb/>
soups, including the standan<lb/>
Gazpacho ($2.95), And som<lb/>
wonderful salads, including tl<lb/>
ever-popular Taco Salad ($4 25<lb/>
and a chicken varietv. Ensa<lb/>
Con Polio ($4.25)<lb/>
Under entrees, the Usl .<lb/>
endless. (It was virtually imposs<lb/>
ble to pick just one to ordei<lb/>
Anything from combinatio<lb/>
plates of tacos, enchiladas, and<lb/>
chile rellenos ($3.95 to S 50),<lb/>
fajitas San Antonio foi two-tc<lb/>
four people ($11.95 0 $21)<lb/>
chimichangas, chicken llautas<lb/>
burritos, and omelettes,<lb/>
prices ranging from $3.95<lb/>
S6.95. Chico's also otters rvera<lb/>
seafood entrees, like the camaroi<lb/>
ranchero, a shrimp dish, as wel<lb/>
as fish and seafood combina<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
For dessert, there are flan<lb/>
(SI.25), a delicate custard<lb/>
sopapillas and empanadas (il.2v<lb/>
to SI.95), fried dough, wit<lb/>
honey and cinnamon, or tropica<lb/>
fruit; or peaches amarett<lb/>
($1.25), peaches, amaretto an<lb/>
whipped cream in a tried shell.<lb/>
Chico's offers a ide vat iet ol<lb/>
traditional and innovative Mev<lb/>
ican cuisine, served in a contem<lb/>
porary, but authenjjjK Mexican a'<lb/>
mosphere. The prices are n<lb/>
bad, the food is wonderful, an<lb/>
with a full bar, the right cotnpan.<lb/>
� it's a sure win as a great place<lb/>
to kick back, throw down an<lb/>
mellow out.<lb/>
aSST�-SSiSSS5:<lb/>
Upco<lb/>
Continued From Page 8.<lb/>
cessible USA channel. Also, th4<lb/>
"twist" endings tended to<lb/>
highly predictable even il<lb/>
voi<lb/>
hadn't seen the ong-nals.<lb/>
"Amazing Stories" on thJ<lb/>
other hand, did not take the twisl<lb/>
ending approach but rather th(<lb/>
I "punch line" approach. Man<lb/>
episodes were actually "jokes'l<lb/>
; of the "Jake the talking snakj<lb/>
and the lever that will end thi<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Both Sidl<lb/>
Continued From Page 8-<lb/>
But, English bands are like th<lb/>
and, besides, just abo<lb/>
everything has been done alreaa<lb/>
in rock music. All thafs left ar<lb/>
variations on the thirty years o.<lb/>
roots. And that sounds like exact<lb/>
ly what these fellows have beet<lb/>
doing. There is a distinctive<lb/>
Beatles influence on certain songs1<lb/>
like "Frankly, Mr. Shankly" an<lb/>
"Never Had No One Ever<lb/>
In other places the heav if <lb/>
fluence comes from the earl) 70<lb/>
or other English bands of rece-j<lb/>
history such as Soft Cell and Tn<lb/>
Fabulous Poodles. The heaviest<lb/>
influence though, comes from th<lb/>
South-Eastern U.S. and<lb/>
sound developed by bands 1<lb/>
the Dixie Dregs, .Arrogance, Th<lb/>
db's, R.E.M. and most rece- I<lb/>
The Connells.<lb/>
I don't know, I guess that's tbj<lb/>
V.<lb/>
All-Amerit<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
S<lb/>
HotV(<lb/>
Br<lb/>
De<lb/>
AllForOnl'<lb/>
Dozens or del<lb/>
Fill your platd<lb/>
back for morel<lb/>
like. The All-<lb/>
Bar4'�loaded I<lb/>
favorite food'<lb/>
Qualitv meat:<lb/>
selections. ho<lb/>
breads tempt<lb/>
All-Ajnericanl<lb/>
there s even<lb/>
Western Steerj<lb/>
Because<lb/>
All-America:<lb/>
<lb/>
1986 Western Stl<lb/>
3005 Eaj<lb/>
Greet<lb/>
itMHHMM �"<lb/>
,y. .<lb/>
s3, j. aa. a t,�<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0009"/><lb/>
HI I ASIAROI ISIAS<lb/>
Si P7I MB1 k i I98C<lb/>
ultures<lb/>
Ks<lb/>
s Satisfies<lb/>
pi<lb/>
,<lb/>
HlfNMutPMY Th�Eiri<lb/>
Ireen'ille has reienth remo.i, I<lb/>
coming Season To Decide Fate Of<lb/>
i onlinued From Page g<lb/>
.essihle USA channel. Also, the<lb/>
"twist" endings tended to be<lb/>
highly predictable even if you<lb/>
hadn't seen the originals.<lb/>
Amazing Stones" on the<lb/>
other hand, did not take the twist<lb/>
tending approach but rather the<lb/>
'punch line" approach. Many<lb/>
episodes were actually "jokes"<lb/>
of the "Jake the talking snake<lb/>
and the lever that will end the<lb/>
towards Jake, then to the lever,<lb/>
etc etc. Will it kill the world's<lb/>
only talking sname or throw the<lb/>
lever that will end the world?<lb/>
Smush! Jake is imprinted with<lb/>
sundry tire treads.<lb/>
The moral (get ready to<lb/>
groan)? Better snake than lever.<lb/>
"Amazing Stories" more times<lb/>
than naught has given us an ex-<lb/>
tended set-up which the punch<lb/>
line does not live up to. The best<lb/>
world" variety.<lb/>
You know � the type of joke<lb/>
where the punch line comes after<lb/>
a long, nerve-racking story. And,<lb/>
when you finally hear the punch<lb/>
line, you want to punch the guy<lb/>
telling the joke. I'll spare you the<lb/>
build up for "Jake the talking<lb/>
snake and the lever that will end<lb/>
the world but the joke reaches<lb/>
its climax as an eighteen wheeler<lb/>
barrels out of control, first<lb/>
Summer Releases Strong On<lb/>
J Both Sides Of The Atlantic<lb/>
l ontinued From Page 8.<lb/>
But, English bands are like that<lb/>
and, besides, just about<lb/>
merything has been done already<lb/>
:n rock music. All that's left are<lb/>
anations on the thirty years old<lb/>
roots. And that sounds likeexact-<lb/>
1 what these fellows have been<lb/>
joing. There is a distinctive<lb/>
Beatles influence on certain songs<lb/>
like "Frankly, Mr. Shankly" and<lb/>
Never Had No One Ever<lb/>
In other places the heaviest in-<lb/>
rluence comes from the early 70s<lb/>
or other English bands of recent<lb/>
mstory such as Soft Cell and The<lb/>
Fabulous Poodles. The heaviest<lb/>
influent though, comes from the<lb/>
outh-Eastern U.S. and the<lb/>
sound developed by bands like<lb/>
the Dixie Dregs, Arrogance, The<lb/>
Jb's. R.E.M. and most recently<lb/>
The Connells.<lb/>
1 don't know, I guess that's the<lb/>
musical trend these days and to<lb/>
be honest, these guys are really<lb/>
very good at the style. The mood<lb/>
is consistantly upbeat except in<lb/>
"I Know It's Over" where<lb/>
singersongwriter Morrissey<lb/>
croons the rather juvenile line,<lb/>
"Mother, I can feel the soil fall-<lb/>
ing over my head<lb/>
In fact, the tendency of the<lb/>
lyric toward a sometimes obnox-<lb/>
ious adolescence is the only real<lb/>
drawback to this musically sound<lb/>
album. If you can listen past self-<lb/>
indulgent lines like "So I meet<lb/>
you at the ccmetary gates Keats<lb/>
and Yeats are on your side<lb/>
Behind the hatred there lies A<lb/>
murderous desire for love" (The<lb/>
Boy With), the crisp guitars<lb/>
and comfortably driving drums<lb/>
are really very good.<lb/>
Compared to their first major<lb/>
album, this new effort reveals<lb/>
 For An All-American Famih' MeaT"<lb/>
New<lb/>
All-American Food Bafm<lb/>
Meats<lb/>
Salads<lb/>
Hot Vegetables<lb/>
Breads<lb/>
Desserts<lb/>
All For Only<lb/>
$3.89<lb/>
Dozens of delicious choices.<lb/>
Fill your platter and come<lb/>
back for more as often as you<lb/>
likeThe All-American Food<lb/>
Barim�loaded with everyone's<lb/>
favorite foods.<lb/>
Quality meats, all-natural salad<lb/>
selections, hot vegetables, hot<lb/>
breads, tempting desserts. The<lb/>
All-American Food Barsm�now<lb/>
there's even more to enjoy at<lb/>
Western Steer.�<lb/>
Because You Want An<lb/>
All-American Family Meal<lb/>
sm<lb/>
lATvswrn Steer<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
� 1986 Western Steer-Mom 'n' Pop's, Inc<lb/>
3005 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
significant sophistication in pro-<lb/>
duction and comes off much<lb/>
cleaner and slicker than the<lb/>
coarser � and better � Meat Is<lb/>
Murder. This is not a bad album<lb/>
for a band still experimenting and<lb/>
looking for its niche in the world<lb/>
of bigtime recording. Maybe the<lb/>
swelling of their heads will soon<lb/>
go down from the success of that<lb/>
first release and they'll get down<lb/>
to work on some really good,<lb/>
lasting music.<lb/>
That's it for this week. Look<lb/>
for "The Review" again next<lb/>
Tuesday with the very latest in<lb/>
both popular and progressive<lb/>
music. And, don't forget to listen<lb/>
to WZMB on Monday nights for<lb/>
"Adventures In Modern Recor-<lb/>
ding" with selected cuts and com-<lb/>
ments from the record presses of<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
HI West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
' 'Shoe Repair At The V en Ben<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
(worst?) example was an hour<lb/>
long episode, directed by<lb/>
Speilberg, in which a World War<lb/>
II fighting plane loses its wheels,<lb/>
and a crew member, who hap-<lb/>
pens to want to animate for the<lb/>
Disney Studio, is trapped in the<lb/>
bottom of the plane.<lb/>
The plane must land but<lb/>
without wheels which means the<lb/>
artist-crew member must die. His<lb/>
buddies agonize for an hour and<lb/>
then have to land anyway. Not to<lb/>
worry � the trapped crew<lb/>
member draws up some nifty<lb/>
animated wheels which pop up on<lb/>
the plane's underside. Had vou<lb/>
going there, huh?<lb/>
This brings us to the new<lb/>
"Twilight Zone Now, what<lb/>
most folks remember and expect<lb/>
of the "Twilight Zone" is those<lb/>
crazy twisted endings. Well, both<lb/>
old and new versions have their<lb/>
share but that is only one aspect<lb/>
of the show. "The Twilight<lb/>
Zone" has always explored the<lb/>
human condition. The fantasy<lb/>
elements are merely catalysts for<lb/>
the human drama.<lb/>
Look at some of the more<lb/>
notable TZ episodes of the pa-t<lb/>
season: "Paladin of the Lost<lb/>
Hour" � A pocketwatch which<lb/>
holds the unnerse's last hour is<lb/>
the instrument in helping a Viet<lb/>
Nam et come to terms with his<lb/>
guilt over an unknown soldier<lb/>
who died for him. "One Life<lb/>
Furnished in Early Poverty" �<lb/>
an unhappy man goes back to his<lb/>
own childhood to learn where<lb/>
everything went wrong and<lb/>
discovers that every man is<lb/>
responsible for his own choices.<lb/>
"Little Boy Lost" � a woman<lb/>
choosing between immediate<lb/>
marriage and her career meets the<lb/>
child she could have had.<lb/>
The "Twilight Zone" has had<lb/>
its share of failures just as<lb/>
'Alfred Hitchcock" and<lb/>
"Amazing Stones" have scored<lb/>
an occasional success. But the la:<lb/>
ter two programs are flawed<lb/>
an attitude which is general<lb/>
throughout the -ee The<lb/>
failures of "The Twiligl � Zone"<lb/>
are due to specific short-comings<lb/>
in story, actor directors,<lb/>
but the general attitude, the goal<lb/>
which l- reached for. is laudal<lb/>
The "Twilight Zone" will be<lb/>
back with new episodes this I<lb/>
and Spielberg is promising bet!<lb/>
things for "Amazing Stories<lb/>
At one time, there was talk<lb/>
revival o "The Outer Limit<lb/>
although the producer- are tali<lb/>
the Hitchcock ap<lb/>
remaking the old episodes I<lb/>
fate of anthology �<lb/>
to come may be determined tl<lb/>
television season. So.<lb/>
tuned<lb/>
V<lb/>
Caterers<lb/>
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(TAILGATE PARTY GATHERING!<lb/>
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And Much More (Two Day Notice)<lb/>
Call For More Information 757-1227<lb/>
OVEBTONS<lb/>
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Tail-Gate With<lb/>
Overton 's &amp;<lb/>
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Choose from over 60 rotating salad items JnclJdingThe freshest 1 99<lb/>
fruits meats, &amp; vegetables; cheeses, tasty dressings (regular &amp; W I<lb/>
lo-cal), plus pasta salads, &amp; more!<lb/>
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Your Choice of Entree, Soup, or Side Dish<lb/>
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Call our salad bar to reserve a fruit, meat, or vegetable tray'<lb/>
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NATURAL LIGHT BEER<lb/>
6 pack � 12 oz cans<lb/>
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CASE PRICE<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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Just 2 blocks from ECU<lb/>
Overton's Shopping Center<lb/>
Home of Overton's Supermarket, Kerr Drugs,<lb/>
and Overton's University Econo-Wash<lb/>
Supem<lb/>
Inc<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SA TURDA Y. SEPTEMBER 13<lb/>
�i<lb/>
I I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0010"/><lb/>
Cultures<lb/>
s Satisfies<lb/>
<lb/>
 a<lb/>
ILLINMU��my . rxt fit) Cj<lb/>
reenville ha recenfh rem<lb/>
X<lb/>
THEEASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. 1986<lb/>
Upcoming Season To Decide Fate Of<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 8.<lb/>
cessible USA channel. Also, the<lb/>
"twist" endings tended to be<lb/>
highly predictable even if you<lb/>
hadn't seen the originals.<lb/>
Amazing Stories" on the<lb/>
other hand, did not take the twist<lb/>
ending approach but rather the<lb/>
"punch line" approach. Many<lb/>
episodes were actually "jokes"<lb/>
of the "Jake the talking snake<lb/>
and the lever that will end the<lb/>
towards Jake, then to the lever,<lb/>
etc etc. Will it kill the world's<lb/>
only talking sname or throw the<lb/>
lever that will end the world?<lb/>
Smush! Jake is imprinted with<lb/>
sundry tire treads.<lb/>
The moral (get ready to<lb/>
groan)? Better snake than lever.<lb/>
"Amazing Stories" more times<lb/>
than naught has given us an ex-<lb/>
tended set-up which the punch<lb/>
line does not live up to. The best<lb/>
world" variety.<lb/>
You know � the type of joke<lb/>
where the punch line comes after<lb/>
a long, nerve-racking story. And,<lb/>
when you finally hear the punch<lb/>
line, you want to punch the guy<lb/>
telling the joke. I'll spare you the<lb/>
build up for "Jake the talking<lb/>
snake and the lever that will end<lb/>
the world but the joke reaches<lb/>
its climax as an eighteen wheeler<lb/>
barrels out of control, first<lb/>
Summer Releases Strong On<lb/>
Both Sides Of The Atlantic<lb/>
(ontinued From Page 8-<lb/>
But, English bands are like that<lb/>
and. besides, just about<lb/>
everything has been done already<lb/>
in rock music. All that's left are<lb/>
variations on the thirty years old<lb/>
roots. And that sounds likeexact-<lb/>
l what these fellows have been<lb/>
doing. There is a distinctive<lb/>
Beatles influence on certain songs<lb/>
like "Frankly, Mr. Shankly" and<lb/>
"Never Had No One Ever<lb/>
In other places the heaviest in-<lb/>
fluence comes from the early 70s<lb/>
or other English bands of recent<lb/>
history such as Soft Cell and The<lb/>
Fabulous Poodles. The heaviest<lb/>
influence though, comes from the<lb/>
South-Eastern U.S. and the<lb/>
sound developed by bands like<lb/>
the Dixie Dregs, Arrogance, The<lb/>
db's. R.E.M. and most recently<lb/>
The Connells.<lb/>
I don't know. I guess that's the<lb/>
musical trend these days and to<lb/>
be honest, these guys are really<lb/>
very- good at the style. The mood<lb/>
is consistantly upbeat except in<lb/>
"I Know It's Over" where<lb/>
singersongwriter Morrissey<lb/>
croons the rather juvenile line,<lb/>
"Mother, I can feel the soil fall-<lb/>
ing over my head<lb/>
In fact, the tendency of the<lb/>
lyric toward a sometimes obnox-<lb/>
ious adolescence is the only real<lb/>
drawback to this musically sound<lb/>
album. If you can listen past self-<lb/>
indulgent lines like "So I meet<lb/>
you at the cemetary gates Keats<lb/>
and Yeats are on your side<lb/>
Behind the hatred there lies A<lb/>
murderous desire for love" (The<lb/>
Boy With), the crisp guitars<lb/>
and comfortably driving drums<lb/>
are really very good.<lb/>
Compared to their first major<lb/>
album, this new effort reveals<lb/>
 For An All American Family MeaFJ<lb/>
New<lb/>
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Because You Want An<lb/>
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3005 East 10th Street<lb/>
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significant sophistication in pro-<lb/>
duction and comes off much<lb/>
cleaner and slicker than the<lb/>
coarser � and better � Meat Is<lb/>
Murder. This is not a bad album<lb/>
for a band still experimenting and<lb/>
looking for its niche in the world<lb/>
of bigtime recording. Maybe the<lb/>
swelling of their heads will soon<lb/>
go down from the success of that<lb/>
first release and they'll get down<lb/>
to work on some really good,<lb/>
lasting music.<lb/>
That's it for this week. Look<lb/>
for "The Review" again next<lb/>
Tuesday with the very latest in<lb/>
both popular and progressive<lb/>
music. And, don't forget to listen<lb/>
to WZMB on Monday nights for<lb/>
"Adventures In Modern Recor-<lb/>
ding" with selected cuts and com-<lb/>
ments from the record presses of<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
111 West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
"Shoe Repair At The er Best"<lb/>
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(worst?) example was an hour<lb/>
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Speilberg, in which a World War<lb/>
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and a crew member, who hap-<lb/>
pens to want to animate for the<lb/>
Disney Studio, is trapped in the<lb/>
bottom of the plane.<lb/>
The plane must land but<lb/>
without wheels which means the<lb/>
artist-crew member must die. His<lb/>
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going there, huh?<lb/>
This brings us to the new<lb/>
"Twilight Zone Now, what<lb/>
most folks remember and expect<lb/>
of the "Twilight Zone" is those<lb/>
crazy twisted endings. Well, both<lb/>
old and new versions have their<lb/>
share but that is only one aspect<lb/>
of the show. "The Twilight<lb/>
Zone" has always explored the<lb/>
human condition. The fantasy<lb/>
elements are merely catalysts for<lb/>
the human drama.<lb/>
Look at some of the more<lb/>
notable TZ episodes of the past<lb/>
season: "Paladin of the Lost<lb/>
Hour" � A pocketwatch which<lb/>
holds the universe's last hour is<lb/>
the instrument in helping a Viet<lb/>
Nam vet come to terms with his<lb/>
guilt over an unknown soldier<lb/>
who died for him. "One Life<lb/>
Furnished in Early Poverty" �<lb/>
an unhappy man goes back to his<lb/>
own childhood to learn where<lb/>
everything went wrong and<lb/>
discovers that every man is<lb/>
responsible for his own choices.<lb/>
"Little Boy Lost" � a woman<lb/>
choosing between immediate<lb/>
marriage and her career meets the<lb/>
child she could have had.<lb/>
The "Twilight Zone" has had<lb/>
its share of failures just as<lb/>
"Alfred Hitchcock" and<lb/>
"Amazing Stories" have scored<lb/>
an occasional success. But the lat-<lb/>
ter two programs are flawed K<lb/>
an attitude which is genera!<lb/>
throughout the series. The<lb/>
failures of "The Twilight Zone"<lb/>
are due to specific short-comings<lb/>
in story, actors, directors, etc.<lb/>
but the general attitude, the goal<lb/>
which is reached for, is laudable.<lb/>
The "Twilight Zone" will be<lb/>
back with new episodes this fall<lb/>
and Spielberg is promising better<lb/>
things for "Amaing Stones<lb/>
At one time, there was talk of a<lb/>
revival of "The Ouier Limits"<lb/>
although the producers are taking<lb/>
the Hitchcock approach of<lb/>
remaking the old episodes. The<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 9. 1986<lb/>
A Dog's Life Is Just Fine For Ripple<lb/>
Continued From Pace 8. �ithini,chc�.�r.i �  M Mr<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
"She knows her pace and she<lb/>
knows what she can handle. I<lb/>
think she's just going to take it<lb/>
easy and just handle what she<lb/>
herself can take, and mainly en-<lb/>
joy the good atmosphere and the<lb/>
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Well, do you see any big plans for<lb/>
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Does Ripple have any current<lb/>
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"A few platonic<lb/>
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So, she really has not settled<lb/>
down to one dog yet?<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
"I think she's just sort of play-<lb/>
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in the neighborhood called Big<lb/>
Head. He is kind of the<lb/>
stereotypical masculine dog. She<lb/>
also went out with a punk dog<lb/>
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Are you concerned about Ripple<lb/>
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"Oh, Ripple is not that way<lb/>
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and she does know how to handle<lb/>
herself well<lb/>
One time last summer I noticed<lb/>
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"That was just an accident.<lb/>
She was lying under a car and a<lb/>
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ing to work. It sprained both of<lb/>
her feet, so we took her to the vet<lb/>
and she had to wear these little<lb/>
light boxing gloves. She couldn't<lb/>
walk at first, and she would just<lb/>
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Do you know anything about her<lb/>
parents, or was she just a mutt?<lb/>
"They were killed in a plane<lb/>
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by Berke Breathed<lb/>
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How old is Ripple?<lb/>
"Ripple is now about nine<lb/>
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What kind of dog is Ripple?<lb/>
"Belgian Shepherd<lb/>
Is there anything else that you<lb/>
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East Carolina University<lb/>
THIS WEDNESDAY AND EVERY<lb/>
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September 14, Registration $1.00 and Reception<lb/>
7:00 Mendenhall Multi-purpose Room<lb/>
September 15, Rush Party, Alpha Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
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September 16, Rush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
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September 17, Rush Party, Zcta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
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September 18, Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
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THt<lb/>
i �<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
,�ir<lb/>
junior Ron Jones, who started<lb/>
$tate, takes the handoff here frol<lb/>
� r<lb/>
Men's Croi<lb/>
jDoes Well<lb/>
By RICK MeCORMAC<lb/>
( o-ipon� hdtior<lb/>
X<lb/>
Z The ECU men's cross con: !<lb/>
jeam competed in their first rr.ee"<lb/>
f the season over the weekend,<lb/>
finishing sixth out of 11 tearr<lb/>
: The meet, The Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege Invitational in Buies Cree,<lb/>
Sas won by St. Augustmes with i<lb/>
rtal of 56 points. PembroK<lb/>
tate finished second with 6i<lb/>
points, while Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth was third with "51<lb/>
points. ECU ended up with <lb/>
roints in the event.<lb/>
The top finisher for the Pirate I<lb/>
$as Milton Matheny, who placed!<lb/>
7th overall, negotiating thel<lb/>
lour-mile course in a time of 211<lb/>
minutes and 41 seconds.<lb/>
 Matt Schweitzer was ne' Fo<lb/>
he Pirates, in 25th place with<lb/>
ime of 22.20. Mike McGehee'<lb/>
lime of 22.31 was good for 28th<lb/>
while teammate Rob Rice cap-<lb/>
tured 31st place with a time : I<lb/>
12.41.<lb/>
Rounding out the scoring f<lb/>
the Pirate runners was Russe j<lb/>
JVilliams, who finished 51st withl<lb/>
ft time of 24.20. Vincent Williams!<lb/>
finished right behind Rice with al<lb/>
ime of 24.30, however, in cros <lb/>
prody's<lb/>
Season<lb/>
<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
HI s�on. Mnitn<lb/>
The ECU soccer team go: oil<lb/>
to a good start this weekend, u in<lb/>
ning their first two games of the<lb/>
Reason.<lb/>
The Pirates traveled to St. Ar<lb/>
Ticket !<lb/>
Policy<lb/>
Outlined<lb/>
Student tickets for the West<lb/>
Virginia football game can be<lb/>
picked up on Tues Wed or<lb/>
Thurs of this week from 8:30<lb/>
am to 4:30 pm at the Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Ticket Office.<lb/>
Tickets will also be available on<lb/>
Tues Wed and Thurs from<lb/>
11am to 6pm at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
In order to pick up tickets,<lb/>
students most present a valid<lb/>
ECU ID and Student Activity<lb/>
Card. That will enable the stu-<lb/>
dent to obtain one free ticket,<lb/>
one half-price ticket and as<lb/>
many regular price tickets as<lb/>
desired. Students may also pre-<lb/>
sent another student's ID and<lb/>
get the ame number of tickets<lb/>
with that one.<lb/>
1 f<lb/>
-40 � ��. a� � a. a.<lb/>
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Id<lb/>
V<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 9. 1986 Page 11<lb/>
Wolf pack Defeats<lb/>
Pirates In Opener<lb/>
JON JORDAN - 1CU PHOTO LA�<lb/>
Junior Ron Jones, who started at quarterback last year against N.C.<lb/>
State, takes the handoff here from his newly acquired receiver spot.<lb/>
Men's Cross Country<lb/>
Does Well In Opener<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Co-Sporti Editor<lb/>
The ECU men's cross country<lb/>
team competed in their first meet<lb/>
bf the season over the weekend,<lb/>
inishing sixth out of 11 teams.<lb/>
The meet, The Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege Invitational in Buies Creek,<lb/>
mms won by St. Augustines with a<lb/>
�ta of 56 points. Pembroke<lb/>
State finished second with 68<lb/>
points, while Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth was third with 75<lb/>
points. ECU ended up with 152<lb/>
Joints in the event.<lb/>
 The top finisher for the Pirates<lb/>
as Milton Matheny, who placed<lb/>
17th overall, negotiating the<lb/>
four-mile course in a time of 21<lb/>
minutes and 41 seconds.<lb/>
i Matt Schweitzer was next for<lb/>
the Pirates, in 25th place with a<lb/>
lime of 22.20. Mike McGehee's<lb/>
time of 22.31 was good for 28th,<lb/>
while teammate Rob Rice cap-<lb/>
tured 31st place with a time of<lb/>
22.41.<lb/>
Rounding out the scoring for<lb/>
the Pirate runners was Russel<lb/>
Williams, who finished 51st with<lb/>
a time of 24.20. Vincent Williams<lb/>
finished right behind Rice with a<lb/>
time of 24.30, however, in cross<lb/>
country only the top-five<lb/>
finishers count toward the team<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Pirate coach John Welborn<lb/>
was happy with his team's perfor-<lb/>
mance in their first meet of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"I was very pleased to finish<lb/>
right about in the middle of the<lb/>
standings Welborn said. "We<lb/>
did better than we thought I<lb/>
would considering it was our first<lb/>
meet of the year<lb/>
In a sense, this fall marks the<lb/>
return of cross country to ECU<lb/>
since the days when the Pirates<lb/>
were in the Southern Conference.<lb/>
Although ECU ran in one meet<lb/>
each of the past two years, the<lb/>
NCAA requires teams to par-<lb/>
ticipate in at least five events a<lb/>
year to be considered an official<lb/>
sport.<lb/>
The next meet for the Pirates<lb/>
will be Saturday Sept. 13, when<lb/>
both the men's and women's<lb/>
teams will compete in the Pem-<lb/>
broke Invitational. The distance<lb/>
for this event and the remainder<lb/>
of the races the Pirates will enter<lb/>
will be eight kilometers (five<lb/>
miles).<lb/>
By SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
RALEIGH � Under first-year<lb/>
coach Dick Sheridan, N.C. State<lb/>
University soundly defeated ECU<lb/>
38-10 with an impressive 32-point<lb/>
second-half comeback, avenging<lb/>
last season's opening-game loss<lb/>
to the Pirates.<lb/>
The contest was close, with the<lb/>
Pirates leading 10-6 at the half,<lb/>
before five second-half turnovers<lb/>
spelled doom for the Bucs.<lb/>
Once again, the game marked a<lb/>
new attendance record for the<lb/>
state of North Carolina as 58,650<lb/>
witnessed the season opener for<lb/>
both squads.<lb/>
Although the Pirates lost the<lb/>
battle, ECU coach Art Baker was<lb/>
unhappy, but did find kind com-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
"Obviously we were diap-<lb/>
pointed to come out and lose our<lb/>
first game in the manner we did. I<lb/>
certainly have to congratulate<lb/>
Dick (Sheridan) and his first win<lb/>
(at N.C. State) Baker said at<lb/>
his weekly press conference<lb/>
yesterday. "1 can honestly say we<lb/>
cannot fault our players for a<lb/>
lack of effort.<lb/>
"My first impression after the<lb/>
game, is that we are younger and<lb/>
more inexperienced than I<lb/>
thought Baker added. "We're<lb/>
playing young players and we're<lb/>
not playing them just to have an<lb/>
excuse � they're the best we<lb/>
have<lb/>
The Wolfpack was led by<lb/>
senior quarterback Erik Kramer,<lb/>
who was seven of 18 for yards<lb/>
while rushing four times for 67<lb/>
yards (including a 45-yard run).<lb/>
ECU's freshman Charlie Libretto<lb/>
was equally as impressive in his<lb/>
debut as he connected on 14 of 26<lb/>
tosses for 169 yards � better<lb/>
than any mark achieved by a<lb/>
Pirate signal-caller last year.<lb/>
"I thought Charlie (Libretto)<lb/>
did a pretty good job. He ex-<lb/>
ecuted the things he was suppos-<lb/>
ed to do Baker said. "Charlie<lb/>
read the defenses as well as a<lb/>
junior quarterback (would).<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Tues. Sept. 9,1948<lb/>
Rex Barney of the Brooklyn<lb/>
Dodgers pitches a no-hitter<lb/>
against the New York Giants.<lb/>
Barney has great stuff, but he<lb/>
tends to be so wild that the<lb/>
Dodgers send him to a<lb/>
psychiatrist in hopes that<lb/>
therapy will improve his self-<lb/>
control. The more visits Barney<lb/>
makes to the shrinks, however,<lb/>
the more the strike zone<lb/>
shrinks, and Barney is out of<lb/>
baseball by 1950.<lb/>
However, he didn't do a very<lb/>
good job carrying out fakes. The<lb/>
pressure finally got to him (late in<lb/>
the game). But he did do some<lb/>
very mature things out there<lb/>
Baker cited two early second-<lb/>
half miscues as turning the<lb/>
momentum to the Wolfpack's<lb/>
favor. An inopportune dropped<lb/>
pass on a crucial third down<lb/>
(while driving to the State 45) and<lb/>
a fumbled punt near midfield<lb/>
killed the Pirates' chances, accor-<lb/>
ding to Baker.<lb/>
"The kicking game killed us<lb/>
and the fumbled punt (also<lb/>
hurt) Baker explained. "We<lb/>
dropped a pass and then our<lb/>
defense held them. They punted<lb/>
and we fumbled and that was the<lb/>
moment the game turned around.<lb/>
We didn't execute from that<lb/>
point on<lb/>
The Pirates came out smoking<lb/>
as ECU scored twice off of two<lb/>
Pack interceptions. Pirate safety<lb/>
Gary London picked off a<lb/>
Kramer pass at the Wolfpack 48<lb/>
and returned to the 28. However,<lb/>
the Pirate offense sputtered on a<lb/>
third-and-one situation at the<lb/>
State 19. Junior Chuck Berleth<lb/>
then nailed his first major college<lb/>
field goal from 37 yards with 8:01<lb/>
left in the opening period, giving<lb/>
the Bucs an early 3-0 lead.<lb/>
Following the ensuing kickoff,<lb/>
junior Flint McCallum got his<lb/>
first career interception � retur-<lb/>
ning it 12 yards to the Pirate 43.<lb/>
Libretto then directed a nine-play<lb/>
53-yard scoring drive. After three<lb/>
pass completions, the Bucs had<lb/>
the ball on the Pack 15. Three<lb/>
consecutive carries by junior<lb/>
fullback Anthony Simpson net-<lb/>
ted paydirt with 1:40 left in the<lb/>
quarter, giving ECU a 10-0 ad-<lb/>
vantage.<lb/>
The Wolfpack scored their first<lb/>
touchdown in a controversial<lb/>
manner. The old42-men-on-the-<lb/>
field" routine ended up in a<lb/>
19-yard scoring pass from<lb/>
Kramer to Nasrallah Worthen.<lb/>
The extra point was missed by<lb/>
Cofer as ECU led 10-6. The game<lb/>
films clearly showed the<lb/>
Wolfpack with two flankers, two<lb/>
tight ends, two running backs<lb/>
along with five linemen and the<lb/>
quarterback for a total of 12<lb/>
See MISTAKES, page 13<lb/>
JON JORDAN - ECU HMOTO LAB<lb/>
Head coach Art Baker gets ideas from assistants above as he intently<lb/>
studies Saturday night's action.<lb/>
ellkn mumt-nr � tm� east Carolinian<lb/>
Junior free safety Ellis Dillahunt (19), who had five tackles Saturday,<lb/>
can only watch the action here as an unidentified teamate makes the<lb/>
stop.<lb/>
ECU-NCSU A CTION<lb/>
Separation Stifles Staffers<lb/>
Brody's Soccer Squad Opens<lb/>
Season With Pair Of Wins<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
KI Sports laf oraattoa<lb/>
The ECU soccer team got off<lb/>
to a good start this weekend, win-<lb/>
ning their first two games of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Pirates traveled to St. An-<lb/>
Ticket<lb/>
Policy<lb/>
Outlined<lb/>
Student tickets for the West<lb/>
Virginia football game can be<lb/>
picked up on Tues Wed or<lb/>
Thurs of this week from 8:30<lb/>
am to 4:30 pm at the Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Ticket Office.<lb/>
Tickets will also be available on<lb/>
Tues Wed and Thurs from<lb/>
11am to 6pm at Men den hail<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
In order to pick up tickets,<lb/>
students must present a valid<lb/>
ECU ID and Student Activity<lb/>
Card. That will enable the stu-<lb/>
dent to obtain one free ticket,<lb/>
one half-price ticket and as<lb/>
many regular price tickets as<lb/>
desired. Students may also pre-<lb/>
sent another student's ID and<lb/>
get the same number of tickets<lb/>
with that one.<lb/>
drews Saturday and won 1-0 with<lb/>
a single goal by senior forward<lb/>
Jamie Reibel. Mid fielder Scott<lb/>
Lee assisted Reibel with the<lb/>
game-winning goal.<lb/>
The Pirate defense held<lb/>
throughout the match allowing<lb/>
St. Andrews only two shots at<lb/>
goal with ECU goalie George<lb/>
Podgorny deflecting both shots.<lb/>
The Pirates struck hard offen-<lb/>
sively, racking up 18 shots at<lb/>
goal. Robert Larrison and Jamie<lb/>
Reibel accounted for 8 of those<lb/>
shots.<lb/>
Pirates taking five shots and scor-<lb/>
ing two goals. Palmier Grossi and<lb/>
Roy Andersch assisted Reibel in<lb/>
his efforts.<lb/>
Freshman Frank Marsh scored<lb/>
the third goal to cap it for the<lb/>
Bucs. Once again, Podgorny and<lb/>
the Pirate defense prevailed<lb/>
allowing the Pats only one goal<lb/>
from seven shots. ECU spent a<lb/>
lot of time on the Francis Marion<lb/>
side of the pitch accumulating 13<lb/>
shots at goal for the day.<lb/>
"It was a very tough and<lb/>
physical match. They were big<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
SorUE!�<lb/>
TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH � It wasn't bad<lb/>
enough that we lost to State<lb/>
soundly, but being separated<lb/>
from our pre-game party was<lb/>
catastrophic.<lb/>
After each of us chipped in our<lb/>
$5.00 apiece for food and stuff,<lb/>
we (about a dozen or so of us) set<lb/>
out on a caravan for Carter<lb/>
Finley. That's when the problems<lb/>
started.<lb/>
For some reason, we followed<lb/>
a foursome of people that led us<lb/>
astray and into the scenic lower-<lb/>
class section of our state's<lb/>
capital. Anyway, by the time we<lb/>
figured out that the girl drivi.g<lb/>
the car (ahead of us) really didn't<lb/>
know a quickie shortcut and that<lb/>
we had been separated from our<lb/>
original crew, we got our heads<lb/>
together and found the traffic<lb/>
heading for the stadium.<lb/>
We figured all was cool and<lb/>
that we would just find the crew<lb/>
easily � it was early about 4:15.<lb/>
However, that assumption was<lb/>
far from reality. After we park-<lb/>
ed, we walked around for hours<lb/>
(or so it seemed). Everyone was<lb/>
having a killer time � with their<lb/>
hibachi's, music and the ever-<lb/>
present liquid beverages to keep<lb/>
people in the right frame of<lb/>
mind. Let's not get off the sub-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
We ran into thousands (okay,<lb/>
hundreds) of familiar ECU<lb/>
backers, and to be honest, maybe<lb/>
two or three didn't seem visually<lb/>
impaired to us. (Living it up<lb/>
Down East obviously moved 85<lb/>
miles west). It was really great to<lb/>
run into so many familiar faces,<lb/>
but in reality, it was tough as the<lb/>
parking lot seemingly got bigger<lb/>
with every step we took.<lb/>
It wouldn't be so bad, but our<lb/>
press passes, along with<lb/>
everything else, was in the other<lb/>
car. Well, by about 6:30 or so, we<lb/>
thought we might as well just try<lb/>
to get in the gate and then<lb/>
possibly try to get into the press<lb/>
box. After explaining our situa-<lb/>
tion to the old guy in the press<lb/>
gate, we were directed to speak<lb/>
with some guy in a nice red<lb/>
jacket. He then told us to speak<lb/>
with another Wolfpack crony. At<lb/>
that moment, as fate would have<lb/>
it, we ran into our boy Ice Mc-<lb/>
Cormac.<lb/>
Then Ice (Rick) led us to our<lb/>
party (of friends), where we got<lb/>
our passes and stuff as we were<lb/>
easily able to enter the game.<lb/>
It wasn't too bad, being that<lb/>
we did run into some of our ECU<lb/>
counterparts who aided us in our<lb/>
search. We would like the chance<lb/>
to thank these honorable in-<lb/>
dividuals. Let's see, 'Gorgeous'<lb/>
George the sports information<lb/>
student assistant, Anne, the<lb/>
typesetter from Jersey, Slick Don<lb/>
and his girl and Graves and<lb/>
Spider.<lb/>
Also, Herman Gentry, Rox-<lb/>
boro's Pirate Club President,<lb/>
who thought it would be best if<lb/>
we found Dr. Karr and seek help<lb/>
from the higher powers. It was a<lb/>
good thought and we are ap-<lb/>
preciative.<lb/>
Except for a few blisters on our<lb/>
feet (well, we needed a workout<lb/>
anyway) it wasn't all that bad.<lb/>
"We played very well and created a lot of n�  �<lb/>
opportunities for ourselves. It was a very good "1111 lC � OOl DSlll NO ICS � � �<lb/>
showing for our first match<lb/>
�Steve Brody<lb/>
RECORD<lb/>
Head coach Steve Brody was<lb/>
pleased with his team's first out-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
"We played very well and<lb/>
created a lot of opportunities for<lb/>
ourselves Brody said. "It was a<lb/>
very good showing for our first<lb/>
match<lb/>
The Pirates took to the road<lb/>
Sunday also, to take on Francis<lb/>
Marion College. ECU was a win-<lb/>
ner for a second time defeating<lb/>
the Patriots 3-1.<lb/>
Reibel once again paced the<lb/>
and very aggressive head coach<lb/>
Steve Brody commented. "Again<lb/>
we played very well, we kept our<lb/>
composure and made things hap-<lb/>
pen for us. This game is a very<lb/>
good one to have under our belts,<lb/>
it will help us a lot as the season<lb/>
progresses<lb/>
The Pirates are now 2-0 as they<lb/>
prepare for their home opener<lb/>
against conference rival William<lb/>
&amp; Mary. Match time is 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
at the ECU soccer field adjacent<lb/>
to Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ANOTHER<lb/>
CROWD<lb/>
Last Saturday night's crowd in<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh<lb/>
of 58,650 was the largest crowd<lb/>
ever to see a football game in the<lb/>
state of North Carolina. That<lb/>
marked the second consecutive<lb/>
year that the ECU-N.C. St itt<lb/>
game has drawn a record crowd.<lb/>
The 1985 crowd of 58,300 was the<lb/>
state's previous high. It also<lb/>
marked the third time since 1983<lb/>
that the Pirate-Wolfpack game<lb/>
has been seen by a record crowd.<lb/>
In fact, seven of the top 10<lb/>
crowds in Carter-Finley history<lb/>
have been from the matchups<lb/>
between the two in-state rivals.<lb/>
ECU IN HOME OPENERS<lb/>
The Pirates own a 20-6 record<lb/>
in home openers since the 1960<lb/>
season and are 17-6 since Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium was dedicated in 1963.<lb/>
The Pirates' first win in Ficklen<lb/>
was a 20-10 defeat over Wake<lb/>
Forest on Sept. 21, 1963.<lb/>
ECU's only losses in home<lb/>
openers are as follows:<lb/>
1966: 21-14 to Northeast Loui-<lb/>
siana<lb/>
1969: 24-6 to Louisiana Tech<lb/>
1970: 10-0 to East Tennessee<lb/>
State<lb/>
1971:45-0 to Toledo<lb/>
1980: 27-21 to Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana<lb/>
1984: 17-0 to Temple<lb/>
ECU has won 12 of its last 14<lb/>
home openers, including a 27-16<lb/>
win over Southwest Texas State<lb/>
in 1985.<lb/>
LIBRETTO DEBUTS AS<lb/>
PIRATES' QB<lb/>
Charlie Libretto directed the<lb/>
Pirate offense last Saturday night<lb/>
in his first collegiate game and<lb/>
made an immediate impact on the<lb/>
Pirates' offensive fortunes. The<lb/>
6-2, 195, native of Middleburg,<lb/>
FL completed 14-of-26 passes<lb/>
for 169 yards vs. the Wolfpack<lb/>
after being named the starting<lb/>
QB by head coach Art Baker just<lb/>
See LIBRETTOS, page 13<lb/>
i0mi0itgmwf<lb/>
 ����u.<lb/>
tmim�0 �<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 9r 1986<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PHI TAU NEW LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
Welcome to the family, induction is<lb/>
wed. at 9:30. Be prepared to party<lb/>
afterwards.<lb/>
BETA OMEGA: Welcome to<lb/>
brotherhood. It's good to have ya'll<lb/>
artth us.<lb/>
SIGMA NU: All bothers and little<lb/>
sisters are invited to attend Pizza<lb/>
Hut on loth St. Thursday night it<lb/>
will be no fun unless you come.<lb/>
Bl KAPPA PHI: Word your order<lb/>
6 ready.<lb/>
JENNIFER: You were a little<lb/>
HARD on the Beaver last Thursday<lb/>
Night.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Congratulations to<lb/>
our new sisters: Erma Dillander,<lb/>
Melanie Gibson, Kristy Patterson,<lb/>
Anna Scott, Nora Stevens. Ya'll are<lb/>
great! Welcome to the sisterhood.<lb/>
Love, Your Sisters.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: We would like<lb/>
to welcome all you guys back and<lb/>
wish you the best of luck during Fall<lb/>
rush! Love, TTKA lil sisters.<lb/>
TO THE MADONNA FAN: "Follow<lb/>
youFollow Me It's not WRDU, but<lb/>
you get the general ideaP.S. Boy,<lb/>
do l love Pantana Bob's! Love, THE<lb/>
BRUCE FAN.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: The Pi Kapps in<lb/>
vite everyone to the Elbo Wednes-<lb/>
day night. C-C-Catch the wave!<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Hey Wick, what's<lb/>
that smell? B.O look out for the<lb/>
speed bumpsl What kind out trooper<lb/>
was he John? Lupton, invest In some<lb/>
frult-of-the-looms. Don't they have<lb/>
bathrooms In Minnesott? Mark,<lb/>
didn t know you could spit fire. Matt<lb/>
(KONG), get your paws off my<lb/>
burger. Kurt, it's Waffle shop time.<lb/>
Dillon, did you find the 10 Command<lb/>
ments? Don't cry Poindexter, you'll<lb/>
Wt your money. Mark (Big D) the<lb/>
oung like it hotl Hey Greg, you're<lb/>
'�ally cute. Well guys, it was a blast<lb/>
Let's get a real driver next time.<lb/>
Stacey.<lb/>
DONNA SAN MARCO: You gave us<lb/>
a surprise when the candle went<lb/>
around 4 times we couldn't believe<lb/>
our eyes! The moment of candle<lb/>
Hght was special for all. We hope<lb/>
Ben enjoyed our excitement and<lb/>
love call. We love you very much<lb/>
and so we'll end this with a sigh<lb/>
We're glad that you are our sister<lb/>
and President of Alpha Delta PI<lb/>
J-ove, Your Sisters. P.s. Donna San<lb/>
Marco, engaged Sept. 6, 1986<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
ATTENTION KA LITTLE<lb/>
SISTERS: Welcome backl Our first<lb/>
meeting will be Sept. 14th at 7 p.m<lb/>
It's very Important you attend,<lb/>
MANDATORYl Let's make this a<lb/>
GREAT semester.<lb/>
w.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
.kll��<lb/>
FOUND: Black lab puppy around<lb/>
3rd and 4th Streets last Monday<lb/>
night Sept. 1st. Call 758-4019<lb/>
LIFE'S A HEALTH AFFAIR: Spend<lb/>
a healthy afternoon with us at the<lb/>
2nd Annual Life's A Health Affair<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 17 from 3-6 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Fun,<lb/>
games, exhibits, free give-aways<lb/>
Sponsored by the West Area<lb/>
Residence Council, Student Health<lb/>
Service, and Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services.<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Dept. is recruiting 10-14 part-time<lb/>
Soccer coaches for the fall soccer<lb/>
program. Applicants must possess<lb/>
some knowledge In soccer skills and<lb/>
nave patience to work with youth<lb/>
Applicants must be able to coach<lb/>
young people, ages 6-15 In soccer<lb/>
fundamentals. Hours approximately<lb/>
3-7 p.m. Monday-Friday. Some night<lb/>
and week-end coaching. Program<lb/>
will extend from Sept. 8- to mid Nov<lb/>
Salary rate, S3.44hour. Applicants<lb/>
will be accepted August 20- Sept 12<lb/>
Contact Ben James at 752-4137 Ext.<lb/>
262.<lb/>
LOST BEAGLE I: Hot pink collar<lb/>
Missing since Aug. 10. Owner<lb/>
HEART-BROKEN. Answers to<lb/>
FLACA. Day 756-3440, evening<lb/>
752-0577. v<lb/>
ATTENTION: Tutor needed for In<lb/>
tro. to Logic 1500 immediately<lb/>
Please call David at 752 1182.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
STUDENTS: Gain valuable creden-<lb/>
tials in part-time work to help you<lb/>
land that job after graduation. Con-<lb/>
tact Martha Jones or Wade Bryant<lb/>
m the Biology Dept. either personal<lb/>
ly (rooms SIM, S-407) or by phone<lb/>
(757 6287, 757-6307).<lb/>
WANTED: Need dependable person<lb/>
to answer telephones. Light typing<lb/>
Hours 8:30-12:30 Mon.Fri. Call Pam<lb/>
at 758 6200.<lb/>
SJfTS?" MALE DIVERS FOR<lb/>
�,E ECU DIVING TEAM. An ex<lb/>
eel lent opportunity to be a varsity<lb/>
Kobe at 757 6490<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Male<lb/>
.issr:to $hare r�nt �nJ<lb/>
utilities at Tar River Estates. The<lb/>
apt. Is completely furnished except<lb/>
for your room. Call 758-2853.<lb/>
WANTED: Female student to assist<lb/>
?�'� with house cleaning and<lb/>
child care In exchange for room and<lb/>
ooard. Near campus. 757-1798.<lb/>
PART-TIME HELP WANTED: At<lb/>
Parkn�H,e,0pt'Cian8; Doctor's<lb/>
Par' B,d8- �� Will work around stu-<lb/>
l$Chedule' No experience<lb/>
manger APP" ,n P"s�" to<lb/>
ftAIf,<lb/>
f.?,R RENT: 2 r�om furnished<lb/>
apartment for rent. Lights and<lb/>
752 12'UrnShed Ca" 7�-0"4 �r<lb/>
T.�tR SET bedroom wprivate<lb/>
S2LSK Christian couple. Front<lb/>
and back entrance, heat and air con-<lb/>
dition furnished. Call 752-7212.<lb/>
feJoVJi1 IS if V�u can buy<lb/>
leeps for $44 through the us<lb/>
SlXI Get the � 'oday.<lb/>
Call 1312 742 1142, ext. 5271-A.<lb/>
22 andEothBeerd'mday ' hear<lb/>
Jennifer 752X5fS �� Ca"<lb/>
am. and p m SLfZ 8,�<lb/>
Mm- Priced to move!<lb/>
NEED A D.J.t: Are you having a<lb/>
party and need a D.J.?: For the best<lb/>
 top 40, beach and dance call<lb/>
Morgan at 758-7967. Reasonable<lb/>
rates. References on request.<lb/>
TYPING: Professional service at<lb/>
low rates Includes: proofreading,<lb/>
spelling and grammatical correc<lb/>
tions; 12 yrs. experience; familiar<lb/>
with all university formats. Cindy:<lb/>
757-0398 anytime after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1985 Pontlac Firebird<lb/>
5speed, T-tops, cruise control tilt<lb/>
wheel- electric windows,AMFM<lb/>
cassette stereo, maroon wgray in<lb/>
terior, AC. $500 down, and balance of<lb/>
loan, $10,000. 5-year warranty Call<lb/>
Tony 752-4225 or 752-8045.<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Word processing. The<lb/>
Dataworks specializes in student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertions,<lb/>
theses, resume's and more. All work<lb/>
is computer-checked against 50,000<lb/>
word electronic dictionary. Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1.75 per page, in<lb/>
eluding paper (call for spedific<lb/>
rates.) Call Mark at 757-3440 after 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
NEED A D.J.?: Having a shinding,<lb/>
wing ding, high dollar affair? Best in<lb/>
mid 6Cs, beach, rock, etcContact<lb/>
the TRASHMAN at 752 3587.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL WORD PRO-<lb/>
CESSING: All your typing needs 7<lb/>
days a week on our State-of-the-Art<lb/>
equipment which features a letter<lb/>
quality IBM Printer. Pick-up and<lb/>
delivery available. 355-7595.<lb/>
KATZ PERSONALIZED COM-<lb/>
PUTER DATING SERVICE: Is of<lb/>
fering special low rates to students<lb/>
Call or write for more information<lb/>
355 7595 or P.O. Box 8003, Green-<lb/>
ville, NC 27835.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dodge Colt, runs good<lb/>
Will take ANY reasonable offer Call<lb/>
now. 758 6680, Catherine<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ringgold Towers "A"<lb/>
Unit for sale, "B" unit for rentsale<lb/>
Fully furnished. 201 532 7913 day<lb/>
(Celidonio) and 201 431-0768<lb/>
nitewkd.<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc Call<lb/>
Anne at 752 3015 and leave a<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Camaro, V 6,<lb/>
5 speed, t tops, AMFM auto reverse<lb/>
cassette deck, low miles, excellent<lb/>
condition, MUST SEE, $6,500 FIRM<lb/>
756 6805<lb/>
FOR SALE: Alvarez guitar wcase<lb/>
$395 Bundy Saxophone wcase $175<lb/>
Dunlop Max 200 G Tennis Racket<lb/>
$80 Call 758 0559.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 blocks from ECU 1<lb/>
bedroom upstairs apt. Large living<lb/>
room, bath and kitchen, stove ana<lb/>
refrigerator furnished. Screened in<lb/>
porch, very nice. S250month Call<lb/>
758 1274 after 6 p.m<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 blocks from ECU<lb/>
bedroom with private entrance<lb/>
Utilities paid. $160month Cai<lb/>
758 1274 after 6 p.m<lb/>
3SSSSSSSSSS<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BETA KAPPA ALPHA: The finan-<lb/>
cial management association will<lb/>
hold its first meeting on Tue Sept<lb/>
9th at 3:30 in room 221, Mendenhall<lb/>
Guest speaker will be Mr. Nick<lb/>
Camardo, Branch Manager of<lb/>
Barclays American Financial All<lb/>
interested Business Students are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend.<lb/>
ECU LACROSSE CLUB: Will be<lb/>
having a fall practicemeeting �<lb/>
Today, Tues. the 9th at 3:30 at the<lb/>
bottom of college Hill. All interested<lb/>
please attend or call John Rusk<lb/>
7586692.<lb/>
ECU KARATE CLUMi Will have its<lb/>
first meeting and workout Thurs<lb/>
Sept. nth, at 7:30 in Memorial in<lb/>
room 108. This meeting is for anyone<lb/>
ranked yellow belt or above, or any<lb/>
other experience in the martial arts<lb/>
Beginning classes will start at the<lb/>
end of September.<lb/>
2ND ANNUAL LIFE'S A HEALTH<lb/>
AFFAIR: Will be held Wed Sept 17<lb/>
from 3-6:00 pm at Mendenhall<lb/>
Special give-aways will be<lb/>
available. Sponsored by the West<lb/>
Area Residence Council, Student<lb/>
Health Center, and Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services.<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS: A free<lb/>
mini class offered by the East<lb/>
Carolina for students. You can iden-<lb/>
tify Sources of Stress, Make Positive<lb/>
Changes, Manage Your Response to<lb/>
Stressful Situations, Learn to Relax<lb/>
improve Self Confidence. Mon '<lb/>
Sept. 15; Wed Sept. 17; Fri. Sept'<lb/>
19, Mon Sept. 22 from 3-4 P m in<lb/>
329 Wright Bldg. (Plan to attend all<lb/>
four meetings). No advance<lb/>
registration is required. Call or stop<lb/>
by the Counseling Center for further<lb/>
information. (316 Wright Bldg<lb/>
757-6661). y<lb/>
STUDENTS: Do you have a GPA of<lb/>
3.3 or better and have between 32<lb/>
and 96 semester hours' If so, then<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi wants you! There will<lb/>
be an introductory meeting<lb/>
(smoker) on Wed Sept. 10th at 7 30<lb/>
pm in rocm 244 Mendenhall, to tell<lb/>
you what Phi Sigma Pi is all about<lb/>
Dress is semi-formal (dress and tie)<lb/>
and refreshments will be served<lb/>
afterwards. Don't miss out!<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS: An<lb/>
nouncing first organizational<lb/>
meeting. Anyone interested in get-<lb/>
ting involved with the elections or<lb/>
iust learning more about the issues<lb/>
is invited to join. We meet on Tues<lb/>
nights at 6:30 in 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Everyone is invited to join the best<lb/>
party on campus.<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP: You don't have to<lb/>
be an athlete to join us for fun<lb/>
fellowship every Wed. night at 700<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 130. Come check us<lb/>
out!<lb/>
ECU HONORS ORGANIZATION<lb/>
(ECHO): The first meeting of the<lb/>
year will be held on Thurs Sept. 11<lb/>
at 5.00 in the Honors Lounge, Rawl,<lb/>
room 220. Anyone currently taking<lb/>
Honors classes or anyone with an in-<lb/>
terest in the program is invited to at-<lb/>
tend. Contact Brian Burke at<lb/>
752-4999 for information or if you can<lb/>
not attend.<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICAN: The<lb/>
ECU College Republicans will meet<lb/>
tonight, Tues. Sept. 8 at 6:30 p.m in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall. Please attend.<lb/>
This is an important meeting and<lb/>
many items of concern will be<lb/>
discussed. For more information<lb/>
call 830-1298.<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Minority Arts Com. of the Stu<lb/>
dent union is now accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for new members. Member-<lb/>
ship is open to students of all minori-<lb/>
ty groups. All interested persons<lb/>
should come by the Student Union of-<lb/>
fice in Mendenhall or contact Cedric<lb/>
Adderley for an application.<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY: There wil be an<lb/>
organizational meeting Tues Sept.<lb/>
9 at 8:00 p.m. in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall. Former members<lb/>
should attend and new members are<lb/>
welcome. Dues for the coming<lb/>
semester will be $5.00. If you are in-<lb/>
terested in law, law school or the<lb/>
legal profession in general, this is<lb/>
the club for you.<lb/>
VISUAL ARTS COMMITTEE: The<lb/>
Student Union Visual Arts Commit-<lb/>
tee is looking for new members<lb/>
Anyone interested please contact<lb/>
Steven Zakely at 752-8481 or stop by<lb/>
room 234 Mendenhall.<lb/>
FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Come to<lb/>
the Methodist Student Center (501 E<lb/>
5th St. across from Garrett dorm)<lb/>
this Wed. night at 5 p.m. and every<lb/>
Wed. night for a delicious, all-you-<lb/>
can-eat home cooked meal with a<lb/>
short program afterwards. This<lb/>
week, a presentation by the 1986<lb/>
Mexico work Team. Meals $1 50<lb/>
with reservation, $2 at the door Call<lb/>
758-2030 for reservations. Sponsored<lb/>
by Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries. Bring old pain-<lb/>
ting clothes if you want to help lay<lb/>
the base for the mural.<lb/>
ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: Atten-<lb/>
tion AED members interested pre-<lb/>
�nedical students. Dr. Dean Hyack,<lb/>
assistant dean of admissions at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine, will speak<lb/>
about the process and preparations<lb/>
of entering Medical School. Anyone '<lb/>
interested is welcome. The meeting<lb/>
is at 7:00 tonight in Flanagan 307.<lb/>
EATING DISORDERS SUPPORT<lb/>
GROUP: Held every Wed. from 5-6<lb/>
p.m. in Room 120 at the Student<lb/>
Health Center. For more informa-<lb/>
tion contact Judith Yongue, M D at<lb/>
757 -6841.<lb/>
FORENSIC SOCIETY: A meeting<lb/>
will be held for all those interested in<lb/>
competing in public speaking and in-<lb/>
terpretation. Come by room 211 of<lb/>
the Theater Arts Bldg 7:30 pm on<lb/>
Wed Sept. 10. This year we are<lb/>
really going places � so plan to at-<lb/>
tend and be involved.<lb/>
ECU SURFING: Will hold it's first<lb/>
meeting Thurs Sept. n at 8:00 in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall. Topics will in-<lb/>
clude contests, trips, and activities<lb/>
for the upcoming year. A new video<lb/>
will be shown and there will be a par-<lb/>
ty after the meeting at Georgetown<lb/>
Apts. Guys and girls are welcome<lb/>
and any new students are urged to<lb/>
attend. For more info call Blair at<lb/>
738-8393 or Cree at 758 9627.<lb/>
GRADUATE MANAGEMENT AD<lb/>
MISSION TEST (GMAT): Will be Of<lb/>
fered at ECU on Sat Oct. 18, 1986.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be com-<lb/>
pleted and mailed to GMAT, Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 964 R,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540. Applications<lb/>
must be postmarked no later than<lb/>
Sept. 15, 1986. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Room 105, Speight Bldg,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
?5L?NAL TEACHR EXAMINA-<lb/>
TIONS - CORE BATTERY EX-<lb/>
AMS: Will be offered at ECU on Sat,<lb/>
pet. 25, 1986. Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed to the<lb/>
9n�p i�?a' 7Mt,ng Serv,c�' Box<lb/>
jm-R, Princeton, NJ 08541 to arrive<lb/>
tlSSLZJSt APP'atlon, may<lb/>
be obtained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Room 105, Speight Bldg ECU<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY: Meeting on Thurs<lb/>
Sept. nth at 7:30 at Cubbies.<lb/>
See ANNOUNCEMENTS, page<lb/>
SsSSSSSSS<lb/>
Hundreds of posters have just<lb/>
arrived from $3.50 to $10.98.<lb/>
Poster frames also available.<lb/>
Personalized Acrylic Items<lb/>
Sorority &amp; Fraternity Items<lb/>
Open Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
�SSSSS-c-c-v-<lb/>
<lb/>
Carolina east mall<lb/>
greenvllle<lb/>
LIGHT MAKERS' IS YOURS<lb/>
FREE WITH ANY 950 OR<lb/>
MORE PURCHASE OF CLINIQUE<lb/>
Cimioue ught Makers bonus puts all you need to<lb/>
look good at your tinge, ups �� trus collection ot<lb/>
skin care and makeup travel-sue samplings<lb/>
This exclusive gift includes Dramatically<lb/>
Orlterent Motslunz;ng Lotion. Zero -A<lb/>
Base Extra-Help Makeup rtarm A -<lb/>
Glo� Creamy Blusher Exfoliating � ll T<lb/>
Scrub Blush VKtet Re Moistunnng aZ t<lb/>
Lipstick and a Omue Extra up 4?K sJT<lb/>
brush tor perfectly defined lips Treat ajk'?<lb/>
your skm (c me best care a.anabe<lb/>
with the Qmique system ot treatments<lb/>
makeups and fragrances<lb/>
All CimKjue products are<lb/>
allergy tested and tOCt<lb/>
fragrance free One<lb/>
bonus per customer<lb/>
pease<lb/>
MEXICO MISSION WORK TEAM<lb/>
Each year, the Methodist and<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus ministries<lb/>
sponsor a two-week mission in Mex-<lb/>
ico, usually helping a Mexican con-<lb/>
gregation to repair or build a<lb/>
church. The 1986 team will present<lb/>
be.r experience as the program for<lb/>
 SuPP�r �t the Methodist<lb/>
Student ctr. (501 E. 5th St. across<lb/>
i��! G!Irett Dorm)' 5 P-m- ��� l�<lb/>
S'2 � V reservatlon (758-2030) or<lb/>
�2 at the door.<lb/>
STRIVING FOR EXCELLENCE<lb/>
Highest Fraternity GPA On Campus<lb/>
2nd Runner-Up Chancellor's Cup<lb/>
ENTERTHETRADITION . PIKAPPAALPHA<lb/>
SEPTEMBER ,5-17 7:00 PM THEATC<lb/>
Mistak<lb/>
Continued from pajje II<lb/>
men. Houeer. the discrepancy<lb/>
went unnoticed b the ofl<lb/>
The Piratex began their<lb/>
possession of the openi<lb/>
on their own 37 1 ibretto c<lb/>
nected with freshman <lb/>
Wilson for 17<lb/>
ball at the Pack 46 w A -<lb/>
maining He hit Wilson .<lb/>
a gain to the State Zh Tim Ja<lb/>
netted 12 more on a draw, pia<lb/>
the 16. However. i �<lb/>
tackled bel tre g<lb/>
bounds as the<lb/>
ran out. The �<lb/>
there wa- :02 �<lb/>
and Berie: .arc<lb/>
field goal The attemp<lb/>
blocked<lb/>
Libretto's<lb/>
Continued from pae ! 1<lb/>
!fie days <lb/>
�number<lb/>
i 14 �'<lb/>
than any <lb/>
Pirate- last se .<lb/>
game. He a<lb/>
ing corj<lb/>
with true<lb/>
Wilson. Jl<lb/>
Arms<lb/>
9<lb/>
Read the<lb/>
week for<lb/>
�<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
� 5<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
ALL NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
r GRADUATING FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
 n order i receive your Nursing P -<lb/>
n December orders must be pla<lb/>
- "e Student Stores a- ghi B<lb/>
Stno :a?e' than Sec   er-<lb/>
 shou d ce p azec a' the ,ee <lb/>
.Coue- Oraers most oe ca -<lb/>
when me oraer is piacea.<lb/>
j DENTAL APTITUDE TEST<lb/>
(DAT): a be offered 91 EC.<lb/>
I Sat . oc !9M Ape ;?� -m<lb/>
blanks are c oe ma ez - I e I<lb/>
rece vec by the Divis on of Ec<lb/>
tlonat Mease1? Airier<lb/>
Dena Ass a m E as'<lb/>
Chicago A,e C�i :ac: &amp;0C"<lb/>
Sept 15, -984 adc ca' ons a-<lb/>
on'a nee from the Test nq Cee-<lb/>
Roc-n 105, See ght EC.<lb/>
PRE PROFESSIONAL HEALTH<lb/>
ALLIANCE (PPHA) A<lb/>
their first rree' ; for "e se-es'e-<lb/>
Wee, SeDf- 10 n HAendenha<lb/>
R-oo1 247 Members are urged �<lb/>
Dr-ese"� A rtterested ce-s:s<lb/>
invitea to a'tenc<lb/>
PIG PICKIN You -e  -e: : a'<lb/>
afternoon ot Chr s' a- e v.s- p<lb/>
Sa . Sept 13- 12 DC noon ?� Ja<lb/>
Meo'a United Methodist Churcti<lb/>
510 S. Aas ngtor $�  Pig<lb/>
Hustl Bfs S a Beas<lb/>
Desse-s az ce 'ea A da<lb/>
acceptec Coe on out az e<lb/>
Christy- fur before the EC<lb/>
ban game<lb/>
Woodsy Owl says<lb/>
No Noise Pollution Here!<lb/>
East Carolina C<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Di<lb/>
We Buy Gold<lb/>
INSTANT CA!<lb/>
$' All Transactions (<lb/>
'  Buy � Sell -<lb/>
fe 752-03<lb/>
 Ho�rv �:��.m �<lb/>
tS205 Aboi addiiional a and Problcn fun her in tor<lb/>
4��<lb/>
rA -number 1-W p � �eekda i<lb/>
WgMl�Mlfc��nf m0mim.<lb/>
�" � - - -<lb/>
tfkMMhBriMMM<lb/>
timi�a��i �mni�lti<lb/>
B<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
mg a<lb/>
e best<lb/>
call<lb/>
rabe<lb/>
 a<lb/>
llQ(<lb/>
Jrrec<lb/>
iliar<lb/>
KATZ PERSONALIZED COM-<lb/>
PUTER DATING SERVICE: Is of<lb/>
fenng special low rates to students.<lb/>
Can or write for more information,<lb/>
355 7595 or p.o Box 8003, Green-<lb/>
ville, NC 27835.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dooge Colt, runs good.<lb/>
W ii taKe ANY reasonable offer. Call<lb/>
ow '58 6680 Catherine.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Rmggold Towers "A"<lb/>
J Unit for sale. "B" unit for rentsale<lb/>
' Fv furnished 201532-7913 day<lb/>
iCes.aonio) and<lb/>
�e wkd<lb/>
201 431 0768<lb/>
iFR<lb/>
ri f?<lb/>
ce<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc. Call<lb/>
Anne at 752 3015 and leave a<lb/>
message<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Camaro, V-6,<lb/>
5 speec t tops AM FM auto reverse<lb/>
lette deck, low miles, excellent<lb/>
� ' Oil MUST SEE $6,500 FIRM<lb/>
TS6 6805<lb/>
FOR SALE. Aivarez guitar wcase-<lb/>
$395 Bundy Saxophone wcase $175<lb/>
op Max 200 G Tennis Ra-�. t-<lb/>
Cal "58 0559<lb/>
FOR RENT. 3 blocks from ECU. 1<lb/>
airs apt. Large living<lb/>
batti and kitchen. Stove and<lb/>
r furn.shea. Screened in<lb/>
very nice $250month Call<lb/>
- after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT. 3 blocks from ECU. 1<lb/>
bedroom tti private entrance.<lb/>
' es pa.a $160 month Call<lb/>
4 after 6 pm.<lb/>
cklf$<lb/>
f<lb/>
posters have just<lb/>
m S3.50 to SI0.98.<lb/>
nes also available.<lb/>
hied Acrylic Items<lb/>
i Fraternity Items<lb/>
i<lb/>
iu<lb/>
Z<lb/>
iniiii(tt<lb/>
CUMQUE<lb/>
r4�1<lb/>
:NCE<lb/>
'PAALPHA<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mistakes Cost Pirates<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 9, 1986 13<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
men. However, the discrepancy<lb/>
uent unnoticed by the officials.<lb/>
The Pirates began their final<lb/>
possession of the opening half,<lb/>
on their own 37. Libretto con-<lb/>
nected with freshman Walter<lb/>
WiUon for 17 yards, placing the<lb/>
hall at the Pack 46 with :49 re-<lb/>
maining. He hit Wilson again for<lb/>
a gain to the State 28. Tim James<lb/>
netted 12 more on a draw play to<lb/>
the 16. However, Libretto was<lb/>
tackled before getting out of<lb/>
bounds as the clock apparently<lb/>
ran out. The officials ruled that<lb/>
there was :02 left on the clock<lb/>
and Berleth came on to attempt a<lb/>
Field goal. The attempt was<lb/>
blocked by the Wolfpack's<lb/>
Nelson Jones.<lb/>
Pirate miscues marred their<lb/>
second-half play. The Wolf pack<lb/>
was able to capitalize on the er-<lb/>
rors as they scored one third-<lb/>
quarter touchdown and 25<lb/>
fourth-quarter points to win han-<lb/>
dily, 38-10.<lb/>
"Turnovers were crucial. They<lb/>
led to us losing some of our inten-<lb/>
sity Baker admitted. "They<lb/>
(State) only made two mistakes<lb/>
and we capitalized on both of<lb/>
them. We gave them five short-<lb/>
scoring drives and that was the<lb/>
difference in the game<lb/>
Baker did see some positive<lb/>
things with his offensive unit and<lb/>
especially the offensive line.<lb/>
"I'm encouraged of what we<lb/>
can do with the offense Baker<lb/>
said. "I felt the offensive line<lb/>
played really well, especially Cur-<lb/>
tis Stryuk and Robert Alexander.<lb/>
Alexander played his best game<lb/>
at East Carolina, and that's say-<lb/>
ing something because he's in his<lb/>
fifth year<lb/>
On defense, Baker praised<lb/>
linebackers Bubba Waters and<lb/>
Vinson Smith as well as safety<lb/>
Ellis Dillahunt. Also defensive<lb/>
ends John Williamson and Willie<lb/>
Powell and tackle Walter Bryant<lb/>
were singled out for their play.<lb/>
"They took a beating and I<lb/>
hope we learned a lot from it<lb/>
Baker concluded, "yet our<lb/>
players kept their composure<lb/>
without losing their temper<lb/>
despite the frustrating cir-<lb/>
cumstances<lb/>
Libretto's Debut Shows Promise<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
five days earlier. Libretto's<lb/>
numbers in terms of completions<lb/>
(14) and yards (169) wsere higher<lb/>
than any passing total by the<lb/>
Pirates last season in a single<lb/>
game. He also had a fine receiv-<lb/>
ing corps which was unveiled<lb/>
with true freshman Walter<lb/>
Wilson. JUCO transfer Jackie<lb/>
Armstrong, last year's starting<lb/>
quarterback-turned flanker Ron<lb/>
Jones, and returnees Jarrod<lb/>
Moody and Tony Smith.<lb/>
MCKINNEY OFF AND RUN-<lb/>
NING AGAIN<lb/>
Sophomore Reggie McKinney<lb/>
started the 1986 season as a<lb/>
kickoff returner much like he<lb/>
finished his freshman campaign a<lb/>
year ago. The 5-10, 185, Mt.<lb/>
Olive native ranked fourth in the<lb/>
nation last season as a kick<lb/>
returner with a 25.5 average per<lb/>
return.<lb/>
McKinney took N.C. State's<lb/>
first kickoff last Saturday and<lb/>
returned it 58 yards before being<lb/>
brought down by the last man<lb/>
between McKinney and the end-<lb/>
zone. He also had a 20-yard<lb/>
return later in the game to bring<lb/>
his 1986 return average to 39.0<lb/>
yards per return.<lb/>
Read the Sports Section every I<lb/>
week for the latest coverage.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
ALL NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
GRADUATING FALL SEMESTER:<lb/>
In oraer to receive our Nursing Pin<lb/>
in December, orders must be placed<lb/>
in the Student Stores, Wright Bldg<lb/>
i-no later than Sept. 19, 1986. Orders<lb/>
"should be placed at the Jewelry<lb/>
Counter Oraers must be paid in full<lb/>
when the order is placed.<lb/>
DENTAL APTITUDE TEST<lb/>
(DAT): Will be offered at ECU on<lb/>
Sat. Oct. n, 1986. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be mailed in time to be<lb/>
received by the Division of Educa-<lb/>
tional Measurements, American<lb/>
Dental Association, 211 East<lb/>
Chicago Ave Chicago, IL 60011 by<lb/>
Sept 15, 1986. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing Center<lb/>
Room 105, Speight, ECU.<lb/>
PRE PROFESSIONAL HEALTH<lb/>
ALLIANCE (PPHA): Will have<lb/>
their first meeting for the semester<lb/>
Wee Sept. io in Mendenhall in<lb/>
Room 247. Members are urged to be<lb/>
present. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
PIG PICKIN: You're invited to an<lb/>
afternoon of Christian fellowship.<lb/>
Sat , Sept 13, 12:00 noon, at Jarvis<lb/>
Memorial United Methodist Church,<lb/>
510 S. Washington St. Menu: Pig!<lb/>
Hush Puppies, Slaw, Beans<lb/>
Desserts and Ice Tea. All donations<lb/>
accepted. Come on out and enjoy<lb/>
Christian fun before the ECU foot-<lb/>
ball game.<lb/>
GRADUATE RECORD EXAMINA-<lb/>
TION (GRE): Will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat Oct. n, 1986. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 964 R, Princeton, NJ 08540<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no<lb/>
later than Sept. n, i9W. Applica-<lb/>
tions may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing center. Room 105, Speight.<lb/>
ECU VETERANS CLUB: Will have<lb/>
first meeting on Tues Sept. 9 in<lb/>
room 221, Mendenhall at 7:30 pm.<lb/>
We will be discussing our plans for<lb/>
the Fall semester. It's going to be a<lb/>
big year, and participation is the<lb/>
key. If you cannot make the meeting<lb/>
but desire more information, call<lb/>
Mike White at 752-2051 or Jim Reid<lb/>
at 758 0333. Everyone is invited!<lb/>
METHODIST STUDENT CENTER.<lb/>
Fri. night, 6:30 p.m we are painting<lb/>
the beach mural downstairs. Wear<lb/>
old clothes and come for an evening<lb/>
of fellowship, pizza, and hard work.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome. The Center is<lb/>
located at 501 5th St across from<lb/>
Garrert dorm, 758-2030. Sponsored<lb/>
by Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA STUDENT<lb/>
LEGISLATURE: If you really care,<lb/>
then VOICE YOUR OPINION! The<lb/>
East Carolina Delegation to the<lb/>
NCSL will hold a fall semester<lb/>
organizational meeting on Monday<lb/>
at 7:00 pm, Room 212, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Veteran Legislators and interested<lb/>
new students make plans to attend.<lb/>
Questions or information, call Gor-<lb/>
don at 756-6382. NCSL � The Cam-<lb/>
pus Voice!<lb/>
F<lb/>
L<lb/>
Woodsy Owl says<lb/>
No Noise Pollution Here!<lb/>
MACB<lb/>
BRYANT t ASSOCIATES<lb/>
The Financial Aid Finders<lb/>
5 25 Sources Guaranteed<lb/>
Scholarships, Grants &amp; Loans<lb/>
We can help you find the money you need<lb/>
to meet college expenses. Three billion is<lb/>
available yearly. Our computers will<lb/>
guarantee 5-25 sources of aid. High school &amp;<lb/>
college eligible. Vocational and technical also<lb/>
eligible. Call 757-0505 or 1-800-824-1164 ext.<lb/>
184.<lb/>
NATIONAL CENTER<lb/>
FOR EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES<lb/>
PO BOX 7092<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27834 7092<lb/>
Scholarships, Grants &amp; Loans<lb/>
lor all colleges &amp; technical vocational schools<lb/>
The Pinto offensive line, which received . gre.t deal of credit from SXTTZTTT "�� �"�<lb/>
ZS. Bour8ois 0�,he 8roud,�c" Thora"s ,57' - S��tT��Xi<lb/>
Quality Mart<lb/>
601 Greenville Bl vd.<lb/>
756-1794<lb/>
Ball Park Franks<lb/>
Bay One Get One Free<lb/>
Fix 'em the way you like 'em<lb/>
Badwdaer 12 pack<lb/>
S3.f?l!<lb/>
Tide Deterg eat<lb/>
regtizetftc<lb/>
Free Med. Pepsi<lb/>
w purcaajeof<lb/>
Coke2Utr<lb/>
DC<lb/>
Si.4<lb/>
HowTo Improve<lb/>
�urGrades<lb/>
AtTheBeach.<lb/>
If you're finding your bathing suit<lb/>
tighter than usual, now's a fitting time to<lb/>
join The Spa. Students can join The Spa<lb/>
on a monthly basis for only S25 per<lb/>
month. That's $25 for 30-days without<lb/>
any strings attached.<lb/>
The Spa offers 52 aerobics work-<lb/>
outs every week, exercise machines, free<lb/>
weights, steam room, sauna and whirl-<lb/>
pool. Plus, there are plentv of trained<lb/>
instructors to help you shape up.<lb/>
So. if your body is flunking the<lb/>
beach test, call or drop by The Spa for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Improving your grades at the beach<lb/>
simply requires a little home work.<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
best health club mlue.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE 756 7991<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Ave<lb/>
We Buy Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
' INSTANT CASH LOANS V<lb/>
All Transactions Confidential A C<lb/>
� C t <lb/>
Buy � Sell � Trade <lb/>
752-0322 �cC<lb/>
" Hours: 9:00 a.m6:00 p.m Mon-S.i V<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$205 Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks at<lb/>
additional cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toll free<lb/>
number: 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdays. General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
Practice - Meeting<lb/>
Today � Tuesday 9th<lb/>
3:30<lb/>
Bottom of College Hill<lb/>
All interested please attend<lb/>
 or contact John Rusk 758-6692<lb/>
mm mmm .<lb/>
� g � �"<lb/>
�aw mm �jN�i,d��. i<lb/>
,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0015"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBERS 1986<lb/>
IRS Football Rules, Putt-Putt Tourney<lb/>
Attention Male and female<lb/>
independent and residence hall<lb/>
flag football team captains.<lb/>
Residence hall eligibility rules will<lb/>
revert back to the same restric-<lb/>
tions as were in effect last year.<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Column<lb/>
1. Residence hall students may<lb/>
participate either in residence hall<lb/>
or independent division.<lb/>
2. Teams within the residence<lb/>
hall will be limited to having only<lb/>
two (2) players from outside the<lb/>
residence hall on their roster.<lb/>
All Male and Female Residence<lb/>
Hall and Independent Division<lb/>
Teams: Captains Must Attend<lb/>
the Re-registration Captains<lb/>
Meeting and Submit a Team<lb/>
Roster.<lb/>
Re-registrationCaptain<lb/>
Meeting is Wed. Sept. 10 at 9:00<lb/>
p.m. in Biology, Room 103.<lb/>
Tee-off with the intramurals<lb/>
Putt-Putt tournament. Registra-<lb/>
tion is i pproaching Monday,<lb/>
Sept. 29. The team captains<lb/>
meeting will be Tuesday, Sept.<lb/>
30, 5:30 p.m. in Brewster, Room<lb/>
C-103.<lb/>
Dive into a great activity, the<lb/>
intramural Swim Meet! Registra-<lb/>
tion is Monday, Sept. 29, from<lb/>
11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m Room<lb/>
105-C, Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Team captains meeting is Tues-<lb/>
day, Sept. 30, at 6:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster, Room B-102. Events<lb/>
consist of the following:<lb/>
50 yard: freestyle, backstroke,<lb/>
butterfly, breaststroke<lb/>
100 yard: freestyle,<lb/>
backstroke, butterfly,<lb/>
breaststroke, t-shirt relay, inner-<lb/>
tube relay, individual medley<lb/>
200 yard: medley relay,<lb/>
freestyle relay.<lb/>
Trying to ma��ain their titles<lb/>
as both All Campus and Frater-<lb/>
nitySorority Champions will be<lb/>
Lambda Chi Omega and Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha.<lb/>
Run for the health of it! The<lb/>
intramural Cross Campus Run<lb/>
will be held on Saturday, Oct. 18,<lb/>
homecoming weekend. Registra-<lb/>
tion for the two and four mile run<lb/>
will be 8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. the<lb/>
morning of the race. The run will<lb/>
begin at 8:45 a.m. so get those<lb/>
feet in gear.<lb/>
Regular particir: tion in the<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
aerobic classes can provide the<lb/>
opportunity for personal reward<lb/>
as well as a fun challenge.<lb/>
Aerobic Challenge is an in-<lb/>
dividualized self-directed pro-<lb/>
gram in which participants may<lb/>
earn a T-shirt award through ac-<lb/>
cumulation of points from class<lb/>
participation. Interested persons<lb/>
may sign up during aerobic class<lb/>
registration or may register<lb/>
anytime at 204 Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium. The program operates<lb/>
IRS Hours<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Fri 7-8 am<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11 am-1 pm<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mon-Fri 4-7 pm<lb/>
Sat-Sun 1-5 pm<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri llam-6pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12noon-5pm<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 3-7 pm<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
Mon l-5pm<lb/>
Fri 1-5 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-2pm<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CHECK-OUT<lb/>
(MG 115)<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
RACQUETBALL<lb/>
RESERVATIONS<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11:30 am-3 pm<lb/>
Mon-Fri 12 noon- 3 pm<lb/>
GYM FREE PLAY<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
this semester from September 8<lb/>
through December 5. More<lb/>
specific program information can<lb/>
be obtained in 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium.<lb/>
The Pepsi Physical Fitness<lb/>
Club offers something for<lb/>
everyone, whether just beginning<lb/>
an exercise program or par-<lb/>
ticipating on a regular basis. This<lb/>
individual, self-directed program<lb/>
offers five choices of exercise on<lb/>
a challenge basis: jogging, swim-<lb/>
ming, walking biking, and<lb/>
pushing (wheelchairs). Par-<lb/>
ticipants select their activity,<lb/>
work out on their own, record<lb/>
distances and receive an award<lb/>
for successful completion of<lb/>
goals. Registration and<lb/>
mileageparticipation forms are<lb/>
available in 204 Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium.<lb/>
Approximately twenty aerobic,<lb/>
toning, and aquarobic classes are<lb/>
taught each session throughout<lb/>
the campus community. In-<lb/>
dividuals may register for an en-<lb/>
tire session, or may participate on<lb/>
a drop-in basis for a nominal fee<lb/>
with valid identification. Stop by<lb/>
204 Memorial Gymnasium for a<lb/>
complete class schedule.<lb/>
Registration is September 2-5<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Session dates are September 8<lb/>
through October 17 costing $10<lb/>
for students and $20 for staff for<lb/>
a session (12 classes) and costing<lb/>
$1 for students and $2 for staff<lb/>
per drop-in class.<lb/>
Drop-in Classes in Memorial<lb/>
Gym Beginning August 25:<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
4:00-5:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
5:15-6:15 pm MG 108<lb/>
11:00-12:00 noon MG 108<lb/>
1:00-2:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
1:00-2:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
5:00-6:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
Toning<lb/>
5:30-6:30 pm MG 112<lb/>
6:30-7:30 pm MG 108<lb/>
Aquarobics<lb/>
5:30-6:30 pm MG Pool<lb/>
MonWedFri.<lb/>
MonFriday<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Tues. Thurs.<lb/>
Mon. ' Wed.<lb/>
Tues. Thurs.<lb/>
SAV-A-CENTER EffS<lb/>
MARKET<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT. SEPT. 13 AT SAV-A-CENTER IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES<lb/>
�SKS$�<lb/>
Plus Double Coupons<lb/>
(See store for details)<lb/>
S WE Will MATCH ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
GROCERY FEATURE PRICE IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current Week Food<lb/>
Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items or Equal Quality<lb/>
S<lb/>
mm<lb/>
���<lb/>
���<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0016"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CARPI inks SEPTEMBERS<lb/>
198ft<lb/>
;<lb/>
IRS Football Rules, Putt-Putt Tourney<lb/>
A ��I � k � t . . <lb/>
Attention Male and female<lb/>
independent and residence hall<lb/>
flag football team captains<lb/>
Residence hall eligibility rules will<lb/>
revert back to the same restric-<lb/>
tions as were in effect last ear.<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Column<lb/>
1. Residence hall students may<lb/>
participate either in residence hall<lb/>
or independent division.<lb/>
2. Teams within the residence<lb/>
hall will be limited to having only<lb/>
two (2) players from outside the<lb/>
residence hall on their roster.<lb/>
All Male and Female Residence<lb/>
Hall and Independent Division<lb/>
Teams: Captains Must Attend<lb/>
the Re-registration Captains<lb/>
Meeting and Submit a Team<lb/>
Roster.<lb/>
Re-registration Captain<lb/>
Meeting is Wed. Sept. 10 at 9:00<lb/>
p.m. in Biolog, Room 103.<lb/>
Tee-off with the intramurals<lb/>
Putt-Putt tournament. Registra-<lb/>
tion is approaching Monday,<lb/>
Sept. 29. The team captains<lb/>
meeting will be Tuesdav. Sept.<lb/>
30, 5:30 p.m. in Brewster, Room<lb/>
C-103.<lb/>
Due into a great activity, the<lb/>
intramural Swim Meet! Registra-<lb/>
tion is Monday, Sept. 29, from<lb/>
11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m Room<lb/>
105-C, Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Team captain meeting is I u<lb/>
da. Sept. 30, at 6:30 p.m<lb/>
Brevwer. Room B-102 Event<lb/>
the following:<lb/>
freestyle, backstroke,<lb/>
breaststroke<lb/>
a r d : free<lb/>
backstroke, butterfly,<lb/>
breaststroke. shirt rela, inner-<lb/>
tube rela, individual med!e<lb/>
200 yard: medley relay,<lb/>
freestyle rela.<lb/>
Trying to ma��ain their titles<lb/>
a both All Campus and Frater-<lb/>
nity Sororit Champions will be<lb/>
lambda Chi Omega and Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha.<lb/>
Run for the health of it! The<lb/>
intramural Cross Campus Run<lb/>
v�.ill be held on Saturdav, Oct. 18,<lb/>
homecoming weekend. Registra-<lb/>
tion for the two and four milei<lb/>
will be 8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a i<lb/>
morning of the race. The run w<lb/>
begin at 8:4 a.m. so get those<lb/>
feet in nea<lb/>
consisi<lb/>
50 ��<lb/>
butterfly<lb/>
100<lb/>
Regular participation, m the<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Ser ices<lb/>
aerobic classes can provide the<lb/>
opportunity for personal regard<lb/>
as well as a fun challenge.<lb/>
Aerobic Challenge is an in-<lb/>
dividualized self-directed pro-<lb/>
gram in which participants may<lb/>
earn a T-shirt award through ac-<lb/>
cumulation of points from class<lb/>
participation. Interested persons<lb/>
may sign up during aerobic class<lb/>
registration or may register<lb/>
anytime at 204 Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium. The program operates<lb/>
IRS Hours<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Fri 7-8 am<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11 am-1 pm<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mon-Fri 4-7 pm<lb/>
Sat-Sun 1-5 pm<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 3-7 pm<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
Mon 1 -5 pm<lb/>
Fri 1-5 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-2pm<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CHECK-OUT<lb/>
(MG115)<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
RACQUETBALL<lb/>
RESERVATIONS<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11:30 am-3 pm<lb/>
Mon-Fri 12 noon-3 pm<lb/>
GYM FREE PLAY<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am-6 pm<lb/>
Sat 11 am-5 pm<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 pm<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
this semester from September 8<lb/>
through December 5. More<lb/>
specific progtam information can<lb/>
be obtained in 204 Memorial<lb/>
 iymnasiuitt.<lb/>
I he Pepsi Phvsical Fitness<lb/>
Club offers something for<lb/>
eerone, whether just beginning<lb/>
an exercise program or par-<lb/>
ticipating on a regular basis. This<lb/>
individual, self-directed program<lb/>
otters five choices of exercise on<lb/>
a challenge basis: jogging, swim-<lb/>
ming, walking biking, and<lb/>
pushing (wheelchairs). Par<lb/>
ticipants select their activity,<lb/>
work out on their own, record<lb/>
distances and receive an award<lb/>
for successful completion of<lb/>
goals. Registration and<lb/>
mileageparticipation forms are<lb/>
available in 204 Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium.<lb/>
Approximately twenty aerobic,<lb/>
toning, and aquarobic classes are<lb/>
taught each session throughout<lb/>
the campus community. In-<lb/>
dividuals may register for an en<lb/>
tire session, or may participate on<lb/>
a drop-in basis for a nominal fee<lb/>
with valid identification. Stop by<lb/>
204 Memorial Gymnasium for a<lb/>
complete class schedule.<lb/>
Registration is September 2-5<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Session dates are September 8<lb/>
through October 17 costing $10<lb/>
for students and $20 for staff for<lb/>
a session (12 classes) and costing<lb/>
$1 tor students and $2 for staff<lb/>
per drop-m class.<lb/>
Drop-in Classes in Memorial<lb/>
Gym Beginning August 25<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
4:00-5:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
5:15-6:15 pm MG 108<lb/>
11:00-12:00 noon MG 10<lb/>
1:00-2:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
1:00-2:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
5:00-6:00 pm MG 108<lb/>
Toning<lb/>
5:30-6:30 pm MG 112<lb/>
6:30-7:30 pm MG 108<lb/>
Aquarobics<lb/>
5:30-6:30 pm M(. Pool<lb/>
MonWedFri<lb/>
Mon -Friday<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Tues. Thurs<lb/>
Mon. ' Wed.<lb/>
Tues. Thup<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT SEPT 13 AT SAV ACE NITER INGREENVILl f-<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES<lb/>
thc superset w- � fJJS<lb/>
Plus Double Coupons<lb/>
(See store for details<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
GROCERY FEATURE PRICE IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current Week Food<lb/>
Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items or Equal Quality.<lb/>
jf<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
Breast Quarters<lb/>
CHUNK LIGHT � IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Double Tiii�<lb/>
q Tuna<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
6.5<lb/>
oz. can<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH ADDITIONAL $10 00 OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
MARKET FRESH<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
5 LB OR<lb/>
MORE lb.<lb/>
RICH IN MINERALS<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
bunch<lb/>
P&amp;Q<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
DUKES<lb/>
v?<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
C3)<lb/>
(Ut UO.L �<lb/>
TOWtlS<lb/>
� n�<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
$10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
REGULAR-BUTTER<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
pr Crisco Shortening<lb/>
feM 3 ib. 168<lb/>
�j-iir 1 can I<lb/>
&amp;3<lb/>
can<lb/>
LIMIT ONE OF YOUR CHOICE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT BEER<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
i liter<lb/>
bottle<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M11PM.<lb/>
OPEN MON. 7 A.M.<lb/>
CLOSE SAT. 11PM<lb/>
703 GREENVILLE BLVD. � OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0017"/><lb/>
Your Choi<lb/>
Famous Name Brand Products At A Low, Low Price<lb/>
Lysol' Cling' toilet bowl<lb/>
cleaner, 22 ounces<lb/>
Lysol' BasinTubTile<lb/>
Cleaner, 17 ounces<lb/>
Fresh n Dry" Air Freshener,<lb/>
4 5 ounces<lb/>
Joy' Dishwashing Liquid,<lb/>
22 ounces<lb/>
Ajax' Laundry Detergent.<lb/>
42 ounces<lb/>
Niagara' Spray Starch, 28 o<lb/>
Soft Scrub" Cleanser, 13 oz<lb/>
Northern' Bathroom Tissue,<lb/>
4 rolls per pack<lb/>
Mott's" Apple Cider, 64 oz<lb/>
White Rain' shampoo or con-<lb/>
ditioner, 18 ounces each or<lb/>
mousse, 5 ounces.<lb/>
White Rain' aerosol hairspray<lb/>
7 5 os or pump, 8 ozs<lb/>
Armor All' protectant, 4 oz<lb/>
Texamatic' Fluid Dexron' II<lb/>
or Type F, 32 ounces each<lb/>
Cutex" perfect care polish<lb/>
remover in 6 ounce sie<lb/>
Q-tips' , 170 count<lb/>
Vaseline' Intensive Care'<lb/>
bath beads, 15 ounces<lb/>
Vaseline' pure petroleum<lb/>
jelly, 3.75 ounces<lb/>
� Aqua-Fresh' pump tooth-<lb/>
paste, reg or kids 4 6 ozs<lb/>
� Colgate' pump toothpaste.<lb/>
regular or gel 4 5 ounces<lb/>
� Oral-B' toothbrushes - sizes<lb/>
60. 40, 35. 30 or 20<lb/>
� Tussy" roll-on or stick<lb/>
deodorant. 2'4 ounces each<lb/>
� Tussy" solid or cream<lb/>
deodorant, 2 ounces each<lb/>
DOUAR<lb/>
f<lb/>
�-���<lb/>
"3208631<lb/>
RO&amp;t S ADVVR1 �<lb/>
Mt- HAHE A �<lb/>
vm iii ��iiuBuaiiLUM�i<lb/>
' PlTce for ThTBe<lb/>
Sale Starts Mon Sept. 8th Sale Ends Sat Sept. 13th<lb/>
Slcx-v Ou� To LOCJM Co�np�Miort<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Covered trash barrel, G gal round<lb/>
laundry basket or square laundry<lb/>
basket. IV2 bu Available in asst. colors<lb/>
VI , NETWT.lW3TtaA ly<lb/>
FOR W Reg. 3.47<lb/>
Cashew halves. Great for those special<lb/>
events or parties. A perfect snack for<lb/>
anytime. 11 ounce can Buy now &amp; save!<lb/>
O BARS I<lb/>
BARS ' I<lb/>
Jergens" soap. The lotion-mild soap<lb/>
Each bar is 4 5 ounces. Shop Roses for<lb/>
fantastic budget pleasing prices<lb/>
5 FOR $1<lb/>
FOR ' I Reg 36 Ea<lb/>
6 strand DMC embroidery floss. Cl<lb/>
from a variety ol I Olors ' -  "iow for<lb/>
all your cross stitcnmg proje ts<lb/>
c<lb/>
v1 P<lb/>
�u"uimx c�uet c-<lb/>
QUAKER<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
'<lb/>
t<lb/>
fPB'ljJL'tMptlW<lb/>
MOTOR OIL<lb/>
FOB BOTH GAlOUNf � .<lb/>
ItUTOMOTIVt Olf �il f N0M��<lb/>
<lb/>
See Store For Details On<lb/>
Additional 2.40 Savings<lb/>
m<lb/>
� "� " '�<lb/>
rl I p� ��i<lb/>
(Cm FOR O Your Choice1<lb/>
Downy' triple concentrate fabric soft-<lb/>
ener 21.5 oz Top Job' 28oz. or<lb/>
Carpet Fresh" in reg. or scent 14 oz.<lb/>
.69<lb/>
10 68 Our Sale Price on 12 Quarts<lb/>
- 2.40 Less Mail In Rebate<lb/>
Each Quart After Mail-In Rebate<lb/>
Quaker State' Super Blend' 10W-30<lb/>
or Deluxe' 10W-40 motor oil. Reg. 1.09<lb/>
&amp; 1.11, Sale .89 per qt. before rebate<lb/>
iL SKEINS '1 Reg .88<lb/>
Roses Creslan yarn. Made of acrylic<lb/>
fiber Machine washable, non-allergenic<lb/>
4 ply Choose from many colors 3 o?<lb/>
BERCOn<lb/>
2 FOR 57<lb/>
Super Buy'<lb/>
FOR f 72 x 90<lb/>
Salem blankets. 100 polyester Great<lb/>
warmth and comfort Sorry. No Rainchecks<lb/>
102 x 90" Sale $7 (Each)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0018"/><lb/>
$11<lb/>
Save 3.97<lb/>
Reg. 14.97<lb/>
Add a special touch to your wardrobe with a pair of<lb/>
these ladies' leather crayons kilties. Available in an<lb/>
array of popular colors to match any outfit Sizes 6-10<lb/>
$15<lb/>
� W Reg. 18.97<lb/>
Warm and versatile jog suits for ladies Select from a<lb/>
great assortment of styles and colors. Available in sizes<lb/>
S-M-L. Buy now during our Dollar Days Sale<lb/>
Reg. 9.97<lb/>
Ladies' short sleeve silk and angora blend sweaters<lb/>
Choose your favorite from a variety of exciting<lb/>
fashionable colors. Available in sizes S-M-L<lb/>
kNY WONDERFUL WAYS TO MA<lb/>
THIS YOUR FAVORITE SEASON<lb/>
Reg. 11.97<lb/>
Ladies pull-on pants made of comfor-<lb/>
Reg. 14.97<lb/>
Ladies acrylic cardigan sweaters in<lb/>
table polycotton blends. Many fall colors assorted styles and colors Sizes S-M-L<lb/>
3 choose Sizes 8 to 18 Women's sizes 38 to 44. Sale si3<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Ladies' polycotton blend skirts in a<lb/>
variety of fabulous fall colors. Always a fall<lb/>
favorite. Available in sizes 8 to 18<lb/>
$10<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Women's polyester blouse with a<lb/>
matching bow. Compliments any outfit!<lb/>
Many colors to choose. Sizes 38 to 44<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Women's poly poplin wrap skirt with<lb/>
button closure and pleated front panel.<lb/>
Assorted colors. Sizes 32 to 38<lb/>
$7R<lb/>
f Reg. 8.97<lb/>
Attractive ladies' acrylic sweater vests.<lb/>
Many fashion colors. Sizes S-M-L<lb/>
Women's sizes 40 to 46. Sale s8<lb/>
I"1<lb/>
Not<lb/>
Available<lb/>
In All Stores<lb/>
 Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Comfortable styled maternity tops in<lb/>
bright plaids and solid colors. Tremen-<lb/>
dous selection available in sizes 6 to 18<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Maternity jeans at a great savings to<lb/>
you! Made of 100 cotton for easy-care<lb/>
Available in sizes 6 to 16.<lb/>
$6<lb/>
Doll Sold Separately<lb/>
Set<lb/>
Reg. 7.97<lb/>
Matching sleepwear for both you and<lb/>
your doll. 100 polyester. Assorted col-<lb/>
ors available in sizes 4-14. Great buy'<lb/>
Reg. 11.97<lb/>
Girls' fashion jeans. Choose from a<lb/>
variety of stripes and prints for your fall<lb/>
wardrobe. Available in sizes 7-14.<lb/>
w Reg. 6.97<lb/>
Your Choice! Toddler girls' oxford<lb/>
shirts or printed jeans in a large variety<lb/>
of dainty colors just for her. Sizes 2-4T<lb/>
2<lb/>
 FOR I Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Your Choice! Infant or toddler girls'<lb/>
knit tops or corduroy pants. Choose in<lb/>
fants sizes 12-24 mos. or toddlers' 2-4T<lb/>
F Reg. 6.97 3 Rea 3 97 &amp; 4 97 VX<lb/>
men, o, dating 55X ,a, " JMt &amp;?&amp;��&amp;$ "<lb/>
Box<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
Your Choice! Ladies' or girls' 1<lb/>
cotton shaker knit sport socks.<lb/>
pack. Ladies' sizes 9-11 or girls'<lb/>
� I<lb/>
00<lb/>
3 pair<lb/>
6-8V.<lb/>
� W Req. 1<lb/>
Reg. 16 97<lb/>
Men s Wrangler- unwashed straight leg or boot cut<lb/>
denim jeans. Made of comfortable 100'<lb/>
denim Available in sizes 30-40<lb/>
$9<lb/>
Men s war<lb/>
FASHION, ST<lb/>
IT ALL A<lb/>
I<lb/>
rUHMAUUi'<lb/>
I ��<lb/>
Reg. 1.27<lb/>
Wells Lamont' brown jersey work<lb/>
gloves for men. Made of easy wearing<lb/>
cotton blended jersey One size<lb/>
SC Each<lb/>
 Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Select your favorite fror<lb/>
ment of novelty mesh b<lb/>
fashion and Dasic co<lb/>
'J0<lb/>
�m FOR O �. FOR W Fru.tl<lb/>
Men s Brut' fashion underwear. Men s pocket tee shirts<lb/>
Choose from low rise or micro styles in a great selection of<lb/>
variety of colors Sizes S-L 100� c cotton Sizes 5<lb/>
2 FOP. $5<lb/>
 3 Pair Per Pack<lb/>
Fruit of the Loom boxer shorts tor<lb/>
men. Available in assorted patterns and<lb/>
colors. Cotton blend fabric Sizes 32-44<lb/>
63 Pair Per Pack<lb/>
Sizes 28-44<lb/>
Men s fashion briefs fromj<lb/>
Loom" with a fly I<lb/>
trim 100�-p cotton in fa I<lb/>
?�.<lb/>
$10<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Men's or boys' In-Action low court<lb/>
shoes. Men's sizes 7-12 or boys' 2v2-6<lb/>
Youths' 12Vs-3, Reg. 12.97, Sale 9.88<lb/>
9.88<lb/>
Sizes 7<lb/>
Reg 14 91<lb/>
Men's popular style boat o<lb/>
Boy's sizes 3" 2-6. youths<lb/>
gents 8-12. Reg 9 97.<lb/>
��. . Ml<lb/>
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FOR f Reg 4.97<lb/>
Infant or toddler girls<lb/>
op 01 orduroy pants<lb/>
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spon,<lb/>
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S5<lb/>
Reg 5.97<lb/>
Ladies or girls 100�o<lb/>
cotton shaker knit sport socks. 3 pair<lb/>
: - idie zes 9-11 or girls' 6-8<lb/>
stmk<lb/>
m.w&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
Reg 16.97<lb/>
Men's Wrangler" unwashed straight leg or boot cut<lb/>
denim jeans. Made ol comfortable IOO�i cotton<lb/>
lenim Available . � I 40<lb/>
�9<lb/>
Reg 10 97<lb/>
Men's warm up jacket featuring a nylon shell and a<lb/>
flannel lining to keep in the warmth and keep out the<lb/>
i hill Many popular colors to i hoose from Sizes S XL<lb/>
Sfi Pair<lb/>
W Reg 7.97<lb/>
We've really turned on the savings on boys ski pa-<lb/>
jamas. Select your favorite from in a tment of novi<lb/>
ty prints in i vanetv I z I I I<lb/>
FASHION, STYLING AND SAVINGS<lb/>
IT ALL ADDS UP TO<lb/>
Reg 1.27<lb/>
Wells Lamont brown jersey work<lb/>
gloves for men. Made ol easy wearing<lb/>
otton blended jersey One size<lb/>
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48fr<lb/>
T&amp;<lb/>
Q C Each<lb/>
J Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Select your favorite from our assort<lb/>
ment of novelty mesh back caps in<lb/>
fashion and basic colors Adjustable<lb/>
Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Junior Boys polycotton football jersey<lb/>
with numbers printed on front, back and<lb/>
sleeve Available in sizes 4-7<lb/>
�8<lb/>
Set<lb/>
Reg 9.97<lb/>
Easy-moving fleece sets for junior boys<lb/>
Made of 100� acrylic for easy-care<lb/>
Available in sizes 4-7<lb/>
iS�<lb/>
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fft1Wteri3tattfL<lb/>
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Men's Brut fashion underwear.<lb/>
Ch � from low rise i micro styles in a<lb/>
arietv : � i olors Sizes S-L<lb/>
Men's pocket tee shirts. Available in a<lb/>
great selection of colors in easy moving<lb/>
100 cotton Sizes S-XL<lb/>
PKGS<lb/>
$7<lb/>
3 Pair<lb/>
Per Pack<lb/>
Boy's Golden Blend tee<lb/>
shirts or briefs. Made of comfortable<lb/>
50� i, cotton500 u polyester Sizes 2-16<lb/>
fft.<lb/>
$6<lb/>
W 3 Pair Per Pack<lb/>
Fruit of the Loom boxer shorts for<lb/>
men Available in assorted patterns and<lb/>
colors Cotton blend fabric Sizes 32-44<lb/>
$6<lb/>
3 Pair Per Pack<lb/>
Sizes 28-44<lb/>
Men's fashion briefs from Fruit of the<lb/>
Loom" with a fly front and contrasting<lb/>
trim 100�o cotton in fashion colors<lb/>
2<lb/>
3 Pair Per Pack<lb/>
Fruit of the Loom Fun Pals briefs<lb/>
for boys Made of absorbent 100- cot'<lb/>
Many fashion colors available Sizes 2-8<lb/>
Sorry, Ni Rail checks<lb/>
FOR f Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Infant or toddler boys knit tops or cor-<lb/>
duroy pants in a variety of colors Infants<lb/>
sizes 12-24 months oi toddlers 2 4 1<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg 4 97<lb/>
Your child will love these Watch Dogs<lb/>
A small stuffed dog on a wrist band Lift<lb/>
up his head and there is a watch under it<lb/>
V<lb/>
$10<lb/>
( lion e<lb/>
Reg 12.97<lb/>
Men's or boys In-Actlon low court<lb/>
shoes Men's sizes 7-12 or boys' ?'?-6<lb/>
Youths 12'2-3. Reg 12.97, Sale 9.88<lb/>
9.88<lb/>
Sizes 7.12<lb/>
Reg 14.97<lb/>
Men's popular style boat oxfords<lb/>
Boy's sizes 3V2-6. youths 12Vi-3 or<lb/>
gents 8V2-12, Reg 9.97. Sale 7.88<lb/>
$3<lb/>
Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Men's Fruit of the Loom" over the calf<lb/>
socks or crew socks. 3 pairs per package<lb/>
Make your selection from sizes 10-13<lb/>
A ffc Slipei Buy '<lb/>
W Reg 5.97<lb/>
Men's Pickett Pack. 4 pairs of acrylic<lb/>
tube socks in a handy carry all mesh<lb/>
sport bag Available in sizes 10-13<lb/>
I<lb/>
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POWER <lb/>
WHEELSW<lb/>
$119p<lb/>
I I Reg. 139 97<lb/>
Power Wheels " High Rider ' 4x4 or Coyote " 4x2 all<lb/>
terrain vehicles Feature: lv forward pe Is with<lb/>
eversi i I dual I itti � m recha :� i<lb/>
G3 'Emerson.<lb/>
i hie<lb/>
Reg 79.97 &amp; 99.97<lb/>
Girls 20 Pacesetter ; Boys 20 Turbo 2X or<lb/>
Monster bikes BM tyh frarm i finger leverbraki<lb/>
i urbo i lei ha free whei a tl front 8 �� ir brak<lb/>
$88<lb/>
Model AR-502<lb/>
Reg 99.97<lb/>
Emerson 4 cu ft under the cabinet<lb/>
microwave with tf minute timer - I<lb/>
Mounting Brackets Reg. 12.97. Sale S<lb/>
counter <lb/>
lefi �<lb/>
12<lb/>
?  v WHAT<lb/>
WILL BUY FOR YOU AT ROSES<lb/>
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WILL BUY FOR YOU AT Rfl�<lb/>
$2<lb/>
Reg. 2.99 &amp; 4.97<lb/>
Choose from an assort-<lb/>
ment of household tools<lb/>
or a 5 piece wrench set.<lb/>
�m Reg. 2.88-4.97<lb/>
Quartz digital clock, key<lb/>
chain clock or auto com-<lb/>
pass clock Super buy!<lb/>
$2<lb/>
ur Choi.<lb/>
Regular and purse size<lb/>
vent brushes. Shop<lb/>
Roses for low. low prices<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 7.88 &amp; 9.97<lb/>
40 piece combination<lb/>
socket set in SAE or<lb/>
metric or hand riveter set.<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 5.97<lb/>
Sonic" model Pro X ultra<lb/>
lightweight mini head-<lb/>
phones. Great value<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Gemini T-120 VHS<lb/>
blank video cassette<lb/>
tape. Record your own<lb/>
$2<lb/>
Baker's Secret<lb/>
Each. Reg. to 4.27<lb/>
Cookie sheets, SML.<lb/>
biscuitbrownie pan, cake<lb/>
pans, oblong or pizza pans.<lb/>
dm Buy'<lb/>
Cheer" all temperature<lb/>
laundry detergent. 42<lb/>
ounce size. Stock up!<lb/>
$2<lb/>
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aoQQQ<lb/>
o a a a q<lb/>
paaoQ<lb/>
� � B P<lb/>
Reg. 2.97<lb/>
9 pair shoe rack. Choose<lb/>
fiom almond oi chocolate<lb/>
Sturdy and handy organize!<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4.77<lb/>
Daisy Door" Mat. Made of<lb/>
Astro-Turt " Available in<lb/>
cocoa or green. Shop now!<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 5.47<lb/>
Table top ironing board<lb/>
with silicone cover.<lb/>
Perfect for dorm rooms'<lb/>
S4<lb/>
LJ<lb/>
Your Choi<lb/>
Electrasol" dish detergent.<lb/>
50 oz or Bounce" fabric<lb/>
softener, 40 count.<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 2.27 to 3.47<lb/>
15 quart dish pan, 16<lb/>
quart round or rectangular<lb/>
pail or dish drainer set.<lb/>
$2<lb/>
��-�<lb/>
Reg 5.97<lb/>
Sharp model EL231B<lb/>
calculator with extra ia<lb/>
keys and readout<lb/>
<lb/>
N<lb/>
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Standard Size<lb/>
Reg. 3.47<lb/>
Foam-filled bed pillow.<lb/>
Shop Roses and save on<lb/>
all your bedding needs.<lb/>
M14" x 50<lb/>
Reg. 5.97<lb/>
Wall or door mirror. PPG"<lb/>
float-plate glass. Hardware<lb/>
for hanging is included.<lb/>
$A 81" x 96<lb/>
mT Reg. 4.88<lb/>
Poly-fil' traditional bat-<lb/>
ting. 100 polyester and<lb/>
hand washable White.<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Walnut stain basket or<lb/>
stand. Holds up to a U<lb/>
inch hanging basket<lb/>
$2<lb/>
Super Buy!<lb/>
Scott' napkins. 450<lb/>
count package. Great sav<lb/>
ings on a quality product!<lb/>
$2<lb/>
fc Your Choice!<lb/>
Spray n Wash, 32 oz or<lb/>
Lysol" disinfectant spray,<lb/>
12 oz reg. or scent<lb/>
$2<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 2.47<lb/>
Krylon" interiorexterior<lb/>
enamel spray paint or<lb/>
Rust Magic paint. 12ozs.<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Vtauostf<lb/>
Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Foam soccer ball. Soft and<lb/>
durable. Will give your child<lb/>
hours of safe fun<lb/>
$4<lb/>
:e<lb/>
Reg. 4.57<lb/>
Mr. or Mrs. Potato Head<lb/>
Each comes with their own<lb/>
accessories Lots of fun<lb/>
$4<lb/>
 Reg. 4.44<lb/>
PLAY-DOH RAINBOW<lb/>
PACK Includes 8 bri<lb/>
colors Clean &amp; non-to<lb/>
$0 Your Choice!<lb/>
Mm Reg. 3.57 &amp; 3.97<lb/>
Eight inch planters in<lb/>
assorted colors. Styles<lb/>
FD-8, CR-8 and CS-8.<lb/>
Finger Wrestlers. Select<lb/>
from 4 styles of the USA<lb/>
wrestling team. 33�" tall.<lb/>
Reg. 2.97<lb/>
Fisher-Price Snap-Lock<lb/>
beads. For children 6<lb/>
months to 4 years old.<lb/>
t Reg. 4.97<lb/>
Rambo� UZI commando<lb/>
sound pistol set with knife<lb/>
and headband. Shop now!<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 4.97 &amp; 5.97<lb/>
Panasonic� Superlite<lb/>
with battery or Ray-O-Vac"<lb/>
Lantern with battery.<lb/>
$4<lb/>
TT Super Buy!<lb/>
Four piece value pack<lb/>
brushes. Shop now while<lb/>
the savings are fantastic<lb/>
9<lb/>
Prestone<lb/>
C,iUCDNE<lb/>
MlN<lb/>
53<lb/>
Prestone II wi<lb/>
-<lb/>
4 97, Sale A 50 :<lb/>
FOR $3<lb/>
STP carb spray cleaner<lb/>
or STP engine degreas-<lb/>
er. Reg 2.17 &amp; 2.27<lb/>
Roberk wiper Dlade<lb/>
. I � .viper<lb/>
blade refills<lb/>
m<lb/>
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VAWC<lb/>
$Q Each<lb/>
O Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Aluminum tea kettles.<lb/>
Many colors from whii I I<lb/>
choose � our<lb/>
$3<lb/>
Reg 3 97<lb/>
Speedy sponge mop. cot<lb/>
ton wet mop or speedy<lb/>
broom <lb/>
Hasi UasJL <lb/>
Ooq L.51 Qgfe<lb/>
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$3<lb/>
Reg. 3.97<lb/>
5" round. 4 x 5'2<lb/>
ovals or 8 Christmas<lb/>
sock cross stitch kits<lb/>
$Q 11 x 11<lb/>
W Reg 3.88<lb/>
Solid terry washcloths<lb/>
Assorted solid colors<lb/>
cotton 12 per pa i<lb/>
Duroco<lb/>
4 for 83 a<lb/>
Roses all purpose ready<lb/>
to use potting soil. Ster<lb/>
ilized eight pound Dag<lb/>
FOR vO 2?7<lb/>
Water can with hand<lb/>
controlled watering a<lb/>
easy carrying 56 our �<lb/>
$Q Each<lb/>
W Reg. 3.96<lb/>
SUPER POWERS action<lb/>
figures. Choose from asst<lb/>
heroes and villians<lb/>
$3<lb/>
Reg. 3.57<lb/>
2<lb/>
2 for $3 n 2<lb/>
Nabia<lb/>
strawi<lb/>
newt<lb/>
2<lb/>
Foam football. Approx- For tt<lb/>
imately 10" Safe, soft &amp; choo;<lb/>
grippable for lots of fun1 peani<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
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cabtnelounter top<lb/>
al<lb/>
$4<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4 97<lb/>
del Pro X ultra Gemini T-120 VHS<lb/>
ighl mini head- blank video cassette<lb/>
hofif s tape. Record your own'<lb/>
oaaaa<lb/>
fi fi Q Q E3<lb/>
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�P maoQ<lb/>
s4<lb/>
Reg 5 47<lb/>
$4<lb/>
'op ironing board<lb/>
lie one cover<lb/>
Reg. 5.97<lb/>
Sharp model EL231B<lb/>
calculator with extra-large<lb/>
and readout.<lb/>
Plant NdlncluU-<lb/>
$ 81 , 96 "<lb/>
TF Reg 4 88<lb/>
Poly-fn traditional bat-<lb/>
ting<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg 4.97<lb/>
Walnut stain basket on<lb/>
stand. Holds up to a ten<lb/>
hanging basket<lb/>
Vauua;<lb/>
Reg 4 57<lb/>
Mr or Mrs Potato Head<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4 44<lb/>
PLAY DOH- RAINBOW<lb/>
PACKIncludes 8 brigh:<lb/>
colors Clean &amp; non-toxic<lb/>
Panasonic<lb/>
kando<lb/>
h knife<lb/>
now'<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Reg. 4.97 &amp; 5.97<lb/>
Panasonic' Super lite<lb/>
with battery or Ray-O-Vac<lb/>
Lantern with battery<lb/>
$d<lb/>
T Super Buy!<lb/>
Four piece value pack<lb/>
brushes. Shop now while<lb/>
the savings are fantastic.<lb/>
Arj? s&amp;&amp; �<lb/>
Prestone<lb/>
ANTI FREE2T<lb/>
ilUCONE<lb/>
llUCATE<lb/>
forflL<lb/>
WARNING �<lb/>
3<lb/>
-i uu<lb/>
Fnrh Gallon Alter Mail in Rebate<lb/>
II winter anti-freezesummer coolant On<lb/>
. � � " ,to k uf now while the savings last Req<lb/>
bale 4 50 per gallon before rebate<lb/>
Reg. 39.97<lb/>
42 inch Royal Flush ceiling fan<lb/>
LOOK<lb/>
antique bra ,�<lb/>
i bright bra i<lb/>
eeds, reversible motor and are light adaptable<lb/>
$44<lb/>
Reg 49 97<lb/>
filing fan m white with bnqhtbral j Emp.error F,usth Mount or Ser' 6000 ceiling fan<lb/>
1 aue brass Schoolhou � l � kit includi I  �� � �� �<lb/>
� ea1 ��� ��:  ;avei � ii imri er md ����<lb/>
UU It'<lb/>
s. 't N . � k � '<lb/>
OU AT ROSES<lb/>
jB M<lb/>
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WILL BUY FOR YOIF AT �nccc<lb/>
TP carb spray cleaner<lb/>
f STP engine degreas-<lb/>
r. Reg. 2.17 &amp; 2.27<lb/>
FOR 0 ?.e97<lb/>
Roberk wiper blade with<lb/>
one per pack or wiper<lb/>
blade refills, 2 per pack<lb/>
ok Up!<lb/>
Extra strength Efferdent<lb/>
denture tablets. 108<lb/>
count bonus pack<lb/>
Roses 1<lb/>
gallon redwood stain or<lb/>
redwood stain brush.<lb/>
Reg. 9.88 &amp; 9.97<lb/>
11 piece wrench set m<lb/>
SAE or metric or 3 inch<lb/>
bench vise Shop &amp; save.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
$C Reg<lb/>
J 3.97<lb/>
7 piece<lb/>
wood screwdriver set or<lb/>
7 piece nut driver set<lb/>
VMVl<lb/>
53<lb/>
Each<lb/>
Reg. 3.97<lb/>
luminum tea kettles.<lb/>
my colors from which to<lb/>
oose for your kitchen<lb/>
$3<lb/>
Reg. 3.97<lb/>
Speedy sponge mop, cot-<lb/>
ton wet mop or speedy<lb/>
broom with free dustpan<lb/>
$3<lb/>
64 Ounces<lb/>
Tide' liquid laundry<lb/>
detergent. Gets your<lb/>
whole wash clean<lb/>
O Reg. 7.97<lb/>
Wooden indoor dryer. Per<lb/>
feet for your hand wash-<lb/>
ables. Folds for storage<lb/>
W Reg. 6.97 &amp; 6.99<lb/>
2V2 gallon<lb/>
gas can or 10 gauge 12<lb/>
foot booster cable.<lb/>
2 FOR $5 3Re997<lb/>
Fiberglass<lb/>
or tubular hammer. Great<lb/>
tools to have and use<lb/>
SO Your Choice!<lb/>
O Reg. 3.97<lb/>
5 round, 4" x 5V2"<lb/>
ovals or 8" Christmas<lb/>
sock cross stitch kits.<lb/>
$Q 11" x 11"<lb/>
W Reg. 3.88<lb/>
Solid terry washcloths.<lb/>
Assorted solid colors. 100<lb/>
cotton. 12 per package.<lb/>
Chair pads. One inch<lb/>
thick. Available in many<lb/>
eye pleasing patterns<lb/>
5"x7" or 8"x10" hard-<lb/>
wood frames. Beveled cut<lb/>
mat &amp; full strength glass.<lb/>
Reg. 7.99<lb/>
Scandia vinyl window<lb/>
shades. White or ivory<lb/>
22" to 37VT x 6'<lb/>
Reg. 7.97<lb/>
Make your selection from<lb/>
an assortment of hand<lb/>
made wicker baskets.<lb/>
for -o ?a-<lb/>
Roses all purpose ready<lb/>
to use potting soil. Ster<lb/>
ihzed eight pound bag.<lb/>
for "O 2ei97<lb/>
Water can with handle for<lb/>
controlled watering and<lb/>
easy carrying. 56 ounces.<lb/>
2F0R$3?e897 2for$53r,1?o 4<lb/>
FOR O "2<lb/>
Nabisco" fig, apple<lb/>
strawberry or blueberry<lb/>
newtons. 12 to 16 oz.<lb/>
FOR VU 310<lb/>
Milk crates. Choose from a<lb/>
variety of colors. Great for<lb/>
the kid's room.<lb/>
5 00 Sa Ea.<lb/>
-1.00 Mail In BaiMlfl<lb/>
Cost After Rebate Ea.<lb/>
Quickie" automatic<lb/>
roller mop or sponge<lb/>
mop. Reg. 6.97, 7.47<lb/>
2 FOR $5<lb/>
Your Che Tackle<lb/>
cleaner, 64 oz or Clorox<lb/>
2 bleach. 61 oz<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
$Q Each<lb/>
W Reg. 3.96<lb/>
SUPER POWERS" action<lb/>
figures. Choose from asst.<lb/>
heroes and villians.<lb/>
O Reg. 3.57<lb/>
Foam football. Approx-<lb/>
imately 10 Safe, soft &amp;<lb/>
grippable for lots of fun!<lb/>
2 FOR $3 20 oz $5<lb/>
For that cnaial enak <lb/>
FOR J20 oz<lb/>
For that special snack,<lb/>
choose this delicious<lb/>
peanut brittle bonus box.<lb/>
Each<lb/>
Reg. 6.97<lb/>
Panthor" or Battle Cat<lb/>
For use with Masters Of<lb/>
The Universe� figures.<lb/>
$5<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 5.97<lb/>
All Star Wrestlers Tag<lb/>
Teams. Choose "Road<lb/>
warriors" and more.<lb/>
3 100 Count<lb/>
Extra-Strength Tylenol �<lb/>
caplets. Extra pam relief<lb/>
that contains no aspirin<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057845_0022"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
s<lb/>
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�-�<lb/>
I ulips Galore<lb/>
l<lb/>
TASTE<lb/>
bV jp<lb/>
6<lb/>
MAKER.<lb/>
stfJ)ens<lb/>
I'<lb/>
3 PIECE<lb/>
TWIN SET<lb/>
I tie Bed Set ' sheet sets.<lb/>
1 Piece Full Set<lb/>
4 Piece Queen Set<lb/>
l Piece King Set<lb/>
IS BUY'<lb/>
Sale "12<lb/>
Sale s17<lb/>
Sale M9<lb/>
78 Cotton22�o<lb/>
Trevira Polyester<lb/>
48 x 24 Peach. Slate<lb/>
Reg 8.47 or Toast<lb/>
Fireside unique homespun fabric pinch pleat cafe<lb/>
48 x 36 Fireside Cafe. Reg. 8 97 Sa<lb/>
x 45 Fireside Cafe. Reg 1 1 97<lb/>
48<lb/>
0<lb/>
Reg. 39 88<lb/>
This handsome bentwood rocker  th cam<lb/>
le b7 and back will be a lovely accent to any room in . .<lb/>
Sale b9 home Some assembly required l"ak idvanta<lb/>
x11 Matching valance. Reg 6.97 Sale "6 th�- grt �mj . i ,� .j .  ;   <lb/>
E ADVANTAGE OF OUR LAYAWAY<lb/>
PLAN DURING DOLLAR DAYS<lb/>
Set<lb/>
Reg 9 97<lb/>
5 piece porcelain enamel bowl<lb/>
set. Perfe t for ! erving and<lb/>
. I 'atterns mav . u .<lb/>
Save 6.97<lb/>
Reg. 21.97<lb/>
Wicker look ventilated hamper<lb/>
Padded lid ! It irdy i onstru tion<lb/>
 �'�' natural oi whit�-<lb/>
Vmyl Mini Blinds<lb/>
Reg 10 88<lb/>
it ��  ,<lb/>
fh � isi 23  ' v<lb/>
i5 oi 36 � 6 I<lb/>
Reg 29 97<lb/>
Dining room chair , tl<lb/>
: fi<lb/>
ulon ' if -<lb/>
tk tn � md h<lb/>
at and : n -<lb/>
$17<lb/>
I f Reg 21 97<lb/>
Unfinished ladderback chair<lb/>
Ready t . : i<lb/>
� � � I � . �<lb/>
CANNON<lb/>
0 30 x 60<lb/>
Ecstasy extra large bath<lb/>
sheets Absorbent 100<lb/>
1 �'�. of I oloi<lb/>
,rmk<lb/>
I Jbbev<lb/>
Ott(<lb/>
I Each<lb/>
Libbey s owl<lb/>
with cork top, bell, ginger jar or<lb/>
bean pot with cork lid<lb/>
S I II Beautiful Drapes<lb/>
I J Reg. 14.47 &amp; 15.47<lb/>
Choose Pilgrim blue or Emer-<lb/>
son brown printed draperies<lb/>
46" x 63" or 46" x 81 sie<lb/>
Reg 29 97<lb/>
Ice cream chair with contoured<lb/>
hardwood frame and cane si �<lb/>
Some assembly required<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
30 inch bar stool  tl  ;<lb/>
J seat and I i  <lb/>
strut tion Gold t la - � .<lb/>
FOR f Each<lb/>
Kitchen kaper wedge rugs<lb/>
'�' ii , i olors and patterns<lb/>
�vail ible Super buy!<lb/>
Reg. 1.34<lb/>
Waffle weave dishcloth. Size<lb/>
13 x 13" Select from many di<lb/>
ferent colors 3 per package<lb/>
Sorry, No Rainchecks<lb/>
FOR $1 RI9ach48<lb/>
Washcloth assortment from<lb/>
Cannon' Assorted colors to<lb/>
choose from Slightly imperfect<lb/>
Reg. 14.97<lb/>
Pin up lamps. Choose from<lb/>
assorted wood, glass, metal or<lb/>
hobnail lamps Great buy!<lb/>
Reg 12 97 8. 14 97<lb/>
Choose from a variety of<lb/>
boudoiraccent lamps<lb/>
greal styles and populai<lb/>
$OH 7 Piece Set<lb/>
fc J Reg 29 97<lb/>
Porcelain enamel cookware I<lb/>
&amp; IV2 qt covered saucepans A<lb/>
qt dutch oven &amp; 8V2" fry pan<lb/>
2 FOR $1<lb/>
Y ou 1 Choici<lb/>
FOR V I Reg. to .77<lb/>
Golden Harvest 16 ounce<lb/>
drinking jar or 4 ounce mini<lb/>
drinking jar with lid<lb/>
$1<lb/>
Yourhoii e!<lb/>
Reg. 1.37 to 1 77<lb/>
Peeler, egg whisk, pizza cutter,<lb/>
pastry brush, can opener. 3 or<lb/>
4 piece spoon set.<lb/>
$7<lb/>
Each<lb/>
Reg. 8.57. 9.97<lb/>
Hurricane candle lamps Select<lb/>
from a variety ot globe styles all<lb/>
with a walnut finished base<lb/>
 1 8 Each<lb/>
Your Choice' pine trash bin or<lb/>
pine taters and onions bin<lb/>
Nice accent for your kitchen<lb/>
$109<lb/>
Model TR6 .<lb/>
Reg 129<lb/>
Aladdin 22 600 btu kero<lb/>
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THREE CONVENIE<lb/>
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Reg 15 88<lb/>
11 Popples "<lb/>
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Bars<lb/>
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Reg 26 97<lb/>
My Buddy or Kid Sister<lb/>
dolls<lb/>
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Reg 24 9<lb/>
Flex" 4x4 machine fi<lb/>
wheel tra<lb/>
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Masters<lb/>
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1 id j<lb/>
Reg 39 96<lb/>
High Energy battery<lb/>
cold cranking am;<lb/>
size GRABBED<lb/>
4 FOR 53<lb/>
Bra I<lb/>
Snap gas treatment<lb/>
lum " motor oil 0<lb/>
Save 2 88<lb/>
Reg 11 88<lb/>
36 spoke wire wheel cover<lb/>
Available in 13. 14 or 15 inch<lb/>
sizes Triple chrome plated<lb/>
$ 13 <lb/>
Car ramps<lb/>
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Reg 9 9;<lb/>
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Reg 21 97<lb/>
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Reg 129 97 �- m <lb/>
'n?q'nitonc?ILkeSr hea,e' Feaiures push Eme�orT Xel VmeiVhead. front load video<lb/>
L9nd built taff&amp;TuL S"0" ShUt0 fUel CaSSe"e reCOrder' Fea,ures wireless remole co�' 4<lb/>
.event14 day programmable timer and 1 touch record<lb/>
4.44<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
8.88<lb/>
Roses porch deck floor<lb/>
paint or 8 year flat wall<lb/>
paint. Asst colors 1 gal.<lb/>
4.99<lb/>
Reg<lb/>
9.97<lb/>
Choose Roses interior<lb/>
semi-gloss or gloss house<lb/>
paint. Many colors 1 gai<lb/>
LOW LOW PRICES<lb/>
HREE CONVENIENT WAYS TO PURCHASE<lb/>
CASH, CHARGE OR LAYAWAY<lb/>
Th Citicorp Card<lb/>
�HOICE<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
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Reg. 15.88<lb/>
Popples are just the right<lb/>
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0 Final Cost After Rebate Ea<lb/>
Barbie and The Rockers�.<lb/>
Each doll has her own contem-<lb/>
porary jewelry Reg. 9.86<lb/>
Reg. 89.97<lb/>
Flywheel bike. Welded steel<lb/>
frame weighted flywheel, speed-<lb/>
ometer odometer and timer<lb/>
Reg. 59.97<lb/>
DP incline leg liftleg curl<lb/>
rowing exercise bench. Some<lb/>
assembly required Buy now1<lb/>
Reg. 26.97<lb/>
My Buddy or Kid Sister<lb/>
dolls are true friends Both<lb/>
j removable clothes<lb/>
3WJ$m. i<lb/>
S S S $4 Maii-ln Heoate<lb/>
�"� ��� Final Cost After Rebate<lb/>
Crystal Castle� is the home of<lb/>
She-Ra' Features elegant fur-<lb/>
niture in every room. Reg. 29.97<lb/>
Reg. 4.99<lb/>
Roses interior latex flat wall<lb/>
paint. Available in a vane,<lb/>
exciting colors 1 gallon s :�<lb/>
�quid stnpper<lb/>
fast actmq<lb/>
Super Value'<lb/>
Power rower. Three function<lb/>
rower with adjustable tension<lb/>
Some assembly required.<lb/>
Reg. 26.97<lb/>
110 pound barbell dumbell<lb/>
set with instruction booklet<lb/>
Get in shape with Roses'<lb/>
Reg 11 88<lb/>
Kutzit paint &amp; varnish remover<lb/>
A liquid strippei Fast acting<lb/>
One gallon s Z� Save 3.88<lb/>
Reg. 24.97<lb/>
Flex� 4x4 machine features<lb/>
wheel transformation and for-<lb/>
ward ajid reverse action<lb/>
�njeWiqti?r<lb/>
IfSUJmE&amp;GiL<lb/>
2?ri�<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Cost After Rebate On 2<lb/>
Masters of the Universe" ac-<lb/>
tion figures. Select your favor-<lb/>
ite hero or villian. Reg. 4.86<lb/>
Terrific Buy'<lb/>
Reg. 11.97 &amp; 12.97<lb/>
ur Choice! Rowing action<lb/>
exerciser with contoured rowing<lb/>
pedals or Tummy toner.<lb/>
ul Your Choice!<lb/>
W Reg. 9.97<lb/>
Push up bar. DP' 5 pound<lb/>
ankle-wrist weights. 5-spring<lb/>
chest pull or sit up fitness bar.<lb/>
S10<lb/>
1 Gallon<lb/>
Reg. 11.99<lb/>
Thompson's' water seal. Water<lb/>
proofing protection for wood, con-<lb/>
crete, canvas and much more<lb/>
y<lb/>
QAA )96<lb/>
�m 7 Reg. 39.96<lb/>
High Energy battery. 370<lb/>
cold cranking amps Compact<lb/>
size. GRABBER u handle.<lb/>
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Your Choice! Brake Fluid;<lb/>
Snap' gas treatment; Prem-<lb/>
ium- motor oil or oil spout.<lb/>
Roses oil filters. Meets or ex<lb/>
ceeds manufactures specifica-<lb/>
tions for excellence.<lb/>
-24 Our Sale Price<lb/>
-s5 Mail-In Rebate<lb/>
Final Cost After Rebate<lb/>
Cabbage Patch Kidss are more<lb/>
special than ever. Beautifully<lb/>
detailed clothes that are durable<lb/>
Reg. 12.97<lb/>
Soft seats by Magnolia' . Dur-<lb/>
able non-cling leather-grained<lb/>
vinyl White, blue, bone or gold<lb/>
�9<lb/>
Save 2.88<lb/>
Reg. 11.88<lb/>
36 spoke wire wheel cover.<lb/>
Available in 13. 14 or 15 inch<lb/>
sizes Triple chrome plated<lb/>
�13<lb/>
Save 6.97<lb/>
Pair<lb/>
Reg. 19.97<lb/>
Car ramps. One piece steel con-<lb/>
struction. 6500 pounds gross<lb/>
vehicle weight rating.<lb/>
$2<lb/>
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Roses air filters. Meets or ex-<lb/>
ceeds manufactures specifica-<lb/>
tions for excellence<lb/>
S Each<lb/>
f Reg. 7.97<lb/>
Your Choice! Fisher-Price'<lb/>
melody push chime roller or<lb/>
corn popper. Ages 1 to 3 years<lb/>
$7<lb/>
Save to<lb/>
Reg. 9.97<lb/>
Bathroom scale by Counselor-<lb/>
Easy to read numerals White<lb/>
Digital Scale. Reg. 24.97, Sale $19<lb/>
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Huggies" disposable diapers. Choose from daytime<lb/>
48 ct . toddler 33 ct newborn 66 ct or x-absorbent 40 ct<lb/>
2$1<lb/>
FOR I The Big Tough Towel<lb/>
Brawny paper towels. Choose from designer or<lb/>
assorted colors 73 square feet per roll, 2-ply durability<lb/>
fi FOR I Your Choice!<lb/>
Roses alcohol or peroxide. Both available in 16 ounce<lb/>
sizes Quality products at affordable prices<lb/>
����<lb/>
2nd SET FREE!<lb/>
For a limited time bring your film to<lb/>
Rose's Photo Center for<lb/>
QUALITY FILM DEVELOPING and receive<lb/>
2 sets of prints for one low, low price!<lb/>
Applies to 110. 126. 135 and Disc color print film<lb/>
Shop Roses For<lb/>
Quality Name<lb/>
Brands At<lb/>
Sensational<lb/>
Savings!<lb/>
Roses facial tissues. 175<lb/>
count in white or yellow or<lb/>
Roses cotton puffs in 100<lb/>
or 300 count Great buy!<lb/>
Personna disposable<lb/>
razors. 5 per pack Big<lb/>
Value1 Great for trips<lb/>
Sorry. No Ramchecks.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Pantyhose in an array of<lb/>
colors and assorted sizes<lb/>
Slightly imperfect Sorry.<lb/>
No Ramchecks<lb/>
$1<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
s1<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Aida 100�o cotton cross-<lb/>
stitch fabric. Available in<lb/>
white or ivory. 12" x 12"<lb/>
14 count. Stock up now!<lb/>
$1 $1<lb/>
Bowl Fresh deodorizer.<lb/>
Fresh scent and long<lb/>
lasting Choose from assort<lb/>
ed colors. 3 ounces each<lb/>
Reg. 1.49 to 1.97<lb/>
Tubular hangers 10<lb/>
count plastic clothespins<lb/>
24 count or wooden<lb/>
clothespins 40 count<lb/>
Roses green or amber<lb/>
mouthwash or dental<lb/>
floss in waxed, unwaxed<lb/>
or mint 100 yards each<lb/>
 Your<lb/>
FOR vOcho,c<lb/>
St. Ives" apricot scrub,<lb/>
clay masque, collagen,<lb/>
replenishing lotion,<lb/>
shampoo or conditioner<lb/>
Your Choi<lb/>
Sweet N Low' . 250 ct<lb/>
Grapefruit diet plan cap-<lb/>
sules, 20 ct or Dex-a-diet<lb/>
II capsules. 24 ct<lb/>
Reg 1.39<lb/>
Decorative wood spoons.<lb/>
A unique country look craft<lb/>
item Great to paint,<lb/>
decorate or stencil<lb/>
Reg. 9.88 to 12.97<lb/>
8 pair shoe<lb/>
shelf bag. dresssuit bag<lb/>
or 4 drawer chest. Great<lb/>
to organize your closet<lb/>
Reg. 8.77, 8.97<lb/>
12 pocket<lb/>
shoe bag or 9 section<lb/>
organizer with bouguet<lb/>
print Great buy!<lb/>
FOR I �e:<lb/>
Regular envelopes, 50 or<lb/>
100 ct security envelopes,<lb/>
40 or 80 ct or writing<lb/>
tablets, ruled or unruled<lb/>
4 PKGS. '1 R889Ea<lb/>
All occasion gift wrap<lb/>
paper. 2 sheets per<lb/>
package. Each sheet is 20<lb/>
inches by 30 inches.<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 8.97<lb/>
Rubbermaid' Rough-<lb/>
neck" trash can or<lb/>
Kelley' galvanized trash<lb/>
can. 20 gallon size each.<lb/>
FOR "C R99gEa.<lb/>
Your Choice' Roses 10<lb/>
count trash, 15 count tall<lb/>
kitchen or 7 count trash<lb/>
and lawn bags.<lb/>
O Reg. 13.97<lb/>
Your Choice! Garment<lb/>
rack or overdoor shoe<lb/>
rack. Great for organizing<lb/>
your clothes and closet.<lb/>
Reg. 2.97<lb/>
Choice' Storage<lb/>
box or underbed storage<lb/>
box with attractive bouquet<lb/>
print Great buy!<lb/>
Microwave popcorn.<lb/>
Choose from butter or<lb/>
original flavors Twin<lb/>
pack-2 servings per box<lb/>
FOR "t ?.6g7Ea.<lb/>
For that delicious buttery<lb/>
taste, choose these Vik-<lb/>
ing danish butter cookies.<lb/>
Available in 1 pound tin.<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 2.07 &amp; 2.27<lb/>
Kodak film. Select<lb/>
CA135, 12 exposure or<lb/>
CL-110, 12 exposure for<lb/>
those special pictures<lb/>
FOR J 16x25<lb/>
Kitchen towels. Mushroom,<lb/>
pineapple or herb prints.<lb/>
Dishcloth 13" x 13" or Pot<lb/>
holder . Sale �1 (Each)<lb/>
 I Great Buy!<lb/>
Beauty silk velvet look<lb/>
bush assortment. Made<lb/>
of polyester blend. Many<lb/>
colors and styles available<lb/>
Reg. 4.17<lb/>
Pompeii pillow. Make<lb/>
your selection from many<lb/>
popular natural looks<lb/>
Shop now for great prices<lb/>
FOR " R789Ea<lb/>
Your Choice! Shasta"<lb/>
drinks. Choose cola, diet<lb/>
cola, orange, grape, ginger<lb/>
ale or lemon lime 2 liter<lb/>
FOR V I R59Ea<lb/>
Roses coffee filters. Fits<lb/>
Mr. Coffee , West<lb/>
Bend , Norelco and<lb/>
most others 100 count<lb/>
D Reg. 7.96<lb/>
Basf bonus pack with four<lb/>
90 minute cassettes and<lb/>
travel case. A sensational<lb/>
value from Roses!<lb/>
Your Choice!<lb/>
Reg. 3.27<lb/>
Homelite� pre-diluted<lb/>
engine oil, six V pints or<lb/>
Chain-Lube bar &amp; chain<lb/>
oil, one gallon size.<lb/>
Light bulbs. Choose 40,<lb/>
60, 75 or 100 watt Four<lb/>
bulbs per package. Great<lb/>
value, great price!<lb/>
FOR v 1 pla<lb/>
Furnace filters. Available<lb/>
in 16" x 20 16" x 25"<lb/>
20" x 20" or 20" x 25<lb/>
A tremendous buy'<lb/>
I<lb/>
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